Tuesday, July 29, 2014

Fwd: The Newest Source Of Startup Funding – The Sharing Economy




-------- Original Message --------
Subject: The Newest Source Of Startup Funding – The Sharing Economy
Date: Tue, 29 Jul 2014 10:29:34 +0000
From: John Greathouse <RevUpNet@gmail.com>
To: stevescott@techacq.com


John Greathouse

The Newest Source Of Startup Funding – The Sharing Economy



The Newest Source Of Startup Funding – The Sharing Economy

Posted: 28 Jul 2014 05:00 AM PDT

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A version of this article previously appeared on Forbes.

The broad implications of the sharing economy are only beginning to be felt. The ability for people to turn their time, residences, cars and other personal assets into viable income streams is revising the traditional definition of "employment."

The sharing economy is also proving to be a significant source of bootstrap startup capital. In the past, a struggling entrepreneur's options for paying the bills were limited. Part time jobs typically generated minimal income while requiring the entrepreneur be at a specific place at a specific time, thus restricting their ability to work on their venture.

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Sharing While Caring About Your Venture

In contrast, the sharing economy affords entrepreneurs the flexibility to work on their ventures during their peak hours of productivity while generating working capital from multiple sources.

Want to monetize your roommate's parking space while they are at work? ParkAtMyHouse.com can help. Could you use some cash driving strangers around town during your downtime? Lyft and Uber will provide you with the necessary infrastructure and allow you to keep most of the money you earn. Have time on your lunch hour to run some errands? Entrepreneurs  using TaskRabbit earn an average of $60 per odd job.

The sharing economy is not only a good fit for entrepreneurs' lifestyles, it also offers them outsized financial rewards. One entrepreneur who is taking advantage of this new paradigm is Courtney Walker, Founder of Callie + Caston. Courtney has been driving for Uber for nearly a year. When I asked her why, she noted that, "Uber allows me to work when I have free time and doesn't impair my focus on my venture. I am in the early stages of launching my company, so there are often times when I have to wait on vendors, suppliers and other third parties before I can make additional progress on my clothing line. Thus, being able to episodically work, when I have the energy and the time, is a great relief."

Sharing Leads To More Sharing

Tradesy, one of the fastest growing sharing economy companies, was initially funded by the sharing economy. Tradesy allows women to sell their clothing and accessories online, thereby recycling their wardrobes while generating incremental cash. (Note: I am an investor in Tradesy via Rincon Venture Partners.)

Tracy DiNunzio, the company's Founder and CEO, was an early adopter of the sharing economy. Soon after Tracy launched Tradesy, her roommate departed with no notice, leaving her wondering how she was going to pay the rent, let alone bootstrap her business. According to Tracy, "There was this new website called Airbnb that had just come out. So I took stock and I said, 'Well I have this nice place on the beach and there are two bedrooms. What if I slept on the couch, and rented both bedrooms out?' I made a quick spreadsheet, and I said, 'At 80% occupancy, I'm making money here. Okay, I'm opening a hotel.'"

Tracy was initially tentative about allowing strangers into her home, saying, "The first two guys that inquired, I just got weirded (out) and I said, 'Sorry, it's occupied.'" Eventually, Tracy's cash flow desperation fortified her resolve and she accepted the inquiry of a musician, after he sent her a song as his "reference." In Tracy's words, "I listened to the song and because the song was pretty good and I really needed the money, I said, 'Okay fine' and 17 hours later, my husband walked in." Thus, Tracy not only funded her business to profitability by leveraging the sharing economy, she also met her life mate.

Tracy's remarks are taken from a talk she gave to a group of aspiring entrepreneurs at UC Santa Barbara. You can watch an 8-minute excerpt from Tracy's talk below.

As Tracy experienced first-hand, the sharing economy allows entrepreneurs to bootstrap their businesses more effectively while also affording them the time and flexibility to accelerate the growth of their ventures.

There is no doubt a small army of entrepreneurs who are quietly funding their startups by driving for Uber, selling clothing on Tradesy and doing odd jobs on TaskRabbit, all of which beat the hell out of flipping burgers or waiting tables. This trend is not only good for entrepreneurs, but for society as a whole.

Follow my startup-oriented Twitter feed here: @johngreathouse. I won't tweet a photo of a killer burrito I am about to devour - just startup stuff.

Image credit: Baruch Moskovits from the Noun Project

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The post The Newest Source Of Startup Funding – The Sharing Economy appeared first on John Greathouse.



Tuesday, July 1, 2014

Fwd: RESENDING: how to build an app with the crowd...




-------- Original Message --------
Subject: RESENDING: how to build an app with the crowd...
Date: Tue, 1 Jul 2014 16:13:06 -0400 (EDT)
From: Peter Diamandis <peter@diamandis.com>
To: stevescott@techacq.com


Steve,

Just making sure you saw this. It's essential reading for today's App-centric world.

-P

I have at least 7 really cool app ideas... but I have no time, and I frankly couldn't program them to save my life. Could you?

I started looking into how I could design and make an app quickly and cheaply... Normally what I'd do is go out and hire an in-house developer (or a freelancer). But that is so linear.

There is a better way... And ultimately, now I'm doing it.

How am I building an app?

I recently met with Narinder Singh, the president of a company called [topcoder], when he presented to the CEOs in my Abundance 360 community (here).

[topcoder] is the "world's largest crowdsourcing development, design, and data science platform. Their community gathers the world's experts in design, development and data science to work on interesting and challenging problems for fun and reward."

