Wednesday, October 30, 2013
3.5BN People Online by 2017--Think Globally ASAP
Posted By: George Deeb - 10/30/2013Earlier this year, Cisco forecasted how large the world’s Internet-using population would be by the year 2017. The data was quite staggeri...
Read the rest of this post on Forbes, which I guest authored this week.
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Monday, October 28, 2013
[NEWS] Join Red Rocket at the 4th Annual Entrepreneurial Bash--Save 30%
Posted By: George Deeb - 10/28/2013Red Rocket is a sponsor of the 4th Annual Entrepreneurial Bash , presented by the Association for Corporate Growth . The Entrepreneurship B...
Robert Jordan, author of "How They Did It", moderates an all-star panel including Rishi Shah (CEO of Context Media), Ken Hunt (CEO of Vasco), Patrick Spain (Founder of Hoovers & HighBeam) and Mahendra Vora (Founder of Intelliseek & Secure IT).
The event will be held from 4:30-7:30pm on Wednesday, November 6, 2013 at the Galleria Marchetti at 825 W. Erie St. in Chicago, IL.
You can register at this link. Be sure to enter Red Rocket's promotional code of RRV_VIP to save 30% on your admission--normally $50, now $35 for Red Rocket Blog readers.
Wednesday, October 23, 2013
The Top 4 Reasons VC's Bias Technology Startups
Posted By: George Deeb - 10/23/2013I have had hundreds of startups reach out to me at Red Rocket looking for fund raising assistance. Most with hungry, passionate entrepreneu...
Read the rest of this post on Forbes, which I guest authored this week.
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Monday, October 21, 2013
Lesson #159: Never Stop Recruiting (Even If No Current Openings)
Posted By: George Deeb - 10/21/2013Back in Lesson #106, we talked about the importance succession planning for all positions within your company. But, in the event you ...
Back in Lesson #106, we talked about the importance succession planning for all positions within your company. But, in the event you don't have the right successor talent inhouse, you will need to recruit replacement talent for your startup, which we learned how to do in Lesson #34. And, most likely, this means finding a quick replacement for an underperforming or lost staff member, or adding a new staff member for unexpected growth.
As the old saying goes, time is money. The longer it takes you to recruit and replace a terminated or lost employee, or fill that new opening, the longer it will take you to train and optimize the new employee. And, therefore, the longer it will take your income statement to see the results.
One strategy to employ here is to never shut off your job postings or resume inflow, regardless of whether or not you have an open position, especially for high turnover risk or other key revenue driving positions (e.g., salespeople). The small cost of the job posting should be more than offset by the weeks of time savings you will get by have a fresh batch of resumes in hand for when you really need them.
And, better yet, it doesn't hurt to have had some active conversations with candidates for these positions, so you have pre-screened and prioritized the resumes, and know the first calls you are going to make when the time comes. Understanding, some candidates may not still be available down the road, but at least you will have an opportunity sell them on your opportunity at that time, no different than professional recruiters do when stealing talent from one company to another.
Yes, I know recruiting can be a pain and often a time-consuming distraction in running your business. I am not suggesting this becomes a full time job for you. What I am saying is, during your free time, keep your recruiting process on a slow simmer on the back burner at all times. So, that when you have the need to heat up your efforts, you are not starting from cold start.
Recruiting for talent is an everyday thing, whether you realize it or not. Especially, for high-growth early stage startups. So, you might as well put a process around it, to make it as efficient as possible for you, in good times (e.g., adding staff) and in bad (e.g., replacing staff). Your bottom line profits will thank you, as your do your best to minimize any negative impact on your revenue stream!!
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Wednesday, October 16, 2013
Out With MBA's--In With Masters in Entrepreneurship
Posted By: George Deeb - 10/16/2013Back when I was in college (a 1991 graduate), an MBA was a heavily coveted degree. The best business schools were heavily demanded, and gra...
But, in the last decade or two, we have seen a seismic shift in demand for an alternative business education, especially with the rising costs of education. One that teaches the basics in starting your own business and being your own boss. One that is tapped into local startup ecosystems with access to venture capitalists and startup incubators. One that marries expertise in technology development, with startup business and marketing skills. A new breed of business education under the banner: a Master's in Entrepreneurship.
