Author Archives: crashdev

Product vs. Platform — Competing at right angles

I seems like every self-respecting entrepreneur these days is building a platform, not a product. Many (but certainly not all) of these “platform” aspirants are smart enough to understand that most true platforms (think Facebook, iOS, Android) didn’t start out that way. Platforms tend to emerge in one of two ways: EITHER: a disruptive new continue…

Gratitude

I’ve been singing a song in my head for the last few weeks — if you’re an old-school Beastie Boys fan like me you might recognize it… “What’s gonna set you free?Look inside and you’ll seeWhen you’ve got so much to sayIt’s called gratitude, and that’s right” – Beastie Boys, “Gratitude”, Check Your Head (1992) Last continue…

Portland is on! Join me for PIE Demo Day, Tuesday 1/17/12

Happy 2012 startup people! I’m just getting my calendar back together after the holidays and the first event on the books is PIE Demo Day, Tuesday January 17 at Portland’s Bagdad Theater. A little over two years ago, Portland-based creative firm Wieden+Kennedy created the Portland Incubator Experiment (PIE). This coworking space was the spawning ground for continue…

The “Enterprise Innovation API”

I’ve written before about the seemingly unbridgeable gap between the elite class of software “makers” and the enterprise customers who most need their help. I was reminded of the problem by Fred Wilson’s post this morning on “vertical accelerators” — specifically the FinTech program in New York. In Fred’s words… “the secret sauce of these continue…

Secondary Market Kung Fu

I’m going to catch a ton of shit for this, but here’s the truth: Seattle is a secondary market for software entrepreneurship. But before all you PNW partisans jump all over me, let me qualify that statement: Compared to Silicon Valley, *every* city in the world — including New York, Boston, Austin, Beijing and Bangalore continue…

Software with soul

Over the past few weeks I’ve had my mind blown by several teams, each pursuing very different ideas, but with fundamentally similar views about what a “magically good” software experience feels like. I’ve been trying to come up with a good description for the ideas these teams are pursuing, and the title of this post continue…