Can you make a dollar?

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Can you make a dollar?

 

 

 

Can you make a dollar?

 

Velocity of a dollar is a concept studied by economists to measure how quickly money changes hands in an economy. It also has an important application for startups.  For startups, velocity of the dollar is all about answering the question “Can we make 1 dollar today?” In the midst of building fancy websites, developing extensive feature sets, and continuous customer discovery, many startup founders fail to ask their customers to simply buy the minimum viable product.

The easiest way to validate whether or not your idea is worthy of more work is to just go out and try to sell it to someone. This is not the top-tier, multi-featured version of your product but rather the simple, early prototype that generally accomplishes what consumers want. If you can get consumers to salivate over this early product, developing traction will be in your near future.

Don’t get trapped in the office making a product that no one wants. For startups, sustainability today is greater than sustainability tomorrow. Don’t get caught up in your industry’s titans and their actions. Large companies adjust quarterly. The advantage of being a startup is your ability to out-focus larger companies and to adjust weekly instead of quarterly. The only place you can truly learn about your customer’s feelings about your product or service is out of the office.

 

Get out of the office and try to make a dollar!

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Meet the Founders: BattleMe

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Meet the Founders: BattleMe

 

 

 

Team:

The BattleMe team is a group of developers and rap fans from Minsk, Belarus.

There are 5 members of the BattleMe team. All have a computer science education at the Belarusian State University. Previous to BattleMe, they had already worked together for 2 years developing multi-platform mobile applications. Since September of 2015 we are fully focused on developing BattleMe app. BattleMe was named the Best IT startup in “My Business” Show on Belarusian TV.

Daniil Patapau: Co-founder of BattleMe. He is the author of the idea and is a Specialist in Informatics and Economics from Belarusian State University. “BattleMe is my first startup. This project combines my main hobby and my professional skills.”

Alena Patapava: Co-founder & CEO of BattleMe. As she was studying at the university she took part in a Belarusian-German project “Analysis and processing of ultrasonography images” at the University of Heidelberg, Germany. She then worked as a SAP and Salesforce consultant building complex business applications and became a SAP CRM certified consultant.

In 2014 she and her brother founded a small IT company in Minsk, Belarus. They develop multi-platform mobile applications.

Dzmitry Bahdanovich: Co-founder and CTO of the project. He worked as a Senior Java Developer for EPAM, Oracle (Oracle Public Cloud), Pentaho (ETL Tool), and then switched to the BattleMe project.

Svetlana Dedunovich: She graduated from Belarusian State University with a Bachelor’s degree in Computer Science in 2015. She is an iOS Engineer motivated by bringing value to the project and making people’s lives better by solving their problems. She has developed several iOS applications from scratch and released them to App Store. In addition to this, she was the Bronze medal winner of International Olympiad on Astronomy and Astrophysics.

Alexandr Sikorski: Alexandr is a passionate UX/UI designer. Creating app designs for him is an art form, and he always tries to make his work as elegant as possible. After working in various IT corporations for 6 years, he considers participating in the BattleMe project to be a wonderful adventure.

Together they form the BattleMe team dedicated to providing a platform for rappers to challenge their peers and maybe even become the next big rap star!

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Meet the Founder: CoachTube

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Meet the Founder: CoachTube

 

 

 

Wade Floyd grew up in the Dallas area. He moved to Austin, TX for college and attended Abilene Christian University. He graduated with a degree in finance. After college he built a direct sales organization for Southwestern and worked for them 15 years.

His entrepreneurial journey began in 5th grade. He sold pot holders which his sister made he would sell door-to-door. He later moved on to purchasing fireworks and selling them at school for 10x the price. His first startup he founded was needto.com which is a digital marketplace for neighbors to help each other.  He has also founded hostfamily.com which connects exchange students with families to stay with. Most recently, Wade founded coachtube.com and decided that it is the most promising so it is where he directs all his attention.

He was inspired to create CoachTube because of his obsession with online, on-demand learning. He built the product with his childhood in mind. When he was a kid he wished he would have had access to world class coaches regardless of geography or income.

In the future, Wade wants to be involved in all kinds of startups and be able to mentor young entrepreneurs.

