In the final chapter of our interview with Manoj he discusses his desires for the future, as well as his philisophical ideals which have guided him so far. SM: How old are you, Manoj? MS: I’m 41. SM: You have a lot of time left. MS: I’ve gone to places for a month where you
SM: Where are you now in your frame of mind? You are at IBM obviously, are you going to be at IBM? How does IBM jive with your current state of mind? Where do you want to go next? What motivates you? MS: Well I am at IBM right now. I’m still running the Webify
In our second part of the interview we delve into Exterprise, the first business venture by Manoj. SM: What was your first company? MS: It was basically a business collaboration platform, a company called Exterprise. We started that in June of 1998 and we sold it in March of 2001. We grew pretty rapidly from
We continue our interview with Peng Ong and talk about his next venture, Interwoven. Here Peng addresses some very interesting topics and his personal philosophy on risk. SM: So tell us the story of Interwoven. You put in your own money? PO: I think the interesting thing if you look at my career, usually the
Previously, we discussed Peng Ong and his background. Today we begin to explore his first true entrepreneurial venture, Electric Classifieds, which spawned the creation of Match.com, the worlds largest online dating service. SM: How long was match.com? PO: I spent probably a total of less than a year totally active there. SM: So you were
People have started wondering what the hell Terry Semel is up to. Amongst these people, there is a category that has more than idle wondering to do. George Roberts would fall in this category. Oh yes, I’m talking about the low-key, soft-spoken co-founder of KKR, the buyout giant. There’s someone else who says, “Damn! Wish
There’s a significant amount of speculation that the New York Times will soon be taken private via an LBO deal. PaidContent reports that this is idle chatter. There is also speculation that NYT may shed Boston Globe, which CEO Janet Robinson seems to refute in the Paid Content article. It makes me wonder, however, about
WSJ reports that Mobius Capital, an erstwhile star venture firm in Silicon Valley, is folding. Worldview is also falling apart, abandoning its latest efforts to raise a new $250 Million fund. These are the larger departures. Many smaller funds that had cropped up during the boom era, have folded by the dozens. Nonetheless, the flow