active questions tagged entrepreneurship - Stack Overflowmost recent 30 from stackoverflow.com2009-12-17T07:16:21Zhttp://stackoverflow.com/feeds/tag/entrepreneurshiphttp://www.creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/2.5/rdfhttp://stackoverflow.com/questions/1130156/web-entrepreneur-documentary0web entrepreneur documentary ?cometta2009-07-15T08:38:44Z2009-12-08T15:15:23Z
<p>i came across this show on tv but i forgotten the name. it's about documentary of web developers startup and have they try to get funding from vc, title: business trend 2.0....something. any documentaries titles that you folks wanna share worth interesting to watch?</p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/158017/good-ways-to-find-startup-partners10Good ways to find startup partners?pearcewg2008-10-01T14:52:22Z2009-12-04T18:15:50Z
<p>What are some good ways for a developer to find quality partners for a startup venture?
Specifically, technical guru with business ideas looking for a business person, graphics person?
<br/><br/>
Best web site?<br/>
Best other methods?</p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1607565/programmer-wants-to-be-a-entrepreneur9Programmer wants to be a EntrepreneurTheGambler2009-10-22T14:20:29Z2009-11-07T00:12:28Z
<p>So, I've been out of school for 2 years and working as a programmer and I've decided that my single most goal in my career is to create a start up or work as a consultant/free lance. I've recently accepted a position that will allow me to go back to school if I want. </p>
<p>With my goals to create a start up or be a consultant/free lance I'm trying to decide if I should go back to school and get a MBA or just spend my extra time creating and developing my product. </p>
<p>So I have some questions:</p>
<ol>
<li><p>Are VC's more likely to give you money if you have an MBA?</p></li>
<li><p>The school that I'm thinking of getting a MBA from has a professional MBA where you take most of your classes on-line. You take the same classes required for their on-campus degree. Would an on-line "Professional" degree be as respected as an on-campus?</p></li>
<li><p>I already have some ideas for products. Should I just start developing these products and not worry about going back to school? My big problem is I'm not too familiar with the business side of things, but I could just subscribe to sites like startuptodo.com and read some books as well.</p></li>
</ol>
<p>Thank you to all that respond.</p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/882575/bare-minimum-for-an-independent-developer9Bare minimum for an independent developergeocoin2009-05-19T12:52:54Z2009-11-06T23:59:59Z
<p>I'm currently in the planning stages of starting out on my own* (with a business partner...) and am trying to come up with a list of minimum requirements that I'll need for the early stages of this venture.</p>
<p>Leaving out the business craft side of things (sales marketing etc.) at this point - there are plenty of articles here on SO covering that - and focusing on the technical side of things only, I have the following list:</p>
<ul>
<li><p>development box (obviously! PC or MAC depending on target platform) </p></li>
<li><p>dev software (VStudio/eclipse/xcode/notepad) </p></li>
<li><p>test box (could be virtual machine)</p></li>
<li><p>Source control (anything except VSS!)</p></li>
<li><p>onsite backup (external HDD, separate
backup box, CD/DVD ROM)</p></li>
<li><p>offsite backup(looking for
suggestions here amazon S3?)</p></li>
<li><p>teleconferencing software (for
discussion with Biz partner who may
not be local. Skype?)</p></li>
<li><p>bug tracking/management (fogbugz?)</p></li>
</ul>
<p>Have i missed anything and/or included too much? I realize that every venture is different, and technically, the bare minimum is just a dev box and a chair... however assuming serious work with disaster recovery is in order, is this list reasonable?</p>
<p>[EDIT] I've created a wiki summary of the answers. I've put the skeleton framework in and intend to fatten it up with links and details etc. Once I can, it will be the accepted answer, in the meantime please vote up the other answers and/or edit the wiki page if you think it's appropriate. BTW, I'm away for a few days so the fattening up will take place after that.</p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/398690/how-to-split-up-income-from-a-product-between-co-founders2How to split up income from a product between co-founders?companyguy2008-12-29T21:17:34Z2009-09-10T16:03:43Z
<p>We are 4 mates that founded a company a year ago.</p>
<ul>
<li>A: high skill, works a lot (the architect)</li>
<li>B: low skill, high motivation, works even more (the motivator)</li>
<li>C: high skill, works only 5-15h a week (the admin)</li>
<li>D: low skill, high motivation, works about 10h a week (the helping hand)</li>
</ul>
<p>We had only projects with fixed payments, that were split into task with fixed rewards, so everyone was paid fair. Skill was rewarded by the effect that the fast one could do more tasks. Wasting time was no issue. Everything was fine.</p>
<p>But now we are working on a product that will be sold multiple times. And we need a suitable model, how to split the income. Because a product is a work in progress, we can not count hours, lines of code or something like that and split the income by a factor depending on that. Maybe during later maintanace colegue C will have a stronger commitment?
