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Debriefing

Response to VC CONFESSION: “I Have Doubts Once I Think Of Women Founders Having Kids…”

By Angie Chang (Co-Founder, Women 2.0)


Jessica Jackley (pictured, left) is best known as the co-founder of Kiva.org — Currently, she is starting up ProFounder.com to help you raise money for your business from your community.

Jessica has raised funding from over 30 investors for her latest startup.

One of her angel investors questions if female founders should be treated differently. He wrote a blog post titled “Putting Women First”.

Reposted with a new title on BusinessInsider as “VC CONFESSION: “I Have Doubts Once I Think Of Women Founders Having Kids And Being Distracted From Work” — this post has received tons of comments.

Below are responses to “A pregnant founder is going to fail her company”


“I’m busy running said company. I expect to be even busier with not just one but two babies (yes, to be clear, I’m expecting twins) arriving this fall. And as all entrepreneurs know, you live and die by your ability to prioritize. You must focus on the most important, mission-critical tasks each day and night, and then share, delegate, delay or skip the rest. So, while Paige’s post was intriguing and important, it wasn’t urgent – until it came to my attention that my team was somewhat bothered by it. When they saw one of our investors questioning my abilities as a leader, they were confused and frustrated. And so I am now replying on their behalf as well as mine.”


Comment by Jessica Jackley (Co-Founder & CEO, ProFounder)
– in response to Paige Craig’s blog post “Putting Women First”

“When my sister and I co-founded Magellan [first search engine in 1993] and worked all the hours that g-d gave, when we finally sold the company and Excite gave me a goodbye party, my then 11 year old son came, and when the time came for speeches, he gave one – which started out something like, as he looked around the room with his big blue eyes… “I don’t know if you all realize, if you all realize how hard my mom worked”"


Comment by Isabel Maxwell (Founder & President, Maxwell Communications)
– in response to Paige Craig’s blog post “Putting Women First”

“As someone who joined a startup at 5.5 months pregnant, worked up until 3 days before giving birth, and came back full-time 6 weeks later, I would question the assumption that your cofounder will somehow become incompetent due to childbearing. “Working smart” is the new “working long”, and nothing makes you ruthlessly prioritize like having a baby.”

Comment by Cindy Alvarez (Head of Product, KISSmetrics)
– in response to Quora: “Is it wrong to fire an (unvested) co-founder who becomes pregnant at a startup?”

“Parenting creates a laser focus that you didn’t have before. Through parenting I have learned to operate at a totally different capacity. I don’t hesitate to say what I think, because there is not time to do business any other way. Who has time to screw around? Frankly you hear so little from us because we don’t have time to linger on chat boards.”


Comment by Tereza Nemessanyi (Co-Founder & CEO, Honestly Now)
– in response to Paige Craig’s blog post “Putting Women First”

The above photo of Jessica Jackley was taken by Michael Dayah via Creative Commons Attribution 3.0.

How Women 2.0 Launched My Entrepreneurial Career

By Arielle Patrice Scott (Founder, GenJuice)

I remember it like a high school favorite song. I was 18 years old and I knew everything. I had already started my first company, failed and was ready to do it again to make Zuckerberg’s success look like peanuts. I knew nothing about tech, but I knew that’s where I had to be. So I looked up as many tech events as I could find, printed the ugliest business cards you can imagine and began networking.

At one of those many events, I met Angie Chang. Angie turned out to be one of the founders of Women 2.0. She invited me to a wine and cheese event, as long as I promised to just eat the cheese. Of course, I had to check it out! At that event, I met Shaherose Charania and Jessica Mah. Both of whom would later turn out to be pivotal in my career. Read More »

Spoondate Secures Angel Funding from 500 Startups After Completing Women 2.0 Founder Labs Program

Women 2.0 is thrilled to announce that Spoondate has secured funding from 500 Startups to embark on the next steps in their venture to shake up the world of online dating. Spoondate founders Raissa Nebie and Van Nguyen met in the Women 2.0 Founder Labs program where they came together on their passion to create a new way to meet people based on food preferences. After all, what’s more intimate than sharing a meal? Read More »

Disruptive women at TechCrunch Disrupt 2010

Disrupting Disrupt were the women — while the panel on “women in tech” created a lot of talk (also known as useless banter) and a deflating aura, the founders in the Battlefield pushed forward and we are excited to see these founders deliver strong pitches.

