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Monday, December 04, 2006

Shane's foreword

I will shamelessly reproduce Shane's foreword for the bluescreen book again. Have acquired a habit of reading it once every few months - so should you. Finetre btw has been acquired by Bisys and Shane is working on his next edition of the new new thing.

Shane's foreword
Entrepreneurs seem to come in two varieties. There are those that begin small… perhaps with an invention close to home, building a product to meet a very specific need, either for themselves or for a friend in another business. They build the first iteration on a shoestring, and deliver it to their inaugural customer. They experience some success, and sell the product to other customers.

Before they know it, they have a fledgling business. The business grows without a rigorous business plan, board of directors, disciplined marketing, or any of the other accoutrements of mature firms.

These businesses grow easily up to the point where the entrepreneur can no longer personally manage every facet of the business. At this point, most of these endeavors struggle, hitting the wall without disciplined processes and procedures. A small percentage of these businesses make the transition to mature management processes of planning, implementing, and measuring. Many remain small businesses, staying within the founder’s comfort zone. And many die.

I’ve always called this business founder the “accidental entrepreneur”. They are driven by need. They create a product to solve a focused problem, but are rarely driven by a love for business in the abstract, or business as an art form. Often they are surprised at their own success, having begun with modest goals. They soon find that building the first product, taking on the role of inventor, is very different than the role of businessman.

Most fail when they either can’t or won’t transition from building a product to building a business.

This book is not about the Accidental Entrepreneur. It is about the “purposeful entrepreneur”. The Purposeful Entrepreneur begins with a big idea. Not the solution to a small, focused problem, but an idea with larger scope and impact. From the very beginning the Purposeful Entrepreneur plans on building a business with impact. They think further ahead. They have visions of greatness. They are driven by scale. They want to change their piece of the world.

But most of all, every Purposeful Entrepreneur that I have known loves business. Business for business’ sake. As an art form. As the highest expression of the most complex strategic games that humans play.

So what does the Purposeful Entrepreneur do? They plan on bigness from the start. They plan on success. They plan on rapid success. But mostly they plan. They put the right team together. They raise capital. They execute quickly. They succeed or meet the Blue Screen of Death.

The world is littered with books about entrepreneurial success. Even books documenting high profile failures begin with wild success. But most attempts to create significant businesses out of dust do not end with entrepreneurial success. They end in anguish.

When the Accidental Entrepreneur fails it is a painful thing, but the sphere of people touched by the event is limited by the scope of the startup. When the Purposeful Entrepreneur fails… well, we are left with a much bigger hole in the ground.

Why is there so little written about entrepreneurial failure, with this the more common experience? For one, it takes a lot of courage, confidence, and borderline audacity to walk the path of the Purposeful Entrepreneur. When failure happens, it shakes one to the very core. Few want to talk about it, let alone write a book. Most retreat to the safety of traditional employment. A few lick their wounds and give it another go. Fewer yet eventually succeed.

“The Blue Screen of Death” is an important book. It captures the very essence of the gut-wrenching effort it takes to create a company from nothing. And even though it is fundamentally about failure, you will recognize that the difference between failure and success is but a few small decisions. Jawwad Farid, now a successful entrepreneur, emerged from failure more valuable than if he had succeeded. He learned the process, but also learned much about the inflection points that define failure and success. Jawwad is one of the few that took stock of the lessons learned, greatly expanded his personal capital, and gave it another go.

In the end, if you hunger success, it is most important to study failure.

Shane A. Chalke
CEO
Finetre Corporation

Friday, November 24, 2006

Confessions of an Actuarial entrepreneur

Society of Actuaries has done some amazing work on branding the profession and leveraging media opportunities to create awareness within students as well as clients. As part of their campaign they have just remodeled the image of the actuary site. They just posted a short note I had written earlier on actuarial entrepreneurs.

On a different note will be speaking at FAST Lahore somewhere in the first week of December (6th most likely).

And on a completely different note, I know I have been missing in action. Number of updates, as soon as I catch my breath.

Monday, October 16, 2006

Youtube's desi cofounder

Jawed Karim's resume shows Paypal, Youtube and now Stanford. Wiki entry sheds a bit more light on education and family history.

Jawed joins Shoaib Abbasi at Oracle (now Informatica), Atiq Reza at Nexgen, AMD (now Reza Foundaries) and Safi Qureshi (AST) in the list of non-Indian desi's to have made it. (Atleast the ones that I am aware of and recall without any assistance - if you belong to this list, please feel free to add your name)

On a side note, the trend now is to go to Stanford, after doing your thingee, not before.

Wednesday, October 04, 2006

PASHA update

The Pakistan Assocation of Software Houses (PASHA) now has 42 full members - members that are making enough money to pay full dues as well as survive for atleast two years in business. Overall membership, full as well as associates members now rests at 182 including members from Karachi, Lahore, Islamabad, Multan, Sahiwal and Peshawar (weclome to the techno boom). This btw excludes traditional multi national technology players, IT departments and other vendors and suppliers. (No NCR, IBM, Unisys, SAP, Oracle or Microsoft within the member list)

Unconfirmed sources indicate that the number of technology firms in Pakistan (unconfirmed source quoted unconfirmed PSEB survey) has now crossed 800 odd firms. This is a mix of less than a year old 2 man shops as well as decade old 300 strong firms.

One additional indicator is the number of firms competing in the annual PASHA-ICT awards. Last year the number was 36 - this year 50 plus.

I think the revolution is going in the right direction, but we could certainly do with some more steam.

Saturday, September 16, 2006

Lums Business Review runs a piece on Alchemy

For you personal copy, raid LUMS campus and read all about us. I will post the content as soon as I get a copy.

Blue Screen Complete Edition - free download

Inspired by Cory Doctorow and the Eastern Standard Tribes, the free complete edition download of the blue screen of death is now available. As Cory said, at this stage, money is not a problem, obscurity is.

Cory Doctorow link: http://www.craphound.com/est/
Free Download pdf: http://bluescreen.alchemya.com/BSODcomplete.pdf
Creative Common License link: http://creativecommons.org/

Wednesday, September 13, 2006

Untitled

Snow Crashed (Neal Stephensen)

Comatose

Thrashing (context switching)

Static (also a derivative or reverse derivative of Snow)

Burnt out

Pissed (as in the American, not British sense)

Wired or Bi-polar (take your pick, I chose artistic license)

State of mind

I need a vacation. Accepting donations now for the boss relief fund

Thursday, August 31, 2006

The entrepreneur's prayer

O God! Behold, I ask of Thee the good through Thy knowledge, and ability through Thy power and beg (Thy favours) out of Thine infinite bounty.

For behold Thou hast power; I have none. Thou Knowest, I know not; and Thou art the Great Knower of things hidden.

O God! If in Thy knowledge, this matter be good for my faith, for my livelihood, and for the issue of mine affair (or for the beginning or end thereof), then ordain it for me, and make it easy for me, and bless me therein.

But if in Thy knowledge, this matter be bad for my faith, for my livelihood, and for the issue of mine affair, or for the commencement and end thereof, then turn it away from me, and turn me away therefrom, and ordain for me the good wherever it be, and cause me to be pleased therewith.

(Dua Istikhara, Prayers of Mohammed, Abdul Hamid Farid)