Soon-Chart Yu didn't have much choice last summer when the financial backers of his health site, Gazoontite.com, told him he had to step aside for a more seasoned CEO.
Published:
23 February 2001 y., Friday
Soon-Chart Yu didn't have much choice last summer when the financial backers of his health site, Gazoontite.com, told him he had to step aside for a more seasoned CEO.
"Boy it was hard to let go," said Yu, who acknowledges that he's more of an "idea guy" and went along with the move. "It was you who built the company from scratch. It was you stocking the shelves, sweeping the floors and connecting with customers when they came in. Walking away was not an easy thing to do." It turns out Yu was walking in circles. Less than a year after stepping down, Yu stepped right back up, snatching up most of Gazoontite's assets in bankruptcy court for an undisclosed amount. Now he and his new partners are running Gazoontite again, including five brick-and-mortar stores. Several other company founders who stepped aside or sold their companies have made the same move, rescuing their brainchilds from an increasingly crowded e-commerce dustbin. Despite a shaky economy and particularly tough times for e-commerce, these original upstarts who created the companies all believed in them, even after they passed through someone else's hands.
Many analysts agree that lots of good companies got swept up with the bad in the past year's dot-com purge. Sick of seeing Web companies burn cash, backers have walked away from the sector and taken their money with them. Companies that may have survived--had they received the funding that would have allowed them to mature-- have run out of cash and perished along with the rest.
Šaltinis:
two.digital.cnet.com
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.
The most popular articles
The international financial forum Banks and Business: Ways for Cooperation opened in Moscow today
more »
South Korea and Poland agreed to increase exchanges and cooperation in the information and technology (IT) sector
more »
Korea's LG Electronics is considering investing up to $110 million in its Polish television factory, daily Gazeta Wyborcza reported on Saturday
more »
Getrag Ford Transmissions, a joint venture between U.S. automaker Ford Motor Co. and Germany's Getrag Group, announced Thursday it plans to build a $400 million auto parts plant in eastern Slovakia
more »
Half of Estonian companies under embargo by Finland’s construction union owned by Finns
more »
Azerbaijan will pay about $64 million in 2004 in debt on credits received from the International Finance Corporation
more »
European Union finance ministers considered the ever-strengthening euro against the dollar Monday amid appeals for Washington to rein in its budget
more »
Twenty-three people died and three others were injured Sunday in an explosion at a coal mine in the Karaganda region, officials said
more »
Air Polonia, Poland's low-cost airline, suspended all flights indefinitely on Sunday in a possible prelude to bankruptcy after an expected investor canceled plans to inject $10 million into the company, airline officials said
more »
Poland's entry into the European Union is making the country an attractive "forward base" for South Korean companies to expand their business in Europe, South Korea's president said Friday
more »