 

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Meet the Founders: Common Edits

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Meet the Founders: Common Edits

 

 

 

Matt:

Matt is the 33 year old founder of Common Edits. After graduating high school in 2001 Matt felt called by his country to serve in the military. He spent 6 years as a nuclear engineer in the United States Navy. After leaving the military Matt attended the University of Texas at Dallas and graduated with a degree in Emerging Media and Digital Communication. He worked in digital marketing for a while before pursuing his passion of music by launching Common Edits.

Matt is married to his wife Lyddy of 2 years. Matt has two core missions that drive him. The first is to emulate his grandfather who he describes as “the perfect southern gentlemen” and the second is to “incentivize people to collaborate with other musicians and create beautiful music”. Matt takes the discipline he learned from the military, the logic from being an engineer, and his passion for music into leading Common Edits.

Caleb:

Caleb Johnson is a 19 year old from Fort Worth, Texas who won the first ever Common Edits contest. Matt recognized the drive, passion, and hustle Caleb displayed during the contest and brought him on to the Common Edits team. Caleb serves as the resident artist and has a deep passion for hip-hop culture.

Mentorship is incredibly important to Caleb. When he was young, he had a mentor who encouraged him to take interest into entrepreneurship. Because of this, he wants to open a sneaker store in downtown Fort Worth as a place that he can pay it forward and mentor young people to encourage them to take an interest in entrepreneurship. Caleb brings youthful energy and a passion for the hip-hop culture to the Common Edits team.

CJ:

CJ Carr is a 28 year old from Boston, Massachusetts. CJ and Matt met at the South by SouthWest Hackathon and instantly bonded over their passion for music.

CJ began playing guitar at 4 years old and won a Jimi Hendrix sound-a-like contest at 11. At 13 he began learning how to program computer games. He went to Northeastern University for Computer Science. Since the he has competed in 37 hackathons around the world. He has an incredible passion for creating art and creating tools that enables others to tap in to their natural creativity.

He believes that “lack of inspiration is a public health crisis” and he is devoted to using his love of music, art, and programming to allow people to unlock their own potential. He channels all of this in his work with Common Edits to provide people with the tools necessary to create music easily.

 

Click here to the full watch the full podcast and learn more about how Matt, Caleb and CJ are reinventing the way independent artists create and license music.

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Meet the Founders: Baby Bin

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Meet the Founders: Baby Bin

 

 

Follow BabyBin @mybabybin

 

Brian Feldkamp and Kevin Bourke are the the co-founders of Baby Bin. They began their entrepreneurial journey when they started a t-shirt company together that Brian used as a class project during college at Depaul University. Together these two are changing the way parents purchase essential baby products.

Brian is married to his wife Kelly who owns and operates a company called Provention Plus in Chicago which helps individuals and corporations prevent injuries before they happen. Kevin is married to his wife Kristina and they have two daughters, Brooklyn (3) and Kennedy (2). The work these two do is characterized by a life motto Kevin’s father passed down to Kevin “Nice. Honest. Effort.” To Kevin it is a foundational principle that manifests itself in all the work that he does. Brian finds his philosophical center within the serenity prayer. He recognizes that some things are out of his control, but if it is in his control, he will do his best to give “Nice. Honest. Effort.”

The two form an entrepreneurial duo that is both well-aligned in its values and well-balanced in its skill set. Kevin has spent most of his career in the corporate world doing everything from engineering to finance. Brian has worked previously as a small business owner and most recently, as a startup founder. Together the two form Baby Bin, a business dedicated to making parenthood a little bit easier so that families can spend more time making memories, and less time doing everything else.

Click here to the full watch the full podcast and learn more about how Kevin and Brian are helping parents get essential baby products delivered directly to their door.

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Meet the Founder: GMTRY

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Meet the Founder: GMTRY

 

 

 

 

Vip Sitaraman is an 18 year old 3-time entrepreneur, University of Arizona graduate, and founder of GMTRY. He makes published research articles accessible to everyone by adding beautifully designed infographics that makes the complex, commonplace. Hailing from Chandler, Arizona, he has already been featured in Forbes, NPR, and was published in the World Forum of Science at only 16.

