Video Playback: Power of One (redux)

Since the Power of One event, we've been asked by a lot of people whether we have plans to make a movie of the day. Fortunately, as we live streamed the event, we were able to capture the whole thing in beautiful HD.

And so, for those who want to watch again, or for anyone who wasn’t able to make it to our first Power of One event, please find below all the videos of the speakers, edited so you can also see their slides.

Enjoy!

The videos

Jason Calacanis talks about the awesome time we live in and the opportunity for technology entrepreneurs and start ups to disrupt.

Sam Ramji talks about how API's are like Darwin's Finches.

David McCandless talks through some of the most powerful and unusual insights revealed by representing data and information in graphical form.

The media panel, chaired by Charles Arthur of The Guardian with Stuart Dredge, Tim Green and Ewan MacLeod.

Yosi Taguri talking about why he's unafraid of failure (and has failed at everything he's ever tried).

Richard Kramer talks through the start ups he meets, largely in mobile technology, and attempts to uncover which ones will be profitable and which ones have inventions that will work.

The investor panel, chaired by Elizabeth Varley with participants from Jason Calacanis, Hugo de los Santos Real, Carlos Eduardo and Tyler Crowley.

Morten Lund inspires start-ups to give. It. All.

iHi is a simple but addictive and impressive iPhone, Android and iPad application for getting your message across.

Guest interviews at the Power of One in Battersea Power Station on 11.11.11

More interviews with guests at The Power of One Battersea Power Station 11.11.11

 

The Power of One: an event built from the ground up

This blog post has been cross-posted from the BlueVia blog

So, we did it.

Six months planning, two months telling friends, not a spot of advertising and no hint that BlueVia was behind the whole thing.  The Power of One was a different type of event altogether.  A day to celebrate the start-up culture that’s turned the world of technology upside down.

It had first been promoted via Twitter.  Later, we spread the word through our network of friends.  We used a little bit of arm twisting to get things done like the awesome augmented reality flying pig (because yes, sometimes they do).  And in the end, the word spread further than we’d ever hoped.

An unusual gathering

The result was an unexpectedly intimate event held in a tented area dwarfed by the ersatz splendour of Battersea Power Station.  The setting offered a stark reminder that the monolithic companies of old are in decline and start-ups now driving innovation.

This surely was a gathering characterised by contradictions.

The speakers we invited were a mix of the world famous and the up and coming, truly representing the spirit of the Power of One.  Jason Calacanis, Morten Lund and David McCandless gave their stock-in-trade honest, off the cuff and inspirational perspectives on how ideas spread and start-ups catch fire.  Yosi Taguri (developer of cult mobile game Pah!) and Stuart Arnott of Scottish startup Mindings were probably new names to most people but their perspectives were perhaps the most valid, given the people listening.

Everyone had a story to tell.  Collectively, they told a story of both inspiration and hard hours.  And in the end, the few hundred who made the trip to the banks of the fast-flowing Thames were united in one view: tomorrows giants may have been right there among us in that ancient turbine hall.  We may never know for sure but we heard some extraordinary ideas on the day, so we’ll be looking out for them.

The point of the Power of One was about a single message: that in today’s ultra-connected world, anyone can create the next big thing.

Power of One in numbers

  • Zero – the number of dollars spent on advertising
  • Two – the number of minutes silence respected for the Armistice
  • 350 – the number of people who turned up because they heard about the event on the grapevine
  • 50,000 – the number of words tweeted about #p1event on 11.11.11

We’re truly excited about the fact that BlueVia was able to pull together something so big without anyone questioning it..  We had moments of self-doubt; would people come, could we find the right speakers, could we find an awesome venue.  We feel completely vindicated, if not a little exhausted! The sense of positivity at the event came from the fact that people were really just there to meet, talk and listen.

There was no sales pitch.

And that leaves us looking ahead.  We’re considering what the future holds for Power of One.  We loved it.  We think everyone who came along loved it.  So we want to know from you whether there is an appetite there is for future Power of One events.  Please help us by answering these questions (there are only three!) or in the comments below.

As they often say at the end of blog posts like this... watch this space.

Photos courtesy of Mark Power and James Parton

Five rules for a successful startup

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This post is based on an interview with Richard Kramer, managing director Arete. Richard is speaking at the Power of One in London on 11.11.11. In case you 

Success can’t easily be reverse engineered. Some people figure out the formula and repeat it, becoming serial entrepreneurs. Some never learn the trick. Some come close again and again. Some die trying.

But some, who have negotiated the tricky road themselves, turn their experience into valuable advice. For them, helping others to decode the formula for their own success is a vocation.

Richard Kramer is one of these.

“Over the past decade and a half, I’ve witnessed just about every approach to starting up a tech business you can imagine,” says Richard.

“Some start-ups have been huge successes. It’s still hard to believe Jimmy Wales has managed to capture the imagination of hundreds of thousands of people around the world to create something as plain as an encyclopaedia. But he communicated a simple vision and the people came in their droves.”

After four years as the number one rated technology analyst in Europe, Richard left his role as head of technology research at Goldman Sachs to form the first - and still only - independent technology research group in Europe.

