Business in the Revolution
June 17th, 2007 at 4:28 • Musings • 0 Comments •
This past semester I had an interesting revelation connecting two different stories I had heard to our life in the People of Praise.
Glen Taylor spoke at the Part-Time MBA lecture series here at school. In the hour long lecture, he had one real key bit of information to pass on. He attributed almost all his success with surrounding himself with “good, capable people who share his vision.” He went on to say that 35% of startup business fail not because of unsuccessful ideas but rather because of bad leadership.
This triggered my memory of an excellent article I had read in the New York Times talking about the original group who started paypal. After Ebay bought paypal for $1.5 billion, different employees began to start on different projects. Four got together and started You Tube which as we all know was bought by Google for 1.65 Billion without turning a single dime in real revenue. Others worked together and started Yelp (online guide to shops), Slide (creating web sideshows),Clarium (Hedgefund with more than 2.3 billion in assests), SpaceX (manufactures small rockets) and Room 9 Entertainment (which produced the movie Thank You for Smoking) However, in all of this success and splintering of companies, this original paypal group has remained extremely close due to their strong bond formed through their struggles and successes at PayPal. Now, this is one of the groups that is changing the face of the internet and communication. If any new ideas are proposed there are investors there to provide the funds.
To me they were successful because of the same things that Glen Taylor was talking about. They were a group of folks working on a common project all with the same dedication and goal in mind. At that time and as they continue to grow they are pioneering how to do business. All of this is based on their friendship.
Now, enter One:Ten Communications. Paypal’s goal was to connect consumers or businesses securely, easily, and quickly across the internet. One:Ten’s mission is to “Unite all things in Christ” Paypal had “Talented engineers and entrepreneurs with innovative ideas and a love of the start-up life; experienced managers who can turn ideas into businesses; and financiers.” One Ten (although they presently may be a little dis-advantaged in terms of financiers) has all of these components and one most important element, the Lord. Whose to say that we can’t be even more successful?
Praise God for our work!
