startups Archives - Techsylvania https://techsylvania.com/tag/startups/ Tue, 22 Aug 2023 09:06:36 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.8.1 https://techsylvania.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/04/favicon-150x150.webp startups Archives - Techsylvania https://techsylvania.com/tag/startups/ 32 32 How do startups and corporations come together? https://techsylvania.com/oveit-2/ https://techsylvania.com/oveit-2/#respond Sat, 22 Aug 2020 09:01:57 +0000 https://techsylvania.com/?p=3355 There are many stereotypes surrounding startups and corporations, but when it comes to company culture, some of them are actually […]

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There are many stereotypes surrounding startups and corporations, but when it comes to company culture, some of them are actually valid. While startups can act as the young character, ever-changing and always with an innovative mindset, corporations may be embodied as a more wise personality, with a well-defined structure.

As we know, collaboration leads to innovation, so when startups and corporations partner, often interesting projects arise. The only difficulty is their different type of “personalities” which can sometimes stand in the way of a natural bond.

So what are the steps for a fruitful partnership between these two? Fortunately, we had both perspectives on the stage of Techsylvania and this is what we’ve learned:

Simon McDougall (McKinsey) How Should Startups Engage with Corporates Pursuing Digital Transform

Simon McDougall submitted that corporations are always taking a strategic view on how their industry is going to disrupt and they want to maintain relevancy and be early investors in promising ecosystems. This is an aspect that needs to be taken into consideration by startups when they want to initiate a collaboration, as this is their promising standpoint.

Pitching to a corporate is different than pitching to a VC because they are more interested in strategic metrics and startups need to have in mind a broader business case.

Simon actually underlined the three most important questions that startups need to have in mind before initiating this type of partnership:

  1. Understand corporates: the perspectives, the state of mind, the strategic goals, the objectives. How do I fit in the majority curve?
  2. Understand the collaboration models: is it a joint venture? Is it investment? Am I looking at going into their incubator? — have a clear understanding of what their models are and bring them intelligently and proactively to the table.
  3. Understand the partnerships models themselves — the risks, the clauses, the inflexion points and how you can integrate that into the structure of the deal.

Marius Stewart came with a different perspective, and he actually marks it down to identifying other three essential steps when creating a successful bond between the two parties:

  • How are the decisions made?
  • What gets prioritized?
  • What gets incentivized?

Startups and corporations are very different when it comes to company cultures but both of them can add strong value if they collaborate. Understanding both perspectives and benefiting of each other’s core points can be the key to delivering the best joint result.

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The successful and the unsuccessful. A startup story. https://techsylvania.com/the-successful-and-the-unsuccessful-a-startup-story/ https://techsylvania.com/the-successful-and-the-unsuccessful-a-startup-story/#respond Thu, 22 Aug 2019 09:06:19 +0000 https://techsylvania.com/?p=3361 Some of the common aspects of startups and founders usually encountered in media are the hardships of the entrepreneurial journey […]

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Some of the common aspects of startups and founders usually encountered in media are the hardships of the entrepreneurial journey and the sweet taste of success. Some of the aspects that don’t come up as often are the actual steps that are essential in this journey, the unsuccessful attempts at building an efficient business and the premisses that help you identify the right idea for your foundation.

At Techsylvania, we have witnessed the stories of many founders on a transparent and inspiring note — inspiring a sense that we’re all in this together, and face the same fears and have the same world-conquering feeling as founders.

Have you ever wondered what happens in an internet minute?

Well, Ralph Simon and Yossi Vardi have, when trying to connect the dots in defining a startup’s success. The one thing that they observed to be common in all the activities happening in an internet minute — was that they all had the “connecting people” factor. It comes down to social and staying in touch, Their premise of building a successful application was that it has to include a social thread.

They took another successful platform’s example, trying to identify what made Amazon (in its primer times) better than all the other e-commerce platforms. Ralph and Yossi agreed that the fact that it used the wisdom of the crowd to target you, showing you similar products based on your likes and other similar peers’ likes, was what differentiated Amazon from its competition.

🗣 Lesson #1: Include the “social factor” in your plan.

“A founder’s journey is a tough journey — it’s full of lessons, but it’s up to you to luck at your lottery ticket and make a difference out of it.” Kaidi Ruusalepp

How much does your environment affect your story?

Kaidi grew up in a small town in Estonia, within what she called “a closed society”, where you can’t have many perspectives. On top of that, the government usually sets the tone for your thinking & opinions, because it defines your way of learning, your learning resources and other matters that directly affect your development. But meanwhile, Estonia has become one of the most entrepreneurial-friendly countries and Kaidi has become the founder of Funderbeam.

She’s a true believer that the new normal is global and technology has opened many boarders. But mostly, she believes that a founder’s story life is a lottery because your environment also has a lot to do with it.

🌐 Lesson #2: Your environment can influence your business, but having the opportunities we have today, you can more easily change it.

Max Niederhofer — Purposeful leadership & entrepreneurship as a journey of personal growth

The secrets of purpose:

  • The interesting thing, which is not only for you as an entrepreneur, it’s also for your company: people will switch to you if you have a great purpose behind your company (60% of millennials have chosen their employer because of the purpose they have)
  • If there’s an overarching theme to your life — That’s where you should found your company.

Max Niederhofer has studied more pragmatically the stories of founders & startups and has reached the conclusions from above, plus a more psychological approach to them. These psychological facts, that aren’t usually addressed when talking about startups founders — there are a lot of founders that start their own company because of a misfit situation (they don’t believe they belong in the corporate world and they want to build their own culture), or for proving themselves to somebody (so they start their own business in order to prove how special they and their ideas are). A business shouldn’t be founded on these premises, because its main attributes should be making a change or a difference through its services or products.

“We should start companies from this conscious place, actually knowing what to create in the world.” Max Niederhofer

💯 Lesson #3: “If there’s an overarching theme to your life — That’s where you should found your company.”

It may come as an overwhelming fact, but Sebastian Dobrincu is a 21 years old entrepreneur, who has already had his share of experience with startups, some of them really successful.

Sebastian focuses a lot on enhancing his skills and making out the most of them, and that’s his primary advice for other entrepreneurs. Using your skills, finding other people who can complement your weak points and always be on the look with the latest trends are part of his recipe for success. Also, taking into consideration today’s startup landscape — you have to focus on standing out through your execution. Or having another world-changing, remarkable idea (which is less likely to happen).

“In a crowded market, fitting in is a failure, in a busy market, not standing out is the same thing as being invisible.” Seth Godin

*quote taken from Sebastian’s presentation

🦉 Lesson #4: Skills have no age, you have to focus on your strongest attributes and leave your weak points to those who master them.

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