www.wired.co.uk
Andy Yates of Real Business gives us the strategy it takes for this 17 year old to be a financial success.
1. Find a real problem and a worthwhile solution
For
Nick D’Aloisio the problem was wasting hours trawling the internet for
decent content. He wanted an easy way to access key information quickly.
His solution saved people time and effort. Yahoo!
serves content to hundreds of millions of users - that is a lot of time
and effort that can be saved and the reason they snapped up the
business.
Successful entrepreneurs find a big enough problem - big
enough that people will pay to solve it. Pay to ease the pain or to be
able to do something better and more productively.
If you can find
something that is better than the competition, or better still, a new
way of doing things that disrupts the current market, then you have
answered the first question on "Who wants to be an internet
millionaire".
2. No pain, no gain
Becoming an
internet millionaire is hard work (especially if you have to fit your
A-Levels in, too). I have yet to meet any entrepreneur who gets their
product right first time. The idea has to be tweaked and perfected. Old
plans are thrown out, new ones tested.
D'Aloisio’s original
product needed a fair amount of seed investment to turn it into Summly.
It didn’t happen overnight and, no doubt, involved a lot of blood, sweat
and tears (and, if my kids are anything to go by, the odd teenage
tantrum).
Customer testing can be a testing time for any business -
but it is vital. Then, when you find what people will buy, what will
really ease the customer’s pain, it is well worth it.
3. Think big
To
make a million you have to find somebody to buy your business. And
buyers are only likely to stump up their cash if the problem you are
solving is big enough. There is nothing wrong with lifestyle businesses
that can support you, your colleagues and your family. But buyers are
not looking for lifestyle businesses. They are looking for scale and the
ability for a business to make big in-roads into a large potential
market.
In other words, do enough people really need and want your product?
On
its own, an online or mobile app is not a business (a mistake too many
people make) - but you can certainly build a business out of the right
app.
In other words, if you want to make it big, think big.
4. Get by with a little help from your friends
In
reality, most internet businesses don’t have huge barriers to entry and
competition could be just around the corner. However, generating PR and
buzz can be a great differentiator. D’Aloisio appears to be a past
master at this - highly impressive for one so young.
After his original product was named "App of the week" by Apple
he caught the eye of a venture capital firm, which in turn led to some
celebrity backers, including Stephen Fry, Ashton Kutcher and Yoko Ono,
no less. Basking in the limelight of high-profile backers helped his app
get more than a million downloads after its launch.
Getting noticed, getting networked and standing out in a very crowded market is crucial.
5. Don’t think about the money
Yes,
I know this point is ironic given the title of this article. But money
is not the primary driver of many entrepreneurs. It is the buzz of
success, the sense of achievement, the desire to see a product out there
and change the status quo.
Put all your energy into getting the
product right and grasping the opportunity rather than dreaming of
untold riches and counting the money in your own head. If the business
is strong, your chances of making money are strong - but lose focus and
you may lose the prize.
Asked what he would do with the money
D’Aloisio said he wanted to buy a new pair of trainers and a computer.
After that he was a bit stumped. All his time and effort had gone into
business reality, not dreams.
D’Aloisio got so much press because
he is one of an all too rare breed in the UK - a young internet
millionaire. And it is not just internet millionaires we are lacking. I
would love to see so many more successful business people.
So, a
parting thought: come on, entrepreneurs across the UK (young and old
alike). I hope the D’Aloisio story eggs you on to real and deserved
success of your own.
http://realbusiness.co.uk/article/22293-who-wants-to-be-an-internet-millionaire_22293
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