B and D have higher skills in aquisition. Made deals sould be rewarded somehow.</p>
<p>What would be a fair system on dividing the earned money among us 4?</p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1138776/quit-my-job-because-i-dont-evolve8quit my job because I don't evolve [closed]tanderson2009-07-16T16:29:39Z2009-07-21T00:32:22Z
<p>Hi guys,</p>
<p>I've worked for some time(few years) for my company. As time passed, the important tasks with new technologies started to be given to my colleague although I've asked several times for more challenging projects. I believe this could be because I asked a few times for a raise when I had more responsibilities for the projects and the boss might have been irritated. </p>
<p>Now, I feel my work is becoming boring, I don't evolve and the time is passing by. I was thinking I could ask for the rest of my vacation and then to retire and stay home and work for my personal project. </p>
<p>My wife has a job too that could maintain both for some time. However, I think the ideal option would be for us both to stay home and work for personal project since the project would evolve much faster with us both concentrating full time on it. </p>
<p>But with this option, there's the money issue. </p>
<p>We have some savings(about 20K) and I guess they could sustain us both for about an year. However, since we might need some money to invest in the project I'm not sure how much we could hold on(1 year was without project investments). It's our first project and I don't know how much money we need to get it started. </p>
<p>To launch the project we'll need to first build the specs(I guess about 3 months of work at least where it's all research and paper work) and then to pay for programmers to implement them. </p>
<p>So my question is, did you face a situation similar to this or what advice could you give me so I can continue achieve the best results? </p>
<p>Here is a comparison of my current choices: </p>
<ol>
<li><p>continue to work for my company </p>
<ul>
<li><p>Advantages: </p>
<ul>
<li>constant monthly income </li>
<li>ok environment - the co-workers are friendly and the work schedule is flexible </li>
</ul></li>
<li><p>Disadvantages: </p>
<ul>
<li>time passes by and the experience is not advancing</li>
<li>I always do what my boss needs, not what I'd like to do</li>
<li>my moral goes down as the time passes</li>
</ul></li>
</ul></li>
<li><p>work for my personal project full time</p>
<ul>
<li><p>Advantages: </p>
<ul>
<li>learn many new things and have challenging experiences</li>
<li>when time will be against me(aka 35-40 years old) and the employers will look for younger and with more time to spend for work employees, I'll have my own project to work for</li>
<li>any success in the project would be a huge upgrade in my moral than to work for the boss where any success you have doesn't matter so much per total</li>
</ul></li>
<li><p>Disadvantages: </p>
<ul>
<li>financial issues if the project will eat much money(I'm not that experienced in how much money a project could eat, so any suggestions are welcome)</li>
<li>income comes after the project is launched, and it is not constant</li>
<li>economic climate(is the current economic climate still ok to start your own project?)</li>
</ul></li>
</ul></li>
</ol>
<p>I appreciate any insight on this matter because it's been haunting me and my wife for some time now and we really would like to take a decision.</p>
<p>Thanks for any help you can provide!</p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1129297/bizspark-licensing-after-product-goes-live1Bizspark - Licensing after product goes liveJP2009-07-15T03:44:55Z2009-07-17T02:50:29Z
<p>My startup is considering applying for <a href="http://www.microsoftstartupzone.com/BizSpark/Pages/At%5Fa%5FGlance.aspx" rel="nofollow">Microsoft BizSpark</a>. I am unclear as to whether or not the software is still usable after 3 years or after the product goes live (whichever comes first). My worry is that we will develop for 2 years, go to production, and all of a sudden we will not be entitled to use the software as the BizSpark agreement will be over. Thank you</p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/28567/how-do-i-name-a-consulting-company16How do I name a consulting company?James A. Rosen2008-08-26T16:43:28Z2009-07-01T16:21:46Z
