“I love Fake Steve Jobs” and Facebook’s PR crisis

Here’s my Fake Steve Jobs story (Fake Steve Jobs is a blog that pretends it’s written by Apple CEO/co-founder Steve Jobs. It got popular this year and recently it was revealed that a Forbes Magazine employee is its author).

Last week I was getting an iced latte at the new Peets in Half Moon Bay. I was wearing a Blogger T-shirt. Old school. There a lady came up to me and asked “is that the Fake Steve Jobs T-shirt?”

I remembered that FSJ published his blog on Blogger and figured the Blogger logo was confusing this lady who assumed it was FSJ’s logo. Blogger, as you know, is the blog service from Google which was started by Evan Williams, er, evhead.

Anyway, I explained to her that the logo wasn’t really Fake Steve Jobs, but rather the tool he published with. Demonstrates that there’s a lot of brand power in Fake Steve Jobs.

As she walked away she said “I love Fake Steve Jobs.”

Truth be told I love FSJ too. Why?

Well.

1. He’s funny, even when he attacks me.
2. Everytime he links he sends boatloads of traffic. I don’t know why I love that, but it makes me happy to see that Fake Steve Jobs has boatloads more readers than Valleywag does (Valleywag says they have tons of traffic, but they don’t click on anything. I’ve been on both sites dozens of times and FSJ’s audience clicks at 20x the rate that Valleywag’s does).
3. He’s been talking about me looking for a job lately which brings a big smile to my face although someone shoot me if I ever take a CEO job. That doesn’t sound fun to me at all. Lucrative, yes, but not fun and I simply wouldn’t be good at that.
4. He’s a lot better writer than I am.
5. He’s a lot better speaker than I am.
6. He has a cool job at a big business magazine (Forbes).

I wish I could get FSJ on my show. Something fun would be to do a little debate about something. Remember, the guy who writes Fake Steve Jobs is actually a Forbes magazine employee, Daniel Lyons. He was the guy who wrote a cover article back in 2005 about how blogs sucked. Everyone who thinks Daniel is such a great blogger should go back and read that article and compare his beliefs back then with FSJ today. Oh, sorry, that’s not funny.

I wonder if Daniel still feels the same way about blogs attacking brand value now that he uses a blog to attack other people, companies, and things?

Or, we could be more professional and debate industry topics like the state of Apple’s brand value or whether the Amazon Kindle is well designed or not.

Hmmm, maybe we should just do a panel session at a conference and debate about how much value Facebook is going to destroy due to horrible PR? That might be entertaining.

Facebook has the most controlling PR department outside of Apple and it sure is in the middle of a PR crisis right now.

I feel ambivalent about the troubles Facebook is having right now. Personally I’m having lots of trouble with Facebook but Facebook doesn’t care about people who have more than 5,000 friends unless they can figure out a way to monetize us. Everytime I look at Facebook I am reminded of how little Facebook cares about me. So, I care less and less about Facebook every day.

My phone number is on my Facebook entry. Interesting that Facebook could use me to answer the community’s concerns. I’d give them hours of video time on my show. But they only seem interested in talking to big-brand journalists and I’m not interested enough to pull out my Fast Company business cards to get them to pay attention. They should invite 40 bloggers who are lower on the TechMeme leaderboard than me and just have a conversation about the mess they are in. But they’ll never do that because they are so damn controlling about what they say and who they say it to.

For completeness, here’s Facebook’s official answer to the latest troubles with its Beacon advertising scheme.

Anyway, that was a really long entry to say that I’d rather read Fake Steve Jobs than log into Facebook lately. At least with FSJ I get entertained as I get bashed. With Facebook I just am reminded that there’s more than 1,000 people that I can’t help because of Facebook’s lame scalability issues. MySpace or upstart Zude are sure looking better and better. Just get that OpenSocial platform done and let’s get on with it!

73 thoughts on ““I love Fake Steve Jobs” and Facebook’s PR crisis

  1. >>”Everytime I look at Facebook I am reminded of how little Facebook cares about me. So, I care less and less about Facebook every day.”

    Yeah, I get a similar feeling too – and they really should be approaching more people for feedback (yourself included) – it would help them seem more connected to their users! I think MySpace might have ‘missed the boat’ because Facebook has done a more tidy job of being a social network (more sociable, and slightly less spam-filled with random strangers….slightly!) – all this means MySpace has got to play catchup in some respects. I can’t comment on Zude as I don’t know much about it. Yeah – if ever there was a good reason for OpenSocial, then it is certainly to bypass the nonsense of having all these separate networks which do all the same sort of thing!

