Seven

FoG turned seven last week.

Truth be told I seriously contemplated using the occasion to shut it down. Outside of family I have very seldom done anything in my life for more than five years. Seven in my mind is the absolute longest time anyone should do any one thing. But for some reason I could not bring myself to turn it off.

The annual stats over the life of the blog show a certain disinterest. The past year was the lowest number of posts that I have authored since FoG started. And the comments, which is the only thing that really makes this more than just a self-aggrandizing free flow of not totally organized thoughts, dropped 6x.

One Two Three Four Five Six Seven
Visitors 2,525 12,792 43,166 46,445 40,745 39,600 21,834
Posts 135 204 178 152 158 92 40
Comments 52 253 685 655 402 307 57
Conversational Index .38 1.24 3.85 4.31 2.54 3.33 1.42
Technorati Rank 788,400 189,138 180,054 46,798 41,981 58,419 36,917

But it seems that over the past month or so I have figured out how to discuss some of the things that are going on in my startup world and that I may be able to keep on a pace to put up two posts a week which in my mind about what is needed to build a healthy community. 

So I decided to remain calm and carry on. Like family, FoG has become a little too cherished to leave.

February 23, 2013  |  Comments  |  Tweet  |  Posted in Personal, Web/Tech

Getting Press

One of the great misperceptions that people in the startup world have when it comes to marketing is that issuing a press release will result in people writing about your news. Nothing is further from the truth. The vast majority of press releases do not result in news coverage. It takes a little more work than that to get noticed. I am going to use the recent Half Off Depot acquisition as a case study.

We closed the deal mid January. We had planned to announce sometime in mid-February. At the Half Off Depot February board meeting turning the transaction into news became a topic of discussion. Here was our general plan.

We were to drop the release at 10:00 am EST on Monday February 11. At that time I personally put it on the wire using PRWeb.

But before putting the release on the wire we reached out to four national technology news outlets that we targeted. We provided them with some details of the release and offered to share it with them under embargo. Embargo tells a reporter they can not publish anything before the embargo time date. You have to slap this on the release in large font red letters. The embargo time/date we used was 9:00 am EST on Monday February 11. This gives a reporter a jump on the release, an opportunity to break the story. It gave us an opportunity to figure out who, if anyone, would be our national lead.

After getting this cranked up and some interest from two of the four targeted nationals I reached out to the trade press. In this case Street Fight and Daily Deal Media. We gave them a 9:30am embargo. I did not want them to dork up the national publication coverage. If a national sees local before they publish more times than not they will kill their story. 

I also selected local press in Atlanta and Tampa (home of CrowdSavings) and did the same as with the trade press. In Atlanta I focused more on the Atlanta Journal than the Atlanta Business Chronicle because I thought I could get the former to bite and they are a bigger outlet with broader reach.

We did this ourselves, because if you can get a hold of them, a reporter is much more likely to listen if talking to management instead of a public relations firm.

This all worked.

All Things Digital turned into our national lead, publishing their story at 9:00am. That was picked up by VentureWire. It became a reference point for the locals and trade writers to update their stories. All, to remind you, before Half Off Depot officially released any news. This was also picked up by Pando, another of our target national outlets.

Building on this locally the Atlanta Journal gave us some nice coverage both online and on the first page of business section of the print edition the following day. The Atlanta Business Chronicle and Tampa Bay Business Journal had coverage. And the trades covered as well. Daily Deal Media and Street Fight published stories.

So it worked. The key is talking to reporters who you think might have an interest before you issue a release. I am not really sure you need the release at all. It is mostly a tool used as a basis to start a conversation with reporters about your news.

If it works for me, and I have seen this type of thing work countless times, it will work for you. 

Update: My dear friend and marketing maven Erika Brookes provided great strategic directon on how to get news coverage of the CrowdSavings transaction. Or put another way, she told me how she would approach it and I did what she said.

February 19, 2013  |  Comments  |  Tweet  |  Posted in Half Off Depot, Marketing

Startup Rally

Hypepotamus-startup-rally-georgia

 

The good folks over at Hypotamus are hosting Startup Rally on February 18th. The event, which is being hyped as the largest gathering of startups in Georgia since 1895 (WTF happened then?) will take place from 3 – 7 in the Georgia Ballroom of The Biltmore.

Scott Case (not related to Steve Case) CEO of Startup America Partnership will be on hand to launch Startup Georgia.

Be there, be square. Register here.

February 14, 2013  |  Comments  |  Tweet  |  Posted in Startups

Half Off Depot and CrowdSavings Join Forces

Over the past two months I’ve been working pretty hard on a big deal. Not your daily deal kinda deal. Something a little bigger than that. We announced it yesterday morning. Half Off Depot is joining forces with CrowdSavings.

It is a union that has been a long time in the making. Seems to me that most deals work that way. I first approached CrowdSavings CEO Chad Jacquays about a how we might work together strategically in April of 2012. We kinda sorta know we were going to do it around Thanksgiving and the transaction closed mid January. Once we got real serious it took a solid two weeks to get it closed. Truth be told the transaction itself was more of an acquisition then a merger.

But putting the companies together is another story. Chad and Doug Bauer, the CrowdSavings CFO, have built some solid systems and a solid team that are going to make our combined entity much stronger. Going forward we are going to be using best practices which is always an interesting exercise.

