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  • The importance of writing

    2017 has been a long and tough year, a lot of challenges, changes and of course, also some great achievements. In 2018 I will use this blog a bit more, to write and share stories, thoughts, and resources mostly about entrepreneurship and about my business and personal adventures.

    Writing is always a good way to digest things and focus. Back in the days, I used to write 2 to 4 articles per day on HostingTalk.it. It was tough and time consuming but that helped me shape my thoughts around things, people and understand an entire industry (webhosting) I knew nothing about. A great lesson.

    I am definitely planning to do that much more this year.


  • “Fighting against empathy”

    Romain Dillet at Techcrunch describes pretty well what I have been thinking for a while now. Too much time spent on Instagram, Facebook, reading useless posts and not spending time building things, writing or simply trying to talk to people in our real life.  A good reminder to delete these apps from my iPhone sooner than later!

     

     


  • Cloud Academy Global Meeting 2017!

    Great week with our team at Cloud Academy to discuss 2016, new projects, 2017 focus and more!


  • Chaos Monkey

    I am close to the end of Chaos Monkey. If you want to understand more about Silicon Valley and how venture-backed startups work, this is the perfect introduction. Do not expect something unbiased: like every entrepreneur, Antonio went through several critical moments and tries to describe rules and problems that are common in the Bay Area for early stage startups that go through fund raising and acquisitions.

    I particularly appreciated the insights on the early days of Facebook.

     

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  • How to find out in an interview if someone is a giver or a taker


  • [Podcast] There is always a way forward

     

    Yesterday while driving to our Swiss office I listened to this podcast on Stanford eCorner. I didn’t know Matthew before. Brilliant entrepreneur and engineer. Besides talking about his entrepreneurial adventures, Matthew brings up about a few points and key lessons that only now I understand, unfortunately.

    • Why you should raise VC money at the very beginning of your journey. Not 100% in agreement with raising VC money at the beginning (bootstrapping is the way!) but I see his point about dilution and it’s smart.
    • On Silicon Valley’s big names in your board/network. They will be not so powerful while you focus on building a business. Sometimes they are just a big distraction. I understood this way too late and even today I struggle communicating this to other people.
    • Building companies and being a founder/CEO, a lonely job where taking care of your mental health is 99% of the game. Very true and sad.

  • On Tesla, Elon Musk and the entrepreneurship model

    I just started reading the biography of Elon Musk, founder of Tesla, SpaceX and SolarCity. It’s a book I wouldn’t start without a great review like this one. The story is similar to the one of many other successful entrepreneurs but somehow all of them keep me thinking about how useless it is to look at them as a model. People became more and more passionate about this type of books and stories, but the reality is that Elon, like Steve Jobs, and many others, has been influenced by a specific path, a specific youth and a set of experiences you can’t replicate or follow to reach the same destination.

    It’s not really the point of reading such a book, but more and more people, specially in Silicon Valley, usually look at these people as examples and models – something they should follow and try to imitate. They are great, no doubts, but you cannot take them as models, as you cannot do it with the majority of entrepreneurs. It’s mostly about their story and their struggles and that’s how they usually end up in something not common for 99% of the rest of us.


  • Why you shouldn’t partner with non-entrepreneurial people in your startup

    This is the classic mistake you recognise only once you have done it. It is easy to understand why you shouldn’t build your startup (let’s call it company) with someone that is not an entrepreneur at the heart. Let me summarise it in 5 simple points. They are very general, and I don’t like writing fluffing stuff, but I will try to be more specific, with real example and personal stories, very soon 🙂

    1 – Risk. When you start a new venture risk is the only certain thing. You want to have someone that is able to embrace and understand it without consequences. It means being able to take decisions that seem counterintuitive and hard decisions that normal people would avoid at 100%.

    2 – Strategy and planning obsessed. This is common to see for people that did management studies, have MBAs and other types of master. You pitch them about a simple idea and they come up asking you what’s your projected revenues in 5 years from now. They are sometimes great managers, but they usually are bad risk takers and even if strategy and planning is 90% of your success in the future, starting off requires a more entrepreneurial mind-set. Having someone like this in your team can literally kill your company in the first 24 months.

    3 – They avoid doing concrete things. The worst signal and the easiest one. If you have to do one single task and this has been postponed for weeks with simple excuses “we should hire someone that is a specialist for this“, “let’s plan how to do it perfect” etc. I met so many people of this type. There is a common characteristic that applies to every entrepreneur: they are very practical people and they get things done, in a way or another. Done. Not postponed 🙂

    4 – They don’t understand the product/service. Yes, it happens a lot. I meet people that have ideas, a lot of them. But you know “I need to find someone that can build it, I’m not an expert and don’t really understand it”. Wow. You want to build a company, a product, but you don’t want to understand it and get your hands dirty on that market. Ok. Just another signal.

    5 – “As soon as we have the money..” – Ok. This could be a good thing, but the reality is that is a bad signal for someone that doesn’t understand entrepreneurship at all. If you have are waiting for the perfect conditions: having exactly the amount of money you need, having the market you operate in booming and all the stars aligned over your head…well, let’s say that you are a good dreamer, not an entrepreneur. Good luck with such people. They are not risk-takers and unfortunately entrepreneurship is 99% operating in bad conditions, not optimal. This is somehow my favourite one: it’s a mix of points 1, 2 and 3. Just awful to deal with.

    Is there anything else?

    I somehow met all this kind of people. There are other signals you should consider as well. Another just coming up to my mind are people doing 3 different things at the same time. They have a full time job, a company and are looking for other opportunities. “Uh, I don’t have much time, but maybe I can help you with some hours a week“. There are exceptions, but 99% of the times they are just putting them in many potential opportunities, hoping something will make them billionaires. It doesn’t work 🙂

    There is not mid-way solution

    Last but not least. This is for you, you that are the real entrepreneur.

    It’s easy to come up with excuses and fall in love with some of those people, specially if you don’t have experience. You tend to evaluate everything else they are capable of and lie to yourself about that signals. Sometimes they are more senior than you and you think it’s going to be great to have such an experienced guy on your side. It’s not. There is a reason why they didn’t start anything before. It can be frustrating, but the only way to be successful or, let’s say, to get your company off the ground, is to avoid them at 100%, it’s the only “medicine“, but just the right one 🙂

    Talk soon!

    Stefano


  • Loyalty

    There is a great post on AVC where Fred explains how to look at loyalists and mercenaries. It turns out that what you do as a leader can completely change how your colleagues see their daily job. It’s true. It’s not easy and that’s probably one of the biggest challenge building a company.

    It’s also a reminder of how few companies, and leaders, think about it regularly. I was at a dinner last night. A few friends of mine where discussing leaving their jobs for better paid positions. The way they were doing it made me clear how that companies already failed with them.

    Talk soon!

    Stefano


  • How to think about Education

    Several weeks ago I posted something on my Facebook related to education and entrepreneurship. From time to time I listen to this beautiful interview – love the part about education. Time has passed but the problem seems to be still a big issue for US like for many other countries. It’s not about resources, it’s about mentality and how we are used to think.

    [youtube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=M6Oxl5dAnR0?rel=0&showinfo=0]