He talks about the VC industry and entrepreneurship.
May 15, 2010
May 4, 2010
March 30, 2010
Ten Golden Principles of Successful Web Apps
From Fred Wilson:
1. Speed 2. Instant Utility 3. Voice/Personality 4. Less is More 5. Programmable 6. Personal 7. RESTful (clean URLs for everything) 8. Discoverable (SEO) 9. Clean Look 10. Playful
The 10 Golden Principles of Successful Web Apps from Carsonified on Vimeo.
March 25, 2010
India Web Success Story
India, for all the talk of its technology power, is way behind in internet usage. Internet penetration in India is a mere 3%. It is an order of magnitude less than that of China which has 20% penetration. There are just two web companies that have gone public in the history. Imagine, just 2! Both with miniscule market caps. China boasts several much bigger successes that immediately come to my mind: Baidu, Tom Online, Alibaba, Tencent, Sina, Sohu. It is safe to say India’s internet potential is just that. Unrealized potential.
But there are examples of a few companies that show how the successful web companies inIndia may look like. One of the few successful categories in e-commerce is the online ticketing. One of the most popular e-commerce sites is the one run by Indian Railways, a government organization (go figure that!), that sells train tickets online. I have been a fan a small web company in India called RedBus which is expedia for bus tickets. Many people travel by bus in India and this startup solves a real problem. Sarah Lacy wrote a nice post on this company at Techcrunch.
Silicon Valley and India have a cozy relationship, but a big question has resulted in friction, failed companies and millions in losses: When will the Internet catch on in India in a big way?
A few companies have done well and a few more are coming up, slowly but surely. But there are hardly any true breakout hits.
RedBus is pretty close. It’s essentially an Expedia for bus tickets in India. It sells about 3,500 bus seats per day, is the fourth most-trafficked Web site in India and has at least tripled its revenues year-over-year. The company sells seats for roughly half the bus operators in India, and that’s saying something: This is an insanely fragmented market that had next to zero centralization just a few years ago. All of this has been built in three years on about $1 million in venture funding. (The company raised another $1.3 million in 2008, but it’s still in the bank. Investors include Helion, Inventus and Seedfund.)
Background for Americans: There are two kinds of buses in India—those that make stops and have ticket-takers on board and that go to one destination only and sell pre-paid tickets only. There are some 3,000 operators of the latter category and, before RedBus, there was no way to contact them directly. To get a bus ticket, you went to an agent. That agent only had inventory from a few bus lines. To book the ticket, he or she would call one person who was in charge of booking every seat on that particular route. There was a long wait time, and frequently the routes the agents knew about were sold out – meaning you had to change your travel plans, or find another agent who had different sources. Meanwhile there was no standardization on pricing and commissions. The agent simply wrote the cost on a piece of paper and if you wanted to ride, you paid it.
Now, RedBus has a central database that gets seats from half of India’s bus operators. It has done so well that it powers the bus ticket applications for most of India’s more general travel sites like MakeMyTrip.com. It also sells an OpenTable-like software-as-a-service product to help bus companies manage their own inventory and better integrate their inventory with RedBus. In terms of seats, it sells less than 1% of the 750,000 rides taken daily, but with several channels and few other easy options, there’s a ton of room to grow a big company.
Sama didn’t set out to build a company. I know that’s a cliché with startups these days, but it’s a rarity in Bangalore where the glamor of being a Web entrepreneur runs high and plenty of TechCrunch-reading kids save up money, quit for a year, try to start a company, and go back to a multinational if it doesn’t hit quickly. When RedBus’s mentor first suggested the company raise $1 million, Sama gasped. He hadn’t even thought in those amounts. His only immediate thought was: “If I had $1 million, I’d put it in the bank and make interest.”
It is a really an interesting read if you want to get an idea of enterpreneurship in India.
Here is a detailed story on the company which traces its beginnings, their struggles and how they solved those challenges.
Says Phani, “I knew there was a need and thought there was a solution, but I wasn’t sure how to make money out of it.” He continues, “At the time we were selected by TiE, there still were a lot of mixed opinions about what our identity should be. Some people thought we should operate a GDS (Global Distribution System) for bus operators, offering a transaction platform and making money by charging for each online transaction. Others said that if we did that, it would take a long time to recoup our investment because the operators weren’t yet technologically savvy enough for a GDS.”
