• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to footer

BobbyVoicu.com

Curious about stuff

  • Home
  • About Me
  • Blog / Archive

[Saturday Video] Malcom Gladwell’s David and Goliath: How to Use Small Size in Business and Life

November 2, 2013 By Bobby Voicu

Malcolm_Gladwell___David_and_Goliath____Talks_at_Google_-_YouTube-5

A good friend sent me this video of Malcolm Gladwell talking at Google and presenting his new book, David and Goliath: Underdogs, Misfits, and the Art of Battling Giants.

The talk starts with a different way of understanding the biblical fight between David and Goliath:
– the sling that David had was capable of great accuracy and of a similar impact as a .45 caliber bullet
– Goliath was probably almost blind and slow moving.

This means that, basically, the guy with the best technology and speed won. As it should :)

Watch the one hour presentation below. Another interesting thing is that Malcolm Gladwell was the first person to participate in the now famous Google talks :)

P.S.: a similar idea to what this guy is saying I’ve seen described in Brad Gilbert’s “Winning Ugly” book about tennis. It is a good read even if you are not a tennis enthusiast.

And, not related to this, I forgot to hit Publish on this post yesterday, so I am publishing it today (even if with an earlier date, to fit into Saturday Video).

The Unseen Side of Success

October 30, 2013 By Bobby Voicu

success

Recently I’ve had the opportunity to meet a guy that’s been really successful in his line of work. Thing is, before meeting him I’ve heard about him lots of stories from different people. And they all said: “I wish I was as lucky as him”. Or “I want to do what he does”. I didn’t hear once someone telling me “man, that guy works his ass off”. No. He was always lucky.

Well, after talking to him, it was obvious to me that nothing he did was luck in any way. He is a brilliant guy with an uncanny eye for opportunity. The last thing is a combination of about 10 years of experience and the understanding that he needs to learn new tricks all the time.

I am just amazed how much people want to see just the visible side of things and ignore the hard work behind the success.

Photo: Blackboard with the text Success, It Depends On You from Shutterstock

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

How To Web Startup Spotlight Participants Announced

October 28, 2013 By Bobby Voicu

Bobby-Voicu-Mavenhut-Startup-Spotlight-2013

A good friend of mine just got accepted to the Startup Spotlight competition for How To Web 2013. His startup is growing, he’s done all the “meet your customer, sell to your customer before writing one line of code” process and now he’s private testing the first version of his app.

I am not telling you who he is, I don’t want to put more pressure on him as it’s already difficult to present your idea in front of several hundred people :)

Anyway, Startup Spotlight is a great place to showcase your project (we’ve earned Best Pitch in 2012) since the audience is full of like-minded people and possible mentors.

Some interesting starups that will present on the stage of Startup Spotlight are (and this is my opinion based on just one line of description, all right?):

Daisy Pi, GameMatch, GloriaFood, KOLOS, Monitor Backlinks, Sportwavez.

Read more about the 32 startups involved in Startup Spotlight here, since you might find something else that interests you.

A little bit of disclaimer: while I am not interested in link building, Monitor Backlinks is backed by SOSventures, the same investors that backed our seed round and I am really interested in their evolution, since the grew quite a little bit since their early round.

Sunday Game: Grand Slam Tennis 2

October 27, 2013 By Bobby Voicu

Grand_Slam_Tennis_2

Recently the Romanian Simona Halep broke onto the tennis scene with a vengeance. She never won a WTA tournament until this year, but 2013 meant 5 finals and 5 tournaments won. This meant more interest in tennis in Romania.

Of course, this had nothing to do with the fact that, in the last 2 months or so, Grand Slam Tennis 2 is the game we at the office. The reason? 4 of us can play at the same time, a doubles game. And it’s so much fun! :))

Another fun thing is that you can play with 80s and 90s players (you have to see Bjorn Borg :D ). They look so out of place on the court, you have no idea. With their short (really short) pants or whatever they are called.

Most of the games, though, are something like Djokovici and Nadal playing against Roddick and Federer. I usually play Nadal since I play better with the player from the back of the court, but I would love to be able to play a more serve-volley kind of game.

We play the game on XBox, but it is also available on PS3 (and, I think, PC). So, if you want a game that you can play with your friends, Grand Slam Tennis 2 is great. Of course, you can do this in real life, but my back still hurts from such a try not long ago :))

Saturday Video: Talk About Entrepreneurship at TechHub

October 26, 2013 By Bobby Voicu

techhub-meeting

Last Thursday, the guys at TechHub had an interesting guest from MIT (Bill Aulet) to talk about entrepreneurship. Along with two Romanian entrepreneurs (Marius Ursache and Andrei Marinescu), they talked about the issues you could have if you do not start in a “beach head” market, how to bootstrap, where would you get cofounders (great idea: going to a Hackaton – Google is organizing one soon in Bucharest).

