In the summer of 2001, I was on a roll.
Although the dot-com bubble was beginning to burst, my fledgling startup, CellWand, had just run a successful pilot of our new #TAXI service with Rogers, and we were inking a long-term contract with Canada’s largest wireless carrier. This included a six-figure revenue guarantee, and it was the first deal of its kind for an automated service using voice recognition. Skeptics of our model in the wireless industry started to reconsider, and long conversations with investors were finally getting real. Our team was exuberant, marked by high fives with friends & family.
Founders crave these moments and that feeling. I was walking on air.
OBJ360 (Sponsored)
Progress can create unlikely allies
There was a time when mining exploration and the environment were like oil and water. Several years ago, I attended social impact investing conferences in America and the U.K. with
How the uOttawa faculty of engineering instills an ‘entrepreneurial mindset’ in students
A decade ago, Terrafixing chief operating officer Vida Gabriel was a chemistry-loving student in high school with little to no interest in business or entrepreneurship. “I didn’t like the sales
That August, we signed a seven-figure term sheet with an NYC-based seed investor with experience in backing B2C companies – something Canada lacked. Suddenly, our vision of hiring a CTO and building out our marketing team was more than hypothetical. I had been at this for over a year without being paid. While I rarely spoke about the idea of actually getting a salary, I thought about this more than I cared to admit.
Due diligence concluded, and everything was set for our financial closing on September 30th.
And then 9/11 happened.