Saturday, February 16, 2013

TheSunnyMag: Tesla Vs New York Times and CEO’s Guide to Creative Financing

TheSunnyMagHere goes our weekly magazine of stories curated from around the world. In this edition: Tesla vs. the ‘New York Times’: Cars Are Now Gadgets. The Kind of Capitalist You Want to Be. Are We Suffering From Mobile App Burnout?How Will You Measure Your Life? CEO Tech Guide to Creative Financing and more.

Inc.

Apple vs. Einhorn: Why the Investor Is Suing a Company He Loves

David Einhorn loves Apple. On CNBC and Bloomberg Television appearances, the hedge fund manager described the company as “phenomenal” multiple times. He reiterated that the single largest position his Greenlight Capital holds is a bullish bet on Apple. In a press release, he said the company was “filled with talented people creating iconic products that consumers around the world love.” Einhorn has a cheerful, boyish face, and it almost appeared to pain him that all of this publicity has to do with him suing the company he loves. Greenlight this morning announced a lawsuit intended to return some of Apple’s $137 billion cash horde to shareholders. Slowing growth has led the company’s stock to decline nearly 35 percent since its September high of $702, but Apple reported stratospheric sales in its most recent quarterly filing. Even after issuing a dividend last year, Apple has $145 in cash per share on its balance sheet. That’s a lot. Read more here.

Dell buyout faces opposition

Dell’s largest outside investor on Friday said it would vote against the proposed $24.4 billion deal to take the computer maker private. The shareholder, Southeastern Asset Management Inc., which says it owns approximately 8.5% of Dell’s shares outstanding, voiced its opposition to the leveraged buyout in a strongly-worded letter to the Dell’s board of directors. A copy of the letter was filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission. “We are writing to express our extreme disappointment regarding the proposed go-private transaction, which we believe grossly undervalues the Company,” the letter said. Read this story here. Also read: What opposition means for Dell, problem with management buyouts  and Southeastern’s letter to Dell. The latest on this is that Michael Dell had agreed to value hsi 16% stake in the company at about 2 % below the price offered to other share holders. Read here.

New new world

A Growing App Lets You See It, Then You Don’t: The ephemeral now has value, at least for users of cellphones. More than 60 million photos or messages are sent each day through an app called Snapchat and then, after they are viewed for a few seconds, the missives vanish. That disappearing act — and a volume that is over a tenth of the well-established Facebook’s — has made the tiny start-up a technology hit, amassing millions of users and the backing of some of the most respected names in Silicon Valley, even though it doesn’t make any money. Read more about Snapchat here.

Tesla RoadsterTesla vs. the ‘New York Times’: Cars Are Now Gadgets: Late Wednesday night, Tesla Motors issued its much-anticipated response to a scathing New York Times review of its all-electric Model S sedan. In a blog post, Tesla Chief Executive Officer Elon Musk used data logs gathered from the car to accuse reporter John Broder of outright lies. Broder, for example, complained about freezing inside the car, since he had to turn the heating system off to save electricity and keep driving. Balderdash, says Musk: The data show the cabin had an average temperature of 72F for the majority of the trip. Broder, in a series of posts, has argued that he followed Tesla’s instructions and that the car simply did not handle the cold weather of the Northeast well. He also claims to have been testing not really the Model S itself, but rather the network of free, superfast charging stations Tesla has started putting up around the country. This is how Broder explains away the baffling circumstances in which he didn’t charge the car while spending the night at a hotel. The tit-for-tat squabble is entertaining. Musk’s data-heavy beatdown, especially, is great reading. Read more here.

Entrepreneuring

CEO Tech Guide to Creative Financing: Bloomberg Businessweek talks about revenue based financing and crowdfunding. Mike Glanz, chief executive of HireAHelper, a website for finding help with moving, wanted to hire additional computer programmers to work on an important project. The problem was that he didn’t have money to pay their salaries. Glanz’s options seemed limited. No bank would make a loan to someone whose company wasn’t profitable and who didn’t have collateral. Angel investors would demand too big a stake for a relatively small infusion of cash. The project, he thought, would have to wait. Then Glanz heard about Lighter Capital, a Seattle-based investment firm that offered an unusual type of loan. Instead of paying a fixed amount of interest, borrowers promise a share of future revenue until the debt is satisfied. Most important to Glanz, such loans do not depend on a company’s profitability or collateral. He applied online for a $200,000 loan and was pre-approved within a few minutes. Read more here.

