7. Ecosystem?
– GDP/capita
– Population
– Infrastructure
– Access to talent
– Access to money
– Access to advice
Ecosystems encompass elements of economy, workforce, infra…
8. Idea #2
There is no “Global Market”
We are in fact addressing new ecosystems.
“Entering China” often equals to “starting a new company”.
How “global” is even Facebook if not in China?
9. Corollary
There is no Silicon Valley
With Yuri Milner signing checks to Y Combinator startups, whose
founders are from around the world, “Silicon Valley” is more of a
network than a place.
10.
11. Bonus Startup: Newt Games
I will start with the first startup I was exposed to, back in 2003
12. SoLoMo in 2003!
– Location-based social game
– Virtual goods avatars
– 3G
– GPS
– In Japan!
So innovative it is pretty amazing even today
13. Problems
– Engineers only
– No user acquisition strategy
– Data too expensive
– Too few compatible handsets
Unfortunately even Japan was not ready for it
14. What I learned
– “Too innovative”
– 8 years too early
– Marketing?
– Art vs. Business
And the company was not really ready for business either
15. Cmune
This is the first startup I have been involved with (almost) from start
16. UberStrike is the #1
First-Person Shooter on Facebook
It is doing pretty well today, with a very advanced game
23. Indicators of Success
• Least to most important
– Industry recognition
– 20 staff
– Investment by top tier VC
– 1M players
– Revenue
Revenue is what marks success, beyond popularity
24. Going back 4 years
But of course, it was not a straight story
25. Cmune
– 2 foreign friends in Beijing
– “3D real-time collaboration”
It started with 2 guys who needed a tool to work online together
26. From Delusions
to Business
– 2008: pitch to Joi Ito
– Accidental Widget
– Pivot to gaming = kill 4 projects + B2B
– Pivot to web-based = dropping the client
– Pivot to Facebook = free distribution
– Pitch at LeWeb (2008.12)
– Upgrade everything!
– Pitch angels start at LeWeb (2010.12)
The world changed as the product was being built
27. Financing for 4 Years
– Year 1
Founders
– Year 2
Friends
– Year 3
Team + B2B
– Year 4
Min. guarantees + Revenue + Loan
– (Year 5)
Seed funding + Revenue
How to finance? Cmune has done it all!
(except donations, kickstarter and selling cereal boxes)
28. Living for 4 Years
– Founders experienced + had some savings
– Beijing cheaper to live ($2K/month is enough)
– Hiring cheaper has a cost
– Building network
How to keep going when you can’t pay people and yourself much?
29. Personal Costs for Founders
– 4 years with minimal salary, often no salary
• 4 x $125K x 2 = $1M
– High risk high stress times
– “Stuck” in Beijing
– You’re getting married!
The opportunity cost is significant,
and so are constraints (place, co-founder).
30. Personal Rewards for Founders
1. Over $1M value created
2. Own boss
3. Build something people love
4. Amazing experience
5. Meet cool people
When you succeed, it is worth it (of course).
If you fail, you still have all except money! (but time is gone!)
31. What now?
• Mac App Store (#1 Game, 500,000+ DLs)
• Mobile (call by Nvidia)
• More!
32. Summary of Problems
– 4 years (somewhat typical in fact)
– Many mistakes (none fatal)
– (almost) ran out of money 3 times
– Various crises
• Stock options, mis-hires, biz dev, …
– Hiring juniors: you get what you pay for
• Lots of training, lower quality, less ideas, slower
Advisors can help you through problems
Smart people in the team are recommended
33. What I learned
– “Too innovative”
– 4 years too early?
– Networking
– Financing
– Hiring
Started very early, thankfully the world changed!
35. “One good Deed per Day”
“Wisdom from Friends”
“Everyone can help!”
“Paying it forward”
“Facebook without the crap”
Which tagline do you like best?
36. “I need a dentist!”
(DayDeed pitch)
DayDeed brings you advice from friends: trusted personalized
37. “Wisdom of Friends”
• Not just sharing, doing
– “Am Anfang War Die Tat!”
• Helping friends getting helped
– Paying it forward
It takes social networking beyond simply connecting sharing:
problem solving!
40. 1
Create up to 3 active needs
2
See needs from friends
Reply or Cheer them
3
Help and get help from
strangers too!
