I’ve Joined the LAVA BOD! Wanna Meet VC’s? Come to LAVA’s Annual VC Breakfast Tomorrow (Tues)

by Ryan on August 8, 2011

Photobucket

I’m pleased to announce that I’ve joined the board of directors of LAVA, the Los Angeles Venture Association.  Given my past opinions (err…rants) on Los Angeles Venture Capital, I decided that instead of sitting on the sidelines playing Monday morning quarterback, I ought to get more involved and so something to help the startup community around LA.  If you’re a startup in the LA area, I encourage you to get more involved in LAVA.  Here’s just a few reasons:

1.  We first met and connected with VC firm DFJ Frontier, the first investors in AudioMicro, Inc. at a LAVA event (the  LAVA 2008 Investment Capital Conference 2008 to be exact).  You can actually get funded through your involvement with LAVA  – I’m living proof!

2.  There are a myriad of opportunities to connect with VC’s and mentors at LAVA events.  Yes – there are a lot of service providers in attendance but if you stay focussed and hunt for the right connections – you’ll come away with great additions to your personal network.

3.  Many of the events are breakfasts from 7am to 9am which don’t eat into your work day or evenings (if you like to work late or have a spouse / family events in the evenings)

4.  Did I mention I’m on the board of directors?  Along with myself, LAVA has a brand new president, Randy Churchill, along with another “young gun” on the BOD – Sam Jones of Formation Media.  And despite my lack of event planning experience, I do have experience starting, funding, operating, and investing in startups so I’m hopeful I can help make the LAVA events more focussed on early stage startups.  If you’ve got any suggestions for future events and topics, please shoot me an note or leave them in the comments below.

If you’ve never been to a LAVA event, tomorrow’s VC breakfast would be a great one to start out with.  You’ll get exposure to the following local VC’s:

Dana Settle of Greycroft Partners

Leo Spiegel of Mission Ventures

Jim Andelman of Rincon Venture Partners (one of my personal faves!)

Neal Hansch of Rustic Canyon Partners, and

Monica Dodi of the Women’s Venture Capital Fund

If you’re not yet registered to attend tomorrow’s breakfast, you can do so by clicking here.  Or simply show up at 7am to 9am at the Skirball center tomorrow, Tues Aug 9th.

*Please note there is a small fee to attend the breakfast which helps to pay for the venue and the food.

{ 0 comments }

FREE Stock Photo Subscriptions for Startups & Bloggers – Courtesy of Fotolia

by Ryan on July 8, 2011

Photo montage

Attention startups and bloggers, our good friends at Fotolia have reached out with a special offer to all my startup and blogger friends. It’s a 14-day stock photo subscription (3 downloads / day) at Fotolia.com.

Here are the codes (first come, first serve):

U4NP3OQ4
S48KFOS3
DWZ58NCX
WTQ98KOP
CXXA83OQ

***If you’ve gotten here late and the codes have been used up, feel free to comment on this post or contact me and I’ll see if I can get some more codes.

Directions on using the codes:

1. You must register on Fotolia for a NEW account here –>

https://www.fotolia.com/stock-photos-for-bloggers

The codes must be used with a NEW account, and not an existing account. The codes only work with NEW accounts which are registered via the link above.

2. Locate images you like and place them into your cart. When images are in the cart, ready for download, make sure you check the option XXL subscription (not credits, as you’re not buying w/ credits).

3. Please note that once you entered the code and it works, you should not have to enter it again so if you log in the next day, no need to enter it again, just login to your account w/ username and pwd.

4. Please DO NOT create multiple accounts just to game the system.

5. Send me your feedback on the product and if you like your experience, consider upgrading your account to a premium, paying subscription.

Lastly, Don’t forget to thank the good folks at Fotolia for the credits.  Perhaps send them a thank you tweet @fotolia or be a fan on Facebook.  Fotolia’s a big supporter of startups and their CEO, Oleg Tscheltzoff is a serial entrepreneur and investor in many North American and European startups including Beyond the Rack (Guilt Group / Hautelook of Canada), Status.net, and Producteev (crazy traffic), among many others.  Thanks to Fotolia for the stock photos and to Oleg personally for being such a big supporter of the startup / blogger ecosystem.

Cheers!

UPDATE:  The codes are all used up but there are 5 more codes here (first come, first serve) –>

http://imagecollect.com/blog/2011/fotolia-promo-code/

Enhanced by Zemanta

{ 13 comments }

How Broke is the State of California?

by Ryan on June 29, 2011

California is so broke that they want to tax internet sales referred to retailers outside of CA by companies / individuals / websites headquartered inside of CA.

Hello,For well over a decade, the Amazon Associates Program has worked with thousands of California residents. Unfortunately, a potential new law that may be signed by Governor Brown compels us to terminate this program for California-based participants. It specifically imposes the collection of taxes from consumers on sales by online retailers – including but not limited to those referred by California-based marketing affiliates like you – even if those retailers have no physical presence in the state.

We oppose this bill because it is unconstitutional and counterproductive. It is supported by big-box retailers, most of which are based outside California, that seek to harm the affiliate advertising programs of their competitors. Similar legislation in other states has led to job and income losses, and little, if any, new tax revenue. We deeply regret that we must take this action.

