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Wednesday, January 13, 2010
This issue comes up at the start of almost every new startup company in a variety of forms. In this post, I want to look at just the question of when it makes sense to use Facebook Connect, Twitter Oauth, OpenID, Yahoo Browser-Based Authentication, Google Friend Connect or basically any of the other authentication mechanisms. Example What do I mean? Interestingly, they are not including Google Authentication . One of the topics that came up in my post Mobile Internet Apple Facebook was around open vs. closed platforms.
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Monday, August 24, 2009
The first company he founded failed, but now Darrin Clement is running a multi-million dollar mapping business that he founded and bootstrapped. How did he go from having to close down his previous company to winning so many customers at this one?
His first big leap into entrepreneurship was launching Optiwave, a fiber optic consulting company. The simple answer is he learned to sell. This program will show you how he did that and what YOU can learn from his experience.
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Thursday, February 11, 2010
TechCrunch says that Google just bought Aardvark for $50 million. Everyone wants to know where to eat, where to go on vacation… These are Google questions and Yelp questions! But for specific, tough-to-Google questions like my lint-brushing sign language, Aardvark is uniquely useful. Why Google bought What the hell is Aardvark (vark.com) ?
It’s like a Yahoo Questions that works.
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Thursday, February 12, 2009
Search engine giant Google said Thursday that it is exiting from the radio advertising business, putting an end into the firm's attempt to leverage its online advertising success into other media. Google--which pulled the plug on its newspaper advertising efforts on January 20th--said the move came because the radio advertising efforts did not have "the impact we hoped for." Google entered the radio advertising market with the buy of Newport Beach-based dMarc Broadcasting in January of 2006. That deal--which was worth $102M in cash plus up to $1.1
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Wednesday, December 23, 2009
Lee LeFever had a talent for explaining tough concepts, so he built a company that makes and sells explainer videos. Common Craft, the business he founded and runs with his wife, has been used by companies like Google and Twitter to help potential customers understand their new products.
I invited him to Mixergy because I'm fascinated by how companies make money by selling content in a world where...
...Tags: I Tags: Intervie
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Thursday, October 29, 2009
Jeff Fluhr and his friend from school got together and created a company called StubHub which they built up and sold to eBay. But, you know, I think it wasn't until after my first real company StubHub that people, I think, thought of me in that light.
So I contacted the owner of the company and proposed to him that I be a distribution outlet for their product in retail channels outside of the Massachusetts area and began to help that company get In 2000, people had all kinds of assumptions about buying and selling tickets to events. They assumed it was illegal or
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Tuesday, November 3, 2009
IROs tend to be the last holdouts within a company’s communication teams to embrace changes in the communications process. m going to show you two ways IROs can become the company hero based on both of those challenges.
IROs have many, significant responsibilities relating to the health and welfare of the company. During the last year, I’ve spoken to numerous investor relations officers (IROs) on the topic of social media and investor relations. Holding out is usually blamed on two reasonable excuses:
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Tuesday, November 10, 2009
It was ahead of its time, which is why Google bought it. But Google let the project die.
Previously, Dennis founded dodgeball.com (with Alex Rainert ), one of the first mobile social services in the US, which was acquired by Google in 2005. They felt they had to sell their company to Google because they weren't connected enough to raise money to keep it going.
If you like this interview, you can submit it to my favorite news site . --Andrew Andrew
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Monday, March 1, 2010
RSS ); Why You Should Start a Company in... Los Angeles By: Laura Rich February 26, 2010
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Monday, March 17, 2008
Google's new Ad Manager technology will soon enable premium ad banners to be sold directly to advertisers by publishers and when the clicks are used up on the premium ads it will revert automatically to use Google Adsense. Clicks are usually sold via banners and text ads at a 2x to 4x premium cutting out Google. think hard working publishers and agencies This is a brilliant move and will further accelerate the gap between premium content and generic publishers who don't provide any unique content value. I
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