BUSINESS BLOGS
BUSINESS BLOGS
category: business
23 Apr 2009
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Live coverage of ad:tech San Francisco by David Shabelman.

ad:tech San Francisco is winding up, but attendance was still solid for a Q&A with Andy Cohen, CEO of elderly care Web site Caring.com , John Durham, CEO and managing partner of marketing services firm Catalyst SF and Will Price, CEO of Widgetbox.

Cohen told the audience that entrepreneurs must be persistent. He said entrepreneurs will always be giving reasons why they shouldn’t be doing something and constantly have setbacks. But he said if you can’t deal with rejection you shouldn’t be an entrepreneur. Durham concurred, saying, “don’t be afraid of failing.”

As for getting an audience with VCs, attendees were told it’s all about relationships. VCs will almost never take a meeting based on a cold call and typically talk to people they’ve worked with before or if they are introduced by someone they know or have worked with before.

Start-ups must be able to show the audience they are delivering, but traditional measuring services can often be costly. Instead, Cohen and Durham suggested publishers use Quantcast, an audience measuring service that’s gaining traction in the industry.

Despite some personal differences with p.r. firms in his career, Durham said in the digital space, public relations firms are important for start-ups to get their story out. Finding a blog writer to tell your story or good placement in a trade publication also are ways to gain attention.

Price ended the discussion by offering some hope to the entrepreneurs, saying he’s seen an improvement in conditions over the past couple of months and that the environment for starting a company is certainly better than it was at the end of 2009, when he said everyone feared they would be going out of business.

For more coverage ad:tech SF, visit our overview page here.

category: business
23 Apr 2009
related tags: Uncategorized |

Live coverage of ad:tech San Francisco by David Shabelman.

After a while (keep in mind I’ve been here for all of a day and a half), attending presentation after presentation at a conference can become tedious, especially when you don’t have a vested interest in what is being discussed (other than being paid for blogging). That’s why it was especially enjoyable to attend a presentation where panelists provided practical ideas for how start-ups can cope with the recession.

Panelists tackled a number of hot-button topics for the current environment, among them layoffs and salary cuts. Most stressed it’s important to hold on to your key employees and reward them accordingly.

Andy Grosso, a partner at Riviera Partners, said an across-the-board staff layoff of 10% of the workforce will also “spook” another 10% of the employees, who will begin to look for another job. Most of the panelists agreed that it’s not a good idea to penalize the top employees by cutting salaries across the board. Those employees who are essential for the products the company is working on should be compensated accordingly.

James Slavet, a partner at Greylock, said companies should not be making so-called “press release” hires, or people who look amazing on paper based on experience, but more on someone who is up-and-coming and looking to make their mark at a company. Slavet also said the founder or CEO should not be overly focused on treating everyone equally during tough times, but should work at making the “exceptional people” happy. Instead of spreading stock around to all employees, give it instead to the three or four most important people.

In the current environment, CEOs should not be afraid to pull the trigger and let go of employees who are not working out.

Rajeev Goel, co-founder and CEO of PubMatic, an online advertising optimization company, said a rule of thumb he uses on whether to keep someone is, “knowing what you know about the [employee] now, would you hire them now.” Can’t get much more straightforward than that.

But companies should work harder during the hiring process so they don’t have to make tougher firing decisions down the road. In other words, hire the right person in the first place.

Tim Chang, principle at Norwest Venture Partners said companies should keep digging for information about a potential hire and keep asking follow-up questions during an interview to determine if someone is right for a job. Along the same lines, Bijan Marashi, CEO and co-founder of e-mail enhancement application Xoopit, said companies should not be afraid to bring someone back for a second, third or fourth interview. And Grosso said employees don’t check references enough.

As far as saving money, panelists recommended outsourcing non-essential IT services not e-mail exchange services and data center services. However, none were fans of outsourcing services such as advertising sales.

For those companies seeking funding, the VCs also had some advice.

Slavet said some start-ups are telling him things they think he wants to hear, such as a hot business model like virtual goods. He said it’s critical not to have a business model “tied to where the wind is blowing,” but to be true to the long-term market potential and invest in that. Also, he said businesses these days are over-emphasizing how frugal they are as the headline of their pitch instead of the opportunity of the business. Focus on why your market opportunity is exciting.