Oh yeah, and Half Off Depot is changing its name to nCrowd. A story for another day.

February 12, 2013  |  Comments  |  Tweet  |  Posted in Deals, Half Off Depot, nCrowd

How To Create An Employee Handbook

If you follow me on Twitter, you know that I have been tolling on creating an employee handbook for Half Off Depot. Mostly on Saturday mornings. And I told some people that I would publish it when I finished. Well I can't do that.

As it turns out section 6.2 of the Half Off Depot Employee Handbook addresses the issue of confidenitality. And it states restricted documents can not be given to a person outside of the company. The Half Off Depot Employee Handbook is marked confidential. I can not share it without violating the provisions of a handbook I wrote. Go figure. I guess the next best thing would be to tell you how I went about creating the 30 page beast.

So when I started at Half Off Depot I was employee number 21. We had an employee handbook. It was designed for a company with about 20 employees. The big driver of the project was that we were quickly going to be approaching 70 or so employees. They needed some rules. I started with that designed for 20 people handbook. But I needed more, much more. So our corporate counsel provided a very legal cover every base handbook that was just way too serious. Way.

But it was a good outline. I just had to move all the super legal cover your bases to the back. Employees don't care about EEOC BS (and BTW I guess at this point I should state that I am a big believer in acceptance and diversity). Employees want to know work hours, vacation, and holidays.

So started asking folks that I know at similar sized companies about their handbooks. Three people that know and trust me quite well offered to provide me with copies of their handbooks as long as I never ever shared them with anyone else. While I would like to publicly thank them I fear that might even break a confidence. Thanks boys and girls. You know who you are.

Well it took me a little while to realize this but it just so happens one of the folks that provided me with their company handbook share the same corporate counsel that we use at Half Off Depot. It was way less stuffy and boring but covered the important topics. I took those two handbooks and combined them in a way that Half Off Depot actually operates on a day to day basis. When I was finished with that I compared the result with the other three I had at my disposal. Filled in a few potholes. Thing of beauty. All in it took me about 40 hours to get it together.

So the way to create an employee handbook is to get your hands on some and adapt them to the way you operate your business. It really is as easy as that.

January 30, 2013  |  Comments  |  Tweet  |  Posted in Half Off Depot, Management

On Doers

My friend Michael Tavani has launched a video blog called On Doers. On Doers is devoted to the the founders the startups. The people that make things happen. The doers. The first episode is with David Cummings of Hannon Hill, Pardot, and now Atlanta Technology Village fame. Interesting stories behind the story. It is embedded below. 

If you like you may subscribe to the series here.

January 24, 2013  |  Comments  |  Tweet  |  Posted in Entrepreneurship, Startups

Rise Up

The city of Atlanta is hosting its first ever NFC Championship today. The hometown Falcons are a 4.5 underdog. You have to go back over thirty years to find a number one seed so heavily favored to lose. The Falcons get no respect.

They got no respect late in the season when they had the best record in the conference. They need to beat the Giants everyone said. They did. Blew them out. Still no respect. They got no respect against the Seahawks. Beat them everyone said to get the respect you deserve. They did. Still no respect. Today is the day the Falcons get respect.

The key to this game is containing Kaepernick on the ground, make Gore run through a crowd, and ultimately forcing Kaepernick to beat you with his arm. As good as the guy is I do not think he can beat the Falcons strong secondary with his arm in a hostile environment. Interception city.

If the Falcons get off to a fast start, and they are the best at in the NFL at doing so, and contain Kaep on the ground they not only cover the 4.5 they win outright. If they don't it could get ugly early. My money says they do both and advance to the Super Bowl.

Go Falcons! 

January 20, 2013  |  Comments  |  Tweet  |  Posted in Sports

The New Atlanta Startup Community Blogroll

Seems I don't get much time to blog these days. To busy running a company to really give it much thought though I try from time to time. Have actually considered just shutting it down but can't bring myself to do that either.

Back in the day FoG was one of the places to be if you wanted to be a part of the Atlanta Startup Community. Not so much any more. But as is almost always the case there are other people to pick up the flag for a good cause. If you are interested in Atlanta technology startups these days here are the blogs you should be reading.

Atlanta Startup Blog. Brought to you by the good folks at Hypepotamus. Never participated in any of their events but intend to. Seems like they have something going on in the heart of the startup scene.

Atlanta Startup Community. Jon Birdsong of SalesLoft is the driving force behind this blog. He has some TechStars experience and great passion. SalesLoft is how housed at Atlanta Tech Village.

10,000 Startup Hours. David Cummings has been doing a daily post for quite a while. And as the guy that started Atlanta Tech Village after a big exit from his own startup David has a lot to say, the time to say it, and the cred.

Atlanta Startup Gossip. Sanjay Parekh seems to be trying to turn this into a community sounding board. If it works as well as Startup Riot he will succeed.

Rob's Blog. Rob Kischuk's blog. Rob would be the perfect technical co-founder if he was not running his own show funded by Mark Cuban. Dude ships elegant product. Rob does not write often but when he does he provides great insight into the Atlanta startup world.

I am sure this list is not exhaustive but these seem to be the places where I find myself keeping up with the goings on in the Atlanta startup community.  

How about you, where do you go online to stay connected to the Atlanta startup community?

January 9, 2013  |  Comments  |  Tweet  |  Posted in Startups