StartupDigest EdTech – September 9, 2011

9/09/2011

For newcomers: StartupDigest EdTech is the members-only weekly email newsletter of the best articles in the education technology industry.

You can become a member for free here.

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Welcome back to StartupDigest EdTech, the members-only guide to what you need to read in education technology every week.This week’s edition includes some controversial news items right as we start the school year: one school district’s massive technology investments are not increasing test scores, while another school district has moved in the opposite direction, severely restricting teachers’ use of social media. Other items include an analysis of the Arizona school district’s situation, an overview of the current state of virtual charter schools, and big news about international expansion for Livemocha, a web-based language learning platform.
StartupDigest EdTech is curated by:
Mahipal Raythattha - Founder of Brain Racer& App Factories

 

 

What You Need to Read This Week

In Classroom of Future, Stagnant Scores
By Matt Richtel, New York Times

An Arizona school district has spent millions to outfit their schools with the latest technology, but students’ test scores have remained flat.

Local teachers banned from “friending” students on Facebook
By Margo Rutledge Kissell, Dayton Daily News

In a widely debated move with far-reaching consequences, a school district has moved to ban many forms of electronic interaction between students and teachers.

Technology driving learning, or learning driving technology: Which way ’round?
By Bror Saxberg, brorsblog.typepad.com

While plenty of research exists to show how technology can improve education when implemented correctly, many schools simply deploy technology without studying how to use it.

Are Virtual Charter Schools a Viable Option for Parents?
By Michelle VanBueren, Education News

Here is a look at the current state of virtual charter schools, with enrollment numbers and viewpoints from proponents and detractors.

Abril Educacao enters Brazil language-learning market
By Guillermo Parra-Bernal, Reuters

A large Brazilian education publisher has partnered with Livemocha, an established language-learning community, to bring English-language education to Brazilian schools and communities.

 

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Toronto StartupDigest – June 6, 2011

7/06/2011

Below is an archived version of the Toronto StartupDigest Events List – a weekly curated listing of the best tech startup events in Toronto.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

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Good Morning, Toronto Startups and Entrepreneurs!

For those of you that participated in the Toronto StartupWeekend, I hope you found it to be an enjoyable and valuable learning experience. Good luck to all the entrepreneurs and new startups that will be joining the Toronto community! This week is Net Change Week 2011 at MaRS, be sure to check the event calendar and drop-in for a session or two. This week’s DemoCamp 29 will also be an event not-to-miss, featuring Howard Lindzon and 5 startups demoing their latest technology advances.

As always, please let us know if we’re missing any key events and we’ll be glad to include them in future digests through our submission form. We are also open to partnerships with other members of the Toronto tech and entrepreneur community to add value to our subscribers. If you or anyone you know would be interested in partnering with StartupDigest to offer discounts on events, memberships and more, please have them contact us at josh@thestartupdigest.com and will@thestartupdigest.com.

– Josh

Toronto StartupDigest is curated by:
Will Lam – Founder of Date Ideas and keeps a blog on Entrepreneurship
Josh Sookman – CEO, Guardly

 

 

What’s Going on in the Toronto Startup Community

Net Change Week 2011
When: June 6 – 10
Where: MaRS Centre, 101 College Street, MaRS Studio, Toronto, Ontario

Net Change Week (NCW) is Canada’s premier event on social tech for social change. The weeklong series of events features training workshops, evening programming with guest speakers, lab sessions and plenty of opportunity for networking. Oh ya, and every year, we throw in an art show to boot. In its third year, Net Change continues to be committed to digital literacy and pushing the boundaries of technology’s potential to yield greater impact.

Cloud Startup Challenge
When: June 6 – 10
Where: Microsoft Canada

The Cloud Startup Challenge calls on Canadian startups to build the next big web-based application that makes use of at least one Microsoft technology or service. Startups who meet the entry criteria are asked to apply online for a chance to take part in a five day challenge at Microsoft Canada’s head office where we will select one grand prize winner on June 10.

