The Indicee Blog

Reviewing the Refresh – A Look Back at F5 Expo

by Geoff Devereux on April 9th, 2010

This past Wednesday was the 1st F5 Expo in Vancouver. The event was billed as a conference for business executives on changing technologies in the online space. In retrospect, I think it’s fair to say the inaugural F5 was as much about finding its own identity as it was about technology.  You can’t grow without growing pains.

Overall, it was a very good event and shows a great deal of potential for the future!

The event was attended by 1000+ enthusiastic area business people.  It was a highly energized crowd and everyone was keen to learn and connect.  The conference really highlighted for me something I’ve noticed the past few years in Vancouver.  There seems to be a… realization, for lack of a better word, that NOW is our time to shine.  I think the organizers very successfully keyed in on this, no pun intended.

The line up of speakers and panelists was fantastic.

Tod Maffin, noted strategist, technologist, author, and speaker opened the show.  Although I missed the talk, based on the tweets I saw, I can only characterize his message as a cautionary tale.  I think Ferris Bueller said it best, “Life moves pretty fast, if you don’t stop and look around once in a while, you could miss it.”

And Malcolm Gladwell closed the show.  Another cautionary tale, you can find details of his talk on Techvibes and the Vancouver Sun.  I think he sums up nicely when he says, the internet is a means to an end, not an end in itself.

I managed to make it to 2 panel sessions.

The first was on Cloud Computing where our very own, Mark Cunningham, contributed to a discussion on the technology.  Mark was joined by Howie Wu, CEO of Layerboom and by Ryan Storgaard, Microsoft’s Director of Cloud Services Strategy.  The moderator was Rajan Sodhi, VP of Marketing for the hosting company Peer 1.  Mark commented to me afterward that there probably should have been 2 Cloud sessions.  One that dealt with Cloud for Business Users and one that dealt with Cloud for Techies.  The result would be two very different discussions.  And I think that nicely sums it up.  You can find some of Indicee’s thoughts on cloud here, here, and here.  If I had to pick one thing from that a Business User would be wise to take away from the session, it’s Howie’s explanation that Cloud “turns fixed costs into variable costs”.

The second session I attended was a panel on Avoiding Start-up Pitfalls.  This was a bit self-indulgent on my part seeing as I work for a start-up and have worked for a bunch of start-ups over the past 5 years.  The panel was comprised of Ryan Holmes, CEO of Hootsuite - the Twitter client, Danny Robinson, Managing Director of Bootup Labs - the incubator fund, and Michael Fergusson, CEO of Ayogo Games - social and mobile gaming, and moderated by Carisa Miklusak, co-founder of SoMedios - social media consultancy firm.  This panel definitely wins the prize for best soundbites at F5!  Here’s a sampling (I’m paraphrasing a bit, still waiting on my tricked-out recording device):

Danny: Equity is rarely a 50/50 deal with co-founders. Have the conversation early when you have nothing to lose.

Michael: The CEO has to be the top salesperson in a start-up.

Ryan: Kill your customers with a dull pencil (avoid the customization trap).

All: Business plans are dubious at best.

Danny: Take the cheapest money you can get.    

And: It’s not the firm who funds you, it’s the partner at the firm.

Michael: The worse possible outcome is a lingering death.  If your start-up is going to fail, make sure to fail well.

This last point reminds me of a recent Globe and Mail video of Mark Evans interviewing Roger Martin on innovation.  According to Martin, “to innovate you have to court failure”.  Roger Martin is Dean of the Rotman School of Management at University of Toronto.

You know, this may actually sum up the whole conference.  To innovate you have to court failure.

We would like to sincerely thank the organizers of F5 Expo, and all the participants, speakers, sponsors, and everyone who helped make this event possible.  You guys did a great job and have continued to step up and take risk in order to bring out the best in Vancouver!

For more reviews from F5 check out:

Gillian Shaw: iPad apps: Made in BC

Middle Child Marketing: F5 Expo Review

Kiwano Marketing: Best of Social Media Metrics

Flickr: Jeremy Lim

Twitter: #F5Expo and #F5cloud

If you know of other URLs with F5 reviews, feel free to leave them in the comments.

Enjoy!

  • Share/Bookmark

Measuring What Matters: Interview with Cheni Yerushalmi

by Geoff Devereux on March 3rd, 2010

Using Interviews to distill meaning

Last time, we were talking about how to “Think Like a Reporter“.  My goal was to convey the importance of asking good questions in order to figure out how things actually get done and what the critical elements are in your business.

Today, I’d like to take it one step further and showcase an interview I was fortunate enough to secure with Cheni Yerushalmi, the managing partner and co-founder of Sunshine Suites in New York City.  In the interview, I’ve tried to apply the principles of good questions in order to create an environment that’s conducive to storytelling.  Then, getting out of the way and letting Cheni tell his story.