TiE’s veteran advisors spurred the young engineers to resolve the problem by acting instead of relying too much on hypothetical analyses. Phani recounts, “Our mentors were of the opinion that we could start off if we could just solve the first obvious problem we saw, which was on the consumer side. We could launch a Web site and mimic the whole back end, even if it wasn’t automated at all. The first step was to get traction by adding value where that would be easiest. They told us just to go do that, gain recognition, and stand on our own as a business. Then we could move on to other things and worry about automating our operations. The TiE members really helped us take one option and pursue it relentlessly with more confidence.”
Because the bus operators were not computerized, redBus could not simply tap into their existing systems in order to put seats online. To get around this problem, Phani and his partners adopted an old practice that had long pre-dated computers: block booking. They asked bus operators to reserve some of their inventory until an hour before departure time, just as off-line travel agencies reserve a fraction of a hotel’s rooms in advance. That allowed redBus to offer seats from multiple operators without knowing in real time how full any given bus would be. It also insulated the bus operators from worrying about scaling up IT systems and servers to handle holiday peaks in online traffic.
However, this decision created a classic problem: which came first, the chicken or the egg? Phani and his partners were among the first to ask private operators to allocate seats to them in advance. Once redBus was established as a volume seller of tickets, more operators would be willing to set aside inventory for them. But unless operators could be persuaded to do that, how could the venture build volume?
The only way to overcome this hurdle was through sheer effort and determination. redBus launched its service August 18, 2006 with just one operator on board. Recalls Phani, “I told the operator that we were a group of well-educated entrepreneurs who were experimenting in order to improve the ticketing experience for customers. I said I knew it would work, and asked if he would help us. He said that he would give me one week to show progress or forget it. I knew that during that one week we couldn’t sell tickets on the Internet, since that was too short a time period for a new medium. So I went to bus boarding points in Bangalore, told everyone our story, gave people my card, and said ‘Call me and I’ll get you a seat.’ That’s how we did marketing for the first two months: going to bus stops, giving out cards, and telling people one at a time who we were. Most of the customers pitied us; they figured that a founder was telling them this story, so why not give it a try? A lot of people in the IT sector were able to relate to us.”
March 8, 2010
Pandora Story
Building startups takes a lot of patience and preseverence. There may be times when a startup comes perilously close to death. But an entrepreneur’s belief and fight can singlehandedly will the company to success (providing the company’s vision has merit which is not always clear, but that’s another story).
Pandora, a online music startup is a case in point. NYTimes has a fascinating story on Pandora’s near death experiences and its eventual success.
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OAKLAND, Calif. — Tim Westergren recently sat in a Las Vegas penthouse suite, a glass of red wine in one hand and a truffle-infused Kobe beef burger in the other, courtesy of the investment bankers who were throwing a party to court him.
It was a surreal moment for Mr. Westergren, who founded Pandora, the Internet radio station. For most of its 10 years, it has been on the verge of death, struggling to find investors and battling record labels over royalties.
Had Pandora died, it would have joined myriad music start-ups in the tech company graveyard, like SpiralFrog and the original Napster. Instead, with a successful iPhone app fueling interest, Pandora is attracting attention from investment bankers who think it could go public, the pinnacle of success for a start-up.
Pandora’s 48 million users tune in an average 11.6 hours a month. That could increase as Pandora strikes deals with the makers of cars, televisions and stereos that could one day, Pandora hopes, make it as ubiquitous as AM/FM radio.
“We were in a pretty deep dark hole for a long time,” said Mr. Westergren, who is now the company’s chief strategy officer.. “But now it’s a pretty out-of-body experience.”
At the end of 2009, Pandora reported its first profitable quarter and $50 million in annual revenue — mostly from ads and the rest from subscriptions and payments from iTunes and Amazon.com when people buy music. Revenue will probably be $100 million this year, said Ralph Schackart, a digital media analyst at William Blair.
Pandora’s success can be credited to old-fashioned perseverance, its ability to harness intense loyalty from users and a willingness to shift directions — from business to consumer, from subscription to free, from computer to mobile — when its fortunes flagged.
February 16, 2010
The magic of viral growth
Hot mail discovered it. Paypal has it. Facebook has it. Twitter has it. It is the magic of viral growth. You all know what it means. Your customers are your best marketers. If your product usage invloves users bringing in more new users, it can give you exponential growth (if each user brings in 2 or more users).
