You Need to Win the Battle for Share of Mind

by Mark Suster on May 21, 2011

This article first appeared on TechCrunch.  I’ve been thinking a lot lately about the proliferation of starutps in the past 2 years. It seems almost incomprehensible that only 2.5 years ago we read the “RIP Good Times” presentation from Sequoia.

But what does this all mean? Are we headed for a long era of innovation in which startups are the new norm? Are we seeing a time in which pre-revenue companies are more valuable than our offline institutional brands? As with the late 90′s the answer is “Yes. And no.”

Yes, there is unprecedented innovation. I’ve never seen anything like it in my career. The era of cheap cloud computing plus open-source software plus digital natives unleashed upon society is creating some truly amazing products that will challenge the way we do business and the way we live our lives. I don’t believe it’s hyperbole to say that Twitter and Facebook are truly transformative at a societal level, for example.

No. It’s not all sunshine and candy canes. We are building a lot of stuff now that has no longevity. In a way, startups have become kind of like the video game industry. New stuff gets created, it’s fun to play with and talk about. You want to use it because your friends are doing it and you want to find out what it’s all about. You want to see what’s new. You want the dopamine rush.

You play with it for a few weeks or months. Then you stop. You stop because it was game like. Temporal. Non valuable. Not really helping you do something better. Not improving your life or business.

Not solving a real problem.

And so it occurs to me that many startups in the consumer world are now truly hits driven like video games or movies. They get marketed as such. We compare user numbers like box office receipts. Some become true breakouts that can be built into a franchise even though they started as just a game, like Angry Birds. They had the magic formula. Others like Words with Friends solve deeper problems than games, like meeting new people or curing loneliness.

The challenge that many startups face today is: Are you really providing enough value? Will you get the TechCrunch bump, the tier-1 VC anointment, followed by great PR firm support and then the NY Times or WSJ story that follows? Will that be enough or will high churn rates creep in, new toys be introduced into the market, new time sucks pulling user attention away?  This year’s Tamagotchi?

If you’re building a startup today I would encourage you to think harder about how you’re going to win the battle for share of mind. That’s much tougher than getting people to play with your hot product for 6 months. To do so you must truly provide value that changes the way that end-consumers do something in their lives that will persist.

My example du jour is LinkedIn.

Why had it endured though market machinations and become this year’s darling IPO? I can’t comment on its stock price – I’m not a public market analyst. But the obvious value to LinkedIn is that it is the dominant online resume of our generation. They got us to fill out the details of where we worked in the past and the network effect compels us to keep it updated.

The second obvious value drive is that it was one of our first true “social graphs.” I often argue that this has greatly weakened because everybody I know accepts LinkedIn requests from strangers so it’s not really a true barometer of our graph anymore but enough of the remnants are accurate enough that value persists. So resume + directionally-correct social graph = goldmine for recruiting, networking and marketing.

It doesn’t strike me as a “social network” in the way we’ve come to define them. But its focus on solving a real-world problem makes it uniquely valuable to most other social graphs.

So as I get around the country speaking at college campus in 2010 & 2011 I have been preaching the same theme. If you want to build enduring companies that weather both the tech market acceleration and the inevitable tech market correction as companies like LinkedIn have done you need to ask yourself if you’re solving a real problem for users that will persist when hotness wears off.

That might be in online resumes. It might be in online game platforms solving the problem of entertaining people. It might be online videos targeting niche audience. It might be a way to diet online or a way to manage your online scheduling / appointments. Or like a company I spoke to today, SportsForce, that is helping high-school athletes better prepare to get picked up by college sports teams. That’s a problem in need of a solution – I’m sure. Or the way Uber is shaking up the cozy, static world of taxi transportation.

Not every problem has to be a huge VC-fundable business.

But what I do see in the market in 2011 is way too many “me too” solutions where a bunch of founders have brainstormed a way to do a better GroupOn, a better GiltGroupe, a better Twitter or a better Quora. When pressed not enough of these entrepreneurs can answer questions about why users would still be using this product in 5 years, about why their product is going to solve a consumer or business problem that isn’t being solved today. They pitch me features, not value.

I play with features. I’m a tech junkie as much as the next guy. But next month I’m on to the next one.

I would encourage you to think bigger. The market is over-weight in companies trying to solve problems for bars & restaurants. Sure, that’s a fine category. I have no problem with it. But what about education? Healthcare information? Energy? Housing? Auto? Financial Services? There are so many big inefficiencies in this country that need tackling. I feel quite comfortable that our bars & restaurant industry will be just fine.