The other key point I would like to offer up as a takeaway from this experience for all of you is to stay alert for opportunities to expand your networks and your knowledge base.  This interview would not have happened had it not been for: 1) Cheni’s willingness and his courage to put himself out there, 2) the enterprising, public invitation from Gary Vaynerchuk, founder of Wine Library TV and author of Crush It, and 3) my recognition of the opportunity and taking action.  These are all voluntary actions.  How can you ever bottle up this mix of bravery, curiosity, inquisitiveness, openness, and indeed playfulness that’s required to create something out of nothing into a “formula” or a “job description”?  This stuff doesn’t show up on your desk with a neat little bow on it, conveniently labeled and packaged for consumption.  You have to create it and I think that’s a useful lesson.

Instead of existing in a constant state of “beware”, move into a state of “BE AWARE”.

Back to the point, we are talking with Cheni Yerushalmi from Sunshine Suites in NYC about business, entrepreneurship, recognizing opportunity, and the critical measures that determine success within the business.

I’ll summarize and paraphrase some stuff here to keep the wordcount net-friendly, but feel free to look for some of Cheni’s other recent appearances here, here, here, and here for more great content.

Sunshine Suites NYC with Cheni Yerushalmi

What is Sunshine Suites?

Sunshine Suites is an office community in New York City specifically designed for entrepreneurs to get out of the house and network with other entrepreneurs in a cool environment.  Sunshine has 2 locations and houses roughly 600 businesses and 1400 entrepreneurs at any one time.  Far from being just another co-working site, Sunshine is serious about creating community!  In addition to a place to work they offer mentorship, events, gym memberships, affordable healthcare, and even access to a timeshare in Vermont’s ski country!

The types of businesses incubating within Sunshine runs the gamut, “every company under the sun”, as Cheni and his partner Joe will sometimes say.

What motivated you and your partner, Joseph Raby, to start the Sunshine Suites?

Sunshine Suites was the result of the frustrations experienced, as an entrepreneur, with the lack of both affordable office space and community support available in the city.  It was the realization that “there must be a better way”.

Leveraging each other’s strengths, as all good founding partners do, Cheni and Joe took the initiative to create the tool that they wished they had when starting out.

So, what would you say to people unfamiliar with the NYC start-up scene?

Historically, the NYC start-up environment has been difficult but it’s improving.  During the heady days of the Dot-Com’s there was interest from investors and lots of money flying around, but not much of an infrastructure to support the companies.  Since the bust, it has been a slow process of building that infrastructure and creating an environment better suited for start-ups.

A couple great examples of groups supporting this infrastructure are the New York City Economic Development Corp and the Coalition of Office Space Providers.

The message coming out of New York right now is innovate and build partnerships because right now nothing is being taken for granted.

How do you measure success at Sunshine?

Feedback from the community is most important.  Of course, we keep track of revenue and occupancy rates, but these numbers don’t provide any context that we can act on.  Obtaining real feedback from members through regular surveys provides a more accurate gauge of whether or not Sunshine is living up to customer expectations and provides direction that’s actionable.  Fortunately, entrepreneurs don’t tend to be shy about sharing their opinions so we know exactly where we stand.  It’s particularly important for the ongoing success of the business since 70% of new memberships are created through referrals.

How do you balance the qualitative elements relating to feedback with the quantitative numbers side?

The business model itself isn’t very complicated.  We know the model works and, being a “for profit” business, we need to keep track of the numbers.  But, revenue is not the overriding consideration and the numbers can be misleading.  Our success is more accurately measured by the happiness of our community.  We like to think of this as a place where we help each other to succeed.  For us, it’s better to look at something like, how many companies have we been able to graduate from Sunshine? We also work with entrepreneurs who want to be more active in the management of the programming.  We call these guys “Shiners” and it’s this level of engagement that tells us we’re doing something right.

You mentioned companies “graduating” from Sunshine Suites; is that a formal process?  Is there a ceremony or what?

It’s funny you mention that.  We’re working now to create a more formal process and you should see something in Entrepreneur Magazine about it in the near future.  Entrepreneurs who have “graduated”, our “alumni”, tend to stay active at Sunshine, providing mentoring to other entrepreneurs.  As well, we provide workshops, panel discussions, and bootcamps.

What do you see for Sunshine Suites in the future?

We are looking at expansion.  We would like to expand into other cities, but we want to be careful.  Every city is different.  They each have their own ecosystem and it’s important to know the environment and the people in order to provide something of value.

Distilling the meaning in relation to Indicee

So, how do we relate what Cheni told me to what we are trying to achieve at Indicee?  Simple.  The most important performance indicators for the business DO NOT come from the financial reports.

We all know the requirements for financial reporting.  A full set of financial statements are crucial for dealing with banks, tax authorities, and investors; but it’s like Cheni said, these numbers lack the context that’s needed to guide meaningful actions on the part of managers.

