Matt Mullenweg puts it in perspective

by Mathew on May 10, 2007 · Comments

As a journalist, I know that sometimes people in my profession get fixated on a particular storyline — in some cases before they even know anything about the subject — and then do everything in their power to force every peg into that particular hole. And I know that sort of thing is particularly prevalent when it comes to “the hot young startup” storyline.

snipshot_e418rojsroje.jpgThat’s why Matt Mullenweg’s description in his latest blog post rings such a loud bell. There seems to be an unquenchable desire for that quintessential startup myth, of the young founder discovering something in a flash of insight and then becoming a gazillionaire overnight, to the point where some magazines create stories pretty much out of whole cloth to try and get them to fit the archetype, no matter what the cost to their believability. But Matt puts his own story so much better when he says:

“I’m not a millionaire, and may never be, but there are now hundreds of people making their living using WordPress, and I expect that number to grow to tens of thousands.

That’s what gets me out of bed in the morning, not the prospect of becoming a feature on an internet behemoth’s checklist.”

Well said, Matt. I for one find that a much more powerful story.

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  • I agree. And I really enjoyed the post. One of the most interesting in a while.

    But with Matt now firmly in the ranks of guys who are wreaking havoc on The Way Things Are for love and not for money, right behind Craig Newmark and Jimmy Wales, I'm sensing a new archetype - something that journalists ought to be able to latch onto.

    ;)
  • Kudos to Matt. If you focus on doing a great job for your customers, the money will take care of itself in the end.

    On the other hand, if you strictly focus on the money, you end up making self-serving decisions that give you little, if any, chance of succeeding.

    Mathew, Matt's philosophy is further support of something I've been pounding the table about since Mesh '06. Specifically, far too much attention in Web 2.0 has been given to "cool" and far too little on "real".

    As the geeks start to learn that the overnight billionaire model is a myth, we'll start to see more of a focus on real. Then, you'll see Web 2.0 jump the shark.

    Best,
    George
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