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Startups are destroying the world

Started by Josquius, December 14, 2016, 02:35:58 AM

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Josquius

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/technology/11765609/Start-up-culture-is-corrupting-our-youth-and-killing-real-entrepreneurship.html

Quote
Start-up culture is corrupting our youth and killing real entrepreneurship


A whole generation is being trained to sell their companies as quickly as possible - rather than doing any actual work to nurture them

Imagine the sort of person that runs a start-up. How would you describe them? Probably using words such as "young", "ambitious", "innovative". They probably embody that meaningless expression "nothing is impossible". This is the problem with start-up culture: it has created a myth that has the power to ruin lives.

Hundreds of thousands of British youngsters are about to flood the entrepreneurship market. According to UnLtd, more than half of young people posses the ambition of starting their own company, which translates to unprecedented growth in the number of companies run by those youngsters. In pursuit of the dream perpetuated by start-up culture, they are equipped with revolutionary ideas such as a condom key chain and a "social media site which, unlike Facebook, would finally allow us to see who visited our page and thus identify obsessive followers" (visit the StalkBook website here).

The culture I'm talking about is one which has glamorised start-ups as the easiest way to share a table with the super wealthy in Mayfair restaurants, have a flexible work schedule and be recognised as a celebrity – as long as you have the force of ambition. Unsurprisingly, venture capital firms – an equal victim of this culture – are showering British start-up industry with cash, because for many potential entrepreneurs they are becoming some of the only people bold enough to invest money on weird ideas.

Unfortunately this notion that it only takes a "killer idea" (preferably something based on an app) and just enough funding to conquer the innovation-hungry consumers is a lie. It goes against traditional business-making practice, where companies respond to the demands of consumers rather than the other way around. True, we all heard stories of successful innovators who indeed delivered revolutionary products to the consumers, but it's perfectly reasonable to doubt that every millennial has the same trick up their sleeve.

There's no question whether this culture is damaging to young people. These new entrepreneurs don't want to sit in boardrooms with calculators trying to balance their books with puritanical asceticism, or conducting extensive market research for their products. No, the prevailing mantra of "to earn you must spend" dictates the direction of most start-ups, which then leads to the absurd belief that the absence of consumption is a fault of lack of marketing. In reality, however, a high "burn rate" of cash by start-ups and lack of market need are the most popular reasons why start-ups eventually fail.
Even when true innovation happens, there's increasing tendency not to attempt to create a business with a long-lasting plan, but instead chuck it towards larger corporations in exchange for a handful of cash. Business cards stating "serial entrepreneur" – those who move from project to project – are becoming a norm. The idea of nurturing a company is in terminal decline. In the past, making sure that the company is thriving and has a competitive edge used to be the defining aspect of good entrepreneurship. Nowadays, by contrast, selling your company for a life-changing sum of money is the mark of success. This breeds a new type of entrepreneurship, which centres on the short-term boom, and turns the creation of start-ups into an industry itself. Start-up culture shifted the focus away from company ownership to either "get rich by selling" or participating in never ending game of start-up creation.

This culture, in which young people have immaturely bought into, tells a tale where aspiration is rewarded with piles of cash, yet ignores the reality of business. The failure rates of start-ups is significant enough to break the myth. In Britain, at least half of companies fail to last more than five years, while in the United States the figure goes up to as high as three out of four start-ups going bust without managing to turn a profit. This exemplifies the fact that ambition and funding aren't enough to create a successful enterprise. Take, for instance, the website Digg, which undoubtedly had the same idealistic belief in its ability to stand out from larger competitors, but despite being hosed with money, failed and was sold for next to nothing.

These would-be/will-be entrepreneurs also ignore the fact that running an effective business requires expertise and sense of maturity, which cannot necessarily be learned on the spot. Inspired by stories like that of Mark Zuckerberg, they rush out of university to start companies regardless of having no experience of working in the private sector, thus increasing the chances of failure.
It must be noted that though start-ups are viewed as a hip thing for the youth, the most successful entrepreneurs have at least 10 years of industry experience prior founding their first start-up.