    Like

  2. >>”Everytime I look at Facebook I am reminded of how little Facebook cares about me. So, I care less and less about Facebook every day.”

    Yeah, I get a similar feeling too – and they really should be approaching more people for feedback (yourself included) – it would help them seem more connected to their users! I think MySpace might have ‘missed the boat’ because Facebook has done a more tidy job of being a social network (more sociable, and slightly less spam-filled with random strangers….slightly!) – all this means MySpace has got to play catchup in some respects. I can’t comment on Zude as I don’t know much about it. Yeah – if ever there was a good reason for OpenSocial, then it is certainly to bypass the nonsense of having all these separate networks which do all the same sort of thing!

    Like

  3. Hey,

    FSJ has taken a few whacks at the old Scoble pinata (Scob-ata?) and this is the first public response I can think of on it. It easy being public and this is a pretty graceful way to take your lumps.

    The day I realized I check FSJ before NYT for news was humbling…

    Like

  4. Hey,

    FSJ has taken a few whacks at the old Scoble pinata (Scob-ata?) and this is the first public response I can think of on it. It easy being public and this is a pretty graceful way to take your lumps.

    The day I realized I check FSJ before NYT for news was humbling…

    Like

  5. Can somebody invent something where I can click a button and transfer my Facebook stuff to another site?

    I would like that very much. Very, very much…

    Like

  6. Can somebody invent something where I can click a button and transfer my Facebook stuff to another site?

    I would like that very much. Very, very much…

    Like

  7. Robert – it is interesting that these companies must begin to realize that as people share more personal information on a social network like Facebook, there is an expectation of personal caring from the company to the individual. Would you have had the same expectation of NBC or Coke a decade or two ago?

    Like

  8. Robert – it is interesting that these companies must begin to realize that as people share more personal information on a social network like Facebook, there is an expectation of personal caring from the company to the individual. Would you have had the same expectation of NBC or Coke a decade or two ago?

    Like

  9. Facebook has lost its soul, man. They’ve lost their way, and someone else is going to come along who better understands communities and serve us. Community and people make social media tick, not networks. This is too new of a medium for any network to get a total lock.

    Like

  10. Facebook has lost its soul, man. They’ve lost their way, and someone else is going to come along who better understands communities and serve us. Community and people make social media tick, not networks. This is too new of a medium for any network to get a total lock.

    Like

  11. I wonder what would happen if, as you, people really showed their Facebook displeasure and even left. How fast could that $15B pseudo valuation be cut in half. Could Facebook be made the poster boy for future stupid, uncaring companies? Could they be made the example of “the customer is in charge”?

    Like

  12. I wonder what would happen if, as you, people really showed their Facebook displeasure and even left. How fast could that $15B pseudo valuation be cut in half. Could Facebook be made the poster boy for future stupid, uncaring companies? Could they be made the example of “the customer is in charge”?

    Like

  13. People build communities. Technology companies build tools. Marketers build markets. Facebook is blurring the lines and, therefore, losing focus. Zude’s focus is user freedom. We give people tools and let them decide what to build. We try not to cross the line. It’s a Webertarian thing.

    Like

  14. People build communities. Technology companies build tools. Marketers build markets. Facebook is blurring the lines and, therefore, losing focus. Zude’s focus is user freedom. We give people tools and let them decide what to build. We try not to cross the line. It’s a Webertarian thing.

    Like

  15. Steve Poppe: Hey, I’ve just taken a look at Zude (linked from here) – just a quick question: is the appearance going to be improved?

    I mean I burst in to laughter just looking at the first page! Are you serious? Four different fonts…just in the name alone and a mess of colors that don’t go together! It gives the impression of being a poor MySpace wannabe! Maybe you guys are still working on it…

    Like

  16. Steve Poppe: Hey, I’ve just taken a look at Zude (linked from here) – just a quick question: is the appearance going to be improved?

    I mean I burst in to laughter just looking at the first page! Are you serious? Four different fonts…just in the name alone and a mess of colors that don’t go together! It gives the impression of being a poor MySpace wannabe! Maybe you guys are still working on it…

    Like

  17. >Would you have had the same expectation of NBC or Coke a decade or two ago?

    Well, let’s talk about Coke. They sell sweetened water, not social networks.

