Offtopic, but I hate this trend of articles titled 'How to..." where the article don't actually tell you <i>how</i> to do anything. It seems like there have been a lot of these articles lately. Is it an SEO thing?<p>Another noiseword title I've learned to avoid is, "What we learned from..."
Yes, there's more angel money these days but the investors outside tech hubs are naieve. They have to be educated, they have a long tedious investment cycle, the friction is just enormous.
I think it's important to note that david brussin's thoughts are primarily geared towards secondary markets. As an entrepreneur who runs a startup out of a <i>quarternary</i> market (athens, ga), i can assure you that we would be benefitting a lot more from having the valley resources at our disposal.<p>i tend to make a trip to atlanta (secondary?) every week, but the resources only stretch so far. atlanta may have a VC presence, but the angels are few & far between.<p>i'd also say that the biggest problem with most secondary markets is they don't cover the entire gamut of industries. talking from my own experience, atlanta is a B2B town with a heavy emphasis on areas like security. if you're running a B2C startup (like we are at <a href="http://gorankem.com" rel="nofollow">http://gorankem.com</a>), i'd almost encourage the entrepreneur to not waste any time seeking money in GA.<p>overall, the biggest advantage the valley has over all the other markets is the connections. personally, i could deal with the competition for talent because i like to think that we have a stronger product. i shake my head at some of the <i>ideas</i> getting funded.<p>the wisdom in the tech community that is being transferred in SF on a daily basis cannot be touched.<p>for that reason & many more, if anybody has a couch to sleep on come this summer, i may be looking for one...
I'd love to know what the success and failure percentages are for Silicon Valley startups. I'm sure there are overall higher successes in raw numbers, but in per-VC dollar invested, or per-developer capita, I'm skeptical.<p>Maybe it's just me, but it seems like most of the startups I hear about these days are just CRUD apps aimed at some social niche. Those can be built anywhere, and don't require rockstar programmers.
Relevant (has also been posted in the past to HN):
<a href="http://www.gabrielweinberg.com/blog/2010/09/yes-phlboschiseanycbltxyz-does-web-startups.html" rel="nofollow">http://www.gabrielweinberg.com/blog/2010/09/yes-phlboschisea...</a>