Showing posts with label Disrupt. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Disrupt. Show all posts

Thursday, 16 April 2015

WeWork’s Adam Neumann To Join Us At Disrupt NY In May

Nestdrop Goes Back To Delivering Weed, Adding 9 Locations Along The West CoastWeWork is just about five years old, and in five years has grown to be one of the biggest real estate companies in the world, with a valuation north of $5 billion.
Given the tremendous growth of the company, alongside WeWork’s ability to combine technology with physical space, made CEO Adam Neumann a perfect fit for the Disrupt NY Stage. We’re very pleased to announce that he’ll be joining us on the main stage for an interview during the conference, going down May 4 – 6.
WeWork started out as a service that allowed startups and entrepreneurs to rent a very small amount of physical space to use as an office. Over time, they’ve grown to 31 locations across the globe, servicing cities like New York, DC, Chicago, San Francisco, Los Angeles, Chicago, and Miami, alongside a number of international locations in England, the Netherlands, and Israel.
But the WeWork folks would be the first to tell you that they don’t measure success by square footage, but rather by the number of people that are part of the WeWork community, which has now topped 20,000 people.
Part of this success is due to the fact that WeWork integrates technology, such as an internal social network for community members, that not only helps with user acquisition but leads to retention of those users even after they’ve outgrown WeWork. Plus, with 20k members, WeWork has the ability to negotiate benefits with large corporations as if they themselves are a 20k person company, as opposed to a company with a few hundred employees and 20,000 tenants.
We’re thrilled to have Neumann joining us in a few weeks on stage.
Adam Neumann will join other notable Disrupt NY speakers, including Tinder’s Sean Rad, FCC Chairman Tom Wheeler, and Vine’s Jason Mante.

Tuesday, 7 April 2015

Vine’s Jason Mante Will Speak At Disrupt New York

With Tech, What’s Old Is New Again
Twitter launched its newly acquired Vine service all the way back in January of 2013, and over the course of that two years, we’ve never actually had anyone from the company on our Disrupt stage. But that’s about to change.
In May, we’ll be joined by Jason Mante, head of user experience at Vine, on the stage at Disrupt New York to discuss all things Vine, mobile video, and more.
Vine has come a long way since its launch more than two years ago.
It only took a few months for the app to hit number one free app overall in the App Store, but with that popularity came all the folks who like to put porn on the internet — forcing Apple to remove the app from the Featured section of the store.
But Vine matured beyond its growing pains pretty quickly, expanding the community and building out the platform by adding more and more granular features for user control without losing the sense of ‘restriction’ that is a part of the Twitter brand as a whole.
And that restriction has fostered an engaged, hyper-creative community. Vine 100 million web viewers each day, with 1.5 billion viewed loops each day. The content you can find on Vine’s Discover page represents some of the most high-quality user-generated content on the web today, and much of that comes from the rules the app imposes on the user.
A lot of that has to do with Jason Mante, who was previously an art director and designer for the Toronto Film Festival as well as a professional musician. These days, he uses those experiences to shape the Vine user experience and community through features like Editors’ Picks, which has been around from the beginning and sets the tone for mainstream content.
He’s also really great at Vine:
About six months after Vine had launched, Instagram launched Instagram Video. It was the best of times and it was the worst of times for Vine, as the company had to deal with a major (but very different) competitor in the market while simultaneously finding added validation in the space from Instagram’s entrance.
Vine continued to flourish as a service, and has today matured into a platform that actually provides a living for great video artists, offers a kids’ option, and offers high-quality video for professionals. But not without losses.

Saturday, 4 April 2015

Bill Maris To Talk Longevity At Disrupt NY

There’s A $10 Billion Opportunity As Marketing Hits The Big TimeAt just 40 years old, Bill Maris is on a mission to save the world — with his investments. Bloomberg recently highlighted Maris’s quest to improve the quality and longevity of human life. This quest is evident in Google Ventures’ growing biotech portfolio, which now includes 36 percent health and life science investments.
Maris, who is a managing partner at Google Ventures, has gone from sitting next to Anne Wojcicki at a Swedish investment bank to Kevin Systrom as a Noogler to managing one of the world’s most capitalized corporate funds — to even a brief stint on tour with his wife, singer songwriter Tristan Prettyman.
And now he’s trying to win at life. Literally. “Part of it is that it is better to live than to die,” he told Bloomberg’s Katrina Brooker.
Maris will be joining us at Disrupt NY to talk about his search for startups that will bring us one step closer to living until “500” — startups like Foundation Medicine and Flatiron Health. We’ll also be asking him tough questions like, “Is Google working on its own self-driving car app?” (Uber is a Google Ventures investment), “What does Calico, Google’s surreptitious anti-aging initiative, actually do?”, and “Why are health-focused investments all the rage these days?”
So come. You might learn how to live longer.
The show runs May 4-6 at the historic Manhattan Center. Tickets are available at an early-bird discount rate until April 11.
Our sponsors help make Disrupt happen. If you are interested in learning more about sponsorship opportunities, please contact sponsors@techcrunch.com.

