Posts from May 2005

My 50 Favorite Albums (continued)

My freshman year in college, I got a copy of the Rolling Stone record guide.  This is the one by Dave March that came out in 1979.   I don’t have it any more but it was thick red paperback and it was by far the most used reference book I ever owned.  It was falling apart by the end of college.

I used to go through it for hours sitting on the window bed in the lounge and look at all the five stars records.  I’d read the reviews and then I’d head over to Nuggets (a used record store in Kenmore Square)and buy one of them.

I’d come back and sit back and listen Tony Alva style.

That’s how I found Astral Weeks.

Astral_weeksIt’s only eight songs, apparently recorded in 48 hours with a band Van Morrison didn’t even know.

And it is one of the greatest records ever made.

It has a mood amd a feel that is hard to describe. 

But when we put it on, and we still do that a lot, I know its going to take me to that place that only this record can.

#My Music

Positively 10th Street

We are headed to long island tomorrow for memorial day weekend so we got our third positively 10th street show done before we head out.

Emily and Jessica didn’t make this show because they were at the Liberty – Indiana game (Indiana won 67 – 59).

But we had fun anyway and the girls did leave a request which we played.

The show featured a bit more talk (which needs some amplification) and the topics included the play Pillowman, the NY Liberty, nights out in NYC, Rhapsody, and the Mass Hysteria podcast.

Song list:

Josh’s Song – After The Goldrush – Neil Young
Joanne’s Song – Losing Streak – The Eels
Fred’s Song – Stranded – Van Morrison
The Girl’s Song – Don’t Panic – Coldplay
Fred and Jo’s Finale – Crying Shame – Jack Johnson

#My Music#VC & Technology

Getting The Mail Through

The age old adage about the postman working in the rain, snow, and sleet to get the mail through is just as applicable in the digital era.

When mail doesn’t get though, its a problem.

This case study on the catlog marketer, Coldwater Creek, is really interesting.

Last summer Coldwater Creek realized that only 70% of its mail to its customers was getting through.

And because their online sales are highly correlated to their emails, that meant a potential 30% loss in revenue.

Returnpath_websiteAfter they hired Return Path, one of Flatiron’s portfolio companies, they saw their deliverability rates go up to 98%.

And what do they pay Return Path for this digital equivalent of slugging through rain, sleet, and snow?

Less than $5000 per month.

I’ve said this before, getting legitimate mail through spam filters is a critical part of the digital marketing equation.

Return Path is the leader in this market.  Nobody comes even close to their suite of services from monitoring and managing campaigns, scoring senders, and managing white lists for marketers and ISPs.

If you have a deliverability problem, hire them and watch your revenues grow.

#VC & Technology

The Pillowman

PillowmanWe went to see The Pillowman on Tuesday night.

I found it very disturbing to the point that I tried to shut it out of my mind during the play.

But two days later I have to say that it’s the best thing I’ve seen on Broadway since Doubt and its up there with the best dramas that I’ve seen.

It’s an incredibly emotional, raw, and powerful story.  It’s awful really.

But if you like great writing, great acting, and great drama, I’d say you have to go see the Pillowman.

The Gotham Gal’s got more on it on her blog.

#Random Posts

Podcasting (continued)

How do you understand a new technology? 

As Nike says, "Just Do It".

That’s what this blog has been all about since the day I started it.

I started blogging about podcasting in October of 2004, starting listening to podcasts in February of 2005, and started a family podcast this month.

I’ve learned a bunch of things about podcasting in the process.

So it was interesting to read Seth Godin’s two recent posts on podcasting this morning.

I totally agree with Seth’s main point in his first post, which is that the inability to browse a podcast makes it less satisfying in many ways.  Listening to a podcast is a big time commitment and you can’t scan 100 podcasts in an hour the way you can scan 100 blog posts.

I have quickly narrowed the list of podcasts that I am listening to from about ten to just three plus our podcast.  My absolute favorite which I never miss is Mass Hysteria.  I feel like I know Paul and Janine even though I’ve never met them.  I love Paul’s taste in music and Janine’s attitude.  I hope our podcast can be like Mass Hysteria because I believe that is the power of podcasting.

I think podcasting may play out more like photo sharing than blogging. 

There are thousands, if not tens of thousands, of people who read my blog from time to time.  There are probably less than fifty people who subscribe to my flickr photos and they are mostly people who know me pretty well.

I suspect that our podcast will play out like my flickr photos.  A much smaller group of people who are inclined and willing to invest the time and energy to subscribe to the podcast will do that.

