I can't really argue with your logic here. Yes, ideally you want to do something you are passionate about.
Now, to be fair, that isn't always the case. I have a small business running almost in auto-pilot that is generating probably $10K a year. Not a ton of money. At the same time, it requires almost no attention. I am not passionate about it. It isn't a scalable business. With a lot of effort it might generate $20K, tops.
That said, yes, if something is going to scale and grow beyond a hobby business you really have to want to be in it because business is hard work. For me it is easy to become passionate about something if it starts making money. It might not be the love of my life, but I enjoy making money. I hope that's not a bad word on HN.
- Do nothing right now
- Elections and voting will never go away
- Keep thinking and look for other opportunities to build a
product or brand around the domain
- Less work
- Far less money than a successful site could generate
- Currently working on other products, including:
- Redoing an existing mobile app to start monetizing
- Planning another mobile app with a partner
- Chipping away at two web projects
- Only the right person or organization is going to put the right
number on the table not to make me feel like a moron after
selling it. My guess is that this is somewhat unlikely to
happen but you never know.
[4] A platform for voting and survey taking online
- Not necessarily limited to politics
- Site provides the tools to organize voting for whatever purpose
- Embeddable voting forms
- Possibly self-hosted solutions
- Free and a couple, or more, paid tiers
- Mobil integration
- Aimed at C2B, clubs and any instance of needing to get people
to vote or opine on something
- Provide analytics, etc.
- Not a new idea; many competitors
- The engineer in me likes this far more than any of the above
- Monetization is based on actually selling a product
- Could also have ad-based revenue in the free tier
- If approach is unique, intelligent and hits a nerve the service
could be an attractive acquisition target
[3] Build something that Democrats or Republicans can use
- Make it a useful get-out-the-vote tool for young people
- Aim squarely at providing it as a service to one of the parties
- Perhaps even look at selling the site to on of them
- It still requires articles and becoming an educator of sorts
- Lightweight content that is easy to digest by a younger audience
- Not much effort in terms of immediate monetization
- Focus should be on content and tools that bring that younger
audience to the table
- Not an easy task
- Two major election events coming up in 2014 and 2016. These
will be highly contested and are potential opportunities for
a brand like "ClickTheVote" to rise to the surface.
- People getting more of their news and info online. With elections
taking place constantly a brand like "ClickTheVote" could be
positioned to be the party-independent go-to resource for
relevant information
- Probably easier to liquidate than [1] and [2] but just as hard to
build and position
[2] Political blog, again aimed at younger audience
- Also easy to setup: Wordpress
- Seeding with posts happens more organically than forum
because one or two people write
- Probably takes just as long as [1] to build an audience
- No need to depend on members for content, which can be
a big advantage
- Possibly better SEO ranking due to issues with user generated
content sites and how search engines treat them
- The easiest ways to gain traction are the extremes:
- Be the voice of reason: analytical, research and fact based
- Be an asshole at one or another extreme of any issue
(Howard Stern "shock jock")
- Far more people will levitate towards extreme views than
sit there and read through well reasoned arguments backed
with facts, calculations, models, etc.
- Have to be comfortable with this reality and be able to
consistently be that persona under a pseudonym
- Still competing with biggies
- Monetization: AdSense, affiliate, etc.
- Maybe even crazy ebooks
- Not an appealing idea intellectually speaking but have to
recognize that in today's political climate the extremes
probably convert better than a reasoned middle ground
- Not sure about liquidation. Could be a flipper site.
[1] Political discussion forum aimed at a younger audience
- Relatively easy to setup. vBulletin or phpBB would do.
- Needs seeding with lots of posts in order to even begin to pull
real people in.
- Fighting spam posts is a daily reality.
- Site depends on converting enough eyeballs into posters
(not just lurkers) in order to gain position and value
- Monetization through AdSense
- If it gets real traffic you can sell advertising space directly
- Some affiliate potential
- Liquidation is far more likely to take the form of selling
through a site flipping service
Thanks for the recommendation. If I could use a bad analogy I'd compare the two world, setting up servers and engineering software to selling marble and being a sculpture.
