Entrepreneurship for Software Engineers. You might be an entrepreneur if… You can visualize...

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Entrepreneurship for Software Engineers

Transcript of Entrepreneurship for Software Engineers. You might be an entrepreneur if… You can visualize...

Entrepreneurship for Software Engineers

You might be an entrepreneur if…

You can visualize solutions without a requirements doc

UX/UI is important to you, even if it’s not your job

You code in C# or Java, because your job requires it, but you learned RoR or Python to see what it could do

You care about what customers want

The Paul Graham Test

You take work a little too seriously You are genuinely smart You get s*&t done People can stand to be around you

You are willing to say, “I don’t know.”

You get frustrated…

When your employer responds slowly to customer needs

If there is a better way to build it (quickly)

Impact ≠ Reward People around you “punch a clock”

…and you’re doing something about it

You contribute to open source projects

You participate in meet-ups, hackerspaces, blog, or contribute to discussion groups

You’re helping a start-up on the side You’ve built a functional prototype

But do you have a company?

Is your product a feature, product, or business?

Is it a product or services business?

Do you have a customer?

Does your technology solve a current or future need?

Is it a big or small market?* What do you know about the

customer, the competition, technology and market trends?

Do you offer a “complete solution”?**

There is only one way to find out

Build a minimally viable product (MVP)

Architect in a way that allows for rapid prototyping, iteration and flexibility

Get customer feedback through interaction

Do it with the least possible $$$

Build MVP and get some validation first Your funding strategy depends on answers to the

questions: Feature, product or company? Small or big addressable market

Success requires lots of help (read: $$$) Marketing team, advisors, investors and

employees To get big fast requires giving up control

(usually)

Fundraising

Read: http://www.paulgraham.com/start.html Read:

http://www.bothsidesofthetable.com/entrepreneur-dna/

Visit www.jumpstartnetwork.org for more information on available resources and to apply

Talk to Kendall Wouters ([email protected])

If that sounds fun to you…

Or, Go Work For A Start-up

What Start-ups Are Looking For

Core Values

Technical Skills

Adaptive Excellen

ce

What Start-ups Are Looking For

Core Values Match

Technical Skills Match

Has Adaptive Excellence

What Are Core Values?

Set of shared principles that unite a team

Reinforced each time someone is hired, rewarded or fired

Non-negotiable, do not change, even when strategies change

You either have them or you don’t

What is Culture?

Where core values = how you do things

What Start-ups Are Looking For

Core Values Match

Technical Skills Match

Has Adaptive Excellence

“Less than 2% of the population has what it takes to

succeed in a high-growth technology business”

- Adeo Ressi, The Founder Institute

It Sounds Hard, Because It Is

Will You Get Paid?

Probably less than you make now, but hopefully not for long

Equity participation Non-monetary benefits:

Impact Autonomy Mastery

What You Can Expect

Long hours Uncertainty and dynamic/fluid

strategy No rule book Accountability - nowhere to hide Start-ups are risky, but…

Visit http://bit.ly/jHnNEF for a list of open jobs at NEO technology start-ups

Connect with entrepreneurs and help them in your spare time (try before you buy)

Email [email protected]

If that sounds fun to you…