Beijing StartupDigest – May 9, 2011

9/05/2011

Below is an archived version of the Beijing StartupDigest Events List – a weekly curated listing of the best tech startup events in Beijing. If you would like to get next week’s digest on Monday, sign up here.

——————————————————————————————————————————————————-

Hello, Beijing Watchers!After having tried Weibo for the last few weeks I am quite impressed. It’s almost like using Twitter 2.0. I wrote an article on how it may impact the culture and technology of China in the China Economic Review (follow me on Weibo “frankyu01”). Gang Lu at Technode wrote a succinct talk on how they plan to monetize. As Weibo’s star seems to be rising many Chinese netizens think that Baidu is the New Evil of China.

We also had a Hacker News Meetup in Beijing last Saturday. Here is a Photosynth Instagram picture.

Busy week for me. I will be speaking on the 13th at BootCamp Beijing (see below on this week’s events) and then on the 15th in Shanghai at TEDxFSS on Sunday, May 15 – 8:00-17:00 Drop by and say hi if you are at either of those events.

Some Interesting Articles
Why RenRen is not the Facebook of China:
From TechRice
From Technode

CHINICT’s Chinapplanet forum for mobile developers
The CHINAPPLANET forum takes place in Beijing at the prestigious Tsinghua Science Park on May 26th from 2PM to 5PM – and is the mobile app & cloud computing gathering of the CHINICT conference.

Qualifying developers may be eligible to attend the CHINAPPLANET forum – free of charge – by applying at: chinapplanet@chinict.org (applying early is recommended as free passes to attend the CHINAPPLANET forum are in limited supply).

Also, if you want to register for the greater CHINICT event that brings together investors, technology leaders and media all In one event, register here.

For more information: info@CHINICT.org / www.CHINICT.org

TechYizu Demo Day
TechYizu Demo Day is starting to accept applications for its Pitch/Demo Event on June 18-19 to take place in Shanghai. Supported bt Google, W+K, Xindanwei and Singtel Innov8, it should be a great event. Here is the application info.

Here are the requirements for startup applicants:
-China-based Tech Startup
-Must have a minimal viable product
-Must be at seed/angel round investment stage

Chinaccelerator Applications
Chinaccelerator is accepting applications till Mid May for their summer program. More information here.

Regards,
Frank and David

Beijing StartupDigest is curated by:
Frank Yu – Founder of Kwestr
David Ding – Founder of Bridge for Angels & Startup Entrepreneurs (BASE)

 

Highlighted Beijing Startup Events (Mixed English/Chinese)

BootCamp Beijing (Mostly Chinese)
When: 13-17 May
Where Beihang UniversityA few days of talks about startups, technology and investments . Academic, business and technical professionals will get together for workshops, talks and meetings for discussions on technology startups, grass root participation and some potential tools and platforms that startups can use.

 

Highlighted Beijing Startup Events (Chinese)

2011 Mozilla å¼€å‘者大会
时间:2011年5月10日 周二 13:00-18:00
地点:北京 海淀区 北京新世纪日航饭店三层中åžåž…欢连å‚加2011 Mozilla 中国开å‘者大会,丞众多Webå¼€å‘者进行深入交æµã€‚æ¥è‡ªMozilla移动部门,产å“å¼€å‘ä»¥åŠæŠ€ 术枨广部门的资深工程师们将å‘丞会者一åŒåˆ†äº«Mozillaå„é¡¹å¼€å‘æŠ€æœ¯çš„æœ€æ–°è¿›å±•ã€‚æœ¬æ¬¡å¤§ä¼šå°†é‡ç‚¹æž¢è®¨å¦‚何利用Mozillaå¼€å‘ è€…ä¸“ä¸šæŠ€æœ¯æ¥æž¨åŠ¨å¼€æ”¾ç½‘ç»œå¹³å°çš„å‘å±•ï¼Œæ¶µç›–æ¶‰åŠæµè§ˆå™¨ç§»åЍ开å‘è¶‹åŠ¿çš„è®¨è®ºï¼ŒåŒæ—¶å¯¹HTML5强大新功能和ç«ç‹æ‰©å±•å¼€å‘都将进行深度剖 æã€‚

