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Sam Odio sells Divvyshot to Facebook

A HUGE congratulations to my brother Sam Odio, who just yesterday sold his startup, Divvyshot, to Facebook.

Sam has been working hard on Divvyshot for the past 2 years. He was initially funded by Paul Graham's Y Combinator fund (a micro-fund approach that I consider to be a new, and better, model of VC funding). In fact, here's an early video he and his friend John put together when applying for Y Combinator (only a prototype of the actual service existed at that point).

Sam and his team will be moving over to run and grow Facebook Photos. The most amazing part of all this to me personally is that Sam is now going to be able to affect the way 400 million Facebook users interact with one of the most popular features in Facebook. Just amazing.

You can read the articles on Mashable and Techcrunch by clicking on the images:

A HUGE congratulations to my brother Sam Odio, who just yesterday sold his startup, Divvyshot, to Facebook. Sam has been working hard on Divvyshot for the past 2 years. He was initially funded by Paul Graham's Y Combinator fund (a micro-fund approach that I consider to be a new, and better, model of VC funding). In fact, here's an early video he and his friend John put together when applying for Y Combinator (only a prototype of the actual service existed at that point). Sam and his team will be moving over to run and grow Facebook Photos. The most amazing part of all this to me personally is that Sam is now going to be able to affect the way 400 million Facebook users interact with one of the most popular features in Facebook. Just amazing. You can read the articles on Mashable and Techcrunch by clicking on the images: Here's a picture of the first Divvyshot website: And here's a screenshot of the site when it was sold to Facebook: And the "About Us" page: Here are some screenshots of the Divvyshot iPhone app:

Could the 80/20 Principle be Wrong?

When I started this blog in 2006, my first post was about my belief in the 80/20 principle, also known as the Pareto principle.

I've lived my entire entrepreneurial career with the 80/20 rule as a guiding principle, and it's served me very well.  As an entrepreneur, you simply can't put all of your time into everything, so putting 20% into any one thing and reaping 80% of the benefits is a very time-maximizing way to live.

But over the past 2 years at PointAbout, I've begun to feel like it's also limiting, but I haven't been able to put my finger on exactly how.  Part of what I've been feeling I expressed in my Nov 2009 post on ABBA, which, as my co-founder Sean Shadmand puts it, is really just the thought that you have to be focused on what you're unfocused on (read the whole post if that doesn't make sense).

What's been gnawing on me is more than just a focus on preventing ABBA, though.  I've been wondering what's truly possible with extreme focus.

This very insightful post on "Why the 80-20 Rule is Wrong" by David Wurtz just put me over the edge.  I'm becoming a believer.