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The Decade in Review cornucopia of links

January 2, 2020 By Bobby Voicu

Here are all the “Decade in review” articles I’ve found interesting, without a specific focus or order. The titles are pretty self explanatory, so I will not add my commentaries this time.

Books related decade reviews:

1. The 10 Best Nonfiction Books of the 2010s (Time)
2. The 20 Best Works of Nonfiction of the Decade (LitHub)
3. The 20 Best Books of a Decade That Unmade Genre Fiction (Wired)
4. The 20 Best Novels of the Decade (LitHub)
5. The CEO Library’s Best Books of 2019

Business & Tech related decade reviews:

1. I’m a 36-year-old CEO who sold my first startup for $1 billion. Here’s what I’ve learned this past decade (Business Insider)
2. Decade in review: Reflections on the last 10 years in the tech industry (Tech Republic)
3. The Top 20 Business Transformations of the Last Decade (Harvard Business Review)
4. Emoji, Uber and selfie: These 25 words describe the decade in tech (CNet)
5. From AirPower to Zune, a decade of tech and companies that died (CNet)
6. The attention economy is in hyperdrive’: how tech shaped the 2010s (The Guardian)
7. Selfies, influencers and a Twitter president: the decade of the social media celebrity

Other interesting lists:

  • 100 photos that defined the decade (CNN)
  • The 100 Moments That Defined the Decade in Music (Billboard.com)

My Rediscovery of Isaac Asimov: I, Asimov

December 29, 2019 By Bobby Voicu

One of the first “modern” SF books I’ve ever read was one in the Foundation series. I don’t remember exactly which one, but I was around 14 and I read all the books written by Isaac Asimov that I could find. Unfortunately, though, you couldn’t find most of them in Romania, where I was born. And you couldn’t find the non-fiction books in particular.

Last week I read I, Asimov: A Memoir, his autobiography. I didn’t read a book that I liked this much in a long time. As I said already, Asimov was part of my youth and I’ve read and re-read the Foundation, Robots and Empire books over and over again over the years. And, through the 600 pages of I, Asimov, I almost turned back in time.

In I, Asimov I’ve discovered a genuine happy person, someone that did what he loved his entire life. I discovered that one of the biggest authors of Science Fiction actually stopped writing fiction novels almost completely for 20 years. I discovered that he enjoyed writing mystery short stories a lot. And this shouldn’t surprise me since most of the books in his SF series are, actually, mysteries. Especially the Robots ones.

His autobiography reads like the archive of a blog, with anecdotes and short stories of the author’s life. It made me smile so often, I didn’t believe it. I was reading in bed and I would read out loud to my fiancée something that made me laugh loudly.

Besides the laughs, I also appreciated the power of Asimov’s convictions. I’m taking example, as well, since sometimes I forget to support my opinions as strongly as I should. And I’m sure my friends might think differently and laugh at the last sentence.

Here, in Asimov’s biography, I found the best reasoning for reading ever. And a refute of watching TV at the cost of reading.

I also pointed out that television yielded so much information that the viewer became a passive receptacle, whereas a book gave so little that the reader had to be an active participant, his imagination supplying all the imagery, sound, and special effects. This participation, I said, gave so much pleasure that television could not serve as a decent substitute.

In short, the age of the pulp magazine was the last in which youngsters, to get their primitive material, were forced to be literate. Now that is gone, and the youngsters have their glazed eyes fixed on the television tube. The result is clear. True literacy is becoming an arcane art, and the nation is steadily “dumbing down.”

I was born in communism and, even if my parents had a big enough library at home, most of the books I read were available from the school library. I still remember how happy I was when I found, in one corner, a new Jules Verne book I could read and share with my class mates. So I understand the value of access to books. And I’ve started The CEO Library because I know you need more than what the school provides.

I received the fundamentals of my education in school, but that was not enough. My real education, the superstructure, the details, the true architecture, I got out of the public library. For an impoverished child whose family could not afford to buy books, the library was the open door to wonder and achievement, and I can never be sufficiently grateful that I had the wit to charge through that door and make the most of it.

I was surprised that Asimov was writing in 1992 that we, as humanity, are destroying the planet. And, 30 years later, he was and is right, unfortunately. And we fight with the results of neglect.

We are now perfectly capable of damaging the planet beyond repair in any reasonable time, and are, in fact, in the process of doing so.

And, again, in 1992, he wrote the perfect explanation of the difference in thinking between “conservatives” and “liberals”. Living in a world where the split is even more obvious and evident, I can’t but wonder at Asimov’s understanding of life.

