Entrepreneurship

Categories, unlike tags, can have a hierarchy. You might have a Jazz category, and under that have children categories for Bebop and Big Band. Totally optional.

Treat high school like a day job

11:57 AM Monday, 1/4/2010 by RK

The holiday vacation ended and most schools started today. Let’s take this opportunity to ponder about what Paul Graham had written for high school students.

Graham, a well-known and respected venture capitalist, programmer, essayist and author, wrote an essay/speech for high school students back in 2005: “What You’ll Wish You’d Known.” While I do not agree with everything that he says in the long essay, I do like the following passages:

Most people like to be good at what they do. In the so-called real world this need is a powerful force. But high school students rarely benefit from it, because they’re given a fake thing to do. When I was in high school, I let myself believe that my job was to be a high school student. And so I let my need to be good at what I did be satisfied by merely doing well in school.

If I had to go through high school again, I’d treat it like a day job. I don’t mean that I’d slack in school. Working at something as a day job doesn’t mean doing it badly. It means not being defined by it. I mean I wouldn’t think of myself as a high school student, just as a musician with a day job as a waiter doesn’t think of himself as a waiter. And when I wasn’t working at my day job I’d start trying to do real work.

Student entrepreneurs who are in high school should take his advice and treat high school like a day job and avoid being defined by it. While passionate student entrepreneurs are already doing that, it’s helpful to read something like this and take a moment to reflect.

Read the rest of Graham’s essay for high school students here:
What You’ll Wish You’d Known.

Personal blogging shouldn’t be neglected

9:34 AM Saturday, 1/2/2010 by RK

One of the negative trends I see today is regular personal blogging getting more and more neglected by our generation. Microblogging is the new hot thing today: posting and reading Twitter and Facebook updates are taking away most of our attention on the Web.

While microblogging has its advantages and purposes of providing speed and ease of use and giving people less pressure to publish thoughts and information online, I think regular personal blogging is very important due to the following reasons:

1. Blogging forces us to analyze and think deeply.
2. Blogging provides us with a space on the Web that is relatively free of distractions.
3. Blogging encourages independent thinking and writing, as opposed to getting into the habit of mostly bouncing off and retweeting other people’s comments.
4. Blogging can improve our writing skills. Posting short updates usually does not.
5. Regular blogging can become a healthy habit. Solely microblogging can become like eating fast food.

Now don’t get me wrong: I think microblogging is highly essential to the world today, which was meaningfully exemplified by events like the Iran protests. On my part, in order to participate in microblogging, I try to tweet every day.

On the other hand, I haven’t been blogging seriously until yesterday, so some of you may think that I don’t deserve to put up a post called “Blogging shouldn’t be neglected.” I have certainly neglected blogging until recently. So, the list above is really for myself.

“Your blog is your mothership” – Matt Mullenweg, founder of Wordpress

I have noticed that teenagers and young adults nowadays tend to participate more actively in microblogging, while their own blogs become more static over time. Of course, the nature of both mediums inevitably leads to such trends, but regular and thoughtful blogging shouldn’t be ignored nevertheless.

Was it worth it?

12:00 AM Friday, 1/1/2010 by RK

Was it worth it? I remember trying to answer this question on a plane ride back from New York. I had just received an award at the International Webby Awards ceremony at Cipriani Wall Street, where the most famous and influential leaders of the Internet industry were gathered to celebrate. To everyone else, my answer to ‘was it worth it?’ would seem simple. Before I could answer, however, the word ‘dilemma’ came first to my mind.

Passion has been the primary force that has guided me during the last three years. I am an adventurer, and my intuition told me that founding and pouring my time into Wayland Student Press Network, an on-line media startup, would bring much positive impact, both to the school community and my life. As a result, I was able to put Wayland High School on the map, nationally and internationally. I am now an aspiring technology and media entrepreneur with so much privilege and lots of potential (I am told). But in a structured school environment where a high school kid is expected to fulfill the duties of a high school student, I have constantly struggled with the dilemma of balance.

My teachers, friends, and strangers may think that I chose to take the road less traveled. On many days, I focused on developing my management, technical, and interpersonal skills over doing school homework and preparing for tests. What people do not know is that taking such a path was not a choice; my passion and I had a life of our own, and the intensity simply drove me during the last three years. There were so many highs and lows, but I couldn’t help it. Once the natural process of following my creative instincts began, I was just doing what I was born to do: taking risks and working toward creating something larger than myself.

Sometimes artists can lose everything while working on a piece of art. In my version, I got lower grades, lost points on tests, and was not able to take AP courses as a result. Sometimes my teachers tried to prevent me from attending conferences and doing any work for my startup, so I could focus solely on their classes. There were many sleepless nights and at times stress was overwhelming. There were times when I was devastated because of public criticisms and social barriers that resulted from being a “media mogul” at the age of 18 in a relatively small community. There was one time when I broke down and cried, though I never cry.

So was it worth it? Yes. As an adventurer, I have explored extensively, made new discoveries, and found and followed my passions. I trusted my abilities and succeeded in emerging from hard times with valuable life experiences gained. I had the privilege to be a creator and a leader.

Today, I have matured as an entrepreneur. I am confident that for my second major startup, I will be able to keep a more balanced life, whether it is between schoolwork and startups or between family and startups. In the meantime, as an immigrant and a transfer student, I am proud that I have made a permanent impact on my community. It seemed impossible at first, but I was able to inspire people by doing so. Frankly, that inspiration is what really matters to me. It’s what drives me forward as an entrepreneur.