TEDxHongKong is all about the Future of Fun on November 24

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We’re extremely happy to announce that we are a sponsor of TEDxHongKong 2012 that will take place on 24 November at 633 Kings Road, Quarry Bay.

Please join us as we talk about “The Future of Fun”, as we explore how technology, design, and innovation has changed our idea of Fun over the past few years.

This is going to be an amazing event – some of the speakers are:

 

  • Tim Willits – Studio Director of id Software and co-creator of DOOM
  • Shintaro Fukagawa – Corporate Executive at Nexon Games
  • Dave Sutherland – CFO of Morgan Stanley Asia and Chairman of ICM Board Erik Bethke – former General Manager at Zynga of the popular Mafia Wars 2 title Annabelle Bond – fastest woman to climb the Seven Summits
  • Ted Lai – Executive Vice President of BBC in Asia
  • Grace Chen – Founder of Charis Entertainment
  • Lisa Crosswhite – Founder of Gnossem.com
  • David Williams – Founder and CEO of AsiaDigitalMojo Cole Sirucek – CEO of EpicMMA
  • Mark Tilden – Creator of the WowWee Robosapien David Hanson – Founder of Hanson Robotics
  • Jason Chiu – CEO of The Cherrypicks Group
  • Giorgio Sardo – Director of Windows Evangelism Group at Microsoft Susan Bird – Author of I is for Intercourse: The ABC’s of Conversation

 

Register here: http://tedxhongkong.eventbrite.com

Read more here: www.tedx.hk 

And sign up for the after party here: http://tedxhongkong-afterparty.eventbrite.com

The Newest Hong Kong Incubator: The Next Nest Monthly Pitch Day is November 24

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The founder of Fluid – one of Hong Kong’s leading digital agencies – also runs the Nest incubator in Sheung Wan, is now opening the doors to new startups to come in and pitch and get a chance at HK$500,000 in seed funding with mentorship, office space and hands-on support!

We’ve met with founder Simon Squibb and like what he’s doing so we want to bring this exciting opportunity to your attention. All you have to do is apply at www.nestideas.com and they will call you in to do a 15-minute pitch; if they like it they will look at financing opportunities with a sliding scale of equity stake based on how far along your startup is and how much mentoring you need.

We know our friends at Refer.me are at Nest right now so feel free to tweet to @referdotme or @beeto for more insight.

We will invite Simon out to a meet-up in December so you can hear more about what Nest has to offer.

Lessons Learned: Patrick Lee Throws Some Rotten Tomatoes At Your Startup

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On October 24th as a part of the CoCoon Entrepreneurial Series, CoCoon hosted Patrick Lee to speak about his experiences with Rotten Tomatoes. 

Rotten Tomatoes is a leading entertainment website that rates movies before they are released to the public. The site uses 400 critic reviews to get the average critic rating. A movie with 60% rating and above would be considered a fresh movie, while a movie with below 60% would be considered rotten. A good movie would receive a tomato, while a poor movie would receive a green asterisk that was supposed to symbolize the effects of a thrown rotten tomato. Rotten Tomatoes also offers entertainment news and a searchable movie database.

Patrick discussed the beginnings and the trials and tribulations that Rotten Tomatoes navigated. Rotten Tomatoes survived both the first dot com crash of 2001 and also the after effects of 9/11. Also, Patrick discussed the growth period and revenue paths that Rotten Tomatoes tool.

The most important ideas to take away from the talk came after Patrick’s talk. Patrick has a few word of wisdom for budding entrepreneurs.

Do not double down. 

If you’re putting all your time in, then don’t put in your money. If you do both, you’re doubling your risk. Try to raise that money from someone else and if you can’t find the funding then maybe it’s just not a good idea.

Start businesses with your friends

Most startups fail because the founders don’t get along. Don’t let your business fail because of a horrible fight. Businesses should fail from legitimate reasons, not because the founders couldn’t stand each other.

A founding team is key.

You should have a least one good engineer. Someone should be technical and it should be someone you know and trust.

Go home.

Do something where your network is, where your strengths are and where you understand the culture. Even though Patrick is Chinese and speaks the language, he had a hard time building a network and working out the cultural differences. If you have to do something in Hong Kong, Patrick recommended that you play on Hong Kong’s strengths and proximity to China. Remember the Hong Kong market is relatively small in the big picture.

Written and video by Cathy Nguyen

(photo above by Jennifer Cheng)