Findory was my first startup and a nearly five year effort. Its goal of personalizing information was almost laughably ambitious, a joy to pursue, and I learned much.
I learned that a cheap is good, but too cheap is bad. It does little good to avoid burning too fast only to starve yourself of what you need.
I re-learned the importance of a team, one that balances the weaknesses of some with the strengths of another. As fun as learning new things might be, trying to do too much yourself costs the startup too much time in silly errors born of inexperience.
I learned the necessity of good advisors, especially angels and lawyers. A startup needs people who can provide expertise, credibility, and connections. You need advocates to help you.
And, I learned much more, some of which is detailed in the other posts in the Starting Findory series:
- The series
- In the beginning
- On the cheap
- Legal goo
- Launch early and often
- Startups are hard
- Talking to the press
- Customer feedback
- Marketing
- The team
- Infrastructure and scaling
- Hardware go boom
- Funding
- Acquisition talks
- The end
3 comments:
Does "The end" means end to the company?
Please ignore my previous post. I found that Findory shut down in November 2007
http://technology.inc.com/managing/articles/200806/rajamaran.html
What are you working on now, new startup?
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