The Kind of Capitalist You Want to Be: John Mackey writes for the Harvard Business Review: Some years ago I was on a panel with other former recipients of Ernst & Young’s Entrepreneur of the Year award. The conversation had moved into the territory of what it really takes to succeed as a business builder. I expressed my deep conviction that business leadership could not be only about maximizing profits for shareholders; it had to deliberately pursue the many other positive impacts good businesses have on their stakeholders. It didn’t take long for the guy next to me to react. “What John just told you,” he announced to the room, “is a load of crap. Business has always been about money, and it always will be.” I could have just dismissed my copanelist as a dinosaur—someone stuck in the tar sands of an old paradigm. But that didn’t seem like it would accomplish anything, and besides, he’s a man I respect in many ways. So I tried to learn how to articulate my beliefs better. Read more here.

When It Pays for the Founder to Take a Break: When computer geek Dustin Snell graduated from high school, he skipped college and went to work making software. In 1995 he founded his first software company and nine years later started his second, Network Automation. As that Los Angeles-based business expanded, he became increasingly eager to “hand it over to more seasoned management,” spend more time with his family, and “get a fresh look at the technology landscape.”

So in 2011, he promoted his chief financial officer to CEO and transitioned to chief software architect, working remotely and using some of his free time to take on a handful of management and technology consulting projects. Snell says the outside work helped him better understand the challenges and opportunities other businesses were facing. More here.

15 Questions That Win New Customers: When you’re having a conversation (or series of conversations) with a potential customer, work these questions into the dialogue. Once you’ve gotten answers, you’ll know exactly what you must do to turn the prospect into a customer.More here.

Gadgetvice

Are We Suffering From Mobile App Burnout? At last count, I had 259 applications on my iPhone. I probably use 16 regularly — including Google Maps, Messages, Twitter for iPhone and Instagram. When I got my first iPhone in late 2008, I couldn’t wait to peruse the App Store for cool new games, neat productivity tools and quirky new social services. In a way, it felt like what television once was, a new kind of inexpensive, readily available entertainment. During those early days, people rushed to download the next new thing, and Apple’s swiftly rising count of the number of applications available was a hallmark of success. The sheer number of apps gave Apple a significant market appeal and a seemingly unbeatable lead over rivals like Android and Research in Motion, who all scrambled to try to recreate those successes.
More here.

8 Point Somethings: If you can hear above the hullaballoo surrounding the Windows 8 launch, you’d know that Windows Phone 8 (WP8) is finally here. But what does this mean to you, especially if you’re considering a smartphone purchase in the next couple of months? Here’s my take on the top 8 things you need to know about Microsoft’s big revamp of the Windows Phone platform for smartphones. More here.

Technicolor

Another Weird Shiny Thing on Mars

The Curiosity Mars rover has found some strange-looking little things on Mars – you’ve likely heard of the Mars ‘flower,’ the piece of benign plastic from the rover itself, and other bright flecks of granules in the Martian soil. Now the rover has imaged a small metallic-looking protuberance on a rock. Visible in the image above (the green lines point to it), the protuberance appears to have a high albedo and even projects a shadow on the rock below. The image was taken with the right Mastcam on Curiosity on Sol 173 — January 30, 2013 here on Earth — (see the original raw image here), and was pointed out to us by Elisabetta Bonora, an image editing enthusiast from Italy. Read more.

Odds of Death by Asteroid? Lower Than Plane Crash, Higher Than Lightning: Most people in the U.S. woke up to a spectacular sight this morning: videos from Russian dashboard cameras showing a fireball in the sky crashing down to the Earth. The 15-meter meteorite impacted the atmosphere and exploded above the Chelyabinsk region of central Russia, injuring an estimated 1,200 people and causing roughly 1 billion rubles ($33 million U.S.) in damage. It was the largest meteorite to hit the country in more than a century. More here.

Lifehack

How Will You Measure Your Life?

