30 Startups To Know Now: New Bay Area Companies with the Potential to Change the World

Business & Finance
Cover of the book 30 Startups To Know Now: New Bay Area Companies with the Potential to Change the World by David Weir, Hyperink
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: David Weir ISBN: 9781614644798
Publisher: Hyperink Publication: July 23, 2012
Imprint: Hyperink Original Language: English
Author: David Weir
ISBN: 9781614644798
Publisher: Hyperink
Publication: July 23, 2012
Imprint: Hyperink Original
Language: English

Over the past few years, a new technology-driven entrepreneurial boom has exploded in and around San Francisco. Thousands of ambitious companies are emerging, bootstrapped and often with just a few employees at first, to challenge business as usual in industry after industry, from food to health care to education to media and beyond.

Collectively, these startups have the potential to transform the way we live our lives.

This boom doesn't really have a name. But it is centered around the convergence of several different technological trends, including social media, location-based technologies, and mobile devices like tablets and smartphones. It also has a lot to do with data - collecting, sifting, and interpreting data about how all of us use the new technologies we are increasingly dependent on.

That this boom without a name is occurring during a severe economic recession has a certain irony. Could it help generate new jobs, especially for those whose industries and professions have been so badly disrupted?

Well, yes and no. There are plenty of jobs for engineers and designers, and an increasing set of opportunities in sales as well. But not so many employment chances for everyone else.

On the other hand, local businesses stand to benefit directly from new tools and services that help them connect with new customers, and the overall more efficient use of shared resources (collaborative consumption) holds the promise of helping to reduce our collective carbon footprint as well. There is a palpable sense of hopefulness about the future that you can't help but pick up on when hanging around so many entrepreneurs, and we hope that some of that rubs off on you as you go through this book.

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

Over the past few years, a new technology-driven entrepreneurial boom has exploded in and around San Francisco. Thousands of ambitious companies are emerging, bootstrapped and often with just a few employees at first, to challenge business as usual in industry after industry, from food to health care to education to media and beyond.

Collectively, these startups have the potential to transform the way we live our lives.

This boom doesn't really have a name. But it is centered around the convergence of several different technological trends, including social media, location-based technologies, and mobile devices like tablets and smartphones. It also has a lot to do with data - collecting, sifting, and interpreting data about how all of us use the new technologies we are increasingly dependent on.

That this boom without a name is occurring during a severe economic recession has a certain irony. Could it help generate new jobs, especially for those whose industries and professions have been so badly disrupted?

Well, yes and no. There are plenty of jobs for engineers and designers, and an increasing set of opportunities in sales as well. But not so many employment chances for everyone else.

On the other hand, local businesses stand to benefit directly from new tools and services that help them connect with new customers, and the overall more efficient use of shared resources (collaborative consumption) holds the promise of helping to reduce our collective carbon footprint as well. There is a palpable sense of hopefulness about the future that you can't help but pick up on when hanging around so many entrepreneurs, and we hope that some of that rubs off on you as you go through this book.

More books from Hyperink

Cover of the book Quicklet on Dan Ariely's Predictably Irrational (CliffNotes-like Book Summary) by David Weir
Cover of the book Quicklet on Blink by Malcolm Gladwell (CliffNotes-like Book Summary) by David Weir
Cover of the book The Best Little Book On Voice-Over Demos And How To Create One by David Weir
Cover of the book The College Student's Guide to Paying Off Your College Loan by David Weir
Cover of the book Quicklet on Lois Lowry's Number the Stars (CliffNotes-like Book Notes) by David Weir
Cover of the book Ben Franklin by David Weir
Cover of the book Quicklet on Stacy Schiff's Cleopatra: A Life (CliffNotes-like Book Summary) by David Weir
Cover of the book The Best Book On Getting A Microsoft Job by David Weir
Cover of the book Guide to Your Congressman: Hillary Clinton by David Weir
Cover of the book Quicklet on Jane Austen's Persuasion (CliffsNotes-like Book Summary) by David Weir
Cover of the book Quicklet on Sir Arthur Conan Doyles' The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes (Classics, Detective, Mystery) by David Weir
Cover of the book iPhone and iPad Apps Every User Should Own by David Weir
Cover of the book Hacker's Guide to Torrenting by David Weir
Cover of the book Biography of Peyton Manning by David Weir
Cover of the book Notes from the Startup Wilderness: Discovery Engines, Big Data Mining, Social Commerce, and Other Trends in Today's Startups by David Weir
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy