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A Very Public Offering: A Rebel's Story of Business Excess, Success and Reckoning
 
 
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A Very Public Offering: A Rebel's Story of Business Excess, Success and Reckoning [Hardcover]

Stephan Paternot
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)

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Product details

  • Hardcover: 256 pages
  • Publisher: John Wiley & Sons (7 Sep 2001)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 0471007862
  • ISBN-13: 978-0471007869
  • Product Dimensions: 23.4 x 15 x 2.5 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 1,739,340 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
  • See Complete Table of Contents

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Stephan Paternot
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Review

"On November 13, 1998, Internet startup theglobe.com opened on Wall Street with the largest IPO in stock history. Literally overnight, the online community′s co–founder, 24–year–old Paternot, became a multimillionaire and dot–com prodigy in the eyes of the adoring media. But, as he documents in this giddy, fast–moving memoir, fortune can turn quickly: less than two years later, theglobe.com′s stock price plummeted close to zero, Paternot′s personal wealth evaporated and the press savagely attacked him and his partner, Todd Krizelman, as "global poster boys of Internet excess." Paternot briskly recounts the story of his rise and fall, briefly sketching his childhood before he arrived at Cornell University, where he and Krizelman started theglobe.com in 1994. After graduating, they moved the company to New York City′s nascent Silicon Alley.
Paternot would party all night at trendy Manhattan nightclubs before hopping on a private jet to woo big–name investors. But when the stock price began to tumble, the press blamed Paternot and Krizelman–even though, as Paternot points out, theglobe.com was one of the few start–ups actually turning a profit. The sustained attacks took their toll, and in August 2000, with the stock at just $2 a share, Paternot resigned as CEO. Rarely bitter (though the collapse of other dot–coms did give him some vindication), he wisely focuses on the day–to–day mania of the mid–and late ′90′s "Internet revolution," vividly showing what it felt like to run a brand–new company racing headlong across unknown terrain." (Sept.) (Publishers Weekly, July 23, 2001)

"Mr. Paternot––whose sole resume entry is chief executive––has written a book about his vertiginous experience as a Web chief, called A Very Public Offering. Sample Chapter heading: ′Theglobe Faces Death and I Become Addicted to the Nightlife′." (The Wall Street Journal, May 2, 2001)

"Their story begins in 1994 at Cornell University, where the two college juniors dreamed up a Web site that hosted discussion groups and homepages. Within a year, they′d attracted a $20 million investment from former Alamo Rent–A–Car chief Michael Egan. Four years later, Theglobe.com debuted on the Nasdaq with that was then the biggest one–day run–up ever. That gave the boys a lotto–size payoff for a company whose business plan could be summed up with the word "community."
As in any good myth, the heroes got their comeuppance, sort of. By August 2000, Theglobe.com′s stock was tanking and co–CEOs Krizelman and Paternot were forced out. In those six years, they tasted fame, fortune and a measure of infamy. A Very Public Offering is Paternot′s recollection of that fleeting adventure.
Paternot, who reportedly hopes to star in a film version of his book, brings about as much skill to writing (even with the help of Details editor Andrew Essex) as he did to running Theglobe.com. His account is unsophisticated ("As CEO of a public company, you′ve got to be very careful with what you say,"), his language sophomoric (Wayne Huizenga is "this massive businessman") and his analysis self–serving (he was the victim of hackers, message board touts, and acquisition–crazed Egan and the media).
Still, Paternot′s book is interesting in a car–wreck sort of way. Schadenfreude–lovers will enjoy his breathless account of his own rise and fall. And would–be entrepreneurs with time on their hands might want to read the book as a cautionary tale." – Amy Bernstein (The Industry Standard, August 6–13, 2001)

"...the most interesting of these books..." (New Statesman, 10 December 2001)

"...this is one of the best and makes for a terrific Christmas present for anyone of an entrepreneurial bent." (Business Plus, December 2001)

"in this giddy, fast–moving memoir,...[Paternot] wisely focuses on the day–to–day mania of the mid–and late ′90′s ′Internet Revolution,′ vividly showing what it felt like to run a brand–new company racing headlong across unknown terrain." (Publishers Weekly, July 23, 2001)

"Paternot′s book is interesting...would–be entrepreneurs with time on their hands might want to read the book as a cautionary tale." (The Industry Standard, August 6–13, 2001)

