FRED WILSON

Venture Studio (22): Reece Pacheco, CEO of Shelby.tv

 

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I recently met with the entrepreneur who's trying to transform the way we share, discover and enjoy web video. Reece Pacheco, CEO of Shelby.tv and his team can take all the videos you've been linking to on facebook and twitter and pull them all together into a custom channel for you. They're making discovery and sharing a lot easier, more personalized and of course- enjoyable.

Reece also has a really unique background having traveled the world and worked in Hollywood for a while after his Brown University years and also having been a professional lacrosse player before diving into tech entrepreneurship! He also founded TeamHomeField with Joe Yevoli before launching Shelby.tv which is still going strong. Reece founded Shelby with his good friend Dan Spinosa who he met while they were students at Brown.

Everyone who knows him knows that Reece is an entrepreneur who is all about teamwork, hustle and making it happen- hope you enjoy this as much as I did.

Follow Reece on Twitter

00:11 - What is Shelby.tv and how does it get viral?

00:52 - How did it all come together?

2:05 - How Reece approached the investment community (great stuff here!)

3:53 - Reece describes the TechStars experience, the mentors, speakers, month-by-month process

4:45 - Cracking the big problem of sharing video on the web

6:01 - Walking off stage at TechStars demo day & being intro'd to investors

 

For the full interview click on the image of Reece just below:

Reece Pacheco

 

Venture Studio (11): Jonathan Glick, CEO of Sulia

This is Episode (11) of Venture Studio

Welcome to this week's conversation with entrepreneur Jonathan Glick, founder and CEO of his latest venture, Sulia- which I learned is in many ways the apotheosis of a nearly two decades-long career at the cutting-edge of content-creation on the web.

Jonathan is a true web pioneer having started his career at AOL during its infancy and then at iVillage with a subsequent stint running technology and product development for the New York Times, as CEO of his own venture-backed startup OuterForce, and as Director of Research Operations for the Gerson Lehrman Group.

Learn about Jonathan's rich experiences through those early days of content creation on the web all the way through to the launch of New York-based Sulia, a venture-backed, real-time media company focused on filtering Twitter into high quality content channels. He's amazingly candid and open about his entrepreneurial journey. Enjoy.

:16  -  Developming his "arcane" skills at AOL in "those early days"

:50 -  Meeting and joining the founders of iVillage

1:00 - Joining the NYT & working for visionary, Martin Nisenholtz

1:50 - The genesis & premise of his first startup, OuterForce

3:55 - Funding via Flatiron Ventures (Jerry Colonna & Fred Wilson

4:20 - The story of OuterForce & and many lessons learned

8:05 - New adventure with the Gerson Lehrman Group

9:02 - The premise of Sulia...

10:00 - Sulia's business model...

11:17 - Sulia's relationship with Twitter

Click for Venture Studio (12) w/Matt Harris of Village Ventures

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Venture Studio (9): Dave Tisch, Managing Director TechStars NYC

This is Episode (9) of Venture Studio

Welcome to this week's conversation with Dave Tisch, the irrepressible Managing Director of TechStars NYC.

Dave came over to talk just two days after organizing an absolutely EPIC Tech Stars Demo Day at Webster Hall. Eleven companies (that had been whittled down from 600+ applicants) presented in front of 750 NYC investors and entrepreneurs after several months of intense preparation and mentorship. The enthusiasm and energy was simply unreal and the place was bursting at its seams. I was in the crowd and was blown-away by the quality of the presentations and companies.  Dave and his team had of course been busy making this happen for over 7 months. Each company obviously has its own story and I appreciate Dave taking the time to share a number of these with us and describing the unique experience of making the very first TechStars NYC a reality. Enjoy.

1:25 - What was the process behind bringing TechStars to NYC?

3:25 - What's the TechStars network and how does it differ from the regular TechStars model?

5:39 - How did the recent crop of TechStars grads make the roster and what's the application process like?

8:25 - Learn about Migration Box, one of the recent TechStars grads.