Using Indicee increases the contextual meaning of your numbers and guides action in that way, beyond the financial statements.

Your customer’s happiness is not an Income Statement line item.  The path to knowing your customer comes from looking at operational measures; things like behaviour, feedback, distribution, and consumption.  This requires building the additional dimensions into your reporting structure to capture these things.

Final thoughts and random words to live by

Working within a start-up environment and having worked for start-ups in the past, I fully appreciate and applaud what the Sunshine Suites community is doing.  I would also point to other great examples out there such as TechStars, YCombinator, and our own local BootupLabs and Network Hub doing great work incubating companies and providing mentoring in order to tilt the playing field a bit in favour of innovators and disruptors who will create the next generation of market leaders.  You could even look to mainstream media and programs like Shark Tank in the US and Dragon’s Den in Canada and the UK as a means of educating and illuminating what goes into building companies. You have to look past the TV-silliness, but it’s there.

I encourage anyone who is interested in this stuff to get involved.  Check out a networking event, look for people to follow on twitter, talk to your local politicians and get talking to each other.

During our conversation, Cheni told me about when he and Joe were last in Vancouver.  The two of them flew into YVR with 2 bicycles in boxes, they assembled the bikes in the airport, then rode from Vancouver all the way to Tijuana, Mexico.  He went on to tell me that he never buys a round trip ticket when he’s on vacation.  He buys a one-way ticket in order to stay open to the opportunities that present themselves. I think there’s a great lesson in that philosophy and it exemplifies what being an entrepreneur is all about.

Enjoy.

  • Share/Bookmark

Indicee Launch

by Mark Cunningham on November 4th, 2009

There’s been no shortage of activity here at Indicee over the past few months and today we are celebrating the hard work. Today is launch day and we are really excited to show the world our first release of Indicee. I have blogged about our product over the past year for our beta users (feel free to go back and take a look) but I thought I would start fresh today with a summary of what Indicee is all about and what makes us different.

The Audacious Goal

Indicee’s goal is to help frustrated business users who are trying to combine data from different data sources just to get img_ask3answers to some basic business questions. Data can be tricky and if you don’t have the IT experience or the budget needed to buy really expensive software the options are limited. Back in the 90’s some of the Indicee team were responsible for creating Crystal Reports and the goal was to get everyone including my mom using it. While Crystal Reports is an amazing tool it was really targeted at techie IT people and software developers. Does this sound like you? I didn’t think so! Here are a few assumptions I have about you, our typical user: you probably don’t understand databases that well, you don’t have a burning desire to spend the next 6 months mastering a technical reporting tool, you don’t have an army of IT people around you and you probably don’t have the budget to fork out $100K for traditional business intelligence software. Am I right? Comon’ now I can hear you yelling out loud all the way from my office in Vancouver! Indicee is different, we are not trying to recreate another reporting tool for this same set of users, instead we are focused on getting to the “masses” of business users in small and mid-size organizations. Simple, easy to use, low cost and self-serve is what we are all about.

I have provided a bit more insight into Indicee below. If you would rather not listen to me ramble on just check out our Indicee video for the highly summarized version.

  • Share/Bookmark

Sun Tzu’s Cash Burn

by Geoff Devereux on October 23rd, 2009

– We’ll revisit the B.I. terms from last time next Tuesday and provide definitions.  Today is a fun look at historical accounting, and for a change, I’ll make reference to Indicee.  –

The Art of War, Chapter 2: Waging War

Sun Tzu said: In general, the strategy for employing the military is this”:

Sun_Tzu_thumbIf there are 1,000 4-Horse Attack Chariots, 1,000 Leather-armoured Support Chariots,
100,000 Mailed Troops, and Provisions are transported 1,000 li, then the domestic and external campaign expenses, the expenditures for advisors and guests, materials such as glue and lacquer, and providing chariots and armour will be 1,000 pieces of gold per day.

Only then can an army of 100,000 be mobilized.” *

* Sawyer’s translation

  • Share/Bookmark

Creating a Lean Start-up

by Mark Cunningham on November 5th, 2008

It never seems to end….each day I come home from work and I vow to close the laptop and free myself from thinking about business for just a few hours. Well…. It’s 11:18pm, Obama is now the new President of the United States and I am reading blogs, blogs and more blogs. The boys from Venture Hacks sent out a twitter linking to a presentation on creating a lean start-up. Steve Blank and Eric Ries do a good job of articulating the concept of a lean start-up quite well. It jumped out at me because this is something I think about every day as we work on our new start-up, Indicee.  As I flipped through the presentation I realized this was Indicee. Why didn’t they call us to be their case study! Well ok….the case study in the presentation isn’t quite us…we actually have some investment dollars but beyond that it resonates with our world.

  • Share/Bookmark
Older Posts »
RSS Twitter