I was on a conference call today with the guys from BeanSprout during their partner showcase. Every month, they ask 5 companies to pitch via webcast with the goal of helping companies source and sign more partnership by circumventing the normal cold call approach. This is a really great idea, and they are executing well. More on them later…
One of the companies pitching today was ImSMB which is does “websites, hosting, and internet marketing for small business.” They have a really cool feature which is effectively a drag and drop iPhone App creator. Once you create the app, you can list it in the Apple app store and get analytics too. What a great idea. The cost is ~$400 for the basic version, and is a great way for a small business to get in the game. I’d love to try it out, but the $400 is not something I want to spend right now. Hoping someone tries it and gives me feedback.
Starting a company has its share of unanticipated costs that can significantly drive up the investment required to get to market. No matter how good you are at projections there are bound to be a host of options to choose from to make the product or experience better. At Let’s Gift It, we operate in line with 37 Signals approach beautifully articulated in their e-book Getting Real.
Before launch, we wanted to include some sort of audio/visual representation of who we were, what the app does, and how our customers can use it. I turned to Google to benchmark time and cost of producing a product demonstration. Thousands of dollars and tens of hours was not a commitment we were willing to make. There are far better uses of time and money, in our opinion, at this stage.
So…what did we do? We did what I think any young, scrappy, hustling company would do. We deferred to the free (even though its not free anymore at $5/publish) option of creating a Minimum Viable Video (MVV) by producing our own ‘Office Group Gift’ example at Xtranormal.
I love to fish. My friend and former colleague at Right Media, Tom Swenson, sent me the first Xtranormal video I ever saw. A five minute, beautifully scripted plea/explanation from husband to wife about the benefits of following the Striped Bass migration from Maine to North Carolina in pursuit of the elusive 50 pounder can be found here. I was hooked (literally).
We decided to use Xtranormal to create our version of the product overview which fit nicely on our then ‘under construction’ How It Works page. Sure, we will eventually spend more time on a professionally voiced over flash, screen-capture or animated version, but that is not necessary at this point. We did what any good startup should do:
1. Identify what you need
2. Identify cost/time vs. benefit
3. Strip out what you don’t really need
4. Find a comparable, cheaper solution
5. Implement
6. Get back to work
I never though buying a new printer for my home office could be so much work. I started this morning at 7:30 crawling through the search engine results looking for a good printer. I made my way for CNET where I was greeted by 4/5 stars given by the CNET Reviewers and 2/5 stars given by other people. What does this mean? Are the CNET reviewers paid for a favorable review? Are there lots of trolls and saboteurs trying to damage the reputation and score of a competitors printer?
I learned a few things today that I have never had to think about before becoming an entrepreneur. Why? Because at all of my previous companies, some entrepreneur had already thought through these decisions. Today was like earning a boy scout badge for office equipment buying. (Features x Price)/Time was the formula for the morning. How to maximize features and value while spending as little time possible to acquire the optimal business printer.
I need print, scan, fax. I want copy, an automatic document feeder (just learned this term), laser vs. cartridge (Im frugal), and wireless. I don’t want a big, slow, ink guzzling piece of plastic that will require me to go all “Office Space” on.
Start-ups are always short on time. Bootstrappers are even more pressed to maximize time as a day spent building a tool, looking for a tool thats been built, or trying to find a workaround is one more day of revenue delay.
The guys at Songkick have compiled an awesome list of tech tools, most of which have been developed by other startups. If you have been in business for more than a week, and already use many of these tools, pat yourself on the back and get back to work. If you haven’t started using tools like BaseCamp, OpenX, Firebug, DropBox, or Bugzilla – it’s not to late.
Solvate is an e-commerce platform that contracts top independent professionals in the country and makes them readily available to work on an hourly basis for small businesses and startups. With on demand access to world class talent, small businesses can operate like world class institutions.
Solvate is insourcing for companies. Most clients find us because they’re already connected to Solvate talent or clients and get referred to us when they’re out looking for a “good so and so”. Solvate matches you with Talent recommended by your network – and ours – to work on demand.
Every web designer and developer should have a good and reliable wireframe (mockup or prototype) tool at there disposal. The importance of such a tool differentiates amongst web designers and developers, some use them, some don’t. Personally, I use them. It is in this initial stage of development that makes web design enjoyable, the coming together of the clients needs and your own creative ideas onto a blank canvas, allowing you to plan effectively the visual arrangement of the sites content.
I have taken a hiatus from blogging for quite some time during my last/current role at Yahoo! which had me on the road overseas (non-US) for two years. Micrblogging also wasn’t the best option as they paid my phone bills and I was compelled to not rack up $1,000+ bills to quench my twitter habit.
I still have a lot to learn. When you are establishing a net presence, its best advised to have a real profile picture. A lot of my pictures are just too damn big and exceed file size. I found a cool, FREE site called Picnik that allows you to edit photos quickly. It looks to be a very powerful site that I still need to kick the tires on, and its the best I’ve found for editing pics.