Media Reviews
LORD, I loved being 19. If I had the chance to do it all again, I'd start up my life at that age. For most relatively normal guys like me, life at 19 is a joyously ephemeral state of being in between. Your adolescence is not quite behind you; your adulthood is not quite at hand. You can appropriate the privileges of a grownup without facing the responsibilities. And if you're lucky, you can still put it all on your parents' tab. Or you can be Ben Casnocha, the 19-year-old author of My Start-Up Life: What a (Very) Young C.E.O. Learned on His Journey Through Silicon Valley. Publishing a book in his teens actually ranks as one of his more modest accomplishments. At 12, he started his first company. At 14, he founded a software company called Comcate Inc. At 17, Inc. magazine named him entrepreneur of the year. Along the way, Ben (I refuse to address him as Mr. Casnocha until he turns 21) was also captain of his high school basketball team and edited the school newspaper. He will be enrolling in Claremont McKenna College this fall. In the meantime, he's been taking what he describes as a year off to travel the world and to lecture at universities while continuing to serve as chairman of Comcate. So much for being a normal, carefree 19-year-old. I don't want to be normal, Ben declares in My Start-Up Life. I want to be something else. Ben's book proves that he is indeed something else, and then some. Like its author, My Start-Up Life is precocious, informative and entertaining, if not quite fully realized as a grown-up work. But it's still very much worth reading to gain insight into the mind, manners and ambitions of an American entrepreneur from whom we will almost undoubtedly be hearing again throughout the first half of this century. Ben organizes his story in chronological order. He recounts the otherwise routine day in 2000 when the teachers of his sixth-grade technology class in a San Francisco-area middle school proposed the idea of creating a Web site dedicated to resolving citizen complaints about local government. Unlike his classmates, who abandoned the project as soon as school let out, he spent the summer learning how to write the HTML code necessary to make ComplainandResolve.com a short-lived but functioning entity. In 2002, Ben transformed that not-for-profit classroom venture into Comcate, a classic Silicon Valley start-up that provides software to enable city managers to track and resolve citizen complaints. He describes days when playing hooky from school started with catching a flight to Los Angeles and ended with basketball practice back in San Francisco. In between, there were sales calls to potential clients, lunches with venture capitalists, and scores of e-mail messages to and from a software programmer in India. But My Start-Up Life is more of an entrepreneurial how-to manual than the autobiography of a whiz kid. The narrative chapters are interspersed with sidebars headlined Brain Trust and Brainstorm that provide insights from adult business people and share the author's epiphanies on everything from redefining the entrepreneurial lifestyle with proper sleep, nutrition and exercise, to ways to maximize luck. Expose yourself to as much randomness as possible, Ben advises. Attend conferences no one else is attending. Read books no one else is reading. Talk to people no one else is talking to. Who would have thought that giving a speech at a funeral at age 12 would introduce me to a man who would introduce me to my first business contact who would introduce me to several other important people in my life. That's luck. That's randomness. An appendix offers a One-a-Day, One-Month Plan to Becoming a Better Entrepreneur. If some of the daily agenda items are mundane ( Stop watching TV, Form an advisory board ), others are both insightful and inspirational. Act on incomplete information, he urges in the context of entrepreneurial risk-taking. He says Gen. Colin Powell expected his commanders in the field to make decisions when they had 40 percent of the potentially available information. In life-or-death situations. And you think you need more information? Unfortunately, My Start-Up Life fails to give a coherent account of Comcate's financing and the current status of the company, which is privately held. In a recent telephone interview, Ben said he withheld those kinds of details for proprietary reasons because his company is a developing enterprise. With a little prodding, he told me that he raised about $250,000 to start Comcate, and that the company is now self-sustaining with 6 employees, 75 local government clients and anticipated 2007 revenue of $1 million. I just wish he'd put some of this general information in the book. Apart from its repeated references to the dot-com mania of Silicon Valley, the book lacks political and socioeconomic context. In describing the early days of Comcate, for example, Ben notes that the fall of 2001 was a busy few months, without any mention of the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11. When I asked him about that, he said that it didn't really impact the business. I also would have liked to read more about Ben's parents. He duly expresses his gratitude, especially to his father who lent space in his law office for Comcate. But we never get a clear picture of what life was like in the Casnocha household. Talk about risk-taking - nothing takes more wisdom and courage than their kind of entrepreneurial parenting. In any event, Ben seems to be gaining an ever more acute sense of history and his own mortality as My Start-Up Life hits the stores. He told me that he's already working on a second book, about America as the world's greatest start-up. He added that he intends to make the most of the time left until his next birthday, in March 2008. I've got another eight months until I'm just another boring 20-year-old, he said. (New York Times, June 17, 2007)