The Next Web

» R.I.P.

   

R.I.P.: Edgeio and TED

patrick Written on December 7, 2007 – 7:20 pm
Patrick de Laive, Internet entrepreneur and co-founder of Fleck

Businesses come and go, we all know that. May they Rest In Peace.

In the US an entrepreneur isn’t considered an experienced entrepreneur when he or she didn’t fail at least one time. The more failures, the better (hmmm.. not sure if I totally agree with that). In Europe we are far more conservative when it comes to bankruptcies. I like (as with many things) the mix between the US and European culture.

” 5 million went up on parties, scotch, hookers, blow. you know, the usual”

You don’t have to be ashamed if your company failed, but you must aim at creating a profitable business and don’t start a business just so you can fail (if you know what I mean).

Although a lot of negative things happen when a company goes out of business, there is also a bright side. The entrepreneur just learned some big lessons and has time to start a new company!

edgeioR.I.P.: Edgeio (see also Techcrunch article)
Edgeio was founded by Michael Arrington (yep, the famous blogger) and Keith Teare. I have had the luck to meet both in San Francisco. Keith is a great guy (he was the one who tipped us to wake up Michael Arrington which was covered by Wired Magazine later on :) ). Edgeio shared offices (and secretaries -Amy-) with Techcrunch. What Edgeio did..? Not totally clear to me.
Edgeio got 5 million dollar funding in October 2006 Intel Capital and Transcosmos and “burned through that money according to plan” !!!! EXCUSE ME! Guess their excel sheet predictions were spot on on the expenditures side but was a little bit off with the predictions of the revenues :)

A TechCrunch reader commented: “what exactly did you spend 5 million dollars on?” Arringtons reply is hilarious “parties, scotch, hookers, blow. you know, the usual” :)

tedR.I.P.: TED (no not the conference)
Closer to home, Amsterdam based TED pulled the plug. TED published a free paper for kids and had an internet concept attached to it and with TED mobile, TED TV and 25 talented people working at their office it seemed a healthy and successful company. TED was founded by Friso Jiskoot (son of former CEO ABN AMRO) and backed by Marcel Boekhoorn (Serial entrepreneur, investor in several startups -zecco.com symbaloo.com-).

I wish Friso all the best and I’m sure we’ll hear from him again as he is a true entrepreneur.
Sorry to conclude that TED is DEAD. R.I.P.

I hope you like that post!

The Next Web Blog covers start-up news from all over the world (not just the Valley), exciting new technologies and inspiring entrepreneurs. If you're new here, you may want to read our 'About' page and subscribe to our RSS feed.

Do you have a start-up that we should write about? Contact us! Thanks for visiting and hope you come back again!
Add to Google Add to netvibes Subscribe in Bloglines

Subscribe to:

 RSS feed   Comments  Email update Email

Add to Google   Add to netvibes   Subscribe in Bloglines
Sign up for our FREE weekly newsletter!

Giga Sponsors:

eBuddy
E.Factor

Accenture Innovation Awards
Netlog

Wakoopa

This blog is currently sponsored by Accenture, E.Factor, Netlog, eBuddy and Wakoopa. Interested in becoming a sponsor too? Check our advertising opportunities for more information.



Mega Sponsors:

myMailMarket email marketing Intermediads
Organizers United Linkedin Group Fleck

Copyright 2006-2008 © The Next Web - Entries (RSS) / Comments (RSS)