Seth godin says viral growth trumps lots of faux followers. This is a great insight if understood properly can improve the effectivenss of your marketing.
Many brands and idea promoters are in a hurry to rack up as many Facebook fans and Twitter followers as they possibly can. Hundreds of thousands if possible.
A lot of these fans and followers are faux. Sunny day friends. In one experiment I did, 200,000 followers led to 25 clickthroughs. Ouch.
Check out the graph on the left. The curves represent different ideas and different starting points. If you start with 10,000 fans and have an idea that on average nets .8 new people per generation, that means that 10,000 people will pass it on to 8000 people, and then 6400 people, etc. That’s yellow on the graph. Pretty soon, it dies out.
On the other hand, if you start with 100 people (99% less!) and the idea is twice as good (1.5 net passalong) it doesn’t take long before you overtake the other plan. (the green). That’s not even including the compounding of new people getting you people.
But wait! If your idea is just a little more viral, a 1.7 passalong, wow, huge results. Infinity, here we come. That’s the purple (of course.)
A slightly better idea defeats a much bigger but disconnected user base every time.
The lesson: spend your time coming up with better ideas, not with more (faux) followers.
February 14, 2010
Chartroulette founder is a rock star
I love the story of Chartroulette. It is the classic story of a teenager doing something for fun to see it become a web sensation. It reminds of napster (without the copyright issues) and facebook. It has other issues such as profanity and vulgarity everywhere (so if can be ofensive to most people). But the concept is intriguing (and a subset of its current community, not all of it).
Fre Wilson, one of the noted tech VCs, wants to invite him to NYC.
Here are some interesting facts from the NY Times piece:
- The founder, Andrey Ternovskiy, is a 17 year old high school student who lives in Moscow
- He created the site for “fun” and had no “business goals” for it
- It was inspired by his extensive use of Skype web chat with his friends
- It spread entirely by word of mouth
- He’s had to rewrite the code several times in order to allow it to scale
- His relatives invested some “funds” so he could buy more servers
- Right now, he’s doing it all himself
- Chatroulette runs on seven servers in Frankfurt, Germany
- He is planning to add more servers in new geographic locations
- Andrey has never been to the USA but would love to visit
- He has ideas for more “weird in a good sense” features
- He’s not sure what Chatroulette is any more
- He thinks it would be best to “found Chatroulette” as a US-based company
I think we’ll reach out to Andrey and offer him a visit to NYC. I’m still not sure if this is something we should invest it, but I’d sure like to meet this guy. He reminds me of many great young entrepreneurs we’ve worked with and his story sounds so familiar.
I think it would be a great experience for Andrey to get exposed to the US tech scene. But I hope he doesn’t get too comericalized and lose the curoisty and innocence. People love stories like this and it is only natural to hang out with sensations. I just hope that Andrey keeps his eyes on the ball. He seems like a mature teenager and reminds me of Mark Zuckerberg. I wish him the same success as Mark.
One of the commenters on Fred’s blog, Aviah Lor, says it well.
but he shouldn’t be institutionalized (yet). keep the artist side.
Amen.
February 13, 2010
Chatroulette
Andrey Ternovskiy, a 17 year old school kid from moscow, started a fast growing video site called Chartroulette. It is a real-time p2p video site that connects people over their webcam. It has been a mystery as to who is behind the site until today. This is a perfect example of the power and beauty of viral distribution pioneered by Hotmail. This is how facebook and twitter became popular. If you have products that has viral loops as integral part of the service (not tacked on as an after thought), then you have a good chance to grow exponentially wothout any marketing.

The site, which gets about 20,000 users on a typical night, generates one-on-one Webcam connections between you and another randomly chosen user. The results are occasionally serendipitous, putting you face to face with an interesting person from another corner of the planet. More often though, the site is reminiscent of those old anything-goes AOL chat rooms, only with video. Let’s put it this way: Parents, keep your children far, far away. The site was well described in a New York magazine article recently and, oddly enough, was featured on “Good Morning America” on Saturday.
The lingering mystery, though, was who was behind the site. The question was answered on Saturday when Andrey Ternovskiy responded to the questions we sent to an e-mail address on Chatroulette. Mr. Ternovskiy said he was a 17-year-old high school student in Moscow.
