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What I read, who I actively follow, and how I consume it

July 21, 2013 by DaveSchappell

french bulldogs running
Running of the Bulldogs, from DogBreedia.com

I admit that this post is mostly to just get something new atop my blog, since I update it so infrequently.  But someone last week asked me what I read every day/week.

I’d refer you back to an older post, because amazingly, those are still all on my daily reading list — for startup industry just follow Fred Wilson, Mark Suster, Ben Horowitz, Paul Graham, and a few others.

For Seattle tech news, I like getting the daily email from GeekWire.

I also really like the daily mail from Twitter that picks stories/tweets that it thinks would be interesting to me — again, it almost always finds a few that I really like.  Yeah, I like getting emails — that way I can read or ignore from my inbox.  Else, they pile up in my feed reader.

On that note, since Google Reader shut down, I’ve found NewsBlur to be a nice replacement.  I think Danielle Morrill made that reco.  On that note, the startup-data mails from her new company, MatterMark, are excellent so far.

For regular professional updates, I like reviewing LinkedIn Connections emails each day — I regularly reach out to folks who I see updates on.

Peace out.

p.s. that photo has nothing to do with this post.  It’s just awesome.  French bulldogs absolutely rule.  If you don’t agree, face it, you’re an idiot.

Filed Under: Startup Advice Tagged With: blogs, VC

How hundreds of coffee meetings have paid off for TeachStreet

September 3, 2011 by DaveSchappell

Even though I keep my list of blog subscriptions pretty small, I’ve been weeks behind in my blog reading. Partially, that’s because I feel like I see most of them in Summify (yes, I LOVE Summify!) and my tweet stream, but I sometimes miss the really good posts.

In that vein, I just read Mark Suster’s post about the Importance of Doing 50 Coffee Meetings, as a way of expanding your network.  After reading it, while walking the dog, I thought about how many of the successes in my last 4+ years with TeachStreet have been the result of non-agenda coffee meetings and the like.  Many people look at these types of meetings as “the wasted-time-stuff-that-biz-people-do”, and I admit that I sometimes feel that way about them too.  But, another way of looking at them is as the types of things that ‘create luck’ for those who are willing to put in the effort.  They’re not activities with fairly-certain-outcomes, like writing code (where there’s a definite output) or testing a paid-search-campaign, and that’s what makes them so exhausting, at times.

If it helps, I thought I’d share some of the outputs of those types of random meetings — I bet that none of these wouldn’t have happened without the hundreds of meetings:

  • Our first $100k angel investor came from a friend’s intro; the investor met me one time, and called me a few days later with the news of his investment. Upon hanging up the phone, I actually screamed out loud.
  • Almost all of my angel investors were originally soft-pitched over coffee, as were many non-investors; more often than not, the non-investors helped with other introductions, ideas or questions
  • I originally met Daryn (our CTO, and the person I consider my TeachStreet partner) via a random networking meeting, where I met he and David Geller, as they were working on EyeJot. And, I’d bet that more than 75% of our employees were introduced, or met, over coffee and/or network introductions.
  • I met Joe Heitzeberg, over coffee at Macrina, to discuss a role he had open at Snapvine; by the time of the meeting, I had already decided on TeachStreet, but it’s a relationship that’s grown since 2007.  Oh, and he introduced me to our accountant, who’s just awesome.
  • The idea for TeachStreet crystallized over a coffee discussion with Jason Kilar, while we were discussing a pre-Hulu startup-idea that he was starting to accelerate toward
  • While not a coffee meeting, we ended up licensing our software to a company in Australia; they found us because of a video presentation I gave at a Seattle Tech Startups event — they caught the piece of the video where I said that “we’d be open to licensing our software”, and reached out (note — I also fielded ~30 of these international outreaches from others, that all went nowhere…)
  • I met Dave McClure years before any startup notions — he was on the Board of Unitus (a microfinance organization, where I was the guy responsible for marketing); as fast as he could spew ideas, I was sitting on the fringes of the meetings implementing/testing them.  That relationship took off quickly 🙂  Dave turned into a great friend, one of my earliest investors, and biggest advocates (and out of that grew uncountable press/blogger introductions for me, and referrals of Seattle-initiated-startups, by me, to 500Startups)
  • Out of a coffee-request overload, we created Hops and Chops, as a way to consolidate many of these conversations, and enable even greater early-entrepreneur interactions.  Entire startups have been assembled there, and numerous friendships have deepened.
  • We recently got one of our first exclusive-lead bus-dev deals done, in days (after multiple attempts with the company), after a coffee meeting where I helped them with some candidate sourcing
  • Finally, one of my very first startup inspirations/enablers was Andy Sacks’ Open Coffee, that he’s been running, at Louisa’s on Eastlake for 4-5 years, without fail.  And, as I look back, that’s where I met Tony Wright for the first time!
This is just a sample.  As I sit here thinking about this, I feel like I could keep rattling off examples for hours. You just can’t know where these meetings will lead you.  It’s important that you try to be selective (because the meetings will multiply, as people find you helpful/accessible), and do your best to limit them (maybe one per day?), but you absolutely need to put in the time.
Quite simply, TeachStreet wouldn’t exist if I hadn’t.

