Saturday, July 28, 2012

Get ready for Startup Asia Bandung: A Multi-Platform Hackathon

After the success of Startup Asia Jakarta 2012, TechinAsia is now back with another Startup Asia. This time, it has chosen Bandung, Indonesia as its third stop.

Startup Asia Bandung 2012 will be different from the previous two events that took place in Jarkarta and Singapore. It will be primarily focused on a 24-hour Hackathon, making it multi-platform and non-restrictive. Developers can code in any language and for any platform.

What participants can expect:

  • 24 hours of fun – Similar to the hackathon in Jakarta, but even more fun! You can expect a lot of activities while the hacking gets tough at night.
  • Challenges – There will be some challenges to throw at the developers. Put your skills to work and live up to the challenge.
  • Prizes – Each challenge comes with a prize, like some bonus cash, gadgets, and/or a possible internship at a tech company.
  • APIs – There will be a list of APIs to have fun with.
  • People – Meet like-minded developers and test out your skills with them.

Who should attend:

Developers and designers across Indonesia are encouraged to take part in this Hackathon. You can formulate and plan your idea beforehand, but no code should be written before the Hackathon starts. You can also form your dream team first before going into the hackathon, or you can group up with some new friends and form a team once you’re there.

Event Details:
Date: Saturday-Sunday, 13th – 14th October 2012
Time: Saturday 12.:30PM - Sunday 6:00PM
Venue: Landmark Convention Hall, JL. Braga 121, Braga, Sumur Bandung, Bandung, 40111, Indonesia
Price: Free
REGISTER HERE

SGE is proud to be the Official Online Media partner for StartupAsia Bandung 2012

 


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Entrepreneurship & Innovation Week 2012: Pushing Boundaries

Already in its 7th year, Entrepreneurship and Innovation Week is a time of celebration with entrepreneurship-themed events organized by Nanyang Technopreneurship Center of NTU. The objectives of this initiative are to showcase NTU’s Entrepreneurship Ecosystem and provision of an experiential learning platform to stimulate the creation and evaluation process of new business ventures, and forge friendships within the NTU community.

This year, the Entrepreneurship and Innovation Week will be held from 13th - 17th August 2012. The highlight of the week’s events will be the High Tea with Women Entrepreneurs of Singapore on 15th August, which gives attendees a chance to interact with and learn from successful women entrepreneurs of Singapore. Other events include Entrepreneurship Case Challenge, and corporate visits to Mr Bean and Osim International.

Check out programme details here


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13 startup challenges (That make the rewards even sweeter)

(Credit: davidistesting)

With near-overnight successes like Facebook, YouTube, Twitter, and Groupon dominating the headlines of the day, it’s time someone injected a bit of reality into the mix.

Everyone has heard exaggerated numbers like “90 percent of new businesses fail,” but few people have recorded specific examples of why getting a real business going (without VC money) is a monumental challenge.

Here are 13 real-world examples I came up with after reflecting on my entrepreneurial career to date:

1. All nighters. I’ve gotten better at this recently thanks to an app my team and I recently developed, but once in a while I stay up and work for 24 hours or more straight. Sometimes it’s by choice, other times it’s out of necessity or worry.

2. Killer stress. If I don’t have to stay up to work, many nights in the past I’ve had trouble falling asleep. It’s usually because I’m planning in my head what has to get done the next day; other times because I was fretting about the company’s cash flow. Most entrepreneurs have similar experience but won’t admit this because they worry they’ll look vulnerable or doubtful in the business’s future.

3. Bankruptcy. I’ve gotten close to bankruptcy in the past due to poor investment choices. Maybe it’s a big deal to admit this, I’m not sure. The truth is, it was an extremely rewarding and humbling experience. It was scary but it taught me how to hustle.

4. Unlimited patience. Clients will get mad at you, team members will make mistakes, and you’ll mess up too. For instance, in the past, a designer on PetoVera‘s team was very late with a project. I could have gotten angry or removed him, but instead I asked questions and realized that (a) he was doing an amazing job of designing the site, which took time, and (b) I should have blamed myself for not planning the project as well as I could have.

5. Living “poor.” After college all of my friends went and got jobs. Pretty much everyone I knew was and still is making more money than me. Meanwhile, since I don’t get a “regular salary,” I’m still counting the cost of that five-dollar foot long sandwich (plus tax).