    But Coca Cola has an open-to-the-public museum where you can come and ask any stupid question and a Coke employee will answer it nicely without trying to control you or tell you to turn off your video camera (every tour ends with a mock press conference where they take questions from everyone and you can leave your video camera running). I know, I asked them whether it really was true that Coke used cocaine in its products in the early years. They admitted that they had used leaves from the plant.

    So, what did that translate to? Coke demonstrated that they’d stand up and take questions from ANYONE, not just reporters from Business Week.

    It sure makes me think that Coke cares about me as a customer. A LOT more than Facebook does.

    The museum is in Atlanta, GA and it’s a must see if you go there. If you do they even let you try all of its products for free including some weird watermelon-flavored stuff they sell in China.

    Like

  18. >Would you have had the same expectation of NBC or Coke a decade or two ago?

    Well, let’s talk about Coke. They sell sweetened water, not social networks.

    But Coca Cola has an open-to-the-public museum where you can come and ask any stupid question and a Coke employee will answer it nicely without trying to control you or tell you to turn off your video camera (every tour ends with a mock press conference where they take questions from everyone and you can leave your video camera running). I know, I asked them whether it really was true that Coke used cocaine in its products in the early years. They admitted that they had used leaves from the plant.

    So, what did that translate to? Coke demonstrated that they’d stand up and take questions from ANYONE, not just reporters from Business Week.

    It sure makes me think that Coke cares about me as a customer. A LOT more than Facebook does.

    The museum is in Atlanta, GA and it’s a must see if you go there. If you do they even let you try all of its products for free including some weird watermelon-flavored stuff they sell in China.

    Like

  19. It’s off-topic, but I’ve gotta agree with Matt Robin above. Zude is seriously lacking in the “we actually have an idea what our presentation should be,” department. Not only is there no color palette, but the site is optimized for aggressively-wide displays, as in if you’re not using a W/S laptop or a big monitor, you gotta scroll all over. Not cool.

    Facebook lost its soul the minute it stopped being university-restrictive. When they stopped requiring .edu E-mail addresses for registration was the day they let the wolves in to devour what uniqueness FB had, making it just another advertising venue. It’s too bad greed can ruin such a good thing.

    Like

  20. It’s off-topic, but I’ve gotta agree with Matt Robin above. Zude is seriously lacking in the “we actually have an idea what our presentation should be,” department. Not only is there no color palette, but the site is optimized for aggressively-wide displays, as in if you’re not using a W/S laptop or a big monitor, you gotta scroll all over. Not cool.

    Facebook lost its soul the minute it stopped being university-restrictive. When they stopped requiring .edu E-mail addresses for registration was the day they let the wolves in to devour what uniqueness FB had, making it just another advertising venue. It’s too bad greed can ruin such a good thing.

    Like

  21. facebook has lost some of it’s vava voom recently

    Its clean design has been polluted by themselves

    they have had big scaleability problems but nothing major what concern’s advertisers is the return…

    they did well on the “fan” stakes but really should have looked elsewhere this is taken up by myspace and their bands… as well as iLike

    what they should have gone for is recommendations… e.g.
    I would recommend watching Top Gear (from the BBC)
    I would recommend buying a VW beetle (1.6 liters good MPG)

    that would actually make sense

    regards

    john.jones.name

    http://www.johnjones.me.uk

    Like

  22. facebook has lost some of it’s vava voom recently

    Its clean design has been polluted by themselves

    they have had big scaleability problems but nothing major what concern’s advertisers is the return…

    they did well on the “fan” stakes but really should have looked elsewhere this is taken up by myspace and their bands… as well as iLike

    what they should have gone for is recommendations… e.g.
    I would recommend watching Top Gear (from the BBC)
    I would recommend buying a VW beetle (1.6 liters good MPG)

    that would actually make sense

    regards

    john.jones.name

    http://www.johnjones.me.uk

    Like

  23. Since when is parody defined as attacking someone? It seems to me that unless someone writes about you in fawning terms, you interpret it as being attacked.

    Like

  24. Since when is parody defined as attacking someone? It seems to me that unless someone writes about you in fawning terms, you interpret it as being attacked.

    Like

  25. You should chat to Om Malik – he had FSJ on GigaOm TV… Maybe we could petition FSJ to come onto the Scoble show Yeah!

    Anyway, facebook: What do you do? I’m mid-late 30’s and don’t really have time for Facebook, although as part of another project I am finding it interesting how facebook works (not just technically of course). But I guess this is a sign of the “must consume/must get more” world – i.e. Facebook’s current advertising (i.e their Flyers etc and Ad-Words/whatever) obviously has a mapped trajectory re: income and obviously Facebook needs to consume more…

    I just wonder where the limit is on “normal” advertising (i.e. ad-words again etc) and if facebook could be sustained just on that?

