Author Archives: fundrazrs

During Tough Times, The Echo Chamber Can Be Your Best Friend

This article is a reprint of a blog post on TechCrunch from Brian Solis.

  View the original article…

We are witnessing either an epic financial meltdown or a long overdue resetting of existing business practices and the hollow markets they create. Or, perhaps we’re experiencing both of these phenomena. Either way, it has the nation gripped with fear, uncertainty, and an unsettling eruption of questionable advice confusing everyone, everywhere. While the floor is crumbling for many industries much in the same way it did for Silicon Valley during the dotbomb years, the sky isn’t necessarily falling on the startup industry – at least not for those with marketable technology or products, dedicated and capable teams, an executable business plan, and access to the resources necessary to help it reach users and customers.

For those startups that are building and marketing something of value for consumers or businesses, there is much work to do. While there is always a need to attract mainstream users, this isn’t the time to stretch or over-commit resources to hit everyone all at once. Branding is an expensive proposition, one that requires time, capital, diligence, dedicated teams, enthusiastic customers, and patience. As counter intuitive as it may seem, this is exactly the right time to market into the echo chamber to earn the support of influentials who will create significant, concentrated brand visibility and momentum to carry you forward.

Your business can grow with the groundswell and doesn’t necessarily require the instant adoption by the masses in order to succeed in the short term.

Usually, when the economy slides, the first natural reaction is to cut expenses, conserve cash, and hunker-down to weather the storm.  All good advice.  But don’t forget also that this could be your time to shine, albeit, in a strategic and intelligent way.

Great entrepreneurs build value and market-share in down markets. They go to work seven days a week and the(y) breakout when other folks check out.Jason Calacanis

Now’s the time to get your head in the game and focus on what it is you do, and go do it better than anyone else. You’re either on the field or you’re on the sidelines.

Any company that intentionally pulls itself from the radar screen of their customers will be absent from customer decisions and referrals. In the process, you create a frictionless opportunity for your competitors to swoop in and fill the void.

There are always customers making decisions, so make sure that you’re part of the equation and process, wherever they go for information and insight.

Influence and adoption historically have migrated from the edge to the center. Or using a more common example, customers and word-of-mouth referrals travel from left to right along a bell curve that starts with Innovators and Early Adopters, peaks with the Early Majority and the Late Majority, and finally permeates with reaction from Laggards.

 

If you dissect the art and science of technology marketing using a car as a simple metaphor, your product serves as the chassis, your cash as the fuel, Social Media, Interactive/Web, Sales, SEO, and PR as the accelerator, marketing strategy and execution as the gears, RPMs as a market indicator for listening and responding, the speedometer to convey inertia, and you, as founding executive, sitting in the driver’s seat, steering and controlling the entire operation.

Marketing to the echo chamber, believe it or not, is how you get that car rolling, starting everything in first gear. Appealing to those who can help spark word of mouth is how you can accelerate, gain enough speed to shift into second, and subsequent higher gears, and attract new users and evangelists along the way, growing in distance and reach at every turn. It is the echo chamber that can help you efficiently gain velocity in order to progressively reach greater audiences and command additional financing and also revenue in the process. With its support and assistance, it is almost like starting with a colossal push.

You have to start by engaging those who’ll get it, and in turn, share it with their peers. It’s an ongoing process that strengthens with each cycle.

Hopefully you are building your business in a way that is independent of the stock market.
Kevin Ryan

The world doesn’t flock to new things en masse. It takes a focused and progressive strategy that evolves and matures over time. In a down economy, this is non-negotiable.

Digg and Twitter are among some of the best examples of how alpha users can help promote a company or service by embracing these new solutions and religiously demonstrating why they are pervasive and useful. And, emphatic users also contribute to the community building process, assisting in the translation of the value proposition for different markets as well as enticing and compelling their peers to join them, which offsets and relieves the company from carrying the bulk of the responsibility for promotion and guerilla marketing.

 

But, where are Digg and Twitter in respect to the adoption cycle? They’re not as far along as you think judging by the buzz and permeation of your social graph. These companies still have oceans to swim until they become household brands. But, that’s OK. They’re building a business, cultivating legions of dedicated user communities, evolving and improving their product, and still conserving cash. Remember, it took brands such as eBay, Youtube, Google, and Amazon hundreds of millions of dollars and armies of enthusiasts and partners to achieve saturation – and many would argue that there’s still much work to be done.

I would bet on any company that earned the support of innovators and early adopters and took the time to listen to feedback in order to iterate based on real world needs, preferences, pains, and new ideas.

Without influence, you’re going to spend precious resources, more than you can afford, convincing people that they should pay attention. Peer-to-peer marketing is priceless and still your best bet for having a shot, and more importantly, making a long-term impact.

But you first need a spark, something to start that avalanche that grows as it races downhill.

The echo chamber is bigger than we think or give it credit for. In fact, think of the echo chamber as its own bell curve. Most of the blogs and users that naturally come to mind, may reside on the left side, leaving a wide array of technology enthusiasts to uncover and pursue.

