The Best resources to ace the AI game in 2024

The best free Google AI courses.

Don't miss these courses. They are:

- Expertly tailored and highly relevant

- Suitable for newbies and experienced pros alike

- Fantastic resources to ace the AI game in 2024

Check them out below, and get ahead in your career.

Beginner Level

1) Introduction to Generative AI

Understand the fundamentals of generative AI and its use cases, and gain practical experience of developing generative AI apps.

https://lnkd.in/dyabpncK

2) Prompt Design in Vertex AI

Craft powerful prompts, learn multimodal generative techniques, and apply Gemini models to real-world marketing cases.

https://lnkd.in/d8QgGSrS

3) Introduction to Duet AI in Google Workspace

Learn to use Duet AI to streamline your Google Workspace and become more productive.

https://lnkd.in/d6-sQ-DN

4) Responsible AI: Applying AI Principles with Google Cloud

Learn best practices to responsibly integrate AI into your business operations.

https://lnkd.in/ddp4vBNd

Intermediate

5) Conversational AI on Vertex AI and Dialogflow CX

Build, deploy and manage virtual agents to engage with customers and resolve errors.

https://lnkd.in/dnkAxE4B

6) Attention Mechanism

Understand the basics of attention mechanism and learn to use it to improve standard ML tasks, such as machine translation, text summarization, and answering questions.

https://lnkd.in/dDZTDEvg

7) Create Image Captioning Models

Use deep learning to create your own image captioning model, train it, and evaluate output.

https://lnkd.in/duuJTWvv

8) Encoder-Decoder Architecture

Learn the fundamentals of encoder-decoder architecture and to use it to train models to perform sequence-to-sequence tasks.

https://lnkd.in/dsNaBcBt

Advanced

9) ML Pipelines

Learn from trainers and engineers who are directly involved in the development of ML pipelines at Google Cloud.

https://lnkd.in/dDu_fgVZ

10) Google Cloud Solutions II: Data and Machine Learning

Learn to use Google Cloud to run big data operations and analytics, using the ML practices of Google’s Solutions Architecture team.

https://lnkd.in/dpMYeVyK

DISCLAIMER: Most course materials are free to consume. But labs may need a subscription, credits, or participation in campaigns to be accessed.

AI-Driven Marketplaces: A Goldmine of Opportunities for Startups

Every time we see a significant new enabling technology, a window opens in the marketplace world. This platform shift is an opportunity to create something unimaginable even a year ago.

For example, smartphones with GPS gave us Uber and Lyft. This breakthrough technology turned everyday drivers into potential taxis – unlocking a whole new form of transportation supply and gave demand the opportunity to book rides in real time.

The rise of search and SEO allowed a range of marketplaces like Trulia/Zillow to carve out market share in real estate, or startups like Indeed to spin up liquidity at very low cost in the job search market where powerful incumbents with strong network effects dominated.

AI is another one of these once in a decade or more technology shifts. Likely, it will prove to be even bigger. Which means this window is opening once again. All software and digital experiences are going to be infused with AI. This is a rare moment where unique opportunities for marketplace startups open up, and incumbents are forced to innovate with speed and conviction or risk becoming irrelevant.

Here’s how it’s happening, and where we see the opportunities.

Marketplace Evolution

Marketplaces are relentlessly evolving towards a better user experience – whether that’s better inventory, better curation and decision support, or reduced transaction friction.

Often the underlying driver of these tectonic shifts are new enabling technologies. For example Seamless and Grubhub had market leadership in food delivery in the pre-mobile era. But after the mobile boom, Doordash was able to provide its own delivery network. This added significantly more supply to the marketplace and a better experience overall for a mobile first transaction.

That was sufficient for Doordash and Uber Eats to displace incumbents and become the new market leaders.

The rise of the fintech enabled marketplace was another example. Embedded fintech made the transaction a seamless part of the marketplace experience – and today we expect to complete all or most of the transactional process on platform. That has allowed marketplaces themselves to capture increased share of the transaction (i.e. through take rates, etc) and new marketplaces to be formed.

Fintech enabled marketplaces will primarily help marketplaces to capture more margin and reduce transaction friction as follows:

The AI tectonic shift changes the trajectory on both supply and demand axes. We anticipate that AI has the potential to meaningfully improve the experience for demand, reduce cost of accessing and curating supply, and increase the efficiency of the entire operations of a marketplace.

