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Do you have skills + character? = A great CTO/co-founder position awaits
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Martin Bähr  
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 More options Oct 23 2012, 10:39 am
From: Martin Bähr <mba...@email.archlab.tuwien.ac.at>
Date: Tue, 23 Oct 2012 16:39:45 +0200
Local: Tues, Oct 23 2012 10:39 am
Subject: Re: [HackerspaceSG] Do you have skills + character? = A great CTO/co-founder position awaits

On Mon, Oct 22, 2012 at 09:21:31PM -0700, MetaKrystal wrote:
> - It is a travel product
> - Full PSD-layered designs, wireframes and functions are completed
> - We constantly evolve - your feedback will be treasured and implemented
> - With an MVP, I am confident of getting significant backing, so you won't
> be working for just equity for long

have you validated the idea?
did/do you show the designs to potential users to find out if it is
something they would use?
do you have people registering now because they want to use the product
when it is ready?
what is it that makes your product interesting?
how do you plan to make money?

you don't need to answer all these questions here on the list, but i
hope you have answers for them and others.

greetings, martin.
--
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Gideon Simons  
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 More options Oct 23 2012, 9:13 pm
From: Gideon Simons <gideon...@gmail.com>
Date: Wed, 24 Oct 2012 09:13:48 +0800
Local: Tues, Oct 23 2012 9:13 pm
Subject: Re: [HackerspaceSG] Do you have skills + character? = A great CTO/co-founder position awaits

Wow, reading this I feel showered with honesty (unless there is something
you aren't telling us :)

Since you are in this situation and are building an MVP for a travel
service and unless you are building a flight seat occupancy prediction
and optimization engine, you may be able to get something up with a few
wordpress plugins and some kind of mailing list like mailchimp.
It doesn't even have to look bad there are a lot of great themes and
templates out there, get some users to feedback.
It will give you a good indication for all the things Martin mentioned and
help you attract more stakeholders (like a CTO). All in true MVP spirit.

Keep your sexy wireframes and cut out PSDs to show
investors/angels/governement your future plans for improvement and see if
they want to help get the ball rolling.

Just something for you to consider until you get your CTO.

Gideon

On Tue, Oct 23, 2012 at 10:39 PM, Martin Bähr <

--
Gideon

 
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Atamert Ölçgen  
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 More options Oct 23 2012, 10:55 pm
From: Atamert Ölçgen <mu...@muhuk.com>
Date: Wed, 24 Oct 2012 10:54:48 +0800
Local: Tues, Oct 23 2012 10:54 pm
Subject: Re: [HackerspaceSG] Do you have skills + character? = A great CTO/co-founder position awaits

Hi Krystal,

On Tue, Oct 23, 2012 at 12:21 PM, MetaKrystal <he...@metakrystal.com> wrote:
> I apologise if this post offends anyone.

I don't think anyone here would be offended against honesty. If you would
like to improve this particular pitch here is some suggested reading:

http://whartoniteseekscodemonkey.tumblr.com/

--
Kind Regards,
Atamert Ölçgen

-+-
--+
+++

www.muhuk.com


 
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Alvin Jiang  
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 More options Oct 24 2012, 12:50 am
From: Alvin Jiang <aji...@gmail.com>
Date: Wed, 24 Oct 2012 12:50:44 +0800
Local: Wed, Oct 24 2012 12:50 am
Subject: Re: [HackerspaceSG] Do you have skills + character? = A great CTO/co-founder position awaits

You may need to take a few steps back (to begin with a job). Here's why:

There are two main reasons why people take up a job: money or passion.  It's usually a combination of both, with the lower end more about money to meet basic needs than passion for the job, and the higher end more of job fit (if you can command $1m/yr, it's going to be about the right job not the exact figure.)

With a startup "looking for co-founder/CTO/bizmonkey" you're trying to tap on an person's desire for the latter without addressing the former. This is a shaky proposition even for the founder who ought to be the most passionate person in a young startup. You may luck out with someone who has basic needs met from another source (previous exit, family money, mature professional) but such a person who's willing to "work for free" is likely to have his own passions and be looking for help on his project rather than working on yours.

