Draw Something Hints to Formula for Start-up Success: Reinvent

Appropriation goes a long way — in art and in technology. Last week, Omgpop’s app that takes its inspiration from a classic board game paid off in an extremely lucrative deal with social media gaming giant Zynga. After the explosive success of its social game Draw Something, Zynga bought the small, struggling start-up for nearly $200 million. Omgpop was sitting on several flopped products, teetering on the edge of an empty bank account just a few months ago.

It’s the second analog-turned-digital hit that Zynga now owns, the first being the hugely popular Scrabble spin-off Words With Friends.

Artist Kelly Hutcheson appropriates Andy Warhol’s famous banana

No one would expect most iPhone-toting college kids to hang out between classes and play Pictionary or Scrabble, but it’s another story when the games exist as extensions Facebook and smartphones. Our world has long gone digital and so have our board games. With even more dynamic energy, our social world has gone digital.

The reinvention of Pictionary didn’t just mean going digital, it meant going social. Like Words With Friends, Draw Something’s hit used the reputation of a simple, well-known game (everyone already knows how to play Pictionary) and powerful free marketing by requiring players to participate through social media. Draw Something’s success sprang from the visibility users gave it on Facebook and Twitter. Easy to use and familiar, yet newly social and digital. The combination seems spot-on; Omgpop released Draw Something less than two months before Zynga bought the entire company.

The opportunity for reinvention seems endless in technology. How many ideas are forgotten because their creators peg them as too unoriginal? Too simple? Think again: think simple and think about taking something old (maybe even out-dated) and using tech to make it new.

Ready to pitch your better mousetrap? TechRaising is 3 weeks away. Register here.

Attracting Early Adopters and Generating Buzz

On Thursday, March 15, we gathered at Cruzio for the last meetup before April’s TechRaising weekend. Developers and entrepreneurs, designers and marketing experts packed the conference room full to weigh in on a big topic: Attracting Early Adopters and Creating Buzz. The diversity of experience and talent in the room sparked an exciting conversation about what happens after a pitched project kicks off.​

As we discussed at the February meetup, pitching your idea in a way that will draw the right kind

of people to your project is vital. The same goes for attracting early adopters; you can get the most out of your product’s testing stages by engaging the best early adopters for your needs.

First, what are early adopters and what purpose do they serve?

  • ​Early adopters are not necessarily your first customers!
  • Someone who will invest time, effort, emotion, (and possibly money) into your project
  • ​Someone who will put up with your product’s growing pains (bugs, crashes, changes, new versions)
  • Alpha and Beta testers who will give you feedback
  • ​Your product testers and brand evangelists!

“Don’t create a product — create a movement.” -Jose Caballer

Who are your early adopters, specific to your needs?
​Who else has the problem your product solves? Most likely, your product addresses an issue specific to your expertise and industry. Your colleagues and coworkers probably have the same problems and needs.

  • Attract early adopters ​representative of the target audience of your product

​“You can get exactly what you want, you just need to know what to ask for.”

You can seek out and choose your own early adopters. ​It may not be possible for every product, but targeting your own early adopters can be beneficial for an optimal testing phase. Get focused about what you want from your testers and whose input will be most valuable.

How do you find and attract those ideal adopters?

  • Remember: this is your target audience, so know them and think like them!
  • Where do they hang out, on and offline? What other apps do they love? What do they read? What are they interested in?
  • ​Offer perks and rewards: free trial, exclusivity, swag, ability to give usable feedback, gamification, the cool factor of being a trendsetter

As soon as you can iterate your idea, you are ready for and need early adopters.

​Your first testers are there to give you essential feedback to help your product become its best. It’s your personal and professional decision as to how much influence your early adopters on the development your product. The most vital question to ask them: Did your service solve the problem you were trying to solve? As suggestions flood in, filter the feedback appropriately and remain flexible in the way your project develops, willing to pivot in order to create a functioning manifestation of your original vision.

It’s also time to build buzz about your new business and get financial backers. Be bold. Make connections and talk to everyone. Share it everywhere — Facebook, blogs, Twitter feeds, your networking circle. Get heard by becoming a thought leader in your field. Promote your own blog and connect with the industry professionals you admire (even if they ignore you at first). Persistence proves passion. If you are passionate about your awesome new product, others will be excited, too.

Thanks to all involved in this productive roundtable. The enthusiasm for building great ideas got us incredibly pumped for April 20. Are you pumped, too? Get your tickets! Registration for TechRaising Spring 2012 is now open.

