How To Survive The New Internet Bubble

We're now in the second Internet bubble. Here's how to survive it.

By Steve Blank, contributor

We're now in the second Internet bubble. The signals are loud and clear: Seed and late-stage valuations are getting frothy and wacky, and hiring talent in Silicon Valley is the toughest it's been since the dotcom bubble. The rules for making money are different in a bubble than in normal times. What are they, how do they differ and what can startups do to take advantage of them?

To understand where we're going, it's first important to know where we've been:

Over the last decade, entrepreneurship has come a long way. In the Lean Startup/Back to Basic era it was understood that a startup is a temporary organization designed to search for a repeatable and scalable business model. The concepts of the Agile + Customer Development entered the lexicon as startups learned how to build for success.

Now the rules for building a company are changing again.

Startup exits in the next three years will include IPOs as well as acquisitions. And, unlike the last bubble, this bubble's first wave of public offerings will be companies showing "real" revenue, profits and customers in massive numbers (think Facebook, Zynga, Twitter, LinkedIn, Groupon, etc.).

But, like with all bubbles, these early IPOs will attract companies with less stellar finances, the quality IPO pipeline will diminish rapidly and the bubble will pop. At the same time, acquisition opportunities will expand as large, existing companies, unable to keep up with the pace of innovation in these emerging Internet markets, will "innovate" by buying startups. Finally, new forms of liquidity will emerge such as private-market stock exchanges for buying and selling illiquid assets (e.g., SecondMarket, SharesPost, etc.).

Today's startups have all the tools needed to take advantage of the exit window, due to their short development cycles and abilities to rapidly adopt customers. These are the rules they should keep in mind:

Order of Battle: Each market has a finite number of acquirers, and a finite number of deal-makers, each looking to fill specific product/market holes. So determining who specifically to target and talk to is not an incalculable problem. For a specific startup this list is probably a few hundred names.

Wide Adoption: Startups that win in the bubble will be those that get wide adoption (using freemium, viral growth, low costs, etc.) and massive distribution (i.e. Facebook, Android/Apple App store). They will focus on getting massive user bases first, and let the revenue follow later.

Visibility: During the Lean Startup era, the advice was to focus on building the company and avoid hype. Now that advice has changed. Like every bubble, this is a game of musical chairs. While you still need irrational focus on customers for your product, you and your company now need to be everywhere and look larger than life. Show and talk at conferences, be on lots of blogs, use social networks and build a brand. PR may be your new best friend in the new bubble, so invest in it.

Lessons Learned

Steve Blank is the author of "The Four Steps to the Epiphany," which details his customer development process for minimizing risk and optimizing chances for startup success. A retired serial entrepreneur, Steve teaches at Stanford University, U.C. Berkeley's Haas School of Business and Columbia. His book and a longer version of this story can be found at www.steveblank

um. why is this 'bubble' so much shorter than the golden age or the dot com? NOW we have massive societal penetration and more pervasive communication networks. There are 15 year olds that grew up with Internet since birth. Perhaps the "golden age" hasn't occurred yet... The Gold Rush in 1849 was short lived and bested by 10x when Nevada found their motherlode. This is the printing press, radio, television, telephone rolled into one. And you're calling for the end?

Screen name (Select one with 3-12 characters; Numbers and letters only)

Enter your e-mail address below and we will send you an e-mail with a link and code to reset your password.

E-mail

Already have the reset code?

E-mail

Reset code

New password

E-mail

Password

Forgot password?

Not a member yet?

Screen name

E-mail

Password

Type what you see in the grey box

CNNMoney will use the information you submit in a manner consistent with our Privacy Policy. By clicking on "sign up" you agree with CNNMoney's Terms of Service and Privacy Policy and consent to the collection, storage and use of this information in the U.S. subject to U.S. laws and regulations. (learn more)

This service is temporarily unavailable. Please try again soon.

 

Thanks!

Please check your e-mail and click the link to confirm your membership. Then, you'll be ready to participate in all activities and conversations on our site.

Go to your Profile page

Be the first to know when there is breaking financial news with timely alerts delivered straight to your inbox.

Fortune's Philip Elmer-DeWitt brings you Mac news from outside the reality distortion field.

Fortune columnist Anne Fisher answers your career-related questions.

Money Magazine's Walter Updegrave answers readers' toughest financial questions.

Fortune managing editor Andy Serwer keeps tabs on Wall Street

CNN's Gerri Willis gives tips and tools for saving more and spending wisely.

A complete roundup of each day's trading activity.

Fortune editor at large Pattie Sellers shares fascinating, fun and valuable insights into people who sit at the pinnacle of power.

The companies, deals, and trends in tech that are moving market and making headlines.

Read Full Article »


Comment
Show comments Hide Comments


Related Articles

Market Overview
Search Stock Quotes