Hacker News new | ask | show | jobs
by mindcrime 5223 days ago
Oh, absolutely. And I have been. But I know it's more work than one person can handle, so it simply seems like it ought to make sense to bring a business head on board.

Yeah, that's similar to the boat we're in. Three technology people (2 hardcore server-side coders, and one front-end coder/designer), and we're still looking for the right "business head" to bring in. The good thing is, we (well, me anyway) are arrogant enough to think we can go ahead and get started, and add the dedicated "business head" a little later on. But I've also been working hard to remake myself into a little bit of a "business head" myself (including taking some business classes at the community college and that whole bit).

Keep slugging away, the right combination is bound to come together eventually. Like pg says "just don't die." :-)

1 comments

Though be careful not to confuse "business head" with "a person capable of adding a business model to a solution and bringing revenue from 0 to 10m within 2 months". Depending on your idea, I've seen CS Ph.D. students take on board a former management consultant with 2-3 years of work experience as CFO. (data integration solution that sells to corporate customers) His motivation? Less hot air, more opportunity to advance an actual project.

Alastair, if you're talking about Taxonomy - really liked your custom maps blog post, btw, even though I'm not a tech guy myself -, someone at college might be well-suited, as you seem to be working on a solution that needs larger-scale consumer adoption and an interesting story to sell (PR-wise) in order to be successful. I am always amazed at the number of business students I know (of) that are happy to intern at (commercial) startups or company builders and end up "community managing" the Facebook page, just because the business founders are successful at pitching their Groupon clone. If you give a talk at a university etc. and mention you welcome feedback on which feature is missing (>> ask for advice, you get money; ask for money, you get advice) afterwards, you might just find someone with a good product sense that also doesn't mind approaching people, and spare them that fate.