That’s going to create four new features within marketplace architecture:

1. Automation Unlocked Supply

AI automation allows us to expand the pool of supply in ways that previous technologies couldn’t. Especially in complex industries where there is a very clear demand signal, but a bottleneck in supply. (Think: therapists, drivers, tutors and basic coding).

AI can learn to drive a car. It can become a 24/7 personalized counselor. It provides opportunities for endless upskilling across verticals (writers can become coders, or data engineers), and eliminates time-sucking rote tasks, allowing labor to take on more projects.

AI-unlocked supply will emerge first in the form of embedded co-pilots (tools to do design work on platform, for example). But it will move toward full services (like personalized AI chatbots or autopilots).

While autopilots are the most likely endpoint, in the case of the marketplace, the co-pilot is actually a powerful intermediate step. AI copilots can dramatically increase the productivity of certain service marketplaces, and through that mechanism, increase potential supply even before full autopilots emerge. Copilots also solve for the inherent trust issues that rise with new technologies focused on important problems.

That said, it’s not clear there will be a large profit pool in massively increasing supply. Whenever you are dealing with AI advancement, it’s important to understand how available training data is to all parties and how proprietary your model and entire experience is. Whenever it is easily accessible, it will be easy for your service to be copied. This opens up the possibility of a race to the bottom.

The AI autopilot in whatever industry your marketplace occupies will be the standard. If you charge a fee for it, it’s likely someone else will come along and charge less.

Imagine a logo design marketplace that employs designers to create logos for new companies. For the same cost of working with a professional to create one potential logo , you could use AI to create thousands of logos and just pick the best one. In this case, the effective price will trend to zero.

So what protections can you put in place against this race to the bottom? First, the market opportunity simply shifts. We will likely see the monetization of those types of marketplaces move up or downstream of this easily commoditized tool. To go back to our logo example, you might be able to cross sell marketing solutions on how to grow your new company, as opposed to just logo design.

And second, the more challenging it is to unlock that supply, the greater your moat will be. Since AI-based tools will be par for the course, any marketplace that isn’t using automation to enhance or even generate supply is going to be left in the dust.

2. Better Demand Side Embedding

In a marketplace, you’re constantly trying to spin up liquidity. If you can create a breakthrough tool that attracts demand immediately, you can use that good will to monetize further downstream.

For example, Immerse speeds up the process of creating 3-D models of automobils in the new and used marketplace by using publicly available visual data to instantly generate perfectly accurate (down to the VIN) 3-D models of autos for online marketplaces. This process reduces the costs of preparing for the work, and turns a painstaking manual process into a two hour long process (to ensure accuracy a human reviews the model).

Here, we see that Immerse is capturing both the planning and procurement process. Previously, a marketplace might just help you find a modeling company. But Immerse helps you both design and source those models all at once – it simplifies life for the demand side.

This is just one approach. You could also imagine tools that help demand side run financial analysis, to streamline their marketing. LinkedIn performed a similar move in building an enormous recruiting marketplace off the back of a professional network and database of record.

We also see AI being potentially very good at complex procurement or organizational tasks where it’s necessary to manage multiple variables including price, time-based availability, quality or product interdependencies. You could imagine AI keeping the trains on the tracks for anything from a family vacation itinerary to new home construction complete with architectural design and materials procurement.

The overarching principle for you, as a marketplace, is to provide a service that offers a high frequency and highly retentive experience that makes it easy to monetize downstream transactions.

This change comes down to adopting a new mental model. Ask yourself what AI can provide to the demand side to buttress the transaction? What’s their workflow leading up to the time when they need to make a purchase? What happens after they make that purchase? How can I make it in their best interest to stay here and make another purchase?

The more of that user experience you can capture on the platform, the more successful your marketplace will be. And it will become a self-perpetuating cycle. Demand will come for your AI services. They’ll stay for your marketplace.

3. Reimagining the Search Box

The modern marketplace starts with a search box. You look for an item, (or find something you didn’t know you wanted). You find it using keywords or matching algorithms. You buy it.

But if you zoom out, the classic “buying cycle” contains far more steps than that:

  1. Awareness: customer realizes they have a problem (this is the stage where most marketing efforts are targeted)

  2. Consideration: Customer seeks detailed information to solve that problem

  3. Intent: Customers makes a decision based on that information as well as other financial, or emotional cues

  4. Purchase: the purchase is made

  5. Repurchase or Continuous purchase (for subscription businesses): customer reconsiders initial choice

Most marketplaces only capture steps two and three. You must come to the marketplace with intent to buy, and select the purchase that makes the most sense.

