When I graduated, I had a choice: go get a job at a media company, or try to make Parceld a business. I chose the latter, and am so glad I did. Even if, after 7 months of dedicating myself body, mind, and spirit to the effort, I have now shut Parceld down.
By Brianne Garcia (Co-Founder, Parceld)
When we entrepreneurs decide to start a company, we know that more things can go āwrongā than can go āright.ā We understand this, and yet we believe that we have what it takes to put āa ding in the universeā, as Steve Jobs once said. Startups are so ācoolā right now that itās easy to forget how terribly naive, blindly optimistic and delusional startup founders have to be to think their company will succeed over others, especially over others with similar ideas in the same market.
I stumbled into founding a company, and perhaps this is why my mistakes seem like āDUHā ones to others, but itās also why I was willing to take risks more seasoned entrepreneurs or business people were too scared to take.
At this time last year, I had never stepped foot in the tech community in New York. To say it was foreign territory would imply that I even knew it existed. Instead, I was fully engrossed in finishing my last semester of journalism graduate school, and was anxious about where Iād work upon graduation.
I had always been interested in online communities, and had hoped that I might be able to merge that interest with my lifelong obsession with fashion. Even though I wasnāt part of the tech community in the way I am now, I had always been an early adopter of shopping and social sharing sites. I hopped on Polyvore, Svpply, Pinterest and Tumblr very early in each of their respective lives, and thatās where the idea for Parceld crept into mind.
As an avid user of these sites, I noticed gaps in the process of being inspired and being able to actually DO something with this inspiration (namely, buy).
My company, Parceld, would solve the problem discovery sites create: the desire to purchase a specific style or trend (since a bunch of images arenāt actionable or affordable). Parceld would let women tag photos to say āhereās what I like about this look. Show me something like thisā, and weād surface a pool of suggestions, sourced from some key major brands as well as emerging brands and retailers.
When I graduated, I had a choice: go get a job at a media company, or try to make Parceld a business.
I chose the latter, and am so glad I did. Even if, after 7 months of dedicating myself body, mind, and spirit to the effort, I have now shut Parceld down.
Two months ago, I stood at another crossroads: I had run out of funding, my technical co-founder had quit and pulled the code out from under me, I was out of savings and student loan payments were taunting me from around the corner.
My gracious network of friends and advisors gave me advice that ranged from ākeep on keeping onā to āgo find a job, NOW.ā One person told me to try bartending while I figured out next step.
I was pointed in the direction of this farewell-of-sorts blog post from Buyosphere founder Tara Hunt, who recently decided to take a position elsewhere, and discontinue a 100% focus/dedication to her own company. Her biggest lesson: it DOES take money to build stuff. And time. And those who have a large supply of both have more runway to make mistakes.
Most of us donāt have big wads of cash and time to burn, so we have one shot and then we have to figure out how to pay the rent and feed ourselves. Those who achieve success in that one shot are just as lucky as they are admirable. And those who donāt hit it big on the first try, but have the time and money to figure stuff out, are extremely privileged.
Though itās natural to make mistakes, itās also worth reflecting on those mistakes in order to do better in the next go-around. I made mistakes, BIG ones, that directly contributed to Parceld failing.
With that in mind, here are my top 3 lessons learned:
LESSON #1 – LEARN HOW TO CODE, and USE GITHUB
Obviously, this is stressed and discussed every which way we turn on the internet, and for good reason. But this is probably the #1 ācomplaintā I had while building Parceld: I felt helpless in some ways because I couldnāt actually code.
In retrospect, I see that you donāt have to become your own CTO, but knowing whatās going on under the hood can save you tears, money and time. My team and I started using Dropbox before switching to GitHub, and it was too late for some of the code. If youāre a founder, you probably HATE feeling helpless, and when I went to visit the alpha product and it wasnāt there, I broke down. Feeling helpless sucks.
The second I get some dough in the bank, Iām taking some courses beyond my Codeacademy online sessions, which are fun, but not really very actionable.
LESSON #2 – BE AGGRESSIVE
No one likes someone who is too aggressive, but looking back, my idea of ātoo aggressiveā could probably fit very nicely into the āpersistentā bucket, which, quite frankly, is not enough when raising money. My father told me that, especially as a woman, to never be afraid to ask for what I want or to remind others of their commitments. People these days are busy, forgetful and over-scheduled; itās quite possible my three emails each got buried, so a fourth or fifth email (not daily, though; maybe weekly) would have served me well. Iāll never know.
LESSON #3 – ASK FOR HELP
Sure, I asked for money from my family and help from a few friends, but there are plenty of strangers I could have tapped into that could have added immense value to either the product, my time management, or other major aspects of my biz. I say ācould haveā because Iāll never know. Ask for help when you need it, accomplish more. Easier said than done, I know. But always worth a try.
So whatās next for me? The truth is: Iām still figuring it out. All I know is this: hustle never dies, it just changes shape.
This post was originally posted at Skillcrush.
Women 2.0 readers: What did you learn from your own failed startup? Let us know in the comments.
About the guest blogger: Brianne Garcia is a co-founder of Parceld. She was a fellow at the Tow-Knight Center for Entrepreneurial Journalism. Brianne is a writer, fashion lover, and general hardcore hustler. Her personal motto is: Always be hustling. Always be learning. Always be sharing. Always be curious. Follow her on Twitter atĀ @brianne_garcia.