13 Things You Must Do Every Week As A Startup CEO

I like this list – it’s from betashop, it’s from Jason Goldberg (http://fab.com). He hits on many soecific tasks centered around “stay awake” and “stay humble” themes.

http://j.mp/oSFgUQ

My additions:

_Quash all politics – put the people who oppose each other in a room together and make them work it out
_Measure yourself weekly
_Randomly call a customer
_Shut Up – stop talking/texting for a day or a few hours, you’ll be amazed what happens
_Take a walk in a park – Central Park? Golden Gate Park? Stanford Campus? Griffith Park? Les Tulleries?

It’s all about Revenue – Continuously Scaling Revenue

This is an obvious one, but a point too many startups forget or ignore in early stages.

The purpose of a for profit business is to generate revenue, period. Avoiding this fact and/or not planning on it, focusing on it In most cases, the goal is to increase revenues continuously over time, i.e. scalability. It’s even more desirable to never have a dip in revenues, but this rarely happens.

There are tons of articles about many things about the startup world these days. Equity discussions, how to pitch, what’s hot, success and failure stories, etc. But very few articles about how to begin, grow and sustain revenues, what that process looks like or what to do when they stall.

There are also almost as many startups as the number of people I meet these days. Everyone has their own startup, which is usually little more than a reserved url, a $10 commitment and an idea. But can they produce revenues, increasing revenues over time profitable revenues? Can they create jobs? Stay in business for 10 years?

Google just announced their most recent quarter numbers: 26% increase in revenue year to year to $9.7 Billion. Now that’s a revenue focused company, pretty incredible for a 13 year old company to be growing that fast in a bad economy. Google’s original business plan didn’t even include their current main source of revenue – advertising. But they adapted quickly and haven’t looked back yet. Their admirable amount of revenue allows them to do so many powerful things their competitors can’t as well as contribute enormously to philanthropic causes. Not every startup will be a Google of course, but if you figure out how to continuously scale revenue or even maintain zero growth revenue, you can provide viable employment, profitability, benefits and even give back to society a bit.

So how do you do it? There are several components that must work together like a system that incorporate your products, your values, your people, outside advisors, investors and more. Having a great idea of course is key, but that alone won’t sustain you. This is where many startups trick themselves. “We have an amazing idea, so we will succeed. You must monetize properly, plan for hiccups, see the future. Most of all, Revenue has to be nurtured and protected  priority #1.

I’m happy to discuss this more, just send me a DM at @tomnora or post on this blog.

My Message to Apple Send your own at rememberingsteve@apple.com

i will always miss his guidance.

Only a year older than me, I have imagined his answers many, many times over the years regarding my career, design, personal peace, style, etc., etc.

Met him twice – once in 1977 when I was a NASA intern in Mountain View, then in 1991 when I did a NeXT disti deal with him.

The first time I had no idea who he was. He and Woz had a storefront on El Camino and he showed us his prototype in a beat up suitcase. I had no idea…

Then in 1991 we met to sell NeXT systems to the Navy – he arrived in a baggy black sweater with a hole in it and jeans, in a black 911. Even though NeXT wasn’t taking off, he was a rockstar. We all had on suits, drove sedans.

Apple will continue to thrive, incorporating his 30+ years of influence and accepting the mantle now that he’s gone.

I will miss his soul. Long live Steve.

Tom Nora

Groupon’s Stumble – Barrier to Scalability

I wasn’t surprised to see Groupons latest announcement, they have always had a potential fatal flaw for long term Scalability – Barriers To Entry. Their business model is easy to replicate, maybe not by one particular competitor but an aggregate of  thousands. And that’s what’s happening – mass replication. It’s coupons, discounts.

They should’ve taken that $5 billion form Google when it was offered – probably won’t see that valuation again without a major pivot.

They can fix this problem; they could reshape themselves into an defensible winner before it’s too late and they go down the Yahoo path (start out with a spike then descend forever).   @tomnora