A specific area so we can start to concentrate talent and accelerate execution
A network of active angels that understands
a) how to live with risk
b) thinking globally
c) next gen web tech
d) how to do quick, valley style deals
(notes etc)
VC's that actually have money and follow the space
An advisory team that helps those angels make good bets
Entrepreneurs that pay attention to global trends (and resulting opportunities) rather than reinventing CMS, CRM and Reservation systems
Less reliance on governance grants of piddly sums of money
Techcrunch Australia
Service providers willing to provide services for equity and differed payment
Co-working spaces
A youtube/google/facbeook success story
A change in attitude from hording contacts to sharing them. From working only for pay to betting on each other in return for stock
More events (social and professional)
I admit, I've never been to the Valley, but all the VC talk frankly shits
me. Let's see some good tech that drives a good business - the web is a
tech-driven industry, so let's focus on innovation, not with making a quick
buck.
> Techcrunch Australia
Please no. Unless you are talking about the early days of Techcrunch when it
actually meant something.
> Service providers willing to provide services for equity and differed
payment
This sounds like your putting the cart before the horse.
> Co-working spaces
This I can agree with - my time at the Silicon Beach house in Perth was
great.
> A change in attitude from hording contacts to sharing them. From working
only for pay to betting on each
> other in return for stock
Expecting people to work for nothing sucks, and will only piss the
developers you are approaching off - stock is worth nothing unless you
believe it the potential product. Have a good product that a developer wants
to build they'll do it. Developers love pet projects. Stop thinking in terms
of "We need x amount of VC funding sp I can employee y employees and get a
big office" - you can do this stuff on the cheap in spare time if you know
the right people and the right idea. I'm pretty sure how a lot of big stuff
started in the early days. Let's get back to basics!
My (rather jaded) 2c.
----------------------------------------------
Myles Eftos
Mobile: +61-409-293-183
MadPilot Productions
URL: http://www.madpilot.com.au
Phone: +618-6424-8234
Fax: +618-9467-6289
Try our time tracking system: 88 Miles!
http://www.88miles.net
I can't help thinking that simply trying to emulate the Valley is a bad
idea. Think about what the valley meant when it started - it was about
technology, it was about cool ideas - it wasn't about raising money of
flicking between companies faster than the printer can pump out business
cards.
I admit, I've never been to the Valley, but all the VC talk frankly shits
me. Let's see some good tech that drives a good business - the web is a
tech-driven industry, so let's focus on innovation, not with making a quick
buck.
> Techcrunch Australia
Please no. Unless you are talking about the early days of Techcrunch when it
actually meant something.
This sounds like your putting the cart before the horse.
> Service providers willing to provide services for equity and differed
payment
> Co-working spaces
This I can agree with - my time at the Silicon Beach house in Perth was
great.
> A change in attitude from hording contacts to sharing them. From workingExpecting people to work for nothing sucks, and will only piss the
only for pay to betting on each
> other in return for stock
developers you are approaching off - stock is worth nothing unless you
believe it the potential product. Have a good product that a developer wants
to build they'll do it. Developers love pet projects. Stop thinking in terms
of "We need x amount of VC funding sp I can employee y employees and get a
big office" - you can do this stuff on the cheap in spare time if you know
the right people and the right idea. I'm pretty sure how a lot of big stuff
started in the early days. Let's get back to basics!
My (rather jaded) 2c.
----------------------------------------------
Myles Eftos
Mobile: +61-409-293-183
MadPilot Productions
URL: http://www.madpilot.com.au
Phone: +618-6424-8234
Fax: +618-9467-6289
Try our time tracking system: 88 Miles!
http://www.88miles.net
Sorry to be blunt mate - I'm in a rush :) (oh - was that your line?)
Not sure what you mean here mate. We should all do mobile? iPhone? I
> We need.
>
> A specific area so we can start to concentrate talent and accelerate
> execution
think building a single area-d industry is probably dangerous, unless
the area is IT + Internet?
We have plenty of angels - we don't have high quality ideas, a network
> A network of active angels that understands
>
> a) how to live with risk
>
> b) thinking globally
>
> c) next gen web tech
>
> d) how to do quick, valley style deals (notes etc)
to execute them in and most importantly - the talent to execute them
or mentor younger folks. It's a talent driven world and sadly we're
lacking. We need time to build up talent.
> VC's that actually have money and follow the spaceWe don't need more VCs in Australia - that's bullshit. They'll come if
there are ideas worth investing in. The number and quality of your VCs
is more a product of the environment than the other way around. Why
are there so few good Aussie VCs? Because there's so few good ideas /
teams.
> An advisory team that helps those angels make good betsHas this ever worked anywhere else? Angels need to make fast
decisions, no committees.
