Fabrice Grinda

  • Playing with
    Unicorns
  • Featured
  • Categories
  • Portfolio
  • About Me
  • Newsletter
  • AI
    • Pitch me your startup!
    • Fabrice AI
  • PT-BR
    • EN
    • FR
    • AR
    • BN
    • DA
    • DE
    • ES
    • FA
    • HI
    • ID
    • IT
    • JA
    • KO
    • NL
    • PL
    • PT-PT
    • RO
    • RU
    • TH
    • UK
    • UR
    • VI
    • ZH-HANS
    • ZH-HANT
× Image Description

Subscribe to Fabrice's Newsletter

Tech Entrepreneurship, Economics, Life Philosophy and much more!

Check your inbox or spam folder to confirm your subscription.

Menu

  • PT-BR
    • EN
    • FR
    • AR
    • BN
    • DA
    • DE
    • ES
    • FA
    • HI
    • ID
    • IT
    • JA
    • KO
    • NL
    • PL
    • PT-PT
    • RO
    • RU
    • TH
    • UK
    • UR
    • VI
    • ZH-HANS
    • ZH-HANT
  • Home
  • Playing with Unicorns
  • Featured
  • Categories
  • Portfolio
  • About Me
  • Newsletter
  • Privacy Policy
Pular para o conteúdo
Fabrice Grinda

Internet entrepreneurs and investors

× Image Description

Subscribe to Fabrice's Newsletter

Tech Entrepreneurship, Economics, Life Philosophy and much more!

Check your inbox or spam folder to confirm your subscription.

Fabrice Grinda

Internet entrepreneurs and investors

Mês: setembro 2006

The past, present and future of French Internet entrepreneurship!

The past, present and future of French Internet entrepreneurship!

With apologies the French Internet Entrepreneurs I have not met yet.

As part of my whirlwind tour of the world, I spent a few days in Paris last week. On Thursday evening I threw a dinner party with most of the French Internet entrepreneurs I knew at Noura, a good Lebanese restaurant.

The discussion was intense and fun with tons of ideas, laughter and dreams flying around. There was palpable energy in the air as we remembered the bubble days and shared our dreams about the future.

On the picture you can see from left to right: Fabrice Boutain, Mark Oiknine (standing), me, Aymeric Chotard, Patrick Robin (standing), Bertrand Pulles, Julien Babin, Antoine Mermet et Michel de Guilhermier. Gael Duval took the picture.

Only Marc Simoncini (Meetic) and Yseulys Costes (MilleMercis) could not make it.

It’s interesting to see how all the “old” Internet entrepreneurs have essentially stuck to their guns and are all still on the Internet:

  • After selling Imaginet, Patrick Robin is just starting 24h00.fr a luxury item discount store where items go on sale for only 24 hours
  • After selling PageFrance, Fabrice Boutain is running Anxa.com a premium self-help service company
  • After selling the online ad agency Alpaga, Gael Duval recently created a new online ad agency Un77.com

As for the others, Michel de Guilhermier runs Photoways, the Snapfish equivalent of Europe. Aymeric Chotard has been with 2xmoinscher.com for over 6 years and recently sold it to Les 3 Suisses. Julien Babin and Antoine Mermet recently left Meetic and Google respectively to create Keyade.com, a search engine marketing company.

Bertrand Pulles was a bit the exception as he has been working for France Telecom since selling his company to them in the bubble days.

As for Marc Oiknine, he’s a former entrepreneur and now venture capitalist with Atlas Ventures.

All in all, I was humbled by the energy, talent and vision that everyone around the table had. As Michel puts it: “Without a doubt the numerous talents here tonight will create Web 3.0 once the Web 2.0 bubble bursts! We live in a blessed period: the market is here, money as well, there are countless opportunities, go for it!”