AI will allow us to bake the awareness and consideration stages of purchasing behavior into the marketplace itself. Imagine an AI companion that can intake your personal goals and tell you which couch might fit in your living room, or match your decor. Or tell you exactly which contractor has the availability and skills to complete your project.

The keyword-based search box is going to be complemented by intelligent, personalized guide mechanisms.

Over time, we expect this to mature into a “push” rather than “pull” based consumer experience in the marketplace.

We’ve already begun to see this happen with platforms like Facebook and Google, where AI is already heavily used via ad targeting algorithms. You know this as that uncanny feeling where you see an ad for a product you’ve been thinking about, but not searching for. It’s a function of advanced AI making predictions from your web activity.

This advanced AI matching is going to start appearing in more places that have enough data and context. And more, smaller scale marketplaces will have that data and context thanks to the accessibility of generative AI models.

(A side point: That uncanny feeling is important to note. The most successful push-based marketplaces will be subtle. While an algorithm might have the perfect match, customers don’t want an “arranged marriage.” Rather, they’ll want to be able to see everything that’s available. Improved, hyper-relevant matching will make the search process easier, and less frustrating.)

4. Vastly Improved Internal Efficiency

One of the hardest parts of running a marketplaces is managing both supply and demand on platform. Securing supply is cumbersome (especially if it’s locked up in disparate silos). Enticing demand is expensive.

Together, these make up the bulk of the costs for any marketplace. AI has the potential to vastly reduce those costs.

On the demand side, AI leads to improved personalization, marketing automation, enhanced SEO or automated SDRs and customer services. Even small savings here will allow marketplaces to operate faster, enable reinvestment in the product or improve profitability.

Though not a classic marketplace, we see shades of how this can happen in companies like Smith.ai. Best known for its virtual receptionists, Smith.AI has leveraged natural language processing to improve lead qualification, intake and outreach for law firms, homes services companies and other high-value SMBs. Systems like these may help lower costs on the demand side of the marketplace as well.

On the supply side, again, we see AI as a tool to unlock latent supply at lower costs. This allows new marketplaces to undercut incumbents in terms of take rates, giving them a previously non-existent wedge.

3 Areas of Opportunity

With these architectural changes in mind, we see three major opportunities for the next generation of AI-First marketplaces:

1. Native, AI-First marketplace

New marketplaces will spring up that never could have existed before. A recent example of this type of spontaneous marketplace evolution was seen during the crypto boom. The most valuable marketplaces of that era were exchanges like Coinbase or NFT marketplaces.

In its first incarnation, we are seeing many emerging marketplaces that are built on top of the products and services that enable AI, e.g. GPUs, algorithms, data and data labeling, RHLF, etc.

However, given we are in the infancy of this industry, there will be new enabling technologies developed and perhaps more interesting marketplaces built around the outputs, assets or derivatives of these new AI services.

Update: OpenAI has already sent a signal that this is a major opportunity. The company recently announced it will create a marketplace for custom GPTs (versions of chat GPT trained with personalized instructions and data).

These are greenfield opportunities with the potential to be very interesting.

2. AI Leapfrogging

AI has already started to make significant inroads in industries where no large, cloud-based digital incumbent exists.

These industries are digital laggards and often have low digital penetration and challenging sales cycles. Interestingly, AI has proved to be a good fit for a number of these spaces because it efficiently organizes disparate market participants, and delivers instant solutions, keeping switching costs low.

Because of this we expect new marketplaces to emerge in fields like legal, construction, manufacturing, govtech, and health. These fields are primed for “AI leapfrogging.”

3. Unlocking Supply + Meaningfully Better Experiences for Demand Can Give Startups an Edge Over Incumbents

Let’s be clear eyed about this first:

Existing digital marketplaces with large amounts of data, distribution, capital and talent will be major beneficiaries of AI. This is important to note, because incumbent digital marketplaces are far more aware of the threat posed by potential platform shifts than they used to be.

There are three reasons for this:

  1. Modern technology stacks for tech companies are built in a modular fashion, allowing the fast adaptation of new technologies via microservices and APIs. Companies behind foundational AI models know this and will continue to make their products easy to integrate.

