Entrepreneur Meetup

We had a great meetup with some really interesting attendees. Much animated discussion that, oddly enough, just happened to coincide with topic I sent out on the agenda: creative marketing.

Attendees

  • Bego Gerber: is an independent business development agent working on a “pro-sumer” (as opposed to consumer) product that enables individuals to buy directly by from companies at wholesale prices, as well as receive rebates on the products they purchase. (You’ll need a password for his web site: ebiz)
  • Phil Johnson: is a musician working fulltime to promote both his band, Roadside Attraction, and the band’s record label, Dangerous Grooves.
  • Anthony Ettinger: is a software engineer who has two side projects – a politics-focused discussion site called It’s All Politics, and a search engine optimization site called Top 25 Web. He’s looking for ways to turn these resources into a steady revenue stream.
  • Brendon Wilson: is a product manager at PGP.

Topics Discussed

  • The majority of the conversation centered on the creative marketing techniques being used by the attendees to find new customers for their products. On the personal side, Bego uses the personal touch to spot potential customers and business partners; for example, wouldn’t that smartly-dressed woman in the line at Starbucks with her child, obviously going to work, like another income stream that would allow her to stay at home with her child? For Anthony’s business, most of the new “customers” for his come to him via Google or other web sites, and so the challenge for him is to stimulate enough interest via valuable content to encourage linking that will drive traffic. In the world of rock’n’roll, Phil and his band are using a combination of sampler CDs (one of which he provided to each attendee), surveys, and email lists to not only get his band’s music out there, but also understand the audience for their music; particularly interesting is his band’s use of email – after a show, they send an email to all concert attendees, inviting them to download the MP3s of the live show. Great stuff on all sides.
  • Some of the conversation focused on how to enable consumers themselves to generate the value of the product. For example, Anthony has been toying with the idea of releasing his partially completed search engine optimization book via a Wiki on his web site, thus enabling his community to flesh out the book and add value to his site. For Phil, a similar effort using message boards on his band’s web site met with limited success due to a flood of comment spam/inappropriate content that limited the usefulness of the effort.
  • Many thoughts on the difficulty of “rising above the noise”. As more access to technology enables anyone to publish music, software, or other content, how do you get your message out there and gain an audience? This group’s opinion appears to be that the only way to succeed in this environment will be for entrepreneurs to build a core committed audience, one that will closely follow the artist’s work and spread the word of what they’re doing, not simply because they’re the “hot new fad”, but more because their is a strong bond between the audience and the artist that transcends the commercial nature of the artist’s work.

Interesting Books, Movies, and Events

Kickin’ At The Lick

Ashley and I headed up the deadly winding road to the top of Mount Hamilton last evening to visit the Lick Observatory – we’d won tickets to participate in the observatory’s Summer Visitors Program. Normally, the observatory is only open during the day, but the Summer Visitor Program invites visitors to view the stars through the 40-inch and 36-inch telescopes and listen to some of the observatory’s staff talk about the history of the observatory, and the research it is currently undertaking.

We managed to catch both the science lecture by Dr. David Koo, and the history lecture by Dorothy Schaumberg, curator of the Lick Observatory Archives. Dr. Koo’s lecture focused on how cosmologists are currently struggling to understand the nature of dark matter and dark energy. To be honest, I’m not sure I understood either of them any better after the lecture – the main thing I took out of Dr. Koo’s talk was that the history and knowledge of the human race are insignificant when compared with the scale on which the universe operates.

Dorothy’s lecture on the history of the Lick Observatory started with background on James Lick, a famed local entrepreneur who left the money required to create the observatory. Dorothy gave a lively account of the man’s life and times, culminating in Lick being buried in the base of the 36-inch telescope at the Lick Observatory, and then traced through the history of the astronomers who made their names at the observatory. Of particular note: the fifth moon of Jupiter, Amalthea, discovered by Edward Barnard on his first night using the telescope.

After the lectures, we were treated by the telescopes of both the Lick Observatory and a number of amateur astronomers to views of M11 (The Wild Duck Cluster), M31 (The Andromeda Galaxy), M57 (The Ring Nebula), and M17 (The Swan Nebula).

Bummer of the evening: running over a rock two minutes out of the Lick Observatory parking lot, puncturing our car’s front left tire. D’oh!