Remove Business Model Remove Coder Remove Customer Development Remove Software Review
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10 lessons I learned by taking the entrepreneurial Red Pill

The Next Web

I was the typical university graduate who “knew his s**t” about Business Administration, which is not very useful in a startup. I couldn’t write a single line of code, and I didn’t have any clue how to start a business. They told me it was impossible to pick up coding. Learn to code.

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Crazy! 189 Answers To The Top Startup Questions On Your Mind

maplebutter.com

Don’t wait to fill the void before letting him go (but obviously get all the code / usernames / password). Sometimes I use Balsamiq, sometimes I code a prototype, doesn’t matter – just create something, then tell the world. I think quick, do something, then review what I’ve learned. How I can find the right investor (software)?

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From Nothing To Something. How To Get There.

techcrunch.com

or just present your crappy, first-run code to investors then pay someone to re-write the entire thing. The contract work burn out is totally where I’m coming from… chip WAAIIITTT… wasn’t the coding of the first version of Digg outsourced to some guy on Elance? What did you do again? Who knows.

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What is the perfect startup team?

www.quora.com

But in the world following Jonathan Ive, designers are finally getting their due. " Saul Klein • Nov 16, 2010 I think the important part of the under-appreciation of the distribution part is the lack of formal structure in business activities and the lack of proper communication arising from it.