Rules for Entrepreneurs: 5 Ways to Avoid Founderitis

Post by: Steven Fisher on May 17th, 2008 | File Under Uncategorized

What is Founderitis? It is been called “Founders Syndrome” and it is not some type of medical disease but rather a disease that can infect your business if you are not careful.

The Wikipedia definition of “Founderitis” is stated as follows:

“The term “founderitis” or “founder’s syndrome” refers to the unhealthy condition that afflicts many companies whose founders maintain a stranglehold on organizational leadership. While many companies owe their success — and in fact their very existence — to their founders, those same individuals can create chaos that ultimately leads to the organization’s collapse. The challenge to founding CEOs and boards of directors is to take steps to change conflict and chaos into opportunities for growth.”

Diagnosing Founderitis

I came across this funny diagnosis from Infoshackle.com and it comes complete with a 12 step program.

“When Founderitis strikes, the Founder’s drive, energy and vision, characteristics crucial to the startup’s initial success, become a hindrance to the company’s maturation into a self-sustaining entity. To assess yourself or a loved one for Founderitis, determine if any of the following symptoms are present:

  • Inability to delegate
  • Anger when not included in every decision
  • Paranoia derived from a sense that the venture is “slipping out of their control”
  • Ignoring input from subject-matter experts
  • Expressing prescient knowledge, even when lacking subject-matter expertise
  • Lack of respect for formalized planning
  • Subterfuge of efforts to institute procedures, processes and controls

Founderitis is akin to an active, engaged parent who is a wonderful caregiver until the child reaches adolescence. As the child enters its teens and requires an increasing level of independence to properly mature and prosper, the Founderitis parent futilely attempts to restrict the influence of outside factors and limit the child’s ability to act autonomously. The result is usually a fractured parent / child relationship or an ‘adult child’ that never develops the life-skills necessary to succeed on their own.

One of the most insidious aspects of Founderitis is that the more profound the case, the deeper the denial on the part of the carrier. The afflicted Founder will honestly believe that all of his actions are in the company’s best interest, though their definition of ‘best interest’ is actually whatever is in their own ‘self-interest’.

Like any startup executive, the Founder must honestly separate his self-interest from the company’s interest. For instance, it might be in his self-interest to lead the sales efforts, as well as a great learning experience and a heck of a lot of fun. However, it may not be in the company’s best interest to lose precious time to market while an inexperienced sales novice attempts to learn on the job.”

5 Ways to Avoid Founderitis

I have personally experience this running my own business. I have found some ways to avoid it:

  1. Respect the need for planning activities, staff meetings, and administrative policies;
  2. Realize that as the company grows circumstances may dictate new approaches;
  3. Institute new systems with approval of your board;
  4. Seek and accept input from others in making decisions;
  5. Delegate, Delegate, Delegate

Don’t worry if you can’t over come this there is a simple solution. The route many take is to get your board to hire a professional CEO and take a long vacation.

So how many of you have had problems with founderitis? What is your story? Have a great example to share? Let the comments be the conversation.

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Unboxing the HTC Touch Diamond Pictures plus four videos: Great packaging

Post by: Phones Review on May 16th, 2008 | File Under Uncategorized

We all know that the HTC Touch Diamond is one of the most talked about mobile phones at the moment, well other than the BlackBerry Bold and more so the Apple 3G iPhone, personally I am so loving this HTC Touch Diamond and really want one so bad.

Anyway we have a few pictures below thanks to eprice.com of the HTC Touch Diamond being unboxed, just looking at the pictures the packaging itself tells you how sexy this mobile phone is, the package is wedged shaped and amazingly they have crammed in the phone, the charger, the USB cable, a few manuals and the software oh and the headset, how on earth they got all this in this sexy wedged shape box is beyond me. Below you will see four videos which I am not going to tell you about, just watch them and enjoy, the videos are right down below the pictures.