For a different take (in French) on the dinner, see Michel’s blog: http://micheldeguilhermier.typepad.com/mdegblog/2006/09/diner_dentrepre.html

Autor FabricePublicado em setembro 20, 2006setembro 27, 2023Categorias Empreendedorismo7 comentários em The past, present and future of French Internet entrepreneurship!

Paris, je t’aime is amazing!

Paris, je t’aime is amazing!

This movie consists of a collection of 16 short films about life, love and love of Paris in Paris. It is well done and touching because it feels so real.

The acting, writing and directing is great. The directors include the Coen borthers, Wes Craven and Gus Van Sant. Some of the actors include Nick Nolte (who is great!), Juliette Binoche, Willem Dafoe, Maggie Gyllenhaal, Gerard Depardieu, Eliha Wood and Natalie Portman.

I hope it comes out in the U.S.!

Autor FabricePublicado em setembro 19, 2006julho 25, 2023Categorias Filmes e programas de TV3 comentários em Paris, je t’aime is amazing!

Lessons in life: the humbling transformation of Andre Agassi

Lessons in life: the humbling transformation of Andre Agassi

I just read Gary Smith’s amazing mini-biography of Andre Agassi in Sports Illustrated. The story of his rise to the top, his fall and rebirth is fascinating and humbling. Few people are able to change fundamentally who they are and yet Agassi went from being the man who stood for “Image is everything” to the one who stands for “Humanity is everything.”

I had always been impressed by the humility he had in press interviews in recent years – always praising his opponents and grateful to be where he is – the article gives a glimpse of why that is.

Be grateful, stay humble, be at peace with yourself and the world, stay hungry!

Autor FabricePublicado em setembro 9, 2006agosto 4, 2023Categorias Interesting Articles2 comentários em Lessons in life: the humbling transformation of Andre Agassi

Red Doors is delightful

Red Doors is delightful

Red Doors is a dark comedy about a dysfunctional Chinese-American family coming of age in New York. The film has been described as American Beauty meets Joy Luck Club. The movie is agreeable and keeps you on edge by alternating between cheeky humor and darkness. If you live in New York, go see it! If not, I hope it will get a larger distribution soon!

For full disclosure, I am a very small investor in the movie and am close friends with the director.

Autor FabricePublicado em setembro 8, 2006julho 25, 2023Categorias Filmes e programas de TVDeixe um comentário em Red Doors is delightful

Live long? Die young? The answer is not in your genes

Live long? Die young? The answer is not in your genes

My last posting showed how deliberate practice overwhelms differences in natural ability to explain the success of top performers which led to the conclusion that you have to do what you love and love what you do!

This posting is somewhat related as recent studies on longevity are showing that genetic make-up is not a good determinant of life expectancy. Studies have shown that while your height is 80 to 90 percent determined by parents’ height only 3 percent of your life expectancy can be explained by how long your parents lived.

Even identical twins usually die years apart. Genetic makeup can influence your predisposition to a certain disease such as cancer, but studies have shown that even in identical twin if one twin gets the disease the risk that the other twin gets it is only slightly increased relative to the average population.

While the study did not say whether it was the environment that impacted longevity, it emphasized the importance of random events: a bad mutation that leads to cancer, a bad fall, a car accident, etc.

You can read the full article at:
www.nytimes.com/2006/08/31/health/31age.html?hp&ex=1157083200&en=9198431085b8eb21&ei=5094&partner=homepage

Autor FabricePublicado em setembro 7, 2006agosto 4, 2023Categorias Interesting Articles1 comentário em Live long? Die young? The answer is not in your genes

A Star is Made

A Star is Made

If like me you loved the inquisitive mindset in Freakonomics where the authors ask numerous unrelated questions of how the world works, you will find the following article fascinating. Stephen Dubner and Stephen Levitt, the Freakonomics authors, start by analyzing the birth-month soccer anomaly to conclude that two people’s innate genetic differences in doing any task is often overwhelmed by how much practice each person had had at the given task.