<p>At some point, I'd like to follow some of the advice on SOFlow and start my own small consulting / software shop. (Consulting because it's easy to get work, software because it scales much better.)</p>
<p>I understand the naming behind "<a href="http://lesseverything.com/" rel="nofollow">Less Everything</a>" - they make minimalist products. But where does "<a href="http://37signals.com/" rel="nofollow">37 Signals</a>" come from? And "<a href="http://fogcreek.com/" rel="nofollow">Fog Creek</a>"?</p>
<p>I want to avoid using my name, because I'd like to build the business up to at least a few people. I'd also like to avoid the stuff that <a href="http://www.bandnamemaker.com/" rel="nofollow">random-band-name generators</a> spew out.</p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1022424/tips-and-tricks-for-running-a-development-shop4Tips and tricks for running a development shopapostlion2009-06-20T20:07:21Z2009-06-21T02:41:12Z
<p>Guys, so I've started my own bodyshop/development company/freelancer-to-enterprise middlemanshipry, jumping from a freelance web development myself.</p>
<p>Currently, I'm working on it extremely fast, going from an idea to a staff of developers and a first outside salesperson in four days—yet, I'm already feeling I'm doing some nasty mistakes right from the start.</p>
<p>Those of you who have had a similar experience—what is the worst mistake you wish you've never made on your way and what's the best bit knowledge you wish you knew when starting?</p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/348394/what-to-do-with-a-finished-prototype-of-a-very-good-idea3What to do with a finished prototype of a very good idea?Sam2008-12-08T00:13:50Z2009-06-15T14:45:53Z
<p>Hello everyone.</p>
<p>I'm just finishing up over 6 months of thought and labor on a project. The impact of my web app will send reverberations through-out the internet, for sure in terms of the technological idea behind it (it will definitely make TechCrunch, ReadWriteWeb, etc), and, hopefully, reverberations with day-to-day users of the internet.</p>
<p>For the sake of this post, assume that this idea really is a very, very good idea. Pretend I explained the idea to you, and you loved it, and you saw it's immediate appeal as well as the framework it creates for future improvement, profit, and research.</p>
<p>Now, my question to you is: where do I go from here? </p>
<ul>
<li><p>Do I put it online for all to consume? Hope that I can withstand the massive amount of traffic it obtains from several blogs? Force myself to keep the system afloat (optimizing, scaling, fixing bugs, securing every last bit, etc) long enough so that my websites reaches the breaking point (critical mass) before another competitor moves in?</p></li>
<li><p>Do I make a privately accessible prototype, and try, somehow, to show it to VC's to get money so that I can launch the product confidently and with the assurance of an entire team of people working on it? There are so many regions of development to explore and a lot of the technology can be vastly improved if I had some really brilliant people working on it. It has several extremely appealing and unique ways to generate revenue right from launch.</p></li>
<li><p>Do I make a privately accessible prototype and try to sell it? Yeah, the idea is that good.. I just don't know how to get in touch with the people who would buy it.</p></li>
<li><p>Patent the core technologies, then ask this question again in a few months? I'm not sure this would help... would a patent on MySpace prevent other social network clones from popping up? No. Nor would a patent on what I've made.</p></li>
</ul>
<p>This is a very important decision for me, as I'm nearing the end of the beginning. The 6 month, 15 hour days, going insane taking into account dozens of existing ideas and having them mold together when least expected into something so pure, simple, and beautiful that I know the world will appreciate and use it. This is the project I was born to make.</p>
<p>I welcome any questions you need answered in order to give sound advice.</p>
<p>Thanks</p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/86998/whats-the-best-way-for-a-developer-to-start-his-her-own-business23What's the best way for a developer to start his/her own business?Brian Sullivan2008-09-17T19:59:30Z2009-05-02T19:55:54Z
