Episode Summary
Sanjay Parekh is one of those multi-hyphenate entrepreneurs that we can barely keep up with: heās a tech mogul, an event founder, a podcast host, and a board member for several high-profile organizations. He lists āinventorā on his resume, and for good reason: NetAcuity, his patented location targeting technology, has helped companies like IKEA and FedEx serve their customers better. In this weekās episode, we talk to Sanjay about raising capital, how the tech landscape has changed for the better, and how he failed as a pizza entrepreneur.
Episode Notes
If your business ideas have ever been more of an airball than a total slam dunk, take heart: you are not alone. Sanjay Parekh is known for being ahead of the game as an entrepreneur, but even heās had off-days. Take Pizza Impulse, his idea for pizza delivery that relied on random demand, random supply, and push messaging. His sales total on that project was a whopping two pizza pies. āThere have been stinkers like that over time, but with the stinkers, you learn a lot,ā he laughs.Ā
Of course, you donāt know Sanjay because heās a failed pizza emperor: you know him as the head of Mirage Data, a start-up that protects your data without sacrificing usability, as well as a founder of TogetherLetters. In his past, he co-founded Digital Envoy and Prototype Prime, and ran events like 2015ās Startup Riot. Heās also a host of Tech Talk YāAll, a biweekly comedy tech podcast. Is there anything this guy canāt do? (Besides running a pizza company…but weāll forgive him for that.)
Like many entrepreneurs, Sanjay got his start in middle school. He was a candy-bar broker: buying piles of the sweet stuff and then selling to his peers. āIf you ask a room of 100 entrepreneurs, more than 50 of them will say they did something like that.ā He turned his early earnings into comic books, some of which he still has today.
In 1999, after graduating from Georgia Tech, Sanjay had an idea that would āmake the internet better.ā He noticed that the FedEx and IKEA websites were still relying on customers to select their countries before they could begin shopping, but suspected there was a tech workout-around that would smooth out that step. At work the next day, his colleague told him, āItās either impossible to do, or somebodyās already done it,ā but nope: Sanjay found that it was possible and he was first. Digital Envoy was born of this idea, and Sanjay left that colleague behind in 2000. Digital Envoy raised 1.5M in 2000, and 10.5M the following year; selling that first company in 2007 has let Sanjay ācontinue on this crazy entrepreneurial journey ever since then.ā
A lot has changed since those heady early-internet days, and Sanjay isnāt nostalgic. For one, āYou didnāt have the infrastructure stuff that we have now. You donāt need to buy servers. You donāt need to buy storage space.ā While Sanjayās early tech needs often gobbled up his large investments, āA lot of companies are able to start now without having to raise much money or any money at all.ā Folks can now get in without huge initial investments, relying on quick, cheap, and global solutions like the cloud.Ā
Being a tech-minded entrepreneur hasnāt always been champagne and gala events. Holding patents means that Sanjay has had to sit through āexcruciatingā sessions in order to explain the nitty-gritty of his products, but doing so ābuilds a moat to protect the company.ā He doesnāt go for the NDA mindsetāSanjay figures that, with seven billion people on the planet, someone else probably has the same idea as him, somewhereāand he says that talking about his ideas is one way of finding out who else is solving that problem, or even why the problem canāt be solved in the first place.Ā
He extends that philosophy to the way he approaches all his projects. āYouāve gotta become an extrovert when youāre an entrepreneur, at least in terms of business.ā He credits his relationships with strengthening his business: from loyal connections to getting the support staff on board, and from funding events, to board service, relationships are where āgood things happenā as an entrepreneur. Where are your best connections?
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