This week Yahoo bought 17 year old Nick D’Aloisio’s iPhone app, Summly, for $30 million. When Yahoo was founded in 1994, Nick wasn’t even born yet.
What’s he doing with $30 million? As Nick says, “I can’t even buy a car because I don’t have a licence yet.” So he’s going to buy a new bag. Why? “Mine is broken; it’s old and the strap’s not working.”
3 STEPS TO $30 MILLION
Nick’s app has delivered over 90 million news summaries in the four short months since he launched it on his 17th birthday in November. But Nick isn’t even old enough to be a Director of his company, so his mum is the Director while he sits in as Company Secretary.
What has gotten Nick to success so quickly in 15 months when so many of us are still struggling after 15 years? Here’s 3 steps his journey has in common with most super-success stories:
PROBLEM + PASSION = $300K SOLUTION
Nick’s Summly App was the solution to a real world problem that no one else was solving well. As Nick relates, “I was 15 years old and I was revising for some kind of history exam. The problem was I was trying to find information that was useful to me.”
Searching Google on his phone didn’t give him enough detail to know what was or wasn’t a useful link. So he put his own iPhone app together. The app quickly rose up the download ranks and Apple featured it in their store.
Then came a fateful email: “About a month later, the private fund of the Hong Kong billionaire Li-Kashing cold emailed me and expressed an interest to invest, but they didn’t realize I was 15…It turned out that they actually liked my age because it demonstrated I was net-native, so I’d only grown up with the Internet. They flew to London about a month later and invested $300,000. That kick-started this whole journey.”
$300K FUNDING + EXPERTISE = $1.3M REPUTATION
Nick used the money to bring in world experts to help relaunch the app. At 16 years old, he teamed up with the leaders in Natural Language Processing, Stanford Research Institute (Who create Apple’s SIRI – named after the company’s initials, SRI).
In between high school classes in London, Nick worked with SRI in the US by phone and text messages to build the new app. SRI’s solid reputation and Nick’s focus on approaching well known celebrities to help him attracted high profile investors Stephen Fry, Ashton Kutcher and Yoko Ono who invested $1.3 million. Nick made the most of his investors, with Stephen Fry starring in the launch video for Summly.
$1.3M REPUTATION + SINGLE-MINDED FOCUS = $30M STORY
With world class partners and world class investors, Nick gave up full-time school at the end of 2011, with his parent’s blessings: “I talked about it with them and my headmaster and we decided it was a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity and it would be silly not to run with it. Now, looking back, I can say it was a massive gamble. But it was a good gamble.”
From a standing start to $30 million, Nick has taken the age old 1-2-3 formula of solving a problem in a smart way, then using the resources he attracts to bring in the best talent, and leveraging that to attract the most influential partners.
What made him think he could just go and knock on the door of the best companies and most well known people in the world? As he says “I was naive. I didn’t know I couldn’t.”
Nick is now reflecting on this week’s news: “Numbing is probably the best word to describe it. It’s a shock to be honest. The only thing I can take from this is that I’m genuinely kind of proud that I’ve been getting a lot of tweets where young people are commenting and saying, “This is really inspirational, I want to go and start my own thing.”
How many of these 3 steps in the 1-2-3 formula have you taken in your business? What can you do to upgrade your product, your talent or your partners?
Or maybe it’s time to be a kid again, be naive again, when you didn’t know you can’t. And start something entirely new.
Keep Making Magic,
Changemakers Forum
Dont miss out on the latest Changemakers Forum videos from our 2013 Australia Tour.
There is no better way to gain perspective than to see things from different points of view. The Changemaker forum we run at our fast forward events is interactive. The participants hear from entrepreneurs and changemakers in their own city who are part of this transformation.
You are experiencing the changes in your industry first hand, and your success is coming from the way you are quickly shifting your strategies to suit the changes. Being smart is no longer as important as being nimble.
Brisbane 9th March Video Link |
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Perth 21st March Video Link |
Greenest Student on Earth
As the inaugural recipient of the USGBC Center for Green School’s ‘Greenest School on Earth’ award in 2012, Green School Bali launched a worldwide scholarship competition seeking the ‘Greenest Student on Earth.’ Exceptional young people who are working on environmental projects in their local communities are encouraged to apply. Green School Bali is sponsoring the Greenest Student on Earth Scholarship Competition to emphasize the importance of caring for the environment to young people everywhere. Three winners of the competition, one each from primary, middle, and high school, will win a full scholarship to the renowned Green School in Bali, Indonesia—an international school whose mission is to inspire students to be creative, innovative green leaders.
Nick D’Aloisio on Bloomberg
The internet revolution has thrown up many stories of modest startup businesses turning into multimillion-dollar giants, seemingly overnight. The latest success story is 17-year-old British-Australian Nick D’Aloisio.
In this WDeo, Summly app developer, Nick D’Aloisio discusses the sale of his app to Yahoo! and the prospect of working with Marissa Mayer. He speaks on Bloomberg Television’s “Countdown.”
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