Tag Archives: okuri

Stay on Target

These series of guest posts are written by the teams attending the Tetuan Valley Startup School 2012 Spring Edition. This post is from the holoholo team, formed by Jay Hum, Gonzalo Calle and Joaquín Grech

Since becoming a member of the Tetuan Valley Startup School 2012 Spring Edition, which started on March 7, we have pitched at least once, sometimes twice a week. In addition to the formal three, five, or seven minute pitches to professors, mentors, entrepreneurs and potential investors, we have given spontaneous one minute elevator pitches to people we’ve run into or just happened to meet at various networking events. We have also recorded a pitch and posted it online as part of the application process to some accelerator/incubator programs.

Before each pitch, we spent at least a couple of hours refining the slide deck, rehearsing the presentation, and preparing answers for the Q&A session. After each pitch, we received a lot of feedback from various sources. Some feedback was positive, which was good because it validated that we were on the right path and the audience understood our product. Some feedback was negative, which was also good because we then knew that we had a gap to fill or had to describe something more clearly. Finally, some feedback was contradictory, which is not good because it leaves us wondering which direction should we take in the pitch and/or product. There is nothing worse than hearing from someone that he/she clearly sees the product/market fit and the huge upside, and then turning to someone else and seeing a confused look on his/her face.

Yesterday morning, we had a 15-minute meeting with an individual from the US who has been on both sides of the table. He has been an entrepreneur and is now a Managing General Partner and Managing Director for two venture capital funds. After we gave him the elevator pitch, he said: “Right, so it’s like a combination of X and Y, but with Z.” He immediately got the concept and said that he really like the idea. Since he understood the product so quickly, the rest of the meeting was used to discuss customer acquisition strategy and costs.

Contrast this to yesterday afternoon, when we had a five-minute pitch to a VC from Israel. After given the same pitch that has been refined over the past month and a half, the VC started the Q&A session with “I don’t get what your product is or what you are trying to do.” Something you never want to hear from a VC! Needless to say, we were shocked and taken back by this feedback, which was completely unexpected.

The more you talk to people about your idea and the more you pitch, the more feedback and opinions you are going to get. It is always much easier to criticize and knock something down than it is to build something of value that lasts. Net net, there comes a point where you have to ignore all the noise, focus on the core of you idea and product, and stay on target.

Entrepreneurial Motivation

These series of guest posts are written by the teams attending the Tetuan Valley Startup School 2012 Spring Edition. This post is from the www.mituyuu.com team, formed by Carolina V. Rojas, Chandini Jeswani and Ángela M. Rojas

Embarking on your own business can have some very important advantages. You can choose your way and set your own pace with your own goals, this is the freedom of the entrepreneur; to make their own decisions based on their own judgments.

This takes you away from different pressures that sometimes generate a gap with the businesses objectives in the private sector. Having to always follow the boss´s decisions regardless of your opinion can be frustrating, making salary the only motivation. But at the time of launching a new business, especially at the beginning where money shines for its absence, the motivation to work on your ideas should be different. It must come from your ideology: to develop an idea according to your ideals. Facing a challenge you want to achieve, it is about a dream to fulfill.

 


Self-coaching is a booming issue that in some way tries to teach you how to think so that you are conscious of what makes you happy and helps you achieve your goals. In the business side it searches for ways to enhance your best skills and encourage you to develop your weaknesses. Apart from fashion therapies such as coaching, continuously reinforcing your interest in achieving the goals you set out is vital for the success of a project. Some methods that could be followed are related with the sources of motivation:
  1. Think about the impact of the idea you want to develop, whether making money, making life easier for people or world peace, those will be your long term goals.
  2. You already have a challenge for which to fight. Probably, as in climbing, when you face a great mountain at first you do not know where to begin. It’s time to split the final objective into well-defined small blocks that allow you to reach the top. This way you will define short term goals which are easier to plan and to achieve.
  3. After that the effort will mark the result. Even if during working you only see the close results in time, think that your development will dictate whether or not you reach the goal. Plan your short term goals but work focusing on the final goal.

Although the road is slow and some times disconcerting………when you have an idea and a dream it is time to face fears, go ahead and think that everything is possible!

Tetuan Valley’s Chief WOWness officer featured on Radio 3 (RNE3)

On March 3rd, a familiar voice chimed through the radios across Spain as Alex, Tetuan Valley’s very own Chief WOWness officer, participated as an expert on Startups together with Emilio Julio Lorenzo, Professor at the Language and Information System department of UNED.

 

 

Did you know that a startup, by definition, has to be technology related?

A lot of us have a vague idea of what key-components a startup consist of, but the term has, as Alex explains a very specific  definition.

