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  1. 7
    Edison guaranteed productivity by giving himself and his assistants idea quotas. His own personal invention quota was one minor invention every 10 days and a major invention every six months.
    What It Takes To Innovate: Wrong-Thinking, Tinkering & Intuiting :: Articles :: The 99 Percent
     
  2. 88
    The Fab Restart (aka pivot) + 1 Year

    Exactly 1 year ago Bradford and I went to our Board of Directors and requested approval for us to shut down our 150,000-member social network, scrap everything, and restart from scratch on an entirely new business.

    1 year later it looks like we may have made the right choice.

    It all began with a simple drawing on a napkin (and a great dinner with a lot of wine). We had decided that we were going to pick One Thing and do that one thing and only that one thing better than anyone else in the world. We found our One Thing at the intersection of:

    • What we are most passionate about
    • What we believed we can realistically be the best in the world at
    • What we were certain could develop into a big business in a market ripe for disruption.

      image

       

    It took us all of about 5 minutes to realize that Our One Thing is Design.

    And, following a 20 minute board meeting 1-year ago today, Fab.com was reborn.

    Since then, we’ve been doing our One Thing and loving every minute of it.

    I’ve blogged previously about what we’ve learned along the way and what we got done in 2011.

    Now, 12 months since we got approval to restart and just 8.5 months since we launched our website, here’s an update on our progress:

    • Even with only 29 days, February was Fab’s best sales month to-date, even more than November 2011.

      image

    • Fab now has more than 2.5 million members, up from 1.5M at the end of 2011. That’s 67% growth in the first 2 months of 2012. 

    • More than 40% of Fab’s daily usage is now from our mobile apps. And, mobile users purchase more often and bigger basket sizes. And, they seem to like our apps.

    • Fab’s new Weekly Shops, launched in mid-Feb, already contributed more than 10% of our overall sales in February 2012.

    • Repeat purchasers continue to make up 2/3 of each week’s Fab purchases.

    • More than 25,000 of Fab’s customers have already made 5 or more Fab purchases.

    • Fab’s social shopping integrations with Facebook is driving viral activity. 15% of Fab’s daily traffic comes from Facebook and our Facebook visits have doubled since December.
    • We acquired Casacanda in Germany and relaunched it as Fab.de, as the first step towards taking Fab around the globe. We believe that good design is made in all parts of the world and that everyone everywhere can benefit from good design.
    • We continue to pick products to feature on Fab based on what we love and what we think will make people smile, not based on sales. This is an emotional business. Our approach remains: Pick out products that make people smile; if they like it, we’ll sell lot’s of stuff over time.

    • We continue to keep it real. Fab is all about good design. We’re true to our design partners and the objects they create.

    • We continue to drive real business for our design partners as we create the worlds most valuable design marketplace. Thousands of designers have made business-changing money on Fab. Hundreds have sold more in a week on Fab than they would otherwise in months. The whole thing is so humbling and inspiring.

    • We are designing a workforce and a workplace for success. We’ve gone from 4 fulltime employees in NY at this time last year to 200+ people working on Fab worldwide in NY, Berlin, Pune, and Deinze, all while fostering Fab as a kooky culture of excellence and fun. You’d think that a business rising as fast as ours would be all about celebrating success. We do celebrate success, but we just as enthusiastically celebrate our challenges and push ourselves to do more and better.

    • We’ve developed a simple formula that seems to be working ok, but we’re ever trying to improve on: A beautifully designed website and app, featuring beautifully designed products, backed up by beautiful service. It’s not perfect, so we challenge ourselves every day to make it better and better.

    And, we’re just getting started.

    Much, much more to come. As we’re known for, Fab.com will continue to be the leading innovator in e-commerce 2.0. This is just the beginning of a long journey we’re on to build Fab into the world’s leading design resource. As I’ve noted, we have big Amazon-scale plans for Fab: We’re building a business for the decades. This is just 1 year into working on it and 9 months into operating it.

    Our One Thing:  Fab.com is design.