When you solve a real problem you’ll win the true battle. The battle for share of mind. Challenge yourself to think harder.

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  • http://www.ticktocking.com Steve Hallock

    I couldn’t agree more.  One of the factors is that it has become fairly easy to create an impressive network of techies.  We are all playing with the latest products as soon as we can get into the beta, and are willing to give them a few weeks even when our use case isn’t obvious.  This creates a false sense of success – in very few cases is that network enough to sustain interest in the long run.

    One of the reasons that Twitter has become my most used Web 2.0 product is that it has captured a multi-disciplined network.  Sure all the techies are there, but it is still useful for the rest of my life and other interests.  We’re not one dimensional people.

    There are a few recent products that I would love to use, but the one dimensional user base burns out their utility very quickly.  

  • http://arnoldwaldstein.com awaldstein

    Good morning from NYC Mark.

    I agree that it’s harder to find context and meaning amidst the din of social noise lately.

    And I agree that ‘solving a problem’ is a great filter to both build projects against and decide what to try out. But, I just don’t believe that (LinkedIn aside) that is the value that Facebook or Twitter or 4Square provide or other wins provide. They aren’t solving a problem or disrupting by building a better mousetrap.

    I believe that these and other interesting solutions are capitalizing on the power of the social web by providing platforms for natural behavior. Facebook didn’t create sharing, as an example, it provides a means for expression.

    Point is (and sorry for the rant) is that the real network wins provide natural value of expression not just, for example, solving a specific problem like social recommendations for TV. And I think that the niche networks or communities will be more about expression platforms around wine or books or raw foods than about solving a specific ‘how to find’ problem.

    Dynamic topical exchanges, like your blog community Mark, solve lots of real problems within the context of community.

    Some thoughts on this here as I’ve been a bit hyper focused on this lately… http://t.co/Z74pKf5

  • http://twitter.com/kimheras kimheras

     Well said, Mark. 

  • http://bothsidesofthetable.com msuster

    I agree that LinkedIn doesn’t necessary create as much long-term value as FB or Twitter. Never argued that. But solve a real problem, it does. I often say publicly that I think LinkedIn has long-term vulnerability because it hasn’t innovated enough. But it’s clear that it has persistent value when you look at its revenue stream.

  • http://twitter.com/manojnyc Manoj John

    True.
    “Me too”  solutions generally  fail.
    But again, facebook was also a “me too” solution with some extra  functionality  like better news feed.

  • http://www.justinpirie.com Justin Pirie

     And from a European angle it’s worse… with hardly any companies solving “real” problems for nearly a generation…

  • Sal Matteis

    Hi Mark, couldn’t agree more that there are real, big problems that humanity faces at a macro or individual level (healthcare, education, sustainability etc) and that they all deserve attention and innovation but I equally think that the likes of mail, social networks, search and wikis have profoundly changed the ‘abilities’ presented to us as a species in our evolutionary path.

    All these things have acted as enabler – pushing the limit of how we can all communicate, create and share knowledge, powering real connections.

    In a very big way they have all contributed to make us smarter and acted as a catalyst for innovation in other areas. 10 years ago I would have had a very small chance to get to read your post and getting to know you via Twitter et al…

    I endorse your argument that there is plenty of great real problems to go after I am almost certain there is innovation to come in the spaces today covered by social networks et al… And I believe that innovation in communication/social network products will foster innovation in other areas.

  • http://twitter.com/citizenracer David Nicholson

    Nice post. I want to comment about added value in the health care space. I think *THE* main reason there has not been real disruption in health care is not the traditional things that come to mind like government regs, HIPAA/privacy concerns, giant legacy software providers, etc. The main reason there is no disruption is because most health providers, who know what disruptions need to occur, don’t have the tech skills to make that happen. And, the individuals with the tech skills, but no patient care experience, have a certain, inherent disconnect from the health care industry. In cases like LinkedIn, Square, Factual, Yammer, the ones who see the problems in their entirety are the ones who can actually design, develop, deploy. Because they are “users,” they accurately see the problems. As a result, you have great solutions that get rolled out.