10:55 - Learn about Think Near, another recent TechStars grad.

12:42 - Do you have to already have funding to be a part of TechStars?

13:25 - Learn about Shelby TV, another recent TechStars grad.

15:33 - Learn about Veri, another recent TechStars grad.  Why is the story behind their application to TechStars, Dave Tisch's favorite one?

18:45 - Why does Dave Tisch love being the first money in any deal?

19:03 - What's the best way to get Dave's seed fund, The Box Group, to notice your company?

20:20 - Dave talks about TroopSwap, one of the companies in the Box Group portfolio.

24:05 - Who is Fake Dave Tisch?

Click here for Venture Studio (10) w/ Ben Lerer, CEO of Thrillist


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Evening Read: 6-10-2010

A New Style of Russian Roulette

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Emilianenko Levchin Brin_Sergeo_russia Chatroulette
  Arlovski Demidov Yuri_milner_small Vitali_Klitschko Prokhorov_and_girls

This is part of my ongoing Series on Entrepreneurial Culture and Venture Capital.

In the tech world there was of course Sergey and that little pet project of his (and Larry's) at Stanford we came to know as Google. Then there was Max and his partners- unfurling the behemoth of PayPal and then Slide.

In the fight game Andrei Arlovski appeared suddenly out of nowhere, shaking-up the heavyweight division in the UFC with some magnificent wins. But then came the ascent of the legendary fighter Fedor Emilianenko, also known as "The Last Emperor", who may be the greatest mixed martial artist the world has ever seen.

In boxing the amazing Klitschko brothers, Vladimir and Vitali, wear practically all the world's heavyweight championship belts between the two of them. Vitali also happens to hold a PhD and I am told both play a mean game of chess.

In high stakes poker Ivan Demidov exploded on the scene in 2008 making the final table at both the World Series of Poker and World Series of Poker Europe.

In chess the Russians have of course been absolutely dominant for almost a century. Kasparov went out on top as the world's #1 a few years ago, is running his own political movement, and now is throwing his support to his old nemisis, Karpov, in the latter's bid to become the new President of FIDE, the world chess federation.

Here in the US, the NBA has now cleared mega-billionaire Mikhail "The Giraffe" Prokhorov's purchase of the New Jersey Nets (not to mention the major stake in the Brooklyn arena in which they'll be playing). Any whiff of oligarchism is off the rose- this guy is 6'7", likes to jet-ski (check this out) and was wrongfully arrested a while ago in France for traveling with too many attractive women. They erroneously thought he was pimping. He was just living his life.

That brings us to the VC game where Yuri Milner and the boys at Digital Sky Technologies have made a huge splash. They swaggered in with some Goldman Sachs polish, rolled up in limos and started laying massive bets all over the table. Valuations were suddenly off the charts. Liquidation preferences? They thought you meant Stolichnaya. "No thanks, we'll just take common shares." Some players in the VC and PE community looked up bleary-eyed from the dingy tables they'd been playing all night and said, "what the f@#$ just happened?".  Meanwhile, entrepreneurs like the CEO of Groupon were quoted as saying:

"DST is just cool..... I think they're disrupting the entire late-stage investment business. They are good at identifying exceptional companies and getting behind them in a way that entrepreneurs want them to. They don't get all caught up in terms. They are very accommodating." (Source: Business Insider, SAI)

In startups there is of course the phenomenon of high-school drop-out Andrey Ternovskiy, who rolled-out Chatroulette from the cramped confines of a Soviet-era apartment in the outskirts of Moscow after being inspired by the movie Deer Hunter! He is young and raw and not into the usual niceties. Word on the street is that Fred Wilson pulled some strings with immigration to get him over here with a special Visa. Milner too sent a limo to pick the kid up, but the lad wasn't impressed. I hear he's been making the rounds in Cali and is speaking at TechCrunch Disrupt this week. Something tells me this is one savvy kid and he's here to stay.

It also seems to me that much like so many of his erstwhile countrymen, he's having the time of his life playing this new game- and playing it his own way...

На здоровье!

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