I have been a liberal all my life. I have had to be. Early in life, I noted that conservatives, who are more or less satisfied with things as they are and even more satisfied with things as they were fifty years ago, are “self-loving.” That is, conservatives tend to like people who resemble themselves and distrust others. In my youth, in the United States the backbone of social, economic, and political power rested with an establishment consisting almost entirely of people of Northwestern European extraction, and the conservatives making up that establishment were contemptuous of others.

If you enjoyed Asimov’s books, you’re gonna love this one.

Best Books of 2019

December 11, 2019 By Bobby Voicu

At the beginning of November 2019 I asked in the newsletter and on Instagram for our community’s favorite books of 2019. After about 2 weeks of adding books to the database, here are the lists. And yes, I was doing other things as well, it didn’t take me 2 weeks to add 50 or so books, ok?

1. Best New Books of 2019

These books are all published in 2019. You liked them and you recommend them.

2. Best Fiction Books of 2019

Though you wouldn’t think so, some of you actually read fiction :D So here are 10-11 fiction books you said it’s worth reading.

3. Best Non-Fiction Books of 2019

Finally, as expected, this is the biggest list. About 80 books you recommended (including the ones of the first list) are here and it should be enough for everyone to have a full 2020 with the books they didn’t read already.

Story driven and story rich games on Nintendo Switch

September 20, 2019 By Bobby Voicu

Link statue - Nintendo switch story rich games

I play games on PS4 and Nintendo Switch. The platforms are quite different in terms of what type of games are popular on each one, so each has its own use.

Today I was looking for some story driven games on Nintendo Switch because I want to play some in hand-held mode. I found several on reddit, but I also found this link for the “story rich” tag on the Nintendo e-shop:

Story rich games on Nintendo switch

Use it, in case you need it. I wrote this blog post just because I thought it might be interesting for others looking for the same thing. And I also wanted the link to be in a place where I can find it easily.

Oh, in the end I’ve picked up Celeste, Undertale and Bayonetta 2. Celeste is giving me nightmares with the difficulty, Undertale is a little… underwhelming. And Bayonetta is NOT something I’m used playing.

Photo by Ryan Quintal on Unsplash

Where is your company on the Silicon Valley clock? [To Read]

September 10, 2019 By Bobby Voicu

What's your company hour on Sillicon valley clock

A company’s narrative moves like a clock: it starts at midnight, ticking off the hours. The tone and sentiment about how a business is doing move from positive (sunrise, midday) to negative (dusk, darkness). And often the story returns to midnight, rebirth and a new day.

Aaron Zamost, What’s your hour on ‘Silicon Valley time’?

I’ve found this 2015 article on Ben Evans’s newsletter and thought the concept is interesting. Also interesting are some of the companies on the image: do you remember what Color wanted to do?

Photo credit: Image from article

Incremental improvements in SEO

August 12, 2019 By Bobby Voicu

Since we started The CEO Library I’ve been paying more attention to the SEO world. I’m trying to do things for the long run on TCL, hence trying to avoid grey tactics (not to say about black hat) as much as possible.

Backlinko is the site I’ve come to rely on for SEO incremental improvements to the structure of TCL. And I say incremental because, in my opinion, the most important elements of SEO right now are really good content and good links (especially as a consequence of good content). These are the two things that push your SEO the most (and maybe the fastest).

But once you have a little bit of a site there, good content and some traffic, you can improve a lot by taking this kind of incremental measures.

Several days ago I’ve found this article on Backlinko: 17 ways to improve your SEO in 2019. And I’ll try to implement 1 and 3 in the next few months for sure: Get More Organic Traffic With “Snippet Bait” and Find Low-Competition Keywords With “Ghost Posts”. Go read the article to find out the other 17, maybe they will help you in some way.

Subscription Boxes – A great business model :: Newsletter Spotlight

June 9, 2017 By Bobby Voicu

As you know, I send a weekly newsletter with business articles to read, things I find interesting and similar stuff. One of the best-received emails is this one about subscription boxes. I’m putting it here exactly as it was sent because I think it can be interesting for a lot more people than the hundreds subscribed there.

Interesting (for me) is that since then (January 2017) I helped my girlfriend start a subscription box of her own (Miruna’s Illustration Box) and it’s as interesting as a business model as I thought.

Finally, before reading it, consider subscribing to Bobby’s Curated Reading List, as well :)

subscription-boxes-business-model

Hello!

I’ve always had an attraction to things based on subscription (this newsletter is one of those, after all :D ). But an entire business model based on subscriptions? Yeah, baby!

This model is called subscription boxes and I recently recognized that it’s actually a thing. I mean, I knew about Dollar Shave Club (being sold for $1 billion), BirchBox or BlackSocks, but I didn’t know there is an entire business model out there based on this. And there are, actually, about 10,000 different “boxes” sold, from Japanese candy to all kind of toys, books, food and whatever you can imagine.

