If you can’t do this, keep refining.
via Techcrunch
If your ship doesn’t come in, swim out to it.
-Jonathan Winters
Darth Vader: Archetypical Project Manager. http://www.geekwire.com/2011/top-10-reasons-darth-vader-amazing-project-manager
even though he’s my archenemy, still a good PM.
What success looks like: http://cl.ly/1A2X413X2A0C0e2i3604
Making mistakes is part of the process of building a company; quickly recovering from them is what’s most important. It’s all part of the adventure of entrepreneurship, which will require all of your stamina, drive and determination.
Branson in Entrepreneur Magazine http://www.entrepreneur.com/article/220743
Read the article and look at the Slideshare at the end #awesome
http://goo.gl/aPwpG
It’s really an important point. We try to teach entrepreneurs not to launch in the press, with all due respect. When you’re iterating and making mistakes and failing, you want to do that in private. You want to take advantage of the fact that you’re an obscure new startup and no one’s ever heard of you but a pathetically small number of customers. That’s actually a real asset. Take advantage of it. Do the big publicity push after you’ve already figured out how to build a sustainable business. We call it the ‘product launch’ when you put the product in front of customers — and you should do that as soon as possible — but do the marketing launch — when you’re pounding your chest and talking about how great you are — as late as possible.
Eric Ries on how startups can navigate launching new products in what is a very crowded environment
Kicking The Addiction to Managerial Heroin: The New Bottom Line Of Business
http://www.forbes.com/sites/stevedenning/2011/12/19/kicking-the-addiction-to-managerial-heroin-the-new-bottom-line-of-business/
respect to Yelp for shipping some personality
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