For more coverage ad:tech SF, visit our overview page here.

category: business
23 Apr 2009

Live coverage of ad:tech San Francisco by David Shabelman.

A few more thoughts from Digg founder Kevin Rose at ad:tech San Francisco.

- On whether he was enticed to accept millions of dollars in a buyout, Rose admitted, “who wouldn’t want to have a shit ton of money,” but said he wasn’t too worried about his personal wealth. “I’ve never been one to need much to live on.”

- But Rose also said he’s not interested in selling out to a large company, then have the site losing its cache, not innovate and fizzles out in a few years.

- Rose said the company could use some of its funds to acquire a digg-like company in another country. He said digg monitors numbers of other sites and if they are gaining traction digg could acquire them.

- He said the dead tree media “is dead” and he doesn’t know why people keep talking about it. In terms of the media’s role as a watchdog, he said that won’t go away, it will just be stripped down. Rose said he doesn’t know if Digg can save newspapers, but it can provide newspapers with reams of information about their users and what other types of stories they’re reading.

- Along the same lines, he said popular journalists, such as the Wall Street Journal’s Walt Mossberg, will always have a following and will actually be more powerful when they are not affiliated with a newspaper.

- He does not believe Twitter competes with digg.

- He said digg has gone about as far as it can with its current format, but said there were drastic changes for the site in the works.

- He was shocked by the amount of hatred its users expressed after the introduction of chocolate Skittles.

                  For more coverage ad:tech SF, visit our overview page here.

                  category: business
                  23 Apr 2009
                  related tags: Uncategorized |


                  Live coverage of ad:tech San Francisco by David Shabelman.

                  No matter how many times we’re exposed to a successful young entrepreneur, it’s always a little bit disconcerting to run into one to give you a reality check of just what you’ve accomplished with your own life. That segue leads us to this morning’s keynote presentation at ad:tech San Francisco, with Digg founder and chief architect Kevin Rose onstage being interviewed by Wired.com editor-in-chief Evan Hansen on the stage of Digg and consumer generated media.

                  Digg.com is the wildly successful social news Web site that lets its users determine which are the most popular stories to display.

                  Sticking with the theme of the conference, Hansen first asked Rose about the advertising outlook for the company. Digg currently has a three-year advertising outsourcing deal with Microsoft that’s set to expire in another year. Rose said digg is ramping up its ads sales staff and expects it to be about 10 to 15 people within the next year.

                  More exciting is that Digg is looking to break free of a straight banner advertising revenue stream and do things a little different once the partnership with Microsoft expires.

                  Rose is looking for more interaction between Diggs’ users and its advertisements, saying interaction between user and ads provides much quicker feedback for the advertiser. Rose said Digg’s user base already likes to vote on things so its ads could also have an element of voting. Rose said he would love to see a world where if an ad is “really crappy” it gets thrown off the site and the advertiser actually gets charged a higher price. If an ad is successful ad, on the other hand, the advertiser is charged less. Interesting thought.

                  For more coverage ad:tech SF, visit our overview page here.

                  category: business
                  23 Apr 2009

                  The media (and executives in general) like to say someone “gets it” or “doesn’t get it”.  I think everyone gets it and doesn’t get it at the same time, to varying extent.

                  It all depends, frankly, on the cards you’re dealt.  One guy who I personally think gets it quite a bit given the cards he’s dealt is Discovery Communications’ David Zaslav:

                  Discovery Communications Inc. chief David Zaslav is in no rush to put his content on Hulu, the online video site owned by NBC Universal and News Corp.

                  “We’re waiting to see if an economic model develops,” Zaslav said at the National Assn. of Broadcasters convention Wednesday in Las Vegas. Discovery does not shun all of broadband. It has made footage of its non-fiction programming available on YouTube as well as its own sites. 

                  From LA Times blog via Business Insider.  Is there a risk for Discovery to become irrelevant by not being online?  Sure, of course there is.  But the faster and more aggressively they move online, the smaller their core business becomes.