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Book Review - Net Entrepreneurs Only
by Adam McFarland

Published on this site: May 26th, 2006 - See
more articles from this month

Everyone loves to read other peoples success stories. It provides
us with evidence that amazing things do happen to normal people.
By learning what they did to succeed we come one step closer to
success ourselves. Such is the case with the ten stories told in
Net Entrepreneurs Only - 10 Entrepreneurs Tell the Stories of their
Success by Gregory K. Ericksen and Ernst & Young.
Ericksen interviewed ten of the most successful entrepreneurs at
the turn of the century and presents their stories with a unique
but effective use of lengthy quotes from the entrepreneurs. The
quotes leave you with a feeling of having actually interviewed the
entrepreneur yourself rather than reading a story about them. Each
story is about 20 pages long but reads more like 10 pages because
of the big print and free flowing pace.
The 10 entrepreneurs chronicled in the book are Jay S. Walker (priceline.com),
Mike McNulty and Mike Hagan (VerticalNet), Christina Jones (pcOrder),
William Porter and Christos Cotsakos (E*Trade), Gregory K. Jones
(uBid), Russell Horowitz (Go2Net), Ken Pasterna (Knight/Trimark),
William Schrader (PSINet), Pierre Omidyar (eBay), and Mark Cuban
and Todd Wagner (broadcast.com).
Each entrepreneur has a unique story of how and why they saw the
internet as a viable place to start a business, and each had a different
way of getting there, but after reading all ten stories you can
see some common threads between these extremely successful net entrepreneurs.
Although this book was written at a time when internet business
success was substantially easier (the book was published in 2000),
many of the core competencies that these entrepreneurs possess can
be applied in any era to any industry.
Each is extremely passionate about what they do to the point that
they inspire others around them to have the same passion. Each is
not afraid to take a risk, regardless of whether or not other people
disagree with it. Along with that, each knows that failure is inevitable
when taking risks and understands that future success depends on
the ability to learn from failure and move on.
Another interesting thing that was mentioned in three of the ten
stories is the fear of being blindsided by an opponent that they
can't see coming. They all talk about the proverbial kid in his
basement or garage that comes up with the technology that puts them
out of business. When talking about Mark Cuban, Todd Wagner said:
"I know Mark worries, among other things, about the proverbial
12-year-old in the garage [coming up with technological breakthroughs]
and us being blindsided."
This commonality is particularly interesting, and I suspect it comes
from the fact that many of these entrepreneurs were that kid and
they fear the second coming of themselves more than anything else.
They probably fear that this "kid" will have the same
passion and determination that they once had, and that, more than
anything else scares them.
If I had read this book when it was written I would certainly have
recommended it to any young entrepreneur. However, years later I
recommend it even more. I think that it's a must read for anyone
looking to go into business or currently in business.
The thing that you can do now that you couldn't do when the book
was written is find out what's happened to these entrepreneurs and
their companies in the time that has passed since the book's publication.
One of the biggest joys of reading this book was trying to guess
whether or not these companies still existed and whether or not
the same entrepreneur was still running them.
Knowing that there was the dot-com boom and subsequent crash around
that time, I figured there was less than a 50/50 chance that these
businesses were still around. I'm not going to ruin the individual
surprises, but there was a fairly vast array of directions that
these companies and entrepreneurs went after the dot-com crash.
Some of the entrepreneurs we've all heard of (Mark Cuban), and some
of the companies we know still exist and are very successful (eBay),
but many the average reader won't be familiar with. Doing the research
to find out where they are today adds an extra dimension to the
book that a reader wouldn't have experienced if they read it when
it came out.
Net Entrepreneurs Only - 10 Entrepreneurs Tell the Stories of their
Success by Gregory K. Ericksen and Ernst & Young is an extremely
interesting for anyone who enjoys a good success story. However,
it's truly inspiring if you are that entrepreneur who strives come
up with the next innovating breakthrough that puts one of these
ten entrepreneurs out of business.

Adam McFarland owns the http://SportsLizard.com
Network
(http://Network.SportsLizard.com)
- a network of sports sites including collectibles, movies, books,
video games, and more. You can read Adam's blog about being a young
internet entrepreneur by going to http://www.sportslizard.com/blog/


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