So scroll down nice and slowly and enjoy the pictures then please check out the four videos provided. Oh and please do visit eprice.com

The Pictures & Videos -

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Would you like to win a free Apple 3G iPhone? Predict the date

Post by: Phones Review on May 16th, 2008 | File Under Uncategorized

This is fantastic, after all the endless speculations T3 have decided to launch the 3G iPhone sweepstakes and offers you the awesome chance to win one. T3 have said that they have had to put up with this since MacWorld in January where there has been whispers, leaked information and rumours but as normal they say “when is this bloody 3G iPhone going to arrive?

Well now T3 are getting bored about all these rumours so they thought what the heck spice it all up by giving you the chance to gamble, so T3 banged their heads together it seems to offer one lucky T3.com reader the chance to predict the date that the Apple 3G iPhone is available to buy ANYWHERE in the world, and they will have a handset mailed straight to your doorstep for no monies at all.

win a free apple iphone 3g

T3 are punting for the date of Tuesday 17th June, all you need to do is email your predicted date to iPhonecomp@futurenet.co.uk for the chance to win what we here at Phones Review say “The hottest and most sexiest mobile phone ever” the iPhone.

The closing date for the entries will be 1st June and the winner will receive the phone as soon as T3 get their hands on it. Please view their terms and conditions here.

Source

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One Tree Hill guest star Kate Voegele becomes Ford’s voice for road safety

Post by: Daniel on May 16th, 2008 | File Under Uncategorized


Kate Voegele has been a guest star of TV’s One Tree Hill, and she is also a recording artist for Interscope Records, but now she is undertaking a much more important role, as the voice for Ford’s teen road safety message. In Illinois the teen fatalities dropped a massive 61 percent in 2008, this was thanks to the state launching a tough teen safety campaign that was modeled after the DSFL (Driving Skills for Life). Now that the Illinois Department of Transportation and Ford Motor Company Fund have joined forces with Kate Voegele, they hope she will be the entertainment industry’s voice for road safety and also an encouragement for young drivers to drive safety during prom season.

Most areas of the world have many auto related deaths each year, but in Illinois between Jan. 1 - April 15 last year 57 people lost their life in auto incidents. If you compare that to this year, 22 people lost their life, which is an improvement but that figure still needs to go down. With Kate Voegele sending the message, its hoped they can lower the amount of deaths. It’s also hoped that other states will follow the lead of Illinois and the commitment of teens around that state. One of the most powerful messages is that of your friends and Ford’s Driving Skills for Life program hopes to help “engage teens to develop save driving campaigns throughout the country”, this is because the most effective influencers of teens, is other teens.

Kate Voegele as a 21-year-old, is going to commit a lot to this message and will be appearing at the Illinois Mathematics and Science Academy’s prom on Friday, May 16. She will also be airing a series of public service announcements on Chicago’s 103.5 KISS-FM over the next few days.

Prom is a great time for teens and lets hope it also ends up being one with a lot less auto death.


Written by Daniel for Product Reviews
In Sections: Autos
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Amazon Associates Introduce MP3 Clips Widget

Post by: Darren Rowse on May 16th, 2008 | File Under Uncategorized

If you have a blog with a music focus the Amazon Associates program have today announced a widget that you’ll want to check out - it’s an MP3 Clips Widget that lets your readers listen to clips of music live on your site.

You can hand select songs to be included on the widget or pick categories of songs. Any sales generated by the widget earn you 10% of the sale as an associate. Just be aware that only those in the US can buy music from Amazon (or at least they seem to need a US credit card). All of your readers will be able to see the widget - just not actually convert with a sale of an MP3.

Amazon.com Widgets

Let me know how it goes if you decide to give it a go!