During his scientific work, a mentor reached out to Vip and asked if he had been interested in science outreach because of his interest in graphic design. Vip started a simple blog and it has blossomed into the startup we see today. After a frustrating encounter where it took him 1 month to fully understand a 7 page research paper, Vip realized the importance of building GMTRY to serve as a new way to communicate complex ideas to people.

Click here to watch the full podcast and learn more about how Vip is putting the art in article.

 

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Are you building something that no one wants?

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Are you building something that no one wants?

 

 

 

 

 

How is your idea different than what exists in the marketplace? We see companies all the time that pitch ideas to us. Some people spend time working on an idea that is not solving a problem, or has already solved a problem.

What is it that you know in your research that proves this company needs to exist? Here are a couple of bad answers to this question:

1.    Well we are gonna be the best

2.    We are gonna dominate the competitor

3.    Our competitor is old and outdated, they haven’t kept up with technology

One challenge that I have for people is to understand the following three key items to make sure your idea can be successful in your space.

1.    Do you understand your customer?

2.    What is the problem that you are solving for that customer?

3.    How are you different from other things that exist in the market place?

 

When Dropbox applied to Ycombinator he saw a need to share large files online.

The customer for Dropbox is anyone who needs to share large files.

The problem is it is difficult to share large files with other people who are not on your own network. You could only use physical media.

Competing products work at the wrong layer of abstraction and/or force the user to constantly think and do things. With Dropbox, you hit "Save", as you normally would, and everything just works, even with large files (thanks to binary diffs).

The problem before DropBox seems silly now because it is easy to share large files. At the time it did not exist. We would love a startup to be able to give the answer Drew Houston did for DropBox.

Understanding what problem your idea is solving is very important. Sometimes startups build something that people do not want.

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Launching Your Startup in 2016: Digital Marketing Growth Hacks

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Launching Your Startup in 2016: Digital Marketing Growth Hacks

 

 

 

 

The very term Startup has acquired a somewhat derogatory note over the past decade, and in 2016 some businesses are even avoiding this label like it’s jinxed. Why is it so? Well, because 9 out of 10 startups fail miserably. A wave of Apple-wannabes, and wantrepreneurs on a mission to create a demand for products that their friends and family consider to be a creation of a genius, have brought hundreds of companies to an imminent failure at a surprisingly fast rate. Brace yourself for the following statement, because it might just sting you a little bit.

You are not the next Elon Musk.

Still, if you don’t want to come off as a business caveman who is not following trends, I suggest that you start using the word Brand instead of a Startup. Because that’s what will influence the final outcome of your work.  And while you’re stuck in a daydream, fantasizing how you will thrive in the business world and build a successful company - some of us are allegedly working even 18 hours a day to make those dreams come true.

So what do you have in plan for today, do you have some milestones to reach? Hopefully you do, because if you want to focus on growth, you need to be focused on a bigger picture as well as your individual milestones. But first, let’s focus on that bigger picture. 

Gartner’s Hype Cycle

The Gartner’s Hype Cycle provides the best possible depiction of how technology innovations peak and progress. Reaching the astronomical curve of growth and the peak of inflated expectations is a bumpy ride, and this representation of tech innovations hype can closely relate to the actual growth of your company. Actually, 25% of startups fail during the first year after their launch, and as much as 30% of them fail because they weren’t ready for the rapid growth. The mutual dependence between your company and the product that you are pushing on the market, and how that relationship relates to this curve presented, should be obvious. Since the great majority of Startups are basing their unique sales proposal on some type of a technological innovation, the algorithm presented is the perfect exemplification of what you can expect from your audience and your overall productivity.

However, reaching that plateau of productivity depends on a grand variety of small milestones that you should reach on a daily basis, as mentioned in our introduction. From marketing to lead generation and actual sales, you have a whole world of troubles to conquer before your business model proves itself as a sustainable operation that will bring profit continuously, and increasingly in the following period.

So which goals should you reach daily? Collecting shares and leads of course. Read through and find out not just how you can generate a buzz within weeks, but also how you can hack some of the growth milestones that you’ve set.

Rapid Growth on a Daily Basis: Exploiting a Social Media Marketing Hack

Your business development relies heavily on your marketing efforts. While most business owners are worried about an inconsistent ROI, which is sometimes in digital marketing as inconsistent and non-transparent as it possibly could be, you will have to embrace the fact that digital marketing is an expense that you can’t get away from. Accept it as a cost of doing business, but keep in mind that it is still an investment. So don’t expect wonders if you are investing less than your competition. Expect wonders only if you are investing less amounts, but in a smart way and particularly focused.