His credo is a refreshingly candid rejection of the establishment.

Unlike other analysts, Arete has no conflicts of interest preventing their telling the truth about technology. After the scandals surrounding deceptive and poor quality analysis, Arete found an increasing demand for its independent views on telecoms, software, semis and services.

For Richard, the next big growth area is mobile. “Internet penetration used to be the stat of the day for economists and entrepreneurs”, he states. “Now it’s mobile penetration, particularly when you take into account those exciting high-growth emerging markets, where the populations are leapfrogging the desktop internet.”

So what can mobile developers do to give themselves the best chance of success? This is what Richard is looking forward to discussing with the start-ups at the Power of One on 11.11.11.

Even if success can’t easily be reverse engineered, when you work with hundreds of start-ups you pick up some essential rules of thumb that can help others find their own route. Here, then, are Richard Kramer’s five rules for start-up entrepreneurs.

We can’t guarantee these are all you need to know if you’re planning your own start-up. But you will ignore them at your peril!

1. Passion comes from people

Ask yourself this: what makes you passionate about a business? It’s a deceptively benign question and it has fundamental implications.

The answer to this question explains why small businesses are fundamentally more creative than big businesses. And it explains why the technology sector has become a hotbed of start-up activity in recent years, leaving the big businesses struggling to keep up.

“However you cut it, what makes people passionate about a business is, well, the people,” states Richard, bluntly.

“The businesses you care about are almost certainly the ones you can name the people who run it, or perhaps recognise their faces. Even if you don’t know those people personally, if you can empathise with them, it makes it far easier to care.

“Imagine someone asks you to recommend a good coffee shop in the neighbourhood you live in. You’re going to want to suggest a local independent way sooner than the local Starbucks. We all like Starbucks and it’s managed to offer customers a great place to hang out, drink coffee and hook up to wifi.

“But we wouldn’t be proud to recommend Starbucks in the way we would the small independent. Why? Because the local guy who’s running his own show, he’s the reason we get passionate about the business. It’s the people. And if you extend this to your staff, investors and customers, it’ll be easier for them all to get into your idea when you’re small and your business is still all about the people.”

2.Small is beautiful

Richard has a simple rule about size: “small things are simpler”.

“Whatever you want to do,” he says, “it will be easier if you’re doing it at a small scale.”

If you want to launch a new app, it’s better to focus on usability and design than filling in the forms to secure the release of internal development funding and completing weekly project status update reports. But that’s how life can turn out for a developer in a big organisation.

In a small place, the thinking can be more purely focused on getting the app right. And that leads to better, more successful apps.

3. Ignore commentators

Start-up entrepreneurs should focus on their business and not take too much notice of what’s going on in the wider economy.

“The economy is growing. The economy is shrinking. What does this mean for a mobile start-up? Nothing,” says Richard. “I’ve run a business through upturns and downturns and can say for certain that the economic climate isn’t something you should use as a factor in your planning. It will affect your business – the availability of funding, the services and apps people and companies want to buy, how much disposable income consumers have: these are all affected by the economy.”

The answer as a start-up is to be flexible, and alive to changes in demand, changes in availability of funding; not to pretend you can predict the economy.

“Who can honestly tell you what the economic cycle will be in a year? If you know the answers to this, become an economist, not a mobile developer. You’ll be a billionaire soon enough!”

4. Build your business around its core values

Sounds obvious, doesn’t it, to say that a developer should construct her business around making great apps? But it’s easily forgotten, especially as you grow.

Once you experience even moderate success, suggests Richard, the growth you experience demands your start-up take a new shape. “You’ll need finance people, HR people, marketing people: all those people that are the norm in big businesses. But that’s when you’ll lose your focus.”

He reveals a fundamental problem: turning great ideas into great apps just isn’t that scalable a businesses. If you manage to develop one great app with a small team, it doesn’t follow that if you scaled up, you could create a thousand great apps with a team a thousand times bigger.

When you find success, repeat the success you have had. Stay small and agile. “Big companies may build a division of 10,000 app developers,” muses Richard, “but they won’t stand a chance against the right small team with the right idea and the right focus.”

5. Pitch to your end users

Richard believes tech start-ups are closer than ever to the people who will use the product of their labour. He casts his mind back, “the success of small developers was once based on big tech companies. If you were the small guy, you’d pitch your ideas to a big company, hoping it would take them and help you market your product or service.”

“Today, all the app stores and the growth of social media mean that you can pitch yourself straight to your end customer. This is a seismic change and one that developers have been among the fastest to grasp.

This is probably the biggest single factor, he says, in the emergence of the small giants. These are “the companies who are taking over the world with teams numbering dozens or, at most, hundreds. A decade ago, even five years ago, it’s unlikely they would have been able to reach the mass market by themselves.”

“But the market itself has changed. People are no longer tasteless consumers. Teenagers don’t sit in their bedrooms absorbing TV anymore; they sit in their bedrooms connecting with each other”, says Richard. They are sharing ideas, cracking problems, whether it’s a computer game or protests against the economic system.