Part of what drives those of us who write code is that we use that code as a creative outlet. I'll generally extend that to the process of designing products, be it hardware or software. Mechanical design isn't about setting up the CNC machine but rather about the creativity and the designer's expression of interesting ideas. I've walked away from designing sheet metal parts with a huge sense of, yes, artistic and creative accomplishment. Designing something that is beautiful and well done in your eyes are the highs that drive some of us. Software or electrical engineering have similar embodiments of the same concept.
I can do Linux at a reasonable level and know most of the tools you listed, some superficially and others reasonably well. However, setting up servers isn't something that appeals to me as an occupation. At some level it would be dishonest to go work for someone knowing that I would not bring a degree of passion to the job. As an entrepreneur I would feel cheated if an employee took a job with me just to get by and not to knock it out of the park. There's a huge difference between a business where everyone is really engaged and one where nearly everyone thinks "it's just a job". Perhaps the canonical example of this is the contrast between a rocking startup and a large, stratified and somewhat stagnant company with tens of thousands of employees. There's a huge difference between what both of those can accomplish given the same time and resources.
I am not diminishing what you do. You seem to be passionate about supporting servers and that's fantastic. Those of us who prefer to create software products need people who can provide us with solid systems on which our software can run reliably and efficiently.
Cash is like the blood running through the veins of a venture. You need it to survive. You also need it to walk and you need more of it to run. There are web businesses that can certainly be entirely bootstrapped, sometimes by a single coder/designer/everything.
On the other hand, most businesses that scale need more people and more resources and more of everything. This is where the "it's just a server in a rack" model breaks down quickly. Scaling means, at the very least, hiring people and providing them with all of the resources they'll need to do their work. You could very easily be at a $50K per month burn rate very quickly after launch, say, thee months. That doesn't account for legal fees and other expenses that might not be obvious on first inspection.
If you have the money and the ability to scale a business and are willing to risk it all, by all means, do it. You don't need external money for this.
Most of the young folks who seem to make-up the HN audience there are lacking three things: money, experience and the business network. All three of these are critical when you need to press on the accelerator and go. Learning while doing is possible but far less than ideal. If a VC can offer smart money this is probably the best bet for young HN'ers. In this context "smart money" means that a VC makes an investment and also contributes experience, guidance and contacts to the process. This can often mean the difference between success and failure.
In many ways this concept of a good vs. a bad idea has to be qualified with a set of variables. Off the top of my head:
Startup cost
Market
Competition
Barrier to entry
Cost of sales
Capital intensity
Regulatory landscape
Technology risk
Intellectual property ownership
Intellectual property minefield
Domain expertise
Funding
Business operating expertise
Marketing expertise
Local labor requirements
I could go on and I could expand on all of the above but that's besides the point which is that a business that isn't a hobby and can scale is far more than a server in a rack.
You seem to be explaining the common theme that
(1) an entrepreneur has some work done that is
sufficiently promising as the beginning of a
big, successful business and (2) needs equity
funding to scale quickly.
My response: So, when a Web site got popular
and a good Sun computer as a Web server cost
$200,000, which had to be paid long before the
entrepreneur could have received the checks from
the advertisers, then equity funding was needed
for the servers, room to put them in, HVAC for
the room, high speed Internet connections, etc.
Okay, but now a much more powerful server is
available for $1500 in parts and can be plugged
together in a day the first time and
an hour or so for similar servers after that.
For the room, use a basement or spare room
in a house. For HVAC, get a window
unit AC.
For the Internet connection,
15 Mbps upload bandwidth appears to be common
in residences, and that is plenty for enough
revenue for much more.
Growing quickly? Why do that? There are some
cases, e.g., to exploit a fad, but it's not so
clear just why it is necessary.
Cash? Right, it's crucial, but getting that
first 8 core, $1500 server live with 15 Mbps
upload bandwidth doesn't take much cash.
Then if the project is good, that first server
should throw off enough cash for growth to
2, 4, 8, 16 servers, which, if kept busy
should throw off enough cash to make a common
Series A look a bit silly.
Growth in head count? Sure, but that's for
later. For a good project, in the first year
of doing well the project should have put
enough cash in the bank to start hiring,
slowly.
For each of the points you mentioned that
need cash and, thus, perhaps equity funding,
there are plenty of example projects. And
generally your points hold for the 'usual'
projects or 'most' projects. But as
entrepreneurs, VCs, and HN readers all
have learned, projects with good VC funding
are like hen's teeth, in a recent comment
by A15H, only about 15 such projects a year.