​Now that you know how to promote a great tech idea, help us promote TechRaising 2012! Tell your friends, tell your co-workers, bring a team from your company, ask your idols to be mentors, or be a mentor yourself. Know of potential sponsors? We need them, too. And, of course, Facebook us, Tweet at us @TechRaising, blog about us.

TechRaising Start-Up Funded and Launched

Ready for some inspiration? Less than a year after the first TechRaising event, Santa Cruz is already seeing 2011 pitches becoming businesses. Early this month, Lauren Gogarty and her team launched All Together Now, the result of Gogarty’s 90-second pitch at TechRaising 2011. Gogarty’s dream — a simple yet powerful project management solution for websites — needed a little momentum, a catalyst to move it from an idea to a reality.

Thoughts of an application designed specifically for the needs of web developers had been brewing at the back of Lauren Gogarty’s mind for quite some time before she heard about TechRaising. Only six weeks before the event, she got the news and knew immediately that she would pitch. When she showed up on Friday, she had a picture of what she thought her invention would look like. By Sunday, she’d demoed animations of the new application and attracted an angel investor who funded her team through a year of development and into launch. She reflects that her team of collaborators at TechRaising formed organically, inspired to create a solution to a frustrating common problem.

The spark of collaborative energy that weekend transformed Lauren’s vision into a functioning web application. All Together Now is the perfect reflection of TechRaising’s goals: the amazing level of creativity, the diversity of talent, and the fact that everyone was there to make things happen. For Lauren, the focused intensity of the weekend was an essential opportunity to start something big, a quick, spontaneous jump-start like a supernova that keeps burning and growing for a long time after it’s done.

We’re less than two months from the next TechRaising! Lauren’s advice to anyone with a tech idea: Get up and pitch. Yes, she was incredibly nervous. But it was only 90 seconds of nerves and it was worth it.

Find out more about All Together Now and the crew who made it happen at getatn.com. Check out our post about our last Meetup, where we discussed how to create an effective pitch. Our next meetup is tomorrow night, Thursday, March 15, 6:30pm at Cruzio. On the table:Attracting Early Adopters and Generating Buzz for your Idea.

How to Pitch an Idea at Techraising and Build your Startup Team

We had a great turnout for our February TechRaising Meetup. Thanks to everyone who attended, and to productOps for hosting and providing pizza and beverages. About 20 passionate TechRaisers filled the room and shared ideas about how best to pitch your idea and build a startup team.

For those of you who are unfamiliar with TechRaising, at the beginning of the event on Friday night, each participant has 90 seconds to get up and pitch their idea to the crowd. After everyone pitches, there is the
chance to walk around and talk to each other about the ideas and to form teams that will work on the ideas over the course of the weekend. On Sunday afternoon the teams will demo what they built. The goal of the pitch is to get people interested in talking with you.

Here are some of the key takeaways (thanks to Bennett for taking such great notes):

Who do you need? What makes a team? Each team needs to fill these roles – a single person may fill more than one role and some people may work on multiple teams:

  • Entrepreneur with a vision
  • Developer(s) (at least 1, maybe 2 or more)
  • Designer
  • Marketing/Brand
  • Product/Project Person

What attracts developers?

  • Interesting idea.
  • Opportunity to play w/ new tech.
  • Open minded entrepreneur (will adapt idea to realities).
  • Clearly defined problem with light at the end of the tunnel.
  • Feasible/realistic to achieve Minimum Viable Demo by end of weekend
  • The idea is disruptive – in a good way.
  • Ability to be profitable, but this is often a secondary motivation.
  • Fun.
  • Serves a purpose.
  • Will help people in the end/has values.

General ideas on how to structure your pitch

  • Define the problem you are trying to solve.
  • Better to solve one problem than try to do to many things.
  • Maybe state why better than what currently exists.
  • Create vision of what solution looks like – use real examples.
  • Use visual words to put images of the final product in the listeners’ heads.
  • Presentation materials can be helpful.
  • Relate to what already exists – use examples like “It’s Groupon for charities” – easy to remember, good for PR.
  • State why it’s important and who cares about it.
  • Use language that will attract the members of your team that you need. Designers and Developers may not respond to the same language or motivations. If you are a developer and need a designer you may wish to adjust your pitch to highlight your opportunity to exercise creativity in the project. If you are a designer looking for a developer you might want to talk about how technically cool or disruptive the he idea is.
  • If you are looking for someone with specific skill you may wish to say so.

How to convey the importance of a pitch

  • Express your idea passionately – be animated
  • Allude to the impact that your idea will have

TechRaising Spring 2012 will be April 20th-22 6pm-6pm and held at Cruzio.

Developers should come with development environments set up and ready to work.