We look forward to their success in the coming months. Check out female founders to watch from TechCrunch Disrupt 2010.

After returning from TechCrunch Disrupt 2010, we have 5 wishes for TechCrunch Disrupt in 2011:

  • No such panel called “women in tech”
  • More than 5 female founders pitching in the Battlefield
  • At least 1 team from Women 2.0 Labs, our pre-incubator program
  • Positive news such as growth or funding from the 5 female founders that launched this year
  • Better veggie options for lunch ;)

We had the chance to catch up with some of the founders who pitched at TechCrunch Disrupt 2010. We asked about their experiences launching their company in front of one of the most capitive, active and cyncial tech audiences. The reflections they shared are encouraging!

Tara Hunt, Founder of Shwowp, said “TechCrunch Disrupt was the best thing Shwowp could have done. Number one, it made us really hone our pitch. Number two, we came together as a team under pressure – you know what they say, the difference between graphite and a diamond is pressure. Lastly, being in the show got us the exposure and made us the sorts of introductions we could have never gotten on our own. I’d highly recommend it to anyone launching their startup.”

We also had the chance to hear from Julia Hu who bravely launched a new hardware product on stage, Lark: “TechCrunch Disrupt was a spectacular event not only because of the great people, but because it forced us to completely put ourselves out there and let the broader audience judge and interpret our company. Going live for the first time (and in front of an international audience), our team was inspired to work harder than they ever had in focusing on articulating what LARK is really about, and throwing out all the secondary messages/issues/features we’d been mulling on. That focus has been transformative for our company. I’m so thankful Mike, Heather, and Erick really stuck by us and gave us so much support- we were sort of an oddball as a simple consumer product in a sea of amazing high-tech software startups.”

Sumaya Kazi from Sumazi said: “Competing and launching at TechCrunch Disrupt Battlefield was both an exhilarating and exhausting process. From the moment we found out we were selected as one of 25 of 1,000 international applicants to compete (just only about 2 weeks before competition) we were officially in launch mode. That meant we had impossible development goals to meet, insane team working meetings that lasted sometimes 12-14 hours (most of the time we weren’t done until 5am), last minute preparation for rehearsals with the TechCrunch editors & VCs giving us advice, and of course the mad dash to put together a solid pitch and presentation for competition day. It was the best experience a startup could ask for. Not only did we get an amazing outpouring of excitement from people worldwide, we also had an insane amount of traffic and signups to our site, investors knocking at our door, great press from publications like the New York Times, and of course a big launch on the world stage. The highlight of it all was when we were recognized at the awards ceremony by the Head of Investments at Omidyar Network as the ‘Startup Most Likely to Change the World.’ We were definitely one of the earlier stage startups competing but I believe we held our own and showed the world a small taste of the big things to come from Sumazi.”

A huge congratulations again to everyone who launched their companies at TechCrunch Disrupt 2010.

Debriefing 2010 Mobile World Congress (Barcelona)

The numbers: 50,000 attendees, 8 buildings, 5 days. Each year, the mobile ecosystem descends on Barcelona to establish the state of affairs and predict the future. Mobile World Congress brings a buzz to Barcelona and everyone was involved, from the taxi drivers to the nearby cafes, from the metro to the tapas bars. Read More »

Founder Institute Bay Area Open for Applications

Women 2.0 is partnering with Founder Institute to encourage more women to go through the four-month training program for both new and seasoned entrepreneurs. Next program starts December 9, 2009.

Founder Institute prepares you to lead the next generation of world-class technology companies across a wide range industries, from biotech to Internet. Weekly company-building sessions are guided by experienced CEOs, and are held in the evening to allow participants to keep their day job or develop their companies during business hours. All of the program stakeholders, from the participating founders to the experienced CEO mentors, share in the upside generated by the companies formed during the program. Participants also enjoy free services from three dozen Institute partners, fundraising opportunities at fair market value, and a teamwork-oriented environment to build a company.