    I guess Beacon was a way to expedite the revenue model some!

    Like

  26. You should chat to Om Malik – he had FSJ on GigaOm TV… Maybe we could petition FSJ to come onto the Scoble show Yeah!

    Anyway, facebook: What do you do? I’m mid-late 30’s and don’t really have time for Facebook, although as part of another project I am finding it interesting how facebook works (not just technically of course). But I guess this is a sign of the “must consume/must get more” world – i.e. Facebook’s current advertising (i.e their Flyers etc and Ad-Words/whatever) obviously has a mapped trajectory re: income and obviously Facebook needs to consume more…

    I just wonder where the limit is on “normal” advertising (i.e. ad-words again etc) and if facebook could be sustained just on that?

    I guess Beacon was a way to expedite the revenue model some!

    Like

  27. In comment #12 — that subtle little link about the lawsuit? — reading an article on that sent all kind of shivers & echoes of familiarity down my spine. The overall tone of not being responsive, accountable, transparent. Huh. Not saying a personality flaw could become the downfall of an entire, and rather large SocialMediaNetworkCompany, but it sets a certain tone, doesn’t it?

    ***

    Oh and FSJ mentions that becoming a blogger was a direct result of that article trashing blogs that he wrote. Even as it was going to press he saw that, and the experience led right into playing around with blogging.

    Like

  28. In comment #12 — that subtle little link about the lawsuit? — reading an article on that sent all kind of shivers & echoes of familiarity down my spine. The overall tone of not being responsive, accountable, transparent. Huh. Not saying a personality flaw could become the downfall of an entire, and rather large SocialMediaNetworkCompany, but it sets a certain tone, doesn’t it?

    ***

    Oh and FSJ mentions that becoming a blogger was a direct result of that article trashing blogs that he wrote. Even as it was going to press he saw that, and the experience led right into playing around with blogging.

    Like

  29. Robert – with regards to the Coke Museum, I actually JUST arrived in Atlanta, for a three day conference for the company I work for. Unfortunately, it is a tight schedule, but a pretty funny coincidence.

    I have read and enjoyed Naked Conversations, and certainly love your blog, and the ideas you express (mostly.) You seems to be pretty disgruntled with Facebook for not treating you like BusinessWeek or the Wall Street Journal. What is the learning curve for marketers and businesses to place the same value on individual bloggers/journalists, as they would on a firmly established news organization?

    Thanks.
    -Dan

    Like

  30. Robert – with regards to the Coke Museum, I actually JUST arrived in Atlanta, for a three day conference for the company I work for. Unfortunately, it is a tight schedule, but a pretty funny coincidence.

    I have read and enjoyed Naked Conversations, and certainly love your blog, and the ideas you express (mostly.) You seems to be pretty disgruntled with Facebook for not treating you like BusinessWeek or the Wall Street Journal. What is the learning curve for marketers and businesses to place the same value on individual bloggers/journalists, as they would on a firmly established news organization?

    Thanks.
    -Dan

    Like

  31. You have a very interesting Blog, and hard to pinpoint,… obscurity about your writing-which is deep, and goes deeper.
    Hadn’t heard about your blog since the “Apple Advertising…” link in the FSJ site a few weeks back.
    Initially it seemed like you where a young-loose cannon, new disappointed customer to Apple falling for their advertising, ranting. YET. as the well goes deeper(and looking you up on Wikipdia and other online sites-finding your somewhat famous) you had worked on Apple II’s back to the 80’s and rebuilt/networked with them, worked for many other companies and had much other technological experiences, and were just a few years older than myself.
    Very ELABORARE, Deep, and cunning in of itself to set a trap of unknowing feedback. You have some good stories and info about tech and “the valley”with a interesting twist and take. Helpful info to someone in the midwest outside Chicago. A good read indeed. Thanks.

    Like

  32. You have a very interesting Blog, and hard to pinpoint,… obscurity about your writing-which is deep, and goes deeper.
    Hadn’t heard about your blog since the “Apple Advertising…” link in the FSJ site a few weeks back.
    Initially it seemed like you where a young-loose cannon, new disappointed customer to Apple falling for their advertising, ranting. YET. as the well goes deeper(and looking you up on Wikipdia and other online sites-finding your somewhat famous) you had worked on Apple II’s back to the 80’s and rebuilt/networked with them, worked for many other companies and had much other technological experiences, and were just a few years older than myself.
    Very ELABORARE, Deep, and cunning in of itself to set a trap of unknowing feedback. You have some good stories and info about tech and “the valley”with a interesting twist and take. Helpful info to someone in the midwest outside Chicago. A good read indeed. Thanks.