“I was not sure whether I should tell the world who I am mainly because of the fact that I am under age. Now I think that it would be better to reveal myself,” Mr. Ternovskiy wrote.
Here are his e-mailed responses, slightly edited and condensed:
I created this project for fun. Initially, I had no business goals with it. I created this project recently. I was and still am a teenager myself, that is why I had a certain feeling of what other teenagers would want to see on the Internet. I myself enjoyed talking to friends with Skype using a microphone and webcam. But we got tired of talking to each other eventually. So I decided to create a little site for me and my friends where we could connect randomly with other people.
It wasn’t so easy to create it for me, but I have been coding since 11 (thanks to my father who introduced me to the Internet early – most of my knowledge comes from it).
I didn’t advertise my site or post it anywhere, but somehow, people started to talk to each other about the site. And the word started to spread. That’s how the simultaneous user count grew from 10 to 50, then from 50 to 100 and so on. Each time the user count grew, I had to rewrite my code completely, because my software and hardware couldn’t handle it all. I never thought that handling the heavy user load would be the most difficult part of my project.
As the user base grew, bandwidth and hosting bills started to show bigger sums. I am glad that my relatives helped me with it by ‘investing’ some money in my idea.
It wasn’t very much money, so I couldn’t just buy new servers just like that, I had to optimize my code as much as possible instead. I must say that lots of people have helped and still are helping me when I have questions about coding. I am very thankful to them. I still code everything myself, though. I’d love to share work with someone else, but I am not in the USA, and most of the interested people are located far away from me, because I live in Moscow. So I still have to do all the things myself. But I am not worried.
I enjoy what I do. It is like a game for me. I discover new things and solve interesting problems.
I am aware that Chatroulette is popular in USA. It is interesting, but I have never been to the USA myself. Yet most of my site users come from it. I would love to visit the United States.
I actually think that it would be best to found Chatroulette as a U.S.-based company. But this is just an idea.
I have always wanted Chatroulette to be an international thing. That’s why I chose Germany for hosting, because it is in the middle between Russia and U.S.A. It is also at the center of various backbone European networks. I think this is a good place for hosting a project which connects people around the world with each other.
However, I am planning to get other servers in other countries soon. With it I will add more interesting and “weird” (in a good sense) features which will make my site even more entertaining.
What is currently stopping me from adding other features which have been suggested by many and have been in my mind is that I am not even sure what Chatroulette is now.
Everyone finds his own way of using the site. Some think it is a game, others think it is a whole unknown world, others think it is a dating service.
January 1, 2010
Mobile Commerce
Om Malik shares his thoughts and ideas on iphone apps transforming e-commerce.

The Mophie Credit Card Reader
Jack Dorsey’s Square, Incase, Verifone and now Mophie — these companies’ credit card readers are turning the iPhone/iPod touch platform into an e-commerce engine.
Mophie, a Los Angeles-based company that makes accessories for the iPod/iPhone devices will release a credit card reader at CES in January 2010. The device is going to have a reader and a software that would allow small businesses to take credit cards. No more details are available just yet.
I, for one, would like to see Mophie or one of these other startups come up with a way for me to scan my own credit card to enter it into an app or web site. Even better, I’d love it if they married their hardware with the functionality of something like 1Password. In doing so, they could enable e-commerce via the iPhone apps. Think of it as iEconomy.
By focusing on the consumers, these companies can also overcome two things: somewhat finite number of likely small business customers and get scale, which would allow them to get cheaper. And this would also help them overcome the slower adoption rates normally encountered when chasing the small business market. In fact, companies such as Visa, MasterCard and large banks should be trying hard to figure out how they can put these kind of readers in the hands of both merchants and consumers, thus shifting even more transactions into the electronic realm.
OK, you can see I am just way too excited about this stuff. Why not? I am encouraged to see such experimentation. It ties in with my big belief: the marriage of computing and connectivity without the shackles of being tethered to a location is the the biggest disruptive force of our times, and it will redefine business models for decades.
Bringing the ability to accept electronic payments using your mobile phone is a powerful concept. It siginifcantly reduces the friction of conducting digital commerce.
December 22, 2009
Secret History of Silicon Valley
as told by Steve Blank, a great story teller. This is long video so watch at your leisure.
