Startup Studios – are they a thing?(writing.makeshift.io) |
Startup Studios – are they a thing?(writing.makeshift.io) |
Also allows us to exponentially build our portfolio and spend capital on expanding rapidly into new areas.
After the first few startups you start to get a sense of what your internal process looks like, this allowed us to ship products faster and charge more too.
This all started when I was working on a mobile app startup (single app) with my buddy and looked at him and asked "what if we sold shovels in the gold rush instead of competing in it?"
Best decision we ever made.
I should probably write a blog post.
Very interesting. I'd love to read a blog post about it. What's the name of your company?
It will never matter what you call the office as the terms are arbitrary. Find a place to work and then just work hard. Call it the immaculate teakettle house if you like, just make money while you do it. What is in a name, an office by any other name is still where I code.
(i.e. I feel like I started reading about horsepower and power-to-weight ratio before being told I was reading about a car.)
... Does anyone else know what a "startup studio" is?
Stuff like that for franchises like The Hobbit or the Twilight series can easily last a decade. There was recently an article about how The Shawshank Redemption is still being distributed and is still amassing residuals 20 years down the line[1]. Operations don't stop after opening night.
[1]: http://online.wsj.com/news/articles/SB1000142405270230453610...
Perhaps this structure works best in cultures that have difficulty accepting failure. Moving on to another project when one isn't working out is easier than admitting defeat after the failure of a whole company. It's the same obviously but psychologically it's easier for us.
Generally I have this sneaking intuition that the success of the multiple project approach depends on the size of the market and the type of consumers. It's fairly well accepted that it's harder to start rocket-ship type startups in the UK than it is in the US. Perhaps we are better suited to this approach?
Either way, I like the idea and it seems to be the business version of what more product-focused engineers do in their spare time. I am personally aiming to create a project a year at this point and would like to make them additive too if I can.
This, to me, is companies operating as people.
All for free for county residents :) http://tic.ocls.info/
Also in Orlando - http://starterstudio.com/
If your "studio" is doing design/development work for other companies, that automatically disqualifies you as a startup studio (in my book)