As a result, we will terminate contracts with all California residents that are participants in the Amazon Associates Program as of the date (if any) that the California law becomes effective. We will send a follow-up notice to you confirming the termination date if the California law is enacted. In the event that the California law does not become effective before September 30, 2011, we withdraw this notice. As of the termination date, California residents will no longer receive advertising fees for sales referred to Amazon.comEndless.com,MYHABIT.COM or SmallParts.com. Please be assured that all qualifying advertising fees earned on or before the termination date will be processed and paid in full in accordance with the regular payment schedule.

You are receiving this email because our records indicate that you are a resident of California. If you are not currently a resident of California, or if you are relocating to another state in the near future, you can manage the details of your Associates account here. And if you relocate to another state in the near future please contact us for reinstatement into the Amazon Associates Program.

To avoid confusion, we would like to clarify that this development will only impact our ability to offer the Associates Program to California residents and will not affect their ability to purchase from Amazon.comEndless.com,MYHABIT.COM or SmallParts.com.

We have enjoyed working with you and other California-based participants in the Amazon Associates Program and, if this situation is rectified, would very much welcome the opportunity to re-open our Associates Program to California residents. We are also working on alternative ways to help California residents monetize their websites and we will be sure to contact you when these become available.

Regards,

The Amazon Associates Team

This e-mail was sent to
Please note that you must use this e-mail address to access your account in Associates Central or when contacting Associates Customer Service.
To manage your e-mail preferences, update your account settings.
Message Category: Notice of Contract Termination Due to Potential New California Law
© 2011 Amazon.com. All rights reserved. Amazon.com is a registered trademark of Amazon.com, Inc.Amazon.com, 410 Terry Avenue N., Seattle, WA 98109-5210, USA.

Posted via email from Ryan Born

Enhanced by Zemanta

{ 4 comments }

7 DO’s and 5 DONT’s for Entrepreneurs (LA VC Revisited)

by Ryan on June 14, 2011

to do list photo

Ever since my post on Los Angeles venture capital, I’ve been getting a lot of email and phone inquiries from local entrepreneurs seeking advice.  It’s not surprising because the post presently shows up #3 on Google when you search “los angeles venture capital” and the 100+ re-tweets and 20+ FB likes certainly helped solidify this position.

Typically the entrepreneurs that reach out want to meet in person and ask for advice.  I try to disclaim everything in that I OFFER OPINIONS, NOT ADVICE.  I’ve been compiling these opinions and figured I’d jot down the cliff note version here.  Without further adieu, here are some strong opinions on various topics that have come up in my recent correspondences with local entrepreneurs.

7 DO’s:

1. Choose a freaking huge market.  Don’t play around in a small market.  If you can’t quantify the size of your market, that means it’s too small, especially for VC.  Go big.

2. Quit your day job – sooner rather than later.  If you want to build a business, it takes 110% commitment.   You’re never going to get anywhere if you relegate your dream to a side project for nights and weekends.  Quit now, not later or you’re only proving that you’re not as committed as you should be.

3. Learn to use an RSS reader.  If you’re in tech but don’t use RSS, I fear for you.

4. Have founder vesting.  There’s nothing worse than founders not having 4 year founder vesting in place, with or without outside investors.

5. Tell anyone and everyone about your idea.  Ideas are a dime a dozen, execution is everything and you’ll learn far more than you could ever possibly lose by sharing your ideas with all.

6. Fire people as fast as possible. The second you think things are not working out.  Fire away.  You’ll never regret firing, you’ll only regret having not done it sooner.  Everyone is replaceable.

7. Read Mark Suster’s blog.  Pretty much every single question I get asked has an answer on BSOTT – “Both Sides of The Table”.  The answer is already out there.  Do your friggin homework.

5 DONT’s

1. Don’t raise money from non-millionaries.  Raise from deep pocketed institutions and corporations.

2. Regardless of what the lawyers tell you, do not form an LLC.  Lawyers love LLC’s.  You know why?  Because lawyers are not entrepreneurs.

3. Don’t have a 50 / 50 co-founder (or 33 / 33 / 33 for that matter).  One of you needs to be in charge and be in control and if you’re the leader…the real entrepreneurial one bringing this thing to life, then it should be you.  Founder shares must have vesting (i.e. be restricted) and be subject to a buy-sell agreement (aka pre-nup).

4. Don’t get caught up in all the press and attention your competition gets.  It’s truly meaningless and in no way indicative of financial success.

5. Don’t raise a round of convertible debt (exception:  if the terms are so Y-combinator style crazy in your favor that you’d be a dumb-ass not to take the cash).  If someone wants to invest, they should set a price and take an equity stake.  If you want a loan, you’d be asking for one or you’d go to a bank / credit card company.

Now each of these points could be a blog post of their own backed up with experiences and circumstances to help you understand why I’ve formed these opinions.  Maybe I’ll get around to doing a deep dive on each item but for now, the cliff notes will have to do.

Now it’s time to get back to what matters most – executing.

Related articles:

p.s. I use stock photos from Photoxpress.

Enhanced by Zemanta

{ 5 comments }

6 Weeks of Traffic Growth @imagecollect

by Ryan on May 16, 2011

Traffic2011-05-16_1040
Now I’ve purposely left off the exact daily visitors here but let’s just say we’re pleased with the early results.   The chart here shows traffic growth (100% organic search traffic) at our new celebrity pictures site, ImageCollect.  We’re aiming to have the next 6 weeks (and months) be just as promising.

Posted via email from Ryan Born

{ 1 comment }