é‡è§.未楖校å‹è¿”校之创业由我 (北航MBA星å®è”盟——创业沙龙)
时间:2011年5月15日 周日 18:00-20:00
地点:北京 海淀区 北航如心会议中心一层中报告垅本 次活动旨在迅速æå‡è”盟在广大师生间的认知度和认å¯åº¦ï¼Œæ˜¯è”盟树立å“牌形象的招牌活动,需è¦é‡æ‹³å‡ºå‡»ã€‚åŒæ—¶ï¼Œæœ¬æ¬¡æ´»åŠ¨è¿˜éœ€è¦å¸å¼•è‹±æ‰ å…³æ³¨ï¼Œèµ·åˆ°ä¸ºè”盟招募所需资æºçš„作用;能够å‘全校和社会宣传北航åŠç»ç®¡å­¦é™¢ã€MBA中心等对创业活动的é‡è§†åŠå–å¾—çš„æˆæœã€‚

 

Top Upcoming Beijing Startup Events

May 25 – Beijing Ventures Bloom
May 26-27 – CHINICT 

 

No Comments

How to Start an Email Newsletter Company

3/08/2010

Over the weekend I received a cold phone call from a guy named Sebastian who is a subscriber to StartupDigest. He was calling because he had read our case studies on email newsletters here, here, Jason’s case studies here and here, and the recent Hacker News discussions about email, so he wanted to start his own email newsletter business.

He lives in NYC and has the idea of doing a newsletter of the best fashion events in NYC for the fashion community. He was calling to ask about my experience in starting StartupDigest, what he should do first, what software to use, what tools to use, and the story of our first 3 months in operation.

Here is a rough transcription of what I told him:

Let’s ask the most important question:  what content are you delivering and what market are you serving?

If you want to reach the fashion community in NYC, what content are you going to send them? Is it event info, videos , news, or analysis? What resonates most with the fashion community? For StartupDigest our audience is the startup ecosystem and we are sending them the best events once a week.  When I started this company there was no comprehensive events guide for founders and hackers and it was a big need in the marketplace.

First you need to figure out exactly what content you will be serving and exactly the community you want to reach. You need to be uniquely passionate about this community of people.

When I started StartupDigest I had just moved to Silicon Valley (Palo Alto) and was working for an investment fund/incubator at the time. I was going to events and conferences to meet people, make friends, and meet the startup community and I was originally compiling “the digest” just for myself so I knew what events to go to and not to go to.  I actually attend the events featued in StartupDigest and I deeply care about the startup community.

Do you deepy care for and want to meet the fashion community in NYC? If not then you shouldn’t start a fashion email newsletter of the best fashion events for NYC. Honestly I am not very fashionable, I don’t know anyone in the fashion industry, nor do I care about getting into that community. I would be the worst person to start this fashion newsletter company.

If and only if you have found your niche and type of content then you are ready to do your first newsletter. Our first “StartupDigest” issue was sent do 22 of my friends in November 2009 through Gmail (not recommended) and I managed the email list using an Excel spreadsheet (also not recommended). We didn’t start off with any special software, or any special tools, the most important part was figuring out what our unique content was and niche was. Everything else will follow.

For Advanced users:
Now that we serve over 60,000 subscribers, we don’t use Gmail and Excel anymore. We use Mailchimp to send emails, Wufoo on our front page for email collection, WordPress for the website, and ReturnPath for deliverability.

11 Comments

The Email Mafia (PayPal’s Got Nothing on Email)

28/07/2010

There has been a lot of discussion lately on HackerNews around email newsletters by Jason Baptiste here and here as well as our own case study about StartupDigest as a newsletter company here. Email newsletters are a huge business and I believe that we are going through an email renaissance right now (Thrillist founder Ben Lerer thinks so too).

Right now is the best time (especially for a non-technical founder) to start or work for an email newsletter company.

