Today’s roundtable has the usual share of people looking for funding with businesses – rather concepts – that are not fundable at this point. Collectiv.ly First up, Satish Viswanatham, from San Francisco, California, pitched Collectiv.ly, a B-to-C social sharing concept that takes the short comings of Pinterest, StumbleUpon, Reddit, etc., and tries to plug them.
Lars Olrik is the group chief executive officer of Verdande, and Joanne Kinsella is the company’s chief executive officer of financial services. The company specializes in early problem detection and prevention, driving its insights from data applying big data technologies. In this interview, Joanne and Lars talk about the oil & gas, healthcare, and financial
Sramana Mitra: Is this something that companies go out and look for? Is it something that all large MNCs put in place – some sort of fraud monitoring systems? Patrick Taylor: They don’t all have one in place now. SM: So your customers are all large MNCs? PT: Our customers are mostly large Fortune 1000
In case you missed it, you can listen to the recording here:
Today’s 168th FREE online 1M/1M roundtable for entrepreneurs is starting NOW, on Thursday, April 4, at 8:00 a.m. PDT/11:00 a.m. EDT/8:30 p.m. India IST. Click here to join.
Today’s 168th FREE online 1M/1M roundtable for entrepreneurs is starting in 30 minutes, on Thursday, April 4, at 8:00 a.m. PDT/11:00 a.m. EDT/8:30 p.m. India IST. Click here to join. All are welcome!
If you haven’t already, please study our Bootstrapping Course and Investor Introductions page. Aydin Mirzaee is the co-CEO and co-founder of Fluidware (formerly Chide.it), an Internet software company which offers feedback solutions in the form of FluidSurveys and ReviewRoom. Prior to co-founding Fluidware he was the CEO of bOK Systems Corp, and he also has experience working R&D at
Sramana Mitra: You are tracking anomalous behavior at a business process level, and then you are correlating that back to individuals who repeatedly trigger such anomalous behavior? Patrick Taylor: That is correct. We are basically looking at it both ways: “Is there something wrong with this transaction?” Then, as I look over time, I ask