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A Day in the Life of a Startup Intern at Wednesdays

By Crystal Yan (Intern, Wednesdays) I just finished my freshman year of college and I've been interning at Wednesdays for about a month. Wednesdays.com organizes employee lunch programs for companies and lunch clubs for organizations (like the Women 2.0 Lunch Club) and is part of the 500 Startups accelerator.

For anyone looking to work at a startup or start one, I thought I'd share some insights from my experience thus far on why working for a startup is awesome and what I've learned so far.

Reason #1: There's no work for work's sake, you get to do more in less time, every time.

My second day on the job, I sent out some emails and mentioned to the founders that we should have a demo video to keep our emails from being too long. So one of them said, "Great, go for it". On my third day, I wrote a script and pulled together a powerpoint with screenshots. I asked Rick, the UX advisor for 500 Startups, to help me edit the script, and he even helped with the voiceover. By the end of the fourth day, a 1-minute demo video was ready to go and was on every individual lunch club's landing page.

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Bootstrapping: Building Fashion the Lean Startup Way

By Heidi Isern (Contributing Writer, Women 2.0) Lindsay Welsh McConnon believes in building from idea to execution. She is the co-founder of Velvet Brigade, a community driven women’s fashion brand. The company showcases aspiring designers from all over the world and makes their products available to the fashion-loving public.

Lindsay didn’t initiate Velvet Brigade with an idea, but rather a person, her former colleague Jena Wang. “We had complimentary strengths and knew we could build a competitive advantage,” she said. Previously a merchant at Macy’s, Lindsay knew how to select apparel. As a previous product developer, Jena knew how to make it. The only thing missing was that "aha" moment to build a company off of their combined strengths.

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Top Women Tech Entrepreneurs in China

By Edith Yeung (Founder, SFentrepreneur and BizTechDay) There are now an estimated 384 million internet users in China, yes it is more than the population of the United States. The growth rate of China's internet user population has been outpacing that of any countries in the world.

With tens of thousands of startups booming in China, I am glad to see that women entrepreneurs are not far behind of their male colleague in the technology space.

Here is a list of women tech entrepreneurs who are very active in the China web space:

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Customer Development: Where the Startup Rubber Meets the Road

By Eric Cantor (Participant, Founder Labs) The brainstorms flow, the sketches come together with a final flourish, and the engineers reason through how the database schema can be perfectly laid out. But the tough news for most potential startups comes when they “get out of the building” and go find out if the product fits the market. Who are you serving exactly? Do they really want it badly enough to engage with it in these crowded times where there are 5 apps for everything? What problem are you solving? These questions and more needed to be answered as we intensify the Customer Development (“CustDev”) process during week 2 of Founder Labs.

Getting Out of the Building

The emerging movement around Lean Startup methodology embraces the agile, nimble, incremental build of a product, starting with a clear focus on customer needs and navigating the way to a business model and an ecosystem. This focus on solutions and customers, rather than technology or product, is one I’ve always followed, and has served well in a variety of sectors and segments including my last few years of work in Uganda, where rapid prototyping was a critical step in everything we attempted.

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RailsBridge NYC Outreach Kicks Off Last Month

By Karen Zeller (Contributing Writer, Women 2.0) On May 7th, 2011, RailsBridge NYC held its first free outreach and training targeted at women. Open to programmers and non-programmers alike, the event was booked solid within twelve hours of its announcement. Demand and enthusiasm for the event was so strong, attendees facing family emergencies made time in their busy lives to commit and show up for the cause.

Mimi Hui, a product strategist and founder of the consulting firm Canal Mercer of NYC, was the chief instigator and organizer of the event. Without her tenacity the event would not have been able to support the number of attendees as successfully as it had.

According to Mimi, “The attendees were surprising, we had the usual entrepreneurs and women who were interested in transitioning from HTML / CSS but additionally, we also had a woman who is trying to build a prototype to monitor world hunger in real time from the United Nations.”

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Announcing DEMO Partnership and Scholarships for Women-Run Startups

The DEMO Conference and Women 2.0 announce a partnership and DEMO's offerings of multiple scholarship opportunities to enable a select group of companies to launch at DEMO. The DEMO Scholarship Partner Program will feature a total of 20 full scholarships for bootstrapped companies (valued at $18,500 each).

Of these DEMO scholarships, a minimum of 4 will be dedicated to women entrepreneurs; 10 partial scholarships will be awarded to angel-funded companies and 10 full scholarships will awarded to college students.

DEMO Fall 2011 will take place this September 12-14, 2011 in Silicon Valley. Scholarship application deadline is July 1. Apply now!

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What the Startup Genome Means to Female Founders: Very Little

By Kaitlin Pike (Marketing & Community Manager, Web 2.0 Expo) Since it was released just two weeks ago, the Startup Genome report has inspired hundreds of blog posts, articles and discussions about the “science” behind successful startups and the causes of business failure here in Silicon Valley.

