Hello, world

Welcome to my 2008 blog! I'm trying to consolidate my Web life by aggregating the random stuff that I find. Rather than locking my old friends, new friends and colleagues into external sites, I'd rather do everything here.

There is no single focus or target niche, just random Web droppings that I find personal, useful and/or entertaining - usually art, code, maps, media or action sports. With a short attention span and an affinity for instant gratification, who knows where this is going.

Ride Snowboards

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Full Tilt Boots

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Ridertech TV iPhone

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Ridertech iPhone

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Snow Reports in Facebook

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K2 Sports (Seattle)

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Ridertech in Facebook

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NBA Finals Game in Facebook

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Fantasy Moguls in Facebook

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Fantasy Moguls

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Black Box Distribution

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Alpinestars Inc.

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Bittersweet by Ze Frank

As promised, the show with zefrank has reached its first year and will expire on March 17th. To start off his last week, Ze Frank shares his views on creativity and confidence.

20 Questions for Startup Success

Norm Meyrowitz 20 Questions for Startup SuccessUWTV just aired 20 Questions for Startup Success, which was a guest lecture by Norm Meyrowitz, the former President of Macromedia (1993-2004).

Watch on UWTV
(Runtime: 00:56:22)

  1. What problem does this product solve?
  2. How does the product solve that problem?
  3. Who are the end users of the product?
    Is there a large addressable market of actual users?
  4. Who is your revenue-supplying customer?
    Are there enough of these paying customers to make a huge business?
  5. Does the product solve a problem that end-users/revenue supplying customers actually have?

    Side note, be aware of fads such as social networking and the long tail.

  6. Are you sure it is a product and not just a "feature"?
  7. Does your stuff easily fit into the way that people already work?
    Or are you relying too much on people changing the way they work because your stuff is so great?
  8. Are you too involved in HOW you are building your product rather than WHAT you are building?
  9. Who are the potential partners? Who are the required partners?
  10. What is the go-to-market strategy?
  11. What is your sustainable competitive advantage?
  12. Do you have a time-to-market/first mover advantage?
    Are you ahead of the pack and can you stay there? Are you too early?

    "The law of increasing returns" aka exponential growth or network effect.

  13. Can you be number 1 or number 2 in this space? Who is the competition?
    "Be ready to compete with people who are better than you."
  14. Is there a team formed/identitifed with a record of successful ventures?
    Have they done something like this before?
  15. Is there a "soul" of the team that knows where this product AND business is going for the next few years?
  16. Is anyone on the team insane? Are the members of the team totally passionate & aligned on this business?
  17. Are there product/technology/operations barriers to sucess?
    If yes, can they be overcome?
  18. Are there marketing/sales barriers to success?
    If yes, can they be overcome?
  19. Are there legal barriers to success? If yes, can they be overcome?
  20. Is there an exit strategy? (IPO or enough possible acquisition candidates to make acquisition a slam dunk)

Conclustion
If you want to build the next Amazon.com, don't be in denial.
Know the answers to these questions.
FOCUS!

For more UWTV, search by subject.


Copyright © Matt Savarino. Some rights reserved.
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