Outsourcing IT and application development has become a common practice for many companies seeking cost savings and access to global talent. However, this approach comes with several significant challenges:
Communication barriers
Quality control issues
Security and data privacy concerns
Cultural differences
Time zone complications
Hidden costs
Loss of in-house expertise
Intellectual property risks
Project management complexities
Dependency on external partners
What are the alternatives?
As an alternative, some organizations are exploring a hybrid model known as “homesourcing.” This approach aims to combine the benefits of outsourcing with the advantages of having in-house employees, recruited from the Balkans.
Key features of homesourcing include:
Communication:
The professionals we find are exceptionally proficient in English
Culture:
The Balkan region has an incredibly good work culture
Professionals from this area are not afraid to be honest
Ownership:
The developer becomes an integral part of the team
They take ownership of the product
They participate actively, just like an on-site developer
HR Support:
We work closely with the developers
We ensure they become part of the team
We provide ongoing follow-up
We make sure they do what’s necessary to integrate into the group
This approach aims to address many of the common pitfalls of traditional outsourcing, such as communication barriers, cultural differences, and quality control issues.
By bringing in specialized talent and integrating them more closely with the existing team, companies can potentially achieve better results while maintaining more direct control over their projects .Do you want to learn more about Homesourcing, please register here or send an email to sales@homesourcing.no
or use this form, and we will come back to you ASAP;
Here are some news articles and tweets I have been reading the last week. I hope you find some relevant stories! If not, send me your links and ideas and learn more about our community here.
Stay in the loop and get daily Angel Investor News at @entrahouse and if you missed out on the last edition, you find it here.
Marquee Equity Uses AI To Connect Startups With Investors — techstory.in
Marquee Equity – a bootstrapped Saas platform, that is disrupting the way companies raise funds, globally. Founded in 2016 by their current CEO, Ash Narain, and CTO, Raj Kabir, the Delhi-based fundraising platform aims to make it easier for early-stage companies to connect with quality investors and raise capital.
Talus’ platform enables the discovery of compounds that affect transcription factors, key proteins that interact with DNA and turn genes on and off. Many transcription factors are implicated in cancer, which results from aberrant gene activity, and other diseases.
Microlending Definition — www.investopedia.com
Microlending is the practice of granting small loans to people or businesses that might otherwise not qualify for such loans.
This week’s tweets
So EXCITED for the latest class of @Techstars_Chi an announced here -> https://t.co/H4X8gUdQlZ Our first accelerator was run back in 2010, what a journey it has been - @Techstars for life!
As a curator, there is nothing more helpful than feedback on what you think should be the focus of this newsletter. If you want to be a more active contributor, have an interesting startup, some great ideas for collaboration you want to share etc… Let’s have a chat.
I promise your voice is important and suggestions regularly incorporated into the digest. Please send me your ideas, exciting news, deals, tools and connect on LinkedIn and follow my blog at bergmoe.com and @berg_moe 🙂
?Congratulations Bryggefisk, you have been accepted to the Food Ecosystems Virtual 2021 Founder Institute! What a start of the weekend???
?The Founder Institute (https://fi.co/join/food), the world’s premier pre-seed startup accelerator, is launching its first-ever global food and agriculture program, and Bryggefisk is a part of that batch.
Soon we will start up in Berlevåg with King grab, but the primary focus in the FI-program will be a development of the application we are working on.
? For more information, contact me. NB. We are also taking onboard a few additional investors to match some public funding.
Story by Feliks Eyser first published at Medium.com.
I started my digital marketing company in 2009 against the backdrop of a global financial crisis. Most people thought a young university graduate — like I was at that time — should play it safe and wait for the business climate to get better before starting a company. I’ll never forget the middle-aged business owner who approached me at a trade show and suggested I was “very courageous” to start a company in“the crisis,” and wished me well as if I were taking a trip to some dangerous place from which I would never return.
My youthful ignorance turned out to be a blessing, although the first two years of bootstrapping were painfully humbling. My business card read “CEO,” but in reality, I was sleeping on an airbed under my desk. Two years later, armed with the proof of concept for our business model and bolstered by the tailwind of the improving economy, I raised my first round of financing. Eventually, I assembled a fantastic team of hundreds of people and later sold the majority of the company to a media conglomerate. It was a great ride, and I now believe that starting my company during a recession was the best move I could have made.