The birth-month soccer anomaly is that elite soccer players are more likely to have been born in the earlier months of the year than in the later months. This is even more pronounced for the youth teams that feed the World Cup and professional ranks. On recent English teams, half the elite teenage soccer players were born in January, February or March. In Germany, 52 elite youth players were born in the first three months of the year, with just 4 players born in the last three.

I won’t reveal the cause of the birth-month anomaly – read the article 🙂 – but suffice it to say it’s not that certain astrological signs confer superior soccer skills!

As part of their inquisition, Dubner and Levitt analyze the “Cambridge Handbook of Expertise and Expert Performance” a 900-page academic book on performance by Andrew Ericsson, a psychologist at Florida State University. The book studies expert performers from a wide range of pursuits, including soccer, golf, surgery, piano playing, Scrabble, writing, chess, software design, stock picking and darts. The intriguing conclusion is that the trait we commonly call talent is highly overrated. In other words, experts are made, not born. Practice does make perfect as our parents have been telling us all along!

The conjoint conclusion is that when choosing a path in life you should do what you love – because if you don’t love it, you are unlikely to work hard enough to be very good. Most people naturally don’t like to do things they aren’t “good” at. So they often give up, telling themselves they simply don’t possess the talent for math or skiing or the violin. But what they really lack is the desire to be good and to undertake the deliberate practice that would make them better.

Read the full article at:
www.nytimes.com/2006/05/07/magazine/07wwln_freak.html?ex=1157688000&en=57d48facd169cf87&ei=5070

Autor FabricePublicado em setembro 6, 2006novembro 15, 2023Categorias Interesting Articles5 comentários em A Star is Made

The Long Tail

The Long Tail

If you read this blog, chances are you know what the long tail is, but just in case, I felt like reiterating it.

The phrase The Long Tail was first coined by Chris Anderson of Wired Magazine. Anderson argued that products that are in low demand or have low sales volume can collectively make up a market share that rivals or exceeds the relatively few current bestsellers and blockbusters, if the store or distribution channel is large enough. Examples of such mega-stores include the online retailer Amazon.com and the online video rental service Netflix. The Long Tail is a potential market and the distribution and sales channel opportunities created by the Internet often enable businesses to tap into that market successfully.

A former Amazon employee described the Long Tail as follows: “We sold more books today that didn’t sell at all yesterday than we sold today of all the books that did sell yesterday.”

The key factor that determines whether a sales distribution has a Long Tail is the cost of inventory storage and distribution. Where inventory storage and distribution costs are insignificant, it becomes economically viable to sell relatively unpopular products; however when storage and distribution costs are high only the most popular products can be sold. Take movie rentals as an example: A traditional movie rental store has limited shelf space, which it pays for in the form of building overhead; to maximize its profits, it must stock only the most popular movies to ensure that no shelf space is wasted. Because Netflix stocks movies in centralized warehouses, its storage costs are far lower and its distribution costs are the same for a popular or unpopular movie. Netflix is therefore able to build a viable business stocking a far wider range of movies than a traditional movie rental store. Those economics of storage and distribution then enable the advantageous use of the Long Tail: Netflix finds that in aggregate “unpopular” movies are rented more than popular movies.

The Long Tail has possible implications for culture and politics. Where the opportunity cost of inventory storage and distribution is high, only the most popular products are sold. But where the Long Tail works, minority tastes are catered to, and individuals are offered greater choice. In situations where popularity is currently determined by the lowest common denominator, a Long Tail model may lead to improvement in a society’s level of culture. Television is a good example of this: TV stations have limited time slots, so the opportunity cost of each time slot is high; stations therefore choose programs that have the broadest appeal. But as the number of TV stations grows or TV programming is distributed through other digital channels, the choice of TV programs grows and the cultural diversity rises.

