by mailarchis on 11/6/13, 4:09 PM
Trilogy at one point of time was among fastest growing software companies. Its training program for new employees called Trilogy University was covered by HBR in one of their case studies [1].
One of the reasons why so many Trilogy alums have gone ahead to found their own startups is because Trilogy University in itself encourage entrepreneurial thinking. New grads who had joined Trilogy were given opportunity to form teams and pitch new business ideas to the CEO. Irrespective of the fact if the CEO liked the idea or not, you could go ahead and work on it. The goal somewhat ( maybe similar to YCombinator) was to have a working prototype with real users live by end of 3 months. And then the whole team decided which ideas were success and worth pursuing post the training program.
[1] - http://hbr.org/2001/04/no-ordinary-boot-camp/ar/1
by chubot on 11/6/13, 4:49 PM
I'll guess Yahoo is quite high because they have historically grown by acquisition. All those entrepreneurs aren't really "native" to Yahoo. They're acquired by Yahoo, stay for a couple years, and then start a new thing.
by njudah on 11/6/13, 4:40 PM
This seems to suggest that founderdating needs to do a better job getting members from the more successful alumni networks (Paypal, Salesforce, etc); the salesforce alumni network had $8b in IPOs in the past 6 weeks alone.
by smirksirlot on 11/6/13, 4:07 PM
I'll be curious to see success rates of entrepreneurs from those alumni networks - although we'll have to define what's successful in the first place.
by alterj on 11/6/13, 4:39 PM
I was surprised to see Netflix so high and not to see Amazon on the list at all. Anyone else?
by reetuio on 11/6/13, 3:57 PM
Half of the startups in India have an ex-trilogy founder.
by canistr on 11/6/13, 3:47 PM
Why does eBay include Skype?