gunnarm / tags / entrepreneur

Tagged with “entrepreneur” (5) activity chart

  1. Web 2.0 Show - Episode 65 - Hootsuite

    Ryan Holmes, Founder of HootSuite talks about pursuing VC funding and the joys of iterating your product

    —Huffduffed by gunnarm 3 years ago

  2. 37signals Podcast #4 Jason Fried’s speech at BIG Ohmaha 2009

    Lessons learned at 37signals In this talk, Jason discusses what he’s learned at 37signals over the years. Topics covered: The idea that you should “fail early, fail often” is bogus. Plans are guesses. Interruption is the enemy of productivity. Sell your byproduct. Emulate chefs. Focus on what won’t change. If you want to do something, you’ve got to do it now.

    —Huffduffed by gunnarm 3 years ago

  3. TWiST #24 with Gary Vaynerchuck

    This Week in Startups the wild episode with author of Crush It, Gary Vaynerchuck *seems to be many people’s favorite episode

    —Huffduffed by gunnarm 3 years ago

  4. Uber Entrepreneur: An Evening with Elon Musk

    By the age of 12 Elon Musk had sold his first commercial software, a space game called Blaster. Sixteen years later he sold his first company, Zip2, to Compaq’s Alta Vista division for $341 million in cash and stock. His next act was as co-founder of PayPal, which was acquired by eBay for $1.5 billion in stock in 2002.

    Musk then turned his energy toward two notable new ventures: SpaceX, developer and manufacturer of space launch vehicles, and Tesla Motors, developer of high-end electric automobiles - both of which were started in a downturn. What makes this visionary entrepreneur tick?

    Musk speaks with Michael Malone about innovation for the future’s sake, business strategies to get there, how to make order out of chaos along the way, and more.

    http://fora.tv/2009/04/07/Uber_Entrepreneur_An_Evening_with_Elon_Musk

    —Huffduffed by gunnarm 3 years ago

  5. Guy Kawasaki at the Commonwealth Club

    For nearly 30 years, Kawasaki has earned a notable reputation as a venture capitalist, entrepreneur and popular blogger. The former Apple evangelist will share his provocative insights and commonsense practices for succeeding in today’s business world. Kawasaki’s “no bull shiitake” approach is a reality check that covers everything from customer service to competition, innovation to marketing.

    —Huffduffed by gunnarm 3 years ago