The Most Overrated Thing In Entrepreneurship
December 17, 2015
1 Comment6 Minutes
The single most overrated, and yet common, belief about entrepreneurship is that the idea is paramount.Yes, an idea is necessary, but it is so much less important than the discipline and process with which the idea is pursued. And, interestingly, all of these are even less important than the quality of the founding team.
Culture Eats Strategy For BreakfastClassics
April 12, 2014
2 Comments13 Minutes
I used to think corporate culture didn’t matter. Discussion of vision, mission, and values was for people who couldn’t build a product or sell it! We had work to do and this MBA BS was getting in the way! And then my first company failed. Cambridge Decision Dynamics did not fail because we didn’t have a great technology or a great product or customers. It failed as a sustainable, scalable organization because we had no meaningful purpose to create team unity to fight through the tough times.…
Avoid Stagnation: Acceleration Trumps IncubationClassics
March 15, 2014
0 Comments15 Minutes
Interest in startup accelerators and incubators has exploded in the past several years, but how effective have they been? One thing that has become clear is that “incubator” and “accelerator” refer to two very different models for startup workspaces, and the distinctions may have significant effects on startup success.
Our Dangerous Obsession With The MVPClassics
March 1, 2014
0 Comments9 Minutes
Building stuff does not make you a startup. “But don’t we need to build stuff and iterate quickly?” I get asked a lot. Well, sure. Once upon a time, when companies used the “old-school” waterfall model to develop products, pushing entrepreneurs to think in terms of building a minimum viable product as quickly as possible made sense. It substantially accelerated the development process. By narrowing the product scope to core features, you start the customer feedback loop quicker and you can more…
Entrepreneurship Can Be Taught, Writer Says
August 12, 2013
0 Comments5 Minutes
Bill Aulet is convinced anyone can be an entrepreneur. The director of the Martin Trust Center For MIT Entrepreneurship recently published a how-to for budding business owners to guide them through the ups and downs of launching anything from an Internet start-up to a pizza shop: “Disciplined Entrepreneurship: 24 steps to a successful startup.” Aulet, a former IBM executive who also helped launch several start-ups, spoke to the Globe’s Michael Farrell.
A Tale of Two Entrepreneurs: Understanding Differences in the Types of Entrepreneurship in the EconomyClassics
May 2, 2013
0 Comments2 Minutes
Not all startup companies are created equal. Although both innovation-driven enterprises (IDEs) and traditional small- and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) can provide valuable products and services and create jobs, IDEs – startups focused on addressing global markets based on technological, process or business model innovation – can potentially create hundreds or even thousands of high-skill jobs if they succeed.
U.S. Immigration Policy Is Killing Entrepreneurship. Here’s What to Do About It
January 9, 2013
0 Comments6 Minutes
When we teach our introductory entrepreneurship class at MIT, we take it for granted that each of our 75 students will be able to start an American company upon graduating. But many of them lack one thing they need to be able to do so—permission from the United States government to continue working in our country.
The Next Big Thing in Energy Innovation and Investing? Let’s Talk Water
May 20, 2008
0 Comments8 Minutes
Energy innovation and investing are exploding right now. Technological breakthroughs are seen as perhaps the greatest hope to solving our dire energy challenge. However, what is often overlooked is the link between finding or creating new sources of energy and the effects on food and water.
What’s Wrong with Energy Investing? Part 2Classics
October 15, 2007
0 Comments21 Minutes
People in many industries will whine and complain about how their industry is so unique and more difficult than others, and so one has to sort through this groaning to find the truth. After some close analysis, though, I have concluded that for energy, unfortunately, it is definitely true. Energy entrepreneurship is much harder than entrepreneurship in other sectors, and I believe most investors have yet to come to grips with this fact.
What’s Wrong with Energy Investing? Part 1Classics
August 6, 2007
0 Comments7 Minutes
Energy is, after all, the biggest industry on the planet and certainly faces the biggest challenges. Therefore, it offers the biggest and most attractive opportunities for investors and others who want to make a difference.