It's unlikely that the myths told by start-up culture will die soon. The powerful force behind them offers a vision for many young hopefuls. But acknowledging the shortcomings of this modern gold rush is the first step. For now, the austere entrepreneur is dead – all hail the new allergic-to-accounting entrepreneur.


Thoughts?

On the one hand- torygraph.  Why can't things remain the way they've always been, moan moan.
On the other.... I can see it to an extent.  A lot of stupid startups coming and going all the time. Even large corporations are trying to be more startup like.
Could another tech bubble be due to pop?
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Monoriu

If start-ups fail, presumably the entrepreneurs lose money and are thus punished.  In that case there is clear accountability and disincentive for them to fail.  Unless they use public money to start their companies, I don't see why other people need to be concerned. 

Phillip V

Quote from: Tyr on December 14, 2016, 02:35:58 AM
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/technology/11765609/Start-up-culture-is-corrupting-our-youth-and-killing-real-entrepreneurship.html


Thoughts?

On the one hand- torygraph.  Why can't things remain the way they've always been, moan moan.
On the other.... I can see it to an extent.  A lot of stupid startups coming and going all the time. Even large corporations are trying to be more startup like.
Could another tech bubble be due to pop?

Where's the facts and figures behind this "whole generation".  I would love to be surrounded by a whole generation of young people trying to create products and services.

Stupid puff opinion piece from 2015.  What tech bubble are you worried about.  Have you seen Twitter's stock price over the past year?  :D

MadImmortalMan

"Stability is destabilizing." --Hyman Minsky

"Complacency can be a self-denying prophecy."
"We have nothing to fear but lack of fear itself." --Larry Summers

Tamas

Bloody uppity plebs trying to sit in upper class restaurants.

Berkut

"If you think this has a happy ending, then you haven't been paying attention."

select * from users where clue > 0
0 rows returned

Valmy

I have seen some bizarre 'kids today' whines before but this one is exceptional.

QuoteUnfortunately this notion that it only takes a "killer idea" (preferably something based on an app) and just enough funding to conquer the innovation-hungry consumers is a lie. It goes against traditional business-making practice, where companies respond to the demands of consumers rather than the other way around. True, we all heard stories of successful innovators who indeed delivered revolutionary products to the consumers, but it's perfectly reasonable to doubt that every millennial has the same trick up their sleeve.

Yes! Don't try to innovate! Be reactionary!

QuoteThese new entrepreneurs don't want to sit in boardrooms with calculators trying to balance their books with puritanical asceticism, or conducting extensive market research for their products.

Entrepreneur-types are not plodding office drones?! How unlike every previous generation!
Quote"This is a Russian warship. I propose you lay down arms and surrender to avoid bloodshed & unnecessary victims. Otherwise, you'll be bombed."

Zmiinyi defenders: "Russian warship, go fuck yourself."

HVC

start ups have always been a thing, but under a different name. People have sold their patents to larger companies, for example. hell, even big name companies like Victoria's secret and tim hortons (for fellow Canadians :P ) where started up and sold off to larger companies or investors.
Being lazy is bad; unless you still get what you want, then it's called "patience".
Hubris must be punished. Severely.

celedhring

God, the article might have interesting points, but it's so mixed up with such hilarious - and ignorant - "old man yells at cloud" attitude that I find hard to seriously engage with it. So you must only give customers what they already demand? You think that every young whipper-snapper knows fuck all about accounting and running real businesses and should bow down to their betters? How do those caves feel, Daily Telegraph?

The Brain

Women want me. Men want to be with me.

Duque de Bragança


Eddie Teach

Brain is Svedish, so he's too hip to ever get old.
To sleep, perchance to dream. But in that sleep of death, what dreams may come?

The Brain

People think I'm way younger than I am. :)
Women want me. Men want to be with me.

crazy canuck

The article makes an interesting point about the mindset of many entrepreneurs but misses the point badly when identifying the issue as a generational problem.  The attitude he identifies goes back to at least the 80s and leads into the tech bubble of the 90s.

Also, he fails to observe that the tech giants of today were started by youngings who stuck with in through start up and are now multi billionaires.