The Startup Kids
The growth of the Internet has
changed small startups to some
of the most influential
companies in the world.
Behind these companies are more
often than not young visionary
entrepreneurs who grew up with
the Internet and now seem best
positioned to direct the future
of the web.
Who are these new entrepreneurs
and what drives them?
A really great founder seems to
be building a groundswell even
if there is nothing there, and
so he in effect is a magician.
nothing.
You are always kind of just on
the edge of your comfort zone
and everything you are doing is
basically something you are just
barely qualified for or not
qualified for, it is like
jumping off a cliff and having
to build your own parachute
I think an entrepreneur, that is
A difficult one, how do you
define an entrepreneur. I think
an entrepreneur is a person who
dares to have a dream that not
that many people have and even
more importantly dares to chase
it with their money where their
mouth is and their time and
their career and dares to take
the risk to going out there to
realize that vision.
Entrepreneurs are some of the
craziest people you ever meet,
they are people who have a dream
or an idea, something that keeps
them awake at night and they get
the opportunity to hopefully
solve that problem or do
something about it.
So the best entrepreneurs are
often either solving their own
problems or solving some huge
things and they can really
Entrepreneurship at the moment
is kind of like the new smoking,
it's cool to be creative and it
is cool to be making something
and I just love that energy.
Over the last couple of years
the cost of starting
a web-based startup has
decreased dramatically.
I think over the last couple
Of years it has changed
dramatically. If you think back
to the turn of the century,
two thousand, what you had
was very large companies often
creating websites like Yahoo,
AOL, these were much bigger
companies creating new kind of
products on the internet.
With the crash those went away
but the Internet didn't go away
and what actually happens was
that new initiative, young
innovators came along looked
at the web and said we can do
Ten years ago if you wanted to
start-up a company you got to
pay a lawyer to tell you weather
you should do a "C" Corp or
a "LLC". Bam, that is a Google
search, done, free, in like five
minutes. You know by that time
you would not even gone past the
lawyer secretary ten years ago.
It is really interesting to see
What entrepreneurs will look
like ten years from now. Before
they were managers, maybe little
engineering but now they are
young tech people and hackers
Anybody now with a laptop
and a Wi-Fi connection
can build anything
Today a lot of people will be
never could have before. This
applies specially to younger
people. They are willing to put
in the long, unpaid hours
and have nothing to loose.
As you get older you get certain
ways and certain patterns and
you recognize them and behave in
certain way but I think that the
young entrepreneurs see things
differently in a way that is often
times refreshing and therefore
groundbreaking.
One of the great benefits of
that you have less to lose than
you know, once you have four
have to re-mortgage your house
company, that is a bigger risk
to take then if you come
straight out of university and
all you kind of have to choose
between is either you take up
a job or you start a crazy
company to do crazy thing
I have met kids out here who are
still teenager and starting
companies and all the way down
to sixteen years old, which is
pretty crazy when you think
about it.
Younger people have been
affected by less and they are
often times more idealistic and
they have bigger dreams and
bigger vision because they do
not know, necessary,
It doesn't really matter to me,
I could be fifty for all I care
because removing the age
element is really what I think,
area so fascinating. That I know
they still take you seriously,
they will still listen to you.
And that is why there is culture
of listening that is so
conducive to entrepreneurship
which is why this area is so
valuable to people
Brian Wong grew up in Vancouver
Canada. At 19 he had raised
4,3 million dollars in funding
for his company, Kiip, a reward
network where you play games on
your phone and get real rewards
through Kiip's network.
My parents at one point thought
I was addicted to my computer
and wanted to take it away
from me and I'm glad that
they ended up not doing that but
I spent, like, eight to ten
hours a day on my computer this
was at a point when I was very
addicted to Counter Strike
Source, which is a first person
shooter game which was extremely
popular when I was young and
still very much is and I spent
game to maintain my top of
server status and I was at the
top of like three servers and
it takes a lot of time
I spent a lot of time on
Photoshop. I taught my self how
to design because I figured
it would be pretty fun to learn
how to do that. I taught myself
through forums and tutorials
and all that fun stuff. It was
something out of nothing.
I studied marketing and I also
did a minor in politic science
that was completely unrelated
to tech, that was in liberal
arts so that I could learn how
people on the other side of
the table were thinking
and it was very enlighten. I was
able to learn a lot about
perspectives around politic
theory and one of the things
it helped me do was to
understand power structures
and politics is inherently turn
around power and if I could
learn how to navigate these
power structures, I could be
so that is what political
science really made me do
I started a web design company,
entrepreneur ends up doing at
design consultancy and we
basically charged people to
make layouts and it was really
me and my buddy, like, hammering
out code and then sending it off
to someone on a freelance
website to make it all work and
then send it off to that client
and charging a lot
of money for it.
Wasn't work at all. It was just
me spending time, to have fun
and it happened to pay us well.
We were able to pay most of our
college tuition from it, that
was great but other then that,
I didn't think too much of it
school and finishing college at
only 18, he decided to move
to San Francisco.
I realized if I were to do
something meaningful for the
rest of my life it had to be in
a city that was larger,
that had more money in it and
Translation
Translate and read this script in other languages:
Select another language:
- - Select -
- 简体中文 (Chinese - Simplified)
- 繁體中文 (Chinese - Traditional)
- Español (Spanish)
- Esperanto (Esperanto)
- 日本語 (Japanese)
- Português (Portuguese)
- Deutsch (German)
- العربية (Arabic)
- Français (French)
- Русский (Russian)
- ಕನ್ನಡ (Kannada)
- 한국어 (Korean)
- עברית (Hebrew)
- Gaeilge (Irish)
- Українська (Ukrainian)
- اردو (Urdu)
- Magyar (Hungarian)
- मानक हिन्दी (Hindi)
- Indonesia (Indonesian)
- Italiano (Italian)
- தமிழ் (Tamil)
- Türkçe (Turkish)
- తెలుగు (Telugu)
- ภาษาไทย (Thai)
- Tiếng Việt (Vietnamese)
- Čeština (Czech)
- Polski (Polish)
- Bahasa Indonesia (Indonesian)
- Românește (Romanian)
- Nederlands (Dutch)
- Ελληνικά (Greek)
- Latinum (Latin)
- Svenska (Swedish)
- Dansk (Danish)
- Suomi (Finnish)
- فارسی (Persian)
- ייִדיש (Yiddish)
- հայերեն (Armenian)
- Norsk (Norwegian)
- English (English)
Citation
Use the citation below to add this screenplay to your bibliography:
Style:MLAChicagoAPA
"The Startup Kids" Scripts.com. STANDS4 LLC, 2024. Web. 22 Dec. 2024. <https://www.scripts.com/script/the_startup_kids_21381>.
Discuss this script with the community:
Report Comment
We're doing our best to make sure our content is useful, accurate and safe.
If by any chance you spot an inappropriate comment while navigating through our website please use this form to let us know, and we'll take care of it shortly.
Attachment
You need to be logged in to favorite.
Log In