> Entrepreneurs that pay attention to global trends (and resulting
> opportunities) rather than reinventing CMS, CRM and Reservation systems
Not sure what you're aiming at here - but I don't think this is fair.
We just need entrepreneurs with good ideas.
> Less reliance on governance grants of piddly sums of moneyAmen brother! Get the government right out of my industry!
> Techcrunch Australia
No - this is pointless. Get more Australian startups on TC itself.
Don't try to beat 'em, join em! TC Aus is just going to have very few
readers, poor content and not enough flow / community to get it going
in the early days. Would you read it? Would I?
> Service providers willing to provide services for equity and differedBah - this is a fallacy too. Creating an industry is hard. All of
> payment
these are simple, quick-fix solutions that won't do squat. How do you
get people to provide equity? Ask them nicely? Legislate it? Give 'em
a tax break on the gains? Bah! They'll provide equity if they see
success in other people doing it.
> Co-working spaces
Yup - this one I agree could definitely help. It's a smaller feature
of the need to just get people together more.
Agree - something like this would help, especially if it was something
> A youtube/google/facbeook success story
like Facebook that had all sorts of network effects to smaller
startups around it. The old "Nokia of Finland" argument.
> A change in attitude from hording contacts to sharing them. From workingNot sure about the betting on each other part, supporting each other
> only for pay to betting on each other in return for stock
more likely. Less tall poppies, less "Good idea mate!" platitudes,
more hard hitting advice that's supportive of each other.
> More events (social and professional)
Agreed.
Sorry for the rant, I believe there's a lot of good intentioned folk
out there - but this has the possibility of creating a whole lot of
steam and no piston.
So the question is how do we do that? :)
However, there is a pretty decent freelancer community - these are the sorts
of people that can afford to spend a couple of hours working on new ideas,
whilst still being able to pull a salary from other contracts at the same
time.
If we can encourage developers (and designers) to go out on their own, it
would add to the resource pool. The co-working space thing here helps. In
the last month of so of the Silicon Beach house here in Perth, we had a
group of designers and developers who were constantly flicking each other
work - it almost became a virtual company, as the whole was greater than the
sum of the parts, but everyone was still independent and so was free to take
as much of the work as needed. It meant they could still eat and pay rent,
but they had the flexibility of their choice of hours.
To make this happen we would need:
1. Co-working space - get estabilished startups with free desks to rent them
out, which has the added benefit that the resource pool will come to you.
This would lessen the risk for the lease holder, as they would have the
office regardless (Silicon Beach house died because we couldn't sustain a
decent number of residents, and the guy with the lease got stung with a
really expensive lease, and wasn't particularly happy about it).
2. Business mentoring - the hardest bit about freelancing is the running the
business part.
3. Availability of work - make sure these guys know the work exists. I'm
talking bread and butter short term stuff that pays money - such as brochure
sites, short term dev projects etc. Getting a decent cash flow means you can
go out and take on "equity" jobs.
That reminds me of this initiative from a while back. The copyright
year is still listed as 2005 so I think it's mothballed. Sounds
similar to what you're after, though.
--
Rob Sharp
blog: http://blog.sharp.id.au
twitter: http://twitter.com/quannum
This email is: [ ] bloggable [X] ask first [ ] private
----------------------------------------------
Myles Eftos
Mobile: +61-409-293-183
MadPilot Productions
URL: http://www.madpilot.com.au
Phone: +618-6424-8234
Fax: +618-9467-6289
Try our time tracking system: 88 Miles!
http://www.88miles.net
I'd suggest that the guys at Happener probably have a decent chunk of
the right people on their books. They're mnostly Sydney-focussed, but
there's no reason that needs to remain the case.
Happener might need some help to grow any bigger, but there's no
reason they can't. And they are very good at matching people and jobs.
Steve
--
Stephen Collins
Cell +61 410 680722
Skype trib22
www.twitter.com/trib
www.linkedin.com/in/stephencollins
acidlabs - strategies, tools and processes to empower knowledge workers
You won't find me disagreeing with any of the above mate :) I'm quite
well known for my opinions that Aussie VCs are generally more like
later stage PE investors - with a hugely reduce appetite for risk to
US VCs - but there are reasons for that. The market isn't as big here,
they're not investing from funds which are as big, there's far less
ideas etc. It's not all the VCs fault - to say that is to oversimplify
- it's more environmental than that.
> I do agree, however, that we need to raise the bar of conversation in this
> country. Recently I feel its the obligation of founders of companies, like
> Atlassian, Mig33, 3eep and Faraday to make a concerted effort to support the
> BarCamps, the Beer 2.0's, and the other various meetups to encourage the
> smaller peeps to raise their bar of language and thinking.
Completely agree. That's why you've seen Atlassian sponsor (every?)
BarCamps up and down. We also sponsor a whole series of user groups,
meetups and such around the city!
m