On a final note, all of this is also related to finding out or determining what kind of company you are, or as Joel Spolsky puts it: Are you Ben and Jerry’s or Amazon? Finding out in what market situation you are in might be a good start to figure this out eventually.
|
startupbug.com - are you bitten by startup bug? - |
top news or
fresh stories
topic » news » help » videos » books » jobs |
submit a new story register | login |
|
top news » news |
Sort News: Most Recent  |  Top Today  |  Yesterday  |  Week  |  Month  |  Year  |  All  |  |
It is a exhaustive list of 'must read' entrepreneurship related resources (like startup news, stories, product videos, related books, startup jobs, etc...) updated daily for startupper minded individuals. Initially, this was a site which I have been using to bookmark startup and related resources for the last few few years. This service can sure as a similar tool for 'like minded' risk takers and wealth creators.
search ... Advanced Search
- stories
- top tags
- saved stories
- history
my saved stories
Navigation History with an option to clear the same. Comign soon...
Startupbug enables you to make your 'startup related blog or a website' more social by integrating our social components/tools, such as the 'Vote Button' for posts on your blog and 3rd party site content syndication (of latest published stories) to drive user engagement with a few lines of copy-and-pasting the HTML code.
» Grab the code & more details
0
Discuss
Discuss
With a good technical co-founder and all the other initial work you have done, you should be close to releasing a preview of your product and/or being ready to raise money or start charging initial customers and bringing in revenue. The process isn't easy - but if it was, (warning: cliche ahead) then everybody would be doing it.
0
Discuss
Discuss
Steve Wozniak is just about as good as entrepreneurs come, and even he has failed or had setbacks in startups. But he doesn't neglect the fact that a startup isn't working, when it's not, instead takes a step back and evaluates the situation. What do you do if an entrepreneurial project doesn't work the way you would like it to have?
0
Discuss
Discuss
Startups and racing have more in common than you might know. A few key lessons are easy to extract, and you'll probably benefit greatly from keeping them in mind. The startup world is hands down a brilliant place to be. I for one love it dearly and have even put my racing on hold for the last 1½ years for it. I’ve come to learn shitloads, and I continue to learn every single day. But, I’ve found
0
Discuss
Discuss
I was actually kind of surprised at the amount of negativity. A lot of people are saying that unless you're the founder, you shouldn't work at a startup because the rewards for early employees aren't worth it. I think that's bullshit, and at best it's an overgeneralization.
0
Discuss
Discuss
With 2010 having drawn to a close it seems an appropriate time to look back over the bigger VC investments made in British startups over the last year. Technology news sites like Techcrunch, ReadWriteWeb and even the formerly British Mashable have a tendency to overlook European startups so it's often easy to miss the startups who have raised big money in the last year.
0
Discuss
Discuss
The biggest mistake I ever made in my life as an entrepreneur was - not quitting my fulltime job in time. Even after Jitbit Software started making a four-times bigger income, I was still afraid to quit working for the big boss. Don't make that mistake.
Hiring is hard. Not hiring can seem even harder, but often isn't. At my last company we went from entrance to exit without hiring one employee. I'm now three years into DuckDuckGo, and still haven't hired.
0
Discuss
Discuss
I have a certain friend who called me again a while back, all excited about his latest revelation. “What if you could go to a web site and find all the recipes you could make today, with just the ingredients you already have in your kitchen? I’m going to start a website to offer this service!”
0
Discuss
Discuss
Rainmaking in Denmark and Okuri Ventures in Spain are joining forces to create the first accelerator based in several European cities, empowering entrepreneurs to leverage on local resources to access larger markets. The 3 month program in Madrid (Summer 2011) and Copenhagen (Fall 2011) will soon be followed by Berlin (Winter 2012) and London (Spring 2012). And that is only the beginning.
Proudly Hosted by: Worria