Read the rest of this post in Forbes, which I guest authored this week.
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Tuesday, October 15, 2013
Lesson #158: Understand Your Brand Positioning (An Al Jazeera Case Study)
Posted By: George Deeb - 10/15/2013Back in January 2013, Al Jazeera, the Qatar based news agency, announced the launch of Al Jazeera America , a new U.S. based news agenc...
Back in January 2013, Al Jazeera, the Qatar based news agency, announced the launch of Al Jazeera America, a new U.S. based news agency covering news in the U.S. They went on to recruit and hire a bunch of brand name U.S. newspeople (e.g., Ali Velshi, Soledad O'Brien, David Shuster) from the other big U.S. news desks (e.g., CNN, MSNBC). The new channel launched in August 2013.
Wednesday, October 9, 2013
Comparing 'Shark Tank' to Venture Capital Reality
Posted By: George Deeb - 10/09/2013I am sure many of you have watched an episode of Shark Tank on ABC. The show allows a startup entrepreneur to pitch their idea to a panel ...
Read the rest of this post on Forbes, which I guest authored this week.
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Tuesday, October 8, 2013
Lesson #157: Consider Sharing Part-Time Executives Between Startups
Posted By: George Deeb - 10/08/2013The cost of a proven C-Level executive inside a startup can be around $250,000 per person. When adding together a CEO, CMO, COO, CFO an...
The cost of a proven C-Level executive inside a startup can be around $250,000 per person. When adding together a CEO, CMO, COO, CFO and CTO, that could total $1.25MM a year in salary alone, just for your five person senior team. Most startups can't afford this kind of spend, until after they have raised a material round of venture capital or are driving material revenues. Instead, they opt to go without that role filled, merge mutiple roles into one body or downgrade the talent level to a VP position to make it more affordable.
But, what is the most important driver of success for a startup? The team!! Exactly the thing startups should not be cutting back on. So, how can a startup attract the high-power talent they need, at a budget they can afford? How about sharing executives between startups. You get the same brain involved with your company, on an affordable part-time basis.
As an example, let's say your business needs a CMO to set the high level sales & marketing strategies to drive revenue growth, and to help manage the junior-level marketing execution team doing the day-to-day work (e.g., search engine optimization, email marketing, social media management, creative development). At, $250,000 per year for full time salary, plus 20% more for employee benefits and payroll taxes, filling this role is often unaffordable for a startup. But, what if this executive only worked for you one day a week, for only $50,000 per year, saving you 80% in salary and related payroll taxes, plus not having to pay employee benefits for part-time workers.
This would work great for startups, to get high fire-power talent helping to grow your business. Provided, the job can reasonably be fulfilled in one-day a week, until the business can afford full-time talent. As long as you have junior team members doing the lion's share of the work in that department (e.g., bookkeepers managed by a part-time CFO), this model should work out well for you, especially if the part-time executive is open to transitioning into a full-time role after the company has the resources to afford it. You end up getting an executive-level brain for a junior-level price.
But, why would a proven executive do this for you? They typically wouldn't, if you were their only job. But, if they were simultaneously filling this role for five startups, spreading their talent across five different companies on each day of the week, now they are getting paid a full-time salary that they are worth, and get the excitement of working on a diverse group of companies . Not to mention, if they are getting a small equity stake in each company in this part-time role (e.g., 1%), they now have a diversified equity portfolio strategy, instead of putting all their eggs in one basket.
So, give this model some thought for your business. And, if interested, pitch it to other startup peers of yours (preferably in the same industry), and maybe five of you can collectively hire the executive-level brainpower you desire to accelerate your business. Or, if you prefer, companies like Red Rocket can play "matchmaker" for you, helping to source both the executives and the other startups to fill up their time. So, feel free to call me, if interested in learning more.
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Thursday, October 3, 2013
The Excubator--A New Type of Startup Incubator
Posted By: George Deeb - 10/03/2013Incubators/accelerators are starting to play a key role in the development of startup ecosystems throughout the U.S. and world. According to...
Read the read of this article on Blackline Review's website.
Here is the great video that goes with the story:
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