While the team behind the Startup Genome still has miles of analysis to wade through (including information from their new updated survey), they’ve already put together a number of summaries about the data including their post on VentureBeat -- The 7 signs of failure for internet startups and 14 key findings on their own blog. Here is a quick flavor of what the report authors are saying:

  • “Founders that learn more are more successful.”
  • “Startups that pivot once or twice raise 2.5x more money.”
  • “People who work half time are able to raise money, but ~24x less than founders who go full time.”

As startup business folks, we’ve learned to rely on data, data, and more data to test, plot, and move forward with our ideas, so it’s only natural a report of this nature has sparked such fervent interest. It’s also generated a significant amount of (hopefully helpful) criticism.

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PyLadies Python Hackathon in Los Angeles on June 18

By Audrey Roy (Co-Founder, Cartwheel Web) After a hugely successful Beginner's Python Workshop in May, the PyLadies were inspired to keep the momentum going for those excited about learning Python and becoming a part of the local dev community.

Last week, the PyLadies hosted a social gathering of lady Python developers in glamorous downtown LA. Next Saturday, the PyLadies will hold the first of several hackathons to take place all through the summer.

For the June 18th hackathon, attendees can continue to go through the tutorials from the workshop, but are also encouraged to bring their own ideas to work on, or to collaborate with others on open-source projects.

The event will conclude with more of the ever-popular PyLadies lightning talks - and, of course, a social hour.

Border Stylo, who most recently released the Retrollect iPhone app, has generously donated the use of their cozy, hacker-friendly office in Hollywood for the June 18th event. The Python Software Foundation is also sponsoring the hackathon, in a show of their enthusiastic support of the PyLadies' efforts to increase the diversity of the Python community.

Tickets are still available at http://pyladies-hackathon.eventbrite.com/.

Questions should be directed to info@pyladies.com.

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Something Worth Waiting For — A Founder’s Calling

By Katherine Hague (Marketing, ecobee) It’s hard for me to believe it’s almost been 5 years since I attended my first entrepreneurship event through Impact in Canada. I had always been the kid setting up lemonade stands or trying to sell hand made greeting cards to unsuspecting teachers [looking back they were really terrible cards, my poor teachers!]. I knew that one day I wanted to start a company but I had no idea there were other people, even kids my age, out there trying to do the same thing.

After a couple of years of standing on the sidelines of startups, planning events, I decided I needed to get some hands on experience. I started working with a number of startups that my friends had founded and ultimately found myself as an independent consultant on digital media and marketing projects.

I stumbled into tech.

You can only spend so long in the startup world without realizing that it’s dominated by tech companies. I loved the fast pace of innovation, the people, and the idea of building something that could change the way people live their lives. I would stay up at night reading Jessica Livingston’s Founders at Work or any startup story I could get my hands on. One of my favorite founder stories is Tony Hsieh of Zappos. I even got to tour their office a couple years ago when I was in town for CES. Next time you’re in Las Vegas, skip the casinos and take the Zappos tour instead, you won't be disappointed.

I’m lucky to be surrounded by great people. I never fail to be impressed by the projects and people that surround me.

Here in Toronto, whether it's Startup Drinks, DemoCamp, BarCamp, Mesh, Girl Geek Dinners, Startup Weekend, Rails Pub Nite, SproutUp or Hacks and Hackers, there always seems to be something going on for startup founders and developers. It’s a close- knit community and everyone is always eager to help.

Programming was always this far away, intimidating concept.

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Female Entrepreneur Wins Mobile BeMyApp Hackathon

By Pamela Day (Founder, Stealth Startup) "Life is always either a tightrope or a feather bed. Give me the tightrope." -- Edith Wharton

I won the hackathon at BeMyApp on Sunday, June 5 by unanimous agreement from the judges: Jeff Scott (148Apps), Anthony Ha (VentureBeat), Jay Jamison (BlueRun Ventures), Isaac Mosquera (Socialize) and Tom Deckowski (Intel). Judging categories were idea, execution and business potential.

My inspiration to pitch at this hackathon came from a Dhana Pawar, a panelist at the "Women in Mobile" APWT iWANT event in May in Mountain View at Hacker Dojo. I asked Dhana for advice as to how a non technical person could learn and gain some understanding.

Dhana immediately responded “Go to a hackathon” and described the hackathon she had organized at Facebook, noting that the people who learned the most were the business people.

The BeMyApp Mobile Hackathon

I saw this listing for the BeMyApp mobile hackathon on Women 2.0. I immediately signed up, not really clear what I was going to pitch. The main project I had been wire framing was not right for this event – I had other ideas from which I pulled. The time was approaching and I started receiving reminder emails from Vera Glavova, the organizer of the event. I was getting nervous, so I chose to pitch an idea that solved a problem that was frustrating and costing me money.

There were 30 pitches that night and Cindy Terdimana, Anisha Sekar and I represented the female contingency.

Five ideas were chosen -– of those five ideas, two were pitched by women!

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One Laptop Per Child and Pixel Qi Founder on Women Entrepreneurs and Leverage

By Mary Lou Jepsen (Founder & CEO, Pixel Qi) I fell in love with One Laptop Per Child (OLPC) which I co-founded and served as Chief Technology Officer for years. I realized that if we could pull off the OLPC project, or even a small fraction of it – we could change everything. I personally also realized that I could have incredibly more impact trying to do this than being a professor at MIT and so I gave that up.