<p>I'm a developer who is interested in entrepreneurship, but also loves building good software. What would be the best avenue for me to own my own business? Would a service-based model work better, or should I go the ISV route and try to build a business around a product?</p>
<p>Also, if you have started your own business, have you been successful, and would you recommend it to others? Or is the industry such that it's better to remain employed by a decent company?</p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/599078/the-process-of-starting-a-technology-business1The process of starting a technology businessDave Smith2009-03-01T01:58:56Z2009-05-02T18:23:00Z
<p>I am employed in a fairly secure job currently. I am interested in the area of entreprenuership in technology. I would like to use my spare time to build a business. I have already incorporated a company but haven't had a chance to work on developing it.</p>
<p>Eventually, I would like to create a software product and although I have a few ideas, I would want to initially get started in providing consulting services which will help me get a feel of how things would go before spending time and effort on a product.</p>
<p>Since it takes time to build the company's reputation, I would like to do this in my spare time. Someone suggested that the most efficient way of marketing consulting services is to get noticed in the technology field. Some of the ways I want to go about doing this is by:</p>
<ul>
<li>Starting a tech blog</li>
<li>Writing articles in tech journals</li>
<li>Attending user groups/seminars to build contacts</li>
</ul>
<p>Ideally, I would want to associate my name with my company when I write blogs/articles. However, I would rather not have my employer/coworkers know about this until I am ready to quit. Any thoughts on how I would go about this?</p>
<p>My 2nd question is about my approach. I want to test the waters before plunging into them. So the plan is:</p>
<ul>
<li>Work part time in building the reputation of the business while working full time to pay my bills</li>
<li>Once I have enough clients, quit my day job and start working for self full time</li>
<li>While working on different projects, hopefully gather enough ideas to build a product</li>
<li>Eventually, in the long run, focus on the product and gradually reduce providing services</li>
</ul>
<p>Does anyone have any suggestions/comments on my thoughts or any general advice for a first timer?</p>
<p><strong>EDIT:</strong></p>
<p>Thanks for the responses. Can someone give some suggestions on the specific questions that I have:</p>
<ul>
<li>How would I build reputation without associating myself with my company</li>
<li>Would my approach of testing the waters and taking one step at a time practically possible?</li>
</ul>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/691994/startup-or-bigco1Startup or BigCo?Majd Taby2009-03-28T01:48:16Z2009-05-02T18:05:22Z
<p>Hey, I'm a university student, at the Junior level, And I'm trying to figure out my plans. I'm fairly sure I can land a job at a major corporation given my background and education. However, I can't figure out whether or not it would be more rewarding to start a startup of my own or to take the safer approach of a BigCo™.</p>
<p>So do you work at a startup/bigco? have you started your own startup? </p>
<p>My biggest fear as a programmer is to become a drone, implementing other peoples' specs for the rest of my life, regardless of how good the pay is.</p>
<p>EDIT: I think something was lost in my question. If I chose not to join a big corporation, it probably won't be to work for a different small company, it would be to start my own. Therein lies the dilemma: I don't have a business background, but I (think I) have the motivation and perseverance qualities for it. I just don't know if the risk is justifiable, and what the variables that should be guiding my decision are.</p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/791736/where-to-best-look-for-skilled-developers-who-might-want-to-get-involved-in-a-sta1Where to best look for skilled developers who might want to get involved in a startup on an equity basis?Clueless Founder2009-04-26T22:34:42Z2009-05-02T17:28:01Z
<p>Hi, assuming I have an idea for a pretty simple Web 2.0 startup that is likely to be fairly successful after say 12-18 months (during which it won't however make or cost much money, just hosting) because it fills a real void, where would I best be looking for talented developers who would possibly like to get involved in the startup on an equity/shareholder basis?</p>