For reference, they have over 640,000 developers, designers and data scientists on their site right now, waiting to build your app.

With [topcoder], rather than a single designer, you actually get a group of designers and coders all competing to concept and build your app, on a rapid development cycle.

Why is this important?

  • Incentive competitions work! There's a lot of latent talent that wants a chance to prove themselves. People are looking to earn money; people are looking for significance. They want to earn a reputation. People want a challenge, and oftentimes they want to solve your problems. Incentive prizes play into these desires.
  • The crowd is immensely powerful, giving you multiple ideas to choose from. Why have one person pitching you app designs or concepts when you could have 50? Now you have dozens of options to choose from. Many may come up with variations and improvements that are meaningful and valuable. The amount of creativity increases exponentially with each contributor you add, especially when they are competing against each other. The development speeds are higher and the cost is often lower in the long term than traditional methods. And, when you use the crowd, you tap into a diversity of talent and levels of expertise that would have been impossible to reach otherwise.

Let's break down the step-by-step process for developing an app using the crowd.

Getting Started: Step By Step, Using the Crowd

  1. The Napkin Sketch: You don't need to know how to code. You just need to be able to describe what you want. Try to understand the ins and outs of what you want to build. Begin by writing down your goals. Sketch out a basic interface. Think about user experience and flow. Think literal napkin sketches.
  2. Design Competition: Next, the [topcoder] team will convert this and launch a design competition. With their help, you create basic wireframes, design a prize, and press Go. Designers then compete to design your app for you. Here's an example from the Innovation Partnership Program, delivered by XPRIZE and Singularity University.
  3. Feedback and Iteration: Throughout the process, you get to give feedback and iterate your idea. Predetermined checkpoints let you interact with the designers before locking in a winner.
  4. Development Competition: Once you have a design, it's time to develop the software. Again, with [topcoder]'s help, you'll outline your specific needs and platform requests (e.g. iOS, Android, HTML5, responsive website). Developers join the competition, and each code different pieces of the app. You can even elect to have the competitions done under NDA in secret.
  5. Pick the Winning App: After a few more rounds of iteration and downselecting, you pick a winner and you have your new app.

If you want to get started with [topcoder], send an email to topcoder@appirio.com. The time for developing an app will run you two to six months depending on the level of complexity, and the cost is probably around $12,000 per month, but if this app is central to your business and your revenue flow, it's worth your time and money.

Some examples:

[topcoder] does data science competitions as well. At Planetary Resources, we partnered with TopCoder to run an AsteroidZoo challenge. We took all of the data that's come out of the Catalina Sky Survey, millions of photographs, and are working with their crowd to build the algorithms and capabilities to find asteroids in these images of the sky.

A company called MESH01 just developed their entire app using [topcoder]. Here are some stats to show you that these aren't just small simple apps (and a video). These are large-scale, complicated projects with lots of moving pieces. Stats: 80,000 lines of code, 130+ challenges logging 7,500 hours of development time, $130,000 in available prizes, 30% labor cost savings, 1/2 time savings. The software built by [topcoder] is powering nearly 100% of this company's revenue.

What's the bottom line?

It's time to tap into the crowd. This is just one of many examples of the power of the crowd. If you want to learn exactly how to incorporate these tools into your business, join me here in January 2015.

P.S. Every weekend I send out a "Tech Blog" like this one. If you want to sign up, go to www.AbundanceHub.com and sign up for this and my Abundance blogs.

P.P.S. Please forward this to your best clients, colleagues and friends -- especially if they've ever wanted to build an app.



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Fwd: evidence of abundance #2: maternal & infant mortality




-------- Original Message --------
Subject: evidence of abundance #2: maternal & infant mortality
Date: Tue, 1 Jul 2014 12:54:24 -0400 (EDT)
From: Peter Diamandis <peter@diamandis.com>
To: stevescott@techacq.com


Steve,

100 years ago, child birth was risky and infant mortality rates were horrific.

How would you feel if 30% of infants died? Or if 900 expectant mothers out of every 100,000 died giving birth?

But thanks to technology, the reality today is far different.

Today's Evidence of Abundance is perhaps THE most important topic I could offer.

***Evidence of Abundance: Maternal & Infant Mortality***

This week's topic is very personal to all of us. It's the life and health of your mother, your wife, your children.

Giving birth today is a happy occasion, but for centuries and millenia, it was a risky endeavor. Let's look at the data.

If we look back over the last hundred years, a mother's chances of dying in childbirth were as high as 900 deaths per 100,000 births.

As sanitation and modern medicine have improved, those mortality rates have plummeted. Today, a pregnant woman expects that she'll give birth and live through it.

Let's look at infant mortality next. I divide this into two parts: (i) infant mortality at birth; and, (ii) having your child living past the age of 5.

This graph shows the death rate per 1,000 live births in the world, starting in 1900 through today. In 1900, the average infant death rate was 18%... and in some parts of the world, this death rate is as much as one-third.

Imagine having one out of three infants dying?

We see another precipitous drop when we look at children who die before the age of 5. Through improvements in technology, medicine, and even reduction in local conflicts, we're now able to keep children alive into adulthood -- feed them, take care of them, protect them -- and this is changing the world.

As we create this world of abundance, we're able to build tight family bonds as mothers and children both live longer, better lives.

Best,
Peter

P.S. Please send your friends and family to AbundanceHub.com to sign up for these blogs -- this is all about surrounding yourself with abundance-minded thinkers. And if you want my personal coaching on these topics, consider joining my Abundance 360 membership program for entrepreneurs.



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