I am back to work this Monday and have a stack of seedcamp applications to process.
I think there are two particularly exciting things about Seedcamp:
1) Ecosystem
Seedcamp is a terrific opportunity for some young and bright entrepreneurs to spend a week meeting the most incredible set of people.(This speech and this link gives a flavor on the board, but I understand Saul will soon be revealing some incredible mentors flying in).
The power of a network is fascinating. Some people seem to think that it’s an end in itself. I don’t agree.
A network is not a set of business cards. A network is not someone you’ve met once at a rabid networking do.
The best people I know, I have worked with. Working in their company, with their board, negotiating a deal on the same side or the opposite side of the table. Sharing my opinion and experience. Having it shouted down, debating and sometimes being listened to ;)
What is wonderful is that the successful seedcampers will get to meet a cracking set of people and engage with them. Hearing their opinions and experiences inside successful businesses. Strongly disagreeing, debating and sometimes agreeing; The closest thing to actually working with them.
2) Thinking big
Seedcamp gives entrepreneurs the opportunity and a very supportive environment to think big.
I am a strong believer that the “go big or go home” mentality is absolute rubbish. Entrepreneurs should not feel obliged to manically strive to create businesses that change the world. Its just not the right path for some people, some business models or some risk profiles.
However, if you don’t consider how you can build your idea into a billion dollar business at the start, its very hard to turn it into one halfway through. If you don’t “just go for it” when you’re young, it’ll be much harder when you have a mortgage and a nice car to drive to a comfy job at a business park in Bracknell.
That’s why I’m excited about seedcamp.

Hi,
Thanks for posting Saul's speech! it's very interesting. I'm from france, and I applied to seeed camp with my two co-workers, because we guess it could be a great opportuniy to launch our business. However, I feel like there is a bigger room for really technical projects. I am wrong? Knowing that our project is about marketing, web strategy, consulting (using web 2.0) for african/caribean brands, I am a bit worry...
What to do think?
Cheers
Posted by: Herve | August 20, 2007 at 10:15 AM