Innovators and early adopters are global citizens and do not solely reside in Silicon Valley. Figure out who your market is today, tomorrow, next month, and set goals for user acquisition so that you can tweak your product and tailor your messages to those very people, as they’ll uniquely connect to your story, and also share it differently among their peers, as it traverses across the bell curve.

Remember, reporters, bloggers and online tastemakers (aka trendsetters) who spotlight innovation can send tens of thousands of new and loyal users to you almost instantly. I’m not just referring to unique visits of those who sign up, test things out, and then leave to try the next shiny service. When done right, the echo chamber can generate real world interest and support. It is these very users who tell you everything about what works, what doesn’t, and how to improve. These same individuals and networks also augment and complement your marketing efforts by legitimizing you’re products, associating credibility and providing pseudo endorsements, and in turn, giving you unprecedented access to their invaluable and highly connected networks of early adopter friends.

This is the time to focus on user acquisition. This is edgework. Everything starts with an intimate understanding of the markets you’re trying to reach and an even deeper connection to the peers, voices, and other channels that influence them. Most of you are not marketing iPhones, gaming consoles, premium spirits, or new music artists. At the very least, you are redefining how people communicate, collaborate, connect, and ultimately work.

There’s a prevailing necessity to educate your markets and introduce not just new products and services, but also change the daily routines of everyday people.

Therefore the goal to race from zero to 60 and hit mass penetration immediately is not necessarily the primary goal. If we look at business development and communications as a series of strategic stages, we realize that there are focused activities that we must pursue and smaller, reachable voices we must reach and convince to help us carry and adapt our story from stage to stage – each time, addressing the needs and pain points of the individual, respective groups.

Of course, as you learn, internalize feedback, change, adapt, and engage with your markets, the foundation for your business solidifies and begins to afford and beget expansion. It is at this point in time, when you can continue to expand your focus and reach to attract and inspire users residing outside of the echo chamber.

Nothing beats a killer product idea and an impressive, objective, and focused team to carry it forward. Expectations count and will determine how you channel information and progress. Think too big and you’ll miss your target and burn through resources before you can ever earn any significant market traction. Aim too low and the market will pass you by.

In this volatile economic climate, the echo chamber can be your direct connection to success, or at the very least, help to kickstart market adoption of your products. It is a global incubator designed to help you grow, gain momentum, and ultimately propel your business across the bell curve to appeal to and attract a wider, active base of customers.

We live in interesting times and it’s up to us, and only us, to define our future.

(Photo by Wetwebworks).

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Another vote for FundRazr

My son Ben plays on a speedball (paintball) team with Bo Wilson. Bo is Blair Wilson’s son. Blair is the MP for West Vancouver and the Green Party candidate for the constituency in the Federal Election on Tuesday. When we dropped the boys off this morning for their team practice, Blair and I had a good conversation about FundRazr.

Blair thinks that FundRazr would be very helpful to candidates at all levels raising money for their election campaigns but particulary for municipal elections and other more regional events where there is not a large “party” machinery behind the candidate and therefore a lack of strong organizations supporting the fundraising process.

We briefly covered the idea that FundRazr could provde “MyObama” style grassroots fundraising capabilities to smaller organizations and still provide the fine-grained auditing and donor management features that are so important to staying “within the lines” on election campaign fundraising. Blair highlighted that these audit features and very importantly the ability to ascertain the geographic location of a donor would be very valuable to any politico. He also stated that it is very important to him to acknowledge and thank each person for their donations, no matter how large or small. Existing manual systems, even for a major candidate in a federal campaign can drop the ball in this area.

Another vote of confidence for the FundRazr campaign…

Another day, another confirmation we are on track

Myra and I went to a launch party (great party!) for riiplay.tv last night. Riiplay is Bret Conkins’ media services start-up. I’m an advisory board member…

While at the party, I had a conversation with Kevin McLeod, Bret’s right hand man and an MBA student at Simon Fraser University. It took me a few minutes to explain the FundRazr business concept (perhaps the wine and the great food they were passing out were getting in the way) but once he “got it”, Kevin really “GOT IT”.

Kevin plays indoor soccer on a fairly competitive team and was quite aware of the problems the team captain had collecting and managing the fees for the team. Once the light bulb went on that BOTH parties in the transaction benefit from the FundRazr service, Kevin started to list off all the people at various organizations he knows that we should contact. These include a friend of his who is apparently president of UrbanRec, a group that coordinates and manages many adult recreational sports teams in Vancouver.

I have a lot of respect for Kevin’s work with Riiplay so this was a great affirmation to me that we are on the right track…

I surrender!

I’ve given up on trying to get our blog to work in our own environment. The darn thing is just too finicky and I don’t have the time to muck with it. I’ve moved the whole blog over to WordPress tonight carefully preserving the date/time stamps of each post so we have a valid history.

Hopefully this works better!

Even stranger times

I attended the BCTIA meeting last night for more networking contacts and potential investors. The first man I introduced myself to works for the National Research Council as an advisor on their IRAP funding program. I told him a sentence or two about me and he promptly said, “Oh, you’re the guy from Atlanta!”.