So, instead of 'most' or 'usual', we have to
be assuming 'exceptional'. Essentially
everything about a successful information
technology (IT) project is 'exceptional'.
So, I was trying to describe some of what
an exceptional project could do. Net, net,
from all I can see the VCs want to fund
only projects that don't need the money.
E.g., one well known Silicon Valley
VC firm wrote me that they want "100,000
uniques" before writing a check. Okay,
let's see: 100,000 unique users of
a Web site in a month might mean
300,000 users with, say, an average of
4 visits a month. Suppose each visit
sees 8 Web pages with 4 ads per page.
Assume get paid $2 per 1000 ads displayed.
Then the monthly revenue would be
300,000 * 4 * 8 * 4 * 2 / 1000 = 76,800
dollars. One guy. He's now awash in
free cash unless he has 50 Lamborghini
cars, a 200' yacht, and a Gulfstream
G650. Instead, if his car is old and
rusty, then he's in line for a new
SUV and a new Corvette. A few more
months, especially if he is seeing
significant revenue growth, and he
can be hiring.
Here is a 'sanity check': I know; I know;
IT startups are the big, hot, new things.
Right. But they didn't invent either
sex or business. Instead, the US is just
awash, coast to coast, village to big city,
in sole proprietorships and family businesses.
When one of those gets to $76,800 a month
in revenue, with only one or a few workers,
they are not out looking for
equity funding. Not a chance.
Such busiesses? Actually, can buy a house
and support a family just being an electrician.
When I needed one on a Thursday, I was up all
night getting names and phone numbers and calling,
trying to get the work done on Friday instead
of Monday. I left about a dozen messages.
Only one called back, near dawn, because
he was on his way to his Friday morning golf
game, but he gave me a name I'd not found.
That name came and did well. Look, those guys
are working 4 day weeks, don't bother with
publicity, and still are being bread winners.
E.g., when I was a B-school prof, one of my
students had a good career going managing
Wendy's -- so, right, you can guess the
B-school. He explained some of how to
do well running a Wendy's: Have the staffing
meet the demand, not too much (waste money)
and not too little (lose business). To do this
well,
have to watch the weather hourly and watch for
special events, say, B-ball games, daily. He
said the difference is about $200,000 a year
in the pre-tax bottom line, at one Wendy's.
So, a guy who is running 5 Wendy's can bring
in an extra $1,000,000 a year pre-tax just
from careful staffing. He's not interested in
equity funding. Instead, banks are perfectly
willing to loan him money for new restaurants.
In what little time I spent in yacht clubs,
I saw people in rental property, several
retail dry cleaning shops, independent
insurance, etc., but I never saw anyone
in IT with equity funding!
Bringing up a Web site will make
any auto body repair guy, auto
repair guy, pizza shop owner,
coin laundry guy, etc. highly
jealous because that $1500
server is chump change compared
with the equipment they need to
be ready to serve their first
customer. Heck, on my street,
the guys mowing the grass arrive
in a truck with a trailer with
their gas powered mowers --
truck maybe $40 K, trailer maybe
$10 K, and mowers maybe $15 K each.
Gee, for just one of their mowers
can buy 10 of those 8 core
servers at $1500 each.
It is looking to me that bringing
up a Web site that runs ads
is a much nicer business than
nearly any of the millions of
successful small businesses in the
US. Yes, the Web site needs traffic,
and if it is to be really successful,
say, $1+ billion market cap,
some careful thinking and/or a lot of
luck. I do suspect that somehow the
guys mowing grass, and speaking poor
English, are getting by without
a lot of legal expenses! If they
can, so should a guy running a
Web site.
What I'm describing, has it been
done? One example is the Canadian
match making site Plenty of Fish.
For some years it was one guy,
2-3 old Dell servers, ads just
via Google, and $10 million a
year in revenue.
For one more, when my cable TV
and ISP guys were last at my house,
they looked at my software and
mentioned that they know of another
customer who bought three houses
in a row. Why? Just to get the
residential price for their upload bandwidth for
their Web site.
For now, I'm glad I'm an entrepreneur
and not a VC: I get to design my
project just from a clean sheet of paper
while a VC is essentially forced to
wait for something good to arrive in
his e-mail inbox. Yes VCs like to
try to map out the promising 'spaces'
for the future, but to me that is
a form of intellectual self-abuse.
