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Home » Archives for youtube

Breeding Inspiration and Innovation in Silicon Valley

April 27th, 2009
All Chapters, San Francisco
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Tina Tran

Tina Seelig, executive director of the Stanford Technology Ventures Program, kicked off this weekend’s inspirational  “I don’t know to CEO” event by declaring that innovation is all about turning problems into opportunities, and that entrepreneurship is an extreme sport that’s all about getting out there and doing it.  Tina teaches the popular “Innovation and Creation” class at Stanford and she encouraged conference attendees to adopt the following principles to drive innovation:

1. Use your gut instead of your head
2. Be willing to experiment
3. Leverage limited resources to fuel your creativity (i.e. necessity is the mother of invention)

Sue Gardner, executive director of the Wikimedia Foundation, gave the keynote address and her message was about finding success by being true to who you are, i.e. “being the best possible version of yourself,  and making decisions everyday that will lead you to where you want to be.”

i-dont-know-to-ceo

The Inspiration workshop following the keynote featured founders of four early stage start-ups, in addition to the CMO of Mint.com – Donna Wells, and the founder of Meebo – Elaine Wherry.  The panelists were in resounding agreement about the path to forging a start-up – Start something, do something, and go from there.  Specifically, they emphasized the importance of meeting with partners on a weekly basis to brainstorm and build upon innovative ideas from which a start-up could be created.  The panelists gave the following advice to aspiring entrepreneurs:

1. Observe pain and solve it
2. Have the resolve to follow what you know to be true
3. Build a strong business that will endure and adapt (challenges can be a blessing)
4. Brick walls are for other people (the resilient entrepreneur will blast through the walls)
5. Focus on simplicity — try not to be all things to all people

Next up, the Instruction workshop gave broad advice about how to build a successful and rewarding career.  Mara Brazer, founder of Brazer Communications, gained everyone’s attention when she announced “Everything I ever fantasized about in life came true.”  Inspiring words indeed.  The panelists gave the following guidance for achieving your dreams:

1. Do what you enjoy, do a great job, and the money will follow
2. Have a long-range perspective when it comes to your career
3. Be resourceful, have an open mind, and know that it takes a lot of hard work to get to your dream job/life

Finally, the power panel of the day, titled “View From the Top: Changing the Face of Technology” emphasized the importance of persistence and adaptability — key elements that require resolve and the ability to tune into the feedback loop of how users and the market react to a product.  Jawed Karim, co-founder of YouTube, encouraged entrepreneurs to watch trends to identify opportunities in the market, while Ellen Siminoff – part of the founding executive team at Yahoo and currently the CEO of Shmoop, noted that “New companies are formed from the mistakes of existing companies.”  Jessica Steel – VP of Business Development at Pandora confirmed Ellen’s point by stating that the opportunity for Pandora came out of the mistakes (too many radio commercials) of media giant Clear Channel.  As a singer-songwriter with one released album and another on the way, Jessica Steel (aka Jessica Stone) also seemed to embody the advice that I heard repeatedly at the event, “Do what you love and the money will follow.”

A big fat thanks to the Stanford Women in Business group for putting on such an inspirational and educational event!  And thanks to the AMAZING speakers and panelists for sharing your experiences with us!

If you attended the event or have more to add, I’d love to hear from you — please post a comment.

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Tags: Donna Wells, Elaine Wherry, Ellen Siminoff, friendfeed, I Don't Know to CEO, Jawed Karim, Jessica Steel, Jessica Stone, Mara Brazer, Meebo, Mint.com, Pandora, Shmoop, Stanford, Stanford Technology Ventures Program, Stanford Women In Business, Sue Gardner, SWIB, Tina Seelig, Tina Tran, Wikimedia, Youniversity Ventures, youtube
Posted in All Chapters, San Francisco | No Comments »

Hillary Clinton Embraces New Media- A New Type of Government Emerging

March 26th, 2009
All Chapters
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Lucia Giacomantonio

The AP reported this week that Hillary Clinton and the US Department of State are embracing new media to spread the word about American foreign policy and help restore Washington’s image.Hillary Blackberry

Its refreshing to see that the State is experimenting with social media to help carry out their mission of creating a more secure, democratic, and prosperous world for Americans and the international community.  We saw this work successfully for Obama during the campaign and it will be exciting to see how “Government 2.0″ progresses in the coming years.

Here are some of the changes Hillary’s team took since taking office:

  • They have revamped the department’s Web site (http://www.state.gov) and the Gi blog (http://blogs.state.gov and http://twitter.com/dipnote) with a fresh array of features, graphics and colorful posts.
  • Users can track her foreign travel on an interactive map (http://www.state.gov/secretary/trvl/map/?trip–id5)
  • They can keep up virtually with her every move through Facebook, Twitter, Flickr and YouTube (http://www.youtube.com/user/statevideo).
  • They can pose questions through an “ask-the-secretary” column (http://www.state.gov/r/pa/ei/ask/secretary/117297.htm) that recently was revised to “text the secretary.” (http://www.state.gov/r/pa/ei/ask/secretary/120236.htm)

According to the article, Hillary’s staff says they also plan to venture further into the realm of social networking, an animated online world called Second Life, and cell phone technology.

Having moved to the Silicon Valley area in 2007, just as Twitter was emerging and Facebook opened up registration to non-college students, it’s been very interesting to see the progression of these tools to mainstream. Its essentially history in the making and we’re all watching it happen.

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Tags: "Lucia Giacomantonio", Dipnote, facebook, Flickr, girls in tech, Hillary Clinton, social media, twitter, youtube
Posted in All Chapters | No Comments »

Hulu – Who knew?

November 21st, 2008
Los Angeles
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Robyn Cohen

 

What started out as a joint venture between NBC Universal and News Corporation, as a rival to Youtube with a strange name, is turning out to be quite a force in the world of online entertainment.

Last year, the yet-to-be-named company was already thought of in the Internet industry as almost a joke. The attitude seemed to be that only two networks starting it, NBC Universal and News Corp, was not enough to get it off the ground and that they had no experience building sites or applications. Also, how were they possibly going to compete with Youtube. Well, a lot can happen in a year…

With over 100 content providers, a net profit of $12 million, and forecasts of $70 million in ad revenue in 2008 by Arash Amel (analyst at Screen Digest), Youtube better watch out. What’s amazing is that, with numbers for Youtube being 83M unique viewers compared to 6M for Hulu in September (according to Nielsen reports), Amel still forecasts that both sites will generate about $180M in the US next year. 

Youtube will always be the top destination for user-generated video content. However, for Advertisers that prefer associating products with well-known entertainment brands, Hulu is the place to do it. Pssst, watch out cable tv…

Hulu, a Los Angeles based company, was founded in March 2007, raised $100 million in financing by Providence Equity Partners in August 2007, and went live in March 2008. 

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Tags: ad revenue, fox, hulu, Los Angeles, nbc, online advertising, youtube
Posted in Los Angeles | 1 Comment »

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