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Why I Stopped Reading Articles about Success

Posted: 22 Apr 2014 06:56 AM PDT

No-SuccessLately, as I’ve been getting all kinds of experiences trying to raise money for my startup the PAR Program, I’ve been thinking a lot about what makes people successful.

Sure I’ve sold a few companies, and I wrote a lot about this topic, but I don’t think there is one single successful person that thinks about this topic when they hit some snags. If you’re trying to hit new level, you’re going to hit new challenges. As a wise man once said “new level, new devil”.

But one thing that really pisses me off are these articles about what makes people “successful”. For example, Techcrunch wrote an article about the “billion dollar club” and the patterns they were able to extract about what made these companies successful.

I don’t read them. Why? Because these articles are basically circle jerks – articles written to please the readers, not to actually tell it like it is.

  • Companies fall somewhat evenly into four major business models: consumer e-commerce, consumer audience, software-as-a-service, and enterprise software.
  • It has taken seven-plus years on average before a "liquidity event" for companies, not including the third of our list that is still private. It's a long journey beyond vesting periods.
  • Inexperienced, twentysomething founders were an outlier. Companies with well-educated, thirtysomething co-founders who have history together have built the most successes
  • San Francisco (not the Valley) now reigns as the home of unicorns.
  • Ninety percent of co-founding teams comprise people who have years of history together, either from school or work; 60 percent have co-founders who worked together; and 46 percent who went to school together.

Remember, this article was written by a venture capitalist who lives in bay area and is writing for tech people, who mostly want to be in tech & in bay area.

But if you were to read this, you would think.

  • oh wait, i’m not that young
  • oh wait, i ain’t in consumer-anything
  • oh wait, i don’t live in SF
  • oh wait, i work alone

Result? You’d think you can’t be part of the billion dollar club.

That’s why I don’t read these articles either. They don’t talk about the one guy toiling away and ends up makeing it. They don’t about that guy in Nebraska building a kick ass marketing software. They don’t talk about anything that doesn’t resemble what they want to see.

I’m not going to lie. When I read these articles, they make me think for a second, “do I have what it takes?”. Then I realize these articles were written not for their true substance, but for entertainment purpose. One of the ways is to give them what they want to read so that they’ll keep reading and buying more of their shit, so that these media companies can sell more ads.

So, I say .. screw them.

Let me tell you a contrary point of view.

1) “You can’t build a huge business without co-founders”

Yeah i would agree that it’s definitely easier to start a company with people. It’s like workign out – your chances of losing weight and getting in shape is exponentially higher when you have a workout buddy that you’re accountable to, not to mention it’s way more motivating.

But at the same time, I wouldn’t necessarily make a prediction that solo founders won’t be successful just because they work alone.

For example:

  • Amazon (Jeff Bezos)
  • Walmart (Sam Walton)
  • eBay (Pierre Omidyar)
  • FedEx (Fred Smith)
  • Spanx (Sara Blakely)
  • PlentyOfFish (Marcus Frind)
  • ClickAgents/BlueLithium (Gurbaksh Chahal)
  • KFC (Harland Sanders)
  • Wendys (Dave Thomas)

Yeah, these guys did alright.

2) “Starting business with your husband/wife/family is a bad idea

VCs are notorious for being anti-family business (here’s why).

I think these families did alright:

  • Cisco Systems (Leonard Bosack & Sandra Lerner)
  • McDonalds (Richard and Maurice McDonald, granted they sold to Ray Kroc)
  • WebMethods ( Phillip & Caren Merrick, acquired by Software AG)
  • Clif Bar & Co. (Gary Erickson and Kit Crawford )
  • Fiji Water (Lynda and Stewart Resnick)
  • VMWare ( Diane Greene and Mendel Rosenblum)
  • Flickr (Stewart Butterfield and Caterina Fake)

Yeah, you get the point.

I don’t know if I would recommend to anyone that they should or should not recruit their family members as co-founders or partners of a company, but think of it this way. What are the odds that your wife/brother/sister would walk away from you when things go bad? Probably not as high as if they were complete strangers, especially if you’re not funded and your personal cashflow isn’t very stable.