Apply

Early Admission Applications due November 15, 2009.
Regular Application Deadline is December 2, 2009.

When applying, don’t forget to mention “Women 2.0″ as your referral.

Register for Women 2.0 Startup Weekend: August 28-30


Women 2.0 joins forces with Startup Weekend this August 28th – 30th, 2009! We provide the space and brain fuel — you bring the energy and innovation to build something big over the weekend. Sign up now for your spot at Startup Weekend!

Maybe you have an idea, maybe you don’t?
Maybe you started a startup before, maybe you haven’t?
Maybe you are a developer, a designer, a do-er?
Please join us for Startup Weekend August 28-30, 2009.

What is Women 2.0 Startup Weekend? Much like a bar camp, you build something exciting over the weekend. Come to Startup Weekend to find an idea that resonates with you, join a team, and build! Startup Weekend is a place to test ideas, contribute to ideas, and meet potential founders. We are bringing together the most innovative, talented, and out-of-the-box entrepreneurs in Silicon Valley. How it works: Teams form Friday night, companies develop product(s) and/or service(s) through Saturday, and company pitches are delivered on Sunday.

Read More »

July 23rd Meetup @ OSCON in San Jose


Update: Doors will open at 5:30pm instead of 6:30pm. See you at OSCON!


Women 2.0 Visits Barcelona! June 18th Startup Meetup

Join the Women 2.0 Startup Meetup on the heals of Mobile 2.0, Hit Barcelona, and 22@Barcelona. Are you going to these conferences? Tweet at Women 2.0 (@women2) if you are attending.



Women 2.0 Visits Barcelona – Startup Meetup Goes EURO!
Thursday, June 18th, 2009, 7pm – 9pm
At GranFoc in Barcelona, Spain (get directions)

This is a FREE event for women & men, aspiring & current tech entrepreneurs.

Who says we can only have Women 2.0 networking events only in Silicon Valley? We are coming to you! In a partnership with Gild International to connect entrepreneurs in Barcelona, join Women 2.0 for a Barcelona Startup Meetup and hear about the innovation happening in Silicon Valley and Barcelona. Come learn about Women 2.0, our annual Pitch Startup Competition, and more to help you launch your startup. Bring your innovative ideas and business cards to meet local and visiting entrepreneurs.

Meet such esteemed entrepreneurs as Maria Sipka from Linqia and Shaherose Charania from Women 2.0! Karen Reith, co-founder of Gild, will be joining as well.

Women 2.0 Co-Founder & CEO Shaherose Charania is speaking at the 22@Barcelona Update Breakfast on Thursday, June 18th at 8am. 22@Update Breakfast is the new meeting and exchange point of innovative ideas which is hold every month in the innovative district — an opportunity to know the last trends in innovation and to exchange experiences with professionals and managers related to knowledge-based economy.

UPDATE: Shaherose shares her experience in Barcelona below

Bustling Barcelona Brings Entrepreneurial Energy

Thursday, July 9, 2009 (San Francisco, CA) — My visit to Barcelona was a perfect balance of meeting old friends and exploring the local entrepreneurial ecosystem. The twisting streets, savory tapas, cafe con leches, and comforting energy remained unchanged from when I lived in Spain five years ago. But I also discovered a *new* Barcelona this visit — a bustling one bringing in entrepreneurial energy from all corners of the globe.

I met with the new Barcelona: a mix of local, British, German, French, Portuguese, Australian technology entrepreneurs. It was interesting to hear their thoughts on our backyard, including a local Spanish entrepreneur: “I’ll be moving to Silicon Valley now that my product is ready, and I have thousands of users here in Europe” and a visiting British entrepreneur: “I hope to move to Silicon Valley one day, what is it like?”.

During my talk at 22@ I highlighted the differences between what I call a “Lifestyle 2.0″ company; the kind of startup that investors always look at me and say “They don’t need funding, tell them to bootstrap, build, release, iterate and make money from day-one.” Content heavy sites, social networking sites, mobile applications often fall into this category and are big part of the Women 2.0 community. Then you find the disruptive innovations, development heavy startups, often light on the business model, much fewer these days. Then of course there is that needle in the haystack, the next Google, *needing* VC money to scale operations and truly innovate on their current product and/or go global.