6. Constant fear of failure. If you fail, all that hard work may seem like it amounted to nothing and you will fail publicly. The “haters” will have won and all those big ideas that you espoused will have been for naught. That fear is always present.

7. Pulling a “Facebook” doesn’t happen. Most of the time. Study those big success stories regardless.

8. People will hate on you. Once in while I get some dumb anonymous blog comment or someone tells me some pointless gossip about what someone else said about my company or me. It’s an unfortunate fact.

9. Most of your victories go unknown. For example, employees won’t thank you for systematizing your business and improving profits or efficiency. The only reward comes in the long run, from happy customers.

10. It’s always your fault. When something goes wrong assume it’s you because it usually is (even if it isn’t).

11. Your family won’t support you. I have a sign with a quote on it hanging in my room from one of my parents. It says something like “You seem lazy, you don’t seem very ambitious, you’re throwing your life away.” I use it for motivation.

12. You have to earn most of what you get. If I don’t wake up one day to make sales calls or go out networking, that is going to have a direct effect on PetoVera’s bottom line. On the upside, to quote Kevin McGovern, “The harder you work ,the luckier you get.”

13. Romantic relationships are tough to maintain. This is especially true when your business isn’t yet “established.”

But even after reviewing all those examples, I still love what I do. Here are 3 great reasons why entrepreneurship stillrocks:

1. You can work from anywhere (or at least you have the option to travel much more than the average person)

2. You get all the upside.

3. You build something big from scratch.

Can you provide any more examples, good or bad?

This post was originally published on YEC.

About Matthew Ackerson

Matthew Ackerson is the founder of PetoVera to solve the universal problem of perfecting the process of making ideas real. As a student at Cornell University, he started three businesses, one of which won Cornell’s Big Idea Business Competition.

The Young Entrepreneur Council (YEC) is an invite-only nonprofit organization comprised of the world’s most promising young entrepreneurs. The YEC recently published #FixYoungAmerica: How to Rebuild Our Economy and Put Young Americans Back to Work (for Good), a book of 30+ proven solutions to help end youth unemployment.



Link to full article

13 startup challenges (That make the rewards even sweeter)

(Credit: davidistesting)

With near-overnight successes like Facebook, YouTube, Twitter, and Groupon dominating the headlines of the day, it’s time someone injected a bit of reality into the mix.

Everyone has heard exaggerated numbers like “90 percent of new businesses fail,” but few people have recorded specific examples of why getting a real business going (without VC money) is a monumental challenge.

Here are 13 real-world examples I came up with after reflecting on my entrepreneurial career to date:

1. All nighters. I’ve gotten better at this recently thanks to an app my team and I recently developed, but once in a while I stay up and work for 24 hours or more straight. Sometimes it’s by choice, other times it’s out of necessity or worry.

2. Killer stress. If I don’t have to stay up to work, many nights in the past I’ve had trouble falling asleep. It’s usually because I’m planning in my head what has to get done the next day; other times because I was fretting about the company’s cash flow. Most entrepreneurs have similar experience but won’t admit this because they worry they’ll look vulnerable or doubtful in the business’s future.

3. Bankruptcy. I’ve gotten close to bankruptcy in the past due to poor investment choices. Maybe it’s a big deal to admit this, I’m not sure. The truth is, it was an extremely rewarding and humbling experience. It was scary but it taught me how to hustle.

4. Unlimited patience. Clients will get mad at you, team members will make mistakes, and you’ll mess up too. For instance, in the past, a designer on PetoVera‘s team was very late with a project. I could have gotten angry or removed him, but instead I asked questions and realized that (a) he was doing an amazing job of designing the site, which took time, and (b) I should have blamed myself for not planning the project as well as I could have.

5. Living “poor.” After college all of my friends went and got jobs. Pretty much everyone I knew was and still is making more money than me. Meanwhile, since I don’t get a “regular salary,” I’m still counting the cost of that five-dollar foot long sandwich (plus tax).

6. Constant fear of failure. If you fail, all that hard work may seem like it amounted to nothing and you will fail publicly. The “haters” will have won and all those big ideas that you espoused will have been for naught. That fear is always present.

7. Pulling a “Facebook” doesn’t happen. Most of the time. Study those big success stories regardless.

8. People will hate on you. Once in while I get some dumb anonymous blog comment or someone tells me some pointless gossip about what someone else said about my company or me. It’s an unfortunate fact.

9. Most of your victories go unknown. For example, employees won’t thank you for systematizing your business and improving profits or efficiency. The only reward comes in the long run, from happy customers.