“Harnessing this potential has been another way for small teams of people to create huge products and services. Look back a few years at how services like Trip Advisor, LinkedIn, YouTube and Wikipedia were built and spread,” says Richard, getting passionate, “these are, for me, the real heroes of the past decade.”

Those developers who are able to spot similar opportunities for getting users hooked on creating content, becoming the editors of a service or providing trustworthy information; these are the ones closest to reverse engineering Richard’s favourite formula for success.

Richard Kramer will be sharing his experience at the Power of One on 11.11.11

A very rare chance to win.... dinner with @Jason and @ML

Battersea_power_station

At some tech events, the speakers are treated like royalty, while the punters fight for the best seats.

The Power of One, taking place at Battersea Power Station on 11.11.11, isn’t like that.

On the contrary, we want to completely break down the them-and-us feeling that you often get. We want to encourage our speakers to meet the people eye to eye and answer the deepest questions about their entrepreneurial success.

So we’re giving you the chance to have dinner all the speakers, the night before the event. Imagine... Jason Calacanis sitting on your right. Morten Lund on your left, and David McCandless and Richard Kramer chatting to energetic Yosi Taguri opposite. Sam Ramji’s at the bar ordering another round of drinks. If you’re looking for start-up inspiration, it does not get better than this.

We have five places at this one-off table and will be drawing names at random from those who have bought tickets for the event by midnight on Friday 28 October.

People who have already bought tickets will be automatically entered into the draw. So if you’re still waiting to buy your ticket, don’t wait any more. Take the plunge this week and make sure you’re not only getting an incredible full day event for £99, but you’re in with the chance to spend an evening with these start-up legends.

Visit the Power of One website to buy tickets. Today.

 

Photo from victoriapeckham's Flickr photostream

Shaa Wasmund - Stop Talking Start Doing

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We are big fans of encouraging people to start their own businesses.  It's what the Power of One event is all about.

There has never been a better time to start your own business. Recessions have a proven ability to produce some of the most disruptive ideas and this one has been no exception. Far from it - having been one of the harshest recessions, it's also produced an environment rich with opportunities for businesses that can upend the status quo.

During this recession, mobile computing has exploded, consumers have been given a voice through social networking and the world has finally become the global village talked about by economists for decades.  It's also become easier during the downturn to recruit talented people, raise seed funding and promote your unique idea.

Learning how to do these things most effectively is what the Power of One is all about.

That's why we're pleased to announce that Shaa Wasmund CEO of SMARTA.com will be MC'ing the Power of One event for us at Battersea Power Station on 11.11.11.

As luck would have it she is the author of a new book called Stop Talking. Start Doing. This book perfectly embodies the spirit of The Power of One. Its really amazing what happens when you have an idea and you start talking to people about it: help is volunteered; advice is passed on; contacts are shared.

But the success of that idea comes down to what you then DO about it.

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All atendees of The Power of One will receive a goody bag on the day and we are really happy to say a copy of Shaa's totally inspiring book will be in that goody bag.

The quotes below are taken from Shaa's personal website shaa.com and as you can see, Shaa is endorsed by some serious achievers, who know a thing or two about starting up and then succeeding.

To achieve anything in life you have to start somewhere, be it writing a book, starting a business or climbing a mountain, this book will set you on your way.

SIR RANULPH FIENNES OBE, the World´s Greatest Living Explorer

This is a great book; straightforward and to the point. To achieve the goals you set yourself, you have to take action and this book will help you do just that.

DEBORAH MEADEN, Entrepreneur and Investor

Shaa embraces fear without regret and through this book convincingly urges others to as well.

SIR JAMES DYSON, Inventor and Industrial Designer

 

Want to speak at Power of One?

So you have heard about the Power of One, right? It's a celebration of tech start ups and how they can change the world. You can see we have an amazing line up of inspirational speakers over at http://p0wer0f1.com including Jason Calacanis, Morten Lund, Sam Ramji and David McCandless.

We have one speaking slot left free, why is that?

We want to offer that slot to the best new tech start up or start up idea we can find. No need to submit a business plan just fill out this short and simple google form and we will sift through the entries and pick out the best one.

If you win you get 20 minutes of prime time in the middle of the conference to pitch your business. You will be up there in lights next to Jason and Morten, you will be presenting to 300 people who could become customers and a bunch of potential investors on stage at Battersea Power station.

Those questions in the google form come from the Guy Kawasaki book The Art of the Start, this book, in our opinion is the best book available for budding tech entrepreneurs to read before they start. The submissions will be based on the criteria set out by Guy in his book.

Submit your entry now:

Submit the info on the form and we will tweet from @p0wer0f1 updates on the review process. We will let you know via email if you have been successful or unsuccessful. The judges decision is final. There will not be any preliminary rounds, no practice pitches.

DEADLINE: MONDAY 24TH OCTOBER 11:59pm

Everybody who submits a start up or an idea will get a heavily discounted ticket for the event on 11.11.11.

If you are worried about what people will hear about your business on the day, or the information you require to give in the form then you probably should not enter your company to pitch.