And somehow through the course of all of these smart entrepreneurial processes, Josh and John found that their luck was starting to change. They reinvented themselves into Omniture Corp., a publicly traded (OMTR-Nasdaq) Web strategy/analytics company that today is a dominant force in the marketplace. They currently have more than 1,500 customers in some 70 countries, including the likes of IBM, General Motors, Microsoft and eBay.
They say they've been lucky. I say they've been smart.
The fact is, this entire enterprise could have easily ended up on the trash heap along with so many other failed high-tech companies in Utah's recent entrepreneurial past. But the owners' determination and confidence kept them going when it looked like all was lost.
Sure, there was some luck involved. There always is in matters entrepreneurial - at least a little. But they were also smart in the way they worked through their challenges and re-invented themselves to take control of a significant - and, it turns out, lucrative - market niche.
In my view, the luckiest people in this scenario are the Utah Angel investors who bought shares in Omniture at 12 cents per share and who could now sell those same shares for about $17.50 per share - about 145 times their original investment.
Of course, even their investment is more than just blind luck. They were also smart enough to know a good business opportunity when they saw it. And to know that in the sometimes-fickle world of entrepreneurship, it can really pay to be both lucky AND smart.