After I picked myself up off the floor I tried to determine how he knew that. Turns out that he spoke with a fellow I had coffee with yesterday who is a potential board member for us and a prolific investor in Vancouver. I gather I made a good impression because he had already spread my name around within 24 hours of our meeting. Note to self – do more of this.

Unfortunately the rest of the night wasn’t as positive. The meeting was a panel of VCs who are fund managers for the BC Renaissance Fund, the government sponsored VC fund that invests in IT, CleanTech, Pharma and Medical Device companies in BC. The essence of their message was that they are hoarding their cash for use by their existing portfolio companies. This will increase the pressure on other types of investment capital i.e. angels and private investors as they attempt to pick up the slack. This could get in our way as our margins and multiples are not YET(!) at the level that they would compete with these companies moving “downstream”. Again, if we are a quality opportunity we’ll get funded but it will take more work.

On a more positive but less relevant note, one of the speakers was the VP for CleanTech for the VantagePoint VC firm. His message about the viability of the North American economy over the long term in comparison to the rise of China and India was immensely reassuring. The short story is that eventually labor costs and standards will approach parity and therefore the economies that best manage their energy resources will have the highest standard of living. NA is rich in “clean” energy resources compared with China and India and we have the venture capital and entrepreneurial structures in place to do the hard work to develop these resources. Bottomline: our kids may yet have a chance for the comfortable lifestye we have grown up with.

Even though I worried about fundraising all night I slept a tiny bit better after hearing his talk.

Strange times

The financial markets are very unsettled these days. Many people have lost significant value from their investments and the forecast is for more turbulence. Angel investors and VCs have no way to liquidate their portfolio investments to free up cash for the foreseeable future.

Industry pundits are predicting that this will make it very hard for new startups to raise capital. On the surface, this looks true and therefore bad news for us. However, I attended the Vantec Angels Network regular monthly meeting yesterday. Three companies were pitching a long (20 minute) sponsored pitch and six more did a five minute pitch. The companies presenting weren’t rock stars by any stretch of the imagination but the room was full of angel investors to the point that it was standing room only. According to Basil Peters, one of the principals in the group, this has only happened a couple of times in the group’s multi-year history.

Talking with angel investors in the room,  it became clear that they held two themes in common. The first was that they were feeling pressure on their “regular” investments and were looking to their angel investments (where they felt they had more control) to pick up the slack. Said another way, the broader markets sucked and they were looking for a better place to put their money. Second, they felt that the downturn in the market would force entrepreneurs into more realistic valuations and therefore give them a chance to pick up some bargains. In other words, they were shopping.

My take away from all of this is that a quality team with a quality business idea building a quality company will still be able to raise the money it needs. We are that company.

Time will tell if my theory is correct…

Yet another competitor… and yet another spin on the topic

While continuing my broad market survey, I encountered another competitor: Buxfer. This company was formed in 2006, is reasonably well funded (in Silicon Valley) and has developed a sophisticated product for managing personal finances. One aspect of personal finances is the online exchange of money between people. Therein lies the competition.

But having said that, they have focused so intensely on personal finances that it makes their tools very cumbersome (and perhaps even unusable) for our target markets i.e. micro-charities and small groups. The amazing news is that within two years, they have grown to manage almost a billion (yes, B) dollars in around 4.3 million transactions. Whether that is money “managed” by them or money “transfered” by them is not clear. Their business model is also not very clear at this stage but will become more so as we look closer.

I’m massively encouraged over the last week at what I consider excellent indicators of the potential size of our market and how quickly we might penetrate it. The biggest challenge is getting it done before someone else heads this way.

I need to go bigger, faster. I thought we had a little more time. We probably don’t. Time to sharpen the corporate fund raising pencil.

Trying too hard?

Tonight, I’m writing up a section of the Business Description on Fraud Prevention. FundRazr will handle lots of money online. As a result, it will be the target of criminal activity. We must do many things to protect ourselves.

As I was writing up our prevention and protection strategy, it struck me that many of our competitors do not appear to take the same care that we intend to. Frankly, this is tough stuff and potentially big issues. I think we have a good handle on the potential problems and some good solutions to prevent or address them. In my experience, many people would not be able to even identify and understand the problems let alone create innovative and cost effective solutions to them. Given what we know of the problem it appears we are on the right track.

However, it does makes me wonder three things:

  1. Are we trying too hard to do it perfectly and therefore slowing ourselves down?
  2. Are we putting additional barriers in front of ourselves that less “thoughtful” competitors ignore and therefore gain competitive advantage on us?
  3. Is there a competitve positioning opportunity in their lack of due dilligence? After all, there is a large “trust” component to the appeal of our service.

I want to do this “right” and “well” but I also don’t want to create a monster specification that keeps us from becoming successful. To our credit, the fact that we are willing to ask these questions and consider the possible answers will keep us out of trouble (me thinks).

If you have any feedback on this topic, don’t hold back…