<p>Also, what do you think is generally a good offer (equity-wise) to make in this context (given that currently there really isn't much except for a concept, that needs to be turned into a working prototype)?</p>
<p>Being absolutely fair and realistic about this is very important to me.</p>
<p>So, as potential developers who'd possibly embark on such a journey, what'd be your most pressing questions and issues/factors?</p>
<p>Thanks for your feedback</p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/716814/dealing-with-multiple-consulting-projects3Dealing with multiple consulting projectsClick Upvote2009-04-04T09:23:55Z2009-05-02T17:21:30Z
<p>As a freelance programmer, it can be a good thing when you quote for 4-5 jobs and get all 5 of them. It can mean lots of money, but it also has the effect of stress/burnout, and not knowing where to start and how to get anything done. Especially when each of the 5 clients want a daily progress report.</p>
<p>How do you organize your time and to-do list in such a situation?</p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/779776/ideas-for-new-technical-projects-and-products-1Ideas for new technical projects and products [closed]Joel Martinez2009-04-23T00:09:18Z2009-04-23T04:59:10Z
<p>I'm constantly surveying the landscape for some new projects to start programming, as I'm sure are many of you. So I figured, what if I just asked the SO crowd for one?</p>
<p>I'll put two constraints on the answers:</p>
<ol>
<li>Ideas that don't involve new breakthroughs or technology, but could be commercially lucrative.</li>
<li>New breakthroughs or technology that solve some problem. Some problem that you'd like to see solved in your lifetime (and is realistic ... no "the singularity" answers :-P )</li>
</ol>
<p>The first thing that popped to mind was, "no one's gonna give away their precious ideas". But then I realized that everyone has lots of ideas ... way more than one could ever work on in their lifetime. So what if everyone just took a realistic look at their internal portfolio and let the ones that they knew they either didn't have time to do, or didn't have the technical chops to do free? I mean, wouldn't it be better to see your idea implemented by someone instead of just collecting dust in the back of your mind?</p>
<p><em>Edit</em>: One of the comments below suggests that there are plenty of ideas that were borne out of academia, but remain unnoticed. Any examples?</p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/753188/information-on-starting-an-internet-company-3Information on starting an internet company [closed]Roy2009-04-15T18:57:02Z2009-04-15T19:04:31Z
<p>I am interested in starting an internet company. I have read information on the internet about this but would like to get seasoned and real-life advice on steps, business licenses, trademark licenses, and any must-need things that need to be done specifically for a successful and organized internet company.</p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/270407/is-microsoft-bizspark-a-good-deal-for-startups15Is Microsoft BizSpark a good deal for startups?Barrett2008-11-06T21:41:54Z2009-02-13T22:11:42Z
<p>I learned about <a href="http://www.microsoft.com/bizspark/" rel="nofollow">Microsoft BizSpark</a> the other day and started the sign up process. Has anyone else heard about it or had success with it?</p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/132646/what-is-your-favorite-it-entrepreneurship-web-forum4What is your favorite IT-entrepreneurship web forum?Stranger2008-09-25T11:09:53Z2008-12-31T09:46:49Z
<p>What is your favorite IT-entrepreneurship web forum?
And why?</p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/7121/what-should-a-software-engineer-read-before-branching-out-on-their-own12What should a software engineer read before branching out on their own?Dominic Cooney2008-08-10T09:09:15Z2008-09-22T14:10:41Z
<p>I'm a software engineer living vicariously through the <a href="http://venturevoice.com/" rel="nofollow" title="Venture Voice entrepreneur podcast">Venture Voice</a> podcast and books like Founders at Work. What should I read before I branch out and try to write and sell software on my own?</p>