How to successfully launch a second startup
13-11- 2013
Let's say you've sold your
flourishing business, or taken it public, for a tidy sum. Starting another
enterprise, especially if it's in the same industry, should be a piece of cake,
right?
Well, yes and no. The success of your first venture can make you
overconfident, and entrepreneur Bob Diener said that's trouble. "Always be
humble. You have to be ready to admit when you're wrong, and change your plan
quickly if it isn't working."
Diener knows what he's talking about. In 1991, he co-founded Hotels.com,
then sold it in 2003 to InterActive Corp. (IACI), which owned Expedia.com and other sites. Financial research firm PrivCo
estimated the deal was worth $1.2 billion.
Diener and co-founder Dave Littman had signed five-year non-compete
agreements, but once that time was up, they were itching to get back in the
game. So in 2009, they launched Dallas-based Getaroom.com.
Why start another travel site? "When the economy fell apart, the
dynamics of the hotel business changed," Diener said. "Occupancy
rates plummeted, and consumers -- including business travelers -- were suddenly
much more cost-conscious. We saw it as an opportunity."
No-frills Getaroom.com offers deeply discounted lodging -- "no rental
cars, cruises, or any other stuff," Diener said -- at about 25,000 hotels
in the U.S. It's a hit with budget-minded travelers, with revenues up by 70% in
2013, and it now has about 200 employees.
But getting there has been full of surprises. "We tweaked our business
model several times before we got it to where it works for both hotels and
consumers," Diener said. Revenues grew steadily from 2009 through 2011,
but that growth was "slower than we expected, and it took us a long time
to get to profitability."
That was partly because the marketplace had changed even more than he and
his team realized.
"When we started Hotels.com, the Internet was so new that there wasn't
much competition," Diener explained. "This time, the market was much
more crowded, even saturated, and the big challenge has been how to
differentiate ourselves from everyone else. It's a whole different skill set.">>>
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