An idea for breaking through Silicon Valley's social network. It can be viewed as a generalization of Hacker News.
This is actually a more general idea for contacting anyone well known who would probably just ignore your email because you are not near him/her in his/her social network.
You can think of Hacker News as an example of this idea since it allows unknowns to contact PG -- particularly if their submission is voted up to the front page.
More generally, what about using a social news site specifically built for this purpose (and not just for contacting the people who created the site)?
The idea is that if many people agree that you have something interesting to say to someone famous, then he/she would probably be interested in hearing what you have to say.
Moreover, a famous person is more likely to respond to a question if he/she feels the response would be of interest to many people.
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[ 3.0 ms ] story [ 36.4 ms ] threadAt that point, a famous person can decide whether to reply or not, and if so, whether to do so in private or public on the site/in some other forum.
How would a famous person know someone is trying to contact him/her? If this service becomes well known, then either the person would see it directly or someone close to him/her in his/her social network would probably tell him/her.
Also the idea can be applied beyond Silicon Valley to contact famous film directors, politicians, etc.
It's better than sending email because a famous person will likely not respond to some random email of unknown quality.
Also, if something like this becomes well known, then I would predict many more unknowns would attempt to contact famous people -- way more than famous people would be able to handle in terms of email.
I don't know what famous people you're talking about ... I'm assuming we're leaving out "celebrities" and concentrating on "useful" famous people in business/academia? If so, you'd be surprised at how much correspondence they can have.
Not to mention I'm not sure if you realize how many of the "emails" on things like VC pages are bogus on purpose. Like when they say, "mail your business plans attention "Business Plan Manager" ... that's usually code for "just toss this in the paper shredder.
Here: test this out. Think of 5 famous people and email them something you think surely would catch their attention. See if you can find their real emails and if they bother reading it. Use one of those "verification of opened email" services.
It just doesn't happen that often. If anything it gets sent to an assistant who sends it to another assistant who sends it to the intern who gives it to his little sister who gives it to the cat.
I think this would be a good "idea" if not necessarily one that translates into a business.
That in itself is something. Now compare that to the next guy who may be able to say, "That guy's idea is good. But my idea is sooooo good, 210,000 people in the industry think you should read and consider what I have to say."
As someone with limited time, which one, all other things equal, would you open first and which second?
And if the third next idea only had 300 votes and you were pressed for time, you'd skip it most likely, right?
HUH??? I'm not sure what this has to do with planned economies and such, but if you put it that way, I see it as exactly the opposite. People who he talks about are hard to get to by design - mostly by the design of their administrative assistants. On the other hand, tons of people voting your idea up is by definition the very essence of a market-based decision-making system.
In the spirit of your reply, I'll give it a go now: "Disagreeing with me is like trying to replace the Constitution with the manual for your DVD player."