Archive | Leaders

10 lessons for tech startups

Justin Spratt

Having been involved in a number of web and tech startups from Vottle.com to a VoIP mobile startup under the auspices of Internet Solutions’ ISLabs, I have been lucky enough to have worked with some very bright entrepreneurs, and have learnt some valuable lessons along the way. From

Two-Minute noodles, to Darwin, to Ham-and-Egging, here are my 10 lessons for founders.
1. The Boot:
Almost every business can be bootstrapped to start, and should be. Not even Google needed outside financing for its first couple of years. Superstar entrepreneurs have an uncanny knack of making money go extremely far and this in itself forces creative solutions to problems that almost always spawn new opportunities. I strongly encourage entrepreneurs to seek financing later in the development of their business, usually post prototype, and as close to product launch as possible. Too much capital makes businesses fat. If you use finance as an excuse to start your business, you should be getting a job, not starting a business.
2. Capital Efficiency:
I have never found a reason to pay founders what they are “worth” in the market. If you want to start a business and believe that the venture finance should be paying like a professional, you should be a getting a job. In fact, I have always believed that founders should use venture finance only for stuff that relates directly to a cost of sale. The easiest thing for founders is to beg, borrow and steal from the 3 F’s (friends, family and fools).
3. Cash really is The King:
“Turnover is Vanity, Profit is Sanity and Cash is Reality”. There is nothing more important to a startup than cash-flow. Nothing. I advise all founders to build a real-time cash-flow model that works for them. There is no need to get caught up in GAAP intricacies either. Put simply, it is your total cash in the bank less bills (“burn-rate”) plus revenue. Income statements and balance sheets are irrelevant for startups and operating small businesses. In fact, they only become useful if you want to sell your business.
4. Two-Minutes Noodles:
If the entrepreneur can eat Two- Minutes noodles and still be evangelical about their business, you know your founder has the right value system. The truth is, successful entrepreneurs never do it for the money, they do it to change the world. This is, of course, less about eating the noodles and more about seeing what type of person you are.
5. Product Paradox:
This is an interesting contradiction that needs to be managed when starting a business. The founders need to get a product out as soon as possible and then iterate through a fast customer feedback loop. At the same time, the founders need to operate as professionally as possible. Product development needs to be thoroughly thought-out. And I don’t just mean in the founders heads. I strongly suggest doing a business plan for every product. This discipline will force the founders to think of hurdles and ensure they can react quickly. Balancing this is probably the hardest objective as it requires the founders to simultaneously wear two hats.
6. The Law of Two:
I haven’t studied or been exposed to startup that has been successful (measured in terms of revenue) without two founders. One is usually a big picture business person and the other is the highly technical and analytical. Both need to be skilled in the others areas too, ideally, but they will own one of these two areas. The technical person understands the vision and sales, while your business person needs to understand, even if only at a high level, the product technically.
7. The Darwin Rule:
It is not the strongest of the species that survives, nor the most intelligent that survives. It is the one that is the most adaptable to change. The best product, although very helpful and ideal, is almost never the deciding factor of success in a startup. The most adaptable business wins over time. People who are set in their ways and want the next day to resemble the previous should get a job.
8. Ideas are like Carbon Monoxide:
They are increasingly abundant and of little use. Don’t be married to your idea and don’t think your idea is worth money. Ideas are worth nothing without execution. Ensure you spend time unpacking your idea and formulating a business plan. The devil is always in the details. Most great businesses started off with an idea that was, at best, only loosely-related to what made them successful. Such is the evolutionary nature of business.
9. Evangelical Rule:
Entrepreneurs need to believe so strongly in what they are doing, they believe they are saving the world through people buying their product. They believe, like Steve Jobs, that they are “putting a dent in the universe”. They have evangelical zeal that on the surface is quite annoying. It is hard to overstate the importance of this frame of mind in your founders. It is the difference between people who do 8 hour and 14 hour days; between two-minute noodles and long lunches; between living your startup and seeing it as a “job”.
10. Ham-and-Egging:
Coined by Profs Bhide and Stevenson, it is the challenge entrepreneurs have of getting both capital from investors and sales to customers without having either in-hand. The ultimate goal is to do both simultaneously, but can be done incrementally. Start-up salespeople (one founder at least) need to be natural ham-and-eggers. They have to make the case that their company is perfectly capable of providing their service without any experience of having done so successfully. This is often difficult because it borders on lying. My take on this, is that if you honestly believe your startup can deliver, do it. It is true that many successful and socially beneficial startups have done this at the early stages, so it is clear to me that this is one of the awkward necessities of a startup.
The ideal founder?
So, if we take the above lessons and construct the ideal founder, they would look something like this:
A zealot with an almost annoying passion for their business and who could talk about their startup up every day, all day, easily. They are good at selling. They believe living frugally is spiritual and necessary. Understanding highly technical ideas as well as the bigger picture is something they are good at. They are not usually analytical. They don’t mind that each day is continually different, despite the chaotic nature of such. They know that money matters, but don’t spend too much time worrying about their personal bank account – that doesn’t help sell the product. Blind faith is often used to describe them. So is naivetéy.
They are comfortable with these personifications, even reveling in them and the fact that it makes them an outsider and “strange”. They deplore rules, even when the rules make sense. Nothing is ever accepted knowledge until they have put it to the test. They are almost impossible to manage and are often deemed self-centered. The latter is just zeal misunderstood.
Consideration is for people with jobs and they, after all, are changing the world for the better, so you need to get out the way.
Article by Justin Spratt founder of Vottle.com
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Announcing Whiver a way for you to talk to the web.