In the spring, Harvard Business School’s graduating class asked HBS professor Clay Christensen to address them—but not on how to apply his principles and thinking to their post-HBS careers. The students wanted to know how to apply them to their personal lives. He shared with them a set of guidelines that have helped him find meaning in his own life. Though Christensen’s thinking comes from his deep religious faith, we believe that these are strategies anyone can use. And so we asked him to share them with the readers of HBR. Read Christensen on how to measure your life here.

Make Your Writing Pop: 8 Tips : If you didn’t have to write much before, you sure do now. Writing is pervasive in everything we do. Today’s communication is dependent on tweets, posts, emails, blogs, presentations, profiles, resumes, websites, white papers, case studies, and proposals. Whew! And that’s just for people who don’t write for a living. I swear, my 10th grade English teacher Mrs. Mitchell never said it would be like this! Have no fear! I teamed up with best selling author, and communications expert Sam Horn to help make your writing POP!  More here.

Big picture

Aaron Swartz wanted to save the world. Why couldn’t he save himself? Asks Justin Peters.

On Jan. 4, 2013, Aaron Swartz woke up in an excellent mood. “He turned to me,” recalls his girlfriend Taren Stinebrickner-Kauffman, “and said, apropos of nothing, ‘This is going to be a great year.’ ”Swartz had reason to feel optimistic. For a year and a half, he’d been under indictment for wire and computer fraud, a seemingly endless ordeal that had drained his fortune and his emotional reserves. But he had new lawyers, and they were working hard to find common ground with the government. Maybe they’d finally reach an acceptable plea bargain. Maybe they’d go to trial, and win. “We’re going to win, and I’m going to get to work on all the things I care about again,” Swartz told his girlfriend that day. It’s not that he’d been idle. In addition to his job at the global IT consultancy ThoughtWorks, he’d become a contributing editor to the Baffler, done significant research on how to reform drug policy, and completed about 80 percent of a massive plot summary of the novel Infinite Jest. But Swartz held himself to high standards, and there was always more to do: more books to read, more programs to write, more ways to contribute to the countless projects he’d signed on for. Read more here.


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Happy Snake Year to 360Buy, for Its $700m New Round of Funding in Pocket to Burn

According to Sina, the leading online 3C retailer, 360buy has just confirmed its new round of funding of $700 millions! The news has been confirmed by 360buy today which is the first working day for Chinese after the Chinese new year holiday, so likely, 360buy will be having a happy Snake year.

The news also mentioned that $400m of this new round from Ontario Teachers’ Pension Plan had actually been secured back in November 2012, which gave 360buy $7.25b valuation. Besides Ontario Teachers’ Pension Plan, 360buy now has one more new board member, Kingdom Holdings Company.

Rumor said 360buy was planning its IPO last year, and it was denied by 360buy. Now, 360buy says the new round will be used for new business development and improvement of its logistic system. So we would not see its IPO this year for sure, then the question is obvious, when can we see it? Let me remind you that in early 2011, 360buy’s raised last round, which is $1.5 billion!

Related posts:

  1. Meituan Obtains Eight-digit USD Second Round Funding
  2. Vancl Raised Its 5th Round of Funding at $100millions
  3. 360buy Accused of Unfair Competition by Leyou – 2nd Round of Price War Imminent?


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Qihoo Acquires SaaS Online Security Startup RiZhiBao

Qihoo reportedly just acquired RiZhiBao, a Beijing-based online security startup providing SaaS-based services to give webmasters intuitive and comprehensive understanding of their website operations through insights into weblogs.

In addition to weblogs analysis, RiZhiBao could scan a website to look into any bugs and vulnerability that might lead to hacker attacks. These features made RiZhiBao a popular service among webmasters. Besides, RiZhiBao also provides enterprise-level service that comes with a price tag.

Qihoo, as a matter of fact, already offered up its own webmaster-oriented service dubbed 360 Website Guard (wangzhan.360.cn) with practical offerings like anti-DDOS, anti-hacking, website stats and so forth. The acquisition of RiZhiBao could complement its own service especially on parts of weblog analysis and insights.

No financial details about the deal have been revealed yet.

\

Image credit: Rizhibao.com

Related posts:

  1. Qihoo 360 Unveils B2C Sites Aggregator to Expand Revenue Sources
  2. Leaked Staff Poaching Report of Qihoo 360 Reveals…
  3. Qihoo filed for IPO in the U.S., raising US$200 million


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Sogou Levels up Competition via Soso Takeover?