41. Timeline
• 2011. 5
Failed pitch at iWeekend in Beijing
• 2011.6~8
Research in SF + Founder Institute
• 2011.9-10
Search in Singapore + events
• 2011.11
Hired team moved to Malaysia
• 2011.12
Alpha
• 2012.01
Open Beta
• 2012.02
Silicon Valley roadshow
The research phase included many discussions, mockups and
“customer development” interviews
42. Problems
• I can’t code
• I can’t design
• I don’t have co-founders
• I’ve never done a startup before
How did I do it?
43. Life Goals
• I had to do it
• I don’t need a house (yet)
• I don’t need to marry or kids (yet)
• I can afford to lose money (some)
Better check your priorities before you embark
on a costly adventure in time and money
44. What I have
• Savings (+8* for cash flow)
• Network (thanks to 100+ talks 5 years)
• Knowledge (consulting rocks!)
• Concept (original to me ^_^; )
A strong idea and limited resources are enough to start!
45. What I CAN do
• Draw mockups (Balsamiq rulz!)
• Write user stories
• Find great people
• Get feedback
• Hustle
This is all about PRODUCT PLANNING, HIRING, CUSTOMER
DEVELOPMENT and BUSINESS DEVELOPMENT.
I think this is the Founder’s job
46. Options
• Learn programming
• Outsourcing (India, Slovenia, etc.)
• Hackers (Hackweekend / Startup Weekend…)
• Freelancers
• Senior developers
I had many options for the technical part,
and decided to go for senior developers
47. What I need
• Reasonable costs
• A few smart guys
• Decent infrastructure
The question was who, where and at what cost?
48. Geographical Options
– San Francisco
– Beijing
– Singapore
– Berlin
– South-East Asia
Those are the locations I considered. Malaysia won.
49. It’s all about Ecosystems
• GDP/capita
English-speaking market
• Population
Large
• Infrastructure
OK
• Access to talent
Introductions
• Access to money
Self-funding + network
• Access to advice
Founder Institute, network
Malaysia scored well on most parameters
50. What I learned (a)
• Prepare well
• Research (usage, customer development interviews)
• Prepare your act (mockups, user stories)
• Build smartly
• Work with smart people
• Launch fast
• Track REAL metrics (not vanity) and Act on them
I use Balsamiq, Pivotal Tracker, Mixpanel, Google Analytics and some
custom stats. Read “The Lean Startup” by Eric Ries
51. What I learned (b)
• Share your idea (leaves stealth to ninjas)
– Feedback is super important
– Especially negative / dubious
– Maybe not a user, but prepares u for questions
– No-one will quit their job to do it
– Already half a dozen doing it you don’t know about
– “Competitors” build the market too
• Silicon Valley culture is PAYING IT FORWARD
You NEED feedback. Your job is (1) Finding who to ask (2) Prioritizing
To get people’s time, HELP THEM FIRST
52. What I learned (c)
“Design is HOW IT WORKS”
It took me 2 years to understand this phrase. I’ll save you time.
53. Meaning?
• Design IS NOT looking good
• Design IS NOT only solutions
• Design SHOWS HOW TO USE IT
• …and EMOTIONS
People understand at once how to use a well designed product.
Something ugly can totally be more usable than something pretty
(think about those fancy light switches: which one lights up what?
Read “Emotional Design” “The Design of Everyday Things” by Don Norman
54. Consequences on Landing page
• Know in 5 seconds what it does
• Use it within 5 seconds
• Prove that it works
• Feel good: how it feels (UI, copywriting)
Make people happy using your ugly product before making it pretty!
55. What I learned (d)
• Specs Project Management are easy
– Pivotal Tracker
• Design can come late
– 1.5 months AFTER alpha!
• Black Magic of Copywriting
• Social Design Emotions!
Prioritizing is hard. Design copy matter as they convey EMOTIONS
56. What I learned (e)
Sign up to
DayDeed.com
For the last tip, sign up to DayDeed.com and give me feedback there!
57. So can you go global from Asia?
• There is no Asia
• Research A LOT then build FAST and keep
MEASURING
• Build connections in Silicon Valley for future
resources, users, market access
• Find a few A-players for your project
So many companies are built in small countries, the 48 countries of
“Asia” will not be an exception!
59. Reading List
• Skip the new TV series or funny YouTube video
and invest $10 in ideas instead:
– The Lean Startup
– The Design of Everyday Things
– Emotional Design
– Understanding Comics
– Kopywriting Kourse
• benjamin@plus8star.com