The Blind Side

Over the weekend I finished reading The Blind Side: Evolution of a Game by Michael Lewis.  I purchased the book last year and let it sit until the heart of the football season.  After you read it you will never watch a football game in the same way again.

The book is two intertwined stories. 

First Lewis analyzes the evolution of football strategy over the past 30 or so years.  The rise of the West Coast offense, the appearance of a new breed of defensive player such as Lawrence Taylor, and the resulting need for quarterback blind side protection.  This ultimately led to other changes in strategy with the end result being the left tackle spot becoming  highly valued with those playing the position generally being the second highest paid person on the field (behind the QBs they are protecting).

Second Lewis adds a layer of color tale of Michael Oher. Oher is a homeless Memphis ghetto kid taken in by
a rich white family with ties to Ole Miss and a Christian high school.  At 6’6" and 350 pounds Oher develops into an top ranked left tackle prodigy
with every major college coach in the country recruiting him. Oher ends up at Ole Miss, under NCAA investigation, but with a bright future ahead of him in the league.  This personal story brings fresh insight into how hard it is for an inner city kid to break away from his past as well as creates great interest for one to follow Oher’s career.

The Blind Side is a fascinating book that is a must read for any football fan. 

December 4, 2007  |  Comments  |  Tweet  |  Posted in Books, Sports

YnR Entrepreneur Social

YnR is an informal forum and semi-regular meeting of Atlanta area entrepreneurs. The group is led by David Ratajczak, who from time to time sends out an email to the 250 or so people that he has amassed on a mailing list to come out for some good conversation and fun.  David welcomes anyone with an entrepreneurial passion into the group, though he does screen people to avoid business service providers.

There is an event this evening over at Everybody’s Pizza in Emory University village starting at 5:30 and running to about 8:30.  If you are an entrepreneur looking to get engaged with other like minded folks this is a great place to start.

If you can’t make it tonight seek out David and get on his mailing list.

I am personally not going to be able to make it myself.  Heading to an event at The Carter Center.  The Center for Ethics and Corporate Responsibility is giving Charles Brewer the Ethics Advocate Award for the his advocacy for the values-based management he introduced at MindSpring.

November 28, 2007  |  Comments  |  Tweet  |  Posted in Entrepreneurship

Startup Weekend Lessons

After Atlanta Startup Weekend I needed some time to recharge.  A nice break from the Internet in general and blogging in particular over a Thanksgiving holiday that I
turned into a week’s vacation offered me a little time to reflect on
the lessons from the undertaking.  As a facilitator more than a task
participant I have a unique view of what transpired and the takeaways.
Some of them are new, many just reinforced previous experiences with
startups.  Here they are.

1.  The Atlanta technology community is strong.  We had over 120 people sign up for the weekend.  We also ended up with several firsts.  Jeff Haynie walked in with a prototype on 8:00am Saturday morning.  Sanjay Parekh and Michael Mealing put a provisional patent together.  On top of those a Google search for the brand name of the service we created returns
more results than any other Startup Weekend product. And, most
importantly, we launched.

2.  Good ideas are immediately apparent.  When Paul Stamatiou first suggested the idea that became Skribit on the idea wiki, you knew it was a winner.   It made it to the final four (but was rated lowest of the four.)  Once it get that far it took a little lobbying. : )

3.  Quick decisions are needed.  Andrew Hyde has some amazing
facilitation skills.  While I was pretty involved in the planning of
Atlanta Startup Weekend, one of my biggest worries was how we were
going to go from over 20 ideas, down to 1 in less then five hours.
Andrew led us through this process masterfully.

4.  Make something that people want and can grow organically.
We ended up selecting the Skribit concept for a lot of different
reasons.  One of the bigger considerations was that the group felt the application had the highest viral element to it when compared to the other candidates. Skribit has the ability to grow by itself without a sustained business development or marketing effort.  The early traffic and use numbers support this belief.

5.  Somebody has to be in charge of product.  When Andrew
first broke us into groups Erika Brookes mentioned that it seemed odd
that there was no product group.  Did that one ever come back to bite
us. Business development, marketing, and user experience were all
telling dev what to build.  Of course dev had their own ideas as well.

6.  Leaders step up and lead.  Alan Pinstein was the second person that brought up the product lead issue.  Which led to a product development intervention on late Saturday afternoon.  During this meeting, while many of the said groups denied setting product requirements, Jason White stepped up for the first time with a solution on the dev side.  During a user
experience meeting about an hour later a marketing person was
introducing a new feature.  Lots of folks were indeed setting
requirements.  Shortly thereafter Alan became the point person on
product requirements and Jason took charge of the development effort.
A bit later in the evening I was accused of being leaderish.

7.  Get the product out.  Late on Saturday evening it became
pretty obvious that we were not going to launch if we continued down
the same path that we had been following.  The Appcelerator
team was confident that their platform could pull us out of the weeds.
The decision was made to let them have a go at it.  They
delivered.  It was amazing to look over Jeff Haynie’s shoulder while
Alan P was diagramming the product requirements on the white board and
then have Jeff bring quickly bring the product to life on his
platform.  By the time they left that evening most of the application
modules were working independently of each other.

8.  All startups need milestones. Driving back to ATDC early Sunday
morning it dawned on me what we had been missing thus far in the
weekend.  Milestones.  All startups need them.   We had none.  Quick early
huddles with Alan and Jason led to setting milestones of noon for an alpha
and 7:00 pm for the first beta.  Not sure we made either, but having
the goals made us focus and we reached our ultimate launch goal.