Information Stream

One of the challenges Kenyans and Africans face, which is also  often talked about in forums such as the recent Mobile Monday (MoMo see here and here ) at the iHub is how to bridge the information gap within and between people in our Kenyan and African context.

Jessica Colaco has been a huge proponent of the mobile web and has suggested that users and developers need to get together to scale ideas into projects  that can be fine tuned to meet the growing demand for information amongst the Kenyan people.

What we are proposing to do with Whiver.com is to extract conversations from our larger Whive.com platform and sort of go on a meet the people tour.

Ideas such as Jessica’s of connecting data to researchers as well as others ideas of connecting users to publishers/content providers is key and any platform that does this in our own local context should be encouraged.

Indeed developers in Kenya should not be lethargic when approaching social media but should come up with new ways of spreading the gospel of innovation and community. Think of Makmende use of social media as one such example.

In this regard we at Whive.com have come up with a platform (due to be on Beta to our users shortly) that will.

  1. Show trending conversations in Kenya and Africa.
  2. Allow one to many and many to many conversations.
  3. Encourage community and innovation through our Free Ads gateway.

We hope you can Join us at Whive.com Signup [Click Here] and we shall send you an invitation to try this service.

God Bless Kenya.

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Revolutionizing Health Care Delivery Dr Kahindi Shedrach

Dr Kahindi Shedrach

Due to popular demand I have posted Dr Kahindi Shedrach’s presentation on. I have also attached famous Blogger Bankelele’s notes on Kahindi’s presentation seeing that i have not had time to post my own.

Dr Kahindi Shedrach, Medical Director, Angelic Missions Mobile Hospital (e-mail kahindig_at_yahoo.com, info_at_angelicmissions.org) spoke about how can medical professional can use mobile phone to deliver information and bridge health gaps

Health care gaps in Kenya
- Lack of medical specialist in rural area
- Lack of medical information to prompt people to visit hospital early
- Lack of health to stop abuse of over the counter drugs (have headache, but take anti-malaria drugs OTC which later results in increased drug resistance)
- Poor doctor patient ratio – 1 doctor serves 7,100 people

They will use three technology channels:
(i) Mobile SMS (ii) web (iii) call centre
website and mobile has disease protocols, and a disease registry African Pixel
- have a central data processing centre (CDPC) that will improve prognosis and clinics will consult specialists to make right diagnosis and treatment (by phone or internet)
- increased health seeking behaviors, and get patient present selves to hospital early

Challenges:
- No legal framework for ICT in health innovation – had to open medial center first
- Lack of funding
- Reluctance to embrace mobile and web in health care
- And fear of job loss by clinicians
- Language barrier
- Political interference

Download PDF Presentation: http://bit.ly/bDEORq

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Kites can power cities. Or can’t they?

As the world continues to sulk under the threat of imminent armageddon, hope comes to us from the most unexpected place, kites!

Apparently if kites are flown high enough for long enough we can generate enuff energy to power huge cities. This is certainely an innovative solution to fighting the problem of global warming. Me suggests that we get all them kids off nintendo wii, xbox 360 and get them to fly them kites all day.