You can read the full original Wired article at:
www.wired.com/wired/archive/12.10/tail_pr.html

Autor FabricePublicado em setembro 3, 2006agosto 16, 2023Categorias Reflexões sobre negócios1 comentário em The Long Tail

The state of sleep research

The state of sleep research

Recent developments in sleep research are extremely interesting. The two most interesting findings are on the importance of non-REM sleep in memory formation and studies on Modafinil and CX717 in promoting wakefulness and quality sleep.

What is interesting is that most sleeping pills currently on the market only promote shallow stage 2 sleep which is much less restorative than “slow wave” sleep – which is why people who take sleeping pills sleep but rarely feel rested when they wake up. Somehow Modafinil allows users to stay awake for extended periods of time without accumulating “sleep debt,” allowing for quality sleep after the wakefulness period and without any of the side effects of traditional stimulants (e.g.; the he jitters, euphoria and eventual crash that come after caffeine).

You can read the full article at:
www.newscientist.com/article/mg18925391.300;jsessionid=MKKILCABJJLM

Autor FabricePublicado em setembro 2, 2006julho 25, 2023Categorias Interesting Articles1 comentário em The state of sleep research

Rent … unless you want to buy :)

Rent … unless you want to buy :)

Experts have been arguing for a while that real estate is over-valued by looking at a number of metrics; e.g., housing prices relative to household income, historical trends of house price increases.

However, very few people connect with those arguments and reiterate: “when I buy a house I am building equity” or “rent payments go down the drain, at least when I buy I am paying towards ownership of the house.” I will explain why those assertions are wrong.

Fundamentally, a house is just another asset. Its value should be determined by the present value of the cash flows you can obtain from it. Those cash flows are the present value of the rent payments you can collect from it over time and the present value of the price you will sell the house for in the end.

In other words:

House value = present value of potential rent payments during the ownership period + present value of selling price

Unfortunately, it is very unwieldy for people to calculate house values that way. Not that many people know how to calculate present value, but more importantly there are too many variables that would be up for debate. People might know their discount rate and current rental values, but how can they reasonably estimate annual increases in rent and in the value of the house over the long run? Polling experts would give you a wide range in the annual price increase of the house – some give you a negative rate in light of the current high prices, some would grow prices with GDP and some would grow house prices faster than that in light of historical housing price increases.

If the present value of cash flow method is unwieldy, the easiest way is to look at the rental yield of the property. In other words, how much of the property value can you obtain in rental income yearly, based on current market prices.

Rental yield = annual rent income / current market price

For instance the current yield on the house I am renting in Long Island is 1.6%. Given that you can get 5.5% risk free in a money market at your bank, renting is clearly the best option by far! I can more than pay for the rent just with the interest of the money I would have had to spend to buy the house. My landlord (who I hope does not read this blog) would be much better off selling the house and investing the money in something else.

In a less exact way, you can also look at monthly costs of renting versus ownership. In other words you can compare monthly rent versus the mortgage cost plus the monthly maintenance cost plus the monthly property tax minus the monthly interest expense tax deduction. It’s not an economically exact representation of the two cash flows over time because you don’t know by how much rents will increase relative to changes in property taxes and maintenance. Not to mention the interest deduction varies, given that over time the amount of interest expense decreases as a share of the overall mortgage payment – but it gives you a sense of the respective costs. Note that you have to assume you are taking a 100% mortgage for the comparison to be correct, otherwise you would have to subtract from the rental cost the monthly income from funds that could have been put towards the house and have been invested elsewhere.

For my Manhattan 2 bedroom apartment, the monthly rent is $3,965. To buy the apartment would cost $2,000,000 which is $11,671 per month on a 30 year mortgage at 5.75%. My marginal tax rate is 40% and almost all of the payments are interest at this point, so I would get a $4,668 monthly tax break. The maintenance on the apartment is $1,249 per month and the monthly property tax is $1,039. In other words, I would pay $9,291 per month for the privilege of owning the apartment versus $3,965 to rent it – a $5,326 monthly difference. Again it makes much more sense to rent.