While at 22@Barcelona, Mobile 2.0 and HIT Barcelona, I shared my experience here in the Silicon Valley, including when and why a VC is the right fit or when to strongly consider bootstrapping depending on the type of startup.

After visiting various government-funded incubators and meeting with some startups…I’d go back to Barcelona! Why?

Incubate quietly, save on costs
Barcelona Activa, 22@Barcelona, and other government funded incubators welcome international entrepreneurs! With less Silicon Valley hype, it’s a great place to build, create and incubate your startup while keeping costs low. Office space is offered and talented developers from Spain and around Europe are ready to create with you (lower cost than the US).

Already in the market? Reach new markets and still save on costs
The government organization and similar services such as Opinno help you set up shop in Barcelona and access new global markets for growth. Access Europe, Africa, and more. Barcelona can become your hub.

Dream and ideate in solitude
Beach, sangria and warm, beautiful people. The perfect studio for dreaming up the next big idea!
Barcelona, a personal favorite is now a realistic, low(er) cost entrepreneurial ecosystem for some. Thinking of going? Let me know, I’d be happy to share my insights. Or maybe I’ll meet you there ;)

Links

Pitch 2009 Winner: LumaMed, Saving Us All

Despite the recession, Women 2.0′s Pitch received close to 100 submissions from all over the world, proof that aspiring entrepreneurs are not allowing themselves to be defeated by the state of the economy.

Over 200 people including venture capitalists, aspiring entrepreneurs, students, and supporters watched the five finalists for Women 2.0 Pitch 2009 pitch live in San Francisco on May 7th, 2009. Competition was fierce as all five finalists represent different industries, solving five different problems the world faces today. (Listen to complete audio recording of Pitch Night 2009)

Team LumaMed (formerly LumaDerm) won the 2009 Women 2.0 Pitch Startup Competition, scoring a private meeting with Michael Moritz of Sequoia and winning business services worth over $10K. Team LumaMed showcased their innovations in cancer imaging and early detection. Their presentation also won the hearts of the audience as they also walked away with the People’s Choice Award, as voted by the audience with their cell phones, and the VentureBeat Best Media Story Award. (Watch LumaMed’s winning pitch)


LumaMed impressed our live judges, winning grand prize, the audience for the People’s Choice award,
and VentureBeat for Best Media Story.

Pitch Night was a celebration of women-led startups and high-growth innovation. Jumpstart your startup with Women 2.0! What’s your big idea?

This has been the third-annual Women 2.0 Pitch: Startup Competition. The competition aims to stimulate innovation and increase the number of women entrepreneurs starting high growth ventures.
Read More »

Join us on March 3rd for “Pitch 101″ in Palo Alto

Are you a founder looking for feedback or funding?
Planning on entering Pitch 2009 but don’t know how?
Women 2.0 brings you the best resources for
perfecting your pitch and refining your business idea.

Join us on Tuesday, March 3rd, 2009 at the Institute for the Future in Palo Alto for Pitch 101: Applying to Women 2.0′s Startup Competition.

Get feedback from startup executives and investors:
» Georges Harik (Principal, Better Planet Investments)
» Rebecca Lynn (Principal, Morgenthaler Ventures)
» Betty Kayton (Founder and CEO, InnovativeCFO)

This is a workshop on what to do (and what NOT to do) in applying to Pitch 2009.Aihui Ong (Pitch 2009 Coordinator, Women 2.0) will go over the Angelsoft application process.

Read More »

January 2009 Women 2.0 Mixer & Book Swap!


Join Women 2.0 for drinks and a book swap on Wednesday, January 28th, 2009 from 7pm to 9pm at Citizen Space (425 2nd Street, Ste. 300, San Francisco, CA – map). Tell us the best book you read in 2008, and what you are eager to read in 2009. Be sure to bring your business/tech/entrepreneurship books to swap for other Women 2.0 members’ books!

Get $5 off a regular price ticket if you bring at least one business/technology/entrepreneurship book to trade!

