Lessons Learned as a Founder From Surviving the Internet Crash of 2000
Serhat Pala
General Partner @ Venture Capital & Angel Investor | Seed-Stage European Origin US Focus High Growth Technology Startup Investor
My wife and I came to the USA for our San Diego State University MBA degrees from Turkey after we finished Bogazici Economics and worked in Istanbul for a couple of years. Our goal was to go back after school and continue our professional careers in finance. However, we caught the entrepreneurship bug while still in school and taking part in the activities of Lavin Entrepreneurship Center (which was called EMC back then). It was an exciting and vibrant time for technology startups.?
The late 90s brought us nonsensical (too early, too fast) flops for its times like Boo.com, Geocities, Kozmo, Pets.com, Flooz.com, and the starts of the giants of today like Google, Amazon, eBay, and Booking Holdings.??
Before I knew it, I was starting my first Internet company that provided an internal website search tool provider for large community websites called vortals (one of those old terms of the past that are hardly heard of nowadays).?
We had a great start with that company, with a few clients piloting the technology. We were gaining traction among retail investors and gaining recognition in community website circles of the time. Then, as we turned the corner around Y2K and AOL concluded their giant merger with Time Warner in Jan 2000, we felt we were at a great place. We had investors calling us, and we were picky and selective about whom we brought on board. The plan was to hold off until we increased our MRR to the next level and then go for the next fundraising round. We had a low but growing burn rate, and many of the pilots by our clients will be turning into large-paying contracts. So 9-12 month runway felt like more than enough time.?
Then things changed so quickly and drastically. First, Microsoft stock (mainly due to an antitrust ruling) dropped, starting a significant down trajectory for Nasdaq, which was followed by back-to-back days of substantial drops in stock market indexes. Investor sentiment changed so quickly that it was hard for founders to grasp what might lie ahead. Venture Capital was no longer available, and the mindsets of everyone in the technology startup ecosystem drastically changed.?
What did that mean for us, as a technology solution provider startup in the changing landscape??
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What were the lessons learned for me as a founder from that experience?
The current economic climate reminds me a lot of the Internet bubble burst times. Yet as founders and investors, we have the experience of the past that can help us guide better this time. Plus, startup and early-stage investment ecosystems are more robust and established. So, as a former (and always in the heart) founder, I chose to be an optimist. Afterall:?
"Nothing of any importance has ever been accomplished by a pessimist." - Jack Welch.
Avaron Asset Management | Managing Partner & Investor Relations
2 年Great points, Serhat. These are easy to be forgot once the caravan is moving fast. Good luck with your VC fund!
Sales, Sales and Product Management. Successful introducing new markets and products.
2 年Don't spend what you don't have. As a sales rep in New York I saw amazing offices, invited to multiple launch parties, and was even taken out to lunch by buyers. All before the company was up and running. Also much here is applicable to the Cannabis industry. Well written
Professor Emeritus, board director, startup advisor, executive coach
2 年Great article Serhat!
Cut Ties to Everything Holding You Back?? Join Our Entrepreneurial Mastermind Community | Founder, InstantlyRelevant.com | 1 Mil YouTube Subs | Podcast | Author | Keynote Speaker
2 年Thank you for sharing this timely inspiration, Serhat. ??
Founder @ Spark Hat Marketing | Building something beautiful.
2 年Great words!