I remember this slide that Serdar showed us in the first lesson of the course, and I wasn’t surprised when I saw it.
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I had heard of the startup failure rate before and I can only imagine how much work and effort it takes to create a successful company. But why do so many startups fail? 

I wanted to know why so my curiosity led me to an interesting TED-talk clip with Bill Gross. Gross has founded and incubated a lot of startups at Idealab and was searching for the answer to that question too and made a research. He gathered data from hundreds of different companies to investigate why some succeed and others fail. Gross ranked each company on five key factors and found that one factor stands out from others. So what factors counted the most?

The idea?

The team?

The business model?

The funding?

The timing?

Surprisingly, it was not the business idea of the startup that was the key factor, which I thought. It was actually the timing that was the number one key to success. This shows how important it is that the market and society is ready for your business idea. Gross mentioned for example that Airbnb was so successful because it was launched at the right time and their idea could thrive in the recession. In the hard times of recession,  people were more willing to rent out their home for strangers and the whole thing became more common. Before that people thought that the whole idea was weird. “Who would want to rent out their house to a stranger that they found online for a short period? Who would want to live in some random person house? ”

Gross also mentioned how YouTube became successful because it was perfectly timed with the launching of Adobe Flash, and this shows the importance of timing it with existing complementary products.

So the lesson learned is that to increase your chances of succeeding you have to be in the market with your idea in the perfect time when there are a potential demand, mature market, and existing technical complementary products.

 

 

 

 

 

Hello!

I know my blog is very late for the event I am going to mention, but as you would all agree last couple of weeks have had so many landmines we know as deadlines to be taken care of.

As you would have read on a previous post from Shiva and Timm, who had also attended the event, gave a pretty extensive write up on this event. So I am going to keep it short and simple.

The IoT-European Platforms Initiative (IoT-EPI) was formed to build a vibrant and sustainable IoT-ecosystem in Europe, maximising the opportunities for platform development, interoperability and information sharing. Their aim is to digitalize everything that can be digitalized and help in the growth of this thing we call as ‘Internet’. They seven projects working under them who would provide platforms, funding and other technical support to startups and entrepreneurs to develop their ideas. All you have to do is sign up for ‘Open Calls’ for one of the projects which could help you out. Open calls generally consists of submitting a proposal to one of the projects.

Link for open calls: http://iot-epi.eu/open-calls/

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A short presentation was given by one of the enterprises which was helped by one of the project under IoT: Terracom. They are a business computing group whose main area of expertise are: solutions for the physical security industry and integration of IoT technology. Their project manager Natalia Oumnova gave this presentation and also gave some insights on how the IoT project can help you!

I have to talk about Norrsken house before I finish this blog. It is probably one of the coolest working spaces I have every seen. The work spaces are completely open with comfortable chairs and green plants everywhere. The whole place has an aura of peace and tranquility. The whole interior design of the building is created in such a way that you can have your maximum productivity yet at the same time feel little stress.

 

Peace!

\Vishal

Hi all,
I wanted to share with you a new product that was created by a startup and that i tested last week. It is an app called “KARMA” available on GooglePlay and AppleStore. It is a digital platform for reducing food waste.Instead of throwing away food, Karma offers restaurants and grocery stores to sell their soon-to-be expiring food at discounted prices. You can buy food directly through the app and receives high quality food for less. Therefore, everybody wins and for us as students, it is a good opportunity to make some savings and at the same time get nice food from restaurants and cafes. There is more than 400 registered restaurants, grocery stores, bakeries and cafes.
It is all about timing and also geographic proximity.There is a map so it is easy to find food near you, or near the place where you’re going to.
You can find various type of food : meals,sweets,bread. Sometimes the price can be half of the original price or even less, so don’t miss this kind of opportunity. For your information, you can pay directly on the app. Also, you can follow your favorite places and get notified when there is food you can rescue. You have your own profile where you can see how much food you saved in total and how much C02 emissions you reduced.

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I believe their idea is great since thay have managed to create a simple and innovative solution on one of the biggest environmental problems in the world which is food waste. I am very sensitive to this subjet since i am studying sustainable energy and environment and i have done many research on this subject. Globally we waste 1.3 bn tonnes of food every year of a value of 750 billion USD. In Sweden alone we throw away 500,000 tonnes of food per year.
If you need more information, don’t hesitate to comment or contact me.

And keep in mind that no one can do everything, but together we can do a lot.
Thanks for reading and sharing.

Anouar Mabrouki