Great to have you at the event Lawrence. If you're in Melbourne soon or 
Sydney during September for our next Startup Weekend it'd be interesting to 
speak to you further.

On Friday, July 26, 2013 11:06:58 PM UTC+10, drllau wrote:
>
>
> Of the two parties tonight during my fly-in-out of Sydney, 
> StartupWeekend<http://sydney.startupweekend.org/>@ Fishburners was more 
> happening than General Assembly's Birthday 
> Bash 
> <http://www.meetup.com/Sydney-Startup-Community/events/120578652/>(though 
> lower in volume and lubrication. The reason? Understanding the 
> difference between *how-how *and *know-what*. 
>
> GA is basically the implementation arm of O'Reilly, a crash-course in web 
> development or specific in-demand skills. This is due to a peculiarity of 
> technology adoption. Often for years it could be an esoteric field (eg HPCC 
> multiprocessor) then suddenly it becomes hot-hot-hot (multicore) when hits 
> mainstream. Similarly General Assembly addresses the skills shortage (or 
> more accurately business short-sightedness) in that if one technology 
> becomes popular, then a bandwagon effect kicks in. Example was seeing Java 
> ads asking for 5 years experience when it was only released a couple years 
> old. So when a new tool becomes the in-thing, then because the early 
> majority didn't invest in upskilling/training, they suddenly have to pay a 
> premium for previously rare skills. This is where specialist dev training 
> colleges come in, allowing their graduates with the *right know-how to be 
> placed in companies*. 
>
> But just because you know-how, doesn't mean you know-what. Though GA 
> teaches a course in business, it can never replace the reality of building 
> a business from scratch (aka school of hard knocks), the 101 things that 
> books never highlight (like chasing creditors). Whilst 54 hours is not 
> long, the mini-cycle of forming, storming, norming and performing gives 
> participants mettle of each other and a esprit d'coup. I have professional 
> reservations about beauty competitions but it does serve a role in the 
> startup ecosystem in bringing together potential founders in a speed-dating 
> format. Best run by serial entrepreneurs (with significant know-what) they 
> can be mutually beneficial, allowing insight into potential ideas and 
> subjecting them to peer review.
>
> Of course, the people with know-why graduate to being angels (caveat 
> survivorship bias). Observing the 6 teams (~3-8 size note Dunbar limits), 
> the continual call for developers indicate GA has a steady market 
> (buy-buy-buy). Another observation is that team self-selection means that 
> if one team ended up with the quiet types, then it is easy for one 
> talkative to dominate. History has shown that Donald Trump types are 
> actually rarer than portrayed in media which glorifies personality 
> conflict. Team balance is more important in a lean startup situation to 
> identify & resource the value-drivers (cf Craig List). I await to see what 
> team emerges the winner.
>
> Dr. Lawrence Lau
> http://www.linkedin.com/in/drllau
>
>

-- 
-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Silicon Beach 
Australia mailing list. Vist http://siliconbeachaustralia.org for more

Forum rules
1) No lurkers! It is expected that you introduce yourself.
2) No jobs postings. You can use http://siliconbeachaustralia.org/jobs


To post to this group, send email to
silicon-beach-australia@googlegroups.com
To unsubscribe from this group, send email to
silicon-beach-australia+unsubscr...@googlegroups.com
For more options, visit this group at
http://groups.google.com/group/silicon-beach-australia?hl=en?hl=en

--- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"Silicon Beach Australia" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to silicon-beach-australia+unsubscr...@googlegroups.com.
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/groups/opt_out.


Reply via email to