StartupsHK

Hong Kong's Tech Startup Community

  • Dave Morin of Path interviewed by @Jason on This Week in Start-Ups

    • 26 Dec 2011
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    • Apps Dave Morin Path StartupsHK TWIST iPhone jason calacanis
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    via youtube.com

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  • From One Entrepreneur to Another by Mikaal Abdulla of @8securities

    • 7 Dec 2011
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    “We are going to change the world”. If ever there was a cliche at a technology start-up pitch, this has to be it.  Having gone through the roller coaster ride of raising investment, I learned an important lesson. Anyone that asks you how you are going to build a $1 billion dollar business and how you are going to change the world is a dinosaur. It is astonishing how many VCs continue to view investments through this lens. Furthermore, it is amazing how entrepreneurs are forced to pander to it. Sure, I understand the VC investing model and that they will make five to ten investments a year and hope that one delivers big.  Those that deliver big are few and far between and you probably won’t be one of them. But don’t let that stop you from building a great product and business because you can. Don’t waste your precious time and energy trying to back fill a story that shows 100 million customers with your totally creative way to drive revenue (that deep down you know is nonsense). Instead, focus on these four clear objectives and frame your business plan around this. First, build a great founding and operating team. Second, build an amazing product that delivers what it says on the box with early customer feedback to prove it.  Simply, make your customers happy. Third, set your sights to break-even and not a day beyond. Finally, ensure you are building a scalable business model and product from day one. If you achieve these objectives you will be in a great position to build a profitable growth business.  Remember, it will take one customer at a time to determine your success.

    Investment funds like Dave McClure’s 500 start-ups get it. The reality is that a successful exits for most ambitious and innovative companies will come in seven or eight digits and not the ten we find in $1,000,000,000. I assure you, if your product is so big and so groundbreaking, then you are not knocking on doors for investment. It will be other way around. Since no VCs are knocking on your door, don’t waste another minute of your time reaching for the moon. Instead, build your product and prove your customers want it. Do everything in your power to delight them with brilliant design and engineering. Change your customer’s world and the rest will follow. If you do that, you will find the right investors with a realistic world view. You probably won’t change the world, but like the great Steve Jobs said, try to make a dent in it. 

    Good luck, I am pulling for you.

    Mikaal Abdulla, CEO: mikaal.abdulla@8securities.com

     

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  • The Long and Hard Road of Raising Capital presented by @8securities

    • 6 Dec 2011
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    The long & hard road of raising capital

    Great presentation by founder of 8Securities.com Mikaal Abdulla (on Twitter: @8securities) at Startup Monday last night! Subscribe to this blog to get updates on next meet-ups!

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  • Never Give up, NeverĀ Surrender by @Jason

    • 5 Dec 2011
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    • Jason Path Start-ups StartupsHK
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    By Jason Calacanis

    A year ago SNS (social network service) Path.com launched as the anti-Facebook. With odd product choices like a 50-person friend limit and an iPhone-only release, the service created a lot of discussion.

    I became a huge fan of the privacy-first Path because, as many of you know, I've had a slight problem with the way in which Facebook has flipped user privacy, with opting folks in to features they would never embrace.

    Back to Path. The service was considered dead. It didn't help optics with users like myself that the company launched a second app called With.me in June. I figured with that launch Path co-founder and CEO Dave Morin acknowledged he had given up on the Path app on some level.

    Read the rest of this post »

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  • #SUMHK Dec 12 - Paul Orlando "Customer Development: the methodology people love to talk about"

    • 1 Dec 2011
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    • Customer Development SUMHK paul orlando startup lessons learned
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    Paul will be in town for a bit and will be talking at this meetup about "Customer Development: the methodology people love to talk about," and "A short list of mistakes I made when running my startup."

     

    Paul_orlando
    Paul's bio:
    Paul Orlando has worked in media and technology since 1996, including time at AT&T in Hong Kong as an “intrepreneur,” where he innovated and sold several new voice and data products and led international business development in China. He found his way back to New York and in 2009 joined Chatfe, a new media startup which helped transform the way online community members communicate, serving as Co-founder & CEO. In this role, he generated revenue from business users, was awarded “Best Business Viability” by Microsoft BizSpark and was written about in the New York Times. Paul now runs a Customer Development course series for entrepreneurs
    called Startups Unplugged. He has a BA from Cornell and an MBA from Columbia. 

    He is fluent in Mandarin and can get by in Cantonese.

     

    As usual, the meeting is at BootHK, 19/f, 231-233 Queen's Road East in Wan Chai and will start at 7:30pm.

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    The official blog of the StartupsHK.com group of tech start-ups based in Hong Kong.

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