  2. The last big platform shift for marketplaces was the rise of mobile. But mass adoption was dependent on consumers buying a new piece of hardware. Adoption of AI is entirely software driven which massively increases the near term addressable market.

  3. Many tech investors and executives realize that they didn’t move fast enough to jump on the mobile paradigm. They won’t make the same mistake again.

What does this mean for you? Founders starting new companies need to focus on speed and orthogonal evolution to capture this opportunity.

No one is going to take on Amazon head on and win outright. Rather there are small, underserved niches that can benefit from AI-fueled innovation on both the supply and demand side.

This is where AI’s potential to expand the pool of available supply becomes an attractive proposition. You may be able to access supply in underserved niches neglected by large incumbents.

On the demand side in particular, there may be even more avenues of attack. Incumbents are often so focused on generating revenue from the supply side, that the demand side is left with subpar experiences. Look for areas where you can create a high frequency retentive experience for demand, where none exist (or existing tools are thoughtless or inadequate).

The AI Deployment Spectrum

Going forward, all companies – not just marketplaces – are going to include some element of AI. But there will be degrees to which companies fully embrace the architectural shifts offered by the technology.

This degree of adaptation is important because AI is only useful if deployed purposefully. AI for the sake of AI, isn’t defensible, nor is it particularly useful.

In that vein, here’s how we think companies can embrace AI intelligently. (This isn’t just a guide for marketplaces, though it will certainly apply to these types of companies too.)

Level 1: AI Enhanced

If you are not using some form of AI to become more efficient, you’re leaving resources on the table. AI-driven scheduling, marketing, coding support, product management…there are many systems that can be automated today that couldn’t have been yesterday.

This is the bare minimum. We will expect all companies, marketplaces or not, to use AI to enhance their own business activities in some way.

Level 2: AI Product Extension

Companies with strong product market fit with a non-AI enabled product don’t necessarily need to overhaul themselves to become AI centric overnight, but they can capture large adjacent opportunities.

These companies should focus on using AI as a locking mechanism to secure that PMF.

Level 3: AI-Enabled

This level of AI adoption includes everything from levels one and two, but adds a layer of intelligence on top. These companies, largely, embed an algorithm at the core of the service being offered.

Companies deploying AI-based matching in marketplaces are good examples of level three companies.

Level 4: AI is the Product

These companies feature AI as the central selling point. This can be a powerful, but fragile place to be. You must ensure that you are using the AI to offer a complete, one-click solution to a real problem that you uniquely can solve.

If you don’t you risk becoming just another workflow – easy to copy, and with traditionally high switching costs.

This is the realm of the countless AI copywriting, or video editing or chatbot companies we’ve seen. Some of these workflows end up taking more time to learn than they save to use, and are easy for competitors to copy.

Remember that AI for the sake of AI can never truly be the product you are selling (even if it is the core of your service). AI must be the means to a truly industry-changing outcome.

Level 5: AI-First

This is perhaps the most exciting level of AI deployment. The rollout of AI across companies will create either new companies that couldn’t exist before, or secondary markets borne of AI adoption.

As highlighted above, these are native AI-first marketplaces built around essential enabling technologies of our new AI era. There will also be many more marketplaces built around the outputs or components of AI. This could start to impact consumer markets such as media, creatives and advertising models, as well as many B2B markets.

AI to AI trusted platforms are likely to form. These will look more similar to what we think of platforms today rather than marketplaces. These would facilitate access and control points between different services, enable permissioned communication, and execute other tasks.

As AIs start to permeate all software, we see enormous potential here and we are fascinated about what might come out of this.

A Rare Moment for Marketplace Evolution

Taken together, this an exciting moment to be building any company – but it’s especially exciting for marketplace founders.

We haven’t seen a large enabling technology alter marketplace architecture since the rise of mobile (fintech was somewhat more subtle). And as a result, the large marketplace incumbents have been relatively secure for years.

But AI has finally caused a crack in the ecosystem. New AI first marketplaces will be spun up over the next few years built entirely around AI tools and their derivatives. Also, founders who act quickly may be able to take on incumbents orthogonally. They will be able to run existing marketplaces far more efficiently.

Ten years from now, marketplaces will look very different from the way they do today. Now is a rare opportunity to build at the very beginning.

If you’re reinventing your marketplace with genAI, or building something new, reach out to gordon@Enginebloc.io I’d love to hear from you!