Seriously! watch this video of Saul Griffith and learn how kites can power your home today.

The second part is about a fellow  called  William Kamkwamba from Malawi who built a windmill from scratch to power his radio. Watch his green solution and see what potential Africa has to offer.

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Flying Man

Ever since the dawn of man. Man has always wanted to fly. This is what led to the imaginative drawings of Genius Leonardo Davinci and the experiments of the Wright brothers which gave birth to the airplane as we now know it.

However Dutchman Ueli Gegenschatz seeks to fulfill the dream of flight in a high-tech wingsuit. Check out this video and see closer we are getting to achieve this dream.

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Investing in Africa Euvin Naidoo & Raila Odinga.

Obama and Raila

Obama and Raila

Dear friends this week i continue with my posts on African development with some ideas from Euvin Naidoo a Harvard Graduate who has worked with McKenzie consultanty agency as well as various development and investment agencies.

Watch the video below and share some of his insights into development in Africa.

Euvin Naidoo: Africa as an invesment

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In my view Africa will really begin to take of when many of the economies become more integrated and goods and services can move indiscriminately across the different regions of Africa. It is also good to note that economies such as Angola are growing at 18% which is the highest economic growth rate in the sub saharan Africa.  Watch the Kenyan Prime Minister discuss about these developments in Africa.

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Dambisa Moyo’s Dead Aid :: The true story of economic aid to Africa.

Dambisa Moyo - Author Dead AID

I disagree heartily with the notion that Africa needs more economic AID to help spur its own economic growth. Indeed as evidence has clearly shown the last 50 years of economic AID have hardly helped any single country in Africa reach even middle income status. Furthermore the countries which have ignored economic AID like Malaysia and India have seen rapid growth and are now emerging as the dominant economies of the 21st Century. Indeed the AID dependency model that is employed by the World Bank and IMF has fueled corruption as well as laid back attitudes in governance.

Dead Aid

Dead Aid

Zambian economist Dambisa Moyo has spent the better part of this year canvassing around the worlds huge media networkings promoting her book “Dead Aid” which among other things compares and contrasts different economic models that have worked for the Tiger Economies and the failed policies in Africa.

I have posted some videos here for you to watch and please feel free to make your comments there in.

Rwandan President Paul Kagame and Kenya’s Deputy Prime Minister Uhuru Kenyatta also echoed this sentiments and urged African countries to reduce their dependence on Foreign Aid. Uhuru encouraged the Private sector especially social entreprenuers to work hand in hand with goverments to reduce this dependence. It is interesting African leaders are begining to read from the same page, which shows that dambisa’s book is timely. Watch these Videos below.

Please read this feature on Rwanda’s model of economic development by Jeff Chu. [Read Here]

ALJAAZERA INTERVIEW – RIZ KHAN

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PAUL KAGAME & UHURU KENYATTA

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BOOK REVIEW

The question of international aid to developing countries is one of the most controversial subjects in modern development literature. One simply needs to look at any local bookshop under the “current affairs” section and you are hit with many large and often time consuming volumes on the subject. So when I stumbled on DambisaMoyo’s book at my favourite bookshop (Waterstones Charing Cross Station), I felt a mixture of delight and nervousness. Delight because here we have a Zambian academic weighing in on a subject that has been the preserve of self-appointed “development experts”. This should fill every Zambian with pride and admiration. God knows we have so few Zambian economists ready to engage such serious issues, let alone publish a book on it. That feeling quickly gave way to nervousness because with so much written on this topic by leading experts such as Easterly, Collier,Riddell and others, could Dead Aid really offer any fresh thinking on the subject? [Read More]

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Barack Obama’s Inauguration speech :: A new era has began.

Truthfully, change is possible if not probable if one puts one’s heart and mind  and soul to it.  On this day we witness the force a people united cannot be defeated. For the last decade the world has lived in tyranny. Greed on the stock markets has poisoned the trust of investors in the stock markets worldwide.

Missiles and bombs have decimated and decapitated cities and children. Disease and corruption has crippled many a prosperous nation. Evil had threatened to drive hope into hiding but today the American’s have inspired us yet again.

So tonight say a prayer for President Barack Hussein Obama and start working for a better tomorrow.

Read the full speech: http://www.whive.com/barackobama/blog/752/

John Karanja

http://www.JohnKaranja.com

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