Archive for the ‘iBreakfast LA’ Category

Upcoming iBreakfastLA Event: Creators, Consumer & Content


2009
11.09

AJ_ahlo tightWell, it’s been a little while… perhaps too long, I know.

But it’s back folks!! iBreakfastLA is coming to you at the usual time on November 18th, 2009. Join us for the usual great conversation and delicious breakfast at UCLA’s Anderson School of Management.

We’re very excited about the panel and the topic, and personally, I think this might be the best one of the year!

Register now before tickets get sold out!  You can also check out the event page here.

See you there! D

Reblog this post [with Zemanta]
  • Share/Bookmark

Did Mahalo CEO Jason Calacanis get it wrong?


2009
10.24

[This entry is a repost from Alan Brody's iBreakfast blog]

mahalo_logoEditor’s Note: with all the talk about a re-awakening in the funding market for new ventures, I thought it fitting to re-post this very well-written and insightful article from our friend and iBreakfast partner in New York City, Alan Brody. It’s a rebuttal to Jason’s recent attack on Mike Segal of Private Equity Forums and other forums who charge entrepreneurs for access to investors. Although Jason’s rant appeals to my philosophical sensibilities, I have to say that Alan makes some very good points, and can’t help but wonder whether Jason’s perspective is a little too narrow on this topic.

 I know Mike Segal of Private Equity Forums and we even promote his events. So let me stick up for him in this way: his events bring out-of-town investors and entrepreneurs to New York. That is his strong suit and has been doing that well for years, filling up room after room with investors and entrepreneurs. He deals with what I call pedigreed starts-ups: people who have serious experience in their fields, have put a good amount of money into it and can afford to pay to be in this league. Dotcoms are a small part of his world – most of his Entrepreneurs have biotech, heavy engineering, energy, packaged goods or financial services businesses.

These obey very different rules from the digital world that Jason and his cohort inhabit – so before we get into some version of class war let’s understand that we are dealing with other classes of new enterprise.

As the organizer of the iBreakfast I should state that we run very modestly-priced start-up events and we give our winning entrepreneurs tickets to Mike Segal’s events so they can see what his world looks like. Some of it is familiar but a lot of it is very different – his investors usually look for revenue, tangible assets, assumable debt and a host of things dotcom start-ups are oblivious to.

I can’t argue with Jason or anyone that access to investors ought to be Free. Why not? If Fred Wilson or Steve Jurvetson wants to see you – go ahead. They might even throw in a Vitamin Water or buy you lunch. But unless you’re a serial entrepreneur and were recommended to them, the chances are the don’t want to see you. So events like Mike Segal’s and to some extent, the iBreakfast have emerged put you right in front of investors and get you into the general recommendation system. By organizing it into a marketplace they are entitled to charge what the market will bear. In that respect Mike is no different from a trade show producer or the Wall Street broker that takes his commission and the spread.

If you think he is charging too much – don’t pay. The iBreakfast offers a low-cost pitching event that grooms, educates and gives start-ups access to investors for a nominal $125. We don’t market it like crazy but then we also don’t pack dozens and dozens of investors into one place. So take your pick. As for the groups that do it more or less free, go to them – but they are probably oversubscribed and they’ll make you wait.

So, should one approach drive out the other or should all of these coexist?

If Jason can attract Investors and Entrepreneurs from all over the region – or the country to an event, do it on a regular basis and give it away for Free, I say more power to him. I might have a plan or two I’d like to trot out myself.

But keep in mind a few things. Free often drives out the good. Without a financial incentive there is a good chance the forum will run out of steam. Even if the forum continues, they still have to add some kind of value that makes it worthwhile for the investors to show up and for the best pitches to rise to the top. If they can do that, Free may win. Even so, many companies would still rather pay for all kinds of reasons like speed to the investor market or controlling their destiny.

A big question is why would Jason do it for Free. I buy his “sticking up for the hood” motive up to a point, but the real deal is publicity for his Mahalo “people powered” pedicab of a search engine, he needs to attract contributors, fire up his base them up and make them feel important.

