Browsing the archives for the Startup Weekend tag.


Startup Weekend Portland, March 5-7, 2010

Community, Entrepreneurship, Networking, Startups

Marc Nager of Startup Weekend just sent me this today – I thought I’d repost (most of it, anyway) and get the word out about the next Portland Startup Weekend.

Hey there!

We wanted to let you know that Startup Weekend is coming back to Portland!

Check out the amazing lineup on the website. We have Matt Compton (venture partner at Madrona and ex vp at Yahoo), Rob Wiltbank (venture partner at Montlake Capital and professor at Willamette U), Eric Doebele (Founder/CEO Reliable.remodeler.com), Nitin Khanna (Founder/CEO of MergerTech), Doug Fieldhouse (CEO of Vesta) and of course the guys from Mugasha Akshay and Justin will be there!

When: March 5-7
Where: NedSpace Old Town
More info: http://portland.startupweekend.org
Looking forward to seeing you down there!

I’ve been to three Startup Weekend events in Seattle, but have not made it down to Portland yet.  If you’re in the area that weekend, and are a startup junkie, you should consider attending!

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Seattle Startup Weekend Coming Back To Seattle!

Community, Entrepreneurship, Startups

Last night I attended a planning session for the next Seattle Startup Weekend event, and yes, I can report that Startup Weekend is coming back to Seattle. 

This is great news for the Seattle startup community, as the first two Seattle Startup Weekend events – plus the one in Redmond last August – were great community-building exercises and brought together people who still maintain close connections in the local tech community.

The tentative date is March 19-21 2010, and the tentative host is Amazon (described as “99% certain” by one of the organizers – Clint, I think).  Last night at Cyclops about 15 people showed up, and although the agenda was more of an informal “drink beer and chat” style event than I had originally envisioned, it was still nice to meet others who are as jazzed about Startup Weekend as I am. Among other things, it was great to make the acquaintance of Franck Nouyrigat (@peignoir), a local organizer of Paris Startup Weekend, who is a prolific world traveler among other things – check out his Picasa albums.

On a personal note, it was really nice to see @aviel and @geekcoach again, whom I met for the first time in January 2008 at the first Seattle Startup Weekend.   Relationships I developed at that event two years ago still continue strong.

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Seattle Startup Weekend Planning Session January 25th

Entrepreneurship, Networking, Startups

It’s only two days away, but if you’re free this coming Monday evening you should head on over to the Cyclops for a planning session for the next Seattle Startup Weekend.  Pulled from an e-mail sent by Clint and Marc:

Please join us for an informal planning meeting at Cyclops on January
25th at 6pm for the next Seattle event scheduled for March 19-21 at
Amazon.  We’re awaiting final confirmation from the team at Amazon on
that.  If you’d like to get involved in the event we would love to
have you.  Come toss out any ideas you might have as well as touch on
the agenda below.  Space is limited, Cyclops is not a huge venue.
Agenda:
1.) Discuss what can be done to continue to make the event better
2.) Get updates from you on projects you’re working on.
3.) Gather thoughts on potential speakers.
4.) Help us spread the work for the upcoming event.
5.) Help us identify potential sponsors.
6.) Let us fill you in on our vision for Startup Weekend and get your
feedback.
6.) Have a few drinks and get to know each other better.

#6 especially embodies the spirit of Startup Weekend.

The event is free; RSVP at http://cts.vresp.com/c/?StartupWeekend/24fec0b9c4/f29581218d/a5588b153f

Hope to see you there!

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I Won’t Be Attending Portland Startup Weekend

Startups

… and it kills me to have to write that headline.  PSW is Memorial day weekend – it starts a week from today – and based on my awesome experience at Seattle Startup Weekend in January, I’ve really been looking forward to taking the Amtrak down and meeting some fellow-travelers in the Rose City.

However, I have this super-important project that I want to launch no later than May 31st, and my own personal decision-tree is such that I’d rather launch Crowdify than get that super dose of inspiration that I know I would have gotten out of PSW.

I was also looking forward to meeting Ray Angel, the new CEO of Startup Weekend – Ray, we’ll have to meet another time.  And to all you Portlanders who are going next weekend: have tons of fun.  My advice is to commit yourself 100% in order to get the most of the experience.  There’s a lot you can take away from an event like SW.

I look forward to seeing the fruits of your labor, and reading about your experiences!

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I Won’t Be Attending Portland Startup Weekend

Startups

… and it kills me to have to write that headline.  PSW is Memorial day weekend – it starts a week from today – and based on my awesome experience at Seattle Startup Weekend in January, I’ve really been looking forward to taking the Amtrak down and meeting some fellow-travelers in the Rose City.

However, I have this super-important project that I want to launch no later than May 31st, and my own personal decision-tree is such that I’d rather launch Crowdify than get that super dose of inspiration that I know I would have gotten out of PSW.

I was also looking forward to meeting Ray Angel, the new CEO of Startup Weekend – Ray, we’ll have to meet another time.  And to all you Portlanders who are going next weekend: have tons of fun.  My advice is to commit yourself 100% in order to get the most of the experience.  There’s a lot you can take away from an event like SW.

I look forward to seeing the fruits of your labor, and reading about your experiences!

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Kluster Will Try the Startup Weekend Concept at TED

Business

From Read/Write Web this morning:

Founder Ben Kaufman, who bankrolled the company in part with money from the sale of his last company Mophie, has organized a gimmick over the course of the TED conference he hopes will prove Kluster’s worth. Kaufman intends to let TED attendees — and users from around the world — design a completely new product over the course of 72 hours.