Filed Under: Startup Advice Tagged With: blogs, coffee, networking

Small list of blogs that entrepreneurs should read (and no more!)

June 8, 2011 by DaveSchappell

firehose of startup information and blogs
If you’re like me, you’ve had moments in your life where you’ve added tons of blogs to your feed reader, and then you got farther and farther behind in your reading.  Over the years, I kept trimming back, and present to you my list of must-read blogs for entrepreneurs (plus some bonus tools I use to keep the inbound information flow manageable):

  • Both Sides of the Table, by Mark Suster — it’s awesome, because he has repeat success as an entrepreneur, and is now an active and accessible investor.  As an added bonus, he isn’t based in Silicon Valley, so he knows that talent can be found anywhere.  Reading his blog is very much like a daily peek into the questions in my head, and fears in my soul 🙂
  • Ben’s blog, by Ben Horowitz – like Mark, Ben writes with the perspective of a seasoned (and massively successful) entrepreneur.  He’s also a fantastic writer.  He doesn’t write often, so he’s gentle on your feed reader, but when he does, it’s worth grabbing a drink and settling in.
  • Essays, by Paul Graham – he’s just a genius, and similar to Ben in terms of writing quality & depth.  Also, like Ben, everything he writes is worthy of a sitdown and repeat-read.
  • GapingVoid, by Hugh MacLeod – Art and Life – his back-of-business-card drawings (and larger artwork), along with minimally expanded explanations, do a great job of visually displaying the noise in my (our) heads
  • AVC, by Fred Wilson – he’s the best. Great mix of broad-internet goings-on, personal stories, musical passion, entrepreneur education, and more.  For me (and many other entrepreneurs), Fred was/is the original VC blogger, and he continues to rock it.

That’s it — unsubscribe from the rest of your blogs, unless they’re close friends or something very specific for your market space.

Now, for some bonus tips, to manage the rest of your news overflow:

  1. Don’t try to read your Twitter feed!  Just keep track of your @replies (and respond if relevant) and DMreplies.  Then, dive in to the feed when you want a light distraction.  But, it’s not your responsibility to read all the tweets in your stream.  That’s one of the many things that’s wonderful about Twitter, once you figure it out.
  2. Twitter is an awesome way to casually spot hot stories, because if it’s relevant to you, you’ll probably see it sweep by you several times during the day.  Read it, or don’t — your life won’t end if you miss a story or two.
  3. Subscribe to Summify – it monitors your social feeds, and you can set how often you’d like to have it email you a summary of the popular stuff.  I have it send me an email one time each day, with 6 stories.  It’s amazingly good at picking out the articles that got lots of tweets/retweets/likes/shares and more, from the people I care about. You can control all of the settings.  It’s awesome (and, as an extra bonus, was created in Vancouver, BC!)
  4. In Seattle, I like GeekWire for my daily news summary (I prefer the daily email — I scan it quickly, click thru to those that interest me, comment, and then dive back out)

Filed Under: Startup Advice Tagged With: blogs

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