Showing posts with label Apple. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Apple. Show all posts

Sunday, June 24, 2012

Steve Jobs “Got it”... Will You?

“Authentic”. “Relentless Passion”. These are some words the panelists used to describe Steve Jobs during the iKC session “The Communication Secrets of Steve Jobs: Mastering the Message”. The four panelists (speakers from Trozzolo Communications, KEM studios, Meers Advertising and Fleishman-Hillard) gave their ideas about why Steve Jobs was so successful in captivating his audience.

The moderator, Chris Olsen (FinditKC), brought up Apple’s innovative marketing strategy. Steve Jobs knew it wasn’t just about targeting the consumer. It was much deeper. You have to find out what drives the consumer to make these decisions and target these motives. One panelist gave an excellent example of how Apple targets consumer motives. When the iPhone 4 came out, Apple ran a commercial that promoted a new feature without talking about it, but it highlighted a relationship. This is an example of how Steve Jobs “got it”.

The panelists gave great insight to Steve Jobs’ success and how we, the entrepreneurs, can achieve our own success. Here are some things the iKC discussion left me with:
  • You have to find what you're deeply passionate about. Steve Jobs found it and changed the world.
  • Get to know your user. What motivates your user? Why does he or she do the things they do? It's necessary to find the answers to these questions so you can market them successfully. 
  • Become an evangelist for your product. People say, "the product will speak for itself", but if you're not willing to speak for your product, why should anyone else?
  • Be consistent with your brand. Apple changed up their products but they kept the same core values since the start

Friday, December 9, 2011

Maybe Janis Joplin was Right...


WRITTEN BY TYLER PROCHNOW, CO-FOUNDER & SENIOR PARTNER

While I’m sure Janis Joplin was not thinking about small business and entrepreneurs when she sang “Take another little piece of my heart now baby”, the refrain has served me and many other entrepreneurs well as we focus on finding customers for our businesses.  When we launched the Arena Football franchise in Kansas City in 2006, the Commissioner of the League, David Baker, was kind enough to share some advice with us.  Of course, I almost always welcome advice from successful leaders and try and incorporate their suggestions the best I can.  But this time, it was different.  Baker stands 6’ 8” and is a self-described “couple of twinkies short of 400 pounds.”  When a man of that size speaks, you listen.

The Commissioner told me that the League was asking us for four things.  They were going to ask us for our time. They were going to ask us for our effort.  They were going to ask us for our money (the most important item).  But they were also going to ask us for “a piece of my heart,” because that is what our fans, our players and our community deserved.  Every week, our fans would come out and give a piece of their heart to the team and regardless of how many games we won or lost, we failed if we did not give a piece of our heart back to them.

Now I am not a touchy, feely, emotion-rules-the-day kind of guy.  I’m not into any of that new age; it’s all about feelings philosophy.  But I can tell you that we took the Commissioner’s advice to heart (no pun intended) and I believe that was a huge reason we were so successful in connecting with our fans and selling tickets.  Nearly every decision we made as an organization was with the fan’s heart in mind.  We put ourselves in their shoes (which was not difficult because at the end of the day, that’s what were: fans) and developed a product that spoke to their hearts.   Since that day, whether consciously or subconsciously, we’ve tried to incorporate that attitude into every business venture we have launched.  This is obviously easier in some industries as there are many businesses that would find it difficult to establish an emotional connection with their customer.  Yet I honestly believe that no industry and no business and no customer engages in a transaction without some emotion.  How often have we worked harder on a deal because you “like” the other side?  How often have you killed a project simply because you didn’t “like” the people you were dealing with?

Steve Jobs arguably built one of the most dynamic companies in history by combining cutting-edge technology with emotional appeal.  The outpouring of emotion when Jobs passed away was not because people loved Steve.  Most people had never met him.  But his products spoke to people’s hearts in a way that they became part of the company.  If you owned an Apple product, you were part of Apple.  That is a lofty goal for all of us.