Let’s assume you already have an email newsletter that’s still small but has traction, who do you start reaching out to for advice? Just like in the Web 2.0 world has the PayPal Mafia, the email world has the Email Mafia.

The Email Mafia is made up of 8 individuals who are pros at building newsletters from small media channels to huge enterprises. At risk of getting whacked, here are its members:

bob pittman pilot groupThe Email God, Bob Pittman, Founder of Pilot Group
Referred to as the Man with the Midas touch, he has invested in almost every single successful email newsletter company. Bob is the creator of the MTV - the Music Television cable network – which revitalized the music business and spawned the music video industry. Now he leads Pilot Group, a NYC based PE Firm that has invested in Thrillist, DailyCandySailThru, Zynga, Rapleaf, GeekChicDaily, Ideal Bite, and more.

Pete Sheinbaum dailycandyThe Great Success, Pete Sheinbaum, former CEO of DailyCandy
When email newsletters are referred to as “a serious business”, the acquisition of Daily Candy is what everyone references. Jason Batispste (also part of the Email Mafia) put it best:

In 2008, [Daily Candy was] sold to Comcast for $125,000,000. That’s right- 9 f**king digits.  I remember hearing about these rumors when they first started to surface in 2006, and I took a look at DailyCandy.  I thought I was missing something since the site was just for an email newsletter.  I thought there had to be some social network or great hot new product I was missing.  Nope, it was just that an email newsletter.

Pete was the CEO of DailyCandy during the acquisition and lead the company through the transition before leaving to start his next company, The Mandelbrot Project, funded by the Foundry. He has also sat on the advisory board of IdealBite, TravelPost, TotalBeauty, and more.

ben lerer thrillist lmvThe Golden Boy, Ben Lerer, CEO of Thrillist
Ben, co-founder of Thrillist, has arguably the fastest growing and most profitable private email company today, reportedly doing $10,000,000+ in revenue this year. They’ve already completed their first acquisition of JackThreads and have been on a hiring tear since. In addition Ben has started his own venture capital fund with his father Ken Lerer named Lerer Media Ventures, which has been in on some of the most prolific deals this year: Betaworks, Gdgt, ZeFrank Games, Sailthru, Hot Potato, Canvas Networks, and more.

andy russell pilot groupThe Pilot, Andy Russell, Founder of Pilot Group
Not much is said publically about Andy but he is a partner at the Pilot Group which he founded with Bob Pittman. He sits on the board of VitalJuice, IdealBite, Thrillist, and DailyCandy. If you can’t find a lot of public information on a guy like this, you know he is truly a badass mafia man.

peter shankman haroThe Skydiver, Peter Shankman, Founder of HARO
Peter is best known for starting Help a Reporter Out or HARO for short. In less than a year the HARO newsletter went from nothing to the standard for how journalists and reporters source news stories. HARO reportedly was doing ~$1m in sales per year and recently sold to Vocus for around $20,000,000. Not bad for a bootstrapped email list.

Jen Boulden idealbiteThe Green Queen, Jen Boulden, Co-Founder of IdealBite
Jen Boulden is the founder of IdealBite an email newsletter of one green living tip you can act upon, once a day. Started in 2005, Ideal Bite grew to 100,000+ subscribers and sold to Disney for $20,000,000 all in less than 4 years. You can check out Andrew Warner’s interview with Jen about how she built her email newsletter business here.

jason baptiste email newslettersThe Reporter, Jason Baptiste
Jason Baptiste is the reason I found out about the business of email newsletters and he has been the person covering the email renaissance since the beginning. It was his two posts here and here that sparked the email business discussions and rumor has it he is working on an email based company of his own :)

Neil Capel sailthruThe Up and Comer, Neil Capel, CEO of SailThru
SailThru is a relatively new company which just received funding from Bob Pittman, Ben Lerer, AOL Ventures, etc. It has received the email Midas touch and has a very intriguing product which is still in alpha. Although their product is new, you will definitely be hearing much more about Neil and his company in the near future. He’s the up and comer, so keep him on your radar.

lisa blau amanda freeman vitaljuiceThe Health Nuts, Amanda Freeman and Lisa Blau, Co-Founders of Vital Juice
On both Hacker News and the comments below our readers said, what about Vital Juice? I’m not exactly their demographic (which is why I hadn’t heard of them before) but they deserve to be in the Email Mafia. They were funded by Pilot Group, have been killing in on Compete, last reported to have 100k subscribers growing at 10% a month.

