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Q&A with Meg Salyer

Innovation 2 Enterprise

She served as the first woman president of the Rotary Club of Oklahoma City, (2003/2004), one of the largest Rotary Club in the world. She is a graduate of Leadership Oklahoma, Leadership Oklahoma City, and is a sustaining member of the Junior League of Oklahoma City. Meg retired from the Council April 8, 2019. Get started!

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Joseph Lee, CEO of Kairous Capital, Shares His Cross-Border Investment Philosophy for the Asia Pacific Region

AsiaTechDaily

I initially worked as an analyst at a stock-broking firm until 2004 before embarking on my venture capital and private equity journey, where I made my first investments in Greater China before exiting via the London Stock Exchange later between 2005 and 2006. What qualities do you seek in start-up founders whose companies you would invest in?

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Transcript of Redpoint Office Hours with Stripe’s Chief Corporate Advisor and former COO, Claire Hughes Johnson and Redpoint Managing Director, Tomasz Tunguz

Tomasz Tunguz

As you know, I run our Founder Experience program here, the set of tools and programs and people that we have to support our entrepreneurs in their growth journey. And I joined as a customer support rep. My advice would be actually, start something and then keep drafting it. Well, let’s transition then to leadership.

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The Guy Who Took on Google (and now LinkedIn): Mike Yavonditte

Both Sides of the Table

I appreciate the write-up and your continued support of this blog. Mike believes the reason AltaVista didn’t become Google ( despite their market leadership position ) was because they didn’t focus on search. They sold in December 2007, but he started selling Quigo in 2004. Why AltaVista Failed To Become as Successful as Google.

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What the Past Can Tell Us About the Future of Social Networking

Both Sides of the Table

rose to prominence by offering a free, ad-supported alternative to all of the crap your mom got on AOL for a fee. It had grown stratospherically from 2004-2007 to 100 million users, which actually was slightly smaller in December 2007 then MySpace was. StockTwits) where you really want to know more about the person giving you advice.