Archive for Entrepreneurship

Twitter Goes for Broke, if Broke Means “A Lot of Money”: New Funding Round at $1 Billion Valuation

Sep 16, 2009 No Comments

Is Twitter a billion-dollar company? It is now, according to its investors. People familiar with the company tell me it has raised around $50 million in a funding round that values the start-up, which has no real revenue to speak of, at about $1 billion… Tweet This Post

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As the Economy Turns, Tech M&A Is Back — and That’s Good News for Startups

Sep 16, 2009 No Comments

Looks like the economy, and with it the urge to splurge, is back — especially in Silicon Valley. After a long chill, the M&A market seems to be thawing — welcome news for entrepreneurs and their backers, who have been stymied by the lack of exits and a moribund IPO market. And the recently announced [...]

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Countdown To TechCrunch50, And Some Advice From Veterans

Sep 13, 2009 No Comments

It’s less than a day before the third annual (and third sold out) TechCrunch50 launch event in San Francisco. Fifty startups are preparing to launch their new products on stage in front of thousands of people. Are they nervous? Yep. But its all part of a rite of passage into the wonderfully chaotic world of [...]

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Ex-Yahoo Sue Decker To Teach At Harvard (YHOO)

Sep 10, 2009 No Comments

Former Yahoo president Sue Decker is one of Harvard Business School’s new Entrepreneurs-In-Residence. Sue left Yahoo (YHOO) in January after the company’s board chose Carol Bartz to be CEO… Tweet This Post

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Creating the Chinese Google

Sep 10, 2009 No Comments

Back in 2002, Chinese billionaire Li Ka-shing, Asia’s most successful entrepreneur, founded the Cheung Kong Graduate School of Business in Beijing to turn out a new kind of Chinese global leader. Cheung Kong has since become the country’s top business school, with graduates like Alibaba chairman Jack Ma and CNOOC president Fu Chengyu. Here the [...]

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Interview: Google China’s Kai-Fu Lee Debuts Innovation Works

Sep 10, 2009 No Comments

Kai-Fu Lee became famous in 2005 when the engineering whiz left Microsoft, where he had created Microsoft Research Asia, to head search giant Google’s operation in China. Microsoft sued, charging that he violated a noncompete agreement, but eventually settled. This time, as Lee leaves Google, he’s sure to avoid a lawsuit, because he’s starting his [...]

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Foreigners Attending US Grad Schools Way Down: Wake Up, Xenophobes

Aug 24, 2009 No Comments

It’s happening: Lou Dobbs’ dream come true and Silicon Valley’s worst nightmare. We’re already seeing the reverse brain drain as smart immigrants take their US educations and experience building companies and creating technology back to their home countries.  But now, xenophobia and the lack of any sensible H-1B visa policy is keeping the world’s brightest [...]

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