Here are some ideas from the talk:

In Bill’s perspective:

  • entrepreneurship needs to be regarded as a profession
  • the supply of quality entrepreneurship education today is very limited
  • entrepreneurial education is contextual, so it’s difficult to teach
  • entrepreneurship is experiential, it’s mentor-intensive
  • the objective of education is to teach people how to fish, not how to catch a fish
  • it’s easy to fail at doing education in entrepreneurship (Donald Trump has an entrepreneurship institute – storytelling and shark-tanking – now he’s being sued for that)
  • you have to have the right spirit, to think differently, to be motivated
  • you need to foster an environment of creative irreverence, like they do at MIT (hacking)
  • hacking is about taking on Goliath, about swimming against the current
  • we need not to make entrepreneurship sound easy
  • we need the execution skills of a navy seal and incredible self discipline
  • you can’t just have practitioners in an entrepreneurship education program; you also need researchers and hard date people
  • if we want to make this a profession, we need the data to back it up.

Unfortunately I cannot embed it on my blog, so you can go here and look over it. It’s worth listening for 50 minutes (though they had some issues with the mic at some point and it was a little annoying, but the info is so interesting, it’s worth getting over it).

Of course, there is a short review of the talk here, on the TechHub blog (this is where the quote is coming from)

Get More Done: Time Boxed Meetings

October 25, 2013 By Bobby Voicu

time-box-a-meeting

I was never too much of a fan of meetings, but I often found myself part of long ones. Some were my fault, I have to say, because I like a good story and we got lost in funny or interesting things

MavenHut changed all this, though. Cristi, one of my co-founder, forced on us (yeah, he really did force it :D ) the time box meetings concept.

What this means is that you set a specific period of time for that meeting and NO MATTER WHAT, when the countdown stops, the meetings stops. If people didn’t say what they had to, well, tough luck.

All of it might seem rough, but what I saw is that, in time, peer pressure started to act: people will force themselves and force the other ones to fit in time and that, in turn, will make people focus on what they want to say and what they want to find out. This will increase the productivity of the team and your own productivity.

So, if I could give you a great tip for any kind of business meeting: try to time box it. Obviously, you can’t do it all the time (good luck time boxing an investor meeting). This doesn’t mean, though, that you shouldn’t try.

Photo from ShutterStock

Number of Employees as Metric of Success

October 24, 2013 By Bobby Voicu

zf-digital

I’ve been present to a Romanian event two days ago, in the panel on Online Entreprenurship in Romania. Along with me were people that are successful in the space (Alexis Bonte from eRepublik, Alexandru Lapusan from Zitec, Lucian Todea from Soft32). I was really honored by the invitation, since all these companies are companies that were started several years ago and they are examples that we looked up to (and still do).

One of the things that was talked in the panel started with the fact that the software companies relevant for Romania right now have hundreds of employees and if (or better when) are we gonna hire the same number of people.

The thing is that Eastern European countries (if not all) still see success in business as having lots of employees, big offices and that’s not true anymore, at least for most of the tech businesses that I know. Heck, I know at least 3 people that made more than $1 Million in the last 2-3 years all by themselves or with the help of 1-2 outsourced people.

Even more important, people that I know and talk to (especially investors) appreciate if you can grow a company by being lean, not getting into a hiring spree once you have a little bit of money, since that will make the company move a lot slower and you will lose the only competitive advantage you have: speed of execution.

MavenHut is a team of 12 people right now, and we really took our time with the hires. We are moving really, really fast and you can’t be part of the team if you can’t do that. I remember that once we interviewed someone from a big Romanian site and he couldn’t believe how fast we move(he really thought we were lying, he got into his head that we made fun of him and he left, basically thinking we were assholes).

And MavenHut is not the only case. Yes, we are small, but look at King or Supercell in gaming (King has an expected value of $5 Billion with just 400 or so employees, while Supercell just got valued at $3 Billion with a little bit over 100). And that’s not just in gaming, Instagram had 12 people when it was acquired for $1 Billion. Of course, different industries have different characteristics, but online product businesses should not have huge teams. At least in the initial stages, before having to hire hundreds for customer support. That is if you don’t outsource it.