And nearly no VCs have backgrounds
that are exceptionally good
as a foundation for
picking and executing a good project.
It's true that the VCs can't evaluate
my project, and that's beginning to
look like good news; that is, the
entrepreneurs the VCs fund couldn't
understand or compete with my project
either.
I'm failing to see much of a future
for US IT VCs: Computers are too
cheap, and the VCs are insisting
on buying a ticket on the planes
after they have already left the ground.
Besides, as in a Fred Wilson post
at his AVC.com a year or so ago,
on average US IT VC returns over
the past 10 years suck.
Well, I think we can agree on some points. There are tons of web businesses that can be started and run with $100 per month...you don't even need to buy the hardware. All you need is a few Linode's and you are good to go.
At the same time, there are web businesses that need cash, people and resources. VC's can be a good match for that type of business.
The other variable is time to market. This is something I did not fully appreciate when I was younger. There are lots of cases where time to market can make or break a business. This is yet another variable or qualifier on the concept of good vs. bad ideas. An otherwise good idea can be rendered bad simply because of an inability to get to market fast enough. Often times this is a matter of the money necessary to bring to bare the resources necessary to accelerate execution.
As is often the case, there are tons of ways to approach a problem.
Some of my arithmetic is off; I typed
too fast, and it's too late to edit now.
But broadly the lesson remains: 100,000
uniques can yield enough revenue so that
a one person company will be comfortable
financially, i.e., enough to pay the
rent, buy groceries, take a pretty
girl to a movie, and have cash enough for more
servers, and if those servers stay busy,
then he is on his way to more servers and
revenue and, then, hiring.
I, too, did mention that there are cases where
have to be in a hurry so that then some equity
funding could be crucial.
For the young, inexperienced readers of HN,
I'm sorry: HN is helping them get educated,
and there is a lot on the Internet, e.g.,
at Fred Wilson's AVC.com. But help for the
young or not, the projects VCs are interested
in are exceptional which, we have to expect,
filters out a lot of people for various reasons.
Tough to make a $1 billion; the economy is
not big enough for everyone to make $1 billion.
For being slow to market, my approach is to have
done some original research that few others will
want or be able to do, and until I am successful
nearly no one will try to do. Then if I am
successful, they will be too late.
But I've
had a long time, e.g., mud wrestling with
Microsoft's software, learning that VCs
don't look at projects anything like I do,
etc., without any significant progress by
competition.
A common claim is that any idea
entrepreneur A thinks of some entrepreneur
B thought of before. Of course, this is silly
because among all people who thought of
the idea, there has to be a first person
and, then, for that first person there wasn't anyone before. Again,
that first person is exceptional, as is usually
necessary to make $1 billion.
In picking projects, I would recommend
picking one where can do some original
research that few in IT are able to do
and have that research be an 'unfair'
advantage and a technological barrier
to entry.
Of the "tons of ways to approach a problem",
I would urge others to pick some ways
that help make the path to success easier.
E.g., now and for a few years, exploit
an 8 core server for $1500. E.g., if
have to be in a mad rush to get to market,
then pick another project. If have much
doubt about 'product-market fit', then
pick a project that right from the beginning
has very little such doubt, e.g., like
a safe, effective, cheap one pill cure for
any cancer. If need a big team long before
revenue enough to pay them, then pick
another project. My project, about to
have all the software needed to go live,
has several simple Web pages, two
more complicated ones, and
two internal server programs with a total
of 24,361 source code lines and
6,615 source code statements.
Not a lot of code. There is a little
more code that runs maybe once a
day in 'batch'. So, it's a one person
project.
There is an old piece of advice that
a key to success in research is
good project selection -- similarly
for entrepreneurship.
Money comes with side effects and it also comes in various grades. At the extremes you'll find smart money and dumb money. The latter is the most dangerous.
Now, to be fair, that isn't always the case. I have a small business running almost in auto-pilot that is generating probably $10K a year. Not a ton of money. At the same time, it requires almost no attention. I am not passionate about it. It isn't a scalable business. With a lot of effort it might generate $20K, tops.
That said, yes, if something is going to scale and grow beyond a hobby business you really have to want to be in it because business is hard work. For me it is easy to become passionate about something if it starts making money. It might not be the love of my life, but I enjoy making money. I hope that's not a bad word on HN.