The next meetup is Thrusday March 15th and will be held at Cruzio. The topic: Attracting Early Adopters and Generating Buzz for your Idea.

Make sure to RSVP so we know how much Pizza to get.

Hope to see you there!

TechRaisers Kick Off 2012 Season

TechRaising 2012 is off to a fabulous start. Thanks to everyone who attended, and to productOps for hosting, the first meetup leading up to April’s TechRaising was incredibly inspiring. The room was filled with passionate and energized TechRaising alumni and new faces – everyone excited to brainstorm and collaborate around building tech in Santa Cruz and the Santa Cruz tech ecosystem.

As a reality check, we wanted to find out what is was that attracted people to TechRaising; why they would take a weekend from their busy lives to attend April’s TechRaising and gather with people they may never have met and proceed to work together to build something they could demo at the end of the weekend … the answers were truly inspiring. Nearly every answer resonating around the same values that drove the founding of TechRaising. It became crystal clear that there is a vibrant community of people here in Santa Cruz that want to reinvigorate the tech ecosystem with the creativity and “can do” mindset that is so often is hidden within or exported to the valley.

We took a little inventory of the expertise in the room, and snap, wow, what diverse and amazing talent we have … Santa Cruz is truly a creative, collaborative, and innovative hub bursting with enthusiasm and promise.

This group is ready to DO, ready to BE in action, and ready to BUILD the future. These qualities are fundamental to being a successful TechRaiser.

Looking forward, an immediate goal of TechRaising is to provide a blank canvas and all the components needed for the members of the community to come together, expand their networks, align around ideas, iterate those ideas, and have something to show for it. Who knows, some teams may even get funded … 2 of 8 ideas from TechRaising 2011 did.

We will meet again next month to continue building towards the April’s TechRaising and hope you can bring your enthusiasm and join us. We have a lot of ground to cover between now and April. We want you to be involved and help build the excitement and momentum for your ideas and the event.

What we learned:

Why do we want to be involved in TechRaising?

  • Meet people in the community
  • Tech community to flourish
  • I want to start a business and this is the right place to do that
  • Learn about new ideas
  • Support innovation & ideas
  • Want to be involved
  • Change the way people interact with books
  • Building stuff
  • Done it, got funding and now want to give back
  • Want to be part of this
  • Be around interesting people
  • Create value in the community

We had over 20 people in the room and the expertise was overflowing. We have the talent and the experience to build projects, to build products, and to build businesses.

Expertise in the house:

  • Development
  • Sales
  • Sys Admin
  • programming
  • Interaction design
  • Java
  • node.js
  • PHP
  • Google App Engine
  • Amazon EC2
  • Python
  • Drupal
  • Javascript
  • Staffing
  • Entrepreneurship
  • Design
  • Electrical engineering
  • Scalable high performance websites
  • Making stuff up / Innovation / Ideation
  • Project management
  • QR codes
  • Spray paint
  • the Generalist
  • the Facilitator
  • the Marketer
  • the Futurist
  • Operations/Logistics
  • Social Media
  • Strategy
  • Business Models
  • Enterprise 2.0/Social business transformation

TechRaising 2012 What to Expect

Do you remember pitch night when over 35 amazing startup ideas were pitched? And then on Demo day — 8 teams pitched their concepts to the panel of awesome judges (and not one DROP of water was spilled!) and an enthusiastic audience of over 100 from the local tech community cheered everone on. Well get ready for that excitement all over again because this year we are raising the roof and will be hosting two events, one in the Spring and another event in the Fall.

Our first event will be in April (exact date to be announced soon). We are gathering our amazing team of sponsors, volunteers and enthusiasts to make our next event kick even more @ss. So get ready to spend the weekend building a product, building a vision, building a team, building your future startup.

Please get in touch if you would like to sponsor or volunteer. Join us.

See you at the Monthly Meetup January 19 @6:30

We are starting the year with a series of monthly meetups that will help get you in gear for the next TechRaising. The meetups provide a great opportunity to meet other TechRaisers, find potential team members, kick around startup ideas, talk about frameworks and to start raising tech. Meetups will be hosted on the third Thursday of the month.

Our first meetup has been sponsored by productOps and will be hosted in their offices on Thursday, January 19 at 6:30. Please let us know you’ll be coming so we have enough FOOD — yes! food will be served.

PLEASE RSVP

We are Raising!

Meet the TechRaising Teams

Friday night we were awed by the creativity and imagination of 35 pitches from TechRaisers. Today as we approach the end of the weekend we have 8 teams racing to the finish line. Here’s a preview of the demos we’ll see this afternoon at 4:30. Come join us and see an amazing showcase of Santa Cruz talent.

