Archive for September, 2008

Book Report: E-Myth Revisited

Monday, September 29, 2008

Luc and I read a lot at ShareMeme, and we really tuned our reading lists to books about entrepreneurship. We already placed some emphasis on book reports before with Geoff Livingston’s Now is Gone. In this series, we really want to nail down the quick hit takeaways from books that might be applicable to web entrepreneurs.

One of the first books that we wanted to highlight was E-Myth Revisited by Michael E. Gerber. We took away the following lessons from the book:

Document. Documenting everything is an important task and goal. This should include code, sales, marketing, finances, etc. The closer a small startup moves towards that paradigm, it eventually means that we’re more marketable for selling and hiring others to come on board later on. There’s written proof the past practices, successes, failures, and duties. There’s history! The same applies to accounting practices too.

Organize. An organizational chart with responsibilities even between two people is really important. It sets clear guidelines for who does what especially with job descriptions or job contracts, as written in the book. For two people, it doesn’t sound like a big deal, but we feel it reduces conflict on decision-making and duties. over time, as new people are brought in, they’ll be presented with a clear division of duties and won’t be confused as to how things work in some mysterious ways in small businesses.

Understand. Marketing is understanding the customer and why they buy. For us, the customer buys what’s easiest and quickest to use. The customer also considers how credible the site is, so that his/her friends consider it credible. An easy way to gain name-recognition is to make the experience quick and easy.

The simple, quick message of the book is to become the technician, manager, and entrepreneur. Being successful in a small business requires equal parts expertise, management ability, and vision.

What’s this blog about?

Wanna Plan an Event from Your Mobile Phone?

Monday, September 22, 2008

To our knowledge, we’re the only service on the web that can turn a simple text message into an onilne event invitation.  We understand the language you’re using This is all you have to do:

Send an SMS message to 41411.  You could write a “sharememe invite my close friends to my house for dinner tonight at 7 PM”.

ShareMeme only needs to know that you created a group called “my close friends”, and that’s it.  We’ll figure out the best way to get in touch with them quickly and easily.  And you’re friends will be responding to your invite in no time.

Maybe you don’t know the groups that you’ve created on ShareMeme.  Send “sharememe groups” to 41411, and ShareMeme will send you back the groups that you’ve created so far.

Try out ShareMeme, and never be too far away from organizing a get-together tonight on the go.

Why Start ShareMeme Now?

Saturday, September 20, 2008

Paul Graham wrote a prophetic essay in May 2005 that should be revisited by any 22 year old out there. It’s called Hiring is Obsolete. In the essay, he had this gem for all of us twentysomethings:
Your early twenties are exactly the time to take insane career risks.

The reason risk is always proportionate to reward is that market forces make it so. People will pay extra for stability. So if you choose stability– by buying bonds, or by going to work for a big company– it’s going to cost you.

Riskier career moves pay better on average, because there is less demand for them. Extreme choices like starting a startup are so frightening that most people won’t even try. So you don’t end up having as much competition as you might expect, considering the prizes at stake.

The math is brutal. While perhaps 9 out of 10 startups fail, the one that succeeds will pay the founders more than 10 times what they would have made in an ordinary job. [3] That’s the sense in which startups pay better “on average.”

Remember that. If you start a startup, you’ll probably fail. Most startups fail. It’s the nature of the business. But it’s not necessarily a mistake to try something that has a 90% chance of failing, if you can afford the risk. Failing at 40, when you have a family to support, could be serious. But if you fail at 22, so what? If you try to start a startup right out of college and it tanks, you’ll end up at 23 broke and a lot smarter. Which, if you think about it, is roughly what you hope to get from a graduate program.

If you really believe in yourself, and you have minimal financial commitments, now is the time. Of course, Luc and I are a little older, but we have some advantages in turn. We have graduate degrees which grant us a little more credibility and a few more skills. If we fail… well we won’t think about that right now.

In any case, Paul Graham’s logic made sense to us. So we’re here!

What’s this blog about?

It’s pronounced (MEEM)

Saturday, September 13, 2008

Though it doesn’t irritate me, it is pronounced MEEM.

Many ask what ShareMeme means. Here’s our first try.

Share is easy enough to understand. But in any case, the definition of share is: to divide and apportion something, anything. Easy enough.

Meme is more difficult for most to understand. You probably know TechMeme, which we’re not affiliated with in anyway, and then you wonder why is it called TechMeme. Then, you wonder why we’re called ShareMeme, and the analogy doesn’t help you any.

Technically, meme is relatively new word. On Wikipedia, it says that a meme:

consists of any unit of cultural information, such as a practice or idea, that gets transmitted verbally or by repeated action from one mind to another. Examples include thoughts, ideas, theories, practices, habits, songs, dances and moods and terms such as race, culture, and ethnicity. Memes propagate themselves and can move through a “culture” in a manner similar to the behavior of a virus.

Okay, a meme means when we transmit information, but Wikipedia defines an Internet Meme as:

At its most basic, an Internet meme is simply the propagation of a digital file or hyperlink from one person to others using methods available through the Internet (for example, email, blogs, social networking sites, instant messaging, etc.). The content often consists of a saying or joke, a rumor, an altered or original image, a complete website, a video clip or animation, or an offbeat news story, among many other possibilities.

Put the words together, and you get ShareMeme. Though we won’t say yet, it gives a pretty good idea of what we’re trying to do.

What’s this blog about?

Ways to Use ShareMeme with QuickMode

Tuesday, September 9, 2008

The main idea behind ShareMeme’s QuickMode is that forms, even short ones, are bad for users that want to do something fast. If you can send a short message to Sharememe, we’ll figure out the rest for you. In any message, you send to ShareMeme, we can figure out who you’re sending to, what you’re sending, and when you need a response by.

Right now, we support using it through:

  1. ShareMeme.com – If you come to ShareMeme, then you can use the QuickMode box on the home page.
  2. Text Message – If you text 41411 and add sharememe before any messages to ShareMeme, then you’ll get a text message back with the results.
  3. AIM & Google Chat – Add sharememe on AIM or sharememe@gmail.com on Google Chat. Send instant messages ShareMeme on
  4. Twitter – Follow sharememe on Twitter. Then, we’ll automatically follow you back. Send direct messages to sharememe to use QuickMode.
  5. iPhone – On your iPhone, you can go to ShareMeme for an iPhone-formatted site. You can use the site just as you would the classic site.
  6. Jott – On Jott, you can call ShareMeme as well. Login to your account. Once in your dashboard, click on “Add Links” in lower right. Then, you’ll have choices for adding further links. Once again, click on the “Developers – Got a Custom Link to add? Add it here.” Then, call the link whatever you like, such as share or sharememe. Add http://sharememe.com/setup_jott as the Setup URL. Add http://sharememe.com/jott as the Link URL. Call Jott, and speak the short messages to Jott.

    You’ll have to be a Premium Subscriber to Jott to have access to Premium links and apps.

  7. From text message, phone, IM, and Twitter, ShareMeme is always ready to receive your message, and send out invites, polls, and links to your friends.

RailsConf Europe Last Week

Monday, September 8, 2008

Last week, Luc and I made the trip to RailsConf Europe. Luckily, it was paid for by Five Runs. They had a contest, and Luc won!

For those that aren’t that geeky, RailsConf Europe is a conference about Ruby on Rails, and it’s the web development platform that we use for ShareMeme.  Luc has a great write-up of the event on his blog.  Check it out here!