Latest rumor has it that Sogou was in talks with Tencent about a potential buyout of the latter’s search engine effort Soso.com, which echoes Mr. Wang Xiaochuang’s prior hints that the company would have a bold move on capital after Chinese New Year. The claim was previously interpreted as a signal for the long-awaited IPO for the third largest Chinese search engine which just lost its second place to Qihoo’s up-and-comer So.com search initiative.

Sogou might take over Soso’s desktop search business and then launch an across-the-board consolidation with regards to teams, channels, traffics and strategies between the two entities.

The rumor came at a time when Qihoo’s new So.com kept gobbling up Sogou’s market share, cornered Sogou to the second place in the market with about 7.95% share, according to Chinese market researcher CNZZ’s latest stats. Qihoo’s So.com currently claimed more about 10.5% of the market share, only next to Baidu’s 72%. Since Tencent’s Soso.com holds about 3.5% of the market, the acquisition could push Sogou back to the runner-up position.

In a response to this market speculation, Mr. Wang told local media Phoenix New Media (ifeng.com) that “Sogou doesn’t comment on rumors…we were said to partner with 360 on search before”.

Image credit: Soso.com

 

Related posts:

  1. Soso losing leaders, Qihoo eyeing 20% of search market
  2. Sogou Outruns Google in China by Usage, for the Time Being?
  3. Sogou to Launch Discover Engine Soon, Eyeing 15% Market Share


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TuJia Gets Series B Funding For its Vacation Home Rentals Service, HomeAway Again Joins In

Tujia funding, and HomeAway

After attracting its first major financing in May of last year, the Chinese vacation home rentals startup TuJia has announced today that it has wrapped up series B funding. The startup had not previously revealed financial numbers, but today said that both rounds amounted to RMB 400 million (US$63.7 million) in investment.

TuJia’s series B saw participation from an all-star array of investors: GGV Capital, Lightspeed Venture Partners, CDH Ventures, and Qiming Venture Partners. Plus, China’s biggest travel booking site, Ctrip (NASDAQ:CTRP), contributed funds, along with America’s HomeAway (NASDAQ:AWAY) – as both did in the last round.

The new funding is thought to have been agreed upon before the Chinese New Year holiday, which ended yesterday for most people.

HomeAway recently worked together with its Chinese startup partner, adding a selection of rental properties in some overseas markets onto the TuJia site.

tujia

The TuJia site.

TuJia, which came online in December 2011, says that it now has over 400,000 holiday rental homes in 65 Chinese cities and 45 overseas locations. It focuses on mid-range to high-end properties. The site’s founder has a great deal of experience in online real-estate portals, and has been using this know-how to ensure a steady supply of good apartments and villas on the platform.

We were impressed with TuJia when we first reviewed the site in January of 2012, and our prediction that a lot of funding was about to flow its way is certainly coming true.

With people getting back to work for ‘catch-up’ days this weekend after a lengthy Chinese New Year break, we’ve already seen the e-commerce site 360Buy announce a whopping new $700 million funding round.

(Source: iHeiMa – article in Chinese)

The post TuJia Gets Series B Funding For its Vacation Home Rentals Service, HomeAway Again Joins In appeared first on Tech in Asia.


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China’s 360Buy Unwraps Biggest Ever Funding Round of $700 Million

360Buy funding $700 million

It was only three months ago that 360Buy, China’s second-largest online store, wrapped up $400 million in funding. Today 360Buy has confirmed its biggest ever injection of capital with a fifth round of funding worth $700 million.

It means that 360Buy, which is second in the B2C e-commerce sector in China to Alibaba’s Tmall site, has raised $1.5 billion in its last few rounds, and has now attracted about $2.3 billion since it first got investment back in 2007.

The massive new round saw participation once again from Ontario Teachers’ Retirement Fund (OTPP) along with new input from Riyadh-based Kingdom Holdings, which was founded by Saudi Arabia’s Prince Alwaleed Bin Talal Alsaud.

360Buy’s previous round effectively valued the store at $7.25 billion, but there’s no indication of its current valuation.