And on a personal note I am extremely proud of all that our email newsletter company StartupDigest has accomplished so far. Our email newsletter StartupDigest has grown from a 22-subscriber side project to a 60,000+ subscriber international media company in less than 7 months. StartupDigest is still very young but we are already seeing the massive potential of what we have created.

Sign up for StartupDigest here.

19 Comments

Why Email Newsletters are So Valuable, Case Study on StartupDigest

5/07/2010

Today I read this post on Hacker News which was a follow-up to Jason Baptiste’s first post about email newsletters. In fact, it was Jason’s newsletter that inspired us to focus on email newsletters in the first place. It’s been 6 months since we started StartupDigest and I wanted to give a real first-hand account into what it’s been like to start a company around email newsletters and why email newsletters are valuable.

First, here’s a little history of StartupDigest is and why it’s valuable. If you are already a subscriber feel free to skip the question below.

StartupDigest logo

What is StartupDigest?
StartupDigest is a weekly email newsletter of the best technology and entrepreneurship events in your local area. We serve 43 cities, 4 Universities, and one specialty group of SF Bay Area hackers.

Each digest is written by a local Curator, an entrepreneur and handpicks the best events to feature each week. We don’t feature every single event in each area; instead we filter through all of the available events and highlight only the best events for you. If you haven’t received a StartupDigest issue before you can check out one here. As you can see there, we like keeping things really simple and easy to read.

We chose to distribute our content via email because everyone has an email address, no matter where they are or what language they speak. As we’ve grown, we are learning first-hand that email newsletters are even more valuable than we originally thought. We will be reiterating many of John’s points here, but here is our own account of why email newsletters are so valuable:

Email Newsletters Are Opt-in and Permission Based
To get curated events content in any of the cities we cover, all you need to do is enter your email address on our homepage. All of our subscribers have opted-in to the content we provide and enjoy our email newsletter on a consistent basis.

When a person willingly (and indefinitely) opens their inbox to your content, it’s a big commitment for both sides. There’s a bond between content producer and subscriber from day one that’s much more personal than that between content producer and website visitor.

We measure the strength of this bond by the number of people & sites who have linked to our signup form (currently 8,000+ links to our homepage), the rate at which our subscribers grow (currently 1,200+ every week), the number of digests to which an individual typically subscribes (currently 4) and how new subscribers hear about us (word of mouth from existing subscribers).

Email Newsletters Empower You to Engage a Specific Target Audience
Our newsletters serve the startup ecosystem, made up of founders, hackers, VC’s, service providers, aspiring entrepreneurs, and University students. In the past, this audience has been very difficult to collect and reach consistently., making StartupDigest very interesting to any person or businesses looking for a new, direct way to engage members of the startup world. How we handle that interest is entirely up to us (we are very picky!) but having that interest makes what we do a viable business. The same can be said for any other company (Thrillist, DailyCandy, Tasting Table, HARO are great examples) that serves a target audience with trusted content delivered through a simple email newsletter.

We updated our demographics two weeks ago here, which confirmed to us the exact people we are reaching.

Email Newsletters Empower You to Serve Key Locations and Expand at Little (or No) Cost
Since everyone has an email address anywhere in the world, you can choose the locations that are most important to you and easily distribute your content to them. Localization is a great way to provide additional value to potential subscribers and provide additional social proof for the value of your business.