    Like

  33. Did Facebook HAVE a soul in the first place? It had an identity from the start: MySpace for the Ivy League. Then it became MySpace for the officer class. Then MySpace for executive trainees. Then MySpace for grownups…like LinkedIn, but with more gossip and stuff that could get you fired.

    Like

  34. Did Facebook HAVE a soul in the first place? It had an identity from the start: MySpace for the Ivy League. Then it became MySpace for the officer class. Then MySpace for executive trainees. Then MySpace for grownups…like LinkedIn, but with more gossip and stuff that could get you fired.

    Like

  35. Dan: actually if you talk with journalists from those organizations they have the same complaints that I do. Getting anyone to talk at Facebook is pretty tough. I watched how some of these journalists were treated by Zuckerberg and PR. They don’t get much more than I did.

    I’m mostly disgruntled by their poor technology that limits me to 5,000 friends. MySpace, Plaxo, and other social networks don’t have that limitation.

    Like

  36. Dan: actually if you talk with journalists from those organizations they have the same complaints that I do. Getting anyone to talk at Facebook is pretty tough. I watched how some of these journalists were treated by Zuckerberg and PR. They don’t get much more than I did.

    I’m mostly disgruntled by their poor technology that limits me to 5,000 friends. MySpace, Plaxo, and other social networks don’t have that limitation.

    Like

  37. Jim/Bob are you on meth? What’s with the sycophancy? Robert Scoble wanting more attention to be paid to Robert Scoble is quite the norm for him. It never crosses his mind that he has not done anything to merit additional attention. (Indeed, one can argue that he doesn’t deserve most of the attention he gets.)

    Like

  38. Jim/Bob are you on meth? What’s with the sycophancy? Robert Scoble wanting more attention to be paid to Robert Scoble is quite the norm for him. It never crosses his mind that he has not done anything to merit additional attention. (Indeed, one can argue that he doesn’t deserve most of the attention he gets.)

    Like

  39. Funny, after falling in Love with Facebook for the last few months, I suddenly detest it after the Beacon fiasco. I think they are doomed..and Myspace is actually starting to look like a better place (shudder)

    I can’t believe how FB pressures people to use their real identity and then just completely violates IT like that. I’m getting angrier as I Type.

    TO HADES WITH FACEBOOK!!!

    Like

  40. Funny, after falling in Love with Facebook for the last few months, I suddenly detest it after the Beacon fiasco. I think they are doomed..and Myspace is actually starting to look like a better place (shudder)

    I can’t believe how FB pressures people to use their real identity and then just completely violates IT like that. I’m getting angrier as I Type.

    TO HADES WITH FACEBOOK!!!

    Like

  41. >> 2. Everytime he links he sends boatloads of traffic. I don’t know why I love that, but it makes me happy to see that Fake Steve Jobs has boatloads more readers than Valleywag does (Valleywag says they have tons of traffic, but they don’t click on anything. I’ve been on both sites dozens of times and FSJ’s audience clicks at 20x the rate that Valleywag’s does). <<

    Hi,

    I’m a counter-example — I read Valleywag (hilarious, for the technically minded, in the same vein as The Inquirer) but this is (I think) my first visit to your blog. The only other time I hear about you is when Mathew Ingram mentions you.

    Cheers,
    Alex

    Like

  42. >> 2. Everytime he links he sends boatloads of traffic. I don’t know why I love that, but it makes me happy to see that Fake Steve Jobs has boatloads more readers than Valleywag does (Valleywag says they have tons of traffic, but they don’t click on anything. I’ve been on both sites dozens of times and FSJ’s audience clicks at 20x the rate that Valleywag’s does). <<

    Hi,

    I’m a counter-example — I read Valleywag (hilarious, for the technically minded, in the same vein as The Inquirer) but this is (I think) my first visit to your blog. The only other time I hear about you is when Mathew Ingram mentions you.

    Cheers,
    Alex

    Like

  43. You seem to have a lot of anger and bile. Maybe you need a REAL break.

    Escape to Utah. You and your family can crash at our place and you can hide from all of them for a while.

    It’s better here, believe me.

