Showing posts with label Fred Wilson. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Fred Wilson. Show all posts

Monday, November 25, 2013

How New York City Views the World

I kid Fred Wilson, but I did see an element of the NYC-centered worldview in his comment,
A smartphone can get you a ride but a car can't get you a date.
I think it's safe to say that Mr. Wilson can afford a car that would be very helpful to his dating life, were he not happily married.

But heck, as removed from the singles scene as I am, maybe we are moving into an era where "Hey, babe, check out the productivity apps on my Galaxy" is an effective pickup line.

Tuesday, December 27, 2011

Investing in the Misunderstood

Fred Wilson has some words of advice for people looking for places to invest their money:
When people ask me, "how do you know which companies and services are going to be the biggest successes?", I usually tell them to look for the companies and services that are mocked and misunderstood. For some reason, that correlates highly with the biggest breakout successes.
That seems reasonable, to a point. If you see momentum toward a product or technology that "doesn't make sense to me", odds are you're missing something. And the more investors who say, "That doesn't make sense, so I'm not going to invest in it," the more opportunity there is for those who see its virtues, or don't see its virtues but trust in the wisdom of the crowd, to become early investors in a technology that may turn out to be the next big thing.

As a VC, Wilson has experience investing money in ventures that fail. So I don't want to read too much into his defense of Twitter, a phenomenal social success that has had great difficulty translating traffic into revenue.
For years, every post, column, or article written about Twitter would have comment after comment making fun of a service where people "told the world what they had for lunch." Of course, people were doing that on Twitter and people still do that on Twitter. But what those mocking Twitter were missing is that in between the tweets about pizza and pita were posts about politics and poetry. There was substance in the midst of nonsense.
I've commented on what I believe to be the primary attraction of Twitter, the illusion of close contact or relationships with other Twitter members, including celebrities. But whatever you make of Twitter, and even if you filter the wheat from the chaff so as to read about "politics and poetry" rather than "pizza and pita", it's difficult to see how that distinguishes Twitter from other technologies or starts it down the path toward profitability. Before the public's attention shifted to Twitter feeds and walls, the blogosphere was ridiculed for its superficiality - despite being full of good political commentary, poetry, and information of substance that in a Twitter feed would appear only as a link. Twitter is not a unique, stand-alone phenomenon, but is part of a progression of technologies that facilitate the public exchange of information. But is that enough to make it viable in the longer-term? It's an open question. The dot-com graveyard is full of good ideas that attracted traffic but made no money, as well as companies who did not find a way to monetize their ideas before they were copied and commoditized by others, and even of companies that briefly made money before being supplaced by something "newer and shinier" or swallowed by and incorporated into a larger company.

If I were investing millions in startups, and expected that only one in three of my investments would succeed, a company like Twitter might look like a good bet. Get in early enough and there's a possibility of making serious money when the company finds a way to turn its traffic into cash. Even if the company never figures out how to turn a profit, it may still be possible for it to go public and provide a huge return on my investment at that time. But as an individual, investing on a very different scale and with very different expectations, my first real chance to get in on a company like Twitter is after the IPO - and if you look at recent IPO's for similar companies, if you join the early rush to buy their stock on the promise or expectation that they'll eventually figure out a path to profitability you're apt to lose some money.

Sunday, February 07, 2010

Lightweight Advocacy


Where Robert Wright finds cause for concern, others see the opportunity to work for sensible policy changes without resorting to traditional, expensive advocacy or lobbying efforts.
As a result of Brad's post [about how we don't have a visa for entrepreneurs], we formed a working group of a few VCs and a few entrepreneurs that we call the "startup visa group." We've continued to blog about this issue, but more importantly, we've started calling and talking to our elected officials and their staffs. We have a plan and we have a legislative proposal to fix this issue.

Now we are collecting the stories that we need to galvanize the elected officials to act. When that is done, the group is headed to Washington to push this forward.

There are no lobbyists involved. There is no PR firm involved. No campaign contributions have been made. No PACs or other advocacy groups have been formed.

Everyone involved has a full time job either starting and running a company or building and managing a portfolio of companies. We are doing this "nights and weekends."

And we can do that because this is "lightweight advocacy". We are using our blogs, the internet, social media, and our relationships with our elected officials to move this issue forward. We'll see if we are effective. I sure hope we will be. It will fix an important issue in the startup economy and it will be yet another example of the internet is providing tools to do things the way they should be done.
To me, that sounds like a very good way to work toward reform, not something of which we should be afraid.