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June 30, 2005

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Listed below are links to weblogs that reference The era of the disposable startup ?:

» Nano-corps? from What's Next?
One other driver that I think is important is that it is now possible to add value in smaller doses than ever before. [Read More]

» Low Startup Costs a Feature of Web 2.0 from IP Democracy
Tim OReilly cites Jeff Claviers point regarding the low cost of delivery of Web 2.0 applications. This new generation of applications is built on $50K to $100K, writes Jeff. Tim agrees that, for now [this is] very tru... [Read More]

» Disposable Starups from Entrepreneur’s Journey
Musing:I’ve been reading a lot about how it is currently a great time to be an entrepreneur. Joe Kraus has an interesting post about how this is the right time. Basically he argues that the cost of getting something off [Read More]

Comments

Charlie Wood

Jeff,

Where do I find these guys who are willing to work for no salary, then just "trash [their equity] and move to the next" if it doesn't work out? I need some free labor.

:-)

Pelle Braendgaard

I like your additions particularly the last one about web services integration. When I was at Altavista almost 10 years ago the mantra was partner, partner. That's what was important. Now you can "partner" with google, ebay, amazon, yahoo all without sending your head of business development on 3 trips to Seattle or San Francisco.

I added the following on my blog as differences:

* Simpler services are more successful
* Big is no longer cool
* Better frameworks

Which I expand on on my blog post. I and many other people are trying to bootstrap without Angel Investors, which is something you will see a lot more of as well.


Charlie,
The difference with many of these startups is that they bring very few people in and no or very few investors, this means that they receive a much greater share of the company and revenues. Rather than sharing 2% between 40 developers as was often the case during the late nineties.

Chris Yeh

I think that entrepreneurship is here to stay for one simple reason:

It's more fun to build a company than to work for the Evil Empire.

I do what I do because I enjoy working with small teams in a fast-paced environment. And I'm never going to work for a company with more than 30 employees when I get there.

James Prudente

Pelle makes a great point. Great frameworks are enabling small teams and individuals to do the work that required tens or hundreds of people back in web 1.0. I've created a complete podcasting platform singlehandedly with the help of Ruby on Rails and the Microsoft .NET Framework.

Check out the demo:

http://bigfeeder.com/demos/mcl095

Clarence Wooten

A lot has been said about Joe’s post during the past few days. Which made me think — is it also a great time to be an investor?

I think so and provide reasons why in my post, Web 2.0: It’s a great time to be an investor. It would be great to get feedback to see if others feel the same. It’s clear that Web 2.0 is not only changing the rules for entrepreneurship… it is also changing the rules for angel and venture investing.

Steven Cardinale

The disposable startup is a great idea, but as Jeff has pointed out, there are some serious drawbacks. However, I think the idea of a disposable startup is not too much off the mark and with some tweaking an entrepreneur can take advantage of the lower barriers to entry (see my thoughts on Disposable Startups vs. Organic Cash Cows)

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