    At the Health Camp this past October in the Bay Area (attended by a lot of developers), I created one of the sessions and called it, “Take Your Developer to Work Day.” I think three people showed up to hear what I had to say. You are probably wondering why they should listen to what I have to say. Well, because I am one of those providers you will see if you need your appendix out, an ACL repair or a mastectomy. And I am *willing* to talk about the weight of terrible health IT on real people, like all of you reading this.

    It seems like I live in a parallel universe from the tech world. And so to help push barriers over, I comment on blog posts like this one. Health providers are busy people with weighty responsibilities. Like Mark said, the bars and restaurants are going to be fine. But when you are all old and in need of intensive health care services, will we have bridged the divide between providers and talented developers?

    Basically, AMEN Brother Mark! Keep challenging people, especially in health care.

  • http://twitter.com/NocPlace_jack Jack, NocPlace

     I also totally agree. And I thank you for the reminder to “think big”. The challenges and frustrations of the day-to-day acceptance of NocPlace make me forget how we can solve problems for other folks than IT–eventually.

  • http://twitter.com/edenciso Eduardo Enciso

    Great post. I think LinkedIn value is way beyond the online resume of this generation. I see their real value comes from the data insight about the business community: where have you contributed with your work, how your career has impacted the world, what are you building, what your business needs are, etc.

    Also agree 100% on your appreciation that there’s way too much “me too” ideas.
    I’m a participant in the current Founder Institute semester, and can say the majority of entrepreneurs and mentors are focusing more on cheering up cool ideas, such as mobile apps, social games, groupon copycats, than solutions trying to solve bigger and real problems.

  • http://twitter.com/HemiW Hemi Weingarten

     Another big problem to solve: the food industry making us fat and sick

  • http://usemighty.com Aaron Crayford

     Suster I thought all we had to do was make a 10x better product? What’s all this share of mind talk now? It’s almost like you’re trying to tell us to make something different?
    http://reisreport.com/index.php?video_id=72

  • http://twitter.com/qohort Qohort

    Great post – I’m glad you, and others like you, have continue to address this issue. To me this trend was also a harbinger of the (now imminent) tech bubble – besides the valuations etc. I am a hacker myself, but it pains me to see the frivolous needs that some of my fellow hackers are trying to address – thus creating the hype followed by a ‘startup’ through a weekend of coding and acquisition of a handful of beta users. Yes, they swear by the lean startup methodology, and/or the pivot methodology..but are they really solving a (real) pressing need? Probably very few of them do!

  • http://www.piqqle.com/blog/ Daniel Kim

     Great post. A smaller start up that has solved a pain in my life is hipmunk. Their great user experience and simplicity in finding the best flight path at the best cost is great and definitely solves a need. Will be it be $10 billion company?  Maybe not, but i have used it the last few times I needed to book a flight.  Not being able to book straight on hipmunk is still a pain, but maybe they can solve that in the near future.

    I was also interested that you mentioned LinkedIn and agree that the second observation of value is weakening as people connect with folks that are strangers.  LinkedIn has a great value proposition, but if it does not offer more innovation in strengthening the value of their users networks, it may not reach its true full potential.  Hopefully what we are working on will nudge the industry in that direction as it relates to true social recruiting and valuable business connections. 

  • http://twitter.com/mafiacash Robin

    The great thing about this blog is that you can actually apply some of the tactics and strategies in other areas of life.

  • Anonymous

    I couldn’t agree more.  I fall into the trap when we are pitching VCs of describing all of the things the Mobile Symmetry does, not the communication problems it solves.  Using our testimonials lets someone else talk for me.  Thanks for a great reminder, Mark.  

    I can’t help but think that the next wave here is “bridging.”  Most of the problems that we solve today are not extending the advances of, say, location-based services (although there are some good companies thinking about this space), but rather increasing the adoption of current technologies through new distribution channels and content.  

    For example, a scientist isn’t as likely to be updating LinkedIn profiles as a salesperson.  What about a LinkedIn just for scientists, doctors, teachers, or theologians?  Yes, they would be big groups (which is what LinkedIn is, a large networking crowd), but it’s focused – literally a LinkedIn Medical, Science, Educators, etc. – separate brands.    That would bring more professionals into the LinkedIn master “brand” , and bridge a great networking tool into a gargantuan societal asset.   

  • http://www.eqentia.com William Mougayar

    There is definitely a flurry of companies that are “feature” companies. A hot feature is easily adopted by thousands if not millions of users, but very few companies are able to evolve and capitalize on their user market share and become “benefits” companies that not only solve a real problem, but are able to monetize their offering.

