
I attended NESTA's Innovation Edge conference
this week. Despite the title apparently the only thing jaw-dropping about it was
Gordon Brown (who was doing that thing with his chin
so quickly even Rory Bremner
would have been impressed).
As with all such events it's a bit hit & miss and one has to make
a cost-benefit call. Can an entrepreneur trying to launch his site afford to spend
the day nodding sagely in agreement with keynote speakers, nancying around making
small talk and drinking lukewarm coffee? Well, the answer is ‘sort of'.
At my decisive best I elected to attend the more targeted afternoon sessions and
so unfortunately missed Gordon
Brown, Bob
Geldof & Tim
Berners-Lee. But I have it on good authority from the effervescent Meriem
Aissaoui from Smarta that they
were in fine form.
By the way, Smarta is a fantastic business resource and social networking site for
entrepreneurs and small businesses that launches officially in November.
The first seminar I attended was called ‘Are online social networks
the new cities?' Unfortunately the topic was too high level
to get the crux of matters the same way blog conversations do but at least it was
fairly entertaining. Here's an extract of the dialogue between the facilitator
and Michael Birch
(founder of Bebo):
Facilitator: So Michael - why did you move to
San Francisco? Was it Silicon Valley?
Michael Birch: Because of my wife - she's from San
Francisco. There just happened to be a small thriving internet community there
too.
Facilitator: Lucky she wasn't in Utah. That would
have been interesting.
Michael Birch: Probably not that interesting.
The second seminar, ‘Entrepreneurs v Investors: Can the relationship
ever really work?', was better. Saul
Klein (The Accelerator
Group) highlighted honesty, self-awareness and the ability to face
issues sooner rather than later as critical ingredients for an effective relationship
and Jon Moulton
(Alchemy) provided a list
of habits that help you spot Bad Managers & Entrepreneurs that I have paraphrased
below:
- They don't know the numbers, don't care about them
- They don't have any customer interaction
- They are often arrogant and dismiss questions from their staff
- They are little too focused on the material things (talk about pay & bonus schemes in the first meeting)
- They don't have a TO DO list - no signs of structured organisational skills
- They don't visit their businesses
- They make stupid acquisitions (double or quits)
- They isolate themselves
- They work 9 to 5 - lacking passion for their business
Investors - if you're reading this - it's midnight and I'm still in the office testing the site. This post only took a few minutes. PS: did you get my email about a payrise?
Another interesting point from Jon was that good presenters aren't necessarily good managers, but people always make this assumption. But on the contrary: good managers are very often good presenters.
The lesson I draw from this is: if you know you're a crap manager take a course in presentation skills.
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