The link. My gem is at 3:30 mark. I basically am talking about how startups share office space a lot – subleases and stuff. Because they are growing, shrinking, moving around and it is not convenient to sign 5 year+ leases.
Or in my case, it is nice to be in a great space you organize and around other actual startups that you like and learn from, not stuck in some horrible cube somewhere miserable.
Then the great and the good are interviewed at some length as it proceeds. David Rose pitching angel investing to the radio listening retirees at minute 12. Exciting times.
Over breakfast one day, a friend told me how he had been really interested in the "curated/collaborative/content" space. Looked at a few. Got involved in one. And couldn't really figure out how it had gotten so amazingly successful. Basically just "execution". Later, I understood what he meant by that was…
For a WSJ post. // Understanding what other startups are doing in your space is hugely valuable. It is information, not just competition. The past efforts more than anything are experiments in user behavior and adoption. Use their lessons. Facebook was not at all the first social network, but it…
This is really a trend -- Codeacademy or Loosecubes or Founder Institute or AngelList are all startups for serving entrepreneurs which is great. If you think the future is about a new and different kind of work, these are the startups that will pave the way. WorkMarket is a great…