I actually see a parallel between what's happening in web startups today and the telecom broom-and-bust that many of us older guys have experienced in 1999/2000. Back then we had Nortel acquiring Qtera, Xros and Coretek at about $3B each, thereby setting the venture business on fire and funded about 100 startups, all determined to be better.
Today we have MySpace, YouTube, Facebook and similarly numerous VC-backed startups that are trying to catch the wind. I suspect there will be disappointments as well and recently I wrote about my own experience in surviving startup failure which I entitled "What I learned from my Dad who taught me how to ride a bicycle". It is my sincere hope that this could be of value to someone.
I wonder what a 50% failure rate says about the level of success among the remaining companies. Traditional conventional wisdom was that only 10% of startups suceeded, but they succeeded spectacularly (more than 10x return on investment).
Does this imply that a lot of "successful" companies are generating very modest returns on investment?
That's depressing shows again that ideas are worth nothing, it's in the execution. I presented the same idea to a german cornflakes manufacturer years ago ( coffein enriched flakes and other breakfast food), they tried to do it but failed.
Yeah... sometimes, more so than the execution, it's about having money or someone who wants to give you money. If you had 10 million dollars you could start making your own line of "Extreme" caffeinated breakfast cereals/health foods.
Today we have MySpace, YouTube, Facebook and similarly numerous VC-backed startups that are trying to catch the wind. I suspect there will be disappointments as well and recently I wrote about my own experience in surviving startup failure which I entitled "What I learned from my Dad who taught me how to ride a bicycle". It is my sincere hope that this could be of value to someone.
http://www.lovemytool.com/blog/2007/10/riding-a-bike.html
--Denny--
Denny K Miu