10. It’s always your fault. When something goes wrong assume it’s you because it usually is (even if it isn’t).

11. Your family won’t support you. I have a sign with a quote on it hanging in my room from one of my parents. It says something like “You seem lazy, you don’t seem very ambitious, you’re throwing your life away.” I use it for motivation.

12. You have to earn most of what you get. If I don’t wake up one day to make sales calls or go out networking, that is going to have a direct effect on PetoVera’s bottom line. On the upside, to quote Kevin McGovern, “The harder you work ,the luckier you get.”

13. Romantic relationships are tough to maintain. This is especially true when your business isn’t yet “established.”

But even after reviewing all those examples, I still love what I do. Here are 3 great reasons why entrepreneurship stillrocks:

1. You can work from anywhere (or at least you have the option to travel much more than the average person)

2. You get all the upside.

3. You build something big from scratch.

Can you provide any more examples, good or bad?

This post was originally published on YEC.

About Matthew Ackerson

Matthew Ackerson is the founder of PetoVera to solve the universal problem of perfecting the process of making ideas real. As a student at Cornell University, he started three businesses, one of which won Cornell’s Big Idea Business Competition.

The Young Entrepreneur Council (YEC) is an invite-only nonprofit organization comprised of the world’s most promising young entrepreneurs. The YEC recently published #FixYoungAmerica: How to Rebuild Our Economy and Put Young Americans Back to Work (for Good), a book of 30+ proven solutions to help end youth unemployment.



Link to full article

40% of mobile internet users in India ditch newspapers for consuming content on smartphones [Report]

The screens are changing and English print is seeing the biggest impact. 2 Crore of the estimated 4.8 crore Mobile Internet users have shifted 50% of their newspaper and TV time to their mobile screens and what’s being consumed is – entertainment, all categories of news, travel and sports content.

Of all mobile internet users in India (estimated at 4.8 crores), a huge 87% are online on mobile every day. Almost half of these users go online through their cellphones every 2-3 hours and the duration of these visits is more than an hour. Almost 60% of these users have been on this medium for over an year already.mobile-internet-consumption

With access to email (99%) and social media (95%) being the primary drivers of mobile internet, consumption of content is starting to shift in favor of the 2 new screens – Mobiles and Tablets and the categories which see frequent or daily consumption include News, Games and Entertainment, Travel, Education and Search (“40% of Google India’s search originates from mobile phones”: ADMA).

Importantly, 55% of all daily Mobile Internet users hail from outside the top 8 metros and almost the survey* reveals that 80% of the users have performed some form of financial transaction through their mobile phone – payment of utility bills, purchase of products and services, etc. and 28% of mobile internet users have even used ‘mobile money’.

* The survey was conducted by Komli’s Vizisense with sample size of 2,024 users who access Internet through their cellphones. Before you take surveys on their face value, read: Why and how to read survey reports?.

More data on Mobile Internet in India:

Recommended Analysis: Publishers and the Mobile Internet Revolution



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Two-thirds of world leaders are on Twitter – but how connected are they really?

Twitter has been a cult amongst youngsters, media professionals and many others seeking fast information and happenings across the globe. In the same tune, world leaders also hopped onto Twitter’s bandwagon, almost two-thirds of world leaders have a twitter account. However, whilst the social network offers direct interaction between users, almost half of world leader accounts don’t follow any of their peers, according to a study carried out by Burson-Marsteller, a global public relations and communications firm named ‘Twiplomacy’.

“Twiplomacy” is the first research of its kind, aimed at identifying to what extent world leaders use Twitter. The study has analyzed 264 government accounts in 125 countries. The findings indicate that over a quarter (76) of all world leaders and governments are following Barack Obama. However @BarackObama mutually follows only Norway’s Jens Stoltenberg and Russia’s Dmitry Medvedev but hasn’t established mutual Twitter relations with other world leaders. European Union President Herman van Rompuy (@euHvR) is the best connected world leader, mutually following 11 other peers. Australian Prime Minister @JuliaGillard is the second best connected leader.Twiplomacy

At the same time, Russian President Putin, Rwandan President Kagame, Singapore Prime Minister Lee, Dutch Prime Minister Rutte and 35 other accounts do not follow any other Twitter user; effectively cutting themselves out of the conversation. On the other hand Ugandan Prime Minister Mbabazi and Rwandan President Kagame are the most conversational world leaders on Twitter with 96% and 93% of their tweets being @replies.