*cough* been there, done that. Doing it again in Portland in a few months. I think what this shows is that Andrew Hyde’s Startup Weekend model — get a bunch of smart people in a room, give them a challenge, set them loose — has legs and strikes the right chord in people.

I’ll be really interested to hear what Kluster comes up with. Operationally, I’m interested to hear how you can “launch” a physical product – not a website – in 72 hours. There will be a lot of interesting (yet minor) dissimilarities with Startup Weekend. It will be good to compare and contrast.

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Portland Startup Weekend

Software

I’m going to Portland!

After waffling for a couple weeks, I’ve decided to go to Portland Startup Weekend, after a tremendous experience last month at Seattle Startup Weekend.

I registered tonight and am happy as a clam. I signed up as “architect” but if it’s another open-source platform design, I’ll probably contribute to QA or project management or research or something. Anything is fun.

The location is still TBD, but may I offer suggestions?

1) Must have nearby bars
2) …. OK, I’m drawing a blank on any other suggestions.

YAY!

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Startup Weekend Seattle TV Clip from KING-5

Business, Culture & Entertainment, Reviews

[youtube=http://youtube.com/w/?v=jlPeB7oNmEI]

I heard that this was the first time Startup Weekend had been on the local news. Not a bad coup for the marketing team!  Attention fans: I can be found briefly at :06 and again at :44.

(h/t Umesh)

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Me at Startup Weekend Seattle

Business, Web

I’m the handsome one in the blue shirt!

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Startup Weekend Seattle Reflections

Business, Reviews, Web

SkillBit is live! (well, in beta anyway). SkillBit is the name of the product we launched at this weekend’s Startup Weekend Seattle event. It was initially described as “Match.com for Enterprise” as a shorthand way of presenting the gist of the idea. It morphed slightly into:

SkillBit helps managers quickly identify existing employees with unique skills for high priority projects and business challenges. SkillBit provides an easy way to manage, collect, organize and utilize your existing employee’s skills and experience. We help companies save time, money and move business forward faster and more efficiently using existing resources.

(h/t Ben Gerstein, from Basecamp)

If you read my earlier posts you’ll remember that there was some confusion and angst about the product idea for this iteration of the Startup Weekend; also see excellent perspectives by Andrew and Elizabeth on this issue. Speaking only for myself, I didn’t really get too concerned about the Friday night product debates and reversals. That’s because I had several overlapping goals for the weekend:

  1. Help create a startup company and develop an awesome product
  2. Meet interesting people and get exposed to different perspectives
  3. Have fun; get jazzed; get motivated
  4. Learn new technologies, tools, and processes

So let me reflect on my SWS experience using those goals as a guidepost.

Help create a startup company and develop an awesome product

I think I may have mentioned earlier that SkillBit was not my first choice of product idea. To be honest, it may not have been in my top three. Nevertheless, I came in intending to commit to WHATEVER the idea was – and I had fun. I heard, or more accurately, suspected, that a couple people didn’t return to SWS after the first or second day because of the choice of the idea. Their loss.

As far as the awesomeness of the product goes, well, SkillBit definitely has a lot of upside. My hunch is that this is the type of technology that could be sold to an existing people aggregator like LinkedIn, Facebook, etc. that would allow corporate types to quickly survey their people. To succeed in this space, however, it seems like we need more of a planning/organizational support system. The quick, one-off “who knows Mandarin?” idea will only take us so far.

Finally, in terms of actually launching a product, well, I’m amazed we actually got as much done as we did. As a software person, I naturally think in terms of the efforts of the dev team, but I am just astounded at how much EVERY team did — there was a lot of concentrated effort by everyone across the whole spectrum. Yes, it needs work; yes, there are holes, but we did a great job.

Meet interesting people and get exposed to different perspectives

Startup Weekend Seattle exceeded every expectation I had in this category. I met tons of people from so many diverse backgrounds that I wouldn’t have been exposed to in a year of my “normal” job. Let’s be honest here. This was a group of web / software people, so we all had a lot in common. It was not exactly an eye-opening clash of cultures. No Lord Greystokes, no Commander Perrys, no Connecticut Yankees. But I would probably have not met 2% of these interesting, intelligent, creative people under any other circumstances. And much more importantly, I would not have worked with them in the same way in a million years. Yay for SWS.

Have fun; get jazzed; get motivated

Another huge win for my personal goals. I’ve been reflecting on the word “fun” a bit since I tend to use it a lot. “Fun” doesn’t exactly describe the experience I had at SWS. It was fun — in a professional context, which combined the best parts of what you mean when you use terms like enthusiasm, motivation, challenge, creativity, diversity, novelty, social interaction, and accomplishment. Playing Super Mario Galaxy is fun. This was a couple orders of magnitude different — and better. It’s like the difference between seeing a picture of Scarlett Johansson on IMDB, and hooking up with her at the Viper Room after a movie premiere (not that I would know about that). :)

Coming out of SWS I am more professionally motivated than I’ve been in a while, and that is sure to manifest itself in better, more fulfilling work. The little personal irony for me is that I’m on sabbatical right now, but I have a couple side projects I’m eager to continue moving forward.

Learn new technologies, tools, and processes

Here are the things I actually used to get work done that I had never, ever used before:

Not too goddamned bad for a single weekend. No wonder my brain hurts! (in a good way). A fourth and final big win for SWS.

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