Lonely Cyclist – “Never Ride Alone”

Concept: Hooking up with someone else when they are on their bike ride in real-time

Members: John Robberts, John Marshall, Doug Ross, Todd Shafer

 

All Together Now

Concept: client and website project management tool

Members: Rich Fallis, Lauren Gogarty, Todd Shafer

 

blam – Boys Like Augmented Mayhem

Concept: Augmented reality shooting game

Members: Spencer Lindsay, Alan Gray, David Fierstein

 

Santa Cruz Bookmarks

Concept: Historical Interactive Tours of Santa Cruz County – (iPhone App Linking the Santa Cruz Library Database to local landmarks)

Members: Conrad Altman, Stephen Beitzel, Scott Campbell, Marcus, Frank, Teresa Landers, Janis O’Driscoll

 

Otto Brew

Concept: Fully Automated Personal Brewery – The bread machine for beer

Attendees: Chris Miller, Albert Deguzman, Bennett Roesch, Mike Xu, Linda Donohue, Merrick Clark, Derek Selander

 

Sizemyc

Concept: Clothing brand sizing app for Facebook

Members: Aramys Miranda, Gary Herman, Darren Odden, Matt Rollins, Kai Pommerenke, John Green

 

Playdate – Fun for More than One

Concept: Discover other people who are available to do an activity. Who can I play tennis with? Who can I surf with? Who can I go to the movies with?

Members: Justin Muhly, Kurt Hurley, Vince Kobayashi

 

Goop – Goop is Good

Concept: Photo sharing application
Members: Magic Unicorn

Scott McNealy will Speak at TechRaising

We are pleased to announce that Scott McNealy will be the featured speaker at TechRaising Santa Cruz on Saturday May 21 at 10AM.

Scott McNealy, is an industry icon and co-founder of Sun Microsystems. McNealy co-founded Sun Microsystems in 1982. He served as chief executive officer and chairman at Sun for 22 years, steering the company to constant innovation in open, network computing. He helped transform the company from a start-up to a leading provider of network computing infrastructure with more than 30,000 employees worldwide, all while positioning the company as the model of corporate integrity. McNealy is known for his longstanding commitment to education and advocacy for open and competitive business practices. McNealy is the visionary behind Curriki.org, a social network for educators who wish to develop, collaborate and share world-class tutorial resources. He serves on the Curriki Board of Directors and leads the charge in the use of social media for making great curricula universally available. Scott serves as an advisor to several Silicon Valley startups, including IngBoo, a social media company helping online retailers extend their floor space to Facebook and Twitter.

Scott McNealy doesn’t speak at many events and this will certainly be a treat. Hope you can join us.

TechRaising May 20 6pm to May 22 6PM

Reward Offered for Closing the Digital Divide

There’s a new competition coming to town. Not just Santa Cruz but to any town in America. The Knight Foundation and the FCC have teamed up to help improve the lives of communities with technology. They are offering up to $100,000 in prizes for software applications that deliver personalized, actionable information to people least likely to be online.

The Knight Foundation and the FCC challenge you to develop a software application (app) that delivers personalized, actionable information to people that are least likely to be online. Using hyper-local government and other public data you should develop an app that enables Americans to benefit from broadband communications — regardless of geography, race, economic status, disability, residence on Tribal land, or degree of digital or English literacy –by providing easy access to relevant content.

What would this app look like in Santa Cruz? Who could benefit from information online that isn’t currently being served? The Techraising event offers a great opportunity to apply your talents in a collaborative environment and build an application to submit to the challenge.

Learn more and apply by July 11 at http://appsforcommunities.challenge.gov/

What are you waiting for? The community needs your ideas today. Come build it!

Breaking free from Needless and False Limits

Seth Godin continually amazes me. He boils things down, strips away complications, and finds the essence hidden within. While the thoughts in his recent blog post about accepting false limits may not be unique, Seth brought them to my attention at a very opportune time.

Many of us, myself included, impose needless and sometimes crippling limits on ourselves. One of the limits that we often impose is personal capacity. While it is true that this may be a personal limit, it does not have to be a limit in achieving a goal.

When we do not have the expertise or personal capacity to pursue an interest or passion, enlist others to help; build what Napoleon Hill calls a Mastermind group – people who are motivated to align their passion, interest and expertise to drive a goal forward by coordinating and collaborating to build something bigger than any of them could build on their own.

My hope that TechRaising can help us shed needless limits and build capacity through collaboration. While the event takes place on May 20 through 22, there is no need to wait to get things started. Talk about your ideas, brainstorm, get others inspired, build interest, spark passion and start making things happen NOW.