To date we cover all of these cities and Universities:

US: Silicon Valley, NYC, LA, Boston, Seattle, Pittsburgh, DC, New Orleans, Baltimore, Chicago, Dallas, Columbus, Indianapolis, Salt Lake City, Phoenix, Des Moines, Philadelphia, Houston,
International: London, Paris, Vancouver, Toronto, Montreal, Tokyo, Mumbai, Cape Town, Seoul, New Zealand, Tel Aviv, Copenhagen, Singapore, Berlin, Sydney, Shanghai, Madrid, Hong Kong, Malaysia, Philippines, Lithuania, Beijing, Nürnberg, Germany, Mexico City, Middle East,
Specially: Stanford University, New York University, Columbia University, SF Bay Area Hackers

People Take Real-World Action on Emails They Receive from People They Trust
The whole point of our newsletter is to be a utility tool to make it easier for members of the startup community to meet each other in person.

If more entrepreneurs and investors get in the same room together more often, the entire startup ecosystem will benefit by creating and improving more great companies, faster. By solving the problem of high-quality technology and entrepreneurship event discovery, we are making a real difference in the amount of valuable feedback startups receive, the people they can choose from to work with, and the sheer number of startup ideas that are created and developed into real products and companies around the world.

We’re delivering all of that through email because people have shown that they are willing to take real-world action based on the emails they receive from sources they trust.

One of the ways we measure success is through our click-through rates (which average ~30%) and conversion rates on ticket sales (which average ~7%). We want to make those numbers as large as possible to make sure that the cross-pollination of people and ideas in every city around the world is as high as possible.

We believe that email is never going to go away. You can build a great business on top of email (like Thrillist, DailyCandy, etc.) and we are only one example. If you are working on an email newsletter company too, leave a comment or email me directly chris at thestartupdigest.com or @mccannatron.

14 Comments

SD5 – 4th of July Edition

29/06/2010

With the 4th of July holiday weekend approaching, we are feeling very patriotic. To help honor the USA, here are the top 5 most popular startup events across our great nation this week. The rankings are based on data we have collected from StartupDigest.

Enjoy and share your favorite events below.

Hackers and Founders

Hackers and Founders: Dogpatch Labs, San Francisco – Thursday in San Francisco, CA
It’s about hanging out, having a beverage and talking about shiny technologies we’re playing with, startups we founded or are thinking about, stuff we read about on Hacker News, and the latest geek and startup news.

View SDbase profile: http://bit.ly/sdbaseHnF

Girls in Tech NYC

Girls in Tech NYC Happy Hour with Mashable – Tomorrow in New York, NY
Girls in Tech NYC has now joined up with the official Mashable Social Media Day event in New York City for the month of June. For this special day, please join Girls in Tech NYC along with members of the Mashable NYC team, for an evening of drinks (and drink specials!) and networking at The Mean Fiddler (266 West 47th St.).

http://www.meetup.com/Girls-in-Tech-NYC/calendar/13800493/

Southern California Venture Network
Southern California Venture Network Monthly Mixer – Tomorrow in Santa Monica, CA
The Mission of the Southern California Venture Network (SCVN) is to increase the entrepreneurial velocity of both startup and emerging growth companies. This mixer is geared towards bringing members, executive board, and newcomers together in a casual atmosphere.
http://scvn.org/calendar/event/2010/6/30/194475

Mass Technology Leadership Council

Tech Tuesday – Tonight in Cambridge, MA
If you’re looking for talent, clients or to just spread the word about what you are doing, join us for this Tech Tuesday.  You’ll have an opportunity for a fast-pitch shout-out to the audience of fellow geeks, tech savvy professionals, DIY-ers, and other industry luminaries at this high energy informal gathering.

http://www.eventbrite.com/event/690779139

GenJuice Chicago
Genjuice Chicago – Tonight in Chicago, IL
This is not a typical networking group. We are a community that offers professional, social and civic opportunities to help cultivate Chicago’s future leaders (a.k.a. you).

http://genjuicechicago.eventbrite.com/

To get the best startup events in your own city every week, sign up for your local StartupDigest issue here.

And God bless America!

USA

No Comments