    The irony in part of what you said about tier 1 VC endorsement is that- these very endorsements are fueling some of the me-too and not-enough companies. In as much as VC backing is necessary, it is certainly not sufficient especially during this time when venture spending has loosened up.

  • http://twitter.com/azizatweets Aziza Ansari

    Mark – I agree wholeheartedly. Thanks for sharing this perspective. I hope to be amongst those start ups that not only creates value but looks to revolutionize education and career paths for college students. I hope there will be most start ups that create value because, like you said, we have PLENTY of problems to solve!

  • http://communico.co.nz Julian A Waters

    Something that bugs me about the lean startup movement, or perhaps an unintended side effect is the focus on smaller and smaller problems that are by definition less meaningful, but allow the founders to run a company without the risk of loosing big money.  The emphasis on theory and best-practice can stray into the game-ification of startups in a paint-by-numbers sort of way. Simple companies solving simple problems.

    It also seems to encourage focusing on consumer needs rather than health/education/energy etc which are a little harder and might require real backing.

    One thing our NZ startup scene has going for it is a focus on real problems: Xero with online accounting, Vend in point of sale, Litmos in learning management, 3D animation, mobile advertising and web site management companies. We even have a startup laying a new internet cable from the US to NZ. The lack of population here makes it almost impossible to have a consumer ‘toy’ hit anyway!

  • Etienne Lapointe

    Hi Mark.

    One of the best post I ever read.

    Thanks for sharing your thoughts and ideas.

  • Ezzie Goldish

    Great post.

    Based on my admittedly very short experiences so far, I think a difficulty even when one does solve a real problem is finding the investors who are interested in *that* problem being solved.

    I think you recently touched on VCs who are too focused on finding and funding the next Google or Facebook, rather than looking for value bets, which I think is somewhat true. While an investor may listen to and be interested in a value pitch for a solution to a real-world problem, at the end of the pitch there’s no ability to claim “Who knows? Maybe we’ll be the next Google” or even the next “Angry Birds”, but more along the lines of “We should be a really solid, highly profitable company for years to come – but in Millions, not Billions”. I think that results in investors who think it sounds nice, but ultimately say it’s just not their space or what they’re looking for at the moment – since for many investors, their space is the web, technology, energy, or medicine.

    If you’re not in a field that has that enticing “limitless potential” tag, it’s just a lot harder to get that investment even with a real solution to a real problem, though I still agree wholeheartedly that that’s the way to go.

  • http://thetylerhayes.com Tyler Hayes

     ”We’re not one dimensional people.” +1

  • http://about.me/humphrey HumphreyPL

    It is so weird because for the past week I have been talking to entrepreneurs about “mind share”. Which I think I learnt from one of your older blogs. How do you own that piece or real estate in your customers mind that makes them think of you when they have X problem. It really is a tough battle and like you said you need to make sure you are doing something that isn’t just a little bit better but better enough so that they will sign up and move to you instead of staying with the incumbent. But it could also be providing a combination of tools at a lower price than the incumbent like Microsoft did with MS Office in the early days. They should a good enough product to compete with Lotus on price and brought down a massive barrier. On top of that they allow their programs to work inter operatively with their competitors (Thanks for the interview with Joel).

  • http://notesfromtheninjabunny.tumblr.com/ Emily Merkle

    I am am entrepreneur, after working for 6 start-ups over the years. It has been a learning process….in a great way. Over the years I have grown in my understanding of the niche I primarily have worked in (PPC), the competition, and the space as a whole.

    I have a never had a desire to change the world – I am a realist.

    However, along the way, I have found that things could be done better,  clients could be treated well, and mainly – that engaging with clients & involving them in the process- win-win. As well – I have learned (the hard way) to 1) know your strengths & weaknesses and 2) choose partners that are  on  the same page with you.

    So – I am working on my 2nd venture, and it is more than an incremental improvement over the previous.

    I am not out to IPO. We did not seek funding.

    I am doing this for 2 reasons:
    - my value prop just make sense. It is clear, simple, honest – and compelling.
    - I treat my clients with complete honesty- in stark contrast to the competiti0n.
    - I seek to make my clients more money, treat them with the respect they deserve.

    I love the start-up high risk / high reward…and I love what I do.

    I would like to live comfortably and have flexibly.