So what about “when I buy a house I am building equity” or “rent payments go down the drain, at least when I buy I am paying towards ownership of the house.” Well, yes ownership builds your equity stake, but consider that you could have been saving and investing the $5,326 in something else and letting it compound every month. In light of the current yield on real estate chances are you would be much better off in the long run – even if you place the savings in relatively safe asset classes.

So from a financial perspective it makes more sense to rent in New York right now than to own. However, life is not about maximizing your financial outcomes, it’s about maximizing your utility, economist speak for happiness 🙂 . Some people want the ability to remodel and change a house. Many people love having a place that is their’s and that they call “home.” In other words, if you get more happiness out of owning the house than the differential in cost between renting and owning, you should own!

In my case, I actually like not being tied down by financial assets and having the flexibility to go anywhere at a moment’s notice. So even at equivalent financial costs, I would probably choose to rent.

Autor FabricePublicado em setembro 1, 2006julho 25, 2023Categorias Reflexões pessoais17 comentários em Rent … unless you want to buy :)

Search

Recent Posts

  • O significado da vida
  • Atualização do segundo trimestre de 2025 da FJ Labs
  • Conversa sobre o mundo da DaaS com Auren Hoffman: portfólios diversificados, vendas secundárias e jantares
  • Episódio 50: Tendências do mercado de empreendimentos
  • Decodificando o futuro: IA, Venture Market e Marketplaces

