By guest author Irina Patterson One incubator manager came up with a brilliant idea. He said, “Irina, I’ll select one entrepreneur – the most suitable for 1M/1M from my incubator, and I will let you talk to him. If he signs up, we’ll have our 1M/1M pilot entrepreneur. He will share his 1M/1M experience with
Web 3.0 and Mental Illness: Content The content needs of the domain are immense and range all the way from content related to various illnesses, their symptoms, medications, prognosis, and state of research, to the vast spectrum of discussions and insights on coping mechanisms and support resources for family and friends.
Paso doble, of Spanish origin, is not an easy dance. Here are two wonderful scenes from Strictly Ballroom to give you a sense of what it looks like …
Sramana Mitra: Given the landscape you have described and the fact that many of the startups are already thinning out, I believe that you will be getting acquisition offers from the ERP crowd as they look to move into this space. Neno Duplan: You are right, and we already have started to get those offers.
By guest author Irina Patterson Vikrant Mathur learned about 1M/1M in early 2010 through a friend. They went to INSEAD together. In 2010, Vikrant’s company ifood.tv had already operated for four years without much external advice. It became a popular destination for food- and recipe-related video content. Now, Vikrant was ready to scale his company
First, we explore context. What brings users to the web? It could be that a family member is in the middle of a first psychosis. However, the family has no experience of the phenomenon, and hence, they do not know what the symptoms mean. They come to the web for research.
Another popular Latin dance, cha cha, is bouncy and fun. Listen to this famous song, “Never On Sunday,” sung by Petula Clark: This song, actually, is one you can dance the cha cha to … a very popular one! And this is what the cha cha looks like … Simple, right? Try it now with
Sramana Mitra: Today when a prospect is evaluating vendors, are you always at the table? Neno Duplan: The majority of the time we are. We use guerrilla marketing to our advantage now. A lot of the companies in our space assumed they were the market leaders and they put a lot of money into advertising