Boomerang Effect: Company founders buy back labors of love

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.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

The most popular articles

Parex banka to expand relationship with American Express

Nils Melngailis, the Chairman of Parex banka, and Alex M Furber, American Express Vice President in Central and Eastern Europe, agreed to explore further options for co-operation. more »

Taiwan in 2.5bn dollar spree

Every one of the Taiwan's 23 million population has been given a voucher worth the equivalent of just over 100 U.S.dollars. more »

EU economy hit hard by global downturn

Commission cuts economic growth forecast as scale of financial crisis and ensuing global downturn become apparent. more »

After solid first quarter: Wincor Nixdorf reaffirms outlook, but attunes to economic crisis

Wincor Nixdorf AG completed the first quarter of the current fiscal year with 7 percent growth in net sales and an 8 percent increase in operating profit (EBITA). more »

Messy bedroom marketing

New homes go up in the UK's eastern county of Norfolk. There is also the unusual take on selling new homes. more »

Motorola Provides Preliminary Fourth-Quarter 2008 Results

Announces approximately 4,000 additional workforce reductions, primarily in the Mobile Devices business. Total cost savings from recent actions now expected to be approximately $1.5 billion in 2009. more »

MasterCard makes global, domestic organizational changes

MasterCard announces organizational changes. more »

Eurobarometer poll shows economic fears ahead of June European elections

Economic volatility , rising prices and a general pessimism about what the future holds were all opinions voiced in a recent “Eurobarometer” European survey. more »

Banking sales improve at Wincor Nixdorf, despite global economic downturn

Wincor Nixdorf AG says it exceeded its profit goals for fiscal year 2007/2008, which ended Sept. 30, despite a battered global economy and a slight drop in retail sales. more »

Aussie shoppers forget crisis

Across the country Australians are expected to spend over 10 billion U.S. dollars in post-Christmas sales. more »