3) If you’re not in Silicon Valley or NYC, you have no chance.

If “billion” is about the only measure of success, I would say people outside these two areas did alright:

Ok, you want US? Statistically speaking, Connecticut or Nevada seems like a better choice than California (where all the “innovation” is happening)

By the way.. the richest (or 2nd richest dude) isn’t even American. Carlos Slim Helu lives in Mexico!

What is success to you?

Dollars and cents can’t be the ONLY measure of success because I would classify Nelson Mendela or Mother Theresa (neither of which were “rich” materially) as wildly successful. So I say, go for how YOU define success to be in your own life.

ProBlogger: How To: Customize HTML of New Getty Images for Your WordPress Blog

ProBlogger: How To: Customize HTML of New Getty Images for Your WordPress Blog

Link to @ProBlogger

How To: Customize HTML of New Getty Images for Your WordPress Blog

Posted: 21 Apr 2014 08:40 AM PDT

This is a guest contribution from Bhagwad Park of hostoople.com.

As we discussed last week, Getty Images recently opened up millions of its images for free usage. Coming from a professional stock photo website, this is a phenomenal step and one that will be greatly appreciated by thousands of bloggers all over the world. Most of us have been in the position where we have found a really appropriate picture to use only to find that it is copyrighted and requires a license fee to display. Now we can have access to the best photographs on a dazzling variety of subjects for free. By default, Getty Images provides you with a stock I-frame that displays the image as well as the credits link. What we want is to find a way to properly incorporate it into our WordPress post so that it fits in nicely with our theme and aligns properly.

Getting the Embed Code

The first step is to find an image that is embeddable. Getty Images hasn't opened all of its pictures to the public – just a large fraction of them. So for example if I have initiated a search using the term "blogging", I will get a number of results and I need to figure out which once I can use. To do this, hover your mouse over each of the icons and you will get a pop-up. The ones we're looking for have an "embed" button along the bottom of the picture to the right of all the other icons as shown in the screenshot below.

embeddable

Clicking this icon will bring up the code to display it on your website. It takes the form of an I-frame that you need to insert into the HTML of your document. It comes with a default height and width and you will probably need to change to adjust it to fit your site. Below it, is a checkbox to toggle the image preview on and off. Enabling it will show you how the picture will look.

paste code

Aligning and Resizing the Image

Let's say we want to embed this image in the top left corner of our post. Go to your WordPress visual editor, and enter the HTML editing mode by clicking the "Text" tab on the right-hand side. This will allow you to edit the raw HTML in your content. Paste the copied i-frame code right at the very top as shown in the screenshot below. If you preview your post now, you will see that the image is the very first thing displayed with all of the text underneath it.

code and preview

But what if we want it left aligned so that our text "flows" around the image? To do this, we need to add the following code to our I-frame as an attribute:

align=”left”

Place this immediately after the I-frame tag as shown below:

align left

Now when you preview the image, it will be left aligned with your text appearing to the right of it. But what if we need to reduce the width so that it more easily fits in with the dimensions of our blog post? Let's say we want to reduce it to 300 pixels instead of the default 515. To do this, simply change the "width" attribute in the HTML to the pixel size you require. In our case, we change it to:

width=”300″

This reduces the width but leaves the height intact which is a problem. As shown in the screenshot below, reducing the width without changing the related height attribute will leave a lot of whitespace below the image.

whitespace problem

Changing the height is a matter of trial and error. The Chrome developer tools do a great job of allowing you to experiment with the right height. In my case, I found that 268 is the optimal height. So I changed the related attribute to:

height=”268″

This gives me a left aligned image with perfect dimensions on my blog. Using these simple instructions, you can have the very best pictures suited to your content for free – thank you Getty Images!

Bhagwad Park is a writer for hostoople.com, specializing in WordPress. You can follow him on Google+ here.

Originally at: Blog Tips at ProBlogger
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How To: Customize HTML of New Getty Images for Your WordPress Blog