I expect this perception will change in time. As someone in the panel said (I think Alexis Bonte), in the future you will not see one company with 1,000 employees, but 50 companies with 20 people employed. So your startup should hire slow. Really slow. :)

Photo taken by me, this is why I am not visible there :D

Tools I Use: iPad Mini

October 23, 2013 By Bobby Voicu

Apple_-_iPad_mini_with_Retina_display

Yesterday I got caught in a football (soccer) match and in Apple’s conference and I forgot to blog. Yes, almost 90 days after starting to write daily, I forgot to blog. It’s obvious, I need a 22 o’clock alarm to let me know I should not forget.

Anyway, back to the matter at question: iPad Mini.

I bought an iPad since it first launched (back problems forced me to run away from the chair and the desk, so I bought it to be able to stay in bed and read or browse the Internet). I bought the second one, also, but I got no interest in the subsequent ones. The Retina display was not something I was interested in particular, and I felt that a smaller tablet would be a lot better. And I would’ve bought the Google Nexus, though I am not an Android user.

Luckily, by the time I decided to buy the Nexus 7, I heard that Apple is gonna launch the Mini. So I waited and went and bought it the moment it came out in Romania.

The result? I am using the iPad mini more than ever, while the bigger form ones were given away to people close to me, because they were gathering dust somewhere around the house. Even though I have a MacBook Air 11′ at home, which is in no way big, I barely touch it, unless I have work to do.

The mini form factor is great: it’s light so we can use it with one hand (which, if you read a lot on it, it’s really helpful) and it is still in the Apple ecosystem, where I have the applications I already use and I am comfortable with. Talking about the weight, my two devices (the iPad Mini and MacBook) weight, together, 1.4kgs. That’s crazy, right?

Another interesting thing (especially because of what I do) is the fact that I play a lot more games. Again, the smaller form factor allows me to hold the device with one hand while using the other hand to play.

I’ve written this article because yesterday Apple launched the new iPad Mini, with Retina screen. I wouldn’t normally buy it, there’s nothing I want from it in particular, but the new processor and graphics will make the gaming experience a much better one. And I understood how important the device became for my daily browsing and reading habits. Actually, because it became so important, for the first time since I started to use Apple products I am gonna buy a 32 or 64GB one. Probably 32, I don’t want to spend too much money, though. And that is all because I find myself consuming so much content on it (especially games).

Conclusion: you should try a smaller tablet (iOS or Android, after taste). YOu will be amazed how much more than you expect you are gonna use it. And it will help you become more productive, because the back pain from staying over your desk will not be as present as it is when using the laptop.

P.S.: I know Apple launched the iPad Air, also, but I really don’t care about it, even if it’s just 500grams (as compared to the 350 for Mini).

Photo from Apple

Facebook Page for Startup Founders

October 21, 2013 By Bobby Voicu

I_Am_a_Startup_Founder-2

As a startup founder you always look to improve yourself. You read a lot, you try to get better at everything you do.

This means that you actually go through a lot of interesting articles, see great videos or listen to great podcasts. It happens the same for me. And the thing is I can’t really publish all those articles on my Facebook account (where I also write in Romanian totally mundane things like the life of my cat).

So I created a Facebook page for this blog where I will basically drop all the interesting articles, videos or anything else I find that I can’t really write a blogpost around. The page is called I Am A Startup Founder and you can find it here.

Though it’s basically the page for this blog. I named it like this because it’s not really about this blog, but more about what I think a startup founder should read.

So, if you think it might be interesting for you, go there and hit like. I promise I read interesting things most of the time :)

  • « Go to Previous Page
  • Page 1
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Page 27
  • Page 28
  • Page 29
  • Page 30
  • Page 31
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Page 40
  • Go to Next Page »

Footer

About

I write about things that raise my curiosity. And I’m quite curious about all kinds of things.

For a full “About Me”, go here.

Recent Posts

  • My Bluesky ID: @bobbyvoicu.com
  • Batman is Here, on the Quest – XR Industry News of the Week – Oct. 24
  • XR Industry News of the Week – Oct. 10
  • XR Industry News of the Week – Oct. 4
  • XR News of the Week – September 14th, 2024

Friends

  • Sami the Westie
  • XR Gamer Digest

The CEO Library Collections

  • Best Leadership Books
  • Best Productivity Books
  • Women Entrepreneur Books

Copyright © 2025 · Privacy Policy · Disclaimer

We use cookies to enhance your experience. By clicking "Ok" or by continuing to use the site, you agree to this use of cookies and data.