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No Sony PS3 price cut in 2008 could lead to better online services

Post by: Daniel on May 16th, 2008 | File Under Uncategorized


When I bought my Sony PS3 in the UK a while ago, it cost £425 and today you will get one for around £300, so if 2008 does not bring us another price cut, it should not matter too much. For the current price, you not only get a fantastic games system and media center, but you also get a Sony Blu-ray player. If analysts are right, and Sony do not cut the price of the Playstation 3 in 2008, we could then end up with much better online services thanks to Sony aiming at being more profitable and spending less time on price battles.

If you are a gamer waiting for a price cut, then you may be unlucky, although this still may happen; most people agree it’s unlikely. Sony has made a prediction that it will sell eight million PS3 consoles around the world in 2008, this would be an increase of 8% on the figures in 2007. It’s a good idea for Sony to focus on the quality of their service rather than competing for market share with the Xbox 360 and Nintendo Wii. I can think of many improvements we need on the PS3 and one would be the way we chat with other gamers, it would be nice to chat in the game and out of the game without disconnecting.

This year will be a great year for the gamer and as someone that’s been gaming for over 25 years, I know we have so much more going for us gamers these days than ever, thanks to three great next-gen games systems and the way we can connect to other gamers over the internet.


Written by Daniel for Product Reviews
In Sections: Gaming, Sony Playstation 3
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Location based solution patent app for Apple iPhone

Post by: Phones Review on May 16th, 2008 | File Under Uncategorized

Some time ago if you remember Apple applied for a patent application that hinted at the Cupertino based fruit company working with Starbucks. Well it seems that it’s even more likely now that Apple will come through with a location based solution for allowing their iPhone owners to be able to interact with their own surroundings.

Apple’s previous patent application surfaced back in December. The USPTO documentation outlines a method which allows an Apple iPhone user to possibly order Starbucks menu items remotely via their iPhone handset, and then be notified once their order is ready for collection.

Apple iPhone

Well now there is a new patent application from Apple which shows possibly more location based services for their iPhone. The latest documentation subtly hints at bringing the Apple iPhone-Starbucks idea into other areas such as movies, concerts, local events and restaurant reviews.

By using a short range wireless network such as AT&T WiFi Hotspots, which we are beginning to see pop up in Starbucks and Barnes & Noble locations, Apple wishes to enable their iPhone users to be able to order from customised menus based on allergies and food preferences. This expanded system could even allow for an iPhone user to purchase a movie or even concert tickets remotely.

Apple iPhone

The location based system could possibly be used to push customised info to the Apple iPhone passing by particular business fronts, maps, weather, city information in an airport, and flight schedules for an example. An Apple iPhone user would only need to log into the WiFi network on their iPhone handset in order to receive local information pushed to their iPhone.

This is somewhat of an intriguing idea and could possible become a great success with airports and restaurants. Wouldn’t it just be superb to be able to order from a menu or even purchase tickets from your mobile phone? Let’s hope Apple hasn’t locked all this down too firmly so other platforms can maybe take advantage as well.

Source – macrumors

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Early Adopters Are Useless

Post by: Aaron Brazell on May 16th, 2008 | File Under Uncategorized

We are early adopters. We use. We try. We evangelize. We bury. We filter.

That’s what we think anyway.

In reality, we are pretty useless.

Late last year, Amazon released the Kindle to the joy and enthusiasm of many early adopters. Robert Scoble, the poster child for early adopters, gleefully got his Kindle on the first day and wrote about how beautiful it was and how it brought him great pleasure. One week later, he hated the Kindle listing a laundry list of problems from usability to the inability to send gifts to other Kindle owners.

Increasingly, I’m seeing common people (read: non-tech early adopters) who own and love the Kindle. And the numbers bear that out, if we’re to believe TechCrunch’s statement that by 2010, Amazon will have sold $750M in Kindles or 1-3% of the company’s total revenue. (Update: For clarity, the TechCrunch article cites a CitiGroup analyst and is not the authoritative assessment of TechCrunch. My point is, that’s where I heard the number in the first place - regardless of the original source.)