Tuesday, 31 March 2015

Postmates Will Deliver Bastian Lehmann Via Bike To The Disrupt New York Stage

Tile Launches Sharing, Allowing Others To Help You Find Your Lost ItemsOkay, the bike thing probably isn’t true but Postmates co-founder and CEO Bastian Lehmann will join us on stage at TC Disrupt New York in May.
Almost four years ago, Lehmann stepped onto the TechCrunch Disrupt stage and launched a company called Postmates, with a plan to totally disrupt the courier industry.
Then, the company’s original focus was on delivering packages from one person to another, with an app to help facilitate the general courier workflow, but the company also said that brick-and-mortar retailers could sign on through a Postmates API.
Postmates has come a long way since that day in 2011.
By May of 2012, Postmates had debuted a “Get It Now” button in San Francisco, letting users order anything they want in the city for a small delivery fee on top of the price of the product.
Since then, the company has spent its time focusing on deeper integrations with retailers and expansion into new markets.
By May 2013 Postmates was headed into New York city, after tackling San Francisco and Seattle, and over the next year doubled that expansion into three more cities.
Today, the company operates in more than 64 markets, and has received over $58 million in funding across six rounds, according to Crunchbase. The explosive growth over the last year has left us more curious than ever.
It’s about time we get Lehmann back on the Disrupt stage.
Bastian Lehmann will join other notable Disrupt NY speakers, including Sean Rad, Aaron Levie and Ron Conway.
The show runs May 4-6 at the historic Manhattan Center. Tickets are available at an early-bird discount rate until April 11.

Disrupt Returns To London, From December 5th To 8th

Daum Kakao Debuts Uber Rival KakaoTaxi In South KoreaLast year European startups raised more money in the first quarter than they had during the “dot-com boom”. Much of that money and startup activity was coming out of London. Why? It’s simple. European entrepreneurs are using this highly developed center as a bridge to global markets, and, often, to San Francisco and the Valley. At the same time, London remains the first beach-head for many U.S. startups looking to scale in Europe. So there are hard and fast reasons why TechCrunch today announces that it’s returning to London with the Disrupt conference.
Last year, TechCrunch Disrupt in London set off a “media atomic bomb”, with multiple media outlets covering the startups that launched on our stage. We aim to repeat, and better, that experience.
We’re coming back.
Unlike 99% of tech conferences, TechCrunch puts its journalists in front of every speaker and holds their feet to the fire. Incredibly, speakers love this and line-up for the battle that ensues. We love that process, and we know everyone else does too.
Certainly, the wider media also loves this approach. On the first day of Disrupt London last year, we saw around 100 media outlets attending, including The Financial Times, City AM, The Independent, Business Insider and CNBC; including the BBC’s flagship current affairs programme, Newsnight.
Disrupt it would seem, captured the imagination of the Western European press like few other tech events could.
So here is the detail.
TechCrunch Disrupt London 2015 will be held at the Copper Box Arena in Queen Elizabeth Olympic Park. It will be open to any startup form anywhere in the world. But we are particularly encouraging startups to apply from Europe, the Middle East and Africa to join us.
The legendary Disrupt Hackathon will be held on December 5th to 6th, followed by the main conference on December 7th to 8th. Startup Alley tickets are immediately available for purchase.
You can apply for 2-for-1 tickets here. We will be releasing a limited number these in batches. So you need to apply for that access ASAP.

