6 Articles match "2006","Mixergy"

The Latest from the Southern California Tech Central Community

Thursday, January 21, 2010
In 2006, when he became Evite's SVP and General Manager, he helped the company grow annual sales from $13 million to $21 million. The gift he gave me (and you) is to come to Mixergy and peel back that success to show us Evite's vulnerabilities so we ambitious upstarts can learn what's inside the minds of big companies like Evite, and how we can take them on... ...Tags: Harry Lin is giving me a gift with this interview. Tags: Intervie
 
Friday, November 20, 2009
invited him on Mixergy to talk about some of the game-changing ideas Oodle took on, like giving users analytics, partnering up with companies like Facebook and making classifieds social. This is the latest post from Mixergy So if we saw a listing for a 2006 Camaro, we would include all the standard features, we could add attributes like the miles per gallon. Early in his career, Craig Donato worked for Excite, a pioneering search engine. When I asked him, "Why do you think Excite didn’t beat Yahoo?"
 
Monday, November 16, 2009
Dave, I'm going to ask your question in a little bit when we get deeper into Goodreads, but if anyone else has questions like Dave does, just punch them into twitter with the word "mixergy" and I'll see them. Nobody ever knows what I’m talking about when I say, “Mixergy”. Not Mixergy. Here's an easy way to vote for this interview on Hacker News. --Andrew Andrew
 

The Best from the Southern California Tech Central Community

In 2006, when he became Evite's SVP and General Manager, he helped the company grow annual sales from $13 million to $21 million. The gift he gave me (and you) is to come to Mixergy and peel back that success to show us Evite's vulnerabilities so we ambitious upstarts can learn what's inside the minds of big companies like Evite, and how we can take them on... ...Tags: Harry Lin is giving me a gift with this interview. Tags: Intervie
asked James Hong to come to Mixergy and teach how he and his co-founder, Jim Young, bootstrapped HOTorNOT and what they learned along the way. But in 2006, managed hosts were available and they were a lot cheaper.  Bandwidth MOST IMPORTANT: If you heard the full interview (not just read the excerpt above), do you think I exposed enough new stories and ideas to include in the Mixergy book ? - This is a story of a company that was built in a living room and went on to become a cultural phenomenon. I
Dave, I'm going to ask your question in a little bit when we get deeper into Goodreads, but if anyone else has questions like Dave does, just punch them into twitter with the word "mixergy" and I'll see them. Nobody ever knows what I’m talking about when I say, “Mixergy”. Not Mixergy. Here's an easy way to vote for this interview on Hacker News. --Andrew Andrew
That's what I invited Siamak to Mixergy to talk about. I'll tell everybody about Mixergy but if you tell me say Mac I'll pay you money to refer everything, I don't like that. Siamak: 2006 8.8 Andrew: 2006, 8.8 If you like my interview, please vote for it on my favorite news site. --Andrew Andrew
invited Jeffrey to Mixergy to teach how he thought about the opportunity when he first discovered it and how he implemented it. We had been -- the company had been growing rapidly for quite a while, but at that point in 2006, we had done, you know, 400 million roughly of top-line gross ticket sales. want to be fair with your time and I know you've got other calls so thanks for coming on Mixergy and thanks for spending this time with me. In 2000, people had all kinds of assumptions about buying and selling tickets to events. They assumed it was illegal or that they'd
invited him on Mixergy to talk about some of the game-changing ideas Oodle took on, like giving users analytics, partnering up with companies like Facebook and making classifieds social. This is the latest post from Mixergy So if we saw a listing for a 2006 Camaro, we would include all the standard features, we could add attributes like the miles per gallon. Early in his career, Craig Donato worked for Excite, a pioneering search engine. When I asked him, "Why do you think Excite didn’t beat Yahoo?"