    Like

  44. You seem to have a lot of anger and bile. Maybe you need a REAL break.

    Escape to Utah. You and your family can crash at our place and you can hide from all of them for a while.

    It’s better here, believe me.

    Like

  45. I know, I asked them whether it really was true that Coke used cocaine in its products in the early years.

    I am tempted to channel FSJ and ask if you asked the Facetards the same question.

    Just kidding! Though you have to wonder if having every web site on earth update Facebook with an entry every time you’d purchased a pair of pink frilly socks in women’s size 10 wasn’t drug inspired. “Say hello to my little Javascript!”

    Namaste.

    Like

  46. I know, I asked them whether it really was true that Coke used cocaine in its products in the early years.

    I am tempted to channel FSJ and ask if you asked the Facetards the same question.

    Just kidding! Though you have to wonder if having every web site on earth update Facebook with an entry every time you’d purchased a pair of pink frilly socks in women’s size 10 wasn’t drug inspired. “Say hello to my little Javascript!”

    Namaste.

    Like

  47. “Facebook but Facebook doesn’t care about people who have more than 5,000 friends unless they can figure out a way to monetize us.”

    Or it could be you are a corner case to facebook and it’s not worth their dev and test time to build a feature very few in the world would use?

    I want Ford to build a pick up with a 32in plasma TV, speakers, a bar, a barbecue, and satellite dish. But they won’t so I guess they don’t care about me.

    “With Facebook I just am reminded that there’s more than 1,000 people that I can’t help because of Facebook’s lame scalability issues”

    So you view yourself as the Mother Teresa of Facebook?

    Like

  48. “Facebook but Facebook doesn’t care about people who have more than 5,000 friends unless they can figure out a way to monetize us.”

    Or it could be you are a corner case to facebook and it’s not worth their dev and test time to build a feature very few in the world would use?

    I want Ford to build a pick up with a 32in plasma TV, speakers, a bar, a barbecue, and satellite dish. But they won’t so I guess they don’t care about me.

    “With Facebook I just am reminded that there’s more than 1,000 people that I can’t help because of Facebook’s lame scalability issues”

    So you view yourself as the Mother Teresa of Facebook?

    Like

  49. Some Guy: you might have missed that I write for Fast Company now too. So I’m a professional too.

    Kevin: one thing, though. Facebook used people like me to build the hype up around it, which brought it a huge valuation. MySpace doesn’t have those limitations, has more users than Facebook does. What if all of the influentials decided that Facebook sucks? Will that valuation keep up? No.

    Facebook is the only major social network with such a lame technical limitation that I know of. So, your analogy doesn’t hold. It’s like GM, Mercedes, BMW, Toyota and others are already building such a pickup truck for you and you’d like to stick with Ford, but they aren’t building you the truck you want.

    Me? I’m moving.

    Like

  50. Some Guy: you might have missed that I write for Fast Company now too. So I’m a professional too.

    Kevin: one thing, though. Facebook used people like me to build the hype up around it, which brought it a huge valuation. MySpace doesn’t have those limitations, has more users than Facebook does. What if all of the influentials decided that Facebook sucks? Will that valuation keep up? No.

    Facebook is the only major social network with such a lame technical limitation that I know of. So, your analogy doesn’t hold. It’s like GM, Mercedes, BMW, Toyota and others are already building such a pickup truck for you and you’d like to stick with Ford, but they aren’t building you the truck you want.

    Me? I’m moving.

    Like

  51. First. FSJ has been around for a few years, not one. And I’m one of the pathetic folks that is absolutely hooked on his blog. I was broken when he was ‘outed’ earlier this year.

    Second. You nailed Facebook. Outside of all of their technical and functionality failures the biggest disappointment of the year was them grabbing/projecting the ridiculous 15B market cap. Good luck breaking over the top of that valuation and pitching to your new hires that there will be upside to their equity they receive. With options based on an insane 15b mark….only dummies will join with any hope of upside. Think about that one and write it up.

    Like

  52. First. FSJ has been around for a few years, not one. And I’m one of the pathetic folks that is absolutely hooked on his blog. I was broken when he was ‘outed’ earlier this year.

    Second. You nailed Facebook. Outside of all of their technical and functionality failures the biggest disappointment of the year was them grabbing/projecting the ridiculous 15B market cap. Good luck breaking over the top of that valuation and pitching to your new hires that there will be upside to their equity they receive. With options based on an insane 15b mark….only dummies will join with any hope of upside. Think about that one and write it up.

    Like

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