[..] Now what? Who is right? And the debate does not stop here, it sparked a pretty good discussion in the Enterprise Irregulars group. I think both sides are correct. It’s a Great Time and It’s a Terrible Time…read my take on CloudAve. [..]
Now is a Great Time to Join or Found a Startup –says Bob Warfield, friend and fellow Enterprise Irregular.
Now what? Who is right? And the debate does not stop here, it sparked a pretty good discussion in the Enterprise Irregulars group. In fact I was facing the same dilemma advising a startup-CEO friend the other day. But I really think launching a new business as Founder or joining one as an employee are two very different animals, so I’ll split the two and talk about Founding (or join as co-Founder) here. I’ll try to some up the pro’s and con’s here:
It’s a Great Time:
It’s a Terrible Time:
It’s a Great Time and a Terrible Time - my take:
Let me expand on that last point. Unemployment is at a record high and growing. It’s close to impossible to get hired now. Anyone can get the axe, and it’s not your fault, it’ the economy. If you find yourself out of a job, and have been doing the kind of ongoing, active outbound marketing, self-branding I’ve discussed before – perhaps you already are on somebody’s wish list and get a job offer soon.
If not, and you’re now scrambling to update your resume, reach out to contacts, browse the job sites and apply for posted jobs – I’m sorry to be the bearer of bad news, but it likely won’t happen. I know you need income NOW, not some long-term solution. I know it, because I’ve been there, done that. And I can’t tell you how much I regretted looking back on wasted 6-8-10 months, chasing job opportunities that just did not materialize when I could have actually created something in that period.
So think about it this way: job search is a full time activity. You can “feel good” about doing your best, chasing phantom opportunities. Or you can have a working prototype, a service … a small business of your own half a year from now. Yes, it will require living on reserves for an extended time. But you will likely be forced to anyway – might as well make the best of it.
Update (1/9/09): Read Sramana Mitra's Advice For Laid-Off Engineers @ Forbes.

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