Startup Weekend in Review – Friday
Last weekend I participated in Startup Weekend in Redmond, WA, hosted by Microsoft BizSpark. See my previous post for a little more info about the event. This post is the first of a mini-series of three about each day of my experiences at Startup Weekend Redmond.
Pitches
Shortly after arriving at the Microsoft Conference Center, I heard about pitches. People would have an opportunity to get up on stage and pitch their idea for a software solution. I figured that I should have one myself. Why not? So just two hours before pitches started, I began brainstorming ideas. I came up with four ideas, but one looked like it could actually be done in a weekend and be useful.
My Pitch
So I actually went up on stage and pitched my idea in front of 200+ people! The problem I wanted to solve was that finding a meeting place and time is cumbersome and requires a lengthy phone call or series of emails. My solution is a website where each user can input their location and time available and it figures out places and times that work for both parties.
Voting
The audience was allowed to start voting before all of the pitches were done. I put all three of my votes into my idea. I got three other votes total from two other people, bringing my total up to 6 votes. That was enough to make it to #14 in the idea rankings. The top 15 were chosen as the startups of the weekend. Yay!
Team building
This was the most difficult aspect of the startup process and the part I was least successful at. Having one of the lowest ranked ideas chosen, people really wanted to be a part of other teams. I had to fight to get people to even consider joining. In the end, I found a team with a relatable idea that was not chosen and got them to join with me. At this point “Meeting Place” was me and two guys from Romania. One was a backend developer and the other had skills in marketing. I have experience with end to end development, which meant that I became the UI guy.
Rest of the Night
Several people went out to a local venue to continue talking. After that, I spent the rest of the night, without sleep, rebuilding my laptop as a VS 2008 development box. VS2008 installed on the ride over (in the back seat) to Microsoft at 8 in the morning. The team had no business plan and no name.
Common Ground Team at Startup Weekend
Hi all,
I’m writing this from Startup Weekend in Redmond, WA. Today is the last day of the event. It has been incredibly exciting. I pitched an idea on the first day, Friday, along with about 35 others. I put all my votes in and a few other people supported it. The idea managed to be in the top 15 (#14), which made it one of the software projects of the weekend.
The idea of Common Ground is to find a mutually acceptable location and time for 2 people to meet. With only a few developers and two days, we are developing a working prototype. We will be presenting later today, in just a few hours. The current url is http://www.findcommonground.biz. Presently parked, it will host our application in the near future. Look for it soon! I have a wonderful team of hard working developers and deep thinkers. I think we are fairing well given that we are one of the smallest teams of the weekend.
I will be posting a series over the next few days documenting my time here at Startup Weekend.
Ryan D. Kyle | Concord Mfg LLC
