Showing posts with label Startup Weekend. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Startup Weekend. Show all posts

Tuesday, March 27, 2012

SXSW update - 8th Lean Startup Meetup

Cover of "Minority Report [Blu-ray]"[Original post written @http://startupiceland.wordpress.com]
Kristjan Freyr Kristjansson was at SXSW2012 and he gave a brief talk about the show and more importantly shared his thoughts on attending many of the Lean Startup Panel. The summary of the SXSW update was:
  1. It is very noisy, crowded and advertisements everywhere - it would be impossible to get your startup noticed or even to meet someone and follow up on the conversation. It is a fantastic place to get connected for the first time through the parties hosted by various brands, Kristjan particularly liked the one hosted by Startup Weekend, TechStars and Google.
  2. Have a plan with regard to what you want to achieve when you attend SXSW, and it is something every startup/entrepreneur should experience once
  3. There is an opportunity to have a big Icelandic contingency in the next SXSW, as the planners of the SXSW really liked the Thojdfunder National Assembly that was organized in Iceland and they would like to tap into the crowd of brilliant entrepreneurs and people focused on solving challenging problems attending SXSW next year and apply the same approach that was applied in Iceland. Gudjon Mar and Gunnar Holmstein were the instigators. I fully support the initiative lets see if we can gather enough people in Iceland to support this initiative and show some strength from Iceland next year in SXSW.
  4. There were some very exciting interactive advertisement focused software that had face recognition software and based on your online profile was able to display ads that were targeted. The technology is here and it is just a matter of time before it becomes mainstream. The advertisements on the subway in Minority Report when Tom Cruise was running is going to happen sooner than you think.
  5. There were many formats for the Lean Startup sessions, some of them were led by Eric Ries, but there were others where different startups shared their examples of applying the Lean Startup Principles. Kristjan, thought it was so incredible to be see so many startups starting to apply the lessons and are learning fast and pivoting into valuable solutions. It is amazing to me why this has not caught on sooner here in Iceland, we have a long way to go here.
The general discussion centered around how we can experiment and validate hypothesis, Kristjan shared the link to the Lean Startup Experiment website lean.st. The 5 minute corner was taken by Helgi þor Jonsson, Helgi has been following a blog site Unicornfree.com and how he has taken the first step to becoming an entrepreneur. He has started working on a prototype of a Project Management Platform for volunteers and non-profit activities. His insight working with this blog site is the concept of 30 x 500, which is get $30 from 500 people then you have a business or $500 from 30 people. He has been taking the online course which is almost over and he would be ready to move on to the next stage of launching his product. We discussed a lot about how to raise the bar on Startups being created in Iceland. Of course there were many suggestions, Gudjon Mar was of the opinion that we need to have big wins to establish a precedence that successful and profitable startups can be created out of Iceland. I feel we need to go one step further, successful and profitable startups need to created in a faster pace. We need to accelerate the process to actually make an impact and change minds in Iceland. I believe that if we can focus the entire startup community to pick topics from Paul Graham's Ideas that YCombinator will invest in and basically build companies for those problems we will get somewhere with the culture here. We need to make it attractive for someone to invest in, nothing against someone wanting to start a coffee shop it just does not create a buzz for Angel and Venture Investors to get excited about.
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Monday, February 27, 2012

And the Winner of Startup Weekend Akureyri is...

English: A cruise ship in the harbor, Akureyri...
Drum roll... Entrepreneurship! Yes, the winner over the weekend is the concept of Entrepreneurship. It was exciting to see over 100 people working on a problem, listening to feedback and presenting their ideas and getting recognized for their effort. As much as I like the idea of people getting recognition for their ideas, Ideas do not equate to launching a business. I have written about "Startup Ideas - Why ideas are not the problem". There were 19 teams that presented their ideas. The companies that I thought really created a business over the weekend were:

Video taken from previous Startup Weekend Events in Iceland
  • Campalo.com and Campalo.is - a booking and reservation application over the web for Camp sites around iceland
  • Disulistar.is - a hyper local curated list of things for everything from Top 5 restaurants for business meetings in Reykjavik to Task list to do press release. You pay a small fee for not having to spend the time to research the list yourself
Of course both of these companies did not win the award because their idea was not revolutionary or "cool" but both of these probably will be able to build a sustainable business. I think the other ideas and teams need to be recognized as well. Here is the link to a slideshow of pictures from my Twitter stream.
  1. Whale Buddy - A Multilingual App for Smart Phones that enables a better experience for tourists on a Whale watching tour
  2. Life Line - Making the rescue suits and life jackets fitted with GPS device, Nano technology and Diode lights to enable finding the missing persons at sea.
  3. Viral Trade - An online market place for digital goods used in online games
  4. Tannstra - A toothpick made from Icelandic straw
  5. Active Site - A photo market for pictures taken underwater off the coast of Akureyri, I guess it could be applied for any all underwater pictures.
There were 12 more companies, I have to admit did not find them very interesting that is probably because of my lack of understanding of Icelandic. 

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Saturday, February 25, 2012

Entrepreneurial Density - Startup Weekend Akureyri

I jumped in a car with bunch of Entrepreneurs yesterday and drove to Akureyri. I am participating in the Startup Weekend in Akureyri. This is the 8th Startup Weekend run by Innovit, Kristján Freyr Kristjánsson, the CEO of Innovit and I have been talking and working through a number of things including the Conference in May Startup Iceland - Building Sustainable Startup Ecosystem. I wanted to volunteer and observe this event and also to test my own hypothesis.

Brad Feld, has the theory that there needs to be Entrepreneurial Density in a community to enable a sustainable startup ecosystem to form and function:
Entrepreneurial density = ((# entrepreneurs + # people working for startups or high growth companies)) / adult population
I wanted to test the Entrepreneurial Density in Akureyri, which is a smaller town than Reykjavik. There were more than 100 people last night split up into 31 teams working on a new idea to launch a business over the weekend. I will play the role of mentor and observer today and tomorrow. It is fascinating to see the energy, enthusiasm and twinkle in the eyes of the people working on their ideas. Entrepreneurism is alive and well in Iceland. I think the number might be small, but I am seeing a healthy trend that is pushing the density number up in Iceland.
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Tuesday, January 17, 2012

Should you build it?

Image representing Startup Weekend as depicted...

Been actively reading and re-reading the Lean Startup book by Eric Ries. Something that I pick up again and again in the book is the fact that it is becoming very easy to start a business, given the availability of many resources. I have written about this before. But it also begs the question, yes, we can build whatever we set our minds to but should we build it? Will the business be sustainable? what is the opportunity cost of the time, money and effort if the business is not sustainable? Eric talks a lot about how we waste resources because we don't put values on them. Will the idea really solve a problem that exists in the world? How do we know? how do we engage with our customer before we embark on this journey? I don't believe we ask this question often enough. I participated as an observer last weekend in the Startup Weekend event held in University of Iceland by Innovit. I met the teams that were working round the clock and I shared with them my experience and strategies while they were working on their business idea and business plan template. On sunday, I also participated in their pitch and one thing that I felt was missing is the question "Should we build this?" and "How we plan to engage with our potential customers and get feedback before we start our venture?" I did not get a conclusive answers but then again I was there for 2 hours and each pitch was 5 minutes. The teams did a very good job, of course it was all in Icelandic so could not get all the facts but overall there was a lot of energy. Over 100 people participated in this event in Reykjavik, very similar to the numbers in Northern Kentucky, West Michigan, Seattle and Beijing where this event was held last weekend. This once again proves that there is enough and more people in Iceland who want to start something new and take control of their future!
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