Category Archives: Uncategorized

Jon is happy about his data store challenge

Jon is happy about his data store challenge

We’ve been busy, real busy. It’s private beta season here at aprigo, and we’ve been hammering away at the code, the website, the data center, and everything and anything else that looks like it is standing in the way from our product delivering on our “frictionless” goals.

The product is coming together, the feedback we’re getting now is better, faster, and more relevant (it’s on code not slides…) than ever. But we’re making some serious progress on a whole bunch of other fronts as well.

Ilan looks short, but that's because he's on the floor in this picture

Ilan looks short, but that's because he's on the floor in this picture

What’s cool and different when your in a start-up, is that you’re not just building a new product or service. Your building a team, your building a business, and your creating a culture. It’s new and more importantly it’s yours. We’ve always set the bar high for new recruits to the aprigo team, and I’m happy to say we’ve had the privilege to expand with another batch of exceptional people that are taking aprigo to the next level.

Jon Anthony, joined us a while ago but his ideas are fresh and he brings a world of experience and intellect that few can match. Jon is building out the engine that enables us to do what we do. He knows his way around data, lots of data.

West coast import, Ilan Mandel is on board pulling his magic as a member of the development team. Ilan’s still out west officially but he’s here enough physically and we “feel” him here in heart.

Dan is immersed in his office, joining Dan Warner on the interface team

Dan is immersed in his office, joining Dan Warner on the interface team

We believe that it’s not just about showing you what your data management challenges and tasks are, but “immersing” you in a cool refreshing user experience that takes data management to where it needs to be, something that’s interesting to look at and interact with, and is generally awesome. Dan Lines joins us to help build the “immersion” feeling flex app that our design partners are so excited about already. Dan has already given his touch to the app, and if we implement half of his ideas we’ll be in excellent shape.

Ann's got product management and aprigo in her sights

Ann's got product management and aprigo's future direction in her sights

Our latest addition is Ann Sharon. Ann’s got her act together. She’s taken on some serious challenges in the past and put together technology, products, programs, and successes that are used on a massive scale. Ann’s leadership is already taking product management at aprigo to new heights, and she’s got ideas of how to take it way beyond.

Welcome all new aprigo’ites and enjoy the ride!

I heard a great analogy from a friend I had lunch with recently, about how start

Getting great at iterations is an iterative learning process

Getting great at iterations is an iterative learning process

ups start off in a trail blazing mode, growing like crazy and building their product into uncharted territory. Then there’s a settlement effort in making sure that you put in place the infrastructure to support everything you’ve built so it doesn’t get lost. But how do you do both at the same time?

We’re big on iterations here at aprigo. Do what you know, get feedback, and then repeat. (Kinda like shampoo, just without the smell). For those of you that have worked in fast paced startup’s you know that getting the product ready is like re-lacing your shoes while you’re running. Balancing the desire to do EVERYTHING you know, with doing enough to get to that feedback phase is the tricky part, and takes discipline. We’re not there yet, but we’re learning that even learning how to iterate, is an iterative process. ;-)

If Escher figured it out, so can we!

It feels like it was only yesterday that our first working demo marked its debut, and already you can sense the excitement in the air.

We’re pretty stealthy about what we’re up to, which makes sense as a stealth mode startup. However, we let a few people in on some of it every now and then (strictly under NDA, CIA, MBA, ESPN, and other important acronyms of course). We’re big proponents of listening to our audience and adapting, so this week we shared our demo with a select number of advisors, and the reaction was well worth the effort of putting it together in parallel to building the real deal. 100% likability quotient so far, we just need to keep it there.

It’s amazing how simply doing something simple, can make such an impact. In the past couple of weeks we’ve had a flood of new advisors and design partners signing up to partake in our revolution and we’re still hungry for more…

Last Friday, Tsahy and I were invited as guests to attend a session at MIT’s Sloan School of Management.

Gil Rapaport, was the speaker and we were his guests. I’ve seen my share of Marketing experts, Sales Quarterbacks, and Finance and Number crunchers, but Gil has got it all wrapped up in a combo platter that makes it seem like those disciplines should never have been separated to begin with.

Keep it simple, and automate everything

I wanted to share Gil’s very interesting, common-sense, and pragmatic approach to building a machine that starts with the customer looking for your product, and ends with your ability to handle every aspect of the customer’s experience within your company. Gil’s view of “Sales is responsible for making the numbers, and Marketing is responsible for the growth” makes plain sense, tying it all together into one machine that generates leads, qualifies them, closes the deal, and supports the customer, makes even more sense. Especially when your market has hundreds of thousands or potentially millions of customers.

What makes it even more compelling is Gil is a serial entrepreneur and you can sense it, he’s actually done everything he’s talking about. He’s doing it again at Viewfinity now.

The question that kept coming to my mind, is why every company that is going for critical mass, isn’t employing a similar strategy. The answer for me is the build or wait paradox. The machine you build requires a critical mass of input to process (leads), and the mechanism itself is hard if not impossible to predict, your customers will dictate most of it. However, if you wait until you have critical mass and makes sense to automate and measure everything, it’s a pain in the ass to stop everything and build the machine, possible but very difficult to pull of in most cases. So where do you start, building or waiting. My bet is on both. Build a small machine, but wait to upgrade the components when you know more about your customers, and when your critical mass is building up.

Sitting in an MBA class at MIT, listening to all the students (even though they aren’t as smart as my Northeastern fellow MBA classmates are…) made me think of how powerful it is to get to meet real world executives (in and out of the classroom) that give you so many answers and experiences, but what you take away and use is really up to you.

Yesterday was our 2nd Board of Directors meeting, and both Dorin and Yaron were crying throughout. I tend to err on the side of optimism and see it as tears of joy, even though they each had their excuses. Yaron’s pensive look (one eye was semi closed), was really an eye infection, and Dorin’s teary eyes where the result of living in a Claritin not-so-clear allergy haze.

Personally, I think it was the demo Ron, Jim, and Yaniv put together that blew them away and brought them to tears, they thought so too. Way to go team for pulling it together!!!

Sixo de Mayo will be a day to remember in the aprigo books, as the first demo of a working something that does something cool, and looks just as cool. Especially since it’s never been done before.

Ok, Ok, I finally got the message. I’ve been getting hints and threats from everybody I know congratulating us on our new fancy blog, but stating that something is missing.

I tried new themes, I changed fonts, and still there was this emptiness lingering.

It finally clicked that even a stealth mode startup can share what’s happening without giving away the formula for the secret sauce. So I am going to make a pledge to post more, it’s not tough considering we only have two posts so far and it’s been a few weeks….

By sharing this lesson, I will make bloggers lives all over the world (not just data geeks) infinitely better. I am sure they will flock to our comments section to thank us.

The first rule of blogging is keep blogging, and then blog some more. Keep your blog fresh!

It’s been a while since our latest addition to the team, and today our import from sunny California arrived in the form of Jim.

Jim’s got his act together when it comes to software development and he brings with him a unique combination of skills, experience, and get-it-done-right attitude that we love to see in all aprigo-ites. Jim and Yaniv are digging our new crib, and talking data management, saas, and IT.

When is the real furnitureĀ arriving?

Jim and Yaniv are pictured here looking for the real furniture…This is it boys, fold-up tables and chairs are THE furniture 2.0 today.

Welcome aboard Jim! team aprigo is ecstatic to have you join us.