We are RAPING Innovation day and night : It’s official now

I don’t live in Silicon Valley. I haven’t ever interviewed Groupon or AirBnb’s founder. I haven’t spoken to Vinod Khosla of Khosla ventures yet. I haven’t taken rounds of VC firms to fund my ideas yet. I don’t want to either.

Firstly, innovation has been molested. Being a part of the Tech Community, as much as I don’t want to say this I have to. The tech community has become a monster raping innovation day and night. What provoked me to write this post was my frustration over the past few years and Techmeme’s front page today.

I don’t give a f**k if Arrignton left TechCrunch or made a new VC firm. It’s complete bullshit. I can’t blame the guy hogging the limelight for this, but seriously what is wrong with the media? This shouldn’t be bothering you as much as it doesn’t bother me.

What the media is simply trying to convey is, “You know what? It’s all about grabbing some million dollars in your first few rounds of funding, having a market cap worth billions and then a massive exit.” Innovation is trampled by money, and squashed completely. The type of ecosystem we are creating now is not sustainable at all. Why is it that VC’s and brokers are credited for success while the entrepreneurs who actually spent countless hours coupled with blood sweat to make their dreams come true and skipped off and blamed for failures?

They are the one’s who deserve the respect. Money cannot overpower ideas. It never will in the real world. Factually, we’re the citizens of the fake world. Reporters writing trash about which company gets how much in series-A-round funding, annual return statements, takeovers and prediction about those undisclosed terms and bank transactions (if you know what I’m talking about) and bla bla crap.

I can’t see an ‘I’ from innovation anywhere. It is the virtue which should be awarded and rewarded. It is of prime importance. This type of media is soon going to kill innovation. Seriously, What The F**k?

Why most Startups fail within 24 months and how you should avoid it

I wouldn’t be wrong to quote that about 50% of startups fail within 2 years of their inception [Source]. If that’s so, its a large number and possibly you could be affected by it. In past few years, i’ve been monitoring news and realized that almost all failures have one root cause.

The problem with entrepreneurs is not that they lack ideas or confidence. No, not even determination, entrepreneurs have gone to heights by selling their homes and mortgaging all their properties to risk it for their startup. And, now when i consider the whole startup ecosystem, there has to be some universal factor ruling and being responsible for their failures.  What I found is most fail because of “Wrong Approach”.

Wrong Approach

Regardless of which field you chose, what team you hire, what funding you get you’re planning to fail if you do not have the correct approach. For that matter, why do you think we consider Bill Gates or Steve Jobs as a visionary? It’s because they were charismatic and great leaders, but they had the right approach to whatever they wanted to achieve. To simply put it, Obama won the elections because he had great vision and his ability to make others realize it themselves.

First we are going to look over at a Case Study I did.

CUIL – The Google Killer

in 2008, there was much buzz about this search engine. The engineers boasted that Cuil indexed more pages than any other search engine on the web. Yes, you heard it right. It manages to receive $33 Million in funding. Today, it’s nowhere [Source].

I remember reading about it in a local newspaper out here in Mumbai. They called it “Google Killer”. So was the web’s verdict for that “month or so”. It made lot of noise. Indeed, it added features which would have done good to users and much harm to Google. The interface was refreshing, look was cool, search was fast, and when you could search more pages than Google who wouldn’t go for CUIL? Another fact, Cuil was started by ex-Googlers, Anna Paterson and Russell Power. With great people and good money, why-in-the-world did they fail?

They did not have the right approach. When I first used Cuil, I found it amusing. Darn it, every new thing is amusing to users for once. But this amusement is never really going to make you win “loyal” users.

Wrong Approach : Being a Market Changer.

Right Approach : Changing people’s habit.

Cuil, never really gave me a reason why I should leave that dull, not so “cuil” looking search engine for it. When I never got it, i never looked back at it ever in my life. So did millions. The search engine was good but from what I had analyzed, they never had a mechanism or some sort of marketing tactic which could attract users again and again. They told them just one thing, “Yeah lads, we’re searching much more than the Big Daddy, Google itself”. How do users even care?  They did not give a substantial reason to change. This proves that reasoning forms a priceless part of startup. Reasons for why your doing something and why others should do the same.

So what I’m shouting on top of my voice is – Get a reason for what you do. Think why your customers or users should get your piece of work. Why, Why and Why. Not What or How. Believe me, it will change the way you work and how others look at it.