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Friday, May 29, 2015

Virgin StartUp of the week: Twicely

Every day we’re bowled over by the innovation of the UK’s startups. One such startup is Twicely. Founders Helen Walker and Adam Walker recognised that selling your stuff online can be a bit of a hassle – so they decided to make it simple. You send your premium pre-loved clothes to them, they’re sold for a percentage of the original price, and you get money in return. Easy. Twicely are supported by our delivery partners BBV. Let’s find out more

Richard B in lift

We choose one Virgin StartUp company to be featured on Virginstartup.org each week. We ask our startups of the week to deliver the ultimate elevator pitch. What would they say if they had one minute in a lift with Sir Richard Branson? Please answer the questions below, keeping each answer to five sentences max. 

Nigerian business Hotels.ng raises $1.2m from international investors


Hotels.ng - a Nigerian startup business that books hotels for people online - is in the news because it has raised an investment of $1.2m from eBay founder - Pierre Omidyar - and EchoVC - a Venture Capital Company based in Nigeria that does early stage investments for Nigerian technology companies...

Friday, May 22, 2015

6 Entrepreneurs You Should Learn From Now

6 Entrepreneurs You Should Learn From Now
Everyone has a different reason for being an entrepreneur, and every entrepreneur is different. However, the underlying entrepreneurial DNA that holds us all together is consistent: We have a healthy appetite for risk, we can solve problems, we thrive in uncertainty, we overcome all types of adversity, we think outside the box, we inspire masses and we believe in our dreams. We see the world in a unique way, and will stop at nothing to shape the world.
I’m pro entrepreneur. I think everyone who has ever thought about being an entrepreneur should at least give it a shot. I love learning from other entrepreneurs, hearing their successes and failures.
Related: 13 Online Marketing Blogs You Should be Reading (Infographic)
Here’s a short list of some of my favorite entrepreneurs to learn from and where to read their insights:

The Best Business Advice You'll Ever Get

Being an entrepreneur doesn't mean you have to go it alone. Most successful business owners will tell you they could not have accomplished their goals without help--from a mentor, colleague, even mom and dad. For many, their ability to evaluate, internalize and act on the counsel they received was instrumental in getting their companies off the ground.
In an effort to tap some of this wisdom, we called on business gurus to tell us the very best piece of advice they've received. From hiring to philanthropy and more, their responses were as varied as the companies they run.

Dennis Crowley, CEO, Foursquare

Dennis Crowley, CEO, Foursquare
Photo © Ewan Burns
"Do what you love, and the rest will come."
After co-founding two businesses, reportedly turning down a $125 million acquisition offer and being named to just about every "40 under 40" list imaginable, Dennis Crowley, CEO of Foursquare, still cites the advice his mother gave him repeatedly as a child: to follow his heart.
This was the mantra he adhered to when he decided to get his master's degree at NYU's Interactive Telecommunications Program instead of going for an MBA. It was also behind his launch of social networking companies Dodgeball (which he sold to Google in 2005) and Foursquare, and his decision this past May to launch Swarm, an app that will unbundle the check-ins and other social media functions from Foursquare. (Foursquare will focus on helping users discover restaurants and other venues.)
"When I look back at my career to this point, I've spent the last 10 to 15 years following the same narrative, building things that people want to use and want to tell their friends about," he says, adding that he decided to spin off Swarm because, "over time, we realized that if we were passionate about these use cases, we needed to unbundle Foursquare into two apps."
He often thinks back to his mom's advice. "All of these [concepts] started as me working in my apartment building on something I thought would be cool," he says. "All are projects that turned into products that turned into companies."

Why Google CEO Larry Page personally reviews every candidate the company hires

larry page
At the start of 2015, Google had 53,600 full-time employees around the world, compared to 47,800 Googlers a year before. Not even counting replacements, that means it hired about 6,000 new people in just one year.
Cofounder and CEO Larry Page approved each of them, according to Google HR boss Laszlo Bock, who writes about Google's hiring process in new book "Work Rules!."
Page told Wired in a 2011 interview that he developed a formal approval system because while he hates bureaucracy, he wants the company he cofounded with Sergey Brin in 1998 to feel true to his vision as it grows exponentially.
"It helps me to know what's really going on," he told Wired.
Bock explains in the book that Google's hiring process is organized to avoid placing too much importance on any single judgment call. Rather than having only the opinion of a hiring manager or two, Google candidates must be screened by several hiring managers, their potential boss, their potential colleagues, a hiring committee, a senior leader, and finally Page.

Young Nigerian Business Owners Meet to Promote Entrepreneurship and Innovations


Over 1000 carefully selected entrepreneurs made up of young business owners residing in Nigeria and in the Diaspora will be meeting at the NAF Conference Centre in Abuja from 3rd - 4th of August, 2015 for the debut of the highly anticipated Young Nigerians CEO’s Conference and Exhibition 2015.

Thursday, May 21, 2015

How to Draw Your Boss’s Attention

Whether it’s your first job or your fourth, or you’ve been working for this company for many years, you may want to boost your career and get a promotion. Working too hard is great but it won’t help you get promoted fast. Most bosses don’t notice a hard work so you should be smart enough to draw your boss’s attention to your ideas and projects. Don’t run to an extreme, though. You don’t want to be too insistent and clingy. Here are some of the best tricks that you can use to draw your boss’s attention and boost your career.
How to Draw Your Boss’s Attention