As for the profit motive, well excuse me, Jason had no trouble charging over $1,000 for his Silicon Alley conferences when he could – thereby keeping good information and contacts away from the needy. Tech Crunch 50 is not Free. So why should these organizers behave differently? If Mike Segal can save his Entrepreneurs from traveling all over the country just to see investors and get the word out at once, then there is a value in it. Something like a road show in one place. Plus, many investors take this kind of effort seriously and see this as separating these Entrepreneurs from the pack – those which just can’t afford the effort and therefore may not be as viable.

That’s why these events take place at fancy ballrooms and not at a taco stand – it makes people take these presentations seriously. Maybe the investor should be paying for the lunch but the market dictates otherwise. Trust me, the doctor who just prescribed Jason his self-righteousness pills didn’t pay for his own lunch either if he didn’t want to. The drug company was happy to pick up that tab. More importantly, if an Entrepreneur is flying in from Minneapolis, Free starts to look very iffy while a paid event says “this is happening” and his time and travel costs will not be wasted on a flake out. Likewise, investors realize their time is unlikely to be wasted by people who are not really committed to their new enterprise.

Having said all that, I actually welcome Free because it forces the paid guys to do a better job or else. Plus it gives the posers a chance to discover their real selves before they do something silly like empty their trust funds.

As to which approach is really better – let’s say they are different and serve different purposes that may ultimately harmonize. A free event favors just-out-of-college start-ups with those big moonshot ideas like the next Twitter, iPhone Killer App or Search Engine (know of any?) Few succeed but the ones that do, make it really big. They change the world.

Paid events favor the seasoned player – the pedigreed start-up that has 10 years of experience in a field, often a mundane one where they see the real opportunity in their space, know the players, the customers and so on. There is less pizzazz and few ground-shaking ideas. The payoff is more earthly but to the investor, is also a safer bet.

The true serial (and successful) entrepreneur which includes Jason, only has to pick up the phone. The sensible entrepreneur has to know which category they belong in before they choose their path but they all have their place.

My prediction – a year from now, all these forums will exists in one way or another. All will do a better job and all will charge about the same – even the Free.

- written by Alan Brody, CEO iBreakfast

  

 

  • Share/Bookmark

Japanese Social Media & Mobile Trends


2009
06.18

Today we had a very insightful conversation at iBreakfastLA. Inspired by some of the comments from the panel discussion and Q&A session, I thought it would be good to look East, and highlight the top 3 trends for mobile social in Japan, where mobile is arguably more advanced than anywhere else in the world.

1. Mobile = Social = Mobile

Mixi is the no. 1 social network in Japan and it gets over 60% of its traffic from mobile devices. Gree, effectively a mobile-only social network that gets 99% of its traffic from the mobile platform, has grown 909% since launching a few mobile social games. Check out one of my recent presentations for more:

2. QR Code

QR code is widely adopted as the de-facto standard in Japan. Promotion agencies use it a lot to create buzz at events or conferences without spending much money on ads or prizes.

3. Nintendo DS

The dominant mobile device in Japan. Nintendo DS is to Japan as iPod is to the U.S. It’s now also used in classroom environments for educational purposes.

The system allows students with the devices to receive exercises sent from a teacher’s computer via a wireless LAN. Taking advantage of the console’s stylus-based touch screen, students can also work on math problems involving diagrams, as well as original study material prepared by teachers. At the same time, the system enables teachers to easily monitor the students’ progress, including calculating the percentage of correct answers in groups of up to 50 students.

- Mainichi Japan, June 10, 2009

Kinda makes you wonder… is the US going to follow a similar path or chart a new course? What do you think?

- Woosung

  • Share/Bookmark

iBreakfastLA Opens to Sold-out Crowd!


2009
05.10

uclaand_logo-best

I am very happy to report that SocialNotions’ executive speaker series – iBreakfastLA – launched to a full house on April 28th, 2009.

You may already have seen my post regarding MySpace and their “social portal” intentions. If so, you’ll have noticed that these comments were made at the inaugural SocialNotions iBreakfastLA event – “Social Media Invades Show Biz!” -  held at UCLA’s Anderson School of Management on a very sunny morning last week.