The business model is this: the customers pay a monthly subscription and they receive a box with stuff. The big thing about this type of business is that you don’t need too much starting capital because, at least in the initial stages, you just buy the things in the box as needed. You don’t have things to store, you don’t have maintenance costs. Almost perfect :)

So, to the links (and read the comments in the reddit threads, as well):

1. The inner workings of a subscription box company
2. Wet Shave Club – 1 year update
3. Ask Me Anything with these guys

These guys started by buying a subscription box business that had a $4000 monthly revenue and they’ve grown it to $350,000 in the first year:

4. Candy Japan crosses $10,000 in monthly revenues

This is a guy that sends Japanese candy all over the world (he also has a book written on the subject of subscription boxes).

5. How I Built a Subscription Business that’s Made over $50k in 6 months

This guy started several businesses with this model (including going through Y Combinator and getting $1,000,000 as investment for one of those).

6. Hot Startup Trend: Boxing Up New Business
7. How an Ordinary Couple Made it Happen with Less than $1,000 and Our Insights on How You Can Too

8. Use Shopify: How to Launch a Subscription Box: Lessons from a Successful Korean Beauty Business
9. From Socks to Sex Toys: Inside America’s Subscription Box Obsession
10. How to Start a Subscription Box Service (Infographic)

There are some more interesting articles above and below, there are some subscription box directories, just so you see how many types there are:

– Hello Subscription

– Subscription Boxes
– Crate Joy

Yeap, lots of links, I know :) But really, it’s that interesting.

Bobby

P.S.: Oh, and don’t forget I might contact you next week to tell you that you won a book (one of these three I’ve written about here). And, also, if you think this email is interesting for somebody else, forward it and tell them to subscribe to this list, please :D

The Romanian Week in Startups

November 13, 2013 By Bobby Voicu

MavenHut-startup

Inventures.eu is starting an interesting series about startups in Romania, a series that shows promise, especially since at least 2 articles already mentioned MavenHut :D

Mircea Goia, from Romanian Startups, talks a little bit about, obviously, startups in Romania here.

As of today, RomanianStartups.com amasses 139 startups, 286 founders, 24 events and 2 accelerators/incubators. It’s a far cry from about 15-20 startups, which I managed to find in 2007 and not all of the actual startups in Romania are in this newly built database.

Bogdan Iordache, the founder of How To Web, talks about “riding a speeding bullet” when it comes to the changes in the startups ecosystem in Romania in the last 4-5 years.

As the number of stakeholders of the new innovation economy grows, more communities emerge. TechHub Bucharest, Startup Hub Timisoara, Cluj Hub and many others provide not only resident and hot desks, but also a reason for the local communities to meet, interact and exchange knowledge, and putting entrepreneurs, investors, R&D centers, product companies, developers and product experts together.

And while this ecosystem matures, growth is happening exponentially. This is just the begining of a great ride, fast as a speeding bullet.

Follow inventures.eu for the rest of the articles :)

Photo from RevistaBiz

Most Popular Articles on Facebook

October 29, 2013 By Bobby Voicu

reading-list

This blog’s Facebook page is called I Am A Startup Founder. There are about 600 people that liked the page, so you should be the next one (hint, hint). If I read some interesting article, I post it there. This way I can separate the personal account and the fact that I mostly write in Romanian there from this blog, that is a more “professional” blog on which I write, as you see, in a comprehensible English.

So, every week I will take the most popular articles there (up to 5) and post them here, on the blog. I will post the links to the Facebook post, since this might also help in making the page livelier :D So don’t be too upset with clicking twice, it’s for a good cause :D

1. “It takes a team of imperfect people and a lot of time to make even a passable product. Even finishing a unprofitable product is an massive achievement in itself.”

An interesting article on why “overnight” success is a myth, with emphasis on the team behind the success.

See it here.

2. SaaS is becoming “the thing” on internet: more and more people that I know start growing small and medium businesses around SaaS and here is a list of bloggers that write about the subject (including some people that have done SaaS or are doing SaaS as they write).

The article is available here.

3. “This post is about how to get 1,000 people to try your site so you can find out what isn’t working, iterate and keep trying to build a site that people, other than your mom, actually come back to. ”

Yeah, this article is about how to get your first 1,000 users. The initial push that you need :) Find the link here.

Bonus:

Finally, every week I will also choose some that I personally think there are really interesting, but they lost on popularity. This week I’ve found a great article on churn and lifetime of your users. You need to understand this if you want to have a great business.

The article is available here.

Of course, hit like to any article that you think it’s interesting, subscribe to the page, you know, make me happy :P

Source: Vintage Books and Pen (selective focus) on ShutterStock

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