What of the odd fellows who you might get to help? If you're offering an "opportunity" without ensuring that the basic needs are taken care of, you're likely to attract someone willing to work only on a "best effort" basis. This is not the way to build a business, though again if you're lucky "best effort" from founders may prove in short time to be worth full-time commitment.

As you're still asking the basic question "does anyone agree with me this is a great idea worth giving up a paycheque for?" and hearing echoes, you may need to consider that maybe only you think it's a great idea. That's not necessarily a bad thing, but it means you will need to pay someone to implement, or learn to do it yourself.

If doing it yourself is not an option, you need to hire someone. No money? No problem. Here's my advice; get a job, save up some money and see if it's worth your hard-earned cash to pay someone to implement it for you.

You've been at it several months and gone nowhere, if the idea is still good then it's likely to still be in another 6 months. At $3k a month you should have saved enough after 4-6 months of contract work to hire a basically competent developer to get some stuff done for you.

In the meantime there's no reason you can't moonlight on the non-tech aspects whilst you toil away for someone else during the day.

Good luck, but don't depend on it.

PS. There is a 3rd reason people accept startup jobs - greed. Many inexperienced founders play on this willingly or otherwise. Don't fall for that trap or you'll end up with the same results. When the going gets tough, your "co-founder" doesn't see his large equity stake maturing fast enough and bails out.

On 23 Oct, 2012, at 12:21 PM, MetaKrystal <he...@metakrystal.com> wrote:


 
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Meng Weng Wong  
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 More options Oct 24 2012, 1:07 am
From: Meng Weng Wong <mengw...@gmail.com>
Date: Wed, 24 Oct 2012 13:07:09 +0800
Local: Wed, Oct 24 2012 1:07 am
Subject: Re: [HackerspaceSG] Do you have skills + character? = A great CTO/co-founder position awaits

I couldnt agree more with Alvin's very thoughtful comments. Alvin, we should write a white paper about this!

On 24 Oct, 2012, at 12:50 PM, Alvin Jiang <aji...@gmail.com> wrote:


 
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Jeffrey 'jf' Lim  
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 More options Oct 24 2012, 1:48 am
From: "Jeffrey 'jf' Lim" <jfs.wo...@gmail.com>
Date: Wed, 24 Oct 2012 13:48:32 +0800
Local: Wed, Oct 24 2012 1:48 am
Subject: Re: [HackerspaceSG] Do you have skills + character? = A great CTO/co-founder position awaits

On Wed, Oct 24, 2012 at 11:30 AM, MetaKrystal <he...@metakrystal.com> wrote:
> Thank you for this, Martin.

> This was a great reminder for me to keep grounded. I took a good, hard look
> at what I've done so far, and I'm happy to say that I have good answers for
> all the questions you have posted, except the "interesting" one - if we were
> to be pedantic about the meaning of that word - I would say it were more
> exciting because of the doors it opens to add value to all our consumers.

you also need to show that u have these answers already in ur search
for that CTO. You haven't.

As for when to get investors... I would say that ur sense of timing is
just about right.

-jf

--
He who settles on the idea of the intelligent man as a static entity
only shows himself to be a fool.

"Every nonfree program has a lord, a master --
and if you use the program, he is your master."
    --Richard Stallman


 
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Gideon Simons  
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 More options Oct 24 2012, 2:02 am
From: Gideon Simons <gideon...@gmail.com>
Date: Wed, 24 Oct 2012 14:02:49 +0800
Local: Wed, Oct 24 2012 2:02 am
Subject: Re: [HackerspaceSG] Do you have skills + character? = A great CTO/co-founder position awaits

Hi Krystal,

Don't worry about coming out too "honest" I only take it as showing your
passion in the whole venture, you have come until now and despite all the
CTO issues you are still pushing it forward!

What I suggested were a few ways to move forward CTO-less , with easy
existing web services.

Regarding your investor process it is one way to do it and of course if you
can become profitable without investors it's best. However there are a few
good sides to getting investors earlier into the business that you should
consider.

- Having more stakeholders to share the risk with you
- It adds a lot to your credibility
- You have some money
- You can get a better team and build a better prduct
- The investor will most likely use his connections and resources to help
you achieve your goals
- Your company's valuation estimate will be higher.
and more..