Given the many other events taking place in the area on the same day, and with Digital Hollywood coming up soon after, I have to admit that I was a little nervous as to how things would go. My biggest concerns were that we may not get the turnout we wanted, and that it’d be tough to get the speakers we wanted… as it turns out, the event sold out before we even closed online registration, and senior execs from NBCUniversal, MySpace, Watercooler, Ning and the ITA saw to it that we had an exceptional speaker panel. Special thanks to co-producer Alison Dollar from ITA for shoring up such a great line-up!

Check out this clip to get a feel for how things went:

Standing off to one side as people finished breakfast and started settling down for the panel discussion,  I have to say I was quite chuffed to look around and see the room filled with 88 executives from big name companies in the social media / media & entertainment space. We even had a few celebrity attendees in Max Gail and Aria Wallace, and besides the accomplished panel, the audience was peppered with other industry mavens like Paul Siegel (producer of Baywatch) and Scott Halpern (founder of Hollywood.com and Ultimatemoviesite.com).

To see more video and learn about upcoming events, keep an eye on the iBreakfastLA site.  In the meantime, I’ll leave you with some thoughts offered by UCLA Marketing Professor Gigi Johnson and Nickelodeon star Aria Wallace, around how teens are interacting with brands online and participating in social nets.

Let us know what you think, and mark your calendar for the next iBreakfastLA in the the third week in June.  We’ll be talking about mobile apps… you won’t want to miss this one!

-D

  • Share/Bookmark

The Future of Social Networks?


2009
05.04

andersonlogoAt the SocialNotions’ iBreakfast event at UCLA Anderson last week**,  Cristian Cussen of MySpace made a very interesting statement… he said that “MySpace wants to become a Social Portal, as opposed to a Social Network” (paraphrased, obviously).

Cristian_Cussen

MySpace Video Director, Cussen, says that MySpace want to become a social portal

It got me thinking about whether this was just an attempt for MySpace to revitalize it’s positioning in the face of an ever strengthening foe in Facebook, or whether it was actually where we’re headed when it comes to the social nets. And what does it mean for the others like Facebook, Hi5 and Bebo?
As I normally do whenever my brain poses an interesting, but puzzling question, I decided to ignore it. In other words, I filed it in the subconcious for latent processing. In other words, I decided to sleep on it, or browse on it as the case may be. And after some passive processing, this is what I’ve decided…

In time, what we think of as social nets today will morph into a conglomeration of individualized portals that resemble independent websites more than they do profile pages. These sites will essentially comprise a network within a network (or social portal in Cristian’s parlance) and will be characterized by highly dynamic content created primarily by the owner’s social graph.

A nice example of where I think this is going is the new White House page on MySpace (www.myspace.com/whitehouse):

Picture 3

If you didn’t look at the URL you may never know it was a MySpace page. Pretty neat, huh? But the question is, is the lack of branding and emphasis on independent looking sites a good thing for MySpace or not?

If this is a special case, then forget what I just said. But if, on the contrary, this is where all the pages are going, then in their quest to become a personal social portal, will MySpace run the risk of becoming nothing more than a white-box provider of a highly individualized, social-graph-maintained personal online presence? And if so, so what? Is there another play for the MySpace’s of the world that goes way beyond profile pages?

I think there most definitely is, and you only have to look as far as MySpace Music and MySpace Video to see that, in the long run, there is much much more to MySpace than meets the profile page. Question is, what is Facebook going to do about it?

My prediction? I say watch out for MySpace - with their portal vision and focus on music and video - to figure out social net monetization  in a big way, leaving Facebook scratching their heads as they design yet another page layout to keep up with Twitter.

__________________________________________

**BTW, I’ll be posting a lot more about the iBreakfastLA event in the next couple days…just waiting on the video editors. In short, a GREAT debut for what promises to be an excellent series. Good food, great conversation, top drawer sold-out attendance and exceptional speakers. Don’t miss the next one (focused on mobile apps and marketing) coming your way in late May/early June!

  • Share/Bookmark