Startup Company, Everybody Have To Start Somewhere

Wednesday, October 8th, 2008, By
Filed under: Featured Headline Online Business

Google, Yahoo!, Facebook, Friendster, Myspace…

Nama-nama besar ini semuanya dimulai dari sesuatu yang kecil, a start up company. Sama seperti manusia, perusahaan besar harus memulai segala sesuatunya seperti siklus kehidupan, memulai segalanya dari sebuah kelahiran. Kelahiran sebagai sebuah start-up company, perusahaan yang baru saja didirikan, dalam masa perkembangan dan pencarian pasar. Masa depan masih agak belum pasti, bisa sangat sukses atau malah terpuruk. 

Di tahun 1998 Google juga mengalami kelahiran menjadi sebuah start up company, dengan hanya 5 orang pegawai (di luar Larry and Sergey). Sekarang Google sudah merayakan 10 tahun karir perusahaan dengan lebih dari 20.000 pegawai. How was Google as a startup company? Di masa awalnya itu, sebuah koran Jerman, Stern, berhasil mewawancarai dynamic duo yang mendirikan Google ini:

 

How did Google start?

Larry: Basically I started doing my Phd. research on the link structure of the Web, about 3 1/2 years ago. And then I got other people interested; Sergey started working on this soon after. 

Sergey: I was at the time working on data mining.

Larry: We’re both Phd. students at Stanford, computer science. We’re taking a leave-of-absence. It just seemed like this was a really good opportunity. Craig [Silverstein, Google employee no. 1] and I have very little left to do, but the world doesn’t wait.

 

Was it difficult to find funding?

Sergey: Basically, we talked to our advisers and other faculty whom we knew. And they just pointed us to other people. Pretty soon, we had investors, we had a lawyer, we had everything that we needed. We got more money than expected. We worked on a business plan for a little bit, but we were basically never even asked for it. Recently we got an e-mail from one of our investors saying, “Oh, do you guys have a business plan? I don’t think I ever saw one.”

Larry: To be fair: We told these guys what we wanted to do and they asked us good questions and they know enough to know what we’re doing.

Sergey: This is based on three years of research. We have a running prototype.

Larry: And we’ve had a lot of contact with the people in the industry. It’s not like we were random students walking in saying, “Hey, we would like some money!”

Sergey: Everybody who we talked to wanted to invest. No exceptions. Now, we get probably 5 to 10 e-mails every day [from potential investors]. We collect their names. We’ll have to decide [at some point] what we want to do. It’s not necessarily that sensible to have hundreds of smaller investors rather than a few big ones.

 

Where do you see yourselves in, say, five years from now?

Sergey: That’s a long way down the sea. There are a lot of benefits for us, aside from potential financial success. The experience, for example. If we want to start another company at some point, that would be fairly easy because we have all the contacts in the industry. Also, it’s been very exciting. I really enjoyed being a Phd. at Stanford, but at Google, we do lots of really different things involved in setting up a company. We take care of very many things you don’t get to see if you’re just purely focused on creating technology.

There’s one more important thing, and that’s to bring what we’ve done to the world. That’s very exciting, too, of course. And we think this does have a potential to really change things forever.

Larry: That’s one of my personal goals. Search engines play a really important role in people’s lives, determining what information they get to look at. You really want to trust the people that are doing that for you.

For both of us, that’s been a strong reason why we started the company, is to say: We think we can do a better job doing this, and that’s an important thing to do for the world. 

 

Do you ever consider the risks?

Larry: Silicon Valley is a little bit different. There’s not so much risk to us. If you fail in starting your company, you’re actually more fundable. You may have failed for some reason not involving yourself at all, just [due to] some random factors.

Sergey: The main risk is really our time. We’re working much, much harder than we would in a normal job. It’s not a 40 hour a week job.

We’ve been trying to cut down. When we started we’d be working upwards of 12 hours a day, six days a week. But be have been trying to cut down, because we think this isn’t necessarily most productive. We try hard to take at least one of the weekend days off, and at times both or at least portions of both.

Larry: Web companies especially are like 24 hour businesses. You just have to keep things running. When something breaks it needs to be fixed right away. So there are demands, I think, even beyond normal start-ups. Sergey: Anyway, we’re trying to push it down below 60 hours.

 

What’s the main part of your work?

Sergey: There are more main parts than we care to have. We try to offload as much as we can to our employees [but] we still do a lot of lower-level programming.

Then, we spend a lot of time talking to people in other companies and to VCs, any kind of strategic contact. And we need to do some kind of high-level strategic planning for the company.

The other thing we do, by the way, is, taking out the garbage, bringing food for people, making sure we have the phone lines, ordering computers, taking care of the “everything else” category.

Starting Monday, we’ll have 6 full-time employees. This week we have 5, last week we had 4. I think it’s going to keep growing at that pace for a while.

 

At some point, the goal is the IPO …?

Larry: Of course, yeah.

Sergey: There are several possible places where we can take Google. One is to get bought out. After that, we’d still continue to work on it. The other possibility is the IPO. I think it would be much more exciting for us to make Google stand on its own. But both are possibilities.

 

Do your investors talk about a day when they expect to earn their money back?

Sergey: Not really. I mean, they talk about schedules to IPO. That’s when they can cash out. But in terms of actually becoming a profitable company and eventually paying dividends or something like that – people don’t bother talking about that, that’s very far down the line.
It certainly doesn’t make sense to try to become profitable tomorrow and stay small, rather than keep spending the money and capture ten times as much market share.

Larry: Clearly, if you’re providing a service to the whole world, you have to have a fairly big company.

 

Do you generate any revenue at the moment?

Sergey: You caught us at an interesting time. Right now, we’re thinking about generating some revenue. We have a number of ways to doing that. One thing is we can put up some advertising. The key there is to put up advertising that will be really useful to our users and not slow down our site. That way we won’t push people away from our site, but we’ll still take in some revenue. Another way would be co-branding. Provide the back-end search engine to other sites.

 

How do you see Google develop? At some point, do you see yourselves on par with AltaVista, Excite, all these other established search engines?

Sergey: I would say no. We want to be on par with Yahoo, or Amazon, AOL. AltaVista, Excite and [the others] are by no means viewed as the winners. There’s no question, we want to be number one in market share in terms of search. And I think we can do that in not so long. Past that, it’s really hard to predict. There’s really no reason to set our sights low. If you do things right you can make a big jump over everybody else.

 

See, all company have to start somehere. And now you know about Google as a start up company. They even have a start up name card. So my advice is: just start your own company now, every company is a startup company when they started the business.
Source: www.ubergizmo.com
Rama‘s Think:
Yes! intinya adalah MULAI.
Banyak sekali orang yang takut untuk memulai usaha, ada yang ngambil S2 dulu dengan dalih belum cukup ilmu, ada yang nggak mulai-mulai karena ngumpulin modal dulu. Well, percaya apa nggak yang namanya ilmu & uang nggak akan pernah cukup untuk menjadi modal.
Yang dibutuhin cuman MULAI.
Bisa dimulai dari yang sangat kecil, dengan menjalankan sesuatu sesuai dengan passion nya. Tetap ingat harus continue dan ada goal nya. Dan tentukan saat dimana untuk ‘naik kelas’.
Sejauh kita punya passion, punya pengetahuan dan bisa membayangkan masalah serta kira-kira solusi nya itu artinya kita siap.
Dan kadang memang harus memanfaatkan momentum, misal saat punya keinginan untuk membuktikan, saat sudah merasa jengah dengan pekerjaan yang dilakukan, atau ya saat bertemu dengan orang yang tepat untuk diajak berpartner.

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