9.  Development has to be in sync with compartmentalized tasks.
To get in a position to win we had to take a short cut.  The
development team was not in sync Sunday on the product requirements.
With the rate of code commits this created a situation where the devs
were stomping on each others code.  This caused hours upon hours of
rework, some raised voices (including mine) and nearly led to us not
getting the product out.

10. Marketing needs to follow product.  Unfortunately the
marketing team was not in communication with product development as
well as they could have been.  Around 9:00 pm on Sunday they contacted TechCrunch and Guy Kawasaki. They did an amazing job.  Both of them covered us.  Which led to a good deal of traffic.  To a site that had nothing but a logo on it.  No
app.  No way to capture email addresses.  A mad scramble ensured to
correct the latter.  We had 6,000 unique visitors within one day of
launching. If you Google  ‘skribit’ you will find over 72,000 results
on a term that did not exist two weeks ago.  No pr is bad pr.

11.  You have to believe in yourself and your team.  At 11:45
pm Andrew asked if we were going to try and launch by midnight.  After
about seven minutes of intense discussion the team decided yes.  Nate Clark
frantically scrambled to move the code from the dev to the live
server.  We were a launch.  We stayed for about three more hours fixing
things as they broke, but we were a launch.

12.  Engage experts. At some point on Sunday, Andrew said
something to the effect of “I could have told you this was going to
happen” to which I replied “why didn’t you?”.  “Nobody asked me” he
said.  Andrew was and remains the smartest guy in the world about
building a startup in a weekend.  We should have been more proactive in
reaching out to him.  As all startups should be with their expert
friends.

While there were some rumblings here and there, I think in the end
Atlanta Startup Weekend was a smashing success.  The only question is
how long should we wait before we have the second one?

November 27, 2007  |  Comments  |  Tweet  |  Posted in Entrepreneurship, Startups

Skribit Widget Live!

I finally had enough free time to get the Skribit widget in FoG.  At the moment it is to the right about half way down the page.   You can now submit ideas that you would like to see me write about.

Not real happy with the way that it is fitting into TypePad at the moment, but the team is still working on this and other items to get the application out to a wider audience.  And when I say the team I mean about 20 people still banging at this hard around the clock. 

So, who is going to be the first to suggest what should I write about?

November 14, 2007  |  Comments  |  Tweet  |  Posted in Web/Tech

Skribit Widget

If you want to see how the Skribit widget works mosey on over to Startup South where you can see the widget embedded in the right sidebar.

We made this widget because one of the biggest problems bloggers face is what should they write about?  Often times the best topics come from readers via email or in the comments section of the blog.  Skribit improves upon this by providing an easy way for bloggers to receive suggestions from their readers via a simple suggestion mechanism.   Once an idea has been submitted other readers can vote on suggested topics. This way a blogger already has an idea how much inherent interest there is in a certain topic before they write an article.

FoG uses TypePad advanced templates so it is going to take some minor coding to get it on this blog, but it is coming.  Let me know about your experience with Skribit.

November 12, 2007  |  Comments  |  Tweet  |  Posted in Web/Tech

Skribit

Skribit is the product of Atlanta Startup Weekend.  We “launched” at midnight and have already been TechCrunched and on Truemors.  While I wished we were a little further along from a product development point of view, any press is good press.

I led the effort to bring Startup Weekend to Atlanta and have been working on this pretty much non-stop since Friday at 6 pm.  Startup Weekend is a great event to build Atlanta’s entrepreneurial community and a great fun.  It was amazing to watch the leadership develop over the weekend and see some stars of the Atlanta web tech scene emerge.

To top it all off Skribit is a great concept that may have some legs.

  |  Comments  |  Tweet  |  Posted in Entrepreneurship, Startups

Shiny Quarter

Today Knology was the last of the stocks in my portfolio to report earnings.  Here is my quarterly stock update.  It’s a good one.

AAPL.  Blew right through the $160 target that I set in August and now sitting over $180.  50% appreciation in the past three months.  Given the weight in my portfolio, this explosion continues to drive overall portfolio performance growth.  Apple’s CPU traction remains strong.  With Leopard, the new iPods and recently announced MacBook updates I expect a very strong finish to the calendar year.  My advice is to buy on any weakness.

ELNK.  Rolla Huff did a fine job of cutting costs and got a good pop out of the stock.  I have yet to see any potential growth strategy.  I heard the word CLEC a lot on the earnings call.  CLECs are boring.  Most likely will sell off if it pops a little more but right now it is looking pretty flat.

JOE. Joe
continues fall from $41 to $32.  They swung from earnings of $6 million last year to a loss of $6.8 million this year.  Home sales are down a whopping 46%.  Gonna take the tax loss on this one.  Purchased some VMWare (VMW) based on the recent weakness due to misplaced concerns with Dell’s purchase of EqualLogic.

KNOL.  Knology
is up from $14 to $16 in the past three months.
They just announced a solid quarter from a revenue growth perspective and entered into an agreement to buy Graceba which will fuel future growth.  Holding.

NFLX.   Blockbuster pulling back on marketing and Movie Gallery filing chapter 11 results in strong subscriber growth at NetFlix.  So much for those competitive pressures that were dampening performance.  What looked like a mistake in Q2 is a winner in Q3.   Up 24% since May purchase.

SCUR. Secure Computing has been on a nice steady upward march.  Until the earnings call.  Management gave some misguided guidance.  Regardless, the stock has returned to the $10 level it was at before the big CipherTrust sell off.  I may regret this, but I intend to sell off my stake to make my first angel investment, a bit of an energy play.

Its been a great three months with the portfolio up 13.5%.  And while there are some unique events driving the number, Quicken claims my 12 month return is sitting at 347%.  And no, I did not miss a period in there.

November 8, 2007  |  Comments  |  Tweet  |  Posted in Stocks