New Orleans’ Neighborland

If you're new here, you may want to subscribe to my RSS feed. Thanks for visiting!

I met Dan Parham and Candy Chang last summer at Launch Pad.  It is a familiar scenario for me, Dan had emailed me and asked me if he could come by and tell me about his startup, Neighborland that they were launching in New Orleans.  I was excited about the potential real world impact that Neighborland would be able to have in New Orleans.  New Orleans has incredibly engaged citizens who care about this city and care about their neighborhoods.

So, I invited Dan to speak at TribeCon, our conference about online communities creating offline change.  I could sense the audience being moved by the way Neighborland empowers people to take action on the issues that matter to them.

A few weeks ago, I decided to try it out myself.

I am passionate about the importance of Tulane bringing its CS Department back online so we are graduating talented engineers in New Orleans and building a pipeline of talent.  I posted the idea on Neighborland.  This activated a conversation around the topic that struck me with the intelligence and civility of the discourse and most importantly the desire of people to take action.  It spurred a piece in the local press as well as a meeting with Ram Mettu, a faculty member at Tulane which is spurring some exciting developments that we are hoping to announce at Launch Fest.

Today I’m thrilled to announce that Voodoo Ventures is investing in Neighborland alongside an amazing group of co-investors including The Obvious Corporation, True Ventures, Lerer Ventures, SV Angel, and Crunch Fund. My central thesis with Voodoo Ventures is to “play where web meets world” and Neighborland has the potential for tremendous real-world impact.

Last year at Launch Fest, I focused on the importance of local angels in New Orleans to get engaged in New Orleans startups because we can catalyze deals that result in investment by top-tier VC’s. This deal is evidence that strategy works.  Now we’ve all got to keep cranking.

How to be an awesome business co-founder

A few weeks back, I wrote a post about finding a technical co-founder.  I’ve been having some conversations lately with developers who are looking for a business co-founder.   I like the model of hustler & hacker co-founders. Here are some qualities of a great business co-founder.

An awesome business co-founder is:

  • A great producer of work-product – skilled at excel for financial models, powerpoint or keynote for pitch decks, writing for web copy, email updates. By great I don’t mean a resume that says “capable” at those software programs – I mean someone that knows how to create a financial model, builds beautiful decks, and writes really well.  You should be impressed when you see their stuff.
  • A hustler – someone who likes talking to people, has done cold calling in sales at some point, has a knack for getting meetings, loves going to networking events.
  • A leader - has taken a leadership role in their community, organizes events, has a blog, has an opinion, speaks at conferences and events – someone who puts themselves out there.
  • A doer - takes stuff and runs with it.  Sometimes termed a self-starter, I prefer “a doer” because they are going to get it done, whatever it takes. This may mean delegating, outsourcing, or hiring, but it means the job will get done.  You need to be focused on product development, you want a co-founder who makes your life easier by doing stuff, not talking about it.

A bad business co-founder is:

  • A fake co-founder - someone not up to the challenge that you are plugging in just to fill the role b/c you think you’re supposed to have a co-founder
  • An idea guy or gal - someone who thinks they have brilliant ideas that someone else should implement
  • A talker – the opposite of a doer, a talker just talks about stuff that should get done, but never seems to be pulling their own weight
  • A big leaguer – someone who has had a successful career as an executive so they think the daily grind of getting stuff done is below them

Of all of those, the one I look for is the producer of work product.  It’s so important to be able to produce high-quality output.  Just like writing code, a business co-founder should be capable of producing business stuff.  What do you look for in a business co-founder?

Getting into an (our) accelerator

I’m writing this post after the tough process of making decisions for Launch Pad Ignition and communicating the good and bad news to the companies that applied.  It was a very competitive process and we had a lot of great applicants, which made the decisions hard.  This year we added an advisory board to Ignition made up of investors – 2 NOLA, 2 NY, 2 SV.  They provided very valuable guidance and feedback and ultimately we made the decisions.

While its fresh, I want to share some thoughts on why some companies did or didn’t get in, so you can be better prepared to apply next year or to another accelerator.

You need:

  • Shovel-ready product development - even if you don’t have product yet, we need to have confidence you’re ready to hit the ground running.  If you’re not building or ready to build, you’re not ready.
  • Hustle and drive - the best way to communicate how good you are is to show that you are building this company anyway, with or without Ignition.  We had a founder who went from talking about his idea at our info session in December to having a prototype built before he finished interviewing. It was clear he was building this company with or without us, and this communicated a lot about his drive.

Deal breakers:

  • All founders not able to attend the whole program - last year we flexed on this a bit and learned why its so important for all founders to attend the entire program.  If you we’re able to commit to being in New Orleans for the whole program, we didn’t let you in.  The value of an accelerator is in being part of it, and if only one founder attends, it leads to companies not being calibrated.
  • Uncommitted founders – founders who still are working full-time or have a second company were a deal-breaker.  You may be able to bootstrap a company or self-fund it this way, but its not an appropriate structure for an accelerator or attractive to investors.  You may see it as a safety net, but we need you all-in.
  • Unable to communicate vision – several companies left us scratching our heads as to what they did or wanted to do, even after multiple interviews. You need to be able to communicate your vision succinctly.  Practice this with regular people. If they don’t understand it, simplify and refine.
  • Kitchen sink approach – take your core value proposition and then layer on everything else you might possibly build. Not a good approach.  Refine your core value to its core functionality. You can build up later. But you must have something core that makes people want to use your product.

We’re excited to be announcing our class Feb 13.  Hopefully this feedback is helpful to applicants who didn’t get in and to those who will be applying next year.

How to find a technical co-founder

I frequently get emails that say something like:

I have an idea for a product that I want to build, and I need to hire a web developer or find a technical co-founder. Where should I start?

I’m going to try to give helpful guidance that I give to people who approach me with this.  First, I want to give personal context.  I am a mechanical engineer and a partner in a software development company, but not a programmer.  I am much more of a hustler than a hacker.  So, I do understand when people need to find and depend on someone else to build out their vision.

Step 1 – Check Your Ego

Step 2 – Get Perspective

  • You are asking for help. Whether you are looking for a co-founder or a consulting firm to build your product, you can’t do it without them.  And you need them more than they need you.  Any engineer you want already has a job, so you’ll need to be persuasive.
  • What value do you bring? The technical co-founder perspective may be – “what do I need you for?” Know what value you bring and communicate it.  Be the hustler to their hacker.

Step 3 – Get Out There

Doing too much? Do what’s important

My friend Kenny Nguyen asked me for some tips on where to focus his time, because he, like many of us, feels like he’s doing too much. Since I’m trying to do the same thing, I thought about what I am doing to focus. Here goes:

Decide what is urgent, what is important. Separate the way you think about things and prioritize truly important things.

Accomplish one thing a day proactively, not just reactively. Answering emails does not count as forward motion.

Focus on what helps you accomplish your goals – building a company – or whatever it is – and spend the large majority of your time on only that. If you’re doing more than 20% peripheral stuff (ie community service work) then you should probably cut back.