Toronto Tech Meetup
When: June 8 @ 6pm
Where: CMA Ontario Offices, 25 York Street, Suite 1100, Toronto, ON

Demoing on Wednesday we have Ottawa-based MercuryGrove demoing webcollaboration.com. Web Collaboration makes it easy for people to work together by providing online work spaces for internal teams, partners, and clients.

We also just added our second start-up 4You2Take, a start-up in beta. Need something for FREE, post at 4You2Take. Need to give something away for FREE, post it at 4You2Take too. Local freecycling made easy.

Ultra Light Startups – Lead Generation Revenue Models
When: June 9 @ 6:30 – 10:15pm
Where: ING Direct Café, 221 Yonge St, Toronto, Ontario M5B 2H1

Event agenda includes: startup pitches, pizza and networking, panel discussion and interactive Q&A then its drinks at nearby location.

DemoCamp 29
When: June 9 @ 6:30 – 9pm
Where: Ted Rogers School of Management, Ryerson University, 55 Dundas St W, Toronto, ON

Democamp’s keynote speaker is Howard Lindzon. Howard is co-founder and CEO of StockTwits.

Ruby Hack Night
When: June 9 @ 6:30pm
Where: Influitive’s Office, 457 Richmond St. West, Suite 200 Toronto,ON

Each hack night, anyone who wants to lead a project can write their idea on the whiteboard, and spend 5-10 minutes describing what they want to work on. Anyone attending can join up with any of the leaders, and we’ll break into 4-5 groups each working on a cool, interesting problem.

 

Top Upcoming Toronto Startup Events

June 14 – JavaScript Hack Night
June 16 – HTML 5 Meet and Learn: CSS3
June 16-18 – NXNE Interactive
June 18 – Hack Reduce 2.0

 

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The Key to Startup Hiring

16/07/2010

We’ve noticed that there have been a ton of job postings lately in the Startup Jobs section of the StartupDigest Classifieds. This is a great sign of growth for lots of startups all over the world, which is both righteous and awesome.

Awesome Startup

As all of you continue the hiring process, we want to share an idea that will speed up the process of finding the best person for any job opening you have at your startup.

The key to startup hiring is realizing that the people you really want to hire aren’t looking for jobs.

The people you really want to hire are:

1) Working on their own startup, someone else’s startup, or for a large company (and kicking ass) but aren’t very happy there. This means that they would be open to a change if they got really excited about another company, but aren’t actively looking for it.

2) Active participants of the startup community. This means that they frequently communicate with the leaders of the startup community (e.g. Dave McClure, Eric Ries, Fred Wilson, Chris Dixon, etc.), they consume the latest technology and entrepreneurship news, and (ideally) they produce their own thoughts about emerging trends.

(In a fantasy world, they would also be close followers of your startup and frequent consumers of your product/blog, but the vast majority of the people you really want to hire might have heard of you, but don’t really know who you are yet.)

If all of this is true, it’s great that you’ve posted your job to the Classifieds because there is a lot there (co-founder opportunities, feedback requests, startup education content, global and local startup resources, etc.) that might attract someone who isn’t actively looking for a job. Of course, posting on the Classifieds is free anyway, so you really have nothing to lose.

We’re betting, however, that the Classifieds section isn’t the only place you’ve posted a job listing. Like many of us, you’ve probably paid money to post your job listing to a popular job board or hired a recruiter to post your job listings in even more expensive places.

Why would you pay money to post job listings in places the people you really want to hire never visit?

Startup Hiring

If the people you really want to hire aren’t looking for jobs, they will never see your listing on craigslist, Monster, HotJobs, theLadders, or even a place like StartUpers (which, admittedly, is at least the most fun one) because job listings are all that they offer.

Those places are great for stacking resumes of people who can fill limited holes with set tasks in your company, but the people who will actually make a lasting positive impact on the future of your startup visit those sites only when they’re looking for a cheap wetsuit or a two-bedroom in SOMA.

Since popular job boards won’t help you find the people you really want to hire, stop wasting your money on them and try these 3 things:

1) Pay for distribution, not for posting.

Or, to quote what many (like, say, Gary Vaynerchuk) have said before us — if content is king, marketing is queen and *she* runs the household.