Saturday, 28 March 2015

Join Ron Conway And Fred Wilson At Disrupt NY

Vine Courts The Embed With High Res VideoIt’s no secret that the incredible wealth of the technology industry has attracted critics in recent years. In this country’s two capitols of capital, San Francisco and New York, influxes of tech workers are reshaping neighborhoods, and accelerating tech salaries are ramping rent prices in entire area codes. Technology promises change, but not all change is popular.
Startup investors Ron Conway of SV Angel and Fred Wilson of Union Square Ventures stand out from the usual technology crowd because of their efforts to boost civic engagement among tech workers in their respective coastal enclaves.
Both will be at Disrupt NY this year in May.
For example, Conway is involved in the Pledge 1% project, which encourages to set aside a portion of their equity early in their life to build out philanthropic arms. SV Angel is a partner of the project.
Increasing income inequality is a flashpoint in our nation’s political conversation. And as technology remains the primal industry of the United States, it cannot escape the conversation. Conway and Wilson are among the most respected and influential investors in the industry. If they can convince entrepreneurs on both coasts — and everywhere in between — to give more, and invest in their communities, we will all be the better for it.
Both investors will be on stage in the middle of our ongoing industry-wide discussion of what a bubble is, how to measure one, and if we are currently ensconced in something soapy.
Fred Wilson and Ron Conway will join other notable Disrupt NY speakers, including Joanne Bradford, Aaron Levie and Tristan Walker.
The show runs May 4-6 at the historic Manhattan Center. Tickets are available at an early-bird discount rate until April 11.
Our sponsors help make Disrupt happen. If you are interested in learning more about sponsorship opportunities, please contact sponsors@techcrunch.com.

Saturday, 21 February 2015

Announcing The First Speakers For Disrupt NY 2015: Aaron Levie, Tristan Walker And Payal Kadakia

Disrupt NY is quickly approaching and we can’t wait. Tickets are available now at an extra early bird discount rate for just a few more days and today we’re announcing the first speakers to headline the show.

Aaron Levie, Tristan Walker and Payal Kadakia are all well-known in the startup scene and we’re excited to have them at Disrupt NY.

Aaron Levie rose in prominence after helping found and build Box, a cloud storage and enterprise collaboration company. Then when Box first tried to go public it ran into a solid market and succeeded in carving its own special niche. Levie kept his head down, grew Box for several more quarters, and then led the company to a successful IPO. Challenges still await and we’re excited to hear his plan on how to keep scaling Box, while also diversifying its feature set to fend of increasing competition from both Google, and Microsoft.

Prior to founding his latest startup, Tristan Walker was the Entrepreneur-in-Residence at Andreessen Horowitz and the Director of Business at Foursquare during its heyday. He’s a staple in Silicon Valley known for his hustle and charisma. He calls his latest project

Friday, 20 February 2015

Register Now To Exhibit Your Startup At Disrupt NY Startup Alley

According to CrunchBase, of the 126 companies that exhibited in Startup Alley at Disrupt NY 2014, 24 of them have since been funded, raising $90.9 million in seed and Series A funding as of January 2015. And 11 of these companies had raised over $78 million in funding within three months of Disrupt.
Considering these impressive stats, why wouldn’t you sign up to have a spot in Startup Alley at Disrupt NY 2015? Disrupt is fast approaching. It kicks off on May 4-6, 2015 in the Manhattan Center, so get your place now.
Here’s how Startup Alley works: Exhibitors in the Alley get two tickets to the Disrupt Conference and one day to put your startup on display, and mingle with prominent members of the media, investors and other tech luminaries. To participate in Startup Alley, your company needs to be less than two years old and have raised less than $2.5 million in funding.
The first two days of Disrupt NY companies in the Alley have a chance to get voted into the Startup Battlefield competition. Each day, one startup is named the audience choice winner for the day, earning their spot alongside our hand-selected startups for a chance to earn $50,000, the Disrupt Cup and the attention of the tech world.
On the final day of Disrupt, the hardware companies take over Startup Alley. Expect to see wearables, drones, robots and other gadgets whizzing around the show floor.
Registration for Startup Alley is open now and we encourage everyone to get your tickets soon to secure a spot. Startup Alley fills up pretty fast.
You can purchase tickets for Startup Alley by clicking this link. A package with two tickets costs $1,995, and you can add attendees for $997.50 apiece.
If you don’t have a startup for Startup Alley, Disrupt tickets at an extra early bird discount rate are still available here. We’ll be revealing more information about Disrupt and who will be speaking and exhibiting at the conference in the coming days.
Our sponsors help make Disrupt happen. If you are interested in learning more about sponsorship opportunities, please contact our sponsorship team at sponsors

 

© 2013 Tech Support. All rights resevered. Designed by Templateism

Back To Top