Inspiration

September 24, 2009

Many have written about their experiences as emerging entrepreneurs to great effect. These books, blogs and articles all serve as inspiration to me and fellow young entrepreneurs.  One of my favorite items I’ve read is Mark Cuban’s insight on that journey.  It’s easy to look at him and say, “Wow. He has everything. He’s a billionaire. He owns the Mavericks. He has a gorgeous wife and a great family.”  But did you know he slept on the floor of a cramped, trashy apartment for a few years while he was trying to get his first company off the ground? Or that he read computer manuals in his free time so that he could become an expert with them? Behind every success story is years of hard work and sacrifice…

http://blogmaverick.com/2009/05/13/success-motivation/
http://blogmaverick.com/2009/06/09/success-motivation-2009/

Now Mark Cuban is a great personal entrepreneurial “hero” of mine, but if we’re talking about inspiration to pursue your goals, nothing compares to Dr. Randy Pousch. At age 47 this Carnegie Mellon professor was given a diagnosis of terminal cancer.  Randy decided cancer could kill him, but not his spirit. In his “Last Lesson,” he shared with everyone his life story and lessons learned.  Below you’ll find the full video of this “Last Lesson.” It’s about the length of a movie, but I dare you to find one as powerful and moving:

http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-5700431505846055184&hl=en#

I saved a number of quotes from Dr. Pausch for myself, but I’d like to comment on a few that resonated the most with me and others I showed the video (approximate time in the video listed in parenthesis):

(18:40) “When you see yourself doing something badly and no one is saying anything anymore…that’s a problem. It means they’ve given up on you”

I think this emphasizes the fact that feedback is so important. You always want to improve yourself and sometimes it’s really hard to get constructive criticism out of people. It’s often because they don’t want to hurt your feelings, but they’re only doing you a disservice.  Of course, if they just don’t care, you have a bigger problem.  If you ever have constructive criticism on my blog, please comment!

(1:10:35)“Decide if you’re a Tigger or Eyeore”

As my father so eloquently put it, “I always thought Tigger was an airhead.” Yes, in the most literal sense that may be true. But to me, this is about optimism and hope vs. pessimism and acceptance.  Tigger sees all the great in the world and pursues his goals of being happy in life, while Eyeore is always depressed about something and never does anything to change his situation. To me, the Tiggers of the world are those that see problems in the world as opportunities to make a difference.  I’m a Tigger. Are you?

(53:00) “If you do anything that is pioneering, you have to put up with the arrows in the back”

This quote relates to entrepreneurs in two ways.  First, there will always be doubters, critics and haters.  You have to know when to listen to them…is it constructive criticism, or deep down, do you know they’re wrong? In general, I’ve found the best way to know if I believe in what I’m doing is simply to have someone try to encourage me to go another way; if I strongly disagree with their suggestion, I know I’m fully committed to my decision.  The second way this affects us is competition.  There is always someone else with the same idea.  Even if you get a head start and have more customers, better market presence, or superior technology, they’re gunning for you.  As I learned in running cross country, if you aren’t passing someone, someone else is likely passing you.

(26:40) “The brick walls are there for a reason.
The brick walls are not there to keep us out.
The brick walls are there to show us
how badly we want something
The brick walls are there to stop those
who don’t want it badly enough.
They’re there to stop other people.”

When I was a freshman in high school, I joined the track team.  Since my father ran track in college I thought I would be good too.  As it turned out…I wasn’t a natural.  At the end of the year, we had a banquet and the coaches honored all of the best athletes, which obviously didn’t include me. I decided I wanted to be one of those guys.  My coach told me I should join the Cross Country team and so after that banquet, I told him I was going to try to make varsity that fall.  He’s a nice guy, so he didn’t tell me no way, but he basically shrugged me off. He knew I ran a 7:30 mile as my best time that track season, and that pace wouldn’t even be good enough to make varsity.  Little did he know how badly I wanted it. All summer I got up every morning and ran 7.5 miles in the morning and 2.5 miles at night.  By the start of the school year I had run over 600 miles and was doing my morning run in under 7 minute mile pace.  I made varsity, to the great surprise of my coaches and my teammates.

When I set a goal, I passionately pursue it with everything I have and refuse to give up.  It hasn’t failed me regardless of whether it’s an athletic, academic or professional challenge.  I see a few “brick walls” in my life right now; I look forward to breaking them down.

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Despite only living half of the average American life, Randy Pousch accomplished a laundry list of lofty and challenging goals including working for Disney Imagineers, experiencing zero gravity, and writing an article for World Book Encyclopedia.  I have a list. Do you have a list? How are you working to check them off?   Don’t be afraid if they’re lofty. Randy’s mentor put it best:

“It’s such a shame people see you as arrogant…it’s going to limit what you’re going to be able to accomplish” -Andy van Dam


Why I’m Blogging

September 24, 2009

People start blogging for many reasons.  Some just want to share their hobbies like photography, food or film.  Others are doing it to stand out from the 430,000 other Jonathan Smiths.  For me, I’m starting this blog for a number of reasons:

1) To build my personal brand.