If you have money to spend on hiring, spend it on marketing your company and your open position to people who definitely are not looking for jobs. Bake your job opening into content you produce on your blog or into a post/comment you add to the content you read.

To give you a real example, here at StartupDigest we help you distribute your Classifieds listings into the events content that is consumed every week by thousands of active members of local startup communities around the world.

Spreading good news about your startup to the people who care about the startup ecosystem most is the best way to find and hire the people you really want to hire.

2) Seek one great person, not “a response.”

What’s the key metric of success in startup hiring? Many founders or recruiters will tell you that they spend money posting on popular job boards because they know that they will get a response. From that response, they will know that a certain percentage will be acceptable resumes, and they know that they can find at least one acceptable person out of the set number of people they interview.

But if resumes reveal only a fraction of a person and hiring should be treated like getting married, how could you possibly settle for what’s acceptable from a numbers game when it comes to startup hiring?

If you go into the hiring process seeking one great person instead of “a response” then you will spend your time and money where the people you really want to hire are instead of where the most resumes will come from. This is a hard approach to take because hiring is an awkward process and if you don’t get 20 resumes in your inbox after day one, it’s easy to feel like you aren’t making progress.

Then again, if you change your definition of progress to locating one person you would really want to hire each day, that feeling also changes. We suggest sending simple notes to each of those people on a regular basis to keep him or her up to date on all of the cool things you’re doing at your startup. You can then track each person’s response as it shifts from “that’s cool” to “what’s coming next?” and “what if?” with a simple spreadsheet. Sounds like Salesforce for marriage, doesn’t it?

3) To speed up the entire hiring process, make it fun by hosting a startup party at your place. Or at least go to someone else’s.

Let’s face it, all of us just want to spend time building products, making customers happy, putting money in the bank, and changing the world for the better. We end up paying money to post a job somewhere, sifting through what we get, and taking what we’re given because we want our needs filled now so we can get back to the fun stuff.

Startups Like Fun

So, to save time and our sanity, we need to make hiring part of the fun stuff. One fun and efficient way to find the people you really want to hire faster is to host a startup party.

It’s cheap (unless you’re too cool for pizza and beer) and brings a large group of startup people around you, giving you the opportunity to show all of them who you really are and how much fun they all could be having if they were working with you instead of their current startup or big company.

Also, many entrepreneurs like to try before they buy when it comes to hiring as much as they like to save time, and hosting a party is the easiest way to get a first honest look at all of your potential candidates at once.

If you’re desperate for talent, especially on the technical side, and you don’t think that your party will attract them, at least don’t waste money on recruiters or expect technical talent to immediately respond to your job postings. Go chill out where the people you want to hire already are, as long as you’re willing to bring your brain and not spam every engineer you meet.

To give you one awesome place to go, the Hackers and Founders Meetup is the best place to grab a beer with smart, passionate startup people and talk about what you’re working on. On top of that, every week there are cool speakers and hackathons and iPhone, Android, WordPress, Drupal, Ruby, you-name-it meetups happening all over the world that are full of the people you really want to hire. You can find all of these events going on in your city here.

And speaking of technical talent, did you really think that great engineers would just read your job posting and email you in the first place? Honestly, put yourself in their shoes. Every brilliant programmer is what LeBron James was two weeks ago, a prized free agent (though programmers tend to be a lot less narcissistic).

Programmers are Prized Free Agents

Brilliant programmers are prized free agents. If you want to land them, hang out with them at their place!

Did Miami land LeBron by posting a listing somewhere, offering the best terms and hoping for the best?

No, Pat Riley & Co. hung out with LeBron where he spent his time, told him how sweet it would be to play with Dwyane Wade and Chris Bosh, and got him so excited about the opportunity that LeBron left his home and $30+ million to join them. You can land the next LeBron for your startup by taking the same approach.

In the end, if you remember that the people you really want to hire aren’t looking for jobs, the best way to find those people is to organize or attend fun startup events.

Take every chance you can to show active members of the startup community who you are and what your startup is all about, and talent will leave their current jobs and money on the table just to join you.

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