Now let’s reinvent your social media marketing strategy. As we said, ideally, you should focus on one metric, and one metric only. If you are on a mission to develop your business, you have to create brand awareness, and creating brand awareness will come through shares and referrals of your followers. Sharing quality content can get you out there, and it will certainly create some buzz if you do it continuously and you mind your basic SEO strategy. But what you need is engagement from your followers, and you need it to increase gradually, if not rapidly.

Organizing a giveaway is probably the most fruitful hack that you can perform. This type of a campaign will allow you to focus your investment, target the right audience, gain followers, spread awareness rapidly and create that buzz within days. You can practically skyrocket your brand and go viral by the end of the week. The first thing that you will need for this is an app designed for this type of giveaways. The second thing that you will need is a prize that will encourage your audience to share your material. In an ideal world, you have some knowledge of API integrations, and you will utilize your CRM tool with your social media profile and monitor all shares and their conversions separately, since there isn’t a tool that will cover all of this options yet. Today, it is not that hard or expensive to build an app by yourself. However, this is not a necessity. The third thing that you will need is a bulletproof content marketing strategy that will utilize this buzz on the right way.

Expect enormous fluctuations in traffic on your website. If you are monitoring your visitors and conversions you will definitely be confused when you receive your monthly report. In all honesty, that sort of traffic is unpredictable, but one thing that you can do is push high quality content. While the great majority of your contest entrants will be motivated solely by your prizes, a percentage of those visitors will become regular readers of your blog, or at least will become returning visitors. Engaging them, and motivating them through high quality content and lead magnets, will create conversions eventually.

Over time, your visits rate will began to drop (similar to the hype cycle algorithm above presented) and the milestones that you will have to focus on are conversions, of course. Once you determine how many shares are bringing you leads, you will have no problem with optimizing that funnel. Invest in quality, organize multiple giveaways if you have to, but keep a steady flow of visitors and focus on conversions. Once your buzz wears out, another contest will kick it right back up. If you are optimizing your funnel right, you will be able to collect higher and higher numbers of leads, and, ultimately clients.

If it helps, imagine this process as a wave. Once it gets low, it’s time to boost it right back up. In that fluctuation, focus your lead magnets and content to acquire as many leads possible. After that, you will have to focus on referrals, but that’s a whole different story.

Nate M. Vickery is a business consultant mostly concentrated on business growth through latest management and marketing trends, and technological innovations. Nate is the Editor-in-Chief at Bizzmarkblog.com.

 

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Are You an Entrepreneur or a Scientist?

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Are You an Entrepreneur or a Scientist?

I recently spoke to a group of Texas A&M entrepreneurial students at Startup Aggieland about the topic of customer discovery. My challenge to them was to become scientists, not entrepreneurs. The essence of early stage ventures is to learn and discover what works, and that requires a scientific approach. Once you know what works, then the entrepreneurial side of you can come out.

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Lean Isn't What You Think

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Lean Isn't What You Think

If you don’t think Lean is awesome…I challenge you to re-evaluate the fundamental principles of a movement that’s been very successful for a lot of people, has actually saved millions of dollars and created much better companies along the way.

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Why Investors Invest in Start-Up Companies

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Why Investors Invest in Start-Up Companies

If you don't know what an angel investor is looking for, you decrease the odds that you will be able to connect with them and get funding. Not all investors are the same, so check out a little bit of psychology behind why high net worth individuals choose to invest in pre-seed companies. 

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The Best Startup Pitch Deck for Getting Funded

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The Best Startup Pitch Deck for Getting Funded

When you’re pitching your startup idea, angel investors and venture capitalists don’t want to hear a sales presentation. A pitch is a different type of presentation than you probably have ever done before. If you are presenting wrong, you decrease the odds of getting funded. So how do you know the best way to pitch?

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Why startup funding is a crutch

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Why startup funding is a crutch

We will explain why we think getting funded has become a crutch for startup entrepreneurs, the lifestyle it can create, and how funding can actually detract from building a company that delivers value.

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