Why it’s better to start a company in 2020 than in 2019
According to a 2009 study by the Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation, an extraordinary 57% of Fortune 500 companies have been founded in a recession or bear market, even though only 31% of all years since 1855 counted as “down years.”
Starting with a blank slate is your advantage in 2020. This year, the competition is weak.
If the majority of these companies got started during rough economic periods, it suggests that they may not be bad times to start a company. A “bad time to start a company” usually implies low consumer demand and limited access to funding. But that’s mainly a problem for startups that are already established. They have to manage the decline, after all.
With no legacy costs, no draining layoffs, and no bank calling you to cut the credit line, entrepreneurs who start companies now can focus on building a great new product or service. Starting with a blank slate is your advantage in 2020. This year, the competition is weak, and you can gain an advantage that might last for years.
Ingredients for success
In the world of startups, there is no guaranteed formula for success, but you need at least four ingredients to avoid failure: a good idea, an outstanding team, enough funding, and a way to find customers.
Here’s what that looks like in the current crisis of 2020.
1. Painkiller ideas
Great ideas usually either solve a real, significant problem or make life considerably easier. Think of great startup ideas as painkillers: People need them and are willing to pay. The year 2020 will produce a whole range of “painkiller-category” problems that will translate into entrepreneurial opportunities.
Millions of children can’t attend school. How can you solve that? Visit any quarantined household with small children. Those parents surely have a litany of new problems in need of a solution. Tens of millions of workers have gotten laid off. Hundreds of thousands of urban storefronts will be left empty by shuttered restaurants and struggling retailers. What will fill the voids in 2021?
Problems create opportunities, and 2020 is not lacking in problems. It’s no coincidence that companies like Uber or Airbnb were founded and thrived after the last financial crisis. They solved real problems (“I need extra cash”) and made life easier (“I want a cheaper, easier option”) at the right time.
2. Hiring during a recession
Finding great employees has historically been one of the biggest bottlenecks for startups. Here’s the biggest reason to start a company in 2020: For the first time in the last five years, you’re going to have access to an abundant pool of amazing talent. In 2019, companies had to bend over backward to attract great people. Outstanding employees were spoiled by poaching offers from competing companies. That drove rising salary levels and the frequency of job-hopping.
Today, the pandemic has forced millions of qualified, hard-working employees to be let go by their firms. Some of them — maybe you among them — will take matters in their own hands and create a startup. Others will be thrilled to be working for one.
In 2020 it will get much easier to compete for talent and retain employees. Perks like free kombucha, Disneyland furniture, and daily yoga classes at work suddenly sound so “2019” now. This year, offer meaningful work with good pay and possibly some stock options and people will gladly assemble their own Ikea furniture to work for you. Add to that the possibility of worldwide recruiting, which the work-from-home explosion has accelerated, and your inbox will be overflowing with applications.
3. Finding funding
Now you might be thinking, “This sounds all well and good, but it will be impossible to raise any money in 2020.”
I don’t agree. But before I address why, let’s clear something up: I think the last five years were a fake environment of fundraising. It felt like anybody and their dog could raise a $1 million seed round if they walked straight and put together 20 PowerPoint slides. There was so much money available that a company was able to raise $120 million dollars to build a $400 machine to squeeze juice from a plastic bag.
These times are probably over, but venture capitalists and angel investors are still here and still have money to invest. It will undoubtedly become harder to raise funds in 2020 compared to 2019. The 2020 funding environment will favor outstanding founders. They will still raise rounds, and the mediocre startups will suffer. But who wants to be mediocre anyways?
Let’s consider a temporary shortage of capital a good thing. Less funding means the quality of entrepreneurship will rise again. Fewer dollars will force everyone to work harder and get better. In my first two years after starting up, I would think three times before spending a dime. For example, we would never pay for any sales leads datasets but instead hack together a script to scrape such data from public sites for free. This instilled a culture of frugality that lasted much longer than the actual bootstrapping phase.
In normal times, nobody needs a $50 million Series A round six months after starting their company. A lot of such rounds led to premature scaling and created more damage than value. Potentially good companies like WeWorkblitzscaled straight into trouble.
Use the temporary shortage of capital to your advantage and foster a culture of frugality and wits. No business-class flights or $1,000 office chairs. The leaner you operate, the better.
