Technology
Building a Better Robot
By By Wes Simons July 21, 2010
Sometimes, smaller is better. Thats the philosophy behind
Robot Co-Op, a five-person Seattle web development company thats ratcheting
its way up Seattle 2.0s Seattle Startup Index with 1.3 million unique visitors
each month.
Robot Co-Op started in 2004 with a list of 75 ideas for a
company. The founders created a platform to track ideas, and this platform
became 43Things.com, the firms most successful site. 43Things gives users the
chance to connect with other people who have similar goals, and then share the
secrets of their successes and failures.
CEO Josh Petersen feels that having a small, close-knit team
that even eats together is one of the keys to the businesss success. A big
team would have really made a mess of this, Petersen says.
Petersen says a business model centered on rapid growth can
lead to an unwanted shift in business and product plans. We believe in putting
our product first and building a company that fits the scale, he explains.
Robot Co-Op recently scaled back operation, trimming and
combining websites to shift focus to its two most popular sites, 43Things and
43Places.com, a travel site.
The business was profitable by its second year of operation,
and its remained so. The majority of revenue comes from ads, although the
company also is backed by Amazon.com, its only outside investor to date.
Robot Co-Ops success has hinged on producing a quality
product, remaining dedicated and even small things like having lunch as a
group, Petersen says. If we couldnt eat together, our success would be much
less than it has been.