    Thank you to everyone who believed in us, helped us and supported us the last 365 days.

    Smile, you’re designed to.

     
  3. 23

    dougjaeger:

    @rickwebb last day at Hotel de Webb. (Taken with Instagram at L’Hotel de Webb)

    Doug Jaeger wins the honors as the last guest to L’Hotel de Webb. I left for the last time 20 minutes later. 

     
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  6. 8,061
    Camera Nikon D70
    Aperture f/6.7
    Exposure 1/45th
    Focal Length 50mm
    UPDATE: For the latest on how to help Amit, join the registry, organize a bone marrow drive, and lots more, visit http://amitguptaneedsyou.com/

    Two weeks ago I got a call from my doctor, who I’d gone to see the day before because I’d been feeling worn out and was losing weight, and wasn’t sure why.

    He was brief: “Amit, you’ve got Acute Leukemia. You need to enter treatment right away.”

    I was terrified. I packed a backpack full of clothes, went to the hospital as he’d instructed, and had transfusions through the night to allow me to take a flight home at 7am the next day. I Googled acute leukemia as I lay in my hospital bed, learning that if it hadn’t been caught, I’d have died within weeks.

    I have a couple more months of chemo to go, then the next step is a bone marrow transplant. As Jay and Tony describe below, minorities are severely underrepresented in the bone marrow pool, and I need help.

    A few ways to help:

    1. If you’re South Asianget a free test by mail. You rub your cheeks with a cotton swab and mail it back. It’s easy.
    2. If you’re in NYC, you can go to this event my friends are putting on.
    3. If you know any South Asians (India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Nepal, Bhutan, Maldives, or Sri Lanka), please point ‘em to the links above.

    *UPDATE 1* Organize a donor drive near you (the most helpful thing you could possibly do!) email 100kcheeks@gmail.comThey’ll send you kits, flyers, tell you what to say, and make the whole process easy cheesy.

    *UPDATE 2* Want to get a free test, but not in the US. Here’s a list of international donor registries that are globally searchable.

    jayparkinsonmd:

    My friend Amit Gupta founded my favorite photography site Photojojo. A few weeks ago, he was diagnosed with leukemia. Amit is one of the nicest, most genuine, most creative people you could ever meet. Prior to founding the awesome Photojojo, he also co-founded Jelly in 2006 in NYC, a coworking community, that’s now spread to 60 cities across the world and helped spark the coworking revolution. It looks like Amit will need a bone marrow transplant quite soon. We can help him with that.

    tony b:

    Unlike blood transfusions, finding a genetic match for bone marrow that his body will accept is no easy task. The national bone marrow registry has 9.5 million records on file, yet the chances of someone from South Asian descent of finding a match are only 1 in 20,000.

    This is where we come in. We’re going to destroy those odds.

    How? By finding and registering as many people of South Asian descent as we possibly can.

    Tests are easy– a simple swab of the cheek. If you’re a match, the donation involves an outpatient procedure. It’s not fun, but it’s not dangerous either. And doing it could save a life.

    We are encouraging anyone of South Asian descent to take a test to see if you’re a match. 

    You can get a free test by mail, or, if you’re in New York, you can join us Friday, October 14th for a special party to rally support.

    We’ll have test kits on hand at the party, as well as music, booze, and maybe even a photo booth. It will, for the first time, combine a House 2.0-style party with a New Work City-style party, and if you’ve ever been to either, you know they are always something special.

    Please spread the word and please do everything you can to help Amit beat leukemia. He’s a superstar.

    Much thanks to Tony and pals for organizing this event, and EVERYONE who’s been tweeting and reblogging.

    Please help get the word out any way you can. My life quite literally depends on it.

     
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  8. 5
    Site of the Day: Awesome Tapes From Africa

    Awesome Tapes From Africa This is music you won’t easily find anywhere else—except, perhaps in its region of origin. 

     
  9. 13

    Team IgniteNYC after IgniteNYC XII, June 8, 2011.

    More photos from IgniteNYC XII on Flickr

     
  10. 48

    Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home, 1986