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1 days and 16 hours ago
pimg alt="dow_jones_venturewire_Nov_08.jpg"
src="http://www.readwriteweb.com/dow_jones_venturewire_Nov_08.jpg" width="160" height="43" /That's
the message venture capitalists at the a href="http://showcase.dowjones.com/"Dow Jones VentureWire
Technology Showcase/a in Redwood City CA today, are offering to entrepreneurs and startups./p pIn
the midst of one of the worst economic crises the world has seen, investors are in the main
optimistic, and agree that to weather this storm and come out on top, today's entrepreneur's need
to change their mindset and go back to basics: go back to the garage, and success will follow./p p
align="right"emSponsor/embr /a href='http://d.openx.org/ck.php?n=12620amp;cb=12620'
target='_blank'img src='http://d.openx.org/avw.php?zoneid=861amp;cb=12620amp;n=12620' border='0'
alt='' align="right" //a/p pa href="http://www.citigroup.com/citi/homepage/"Citi/a analyst Mark
Mahaney explained that today's market brings new opportunities if you're willing to look for them.
In the late 90's when all looked bleak, one company that broke through was a
href="http://www.ebay.com"eBay/a(a
href="http://quotes.nasdaq.com/asp/SummaryQuote.asp?symbol=EBAYselected=EBAY"EBAY/a); it went
public in the fall of 98. "While the bar is exceptionally high right now, it doesn't mean someone
can't break through it." /p pPointing out that even though this is going to be a tough period,
William Tai, a href="http://www.crv.com/"Charles River Ventures/a anticipates the companies that
will show up in VC portfolios will be born now. "If you look at returns on venture funds that were
invested during a recession, they offered the best return. Companies that are being built now have
fewer competitors, have the ability to address bigger markets and can hire high quality people that
charge less."/p h2Five Tips for Startups and Entrepreneurs/h2 pstrong1. Don't focus on growth;
focus on cash preservation/strong/p pDavid Cowan, a href="http://www.bvp.com/"Bessemer Venture
Partners/a, recommends companies move toward cash preservation rather than growth. "Spend less time
worrying about what competitors will do in terms of features, it won't be your biggest problem
because competitors will have same issues in terms of growth," he said. "Move toward cash
preservation."/p pstrong2. Work out how to monetize social networks/strong/p pMahaney said the
opportunities he sees are in social networks. "At the moment, no one has figured out how to
monetize them, but they can - absolutely," he said. /p pstrong3. Don't make new commitments, look
for opportunities in mobile technology/strong/p pCowan also recommends to avoid new commitments,
and to make money he suggests looking at new ways to use media. Taking out his iPhone, he played a
tune for the audience using the new a href="http://ocarina.smule.com/"Ocarina application/a. "Six
people developed this and it's they've sold tens of thousands." This is only one idea; there are
lots of creative ways to use the Internet and mobiles./p pstrong4. Strike while there is less
competition/strong/p pTai sees opportunity in going forward, and is most excited about Internet
technologies, mobile and open source. "Everything is bigger and happens faster when stuff hits in
this environment," he said. In the environment of a few years ago, you'd have 20-50 competitors; in
this market you have fewer competitors and an opportunity to shine./p pstrong5 Look to the virtual
world and expect to nurture your product for 7 - 8 years/strong/p pBasil Horangic, a
href="http://www.nbvp.com/"North Bridge Venture Partners/a said that they're seeing excellent
growth in companies that are working on social networks, virtual world space and the monetization
for virtual goods. "There is a lot of innovation in those areas," he said. As for startups looking
to be acquired, he tells the audience that the data shows companies go public and get sold at seven
or eight years of age./p pimg alt="google_garage_1998_nov_08.jpg"
src="http://www.readwriteweb.com/google_garage_1998_nov_08.jpg" width="270" height="214" //p
pemPage and Brin in Wojcicki's garage, 232 Santa Margarita Ave, Menlo Park CA/em/p pIf a simple
garage was good enough for Larry Page and Sergey Brin to start goliath search engine Google, it
should be good enough for new startups trying to break out at a time when the odds are against
them. So the advice of the day? Stop paying $5 for a latte, invest in a basic coffee machine and
start innovating.br / /p stronga
href="http://www.readwriteweb.com/archives/5_tips_for_startups_and_entrep.php#comments-open"Discuss/a/strong
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