Up and Running:

Starting your business with growth in mind

By Tim Berry
Web 2.0 Meets Darwin

Interesting piece on The NY Times‘ tech blogs today, Web 2.0 meets Darwin, pointing out, unfortunately, that what goes up (some Web 2.0 ventures) can also go down.

Watching the stock market this morning has been like attending a bungee jumpers convention. (”Does his cord look like it’s a little frayed?”) Meanwhile, it doesn’t matter whether the Dow is 9000, 8000 or 7000 for tech companies to realize they need to pull away from the cliff as fast as they can. Signs of turmoil abound.

Author Saul Hansell cites several fire sales and failures, and adds:

The stream of negative news is just starting. Radical cutbacks. Fraud discovered. For every company we hear about now, there are many more that realize they are on very thin ice and are trying to figure out if they can avoid a very cold bath.

Further on he cites Rafe Needleman’s list of 11 companies in trouble . . .

Rafe Needleman takes his shot at picking this generation’s biggest losers. It is a gallery of those nifty little Web 2.0 companies that figured they would get big fast and worry about revenue later: Twitter, Meebo, Zillow and so on. He also wonders about some first-generation survivors that may not be able to make it through a second ice age, like Skype and Ask.com. I don’t agree with his analysis. MySpace may no longer be hot with a bullet, but it has revenue of $800 million a year and tens of millions of users. We should all have that kind of trouble. In any case, the dead pool is a game to play in between watching the Dow gyrate and the presidential candidates hurl mud.

Lots of bad news here, but Hansell has a point: Revenue of $800 million and tens of millions of users aren’t really that bad. “We should all have that kind of trouble.”

This entry was posted on Friday, October 10th, 2008 at 1:26 pm and is filed under current affairs, events, failure, technology, trends. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

One Response to “Web 2.0 Meets Darwin”

  1. Howard Oliver Says:

    The Web 2.0 firms that support business processes and change for that service will survive. You pay for your stall in the farmers market, you should pay for the same online. SIMPLE!






Leave a Reply


  • About Me Visit My Site
    MORE FROM TIM BERRY
    15th Anniversary Edition. Looking for a fast, easy way to create a business plan? This popular software solution offers 500+ sample plans, step-by-step guidance and more. Your words, your numbers. Let the software do the mechanics.

    Download Business Plan Pro Today!


    Email Management made simple. Never stumble over shared email again.

    Sign up now!


    Marketing Plan Pro 11.0 powered by Duct Tape Marketing is simple, practical marketing plan software that makes it easy to plan and carry out the marketing activities you need to grow your business.

    Download Marketing Plan Pro 11.0 Today!


    BOOKS BY TIM BERRY
    The Plan-As-You-Go Business Plan is out now, done, and available for order ...

    It's in stock at Amazon.com, Barnes and Noble, and Borders.


    3 Weeks to Startup is in final production, due out in October, and is available for preorder ...

    At Amazon.com, at Barnes and Noble, and at Borders.

  • Recent Posts

  • Categories

  • Archives

  • I was podcasted on Small Business Trends Radio
  • Books I recommend

  • TED talks

    ted.com