360Buy told Chinese media that the newest financing will be used to bolster day-to-day operations, as well as to build up its fledgling logistics service.

CEO and founder Liu Qiangdong has indicated in the past that 2013 was likely a good time for an IPO, but it’s not clear if the new investment would delay that timeline.

China’s e-commerce sector is marked by a ferocious burn rate for companies, as well as vicious price wars. 360Buy has diversified into a few areas where monetizing is a bit simpler in the past few months, such as by shipping some products to overseas customers, and launching an online music store within China.

(Source: iHeiMa – article in Chinese)

The post China’s 360Buy Unwraps Biggest Ever Funding Round of $700 Million appeared first on Tech in Asia.


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Can I Courier Myself home this Diwali? and other IRCTC Jokes!

irctcThe Indian Railway ticketing website is a source of mystery. Of agony. Of pain, of happiness, of misery for millions of Indians trying to book tickets on the site. Of victory of the lucky few who manage to book a ticket. But we learn to live with it and at times make fun of it. Even if it is like this only. Here are some of the funny tweets on IRCTC we curated for you. Take a look:

  • Dear Sachin, scoring Century against Railways is not a big deal – Try booking a Ticket in IRCTC once. @Joydas
  •  A lot of people think IRCTC’s tagline is ‘This webpage is not available’ – @coolfunnytshirt
  • We are against reservation. – @abcdefu
  • The real competition in India is not seen during IITJEE, CAT or UPSC. It’s seen every morning at 10am – @NirvaanBaid
  • The most valid excuse for coming late to office. A team mate emailed – ‘Booking ticket on IRCTC. Will be a bit late- @ NamanSr
  • Dear Arvind Kejriwal, I would vote for you in the coming elections if you fix IRCTC website – #IRCTC website
  • IRCTC- India’s favorite massively multi-player online adventure game (Via Twitter)
  • “Mental disorder is 2nd most common cause of suicide in India. 1st is “Trying to book tickets on IRCTC website” [@sachin_pbs]
  • When it comes to queuing up, IRCTC / Indian Railways can beat Apple any day! –  @beingpractical
  • Why Advani Ji prefer his own “Rath” over “IRCTC”- @HazirJawab
  • Qn:How to test browser speed? A: Try opening IRCTC.* *Plug in power source to your laptop before attempting this – @msiroya
  • Maybe I should start walking to my hometown rather than waiting to get log on in IRCTC to book ticket:) – @vambukku

Turtle: Nothing is slower than me! Snail: Lol you sure?

Internet Explorer: BITCH PLEASE..

IRCTC : Awaaz Niche!! ;) – @SumantKumar

  • Dear Blue Dart and DHL, this Diwali, can I courier myself to my home? Sincerely, IRCTC hater.
  • What if IRCTC is actually promoting ticket less travel? – @agarwalriya

Recommended Read : Five things IRCTC ticketing site must fix: A geek’s wishlist for IRCTC/Indian Railways


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Tech in Asia: News Of The Week [February 16, 2013]

techinasia news of the week

So most of the team is finally coming off of New Years break. Here in Ho Chi Minh city most people are still coming out of the lazy holiday haze and people will officially start break on Monday. Despite the lull, looks like there’s been quite a lot of interesting news this week.

Minh’s pick: Tokyo becomes Asia’s first YouTube space location

Actually, I would have picked Pakistan’s incubator but Willis beat me to it, so I gotta pick Youtube’s entrance into Japan. I think this will be interesting given that Japan already has several video sharing websites like Nico Nico Douga, which already cater to Japanese video sensibilities. On the other hand, with Youtube’s first studio in Asia, we’ll be seeing more Asian content besides Gangnam style on the interwebs.


Willis’s pick: Plan9 – Pakistan’s first tech startup incubator

I’m picking my own story for the first time because I do believe that Pakistan seems to be going in the right direction with its very first tech startup incubator. There’s potential in the country, at least based on numbers: over 176 million in total population, 30 million internet users, and 16 million mobile internet users. Not too bad. Disclosure: I haven’t visited Pakistan myself before, so take my opinion with a pinch of salt.


Steven’s pick: WeChat moves towards monetization, beta-testing new features for brands

We’ve already seen the China-made WeChat app add support for brands having official accounts that anyone can follow (sort of like on Twitter), and now it’s looking to go much further than that. The next stop might be WeChat moving into mobile payments for in-store purchases.