I am sure that there will be breakout podcasts but I don’t see that many happening.

I think for the most part podcasting is a "long tail" phenomenon that creates great social value for the people who participate in it but not huge economic value.

#VC & Technology

All Marketers Are Liars

Marketers_are_liarsI don’t read business books for the most part.  I find them dull and boring.

There’s the occasional business book that I’ll read if its so classic that it becomes a must read.  I’d put Crossing the Chasm, The Innovator’s Dillema, and The Tipping Point in this category.

Then there are Seth Godin’s books.

Every time Seth puts out a book, I get it and read it.

Why?

Well, mainly because they are so damn entertaining.  I picked up All Marketers Are Liars yesterday at the office and couldn’t put it down.  It was like Josh watching the Simpsons, I just kept chuckling every few pages.

Seth tells stories with the best of them.  He’s an entertainer first and a business guru second.

The other reason I always read his books is I feel like he’s laying out this amazing treatise on marketing in the digital era with them.

Permission Marketing
Ideavirus
Purple Cow
Free Prize
and now Liars

Though its not necessary, I would recommend everyone read these books in chronological order.

Seth has a big story to tell.  It’s one that is playing out before our very eyes.  And he does it in the most entertaining manner.  That’s why I love Seth’s books.

#VC & Technology

The Nuclear Blink

There is a reason that no nuclear bombs have been launched since the first ones were dropped at the end of WWII.

Nobody really wants to find out how nuclear war will go.

And so it was in the Senate this week.  The Senate worked.  We still have a government that can find the middle ground.

Jarvis and Watson have good posts on this subject.

Jarvis calls for a "moderate revolution".

And Watson claims that First has lost and McCain is now the presumptive Republican nominee in 2008.

I am all for that.

If McCain had beat Bush in 2000, he’d have gotten my vote against Gore.

I’d love to see McCain in the White House.

He’d take the country back to a place it needs to go.

#Politics

VC Cliche of the Week

If there is a VC cliche I say the most it has to be, "we are passing".

For those who are unfamiliar with the VC vernacular, this means we are turning down an investment opportunity that was shown to us.

The stats are well known. VCs pass on 99% of the oppprtunities they are shown.

Since each of us sees at least 10 new opportunities a week, that means we each have to pass on about two deals a day.  That’s a lot of passing happening.

There are variations on the term passing.  I’ve said, "we are taking a pass".  I’ve said, "we’ve decided to pass".  I’ve said "it’s going to be a pass".  I’ve said, "we passed on that deal".

We also use other words, like turn down, decline, and no thank you.  But pass for some reason is the most common word for saying no.

I don’t know the origin of the term.  It seems like an odd word to use for no in many ways. 

In Wikipedia, the verb pass has several meanings:

in sports it means giving control of the play object to someone else
When driving it means to overtake a slower car
It means to die, as in pass away
And it means giving up one’s turn or chance at something

Clearly it’s the latter meaning that spwaned the use of pass in the act of saying no in the venture capital business.

But for the entrepreneur, it may be the third meaning, dying, that best describes the experience.

It is never easy to say no.  Many times, when its a quick no and there hasn’t been much work on the opportunity, the pass isn’t such a hard converstation.  And that’s the situation most of the time.

But when you’ve spent a lot of time working on something and come away from all of that work with a no, then you are talking about a different conversation with the entrepreneur.

I believe that the VC owes the entrepreneur an honest, complete, and interactive discussion of the reasons for the pass whenever both have done a significant amount of work on an investment transaction between the two.

There are a lot of reasons that VCs have gotten a bad reputation with entrepreneurs, but the pass is probably near the top.  Entrepreneurs understand that VCs are going to pass, but they expect a level of professionalism in the process of passing that is often not there.  A quick email saying no thanks after months of work is not a great way to build a reputation after all.

So I think these two rules are critical when saying no:

1 – Say no quickly to the things you know you aren’t going to do

2 – Don’t take an opportunity into diligence unless you are willing to spend enough time to truly  undersand it, and if you don’t invest, make sure you are willing to spend time explaining why.

It won’t make it any easier on the entrepreneur who is trying to find someone to invest in his business that you are passing, but they might learn something from the discussion, and in the end you will gain their respect.

And in this age where VCs and their money are a dime a dozen and great entrepreneurs are rare, respect from entrepreneurs is critical to success in the VC business.

So pass with care.

#VC & Technology