Brad Feld, a few years ago, wrote an amazing article titled The First 25,000 Users are Irrelevant which talks about the effect of early adopters on companies and products. As the oh-too-typical scenario goes, TechCrunch or Mashable covers a new product, there is a surge of traffic, registration or sign-ups for private beta invites from early adopters, or “tire kickers” then they go away. Some remain and become “evangelists” for the company or product, but most people don’t even care. Later on, if the company has mainstream staying power, the real buy-in will happen organically and without the say-so of the early adopters who largely came and went.

See, we like to tell people we are filters. We like to think we are influencers and powerful. We like to think we have an inside angle on what works and what doesn’t work, but we are just small insignificant people in the grand scheme of things, and largely irrelevant.

Amazon knows this. They don’t really care about us. And that’s why they might hit the $750M mark by 2010 and completely bypass the early adopters, placing their Kindle directly in the hands of mainstream commuters and book lovers.

Update: Corvida at SheGeeks thinks this is generational and writes a thoughtful and intelligent argument about this. However, I’m not convinced that everything is generational. I think early adoption is also a result of personalities.

 

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New Jawbone Bluetooth Headset launched by Aliph

Post by: Phones Review on May 16th, 2008 | File Under Uncategorized

The Jawbone Bluetooth headset was originally well received, and now Aliph’s sequel has launched right at the top to become Aliph’s new flagship product. Such a high accolade is justifiable when viewing the impressive specs and considering the improvements made over the original version, which by the way is now being retired to make way for this new younger sleeker version.

The latest Jawbone Bluetooth headset is about 50% smaller than the original, and includes “NoiseAssassin” technology, a further improvement on the original noise cancelling technology originally used, and there is also a much faster processor for heavier signal processing to cancel out ambient noises with ease.

Jawbone Bluetooth Headset

The new Jawbone Bluetooth headset uses tech originally created for The Defence Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) to enhance communications in hostile and rugged environments. The Jawbone tech also includes an intelligent system of sensors and software whereby it continually adjusts at a rate of 500 times per second which improves audio quality based on what it knows about the environment. Sounds pretty impressive don’t it? And well with all that army technology in there it should be one of the best around this year.

The Jawbone Bluetooth headset weighs in at only 10 grams and has a new faster charging battery that can juice Jawbone up to eighty percent capacity in just thirty seconds; however the overall battery life suffers from the originals capacity with four hours of talk time and eight days of standby time.

Jawbone Bluetooth Headset

The Jawbone Bluetooth headset will be available very soon in the United States of America, will cost around $130.00, and will launch in black, but with a rose gold and a silver version to follow.

Source – pocket-lint

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Should I Stop Blogging? 20 Questions to Ask Yourself

Post by: Darren Rowse on May 16th, 2008 | File Under Uncategorized

“When Should You Give Up On a Blog?” - question from the Q&A sidebar widget.

While they won’t all apply to every blog - here’s a list of questions to consider when working out whether you should give up on a blog.

  1. What goals do I have for this blog? Are they being met? Am I getting closer to meeting them?
  2. Am I Interested in the Topic?
  3. Am I getting personal satisfaction from posting?
  4. How Many Posts Did I write in the Last Month?
  5. Do I have time to keep the blog running?
  6. Is anyone reading my blog?
  7. Have I given it enough time?
  8. Do I still see myself writing on this blog in 18 months time?
  9. Is the niche growing or dying?
  10. Is the blog earning anything?
  11. Is the blog growing my profile and perceived expertise?
  12. Are there any other benefits from this blog?
  13. Is the blog giving energy to or taking energy away from me?
  14. Is the Blog’s traffic and income growing or shrinking?
  15. Are readers engaging with the content?
  16. If readers are commenting - what are they saying?
  17. What are other bloggers writing about my blog?
  18. Do I have anything original and useful to say on my topic?
  19. What else could I do with the time that I spend on this blog
  20. What would the impact be of me not blogging? (on readers and me)

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