UserVoice Blog

Farewell to a friend

I’ve heard people caution fledgling entrepreneurs that building a business is a marathon, not a sprint.

There’s certainly some truth to that, but I believe it’s more aptly described as a relay race, an especially grueling relay race where the course itself changes dramatically with each hand off of the baton. Each leg brings new obstacles, and demands that the runners develop skills they didn’t even know existed.

It’s with that in mind that I sit down to write a farewell note to my friend, co-founder and eternal optimist Marcus Nelson as he leaves the UserVoice team to pursue his next dream.

How did we get here?

When we started in late 2007 it was just me & Lance Ivy doing the prototypical designer-developer tag team. A few months later we had a prototype, a little seed money and a concern. I’ve known the pain of building things in the dark and I’m fond of saying “2 people is a project, 3’s (a) company.” I knew we needed someone who could come in and spend his cycles spreading the gospel of UserVoice.

Through local tech events, like SuperHappyDevHouse, I came to meet Marcus and through a certain Craigslist post I found him yet again. He seemed to be the missing ingredient, but like all good engineer types Lance and I thought we needed a test. SXSW was right around the corner, just the test we were looking for. I don’t know what we expected, but it was certainly exceeded. I think I saw Marcus for all of 2 hours over 3 days and each time it was an exasperated Marcus saying “I just met so-and-so… oh and do you have any more cards.” Hurricane Marcus was bearing down on SXSW. He was a force of nature. In the end he gave out every one of his cards and half of mine.

That’s Marcus for you. Put him in a room of smart people and he’s like the Googlebot spidering his way from person to person, bringing back the raw social capital a fledgling startup needs to get noticed.

You might have met Marcus on Twitter

I remember when Marcus introduced me to “the Twitter.” Or at least I remember my reaction. “You’re talking to individual people… like one by one… that’ll never scale. What we need is to talk to bloggers!”. I had some past success with guerrilla blog marketing and naturally that was *the* way to get noticed. Not this stupid big-ass, confusing chat room called Twitter.

Marcus didn’t listen to me and I’m very thankful for that. You *can*… no you *have* to build awareness of your product one person at a time. And it does scale… well at least when you have a b2b model like ours. [psst, tools like UserVoice help scale that 1:1 feeling of connectedness ;) ]. The *individual* relationships that were cultivated over Twitter led to cornerstone customers, future employees, positive press and even investment.

Back to the present

I’ve learned a lot from Marcus over the past 18 months. I’ll never work a room like he does, be quite as optimistic or crack as corny jokes (I’m probably okay with that bit) but I’ve certainly learned a lot about the value of relationships and positive thinking.

Marcus will certainly be missed. But like a runner in the relay, has has cleanly handed off the baton to a new team of great people that have come on board to run this leg. We’ve an exciting new sales team featuring Daniel Kan (you’ll see his bright smiling face on the sign-up page), I’ve turned the designery keys over to the excellent Joshua Rudd and I’ll be stepping into marketing & evangelism. There’s a lot of excitement on the team and on the horizon.

Marcus is off to to new opportunities and places that stretch him to the limit, yet again. As a co-worker and even more so as a friend I hope you’ll join me in wishing him the best.

You can reach Marcus on Twitter (@marcusnelson) and via email (marcusnelson@yahoo.com)

  • alexhillman
    So the public face of Uservoice leaves suddenly? Ruh roh. Is there something we don't know?
  • Huge mistake for UserVoice to wave goodbye to Marcus. Huge. One of the classiest, most talented and passionate marketing and business minds I've had the privilege to chat with.
  • Name
    I'd have to agree. This seems like StartUp Fail 101. Get rid of the guy who was the face of the product, got people excited about it, engendered loyalty and trust, etc...?

    Wishing Marcus all the best!
  • tinatran
    Big loss for UserVoice. It's rare to meet someone as passionate, likable, and powerful as Marcus.
  • From working with Marcus in the past I'd say it's sad to think his face won't be around when you hear about Uservoice. Definitely an interesting move and I'll be eager to see how his role will be filled.
  • All the best to Marcus in his future endeavors. He's a dedicated, passionate, fun and great guy. I wish him the best as I wish UserVoice a bright future.
  • dst907
  • Godwinewr
    Woow This is best blog i have read on the tpoic

    respect
    jenny yully
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  • ClelandClelandfrealman
    I subscribed to your blog when is the next post

    Have a nice day
    poly banger
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  • WalkerCargill
    Hi nice to read this I realy like it

    Have a nice day
    slip kamper
    ______________________________________________
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  • nikehandbags
    We traveled many roads together. We always held the vision. I could always count on you. In times good and bad. Farewell my friend. - http://www.nike-handbags.com/
  • Marcus blog on Twitter is best and sharing a lot of information.Marcus is off to to new opportunities and places that stretch him to the limit which is a good sign.
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