“A startup is an interesting concept, that is used a lot in media but many people don’t know. A startup is made up by 4 concepts. The first one is, as many people are aware of, a newly started company, but what most people aren’t as aware of is that by definition it is a new company based on technology. It doesn’t mean that it has to be a computer company, it can be telecommunication, bio-technology, nano-technology, but it has to have a technological basis. The 3rd concept is that it has to be, as the Americans call it; cutting edge. This means that one is working with a concept that implies a lot of risk. And finally, and maybe most importantly, the objective isn’t to create a business which happens with a lot of companies, the objective with a startup is to sell it, after 5-6 years. Fundamentally, the whole equation changes when you consider that in 5 to 6 years, your company will be sold because the idea isn’t to live by it. So there are those who failed. Google is a startup that failed, where they couldn’t sell it… I wish I could have failiures like that :-)


Covering topics such as the amazing transformation of people that we’ve seen over the course of 6 weeks in Tetuan Valley Start Up School, the similarities and differences between being an entrepreneur in Spain vs. Europe, and University Spin-Offs, Alex delivers 30 minutes of diverse and interesting information about different aspects of the world of startups.

Check out the interview at http://www.rtve.es/alacarta/audios/uned/uned-el-mundo-de-las-startups-las-empresas-tecnologicas-del-futuro-02-03-11/1034236/

Okuri Talks: Manuel Domínguez, a real life entrepreneur chef at Lúa

For this month’s Okuri Talks we’re bringing a real life entrepreneur, Manuel Domínguez, owner, founder and chef at the restaurant Lúa, one of the best restaurants in Madrid.

I met Manuel like a month ago when I went with my parents to have dinner there. It’s one of those restaurants you can’t forget. First of, there is no menu, you eat whatever the chef wants you to eat. The food was amazing with a characteristic minimalist style. I hate minimalist restaurants, very fancy but you end up leaving the place still hungry. That’s why, even though Manuel’s recipes are minimalist, they give you MANY courses, that means you get to try like 6 courses plus desert plus 6 different wines, one for each course.

But, that’s not why we’re bringing him to the office, it’s because after the dinner, he came out of the kitchen to check on everyone at the restaurant. You could see that he really cared about his customers, his people and his food. It was so amazing we started talking and the more he said, the more I realized he’s a natural born entrepreneur with such amazing core values, he’s an incredible example for all of us.

He told me how he never gives lunch or dinner for free, no matter who you are, everyone pays here, except for those he thinks that really deserve it. He told me that one night he had a couple of teenager having dinner. The guy had been saving money to take his girlfriend to his restaurant. He was so touched by the gesture that he invited them to that dinner. WOWness factor in pure state!

I was extremely curious about how a top chef develops each course, specially when you change the menu every 10 days. He told me about this and many other things that were fascinating! After the chat, that was more of an open discussion for 30 minutes, I realized Manuel illustrates the best values an entrepreneur can have, not only he’s an amazing professional, but he’s humble, and above all, he loves his business!

He’ll be with us this Thursday Feb 17th from 7pm to 8pm at our offices (c/Pinos Baja 89, metro L9 Ventilla). I think it’s an amazing opportunity to listen and chat with someone that embraces all what Tetuan Valley stands for. Please RT, share, email this post so we can pack the room and beat the current record!!

Inscribe yourself here if you’re coming :)

Email us if you have any questions at: tetuan @ tetuanvalley.com

 

The Hackathon has arrived to the valley

Yes, we know it, all you developers have been waiting for this! A day of pizza and uber coding session. Well, your wish has been granted! We’re organizing the first Tetuan Valley Hackathon this week.

Oh, you don’t know what a Hackathon is?? It’s simple, during this week, we’ll request ideas from anyone that’s interested in attending. These ideas have to be doable (codable) in 1 day. You can choose whatever you want as an idea. Always wanted to code this idea you’ve had in your head for months? Send it! You had an idea to simplify your daily work? Send it! You’ve thought of a way to make you project more effective? Send it!

On Friday morning (Jan 28th 2011), we’ll meet for the Hackathon Day. 9am sharp, we’ll display all the ideas so that everyone can choose one to work with. Once you choose an idea you want to do, you need to group or band with someone to do it. Groups can be any size, but it’s more fun if there is at least 2 of you doing it.

The rest of the day is for coding! By 6pm sharp, everyone stops coding and we’ll present each project. Everyone that attends will get a vote and the winner will be picked!

SUBMIT YOUR IDEA NOW! (Submission will be close by Thursday midnight)

ATTEND THE EVENT

Friday, Jan 28th. 9am – 7pm

Tetuan Valley. c/Pinos Baja 89 (Metro Ventilla)

Confirm you’re coming  here!

If you have any questions, feel free to email us at tetuan AT tetuanvalley DOT com.