top | item 1238788

What Silicon Valley startups can learn from West African kidnappers

10 points| denisu | 16 years ago |blog.cubeofm.com | reply

14 comments

order
[+] sperry|16 years ago|reply
This guy's a joke. His novelty is wearing off fast. His startup advice is stale and it seems like he's tryig too hard to build up his Internet persona.
[+] pw|16 years ago|reply
That seems harsh. This post wasn't that great, but his others were pretty good. He's certainly working at building his online persona, but there's nothing wrong with that. Though with the mention of making "30k a month", I'm beginning to worry that his story might be fabricated for the sake of publicity. Regardless, I look forward to seeing more writing from Max.
[+] mahmud|16 years ago|reply
Yeah, I pretty much started ignoring maxklein after he trolled HN.
[+] pgbovine|16 years ago|reply
i didn't find any insights that were unique to West African kidnappers; the same comparisons could be made to any risky enterprise with an intense and tightly-knit team.

did anyone else find that article a bit creepy to read? i'm afraid of the slippery slope where people continue to push more and more absurd yet uninsightful analogies. i'm sure someone could've written a similar article entitled "What Silicon Valley startups can learn from Nazi commanders" and made those same points.

[+] philk|16 years ago|reply
I found the bit about West African kidnappers interesting without the assortment of generic startup advice.
[+] josephd|16 years ago|reply
Re-echoing what someone above said, the analogy in the article is quite stale, without bearing fresh insight in relation to startups. It tries too much to cash in on tabloid like sensationalism ''Kidnappers'' while pretending to educate its readers. It is also wordy. There are a few writers on here who try to share insightful messages in fewer words (Sivers etc.,) and they are modest about the attention they get. Focusing the readers' attention on the amount of shareware money one earns is the equivalent of cyber bling: very suspect.
[+] SteveC|16 years ago|reply
This is a link to an article about hemorrhoids.