Good luck!
Gideon

--
Gideon

 
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Meng Weng Wong  
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 More options Oct 27 2012, 12:01 am
From: Meng Weng Wong <mengw...@gmail.com>
Date: Sat, 27 Oct 2012 12:01:22 +0800
Local: Sat, Oct 27 2012 12:01 am
Subject: Re: [HackerspaceSG] Do you have skills + character? = A great CTO/co-founder position awaits

On 24 Oct, 2012, at 3:45 PM, MetaKrystal <he...@metakrystal.com> wrote:

> Your insight, as always, is sharp, poignant and very helpful. I agree with Meng that this should be a whitepaper, or at the very least, a Quora answer.

OK, white paper done!

http://rtfm.jfdi.asia/hiring-and-firing/


 
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Martin  
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 More options Oct 27 2012, 9:11 pm
From: Martin <martin.brochh...@gmail.com>
Date: Sun, 28 Oct 2012 09:11:36 +0800
Local: Sat, Oct 27 2012 9:11 pm
Subject: Re: [HackerspaceSG] Do you have skills + character? = A great CTO/co-founder position awaits

This is awesome! Thanks for sharing!

On Sat, Oct 27, 2012 at 12:01 PM, Meng Weng Wong <mengw...@gmail.com> wrote:


 
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Meng Weng Wong  
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 More options Nov 1 2012, 1:03 am
From: Meng Weng Wong <mengw...@gmail.com>
Date: Thu, 1 Nov 2012 13:03:29 +0800
Local: Thurs, Nov 1 2012 1:03 am
Subject: Re: [HackerspaceSG] Do you have skills + character? = A great CTO/co-founder position awaits
 
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Jason Ong  
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 More options Nov 1 2012, 2:27 pm
From: Jason Ong <velve...@gmail.com>
Date: Thu, 1 Nov 2012 11:27:23 -0700
Local: Thurs, Nov 1 2012 2:27 pm
Subject: Re: [HackerspaceSG] Do you have skills + character? = A great CTO/co-founder position awaits

First chapter is sehr gut.

On Wed, Oct 31, 2012 at 10:03 PM, Meng Weng Wong <mengw...@gmail.com> wrote:

--
Cheers,
JasonOng

---
about: http://bit.ly/velvetpd
portfolio: http://velvetpd.info


 
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Adrienne  
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 More options Nov 7 2012, 9:02 am
From: Adrienne <adrienne.miche...@gmail.com>
Date: Wed, 7 Nov 2012 06:02:31 -0800 (PST)
Local: Wed, Nov 7 2012 9:02 am
Subject: Re: [HackerspaceSG] Do you have skills + character? = A great CTO/co-founder position awaits

Hi Meng,

Apologies for butting in here as this thread has little direct relevance to
my purposes for being in the group, but I read your white paper with
interest as I look a long way forward into a potential future in Asia and
in a peripheral industry. Your whitepaper is overall an excellent,
thorough, and resourceful guide for someone who might be "new" to the
entire process.

However, one paragraph in particular surprised me and took me aback
somewhat. It's this one, under Attracting and Retaining Talent<http://jfdi.asia/rtfm/hr/#name_attracting>
:

One final point. The Singles Map (xoxosoma.com/singles/) will send a chill

> up the spine of any straight male hoping to find love in the Bay Area.
> Singapore, by comparison, is a paradise for foreign dudes: it’s a sea of
> beautiful Asian ladies who grew up on a diet of Ashton Kutcher, Brad Pitt,
> and Matt Damon. Wink wink, nudge, nudge, say no more.

I think it's safe to say this is a fairly sexist approach to attracting and
retaining talent. I realize you likely did not intend this at all, but I am
hoping you consider my rationale for speaking up. This paragraph makes a
broad (and potentially offensive) assumption that the best talent a
start-up wants to hire is heterosexual and male. I sincerely hope that
start-ups are not limiting their hiring to this narrow demographic. Further
a phrase like "it's a sea of beautiful Asian ladies" objectifies the female
residents here, painting a picture of talented straight male (+desperate?
horny?) developers who can be enticed to move to Asia because of the
prospect of an exciting love/sex life with presumably "available" women.
While this message is not explicitly stated, it's certainly strongly
implied, and it makes me very uncomfortable. I imagine other women (as well
as gay or transgendered persons) might feel similarly, as it is a rather
marginalizing message.