Recent Comments

    Archives

    • julho 2025
    • junho 2025
    • maio 2025
    • abril 2025
    • março 2025
    • fevereiro 2025
    • janeiro 2025
    • dezembro 2024
    • novembro 2024
    • outubro 2024
    • setembro 2024
    • agosto 2024
    • julho 2024
    • junho 2024
    • maio 2024
    • abril 2024
    • março 2024
    • fevereiro 2024
    • janeiro 2024
    • dezembro 2023
    • novembro 2023
    • outubro 2023
    • setembro 2023
    • agosto 2023
    • junho 2023
    • maio 2023
    • abril 2023
    • março 2023
    • fevereiro 2023
    • janeiro 2023
    • dezembro 2022
    • novembro 2022
    • outubro 2022
    • setembro 2022
    • agosto 2022
    • junho 2022
    • maio 2022
    • abril 2022
    • março 2022
    • fevereiro 2022
    • janeiro 2022
    • novembro 2021
    • outubro 2021
    • setembro 2021
    • agosto 2021
    • julho 2021
    • junho 2021
    • abril 2021
    • março 2021
    • fevereiro 2021
    • janeiro 2021
    • dezembro 2020
    • novembro 2020
    • outubro 2020
    • setembro 2020
    • agosto 2020
    • julho 2020
    • junho 2020
    • maio 2020
    • abril 2020
    • março 2020
    • fevereiro 2020
    • janeiro 2020
    • novembro 2019
    • outubro 2019
    • setembro 2019
    • agosto 2019
    • julho 2019
    • junho 2019
    • abril 2019
    • março 2019
    • fevereiro 2019
    • janeiro 2019
    • dezembro 2018
    • novembro 2018
    • outubro 2018
    • agosto 2018
    • junho 2018
    • maio 2018
    • março 2018
    • fevereiro 2018
    • janeiro 2018
    • dezembro 2017
    • novembro 2017
    • outubro 2017
    • setembro 2017
    • agosto 2017
    • julho 2017
    • junho 2017
    • maio 2017
    • abril 2017
    • março 2017
    • fevereiro 2017
    • janeiro 2017
    • dezembro 2016
    • novembro 2016
    • outubro 2016
    • setembro 2016
    • agosto 2016
    • julho 2016
    • junho 2016
    • maio 2016
    • abril 2016
    • março 2016
    • fevereiro 2016
    • janeiro 2016
    • dezembro 2015
    • novembro 2015
    • setembro 2015
    • agosto 2015
    • julho 2015
    • junho 2015
    • maio 2015
    • abril 2015
    • março 2015
    • fevereiro 2015
    • janeiro 2015
    • dezembro 2014
    • novembro 2014
    • outubro 2014
    • setembro 2014
    • agosto 2014
    • julho 2014
    • junho 2014
    • maio 2014
    • abril 2014
    • fevereiro 2014
    • janeiro 2014
    • dezembro 2013
    • novembro 2013
    • outubro 2013
    • setembro 2013
    • agosto 2013
    • julho 2013
    • junho 2013
    • maio 2013
    • abril 2013
    • março 2013
    • fevereiro 2013
    • janeiro 2013
    • dezembro 2012
    • novembro 2012
    • outubro 2012
    • setembro 2012
    • agosto 2012
    • julho 2012
    • junho 2012
    • maio 2012
    • abril 2012
    • março 2012
    • fevereiro 2012
    • janeiro 2012
    • dezembro 2011
    • novembro 2011
    • outubro 2011
    • setembro 2011
    • agosto 2011
    • julho 2011
    • junho 2011
    • maio 2011
    • abril 2011
    • março 2011
    • fevereiro 2011
    • janeiro 2011
    • dezembro 2010
    • novembro 2010
    • outubro 2010
    • setembro 2010
    • agosto 2010
    • julho 2010
    • junho 2010
    • maio 2010
    • abril 2010
    • março 2010
    • fevereiro 2010
    • janeiro 2010
    • dezembro 2009
    • novembro 2009
    • outubro 2009
    • setembro 2009
    • agosto 2009
    • julho 2009
    • junho 2009
    • maio 2009
    • abril 2009
    • março 2009
    • fevereiro 2009
    • janeiro 2009
    • dezembro 2008
    • novembro 2008
    • outubro 2008
    • setembro 2008
    • agosto 2008
    • julho 2008
    • junho 2008
    • maio 2008
    • abril 2008
    • março 2008
    • fevereiro 2008
    • janeiro 2008
    • dezembro 2007
    • novembro 2007
    • outubro 2007
    • setembro 2007
    • agosto 2007
    • julho 2007
    • junho 2007
    • maio 2007
    • abril 2007
    • março 2007
    • fevereiro 2007
    • janeiro 2007
    • dezembro 2006
    • novembro 2006
    • outubro 2006
    • setembro 2006
    • agosto 2006
    • julho 2006
    • junho 2006
    • maio 2006
    • abril 2006
    • março 2006
    • fevereiro 2006
    • janeiro 2006
    • dezembro 2005
    • novembro 2005

    Categories

    • A economia
    • Criptografia/Web3
    • Mercados
    • Discursos
    • Gadgets tecnológicos
    • Brincando com unicórnios
    • Laboratórios FJ
    • Publicações em destaque
    • Nova York
    • Peças
    • Ano em análise
    • Reflexões pessoais
    • Viagens
    • OLX
    • Felicidade
    • Filmes e programas de TV
    • Entrevistas e bate-papos
    • Reflexões sobre negócios
    • Livros
    • Empreendedorismo
    • Jogos de vídeo
    • Ano em análise
    • Otimização da vida
    • Laboratórios FJ
    • Tomada de decisões
    • A economia
    • Vida com luz de ativos
    • Reflexões
    • Otimismo e felicidade
    • Cães

    Meta

    • Acessar
    • Feed de posts
    • Feed de comentários
    • WordPress.org
    Pitch me your startup!
    • Home
    • Playing with Unicorns
    • Featured
    • Categories
    • Portfolio
    • About Me
    • Newsletter
    • Privacy Policy
    × Image Description

    Subscribe to Fabrice's Newsletter

    Tech Entrepreneurship, Economics, Life Philosophy and much more!

    Check your inbox or spam folder to confirm your subscription.

    >
    This site is registered on wpml.org as a development site. Switch to a production site key to remove this banner.