    I also want to demonstrate to the individuals I work with that:
    - honesty does exist in advertising.
    - professionals do exist in the interactive space, they are knowledgeable – and I enjoy teaching & learning from them as well.

    So – I do not try to reinvent the wheel; I just want to do this better – much better – and give my clients the experience of being treated an equal in our endeavor;  and that they should expect it at all times. They deserve it.

    Incremental change.

    I am a single voice – trying to make a difference.

    That  is the best we can do in this world.

    Speaking of – DEBT CEILING – I am soooo tempted to go to D.C. and kick some GOP idiot a**.

    JHC.

  • Guest

    I think it’ll be funny to see what really ends up being “Temporal. Non valuable. Not really helping you do something better. Not improving your life or business. Not solving a real problem”.

    Which VCs are readily funding anyone who tackles hard (tech) problems/pain points? I it even the role of VCs to do this or rather to provide the rocket fuel to scale companies quickly? Controversial and questionable whether the lean start-up approach has anything to do with this sort of breakthrough innovation.
     
    The question about all this high ground talk is whether you wouldn’t always have dismissed the most succesfull propositions of the last years as such ephemerical phenomena. At the end of the day it’s not the VCs that determine what a real problem is and whether proposition xyz solves it or not, but consumers vote for it every day. 

    Why this disdain for consumer retail propositions? How many of the break-out success stories in ecommerce must have come the way of Global Retail Partners and were turned down? I bet your anti-portfolio must make you cringe…

  • http://notesfromtheninjabunny.tumblr.com/ Emily Merkle

    Heard today – Watson can now respo0nd to verbal queries & reply to questions about medical issues & diseases.

    SO psyched.

  • http://notesfromtheninjabunny.tumblr.com/ Emily Merkle

    Also – my primary care physician is 100% electronic records and an app on his phone to look up symptoms etc.

    So does my psychiatrist at Columbia Presbyterian.
    My sister is a resident at Parkland in Dallas is 100% electronic.

    energy:
    also – re: Sergey Brin – is heading a personal investment in wind farms on the east coast w/ a private U.S. co. and a Japanese co. – as well as a dual transmission lines – one A/C, one D/C.

    Lots of private companies working on this too…

    Can’t wait.

  • http://notesfromtheninjabunny.tumblr.com/ Emily Merkle

     LI – IMHO the Q/A boards have been completely been ruined by self-promoters
    (like K. Lee) – however, it is a good way to make connections & keep in touch; however, I am quite dubious of people who have 500+ connections – um, really?

  • http://notesfromtheninjabunny.tumblr.com/ Emily Merkle

     Do not eat it. :)

  • http://polidigital.org Joshua Ansell-McKinnon

    There seem to so many areas that technology can help.  What I see is people get tunnel vision and develop what they know and what has worked.  I had a bartender friend pitching me a an idea for restaurants the other day.  It was an ok idea, but the scope of the products success was way to large and risky.

    It is hard to get people excited about a markets that they see as boring or know nothing about.  But what people miss is the niches are where the gold is.  

  • http://www.trainingcenter.com training courses

    It’s up on how they made the right decisions in solving the problems that it might be encountered. It is better to think time to time in dealing the real problem.

  • http://twitter.com/niyogi Roj Niyogi

     A good post for sure but here’s something to think about (that might have already been brought in the comments so I apologize in advance if this is the case).  In the quest for VC financing (whether that should be a quest at all), entrepreneurs are asked more often than not “have you seen any traction?” 

    This encourages the myopic thinking on part of the entrepreneur to come up with gimmicky strategies to increase shallow user counts fairly rapidly.  Yes, cohort analysis would be a better yardstick (for both investors and entrepreneurs both) but as entrepreneurs see opportunities to build a user base quickly and then “get acquired” or “get VC financing” and so the vicious cycle continues. 

     How many people are *really* using BranchOut?  I would never qualify them as a LinkedIn competitor/killer but instead employing many gimmicky tricks to get users to feel that the app is alive and aggressively growing.  Pair that with stories touting their success in fundraising and this continues to encourage “grow with users dammit!”

    http://techcrunch.com/2011/05/11/exclusive-branchout-raises-18m-for-facebook-focused-professional-network/

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  • http://profiles.google.com/mvg210 Mike Gnanakone

     I agree with you Mark. 

    Over the past weekend, I’ve made animated videos of the top 1000 words for the SAT. 

    I’m 2/3 of the way there; my company is going to be as if RSA animate and Khan Academy had sex and made a baby that grew up to be a scholar. 