I hope you don't mind me saying this here -- I feel a need to voice these
comments openly but respectfully as they far too often go unsaid in
predominately male industries like tech+entrepreneurship. I also know that
very rarely are things like this written with the *intent* to marginalize
or cause discomfort; these kinds of perspectives are so "mainstream" that
it often involves a re-think to become consciously aware that they are not
inclusive. I hope you can see this as a matter of equity in language and
communication, and is not a personal attack. And I do hope you consider
removing the above paragraph, though of course it is your paper and your
organization and therefore your decision to make.  

Thanks and regards
Adrienne


 
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Meng Weng Wong  
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 More options Nov 11 2012, 9:12 am
From: Meng Weng Wong <mengw...@gmail.com>
Date: Sun, 11 Nov 2012 22:12:50 +0800
Local: Sun, Nov 11 2012 9:12 am
Subject: Re: [HackerspaceSG] Do you have skills + character? = A great CTO/co-founder position awaits

I'm really glad you called me on this – it's important that people speak up
about issues of gender politics, particularly in our male-dominated field.

Now I know that at least one person read the white paper all the way
through :)

I've taken the para out of the online version. It got taken out of the PDF
already.

I do want to continue to explore this issue, though. Let me begin by making
a number of statements.

Suppose we want to make the case for Singapore, to foreign programmers,
whether male, female, or LGBT:

1. it never gets cold here, and for people who have trouble every winter
typing with frozen fingers, it is a good place to code.

2. our food has flavour. programmers who are also foodies may enjoy the
infinite variety of eastern and western cuisines.

3. it has a good primary and secondary educational system, and for people
with young children, it is a good place to raise a family.

3. it has a very low crime rate, and a generally phlegmatic population, so
that single females can feel safe walking anywhere, at any time.

4. strictly observant Muslim programmers may find Singapore more
convenient, as mosques are more densely available for daily prayers.

5. a solo straight dude looking to date, with the intention of getting
married, will find a greater density of single women here than in the Bay
Area.

6. a lesbian woman looking to be left alone to code will likewise be
satisfied, as men in this country tend not to hit on women aggressively.

All of the above are, I believe, true.

Is there a more politically correct way to make my point #5, than how I
phrased it previously?


 
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Martin Bähr  
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 More options Nov 11 2012, 9:33 am
From: Martin Bähr <mba...@email.archlab.tuwien.ac.at>
Date: Sun, 11 Nov 2012 15:33:10 +0100
Local: Sun, Nov 11 2012 9:33 am
Subject: Re: [HackerspaceSG] Do you have skills + character? = A great CTO/co-founder position awaits

On Sun, Nov 11, 2012 at 10:12:50PM +0800, Meng Weng Wong wrote:
> 3. it has a good primary and secondary educational system, and for people
> with young children, it is a good place to raise a family.

i hear a lot about competition in singapore schools so i am not so sure
about that one.

> 6. a lesbian woman looking to be left alone to code will likewise be
> satisfied, as men in this country tend not to hit on women aggressively.

is this limited only to lesbians? i think this statement can be made
more general.

> Is there a more politically correct way to make my point #5, than how I
> phrased it previously?

what about the percentage of single males? can it be said that generally
there are more singles in singapore? if so the statement could be made
gender neutral.

greetings, martin.
--
cooperative communication with sTeam      -     caudium, pike, roxen and unix
services:   debugging, programming, training, linux sysadmin, web development
--
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Martin B hr          http://societyserver.org/mbaehr/      


 
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Patrick Haller  
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 More options Nov 11 2012, 6:24 pm
From: Patrick Haller <patrick.hal...@gmail.com>
Date: Mon, 12 Nov 2012 07:26:04 +0800
Local: Sun, Nov 11 2012 6:26 pm
Subject: Re: [HackerspaceSG] Do you have skills + character? = A great CTO/co-founder position awaits
On 2012-11-11 22:12, Meng Weng Wong wrote:

> Is there a more politically correct way to make my point #5, than how I
> phrased it previously?