The study found that politicians often discover Twitter during election campaigns but once elected, these accounts tend to go silent, such as the accounts of Brazilian President Dilma Rousseff @DilmaBR and French President François Hollande @FHollande who have abandoned their followers since taking office. There are 120 personal accounts, however only 30 world leaders tweet personally and then only occasionally.
According to the findings of study, Twitter is also used by small nations to put them on the world map and tweet eye-to-eye with their peers. The president of the Dominican Republic unilaterally follows 71 other world leaders. The president of Portugal and the prime minister of Trinidad and Tobago both unilaterally follow over 50 other peers in the hope that they will return the favour and the young Republic of South Sudan hopes to gain international Twitter recognition by following 16 peers.

Twitter is most popular in North and South America with 80% of governments active. Barack Obama is the most followed world leader with 17,115,077 followers, globally in 5th place just behind Britney Spears. Venezuelan president Hugo Chávez is in second place with 3,152,608 followers, followed by the White House, Queen Rania of Jordan and 10 Downing Street who all have over two million followers.



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[Infographic] Almost 50% of Singaporeans use their online social networks to find Mrs. or Mr. Right

In a representative survey commissioned by the new online dating service, Go Break The Ice, and executed by the Singapore based research company Blackbox Research, over 600 Singaporeans over the age of 18 were interviewed on how they find love.

The concept of recommendation is one of the most influential ways to make people interested. It works for almost everything; and a recent survey among Singaporean singles unveils that it also works when it comes to love and dating.

Results show that 85% of singles in Singapore would rather date or meet someone they know through their friends or social network and 53% of Singaporeans trust their friends when it comes to dating advice, tips and recommendations.

“It’s all about date recommendations from trusted friends”, says Alexander Wallestam, Founder and CEO of Go Break The Ice. “In real life, people who are in relationships meet their partner very often through their friends, and colleagues, at an event or private party or dinner. That’s what I wanted to translate into the online world. At current online dating sites you are thrown into a jungle similar to walking into a bar filled with people you don’t know. But as soon as there’s only one person you have a common friend with, or you have been introduced to, you already have something in common. That makes it so much easier to start a conversation, and most likely it will lead you to a better and more honest conversation.”

Go Break The Ice is a new online dating service that users the influence of one’s social network to find Mrs. or Mr. Right while this survey was part of its market research activities.

However, online dating in its current form still has some risks. Some scenarios include persons looking completely different than on the photo, persons not showing up at all, person who turned up made a somewhat creepy or suspicious impression.

Nonetheless, online dating stills plays an important role for singles on their search for a partner. Almost close to 50% of Singaporeans (46%) have already tried, or are considering meeting their partners online.

For further information about the survey and its result, take a look at the infographic below.


Link to full article

[Infographic] Almost 50% of Singaporeans use their online social networks to find Mrs. or Mr. Right

In a representative survey commissioned by the new online dating service, Go Break The Ice, and executed by the Singapore based research company Blackbox Research, over 600 Singaporeans over the age of 18 were interviewed on how they find love.

The concept of recommendation is one of the most influential ways to make people interested. It works for almost everything; and a recent survey among Singaporean singles unveils that it also works when it comes to love and dating.

Results show that 85% of singles in Singapore would rather date or meet someone they know through their friends or social network and 53% of Singaporeans trust their friends when it comes to dating advice, tips and recommendations.

“It’s all about date recommendations from trusted friends”, says Alexander Wallestam, Founder and CEO of Go Break The Ice. “In real life, people who are in relationships meet their partner very often through their friends, and colleagues, at an event or private party or dinner. That’s what I wanted to translate into the online world. At current online dating sites you are thrown into a jungle similar to walking into a bar filled with people you don’t know. But as soon as there’s only one person you have a common friend with, or you have been introduced to, you already have something in common. That makes it so much easier to start a conversation, and most likely it will lead you to a better and more honest conversation.”

Go Break The Ice is a new online dating service that users the influence of one’s social network to find Mrs. or Mr. Right while this survey was part of its market research activities.

However, online dating in its current form still has some risks. Some scenarios include persons looking completely different than on the photo, persons not showing up at all, person who turned up made a somewhat creepy or suspicious impression.

Nonetheless, online dating stills plays an important role for singles on their search for a partner. Almost close to 50% of Singaporeans (46%) have already tried, or are considering meeting their partners online.

For further information about the survey and its result, take a look at the infographic below.


Link to full article