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F'd Companies

F'd Companies
F'd Companies
Spectacular Dot-com Flameouts  
This edition: Trade Paperback, 208 pages
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Description

Not long ago, the world was awash with venture capital in search of the next Yahoo! or Amazon.com. No product, no experience, no technology, no business plan -- no problem. You could still get $40 million from investors to start up your dot-com. And you could get people to work around the clock for stock options and the promise of millions. Then, around April 2000, it all came crashing down.

Smart investors, esteemed analysts, and the business press found themselves asking:

  • Who knew people wouldn't rush out to trade in their U.S. dollars for a virtual currency called Flooz?
  • Who knew people wouldn't blow all their Flooz on a used car from the guys at iMotors.com?
  • And who needed a used car from iMotors.com when they could just sit at home and have 40-lb. bags of dog food delivered to them by a sock puppet?

F'd Companies captures the waste, greed, and human stupidity of more than 100 dot-com companies. Written in Philip J. Kaplan's popular, cynical style, these profiles are filled with colorful anecdotes, factoids, and information unavailable anywhere else. Together they form a gleeful encyclopedia of how not to run a business. They also capture a truly remarkable period of history.

F'd Companies is required reading for everyone involved in the "new economy" -- assuming your severance check can cover the cost.

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Table of Contents
Yahoo! Internet Life Who are the latest casualties of the Dot-Bomb Era? Nobody knows better than this guy.
Joel Durham Jr. ex-Technical Editor, CNET Kaplan knew I was getting laid off before I did. Thanks for the heads up, asshole.
Jeff Dachis CO-Founder and ex-CEO, Razorfish When I think of FUCKED I think of Philip Kaplan.
Susan Callaghan ex-Human Resources, Rare Medium I laughed, I cried, I filed for unemployment.
The Washington Post Kaplan seems determined to make Microsoft Chairman Bill Gates -- everyone's definition of the ultimate geek
-- look as suave as Cary Grant.
The New York Times Philip Kaplan is another one of those annoyingly young dot-com successes that no one with a real job wants to hear another word about. Except that his Web site is so perversely satisfying.
Timothy J. Seager Managing Director, Watermark Venture Partners If Blodget still had a job, he'd rate F'd Companies a strong buy.