Maximizing Event Engagement: Growth-Hacking Your Presence Without Official Sponsorship

In the competitive realm of tech startups, visibility and engagement are crucial for scaling and growth. Events, particularly those teeming with potential clients, partners, or investors, present a golden opportunity to make an impression. Yet, official sponsorship often comes with a hefty price tag, which may not be feasible for all, especially budding startups. What if there was a way to make an indelible mark without being an official sponsor? Herein lies a potent growth hack, where strategic micro-engagements can magnify your brand's presence. Let's delve into actionable strategies that can be integrated into an attendee's journey, elevating their experience while positioning your startup at the forefront.

Arrival in the City:

  • Consider investing in airport billboards for high visibility.

  • Collaborate with airlines to feature your ads on in-flight entertainment systems.

  • Curate and distribute travel kits tied to a strategic pre-event social media campaign.

  • Offer seat upgrade incentives for attendees who schedule consultations with your team during the event.

City Transit:

  • Leverage Uber's in-app advertising during the event's duration.

  • Facilitate high-touch interactions by providing premium airport transfers, with strategic discussions facilitated by your team.

Accommodation Experience:

  • Sponsor hotel key cards to consistently remind attendees of your brand.

  • Establish partnerships with local hospitality providers to incorporate branded welcome amenities in attendees' accommodations.

  • Host exclusive dinners or sessions at the hotel to foster connections.

  • Develop branded streaming content for in-room entertainment systems.

Digital Engagement:

  • Design an event-centric playlist, promoting it through platforms like Spotify.

  • Employ geotagged filters on Snapchat or Instagram, tailored to the event's venue.

  • Initiate location and date-specific social media or PPC campaigns.

Culinary Ventures:

  • Form alliances with renowned local restaurants, incorporating branded dish names and distributing exclusive vouchers.

  • Sponsor a morning coffee station, offering attendees a refreshing start.

  • Station a branded food truck near the venue for additional visibility.

Conference Venue Arrival:

  • Secure billboard space adjacent to the venue.

  • Offer branded wearable merchandise, incentivizing attendees with rewards for visibility within the venue.

  • With the appropriate permissions, consider branded decals on walkways or nearby infrastructure.

  • If feasible, a nighttime drone display can offer a memorable spectacle.

Evening Engagements:

  • Reserve local venues for exclusive after-hours networking events.

  • Organize or sponsor theme-based dinners to facilitate more intimate interactions.

Wellness Initiatives:

  • Arrange for complimentary morning wellness sessions, be it yoga or fitness.

  • Offer serene zones near the event venue, where attendees can rejuvenate.

  • Incorporate branded wellness stations, like massage booths.

Exploration & Leisure:

  • Collaborate with local retailers to offer special deals for event attendees.

  • Organize branded city tours or attraction-based scavenger hunts, with winners receiving pertinent rewards.

By intertwining your brand with various touchpoints in an attendee's journey, you can create memorable interactions without the extensive costs of official sponsorship. These strategies not only amplify your brand visibility but also position your startup as innovative and attendee-focused.

How NFTs are Revolutionizing the Web3 Industry

Have you ever thought about owning a piece of digital art or collectible that you could physically hold in your hand? Well, with the power of NFTs and NFC technology, this is now possible. By embedding an NFC chip into a physical item, such as a painting or a sneaker, it can be linked to a unique digital asset on the blockchain, creating an entirely new level of authenticity and ownership.

But the potential of this combination goes far beyond just collectibles. Imagine purchasing a pair of sneakers that have an NFT linked to them. This NFT could provide access to exclusive content, such as behind-the-scenes footage of the design process or even early access to the next release. The possibilities are endless, and this technology is already being used in the fashion industry to combat counterfeits and provide consumers with an added layer of security.

But the power of NFTs and NFC technology extends beyond just the physical goods themselves. In the web3 industry, this technology is being used to create new business models, such as fractional ownership of real estate or art. By breaking down assets into smaller pieces and linking them to NFTs, ownership becomes accessible to a larger audience, opening up new investment opportunities.

The combination of NFTs and NFC technology is truly game-changing. From creating new levels of authenticity and ownership to revolutionizing business models, the potential of this technology is immense. As the web3 industry continues to grow and evolve, we can expect to see even more innovative uses for this powerful combination.