Charlie’s pick: Brad Pitt banned from China again

OK, so this probably isn’t actually the most important tech news from this week, but I’m picking it anyway because it’s sort of funny (poor Brad Pitt) and it’s another window into the way Sina Weibo actually works.


Enricko’s pick: Lessons in monetizing apps and games in smartphone-mad Korea and Japan INFOGRAPHIC

This article offers a very nice and insightful data for developers vying to reach the Japanese and Korean markets. With both nations having overtaken the US in terms of Android market size, as well as having pleasing ARPU’s, developers should start considering saying hello to those markets, if they haven’t done so already.

The post Tech in Asia: News Of The Week [February 16, 2013] appeared first on Tech in Asia.


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Mobile video ads yield better results than TV and other media

Tapjoy Screenshot VideoMobile videos are more engaging and effective than content broadcast over TV or watched over the Internet through a desktop device, says a recent Nielsen study.

Mobile devices are increasingly replacing other media in terms of access to rich content. While we used to be couch potatoes staring at the TV screen all day, now we’re couch potatoes staring at the smartphone or tablet on our hand. And it’s not just on the couch where we consume media, but just about anywhere — at work, on the train, while stuck in traffic and more.

Given these trends, it’s probably that rich content is also now increasingly becoming more effective in these media than elsewhere. A recent Tapjoy-commissioned research by Nielsen has found proof that mobile video yields better results than TV and other media. In gist, the following are found to be the benefits of mobile ads, mostly relating to Tapjoy’s mobile ad platform.

  • Mobile ads demonstrated a 48% brand recall, compared with 22% with TV and 21% online.
  • Mobile ads result in higher brand likeability at 22%, compared with 11% for TV and 12% for online ads.
  • A significant amount of the mobile users surveyed say they are likely to seek out additional information (16%) than TV (6%).

See also: Optimizing for a new mobile platform? Don’t get discouraged, says Tapjoy’s Chris Akhavan

Meanwhile, in a study that involved a theatrical movie screening, the mobile push was seen to have had a positive impact on awareness:

  • 274% higher awareness compared with other media;
  • 34% more favorable opinion on the film;
  • 150% better tagline recall; and,
  • 164% plot recall.

“Brands looking for stronger brand affinity and recall with consumers can use the Mobile Value Exchange model as option to reach them when and where they are most receptive to advertising,” said Tapjoy chief marketing officer Peter Dille, citing the company’s Mobile Value Exchange model, in which mobile users are rewarded with virtual currency or premium in-app items in exchange for watching mobile videos.

Dille has stressed that “mobile has already surpassed TV commercials and online videos” when it comes to user engagement. The study highlights that mobile videos are a viable and effective advertising alternative to TV, online videos and other marketing media. While the study involved an automotive brand and a theatrical presentation of a movie, the trend is likely to be similar in other branding campaigns, too. Tapjoy has found similar trends in the telecommunication business and financial services.

If you want better engagement from your online and social media presence, perhaps rich content — such as movies, animation and other interactive content — will be effective in catching your users’ attention, especially on mobile devices.

The post Mobile video ads yield better results than TV and other media appeared first on e27.


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Pi Of Life : Break Free From To-Do Lists

To DoThere are to do lists, and even more to do lists. There is pen and paper, spreadsheets, desktop, online mobile apps of every kind that promise productivity and the ability to finally keep track and prioritize. You move from the current one to the next, mesmerized by a small feature in one, a wonderfully easy user experience in the other. You’ve tried RTM, and the whole set of tools around GTD, and Asana, and Do.com, and even Google Calendar!

Do They Work?

Eventually, and pretty much always, it comes to naught, doesn’t it? For most of us, most of the time, at least.

Let me share some common reactions from a straw poll we did for this:

“No they never work :(“

“I dont even make them. ‘Panic’ is what works” :)

“When i have a lot to do, i tend to lose track. So i make a to-do list on my laptop and look at it occasionally.”

“I tried. What works is letting the most important priority bubble up.”

You get the drift. Right?

Of course, for some the tools do work, especially in the context of team-wide collaboration. However, that is a very different use case, and by and large, most feel defeated by the lists when it comes to personal productivity.

