Vladimir Putin “We discussed this important issue yesterday over a beer...”

Barack OBAMA “You know, my faith is one that admits some doubt...”

Posts tagged with the keyword: ‘pitches’

Startup Weekend: 48-hour labor for business births

Startup Weekend: 48-hour labor for business births

NEW YORK (AP) — With just minutes to go until deadline, the coders sit furiously typing, putting the finishing touches on their website. Brett Martin turns to his computer – the PowerPoint slides are almost done. On the couch, a tiny dog buries his head into a blanket and shuts its eyes. “Spanky’s the only one who got to sleep,” Martin says. This group of nine entrepreneur hopefuls started less than two days ago with just an idea: an online planning and finance tool for small businesses called ProphetMargin. Now they have the website design, a business plan and a working database. And by the end of the evening, they’ll have a formal mentor and a meeting planned with investors. Such is the pace of Startup Weekend, one of the final events of New York’s Internet Week, which is ending Monday. Participants in the 48-hour marathon came in alone with an idea and left with like-minded partners and a fledgling business. “It’s a testament to how much people can get done when they’re working on something they’re really excited about,” Martin said Monday, reflecting on his team’s accomplishments over the weekend. “I met great people and had a great time and hopefully we’ll get some funding.” ProphetMargin was one of 18 projects pitched Sunday night in the weekend’s final presentations. Other groups offered up plans for an app that would give users information about other people around them in public, a website to connect users with friends who need housesitters, an app allowing people to track the beers they drink, and an Internet platform to help adult entertainers build their brands. The projects started as 60-second pitches Friday night. The 145 participants evaluated 57 suggestions and formed teams around the best ideas. Then they all got to work. Usually, “you couldn’t create something like this without spending thousands of dollars,” Rob Steir marveled, looking around at his ProphetMargin teammates as they pushed through the final stretch. “We wouldn’t even know each other – we don’t know each other.” Most teams gathered together people with varying specialties. The group creating Data Dough – a service to help people sell their personal information to advertisers – included two software engineers, a graphic-design student, a computer-network manager, a Harvard Law School student, a new-media journalist and one person with a finance background. In the end, the group’s work won it a prize – a mentorship from Noiz Ivy, an organization that supports entrepreneurs. Score.ly – a platform that would allow users to display verified personal and professional achievements – and ProphetMargin won the same prize. A group creating a platform to help publishers market-test novels won a free month of shared working space. And a representative from AOL Ventures said the company would meet with three groups and fund one of them. The details of the deal were to be worked out later. The finalists were Score.ly, ProphetMargin and Deal Over Here – an app allowing people to buy unsold tickets just minutes before an event begins. Even for the participants who leave with no prizes or investment prospects, the weekend can provide an opportunity to jump into a project full-throttle and test out potential partners for future endeavors, said Peter Chislett, a startup veteran who has provided mentoring to previous participants and who now helps run New Work City, a shared Manhattan workspace. Creating a startup can be an intimate experience that it’s better not to attempt with an utter stranger, he said. “Your partners, they are your most important relationships for as long as you’re together,” he said. “You have to get along and you have to be able to trust them like they’re part of your family – without all that baggage.” It’s a trial run that’s been shared by more than 500 teams at more than 100 startup weekends around the world over the last three years. Startup Weekend – itself a non-profit startup run by three directors and a handful of volunteer facilitators – has gathered would-be entrepreneurs in cities from Copenhagen to Istanbul. It’s funded by a combination of sponsorships and entry fees. Participants usually pay less than $100 each. There’s no guaranteeing that any of the projects will live on beyond the weekend. But Kyle Kelly, a wealth management product manager who joined a team launching a children’s language learning platform, said the experience gave him the opportunity to try on a number of different hats – and collaborate with others. “The best ideas are generated not just by one person,” he said. “The best companies are formed with a team.” — Online: http://startupweekend.org/ ? 2010 The Associated Press . All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. Learn more about our Privacy Policy and Terms of Use .

Internet fraud losses doubled last year

Internet fraud losses doubled last year

WASHINGTON (AP) — The cost of Internet fraud doubled in 2009 to about $560 million, the FBI said Friday. The most common type of frauds reported were scams from people falsely claiming to be from the FBI. Individual complaints of Internet scams grew more than 20 percent last year, according to a report issued by the FBI in partnership with a private fraud-fighting group, the Internet Crime Complaint Center. The amounts taken by individual frauds ranged from less than $30 to more than $100,000, officials said. The most frequently reported scams were those that falsely used the FBI’s name, accounting for 16 percent of the more than 300,000 complaints received last year. Some of those frauds have even featured e-mails purporting to be from FBI Director Robert Mueller, though the e-mail addresses of the senders often betray the con, authorities said. Peter Trahon, head of the FBI’s cyber division, said people should evaluate the e-mail pitches they receive “with a healthy skepticism – if something seems to good to be true, it likely is.” For example, one popular scam last year involved a phone pitch made by someone who sounded a lot like President Barack Obama. The recorded message told people to visit a Web site to get government stimulus money. When victims who visited the site entered personal information and paid $28 in fees, they were promised a big stimulus check, but got nothing. — On the Net: Internet Crime Report: http://www.ic3.gov/media/annualreport/2009-IC3Report.pdf

MySpace Music experiments with audio ads

MySpace Music experiments with audio ads

LOS ANGELES (AP) — Hoping to boost revenue, MySpace Music has begun experimenting with audio advertisements that users must hear before listening to music for free online. The 30-second ads began appearing last week when users listen to songs on artist profiles, album pages, playlists and pop-out players. They expand on a trial that began in December. The ads are impossible to avoid, unlike the visual, banner ads that can be put out of sight in background windows as users listen along while doing other Web surfing or computer work. But the audio ads are timed so that a user can listen to up to 100 songs on a playlist or to a full album with just a single interruption after the first song. The oral pitches make online listening more like over-the-air radio, although online listeners can choose which songs they hear. MySpace Music, a joint venture between major recording companies and News Corp., wants to boost the frequency of such ads this month before settling on how often they’ll be running. Other online music sites such as Pandora and Yahoo Music already run similar audio ads. “Unobtrusive audio advertising is another way to communicate with an engaged auditory audience,” MySpace Music said in a statement. “As always, we are interested in hearing feedback from our users and advertising community as we run these tests.” Some early advertisers include TurboTax and Office Depot. The ads are sold by online audio ad company TargetSpot Inc. News Corp. Chief Executive Rupert Murdoch said last week that MySpace’s turnaround is “not yet where we want it.” The company said its digital properties, including MySpace, experienced a fourth consecutive quarter of falling ad and search revenue. MySpace is being overhauled by Owen Van Natta, a former Facebook executive who joined the company last April as its CEO. Once a leading social-networking site, MySpace has lost market share to Facebook and others. Last year, MySpace cut about 720 jobs, reducing its work force by about 40 percent.

Advertisement