Friday, September 26, 2014
K-12 Curriculum Needs Major Overall to Develop Entrepreneurship Skills
Posted By: George Deeb - 9/26/2014I am not one to be doom and gloom, preferring to take an optimistic view of most things, but what has me really nervous is the state of K-1...
Read the rest of this post in Entrepreneur, which I guest authored this week.
For future posts, please follow me on Twitter at: @georgedeeb.
Thursday, September 25, 2014
Microsoft Supports 100,000 Startups With BizSpark Program
Posted By: George Deeb - 9/25/2014I recently met Martin Schray, a senior technical evangelist at Microsoft. He introduced me to an interesting program that Microsoft offers...
- Less than five years in business
- Less than $1 million in revenue
- Privately held
- Building software, software as a service or online services
- What’s in it for Microsoft? They hope you will build on their platform and tools and hopefully run on their cloud. Note that Azure supports Linux, PHP, Python, Java, Node.js and others.
- What if I do not build with Microsoft technologies? Azure supports Linux, PHP, Java, Python, Node.js, and more so run what you want.
- What if you exceed $150 a month? Microsoft has a program called BizSpark Plus where your startup can be nominated for up to $60K of Azure benefits for a single year.
- You can host your website
- Run a Linux or Windows virtual machine 24/7 (perhaps hosting services for your startup)
- Store, query and update data from a SQL Server database
- Store, query and update data from a cloud database backend for your iOS, Android or Windows/Windows Phone apps
- Use Azure’s Active Directory Services for authentication
Friday, September 19, 2014
How to Find Angel Investors for Your Startup
Posted By: George Deeb - 9/19/2014Angel investors (not venture capital firms) are the most likely candidates to get your businesses from a piece of paper to a proof-of-concep...
Read the rest of this post in Forbes, which I guest authored this week.
For future posts, please follow me on Twitter at: @georgedeeb.
Chicago: The Next Big Startup Ecosystem
Posted By: George Deeb - 9/19/2014When I started iExplore in 1999, Chicago was jokingly referred to as a “flyover city” because the big venture-capital firms in Boston and Si...
Read the rest of this post in the Wall Street Journal, which I guest authored this week.
For future posts, please follow me on Twitter at: @georgedeeb.
Wednesday, September 10, 2014
Busting the Lean-Startup Myth
Posted By: George Deeb - 9/10/2014The below is a really great guest post by Howard Tullman ( @tullman ) , CEO at 1871 (the largest shared space for startups in Chicago), Par...
_______________________________
Is There "V" in Your "MVP"?
The Basic Flaw
Problem 1: They Won't Care
Problem 2: They Won't Suffer
Problem 3: They Won't Wait
The Right Way
Friday, September 5, 2014
Innovate or Die: The Stark Message to Big Business
Posted By: George Deeb - 9/05/2014Big companies that fail to innovate risk extinction. That's the stark truth in the era of "digital disruption". Just look at t...
Read the rest of this article at BBC, which we contributed to this week.
For future posts, please follow us on Twitter at: @RedRocketVC.
Thursday, September 4, 2014
Lesson #187: The 1,024 Types of Salespeople. Hire the Right Ones!
Posted By: George Deeb - 9/04/2014Hiring good salespeople is one of the hardest things a company has to do. Typically, companies need to go through three salespeople, in...
Hiring good salespeople is one of the hardest things a company has to do. Typically, companies need to go through three salespeople, in order to find one successful one with long-term closing power. This hard fact can take its toll on early-stage companies, that have limited budgets, can only afford small teams and can’t afford to make any mistakes which will result in revenues getting delayed down the road. Hopefully, the below categories of salespeople, will help point you in the right direction of which type you should hire for your business.
Enterprise vs. SMB
Enterprise sales is typically a much longer sales cycle, and needs someone who knows how to work numerous parties and divisions within an organization over time. With smaller businesses, you are typically closer to the decision makers and budgets at the top of the organization for a quicker sale with fewer people involved in the decision making.
Early-Stage vs. Late-Stage
Early-stage salespeople tend to need more leadership, passion and brand ambassador skills. And, later stage sales people tend to work better within structured and repeatable processes.
Inbound vs. Outbound
Inbound salespeople prefer limited travel and leads coming to them in the office. Outbound salespeople are typically road warriors that spend most of their time selling and schmoozing prospective buyers at the clients’ offices.
Simple vs. Consultative
Most any good salesperson can sell a product that is simple and easy-to-understand. It takes a really special salesperson that can put on a consultative hat with clients, to help them better understand a complex product and remove the fear of the unknown.
Competitive vs. Non-Competitive
Again, most any good salesperson can have success with limited competition in the market. But, finding a good salesperson that knows how to win business with “hand-to-hand” combat skills up against entrenched competitors is much harder.
Big Ticket vs. Small Ticket
The bigger the ticket, the longer and harder the sale process, as more decision makers are typically involved in larger ticket purchases. Not all salespeople have the persistence and nurturing skills required to succeed in longer sales cycle products.
Hunters vs. Recipients
Any good salesperson should be able to close leads that are handed to them by the marketing department. But, many salespeople do not have the “hunter mentality” to have to drum up leads on their own, with persistent and long term success.
Doers vs. Managers
Make sure your salesperson actually has demonstrated recent success in selling, as opposed to managing a team of salespeople. It is very different when you have to “dial for dollars” yourself and are building your own Rolodex of relationships.
Lone Wolves vs. Team Members
Very few virtual salespeople working from their home offices have the discipline to stay focused and put in the hard work required. And, some salespeople just prefer the team environment of working alongside their peers in the office. Don’t put a square peg in a round hole.
Direct vs. Reseller
Typically, you want to hire someone with past success selling one specific product or service, inside that company. Resellers, distributors or channel salespeople are often selling multiple brands, leveraging a broad portfolio of products, and may not be able to show success for one specific product therein.
So, with ten categories above and two options in each category, that equates to over 1,024 specific types of salespersons (two to the 10th degree). Try to hire ones that check off the most skills needed for your specific business.
Be sure to re-read Lesson #127, How to Screen Salesperson Candidates, for a list of key questions you need to ask during the interview process.
For future posts, please follow me on Twitter at: @georgedeeb.
Tuesday, September 2, 2014
When Picking a Startup to Join, Think Like An Investor
Posted By: George Deeb - 9/02/2014Startups are really risky. If you are looking to join one, know you’ll probably be looking for another job within a couple of years because ...
Venture capitalists can get around these odds by investing in 10 companies hoping one hits it big, but employees only get one “bite at the apple.” You can't work for ten companies concurrently, so you need to pick wisely.
Read the rest of this post in Entrepreneur, which I guest authored this week.
For future posts, please follow me on Twitter at: @georgedeeb