This is even worse for entrepreneurs. Why?

For starters, you don’t just have “tasks”. You have tasks for the immediate must-dos. You have networking to catch up on. You have many ideas at different stages of their lives. You have thoughts you want to discuss with you co-founder, mentor, investor. You have many good reads you’ve bookmarked. You also have accounts, recruiting, admin and even personal stuff to get done.

And everyday, you add many many more of these.

A typical to-do list approach would merely add a dozen new things to the list and you’d get 3 or 4 done everyday. Imagine the manageability of a list like that. Imagine its impact on your morale. And imagine its real utility, and useful lifetime.

So what’s the way out? Yes, priorities do bubble up, one way or the other, but that would mean you’re always catching up and reacting. Proactive stuff will pretty much never find time or mindspace.

Enter “Got Done Lists”. With a twist.

Many have used these, and swear by the Got Done Lists. The positive reinforcement it creates is a huge win, and helps you track and analyze your work and productivity patterns very well. Every day, you actually remind yourself of what you accomplished, and its a good health check for the next day.

What can really help is following this in the context of goals.

After all, as a startup, you do not follow a particularly set path or have a neatly defined workday. Serendipity is an important part of your life, and the unexpected and unplanned often leads to a major movement forward. There is a fair bit of randomness to your plans, work, meetings and this chaos is not just a fact of of life, but crucial to a startup getting somewhere!

What’s important is to have a set of goals – both individually and organizationally – at any point of time. These should be clear enough not only inside your head, but put down on a whiteboard, or a wiki, or a piece of paper. And everyday, or at least every other day, your effort needs to add up to move forward with respect to at least one of these goals.

So as you jot down what you got done, also try and write down which goal it help or might help, and its impact. Also manage an overall goal-wise effort list. This will help you track effectiveness, not just busy-ness. And automatically point out course corrections as needed. If you’ve been attending one meetup or event too many, it’ll show up on the list, and remind you to do something about the other goals as well.

And most importantly, you’ll get focused on what you are doing, can and should do, rather than get into a guilt and regret trap that the undone stuff on a typical to-do list usually set up for you.

Start right away. Its easy, and feels good.


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DailyDose: Posterous To Shut Down On April 30 & Google to Open Own Stores

Asteroid

Image: Wiki

DailyDose: Your everyday technology news brief is here. In today’s edition: Posterous will shut down on April 30, Google will open its own stores by the end of the year, LinkedIn overhauls its jobs service with a fresh design and better discovery features and more.

Posterous will shut down on April 30: On April 30th, we will turn off posterous.com and our mobile apps in order to focus 100% of our efforts on Twitter. This means that as of April 30, Posterous Spaces will no longer be available either to view or to edit. More here. Co-Founder Garry Tan has launched Posthaven To Save Your Sites.

Asteroid Passes Earth as UN Mulls Monitoring Network: An asteroid half the size of a U.S. football field passed within an astronomical hair’s breadth of Earth today in the closest such encounter in a century. The asteroid, called 2012 DA14, came within 17,200 miles (27,350 kilometers) of Earth at 2:25 p.m. Washington time, over Indonesia. More here.

Google will open its own stores by the end of the year: An extremely reliable source has confirmed to us that Google is in the process of building stand-alone retail stores in the U.S. and hopes to have the first flagship Google Stores open for the holidays in major metropolitan areas. More here.

Intel Wins X2Y Patent Case Said to Threaten U.S. Jobs: Intel Corp. won a patent- infringement case some U.S. lawmakers said could have threatened jobs at the chipmaker’s U.S. manufacturing plants. More here.

Facebook says it was a target of sophisticated hacking: Facebook Inc said on Friday it had been the target of an unidentified hacker group, but it found no evidence that user data was compromised. More here.

Next Sony PlayStation to Stream Games: Sony Corp. is planning to offer technology to stream games to its next videogame console, people familiar with the company’s plans say, alongside other enhancements to bolster its position in the market. More here.

LinkedIn overhauls its jobs service with a fresh design and better discovery features: LinkedIn has unveiled an updated LinkedIn Jobs service that it says will make searching much easier to use and more relevant to its members. It expects this update to be rolled out to its 200 million members around the world. More here.

 


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