Post by mdalayan on Mar 10, 2024 21:36:43 GMT -6
Despite the warmth of this community that’s nestled between the Rocky mountains and the great plains, they’re very insular and don’t share their story to the rest of the world. I’ve visited countries where they actually have government sponsored outreach programs just to tell their story in order to attract buyers, partners, and employees –Colorado could really benefit by not only focusing inward, but being a bit more extroverted and sharing their story with others. Well, if anyone in Colorado was hoping to keep their ecosystem a secret –too late now, I just told my community. Above, I interviewed Kit Seeborg and was joined by Jason and James both of Room 214, a local pure play social media agency.
The list of startups we were Venezuela Phone Number throwing out were just a small sample, I crowdsourced the list through Twitter, if you know of other startups, tweet the name and tag it #costartup. See the growing list of tech startups in Colorado in this twitter search result. If you attended the Tweetup yesterday, leave a comment with your handle. Left: I met much of the founding team of Demand Media last week in SF at the Web 2.0 expo. A few days ago, I had lunch with Richard Rosenblat, CEO of 2.5 year old Demand Media (who recently purchased Pluck) to learn about his unique business model which sits in between self-publishing and mainstream media. This company has been pretty tight lipped but after Richard’s presentation at Web 2.0 Expo and an interview with Kara Swisher, he was interested in briefing an analyst.
If you’re familiar with the long tail concept you’d be aware of the large head, long tail –and fat neck. Overused metaphors, but visually it helps to explain this concept. [Successful media websites are fueled by fresh quality content –yet the cost of rapidly creating content requires talent, staff, and resources] Currently, there are two predominant publishing models on the web: 1) Enterprise Generated Media Mainstream media publishing existing content (TV, Newspaper, Magazine) or spending quite a bit of resources or high quality created content like Funny or Die. This content is easy to spot, it’s highly refined, quality is often high, and is expensive to create.
The list of startups we were Venezuela Phone Number throwing out were just a small sample, I crowdsourced the list through Twitter, if you know of other startups, tweet the name and tag it #costartup. See the growing list of tech startups in Colorado in this twitter search result. If you attended the Tweetup yesterday, leave a comment with your handle. Left: I met much of the founding team of Demand Media last week in SF at the Web 2.0 expo. A few days ago, I had lunch with Richard Rosenblat, CEO of 2.5 year old Demand Media (who recently purchased Pluck) to learn about his unique business model which sits in between self-publishing and mainstream media. This company has been pretty tight lipped but after Richard’s presentation at Web 2.0 Expo and an interview with Kara Swisher, he was interested in briefing an analyst.
If you’re familiar with the long tail concept you’d be aware of the large head, long tail –and fat neck. Overused metaphors, but visually it helps to explain this concept. [Successful media websites are fueled by fresh quality content –yet the cost of rapidly creating content requires talent, staff, and resources] Currently, there are two predominant publishing models on the web: 1) Enterprise Generated Media Mainstream media publishing existing content (TV, Newspaper, Magazine) or spending quite a bit of resources or high quality created content like Funny or Die. This content is easy to spot, it’s highly refined, quality is often high, and is expensive to create.