The Next Big Thing: Combining NFTs with Physical Goods

In a world where physical goods and digital assets coexist, the power of NFTs has become impossible to ignore. These unique tokens have taken the art world by storm, but their potential extends far beyond that. By combining an NFT with a physical product via an NFC chip embedded in the item, retailers can unlock new opportunities for sales and marketing.

Imagine purchasing a limited-edition sneaker with an NFC chip that links to an exclusive NFT digital artwork. Not only does the sneaker have value, but so does the accompanying NFT. This combination creates a unique and compelling reason to purchase the product, and adds a layer of exclusivity that can drive demand and increase the perceived value of the item.

The use cases for NFTs and NFC chips are endless. From luxury fashion items to collectible toys, the combination of a physical product and a digital asset can revolutionize the retail industry. And as the metaverse continues to grow in popularity, the value of NFTs as digital assets is only set to increase.

The combination of NFTs and physical goods via an NFC chip has the potential to be a game-changer for retailers. By leveraging the value of NFTs and creating unique and exclusive products, businesses can stay ahead of the curve and capture the attention of consumers in a rapidly evolving market. One company leading the charge is RFNFT who are building scalable NFC based solutions providing encrypted, anti-cloneable bonds between physical merch & digital worlds Inc authenticity, provenance & redeeming.

6 Common misconceptions about blockchain that are holding your business back

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Even if you have no idea how it works, odds are you have heard some of the buzz around blockchain. Because distributed hyperledger technology is a relatively new technology, there is still a large gap in knowledge between those who believe it to be the next Internet and those who just don’t know where to start. 

That was why I decided to collaborate on an online Blockchain for Business course with Columbia College Chicago Online. The 8-week course demystifies blockchain technology by starting with the basics and working through powerful use cases in booming industries like healthcare, law, government, and finance. Students walk away with a whitepaper and a plan to implement blockchain in their business immediately. 

Blockchain might seem like a technology waiting for us in the distant future, but the transformation is already happening as studies show that global spending on blockchain hit $2.1 billion in 2018 and is expected to reach $20 billion by 2024. That means that the time to challenge the myths and start exploring the technology is now. To help you get started, here are a few of the most common misconceptions surrounding blockchain that might be holding your business back. 

1. Blockchain = Bitcoin 

While it’s true that blockchain was initially developed in 2008 for cryptocurrencies, it can be used to store and protect data of any kind. Think of blockchain as a vehicle for transporting information from point A to point B. You can fill the vehicle with cryptocurrencies, digital currencies, customer data, voter information—the list goes on. Beyond the functionality of the technology, it is also worth knowing that different types of blockchain have been developed as a result of several cryptocurrencies, not just Bitcoin. In fact, Ethereum’s hyperledger structure is far more robust than Bitcoin’s and is becoming the model of choice for most businesses. 

2. Blockchain is used only for financial transactions 

After the successful application of blockchain to cryptocurrencies, banks and other financial institutions were naturally among the first to explore blockchain—JPMorgan, Bank of America, and the Federal Reserve to name a few. However, companies like IBM are really the ones leading the charge by investing in blockchain and educating their employees at break-neck speed.  Remember that blockchain protects data and information, which is not limited to banks, but rather includes any company that is concerned about the safety and speed of information transfers. Even industries you might not expect like music and entertainment are finding creative and highly-useful ways to use blockchain for more efficient business models. One of the most prevalent applications of blockchain is smart contract technology. Built on the Ethereum platform, smart contracts help businesses cut out middlemen by letting two parties exchange money, property, or any other sensitive information directly through the blockchain. While you might normally go to a notary or lawyer to legalize a document, smart contracts are completely digital and just as secure. Smart contracts come with their own sets of rules and authorizations, a cryptographic code, which are triggered when the two parties input their information. Smart contracts have the potential to cut out an incredible amount of time and money for any industry that relies on contracts to do business—particularly real estate, local and national government, and finance. 

3. There is only one blockchain, and it floats up in a magical cloud 

When you think of blockchain, you might imagine one large database floating in the cloud, connected and communicating across an invisible grid in the sky. Mystical as it might sound, this is far from the reality. There are many different types of blockchain and distributed ledger technology. They can be created and exist separately from other blockchains, they can be open or closed source, and they can be used for general purpose or case-specific situations. The two things that all blockchains have in common is that they are distributed and have some sort of consensus mechanism. Rather than existing in a cosmic cloud, blockchain is compiled as a flat file—a linear list of simple transactional records. These files are also known as “nodes,” in which miners can add or edit data independent of the blockchain.  Want to learn more about how this process works? Sign up to receive a free sample lesson for my Blockchain for Business course. 