"But in a roundabout way...this 27–year–old′s memoir unwittingly conveys the real story: why theglobe and many other dot–coms were flawed from the beginning." (Business Week, September 10, 2001)

"...the most interesting of these books..." (New Statesman, 10 December 2001)

"...this is one of the best and makes for a terrific Christmas present for anyone of an entrepreneurial bent." (Business Plus, December 2001)

New Statesman, 10 December 2001

"..the most interesting of these books"

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Front Cover | Copyright | Table of Contents | Excerpt | Index | Back Cover
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
Format:Hardcover
An amazing account of the founding of a dotcom company by two young students and their road to bringing it public at the age of 24. A time capsule of a unique time in Internet history.
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews on Amazon.com (beta)
Amazon.com:  31 reviews
15 of 19 people found the following review helpful
A good story not well told 5 Sep 2001
By A Customer - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Hardcover
Now that the dust has settled, the volatility of the stock market during the dot-com boom is a memory that is already disappearing in the rear-view mirror of our collective conscious. It is time for the stories and histories to be told - the recent film Startup.com chronicled the rise and fall of, as you might have guessed, a dot-com startup; this book from Stephan Paternot, cofounder of theglobe.com, is ostensibly in the same vein.
After a prologue talking about the euphoria of IPO day (on which theglobe.com's share price jumped by 1000% before closing up 700% for the first day), Paternot (with a little help from a ghost-writer) talks the reader through his early life, up until his entry into college at Cornell, and the founding of his company. I say, "talks through his life" - that is precisely the tone of the book. It comes across as more than a little rushed, though the story is consistently gripping enough that it scarcely matters that the author's writing style would not be out of place in a Dick and Jane story. There is no doubt that Paternot and his friend and business partner, Todd Krizelman, were in the game right from the very beginning, and created what was probably a terrific Web site that became the Apple Macintosh's number one online community destination. For a pair of 20-somethings, this was a wonderful achievement, and Paternot is rightly proud of his company and its achievements. Some might say a little too proud, and the hubris in the book is sometimes breathtaking; for example, it might surprise aficionados of the internal combustion engine to hear that apparently the Internet is the most important human invention since movable type... though there is little doubt in my mind that the author's enthusiastic knack for hyperbole was probably what allowed him to convince a number of business big-shots to buy into his vision (most notably the ex-Chairman of Alamo Rent-A-Car, Michael Egan).
The book continues on, talking a great deal about stock price movement, and betraying the author's bitterness that theglobe.com was never quite so over-priced as so many other dot-coms (theglobe.com was one of the first companies whose value slid dramatically). Dust-jacket hints about salacious stories of an unconventional rebel wild-child flying in the face of the business establishment are few and far between, unfortunately - I was hoping for a few more tales of bacchanalian debauchery, but Paternot's life doesn't sound too different to that of most young, professional Manhattanites.
Nonetheless, it's certainly an interesting read by a talented person - that talent may not be in the literary field, but then you would hardly read the autobiography of Richard Branson and grumble about lack of literary merit. Ultimately, though, the book fizzles out in a rather unsatisfying way, and I was left with the overwhelming sensation that it was as if the company had never really existed... Perhaps it is fitting, then, that despite Paternot's pride in the fact that his company was still operating at the time of publication, all that is left of theglobe.com today is a message on the Web site: "In 1995, theglobe.com confirmed the Internet's power to connect people worlds apart. Unfortunately, after six amazing years, theglobe.com closed its doors on August 15, 2001... Thank you for your patronage and for the incredible support over the years. Sincerely,
theglobe.com"
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
A Very Honest Offering 11 July 2011
By dmichaelc - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Paperback
A Very Public Offering is a unique guidebook on the peaks and pitfalls of the roller-coaster that is entrepreneurship. No-one tells this kind of story - an honest and sincere tale of a young CEO's very personal experience. It takes into account everything that happens in Paternot's life while pushing forward as a pioneer in an impossible time when little was understood about the internet and online communities. This book should be read by young entrepreneurs in the online space and is proving very helpful to me, a fellow founder of a community website.
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
Great read - must for young entreprenuers! 17 Sep 2007
By Troy - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Paperback
This book was great! It is inspiring and touching and informative about the inner workings of the tech business in the late 90's. Being that I have several ideas of my own which I'm attempting to get off the ground it was a great read for me - so much so that I read the entire book in a day. That's how easy of a read and how interesting this book is!
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