I know one of the first lessons they try and teach you in business is to leave emotion at the door.  Look at the opportunity purely through an economic lens and decide whether the opportunity has merit.  But is that really possible?  Establishing an emotional connection and reaching out to your customers or your partners is the very essence of building brand loyalty and more importantly, customer loyalty.

So whether you are a first time startup with a golden idea, or a serial entrepreneur with another new business, I would urge you to fire up your iPod, put a little Janis Joplin on your playlist and look into your customer’s heart to find the magic ingredient for success.

Follow Think Big! @ThinkBigKC

Tuesday, November 29, 2011

The Story of LiveOn


How the one of the Midwest’s fastest-growing startups killed it by taking risks, engaging the experts and being able to think big


WRITTEN BY ALLISON WAY, SENIOR COPYWRITER & CHIEF EDITOR

In Kansas City, where the aroma of the Rivermarket’s fresh produce and bustling energy of downtown seem to collide, there lies a modest building on the intersection of 7th and Walnut.  From the outside, it doesn’t seem like much.  Standard red brick, numerous hazy windows, and a Thai restaurant sign are the only embellishments on the building’s exterior.  But the inside of the building is a different story.  It houses one of the Midwest’s fastest-growing startup companies—LiveOn.

LiveOn is a Kansas City startup born from the entrepreneurial mind of Jonathan Whistman that has an ambitious vision for capturing, celebrating and sharing life across multiple generations.  In order to do so, LiveOn has created a web application that helps users share their most important moments, while keeping those memories alive and safe for future generations.  In other words, it’s an online time capsule...with a little “oomph.”

If you’ve ever watched your child take his or her first steps and wished you could capture the moment with your camera and show it to them when they’re older, LiveOn can do that.  If you’ve ever wanted to share video from your college graduation with your great-great grandchild, LiveOn can do that.  If you’ve ever wanted to pass down memories with your future children, future grandchildren and future generations, LiveOn can do that.  LiveOn captures, displays and archives all of the most treasured moments in a life and allows them to be shared for generations to come. 

A funny thing happened at a funeral
LiveOn was born from a simple thought during a funeral.  Ironic?  Maybe not.  A few years ago, entrepreneur Jonathan Whistman, founder of the LiveOn, was attending a funeral for a family friend’s young son.  Although it was a time of sorrow and remembrance, it was also a time of awakening for Jon.  While attending the ceremony, he realized that the funeral had virtually nothing to do with the kid’s life.  Jon thought to himself, “There has to be a better way to tell a person about your life.  Why can’t we continue to share and enjoy things so that they can live on?”

What if you could rewind your life and watch it back?
Jon continued to ask himself this question as he began to develop the percolating ideas of LiveOn.com.  He knew that he wanted to create a place where memories could connect users with the families and last virtually forever.  But what else could LiveOn do? 

Jonathan began raising funds and hiring developers with help from Tony Karrer, former CTO of eHarmony, who was a huge help in LiveOn’s technological architecture and selecting the first Kansas City based developers. The first line of code was written on March 20, 2011 and the company executed a soft launch a few months later on November 1, 2011.

LiveOn experiences growth, change and money
With additional funding, LiveOn is growing very quickly.  Now numbering twelve employees, the company is looking to double its number of employees (more specifically, looking for a systems administrator, mobile developers and front end developers) and is finding new ways to expand its services. 

In addition, LiveOn has begun to further develop LiveOn Rewind. When the vision is complete, Rewind will be located in a “clean room” on the second floor of the LiveOn office building.  LiveOn Rewind takes old photos and videos that users send in and digitizes them.  Users can ship videos and photos, watch the LiveOn tech experts scan and digitize them via website, and record their voices over each picture in order to capture the moment accurately. 

 LiveOn: Inspired by Apple
When asked what company Jon admires most, he couldn’t help but sigh. 

“The answer is obvious,” he said.  “Just look at our offices.” 

And it’s true.  In every cubicle sat one hard-working LiveOn employee coding and punching away on a giant Apple screen.  LiveOn’s simplicity, creativity and consumer-awareness truly does have an Apple-esque essence.  But what other companies does the startup inspire to emulate?

