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» Experiment: who wants to be a mentor?

   

Experiment: who wants to be a mentor?

simone Written on May 13, 2008 – 3:34 pm
Simone Brummelhuis, writing about women on the web

Already twice at London Coffee Meetup, I have come across female founders of internet startups who would love to have a mentor. Somebody who gives them some guideline without further ado. So I decided to set up an experiment.

Founder of HabinkiAre there any readers of The Next Web who are willing to act as mentor for Chloe Holding? She’s the founder of the very early stage startup Habinki. Read the questions and answers below and let me know!

1. How did you come up with the idea of your start-up?

It was more a question of ‘What did I want to do with my life?’ than finding a new business idea, and starting up a bikini/travel company was exactly what I wanted to do. I had always wanted to set up a business and I had a passion for travel and retail, and it just took a little bit of inspiration to figure out how to make that into a great business.

2. How far are you with the set up of the start-up?

I have secured funding via a loan with the Small Firms Loan Guarantee Scheme backed by the government, I have incorporated the company, developed the branding, and begun marketing and selling my brand. The bikinis are on their way from Brazil to arrive in June and the website is currently in development.

3. What is your goal with the company

I want to create a brand which young people associate with and are inspired by. I can see many opportunities in the future in terms of developing new product lines and focusing more on the travel industry, in terms of places to go ‘in your bikini’.

4. What was your biggest challenge during the development process?

Without any doubt the biggest challenge so far has been to make the decision and find the strength of mind to do something very different, which your peers, friends and family may not understand or support. It was about realising that I wanted to do this so much that it actually didn’t matter what anyone else thought, or what advice people gave me, and that the faith and passion I had for building businesses was strong enough to set out on a path on my own. I think part of the definition of being an entrepreneur is to do what everyone else says ‘will never work’.

5. Who are your advisers?

My close friends, a core group of girls (and a few boys) who have shown a real interest and passion for what I am doing. They have offered advice, often on a daily basis, on some tricky issues, and I hope that in the not-too-distant future some of these people will come and work for the business.

6. Why do you need a mentor, for which activities and for which period of time?

I would like someone who has been through a similar experience of setting up a business from scratch, and who has been successful. I would be interested in any kind of communication that would be convenient for them. Even an email exchange every couple of weeks or once a month would be great, or even just to have the opportunity to talk on the phone for half an hour as a one-off, so that I could talk through some core-issues. I think about raising capital, and how to expand, or…. recover from a major business crisis. It would also be useful to gain recommendations of advisors, software, consultants to use.

7. What type of mentor you think would you benefit from?

Ideally someone who has built a consumer retail business, but more importantly someone that has set up a business from absolutely nothing and knows how difficult it is to raise capital and live on nothing but air.

8. What does the mentor gain from mentoring you?

I think that the ideal mentor would enjoy doing this as they would enjoy helping someone embarking on a similar venture as they had. In the future I would be keen to do the same. However, on another level, a successful businessperson and investor may be interested in financing small businesses or may be interested in gaining access to a network of young entrepreneurs and listening to their business ideas.

Interested? Leave a comment below or drop Ernst-Jan a line. I hope the experiment will be a success!

I hope you like that post!

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About the author: Simone worked as a successful lawyer before becoming an entrepreneur by setting up her own B2B publishing company Brummsbooks. Thereafter, as co-owner and managing director of IENS (www.iens.nl), she developed this start-up into the no. 1 user generated content database publisher of restaurant guides in The Netherlands. With the Europeanmuseumguide.com, she intends to do the same. She works with Linde Wolters on a book about Female Internet Heroes and launches www.thenextwomen.com.

6 comments/trackbacks to “Experiment: who wants to be a mentor?”

  1. Jun 24, 2008: Evaluation of the mentorship request for bikini start-up

    [...] weeks ago I called for mentors to help founder Chloe Holding with her online bikini site Habinki. I received numerous replies of [...]

  1. By Patrick de Laive on May 13, 2008 | Reply

    Unfortunately, I think I don’t qualify as a mentor, but my first tip would be to put at least something on your website… 123 register dot com doesn’t make a very good impression on people who are visiting your website

  2. By Karin on May 13, 2008 | Reply

    I agree with Patrick, also habinki.nl is still available… I should register the domain as soon as possible before someone else does!

  3. By Mike Butcher on May 13, 2008 | Reply

    Happy to hand over advice in return for a phone call about her startup, if it’s UK based.

  4. By Claudio Cossio on May 13, 2008 | Reply

    I would recommend her to check out this event in Cambridge. It is called Ignite.

    They have sessions with mentors, that I think would fit what she is in need off.

    http://www.cfel.jbs.cam.ac.uk/.....index.html

    Regards.

  5. By Steven Carroll on May 14, 2008 | Reply

    What a bloody good idea! If it was not for my own mentor there is absolutely no way I would have succeeded the first time around. Unfortunately Bill died in 98 and left a major vacuum that I am still craving to fill.

    Also may I suggest, (this going to sound a bit creepy), but as well as a mentor, needed for me was a sounding board partner, (not necessarily to have a stake in the business) and not having a stake might even be a bonus, just someone who is employed who’s heart is with you, gets your challenges and acts as a sounding board (antagonist) and who can help you technically / and logically, mine was Denis who also died in the same week as Bill, (God was working on a big project at the time see), but I yearn for both of them equally.

    Once your lucky twice your good (NOT TRUE IMO)!
    Once your lucky, twice your bloody lucky = (idea for a blog post in the making).

    Good luck, and my best tip, trust NO ONE unless you have walked though crap with them and seen them exposed in the shit.

    Steve

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