4. Finding customers
When I started my digital marketing company in the financial crisis, a lot of companies had shredded their advertising budget. So needless to say, our products didn’t sell like hotcakes. But we knew there were still businesses out there that were doing well and who needed our services. Our job was to be smart and find them.
As a founder, your job in the first year is to build something that 100 people love, rather than something that 10,000 people kind of like. If you do an excellent job of creating something valuable, you’ll find those 100 people, no matter if it’s the year 2020, 2009, or 2001. That is the first stage for most startups, and during this stage, the macroeconomic environment just doesn’t matter so much. It will easily take one or two years until you have genuinely figured out product-market fit.
Take advantage of the low advertising prices as well. If you truly offer something that people need, now is the best time to attract users cheaply. With marketing budgets cut down to almost zero in a lot of cases, you’ll be able to buy low-priced ad inventory, especially in digital channels.
Here’s to the real entrepreneurs
The next couple of years in a downturn environment will be your training day. The sales you make will be the hardest of your life. The fundraising will be slow and cumbersome, especially if you’re a first-time founder. You will get scars. But those kinds of scars will make you great in the future.
Fortune hunters who are just in the game for easy money are likely to leave the scene during this crisis. But real entrepreneurs will enter the arena and stick around. Entrepreneurship is always a tough game with limited resources, no matter when you start. One of my mentors would always say: “As a founder, you have to eat concrete.” You’ll face a thousand setbacks in your journey. So you might as well start now when everyone else is too scared to join the race. You’ll have a head start.
Story by Feliks Eyser first published at Medium.com.
NIEC already has people coming from the United States, Germany, Sweden, Netherlands, United Kingdom, Africa, Denmark … and of course Norway.
Join me and this international group of entrepreneurs and angel investors to network, meet & greet and do business together! Secure your tickets now at http://www.niec.co
Stian founded 24SevenOffice back in 1997, which is the world’s first cloud-based ERP system. Besides being the Founder and CEO of 24SevenOffice,
He is an experienced serial entrepreneur and angel investor with several successful startups and investments since 1997. Stian has been the founder, co-founder, angel or main investor in more than 40 companies. Stian is an interdisciplinary graduate in engineering and finance and is now taking his ventures to the US and have moved to NYC with his family.
I have been involved in the internationalization of companies before (Seed Forum Global, First Tuesday, Global Direct, etc.) and have after 2003, systematically been developing an extensive network of entrepreneurs and investors.
Based on the platform Gründerklubben – The Norwegian Entrepreneurs Club, we aim to do to it again are now looking for international partners (accelerators, technology vendors, global consulting companies, early-stage funds, etc.) that want to team up with us.
We are currently creating a new international brand that will be the powerhouse in this endeavor.
Now, we have a technology platform under development that will transform how companies communicate with the market, find investors for their projects, and great partners.
Gründerklubben already has more than 23 000 members in Norway, and last month we also acquired the biggest entrepreneurs network in Bangkok, Thailand. We now have 147 502 people in our system and are planning to grow fast.
Vision; We are creating the worlds most significant global network of entrepreneurs. Startups are the real job creators and problem solvers of this century. We want to inspire even more companies to have a comprehensive approach to their rollout and will develop a platform to make it easier to reach out to potential customers, partners, and investors to succeed.
Mission; We develop a member club and support forum for entrepreneurs. We help startups to grow and prosper using the power of sharing is caring, best practice and a world-class application linked with social media tools.
Goal; To build the world’s biggest global entrepreneurs club and support forum.
First, I would like to invite you to sign up for my Newsletter “New Venture Insights” I will send you my ebook “12 Reasons Why I Love Estonia” as a small intro gift :).
Let me take a minute to give you a short introduction to what I do;
My LinkedIn profile sums it all up; I have more than 30 years of experience with funding, coaching, and growing companies and great ideas to the next level. Have an extended global network of people in both the seed funding and venture capital world. I consider myself as an entrepreneur by heart and is always looking for win-win scenarios.
Currently, we have invested in a few startups and are now engaged, taking them to the next level. Feel free to follow my journey at my blog, Berg Moe Inc.
I am also the owner of Gründerklubben (The Norwegian Entrepreneurs Club) and Bangkok Entrepreneurs, the largest entrepreneurs networks in both Bangkok, Thailand, and Norway.
Our goal is to build the world’s biggest global entrepreneurs club and support forum. We now have 147 500+ people in our network and are planning to grow fast.