    I’ll make a Kickstarter project for it, I hope you can contribute some change 

  • Anonymous

    Mark, I think it’s safe to say there are plenty out there who agree with you, as I do.

    Healthcare is  my own personal “hobby,” as it overlaps with what I do every day. I do try to think about the big problems, and I do try to match “problems” with “solutions” (and would dearly love to have my own startup some day based on a solution-oriented application/problem.

    Any ideas where these big problems can be discussed, or where they might be billboarded? I remember a site from Ycombinator not long ago, with a kind of “What-we-would-really-like-to-see-addressed” list of questions, would be good to get this kind of a discussion going (although this will certainly be nvere-ending)…

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  • Arman Eker

    Greetings from Turkey,
    This is a really great post. Thank you for sharing such a valuable idea.

    Best Regards,
    Arman Eker
    Technology Consultant

  • http://twitter.com/wfjackson3 Willis F Jackson III

     This is pretty timely validation for me.  I was mentoring my sister the other day when she told me she wants to open a cupcake shop.  I asked her the same questions about the endurance of her business when the cupcake fad wears off.

  • http://twitter.com/wilson1315 Wilson

    Agree with you strongly

  • http://www.interpretllc.com Michael Dowling

    Mark, some interesting parallels here to the entertainment industry and perhaps some foreshadowing of what’s to come? The film and video game (packaged media at retail) industries went through periods of incredible innovation until the costs of production and marketing forced both industries to focus almost exclusively on tent pole franchises – spending more to produce and market fewer titles in the hopes of “guaranteeing” success. As you say, the means to producing interesting products cost-inexpensively are in the hands of many more people, which is a good thing. But, its also creating an extremely cluttered market. Will this lead to the same cycle dynamics and force investors to spend more on fewer products/companies? As someone who loved the innovations coming out of independent film in the early 90s, and who is enjoying this current spurt of creative genius, I certainly hope not.

  • Dave W Baldwin

    Great post.  Moving to the bigger is the reason for my push into improved AI.  

    I have found over the past 6 months difficulty in getting a few of the folks I’ve talked to, to open their mind and see the bigger picture.  So the connection to Auto, Healthcare and so on was lost.

    This week, will allow me to finish an eplanation of too much 2 Deiminsional thinking and the move over to three diminsal that is happening. 

    Hope that helps.

     

  • http://www.joaobelo.co.uk/ Joao Belo

    “In a way, startups have become kind of like the video game industry. New
    stuff gets created, it’s fun to play with and talk about. You want to
    use it because your friends are doing it and you want to find out what
    it’s all about. You want to see what’s new. You want the dopamine rush.”

    Brilliant analogy, I completely agree. Up-and-coming rock bands in the 70s/80s would be another one – The great ones persist, the others simply wither away after their one-off hits.

    Enduring substance is key. Everything else is noise/hype – But it can help promising entrepreneurs to take the first step… and better prepared professionals out of those who don’t make it.

  • Mo

    alth tyhghealthcare etc. are semi-monopolies. A single guy is rather a risk than an opportunity. No investor will trust it’s fate into the corner. Mark’s appeal is more provocative than a real advise.

  • Dave W Baldwin

    Very good… I was wondering when others would see the pattern… just don’t fall into the 2 dimensional trap  ;D 

  • http://www.swaglove.com/blog Casey Schorr

     Completely agree. “Unsexy” is what I call it. More startups need to strive for unsexiness. It’s often the “boring”, not TechCrunch “worthy” companies that make it big and make real money, year after year. I’ve been trying to get out of the bubble and surround myself with folks that think like this. They provide more value as mentors and peers than the founders creating me-too groupon clones, etc. One thing the tech industry forgets again and again is that we’re still creating businesses. And the definition of business hasn’t changed in 100 years. The idea is to provide a ton of value. The more value, the more profit you can skim off the top. And profit is the name of the game. Even for tech companies.

  • Anonymous

    That’s why I am very 

  • David Mease

    Right on Roj!  Legit startups building more gradual and sustainable  traction are getting  overshadowed by the flash-in-the-pan gimmicks.  It’s about quality not quantity!

  • Dave W Baldwin

    You make good point, however the lines are going to begin to blur… that is enough where a more bottom up B2B/C is going to happen.  If you are coming from the viewpoint of big B to big/medium B, that is understandable. 

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