There’s only one “Jason Evanish” on the web, so I’m not fighting other people for relevancy on Google search.  Of course, this also means that anything you find in searching my name is definitely associated with me.  This fact provides me the great ability to control what anyone searching me finds first.  Right now, Google search lists (in order):

- My LinkedIn Profile

- My Twitter account

- My profile for Revolve Nation’s Boston Entrepreneur Meetup

- My Brazen Careerist account

- A podcast I did for the Northeastern School of Technological Entrepreneurship

- Design slides from a presentation I did for my Master’s program in collaboration with MassArt students

This isn’t a bad start; you can figure out a lot about me from this, but there’s nothing that reflects my voice. The exception to this may be Twitter, but how much do you really say in 140 characters?   With a blog I can get into my passions and interests, showing what’s important to me and make a contribution to the world wide conversation.  And, of course, I also have the opportunity for future employers/partners to see an unfiltered view of me.

2) To discuss my passions and interests

I love entrepreneurship.

It all clicked my freshman year of college when I took a seminar class from the School of Technological Entrepreneurship at Northeastern which featured a different entrepreneur sharing their experiences and insight each week.  Every entrepreneur was in a different stage in their startup and had different viewpoints; some showed their VC presentations, others just showed off their technologies or told war stories.  I loved it all. I was hooked.  It seemed exciting, challenging and a break from the Office Space world I feared may be waiting for me after graduation. (Scott Kirsner, among others, is actually working to put together a program like this for all Boston students to have the opportunity to visit CEOs, which is awesome.)

I love technology and innovation.

Having been born in the mid ‘80s, I have very little concept of a world without computers and the internet. Can you imagine having to use the postal service to stay in touch instead of email? Or even more important, using manual tables and a typewriter to keep your business together?  Every minute the world is becoming more interconnected. More information is at our disposal thanks to search than ever was remotely possible before. I love reading about all the new technology and considering how the next innovation may change the way we work, play and interact.

3) To share what I find interesting

I read. A lot. Currently, I check 18 blogs per day. Not all of them update daily, and the blogs have changed a few times based on my interests, suggestions from others and eliminating some redundancies, but it’s still an undertaking each day to go through them. To me, it’s like an a la carte daily newspaper from around the world.  Currently the list is as follows:

http://onstartups.com/ <– Dharmesh Shah’s blog…always something interesting about startups showing up there and he’s the CTO of that cool company, HubSpot

http://blogmaverick.com/ <– Mark Cuban’s blog…my resident “man-crush” as my roommates call it. He writes about many different things, but it’s always insightful and brutally honest

http://www.collegemogul.com/ <– Blog for young entrepreneurs

http://lifehacker.com/

http://www.techcrunch.com/

http://www.xconomy.com/boston/ <– Online business/tech news site focused on Boston

http://www.engadget.com/

http://www.businessinsider.com/alleyinsider

http://sethgodin.typepad.com/ <– Seth Godin’s blog…always an interesting thought for the day

http://blog.hubspot.com/ <– I’m really interested in inbound marketing, and hoping to get a job at HubSpot, so you gotta keep up on what they’re saying!

http://venturebeat.com/

http://gizmodo.com/

http://entrepreneur.venturebeat.com/ <– Subset of the VentureBeat site with great articles specifically for challenges facing entrepreneurs

http://www.boston.com/business/technology/innoeco/ <– Scott Kirsner’s blog on innovation in Boston…he always finds something interesting to write about.

http://www.startuplessonslearned.com/ <– Eric Ries’s blog…when he writes it’s pretty lengthy, but packed with good content.

http://www.chrisbrogan.com/ <– In my research of Hubspot, I came across him and enjoy his daily social media entries.

http://www.emergingenterprisecenterblog.com/ <– the Lawyers over at Foley Hoag in Waltham provide insights to common legal issues for local startups.

So you can see that’s a pretty broad list. I augment that by also reading Popular Science, Inc Magazine and MIT’s Technology Review.  Add it all up, and I know at least a little bit about just about everything that’s going on in technology, entrepreneurship and the local start-up scene.  This has come in handy more than once when I’m at a networking event; I’m able to both comfortably enter conversations with others, while also giving me a good base from which I can generate questions.  I can tell you from experience the latter is really important; nothing gets attention faster than an insightful question or comment at an event, especially from a young person.

So what does all this reading mean for this blog? Well as my roommate quipped recently, “How can you read that much and not have something to say?”  So when I come across something I find particularly interesting, I’ll pass it along and add my thoughts and questions.

4) To help fellow Young Entrepreneurs

When I started trying to get involved in the local startup community, I actually found it pretty difficult.  There are a lot of subtle things you need to understand and a lot of resources are out there that aren’t necessarily easy to find if you aren’t “plugged in” to the community.  Through this blog and future efforts with some fellow young entrepreneurs, we’re going to try to make this process much easier. This will include reporting the efforts others are making in this area like our friends at DartBoston as well as writing about our experiences and lessons learned.

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Most artists have some type of trademark that makes them unique. For me, the unique feature of my blog will be a quote; at the end of every entry, I’ll leave you with a favorite quote of mine (I’ve collected hundreds over the years).  This time, it’s the quote that inspired the title of my blog and embodies my philosophy of life:

“The master of the art of living makes little distinction between his work and his play, his labor and his leisure, his mind and his body, his education and his recreation, his love and his religion. He simply pursues his vision of excellence in whatever he does, leaving others to decide whether he is working or playing. To him, he is always doing both.”                                                                 –James A. Michener


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