Did your panel or keynote make the top 10 most-viewed panel or keynote at Vator events in 2011? Here are the top 10 popular segments in 2011.
Which early-stage startup strategy is the best?
That was the late-night panel topic discussed at Venture Shift SF at Cafe Du Nord in San Francisco. The panelists discussing that topic were AngelPad’s Thomas Korte, Dave McClure of 500 Startups, Manu Kumar from K9 Ventures, and Jed Katz from Javelin Ventures. Michael acted as moderator. Read more
Next phase of local is more Amazon than Google
In his keynote, Zorik gave a glimpse of the future of local: “We’re in the midst of another huge inflection point for local,” said Zorik. “This phase that was dominated by Google and Yelp and is disrupting offline directories is now being disrupted by this next-generation of players, the Groupon’s and the Living Social’s of the world.” Read more
ngmoco’s Neil Young’s advice: Burn your boats
That’s the No. 1 lesson first-time CEO Neil Young, founder and chief executive of ngmoco, shared with the 400 attendees at Vator Splash February in San Francisco. “Burn your boats” has become a popular expression to represent commitment. It originated from the story of Captain Cortez, who, in the early 16th century set out to conquer Central America. Upon arriving, he told his soldiers to burn their boats, giving them no choice but to fight and win, or die. Read more
How Pandora survived on 12 maxed credit cards
When I asked Tim at the end of his speech, what kept him going, he said: “I had a dream.” After watching Tim, you’ll probably agree: Dreams are powerful. And, Tim is a quintessential example of someone who has the bullheadedness to crash through walls and not give up – a quality, many venture capitalists look for. Read more
Peter Thiel: To be contrarian… is just to think
“The contrarian thing is not to be with the crowd, or fashionably against the crowd, but to think,” said Thiel.
For a good overview of Thiel’s keynote, read Faith Merino’s “Peter Thiel: Don’t think of companies as statistics.” Read more
The bubble: It’s all the super angels’ fault
The panelists included Neal Hansch of Rustic Canyon, Larry Marcus of Walden Capital, Brian Garrett of CrossCut Ventures, and David Cremin of DFJ Frontier. Through his questions, Bruce led an entertaining discussion about the difference between LA startups and Northern California startups to the value that VCs bring over angels and visa versa. Read more
HomeAway’s Brian Sharples on building a startup
HomeAway is an online vacation rental marketplace, with properties such as VRBO and VacationRentals.com. It’s backed by Redpoint Ventures, IVP and Austin Ventures. Brian founded the company in 2005, raised $400 million, went on a buying spree, and went public earlier this year. The company currently trades on the Nasdaq under the symbol AWAY, and is valued at nearly $3 billion. Read more
Mike Hudack on how Blip.tv got its start
One of the more unique stories Mike shared is the time he was raising Blip.tv’s initial $500,000 in seed funding back in 2005. One investor was very hard to convince. It took Mike some 25 meetings with this person before he opened up his wallet. Finally, after one meeting, the men both went to the urinals. The investor looked over the divider and asked, “Are you really serious about this?” Mike said, “Yes.” They shook hands and the deal was sealed. As Mike explained, the new investor like Mike’s handshake and the fact that he looked the investor in the eye. Read more
Shawn Colo, Demand Media co-founder, at Splash LA
Has the traditional VC been forced to pivot?
On this panel, we had Randy Komisar from Kleiner Perkins Caufields & Byers, Phil Black from True Ventures, Raj Kapoor from Mayfield, Rob Hayes from First Round Capital, Howard Hartenbaum from August Capital and Rich Melmon from Bullpen, who moderated. For a great overview of the panel, read Faith Merino’s “Angels meet a need the VC industry couldn’t.” Read more