Sell the vision, not the features? I.e. try nixing the identity /
preference keywords and just talk about SG

Vision: SG = the land of opportunity

As the regional entrepot for SE Asia and beyond, SG has an incredibly
strong and diverse dating culture as young people from all over the world
come here to educate themselves and to begin their careers....


 
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Isaac  
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 More options Nov 12 2012, 8:11 am
From: Isaac <isouwe...@gmail.com>
Date: Mon, 12 Nov 2012 05:11:55 -0800 (PST)
Local: Mon, Nov 12 2012 8:11 am
Subject: Re: [HackerspaceSG] Do you have skills + character? = A great CTO/co-founder position awaits

this is an inspiring thread. great callout and great response.

some notes on the singapore feature list -

--

3. it has a good primary and secondary educational system, and for people
with young children, it is a good place to raise a family.

>i would nuance this. singapore is an amazing place to raise kids under 5

b/c of cheap/live-in child care + safety + ease of getting around. it gets
more complex after that b/c local schools are a) not easily accessible and
b) not perceived as desirable by most foreigners. hence international
school is often the result which is high quality but very expensive.

5. a solo straight dude looking to date, with the intention of getting
married, will find a greater density of single women here than in the Bay
Area.

>the marriage normativity here is distasteful in my view i.e politically

correct in the bad way. what about the solo straight dude not looking to
get married? shall he be shunned? For me there is nothing wrong to say that
it's a great place to meet girls. and perhaps you might accentuate the
diversity of options, i.e, wonderful/ talented/beautiful women from all
corners of the world. as to whether it's a great dating scene for young
women, i wonder is that actually true? not saying it's not just never heard
that. . .

6. a lesbian woman looking to be left alone to code will likewise be
satisfied, as men in this country tend not to hit on women aggressively.

>covered in #3 about the phlegmatic locals no? again feels like a

politically correct sop rather than a serious point. and bigger fact
is singapore sucks a bit if you are gay b/c it's still technically illegal.
however there is a thriving gay scene nonetheless. so perhaps go with that
- "not as bad as you've heard for homosexuals" :-)


 
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Adrienne  
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 More options Nov 12 2012, 8:48 am
From: Adrienne <adrienne.miche...@gmail.com>
Date: Mon, 12 Nov 2012 05:48:27 -0800 (PST)
Local: Mon, Nov 12 2012 8:48 am
Subject: Re: [HackerspaceSG] Do you have skills + character? = A great CTO/co-founder position awaits

Thanks for the response. Meng. I'm really liking the discussion this has
brought about.

I have to agree with Patrick:

> Sell the vision, not the features? I.e. try nixing the identity /
> preference keywords and just talk about SG

> Vision: SG = the land of opportunity

> As the regional entrepot for SE Asia and beyond, SG has an incredibly
> strong and diverse dating culture as young people from all over the world
> come here to educate themselves and to begin their careers....

Patrick captures it succinctly there. I really don't think gender or
orientation are relevant in a post about recruiting talent. The goal is to
recruit *talent*, right? Talent comes from wide, diverse places and gender
/ orientation / identity have little to do with the talent itself. That
said, I think you will want to say as much as you can about what makes SG
an attractive place to live for *all* foreigners with talent. I might say
something about it being a tolerant multicultural society with a
cosmopolitan entertainment scene and active nightlife for singles. You've
already got a few bits in there about what makes it attractive for families
-- though I might add all the park space and family-friendly entertainment
like playgrounds, zoos, etc. A quick stop on sites like TimeOutSG or City
Nomads gives a good impression as to what's available for singles of all
types. But basically, I think you want to aim for inclusion rather than
exclusion -- that is, families and married couples will enjoy it as much as
singles of any demographic.

Thanks again to all who've responded. I'm quite pleased to see I'm not the
only one who thinks about these things, and I've enjoyed watching this
conversation evolve. You all bring such insight to the topic.


 
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