4. Blockchain technology is always public 

Blockchain enthusiasts love to laud blockchain for being open and transparent, mined and mediated by a public consensus. While this can be true, private blockchains absolutely exist. In fact there are three types of blockchain—public, private, and federated. For public blockchains, consensus algorithms are open source, and anyone can participate without permission. Private blockchains are kept centralized to an organization and can place internal restrictions on participation. Federated blockchains, on the other hand, are run by a group and cannot be modified by anyone on the Internet. This means that companies can customize their blockchain according to their business goals and add another layer of protection to any sensitive information or data.  

5. Blockchain is too complicated for small business 

You might think that blockchain is reserved for mega-elite corporate giants, but it’s much more adaptable and adoptable than it seems. Because businesses have the option to create their own customized hyperledger technologies, there is a huge amount of opportunity for growth and discovery. There are also small-scale applications of blockchain technology that your company can integrate without taking your entire business on the blockchain. Smart Contracts, digital identity verification, and international supply chain communication are a few ways that companies are applying blockchain to certain branches of their business.  

6. Blockchain is a fad 

Because blockchain is often associated with Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies, there is an automatic assumption that it is a passing trend. But the progress of Bitcoin is in no way a reflection of the progress of blockchain. As the hype around Bitcoin faded over the past year, blockchain has been amplified by business leaders who cannot afford to ignore its benefits.  According to Oracle Executive Frank Xiong, at least 50 percent of all companies will be using blockchain within the next three years. By my own estimate, this is an understatement. Businesses are already beginning to discover the versatility and transformative power of blockchain—and because it generally takes six months to implement blockchain, the time to get started is now. 

Influencer Marketing for Startups

It’s no secret people are becoming increasingly annoyed by digital advertising, with the more sophisticated of the bunch even resorting to ad blockers. Apple’s Safari browser is about to launch a new update that makes ad blocking even more central to their offering. Safari in macOS Big Sur offers what Apple calls a Privacy Report, which shows you what trackers the browser has blocked for users.

As this trend in privacy continues, sponsored content embedded within experiences that consumers seek out is an ever expanding tactic for startups to leverage. Influencers can provide this sponsored content in a manner that consumers not only don’t mind, but actually appreciate and value.

So how do you know which type of influencers are right for your company?

  • Only 3% of people say they would consider buying a product if it were endorsed by a celebrity, but 30% of people say they are more likely to purchase a product based on a recommendation from a non-celebrity blogger, according to stats the infographic cites.

  • However, if you're looking for brand awareness, a macro-influencer can reach a lot more people in a much more efficient way.

An infographic by corporate video production company One Productions explores both the differences between macro- and micro-influencers and the benefits of influencer marketing and what you can expect to pay to work with influencers.

For those marketers who have made the leap - the vast majority (94%!) find it effective. It’s also cost effective: Influencer marketing can generate up to 11 times the ROI of traditional advertising, according to the infographic below.

Check the full graphic below for more insights.

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Startup Financial Model and Valuation

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All early-stage startups need robust financial models

99% of startup founders are afraid of the terms Pro-forma Financials, Balance Sheet, Types of Cash Flow, WACC, IRR, and especially, Valuation.

99.9% of startup founders don’t understand how to logically estimate demand for their pre-revenue ventures.

If you’re reading this, it’s because you’re raising money or researching the best ways to raise money for your seed or Series A round. It’s a daunting challenge, even for the best finance professionals, and downright scary for startup founders with no finance experience.

According to Fundable and Entrepreneur, 565,000 startups are launched every year and just under 3% receive angel and VC investments. Entrepreneur identifies three main reasons startup founders fail to secure funding:

  • Misunderstanding your financial situation.

  • Underutilizing your management team.

  • Lacking a clear go-to-market strategy.

Investors are looking for a company with a clear and scalable business model they can get behind and help grow. You need to determine a reliable and defensible value of your startup’s worth before VCs will even enter into the discussion.

Modeling an early-stage venture is especially hard because there is no baseline for any financial estimates. Yet, to position your startup as an attractive investment, you must show growth in revenues and profits. The question is how fast they should grow and where that growth comes from. The earlier stage a venture is, the more detailed strategy representation is required for a financial model to be credible.