I spent time in Asia to realize the design and convince large manufacturers of the world to make my product — the $100 laptop -- to make a profound impact on children in any country, especially the developing world. There the reality is so stark in some of the worst countries where, for example, about one-third of the paid teachers do not show up, and approximately another one-third of the paid teachers are illiterate. In such cases as these the solution isn’t better teacher training. The solution is more radical: leverage the kids. . Kids are smart, they are motivated, and can learn a lot. OLPC gave them access to information and communication to fill in the large gaps in their education.

Every child in Uruguay has one of our laptops, the OLPC “XO” machines, about half the children in Peru, and there are large deployments in Afghanistan, and more than 30 other countries.

We ended up touching a nerve in the industry, competing with the likes of Intel and Microsoft. There is something about the sincerest form of flattery being imitation, and it is from this kind of imitation of the “$100 laptop” that the netbook emerged in late 2007 and became the fastest growing IT product category ever recorded (faster than the more recent rise of tablets even). But of course, the price point of the netbook was double of what we were able to achieve on the OLPC laptop, but most importantly, the power consumption was 10-20 times higher. Consider that in third world countries, access to electricity is difficult and without a low power device human and solar power become prohibitively expensive. Do you want your batteries to last longer or not so long? I asked that question to thousands of people and I have only heard one answer — guess which one. This technology is proven.

I wanted to bring this technology across many products to give all people more access, while also helping people across the digital divide and making greener electronics. By making more of something you can also make it less expensive. And so I founded Pixel Qi.

Leverage As A Woman Entrepreneur

I started Pixel Qi with dual headquarters in Silicon Valley and Taipei. While I intended to spend a third to a half of my time in Asia, I didn’t intend to move to Asia. But, when the bottom fell out in the financial crises I did move here (Taipei) to make Pixel Qi happen. 90% of the world’s devices are designed in Taipei, not Cupertino. To fit in to the local culture, you have to become involved in a lot of discussions and lots of dinners too, it requires a constant presence. I think women have an advantage in that historically they have been accepted as much less threatening in foreign cultures than men. From my experience as a woman in technology throughout my entire career: they remember you and they underestimate you.

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Aspiring Mobile Startup Founders Wanted for Founder Labs San Francisco: Apply by June 24

By Shaherose Charania (Founder & CEO, Women 2.0 and Founder Labs) Founder Labs San FranciscoLooking to start a new mobile venture? Looking for a co-founder? Want to validate an idea? Join Founder Labs in San Francisco: Apply by June 24.

Founder Labs is a pre-incubator for new mobile ideas. Founder Labs is a 5 week pre-incubator focused on the first phase of launching a new mobile venture -- building a co-founding team and validating a new idea. Recent Founder Labs alumni include Kimberly Dillon (House of Mikko), Rebecca Woodstock (Cake Health) and Raissa Nebie (Spoondate).

20 aspiring startup founders form 5 teams, work for 5 weeks, 5 days a week moonlighting (after working hours) to validate a new idea and build an initial prototype. Founders learn key startup lessons such as Lean Startup principles, Customer Development and more, presenting progress each week to Visiting Advisors. Founders work closely with Mentors who have experience in the mobile space. Founder Labs is half male/female, half technical/non technical. For more info, visit www.founderlabs.org. Read about the program on Xconomy here.

Supporters and mentors in the program include Dave McClure (500 startups), Eric Ries (The Lean Startup), Steve Blank (Customer Development), Theresia Gouw Ranzetta (Accel), John Malloy (Blue Run Ventures). Meet the Founder Labs visiting advisors and mentors.

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500 Startups Announces New Accelerator Batch with 20% Women Founders

By Christine Tsai (Partner, 500 Startups) 500 Startups has a new Accelerator batch that kicked off May 23. We have 20 startups in the program from May to September. Among the companies in this batch are:

  • 20% women founders: LaunchBit, Snapette, Vayable, Cardinal Blue, Culture Kitchen and DailyAisle have women founders. In particular, 100% of the founding teams for LaunchBit, Snapette and Culture Kitchen are women.
  • 30% international founders: Zerply (Sweden, Estonia), Welcu (Chile), Ovia (Mexico), AppGrooves (Japan), Cardinal Blue (Taiwan), vvall (Hong Kong), and BugHerd (Australia). A number of our startups are from outside the valley: DailyAisle, LaunchBit, Snapette (Boston), ToutApp (NYC), LaunchRock (Philadelphia), HelloWorld (Austin), and Scoopola (Seattle).

In January 2011, 500 Startups opened its doors to an underground group of racers. For several months, they built product. They burned the midnight oil. They hustled their asses off. Finally, they demoed to a captive audience of investors during Demo Days. Fast forward to today. A new crew is ready to take down the streets of Silicon Valley and beyond. They are the epitome of #500STRONG. 30% international. 20% women. 100% AWESOME. Scheming and plotting. Don’t mess w/ them.

Here are 6 teams in the 500 Startups accelerator with at least one woman on the team:

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