tl;dr = Google at first approved of the tactic these guys used then suddenly without warning changed their search algorithm and penalized these guys. Lesson, don't rely solely on Google to build traffic or you might lose a lot of money. They lost $400k in business from it.
Google changes its search algorithms periodically in an attempt to thwart the SEO spammers, which sounds like a good thing until you notice a lot of sites which had good in-depth information - but wasn't really SEO'd much if at all - are unfortunately also disappearing from the results along with the spam. It could just be my nostalgia, but the Web felt like a much... richer place 10 years ago. Sure there was more spam (and it was relatively easy to ignore), but among that were sites which had lots of interesting info, in very simple and readable styling, and almost no ads. These days it seems Google second-guesses queries far too much, and all you get are bland-looking, very similar sites with very meagre portions of irrelevant or superficial information along with large amounts of (I block them, but some still slip through) ads, social media widgets, and other distracting cruft.
I guess that could be Google over-filtering, but I think the more likely explanation is that 10 years ago that there wasn't as much much SEO effort, so it was easier for Google to pick the good pages out. So if Google weren't aggressively trying to correct for SEO spam, you'd see even more bad sites with meager information and lots of social media widgets.
Interesting proposition though; can Google's search algorithm's ranking be construed as libel or something legal like that? Has anyone ever sued Google for lost business, and won?
Title is clickbait and inaccurate - they raised €550k at 100,000 users.
So they bootstrapped until 100k users (still a great achievement), but hardly to 4mil users as the title would suggest.
Even funnier: they forgot to mention all that sweet sweet EU and Austrian R&D funding money they received over the last couple of years for 'research projects' that don't deserve that title at all.
At least remove the Google part. Maybe just "How we grew to 4M users" since they didn't bootstrap. They got traction and raised money.
Also, their software is actually really helpful at thinking through ideas. I don't mean to knock them. But the title is wrong and takes away from their achievement.
It's more of a visual brainstorming tool. It's kind of fun. There's some pseudo-science around it but it helps some people organize/visualize their thoughts (studies apparently show it helps).
UML is still around but really not much connection between the two. UML is for techies while mind maps are for everyone and not very structured or formal.
I disagree with the sentiment that watching Apple demos is a great idea. These days it seems that they are somewhat willing to sacrifice usability for looks which is rather bad (imo, I have no data to back this claim).
The influence of Google on their revenue (or time they had to spend) was interesting and a bit scarry.
I also couldn't help but feel this was somewhat of an "add post" (at first I thought it might be a positioning to get acquired type post). Sure enough in the end they "peddle" their newest product and throw in a PG for good measure. Seems like it's a "lets blog about this and get on HN" type "growth hack".
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[ 30.7 ms ] story [ 1228 ms ] threadAlso, their software is actually really helpful at thinking through ideas. I don't mean to knock them. But the title is wrong and takes away from their achievement.
(Whatever happened to UML? Anyone remember UML?)
UML is still around but really not much connection between the two. UML is for techies while mind maps are for everyone and not very structured or formal.
The influence of Google on their revenue (or time they had to spend) was interesting and a bit scarry.
I also couldn't help but feel this was somewhat of an "add post" (at first I thought it might be a positioning to get acquired type post). Sure enough in the end they "peddle" their newest product and throw in a PG for good measure. Seems like it's a "lets blog about this and get on HN" type "growth hack".