Once You're Lucky, Twice You're Good: The Rebirth of Silicon Valley and the Rise of Web 2.0 | 
enlarge | Author: Sarah Lacy Publisher: Gotham Category: Book
List Price: $26.00 Buy New: $9.64 You Save: $16.36 (63%)
New (33) Used (13) from $8.65
Rating: 32 reviews Sales Rank: 75547
Media: Hardcover Pages: 304 Number Of Items: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.2 Dimensions (in): 9 x 6.1 x 1.3
ISBN: 1592403824 Dewey Decimal Number: 338.4700670979473 EAN: 9781592403820 ASIN: 1592403824
Publication Date: May 15, 2008 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Shipping: Expedited shipping available Condition: SATISFACTION GUARANTEED! NEW Book! May have remainder mark. Most orders ship within 1 BUSINESS DAY with ORDER CONFIRMATION.
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Product Description The captivating story of the mavericks who emerged from the dotcom rubble to found the multibillion-dollar companies taking the Web into the twenty-first century
Everyone has heard the story of the Internet Bubble. Beginning with Netscape s IPO in 1996, billions flowed into Internet startups, and companies with no revenues and shaky business plans earned sky-high valuations on Wall Street. It was the era of paper millionaires, $800 office chairs, and Super Bowl ads for dotcoms. Then in 2000 the Bubble burst, with the NASDAQ losing 75 percent of its value and hundreds of companies closing up shop. It was all written off to irrational exuberance, and everyone moved on.
Once You re Lucky, Twice You re Good is the story of the entrepreneurs who learned their lesson from the bust and in recent years have created groundbreaking new Web companies. The second iteration of the dotcoms dubbed Web 2.0 is all about bringing people together. Social networking sites such as Facebook and MySpace unite friends online; YouTube lets anyone posts videos for the world to see; Digg.com allows Internet users to vote on the most relevant news of the day; Six Apart sells software that enables bloggers to post their viewpoints online; and Slide helps people customize their virtual selves.
Business reporter Sarah Lacy brings to light the entire Web 2.0 scene: the wide-eyed but wary entrepreneurs, the hated venture capitalists, the bloggers fueling the hype, the programmers coding through the night, the twenty-something millionaires, and the Internet fan boys eager for all the promises to come true.
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| Customer Reviews: Read 27 more reviews...
Just horribly written September 11, 2008 Z. Brock 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
The anecdotes in this book are really great, but pretty much everything else is just plain awful. The writing, thesis and "evidence" are all horrible. I won't even go into the second two, but check out this gem from page 4: "Another contender was Six Apart, founded in 2002 by then twenty-four-year-olds Ben and Mena Trott in 2004." Or this one from page 208 "Peter's two protoges were going to become closer allies or rivals". Allies? Rivals? Maybe both! Include Lacy's obnoxious habits of name dropping people and super exclusive parties she attended, referring to Mark Zuckerburg constantly as "Zuck" and finishing paragraphs with sentence fragments and you end up with a really painful book to read.
Too much Zuck and Ning, got boring after a while August 28, 2008 M. Hill (Intraweb) 0 out of 1 found this review helpful
My Twitter review: Zuck is Steve Jobs 2.0, Ning sucks, Slide is boring, Digg missed the boat, and the book was a "meh". I wanted to like this book, I really did. Having lived in Silicon Valley from 1999-2003, I identified with the sense of what was old would be new, and that true innovation trumps luck any day. The book was a somewhat okay account of some of the newer darling dandies of the web (Digg, Facebook) but then droned on about Marc Andreessen and Jim Clark getting lucky with Netscape, then trying (trying!) to reproduce that same magic again with limited success. This book is okay...I felt it got boring midway through, and then rehashed a bit too much.
Could have been more... August 17, 2008 D. Berry (Trailerpark USA) 1 out of 2 found this review helpful
It was "okay". It mostly talked about Paypal, Facebook, Digg and alittle about Blogger > Twitter. Some stuff were pretty informative, but it was (insert nice word for fluff here) overall. I already know alot about PP and FB (who doesn't?) but I did not know that the founder of Blogger sold to Google for $10 million in stocks and cashed out for around $50 million. I also did not know that the Blogger Founder started Twitter. Makes sense I suppose. Is it worth reading? Maybe if you're not from Silicon Valley or don't know much about Web 2.0. Some things were alittle shady - how Zuck, 20, met an important person before he moved to the Valley. How did he meet this tech person who didn't go to Harvard? There are some gaps. Lacy seems an admirable person, but given her lack of credibility over her article on Kevin Rose in Business Week last year and her disastrous interview w/Zuck at SXSW doesn't make this a sound book based on true facts, but based on assumptions and rumors. Most of this stuff could probably be found on Wikipedia if you look up the companies and founders. Save the money or wait till I donate this book at the local library near you.
Great Book, illustrating and educating on the Web 2.0 August 11, 2008 Rafael Nenninger (San Diego, CA) 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
It's a great book. I enjoyed it while learning about how the old and new VC work. Really inspiring stories on how the web 2.0 got build.
Social Networking Start Ups should be required to read this book! August 10, 2008 Mega Star Media (reno, nv) 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
Once your lucky, twice your good...by Sarah Lacy.... A MUST READ, for any internet start up! I LOVE this book i am only half way through but had to share my feelings about it thus far. As an online web entrepreneur, i speak with thousands of potential "mega stars" each year and listen to ideas, dreams and plans on how to "make it", this book easily shares insights into a world most of us business types only dream of as well as gives you a glimpse into the lives of some of the internet's brightest starts. This book has ignited by passion for what I do. Thank you Sarah! sandy rowley www.megastarmedia.com custom social networks
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