Figured I’d do some SXSW blogging while I’m here so , here it goes.
I’m currently sitting in the Art of Speed panel discussion with the kick ass panel of Mike Cassidy (currently of BenchMark Capital), Evan Williams (currently of Twitter), Cali Lewis (of GeekBrief.TV) and Tim Ferriss (of The Four Hour Work Week). I’ll be listing my own notes here for my own selfish reasons (a personal archive of sorts) and for your perusal. Hope it’s worthwhile.
-Mike Cassidy has a really impressive resume.
-Evan Williams is speaking about reaching critical mass and how SWSX 2007 helped Twitter skyrocket.
- Twitter is apparently really big in Japan.
-The more Evan Williams is talks about how SXSW helped Twitter get huge, the more I realize “mass adoption” is more about having something usable and ready to go when the right time comes. “Luck favors the well prepared” comes to mind.
-Note to self: go where the market takes you.
-Cali is talking about how passion is key and can’t truly be faked. Doing what you’re naturally interested in allows you to put in what ever amount of work is required to make it work.
-I really need to start watching GeekBrief.tv, see what’s it’s like.
-Thought-Leaders and the Traffic-Leaders are not necessarily the same people. Good point. People seem to always go after the Traffic-Leaders (the Scbole’s and Arrington’s of the world).
-Wait a sec, Cassidy invented Xfire? He’s totally got to be into WoW.
-Cassidy touches on how you need to go above and beyond to get the right people. He invites recruits over to his house for dinner and sends congratulation flowers over to new hires, welcoming them to the team. Also mentioned how he’ll pay more for the right developers.
-Evan Williams says they don’t have a real big “feature implementation” process and how they try to understand how customers feel but being customer’s themselves.
-Evan makes an interesting point on how tricky it can be to balance the appeasement of the power users while planning for “regular” users down the road. An example: to use Blogger when it first launched, you had to put in your FTP info. While the hosting of content didn’t come until later, the ftp features are still there to this day (...i think)
-From Cali – Don’t promote your goodness too early. Give yourself some time (or a few shows if you’re a vlogger) to work out the kinks and to find your voice and flow.
-Ready.Fire.Aim. – the key to quick development
-Things you shouldn’t do too quickly: handling internal team morrale issues, talking and meeting with people (don’t skimp just to meet more people in a shorter amount of time).
- Cassidy “if moral is high, the team can go 6 months without salary” (paraphrased) – interesting…
now it’s on to Q&A, I don’t think I’ll post any of them unless there’s something really compelling.
Overall, good panel.