With a few notable exceptions, Silicon Valley's rising young stars are rejecting the traditional symbols of status: fast cars, yachts, luxury homes. To make their mark, they're putting their wealth into social causes and startup ventures.
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It is a exhaustive list of 'must read' entrepreneurship related resources (like startup news, stories, product videos, related books, startup jobs, etc...) updated daily for startupper minded individuals. Initially, this was a site which I have been using to bookmark startup and related resources for the last few few years. This service can sure as a similar tool for 'like minded' risk takers and wealth creators.
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Startupbug enables you to make your 'startup related blog or a website' more social by integrating our social components/tools, such as the 'Vote Button' for posts on your blog and 3rd party site content syndication (of latest published stories) to drive user engagement with a few lines of copy-and-pasting the HTML code.
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Young company founders are growing in number and prominence in Silicon Valley, another sign, tech-watchers say, of how the Internet is changing entrepreneurship. Young founders are nothing new for Silicon Valley companies. But they are growing in number and prominence these days—another sign, tech-watchers say, of how the Internet is changing entrepreneurship.
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The whole world is an Internet startup now. Let me try to explain. Back even five years ago, our industry was dominated by people who considered themselves a select breed of financier and entrepreneur - they were Internet startup folk. I considered myself one of them, of course, but I also kept a bit apart - it's one reason I live up in Marin, and not down in the Silicon Valley. Why did I do that
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People are always asking me for an inside tip on Internet sites that will be “the next big thing.” Those are hard, since someone has to invent something innovative, but I do have some views on other ideas whose time has come and gone. In some cases, these are concepts that have already been done too many times, and the space is crowded. In others, the concept has been tried too many times...
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I received an email from an entrepreneur today asking me about something that made my stomach turn. It’s a first time entrepreneur who is raising a modest (
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The stories about how startups have succeeded because of blogs are amazing. Starting with 37Signals, who launched BaseCamp with their blog as it boasted tens of thousands of subscribers. Or Wufoo, doing it in a similar manner of only having a blog first. In my latest venture Buffer, we are maintaining a very active Social Media blog and the benefits have been truly amazing.
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Is this Bubble 2.0? This infographic, which Column Five Media did for Udemy, examines the state of startups. Though VCs are doing fewer deals than they were before the recession really took hold in late 2008, the amount of money invested is up to prerecession levels. Even if we are experiencing another bubble, is that so bad for startups trying to get funding? This infographic, which Column...
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Businesspeople and educators say there are crucial psychological traits an entrepreneur needs to succeed, and parents should help kids develop them at every opportunity. Here's a look at those attributes—from a sense of adventure to conscientiousness—and how to foster them. Tips on putting your kids on the path to running their own businesses. How do you get kids ready to become entrepreneurs?
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As a bottom note, never let the big exits you read on TechCrunch be the reason you decide to join a startup or make one. The honest truth is that TechCrunch only reports of that 1% that succeeds, the 99% that are either failing or only breaking even don’t make the pages of the news site.
The Best Way To Help A Start-up Start-ups are like children; they need interaction, attention, and positive & negative reinforcement. The best way to help a start-up is to be their customer.
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