“It’s the people in certain companies that inspire me most,” says Jon.  “I love looking especially at the 3-4 person companies.  They believe in what they’re doing the most out of anyone.” 

From the words of Jonathan Whistman himself
Starting up a successful company like LiveOn is not easy.  Just ask Jonathan Whistman about the business venture.  The funding didn’t just fall into his lap, the employee applications didn’t come pouring in and the business didn’t create itself in a day.  It takes a lot of effort to make a startup work—especially when it comes to believing in the idea.

“The hardest part of starting up LiveOn has been dealing with the mental challenges,” says Jon.  “I am in a new field, I need tech-capable people, there's no guarantee.  In the beginning I constantly asked myself, ‘Will I be able to do this?’  Finally, I just took a chance and did it.” 

But many potential entrepreneurs tend to ask the same question to guys like Jon over and over: why did you choose entrepreneurship and how do you know when to start the business?  Jon’s answer is quite straight-forward: 

“Why?  I don’t like working for other people!  People often view entrepreneurship as a danger because there’s no job security.  I believe that the secure corporate job is just an illusion of security.  I have learned that in entrepreneurship, I get to know exactly how many days I am away from being broke.  And then I get to actually do something about it.  In the corporate world, I never knew how many days away from broke the company was and therefore, I had no control.”

“Listen to the experts, but in the end, trust your gut”
If Jonathan Whistman has learned one thing from starting up LiveOn.com, it would be to go with his instinct.

“Always listen to the experts,” he says.  “But in the end, trust your gut.  And remember: there is a difference between advice and counsel.  Advice is something you can get from people who haven’t been through entrepreneurship.  Counsel comes from people who have lived through it.  Always seek counsel.”

How does LiveOn Think Big?
When asked how he Thinks Big, Jon replied with the following statement: “I believe anything is possible if people are willing to challenge conventional thinking.  I think people really do create their own destinies.” 

Follow me! @AllisonThinkBig

Wednesday, October 19, 2011

The Gigabit Challenge Announces Screampoint as First Platform Partner


The GigabitChallenge, a global business plan competition looking for entrepreneurial ideas to disrupt on the Google Fiber network, has welcomed Screampoint as its first Platform Partner. Screampoint is a global leader in providing 5D SMART™ technology solutions that allow government officials, master developers and corporate leaders to access multi-departmental real-time city and building data through the unique interface of a 3D visual model of a city.  As an important new tool in the real estate technology and Smart City sector, Screampoint’s 5D SMART™ technologies will change the way the built environment and the smart cities of the future will be designed, built, monitored and managed. 

As part of the Platform Partner package, Screampoint will allow third-party developers that are finalists in The Gigabit Challenge to utilize the Screampoint 5D SMART™ platform to build applications for free for a period of one year starting in Q1 2012.  This is the same quarter in which Google will begin to deploy the first-in-the-nation one-gigabit Google Fiber network in Kansas City. 

“We are very excited to have Screampoint on board as the founding Platform Partner,” said Tyler Prochnow, co-founder of Think Big Partners, host of The Gigabit Challenge.  “The company’s next-generation 5D SMART™ technology will spawn a whole new genre of applications, including those that will power smart cities, that are ideally suited to run on the Google Fiber network.”

Screampoint is active in countries around the globe and assembles technology companies, building systems management companies, and AEC firms to bring 5D SMART solutions to cities and building owners.

The Gigabit Challenge invites other major platform providers such as Apple, Google, Microsoft, Intel, Oracle and Salesforce to join startup Screampoint in working with The Gigabit Challenge as a Platform Partners.  The Challenge is calling on these innovators to let their developer communities know about this opportunity and encourage them to compete for the $100,000 Grand Prize. 

The first round of The Gigabit Challenge opened on October 3, 2011 and will close at midnight on October 31, 2011.  Finalists will be announced in November and a final pitch with an awards ceremony will be held in Kansas City on January 18, 2012.  View the complete schedule.  For questions concerning applications, partnerships, or judging opportunities, please visit www.gigabitchallenge.com or call (816) 842-5244.  

Take me to the press release.
Written by Allison Way
@AllisonThinkBig