I've been saying a lot lately that you can tell things are getting good because the jerks are back. 24 year old entrepreneurs who think the world did not exist before ValleyWag and have a shiny new Series A term sheet to prove it. We're just short of having meaningless demo conferences in the desert with thousands of booths populated by incredibly good looking "marketing coordinators" right out of school who can with a straight face swear their PokeApp really is more than five lines of PHP script creating a weather widget, it's the next coming of Google. Once that happens, we'll know we've really made it.
That said I had two very good meetings last week with some companies that are really on the cutting edge of the burgeoning field of utilizing web services to build applications. Dave Rosenberg, CEO of MuleSource, and Oren Michels, of Mashery. Both companies are on the cutting edge of how we take we extend the mashing up of applications beyond the class projects of layering Google Maps onto a smell database of the New York City Subway System and in to real offerings that support business level availability, billing and support. Anybody interested in how to make this work in the real world could definitely do worse than start by talking to these companies.
What struck me about meeting these guys was how we are beginning to see a new breed of entreprenuer and CEO; one who understands the technology and community power of Web 2.0 but who also are grown ups who can discuss business and how to make this all work for real companies. Up to now it seems that many people working on SaaS and Web Applications fell in to two catagories. The first are software guys who don't understand that this is all about the Web for business, not coming up with a new pricing scheme for their old products. The second were guys who have no real world experience and think the whole world revolves their latest Web 2.0 applet, or more simply put jerks.
It's guys like Dave and Oren that I think really differentiate this new wave of technology from the last one. They both really understand the technology and what it's going to take to make real business's work with it. This new breed of entreprenuer is far more visionary than the traditional software guy, but knows that you can't be a jerk if you want to create the long term relationships necessary to build these businesses. Oren is so balanced, he even called me for being a little over enthusiastic about what we do and how great it was (not that I've ever been called a jerk myself.)
It's exciting, because I think that means companies who realize the potential of these technologies will have a much better chance of succeeding this time around. Plus, they'll be a lot more fun to work with.
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