NY Times: Only A Few Can Multitask
Foundry Group: Moves to Twitter Platform to Evaluate Deals? (April Fools?)
Professor Bob Langer MIT: Interview
Dave Broadwin: VC Termsheets
Hargreaves: Where Are NYC Startups and Who is Funding Them?
NY Times: Only A Few Can Multitask
Foundry Group: Moves to Twitter Platform to Evaluate Deals? (April Fools?)
Professor Bob Langer MIT: Interview
Dave Broadwin: VC Termsheets
Hargreaves: Where Are NYC Startups and Who is Funding Them?
“What has been will
be again, what has been done will be done again; there is nothing new under the
sun.”
Ecclesiastes 1:9
This is part of my Series on Venture Capital.
Despite the hyped meme people are putting out
there about the “venture model being broken”, I’m definitely of the school that
believes Venture Capital is merely going back to its roots. Smaller, smarter,
more agile, leaner, that’s all. Just look at the charts Kopelman’s been sharing
of late. If you ask me, this is all a very good thing.
Speaking of Kopelman, here’s a guy who, along with a few other smaller/high-volume funds is executing very effectively on this leaner VC model (on the east coast at least). I really do think his extremely effective special-forces model is part of the new wave we will be seeing a lot more of.
To give you a concrete example, this ostensibly “Philly-based” swat team
recently executed the equivalent of a pub crawl through all the NYC incubators
in a single day, all under the covering fire of a steady stream of tweets,
four-square yawps and various other forms of digital pitter-patter that announced their comings and goings. No doubt their approach is catching the attention of their brethren VC’s ensconced in more conventional settings and habits.
And let’s face it, who really needs an office in
this climate? This new breed of bad-ass-VC will meet you in cafes, at the Ace Hotel, in noisy
diners- they don’t care. Bring it on. Headquarters, what’s that? That’s silly to them. You go where the entrepreneurs are and you hang with them.
It’s actually been incredibly enjoyable to watch- and with the advent of widespread VC blogging, the Funded, the ubiquity of cloud computing, open source software, younger and younger entrepreneurs and hence much less funding needed to launch a web business- we are witnessing the opening-up of, accessibility of and democratization of the entire industry. And by the way, First Round is just one of an entirely new breed popping up all over the place which includes the Founder Collective, True Ventures, Andreessen/Horowitz and others.
Here’s my tongue-and-cheek take on what’s been happening
and what’s going to happen (on the east coast at least).
What’s been happening:
What’s going to happen:
PS: (Oh, and by the way, I’m talking about tech VC, not biotech VC. Commissioning the optimization of molecules and the like from reserved and stately offices supported by enormous amounts of capital is not going anywhere for a while IMHO.)
This is part of my Series on University Entrepreneurship.
I've written here about the magnificent tidal wave of university entrepreneurship I see cresting in this country. But those of us in NYC will have the distinct pleasure of watching it converge with red hot Silicon Alley's own wave in the form of the much awaited and upcoming NYC Startup Job Fair. It is to be held at AOL's NY headquarters on April 9 from 1-4pm. Big time congrats to the organizers for pulling this off!
So if you are a student or recent graduate of a NYC university trying to break into the world of start-ups, or if you are a start-up looking for some talented and enthusiastic university students, you should definitely register for this event ASAP as space is limited.
Sign-up here:
SAI “Do Startups Fare Best in Silicon Valley?”
David Hornik “The Fathers of the Venture Capital Industry”
WSJ “Israel Struggles to Evolve Into VC-Promised Land”
Entrepreneur “17 Companies We Love”
Fred Wilson “Chatroulette”
BusinessWeek “What Obama Said About Small Business"
Jim Flowers “The Century of the Entrepreneur”
WSJ “Venture Capital’s Most Trafficked Web-Sites”
WSJ “Entrepreneurs’ Most Common Mistakes When Pitching VCs”
Chris Dixon “The NY Tech Scene is Exploding”
Matt Blumberg “Innovating in NY”
I was speaking with Owen Davis last night and he mentioned that no one in the Columbia entrepreneurship community had yet applied for this new summer program. The deadline is approaching so if you didn't know about it yet, there's still time to throw your hat in the ring. Here are the details:
NYC Seed Announces SeedStart 2010 Summer Program-$20k for up to 10 startups for the summer
SeedStart will offer promising teams the chance to build a technology product and launch a company with the assistance of seed investment capital, mentorship and other resources. Companies will be selected through a competitive application process and each company will receive a $20,000 investment. Throughout the summer, companies will also receive mentorship from experienced New York City based venture capitalists and entrepreneurs, legal and business guidance, administrative help and technical assistance. At the end of the summer venture capitalists and angel investors will be invited to an Investor Day where each team will present their product and launch their company. SeedStart will run for 8 weeks beginning in June of 2010.
SeedStart is a joint effort among Contour Venture Partners, IA Ventures, NYC Seed, RRE Ventures and Polaris Venture Partners, and also includes Fish & Richardson, Manatt, Phelps & Phillips and Silicon Valley Bank. The program has begun accepting applications and teams of at least two founders can apply here:
http://www.nycseed.com/seedstart.html by February 28, 2010 to be considered.
For information, contact Owen Davis at owen@nycseed.com.
As 2010 approaches, a few wishes and thoughts come to
mind:
1) First, I want to thank you, the readers of this blog for all your encouragement, thoughtful comments and words of wisdom throughout the year. I wish you all much success and happiness in 2010 and look forward to our continuing dialogue.
2)
I also want to wish the entrepreneurs and investors
I work with on a daily basis all the best for the coming year. It is truly a
privilege to work with so many enthusiastic and dynamic individuals in a city with such a close-knit start-up community and so many great companies. The New York tech scene is on a huge roll. Let’s
continue to make it happen!
3)
2009 was certainly a tough year and the difficult
economic climate may well persist. The keys for fledgling start-up companies will no doubt be to
stay focused, flexible and ultra-determined. Stick to the basics of “getting
from zero-to-one” at all costs so as to survive and thrive. Surround yourself with high-quality missionaries
who are all about “making it happen” and run like Usain Bolt from everyone
else. In this environment there is literally no time for mercenaries,
negativity, complainers and/or bureaucrats any more. The stakes are simply too
high.
4)
Lastly, as good old Mark Suster says, JFDI and take the plunge!
1)
NY Times “Lessons From the War Over Skype”
2)
WSJ “Ron Conway Changes His Tune About the Big Apple”
3)
SAI “How to Bootstrap Your Way to Billions”
4)
Chris Dixon “How to select your angel investors”
5)
Scott Anthony “Why Great Innovators Spend Less Than Good Ones”