Unfortunately, just modeling revenue growth rates does not work for a startup because it does not explicitly show where this growth comes from. In the absence of any financial history, the absence of revenue-generating logic makes any resulting numbers unjustifiable.

That is precisely why you need to provide a higher level of granularity in modeling those companies and think about the concrete actions a company must take in order to generate revenues. Those actions will include its go-to-market strategy as well as other business-model specific considerations.

99.9% of startup founders do not have this vital aspect of a successful startup down on paper correctly. If you’ve been struggling to get meetings with VCs or to win competitions, your Financial Models may be unrealistic and the source of the problem. Here is where the rubber meets the road! Focus on this issue and make sure your financial model is rock solid!

In the current business environment, having credible financials is more important than ever to make investors take your seriously!

Action Steps:

  1. Decide if you need a financial slide in your pitch deck. Financial deck slides do not take a standard form. Some startups will use them to showcase how much they raised during their first seeding round or to list potential buyers for an exit strategy. Others might skip this slide altogether and include an income statement on their traction slide instead, highlighting their venture's success so far.

  2. Evaluate your Business Model Slide - if you don’t have a financial slide, your business model slide will undoubtedly be the slide VCs focus on the most. Therefore this slide is the most important slide in your deck!

    Mention the following metrics and explain everything in detail with number crunching:

    • Total Business Done till date (Called traction)

    • Revenue Lines (transactions from which you will make money)

    • Business Model (complete end to end mention of one transaction by a user and you)  – which will result in a sale and you making money)

    • Pricing Arrival (how did you arrive at the mrp and what are the avg margins)

    • Customer Acquisition cost (CAQ) & Life time Value of Customer (LTV) (Very important in pitch deck template)

  3. Feeling like you need help on Step 1 or 2? Watch the brand new FREE masterclass from our strategic partner, The Startup Station, called "Build Credible Financials for Your Early-Stage Venture" which describes their unique framework for modeling pre-revenue ventures in a credible way. This is applicable to any product, software, or service startup, pre-revenue or revenue-generating. Sign up today and take the first step towards getting funded!


HIRE US TO HELP YOU WITH YOUR BUSINESS MODEL AND VALUATION
We help startups articulate their business case to investors from the financial point of view. We create a detailed strategic roadmap, a robust financial plan and a resulting valuation that outline business logic, drivers, financial goals, and key metrics for their company. .

Finding the Right People

Find the right co-founders and advisors is one of the most important steps any tech startup takes. The surest way to deal better with day-to-day challenges is by having great co-founders. Now they can’t just have a great CV, they need to be the right co-founders. You’ll be spending LOTS of time with them - perhaps even more time than you spend with your family and friends. You will fight, win and lose together. It’s hard to find them, because you will only know you’ve made the right choice, after you start or complete your adventure together.

For a tech business we recommend to start with a team that covers the following areas. That team can either be comprised of full-time founders, or through advisor or vendor partnerships to cover all areas:

A product person
This person, advisor or agency should be obsessed with the product details and strategy. They should be able to hire great designers to help build a better product. They should constantly think about the little yet big details of a product. They also (ideally) should have experience in building different kinds of products and understand not only how it’s designed, but also how it’s made (technically).

An engineer
This person, advisor or agency needs to be incredibly skilled in engineering, and should ideally be an experienced CTO. They should know how to hire engineers, how to define a scalable architecture, how to build up a strong engineering culture — and how to build a maintainable product.

A marketing/sales machine
The next person (most companies forget) is an experienced sales/marketing role. The person or agency in this role should be able to define a world-class brand and develop it globally. They need to build up a strong team that can tell great stories to attract new customers, while keep the existing ones interested.

A business/finance person
Having a financial mastermind is an incredible asset, and reduces the risk of making financial mistakes in the beginning enormously (e.g. agreeing to the wrong investment terms). I would never start a company again without having someone taking over that role.

Also, traditionally 1 of those 4 people should take over the leading role. There are ways to build up a company without a leading role, but I think it’s more than healthy to ultimately give someone the authority to make the final call. It helps you keep up the speed.

When it comes to equity, be fair. Everyone should invest the same energy and the same amount of time. Also think about your first employees, it’s normal to let employees participate in the companies financial success by giving away virtual stock options. Make sure you hire an experienced lawyer for setting up the company.