Our special guests:

  • Tara Hunt, The Whuffie Factor: Using the Power of Social Networks to Build Your Business
    Tara is co-founder and Chief Marketing Officer of Citizen Agency, an Internet consultancy specializing in community-centric strategies around product research, design, development and marketing. She has over 11 years experience in web design, 8 years in online marketing, and over 4 years of blogging on HorsePigCow. Tara is the author of The Whuffie Factor (coming mid-2009), an insightful and practical guide to connecting with the online communities that matter to your business in ways that enrich both.
     
  • Sramana Mitra, Entrepreneur Journeys Volume 1
    Sramana is a Silicon Valley based serial entrepreneur who founded three companies after earning her master’s degree from MIT. She is a strategy consultant who has worked with some 75 companies, a weekly columnist for Forbes, and author of the widely syndicated business blog Sramana Mitra on Strategy. In her book, she spotlights a diverse group of innovative entrepreneur CEOs and analyzes and discusses how they got their high-tech start-ups off the ground.
     
  • Clara Shih, The Facebook Era: Tap Online Social Networks to Build Better Products, Reach More People, and Sell More Stuff
    Clara runs the AppExchange product line at Salesforce.com and is the creator of Faceconnector, the first business application on Facebook. Previously, Clara worked in strategy and business operations at Google and as a software developer at Microsoft. Through case studies and CEO interviews, Clara’s book paints a vision of how businesses can transform their sales, marketing, recruiting, and product development initiatives through use of online social networks. Clara was a finalist in the 2007 Women 2.0 Pitch Startup Competition!

Tara Hunt talks about her book “The Whuffie Factor” at the book swap and mixer.

Mingling with wine and books in hand.

Clara Shih talks about her Facebook book.

Shaherose Charania (Women 2.0) works the mic — she knows how to energize an entrepreneurial crowd!

Sramana Mitra chats with Women 2.0 members.

The Women 2.0 entrepreneurial book swap was a hit!

Special thanks to Julie Blausten for taking the pictures you see here and more at Women 2.0′s Flickr group.

She’s Geeky is an “unconference” on January 30-31st, 2009 in Mountain View, CA for enthusiastic women in technical fields to share their professional interests and passion for geeky things.

What is an unconference? Beginning at 9am each day, we start with a blank wall and create a multi-track conference agenda that is relevant and inspiring to everyone. Rooms are assigned to each topic and participants attend sessions they are interested in. Notes from each session are collected and a book is compiled with all the notes from the conference and distributed to everyone who attends. For a 3-minute peek at last year’s unconference, click here.

To register for She’s Geeky, click here. Register by January 15th and early bird price for one day is $59 or $108 for both days. Use coupon code “women2″ to save 10% on your unconference ticket!

Women 2.0 is proud to be a media sponsor of She’s Geeky.

The Finance Crisis and Your Startup – Oct 7th

Busy running your startup but wondering how the financial crisis will impact your business? How does the future for startups seeking funding? Is this a good time to launch your dream venture? We will discuss the current financial crisis and its impact on the startup world at the Institute for the Future (IFTF) in Palo Alto on Tuesday, October 7th, 2008 from 6:30pm to 8:30pm. IFTF will demo the Massively Multiplayer Forecasting Game: Superstruct before the panel event.

Panelists:
» Shai Goldman (Director for Venture Exchange, SVB Capital)
» Rebecca Lynn (Principal, Morgenthaler Ventures)
» Prasanna Krishnan (Associate, Draper Fisher Jurvetson)
» Betty Kayton (CFO, high tech startups & early stage firms)
» Greg Schmid (Director, Managing Uncertainty Group)

Moderator:
» Jill E. Fishbein (Partner, Carr & Ferrell LLP)

Register online now for your space at this important discussion!

Event sponsored by SVB Capital:


From left: Jill Fishbein (Partner, Carr & Ferrell), Prasanna Krishnan (Associate, Draper Fisher Jurvetson), Shai Goldman (Director for Venture Exchange, SVB Capital), Rebecca Lynn (Principal, Morgenthaler Ventures), and Betty Kayton (CFO, high tech startups & early stage firms).

The event was blogged at Wall Street Journal as “VCs Ask Start-Ups: What’s Your Worst-Case Scenario?”. Blogger Gwen Bell turned her live Tweets from the event into a blog post titled “Economy Got You Poppin’ Pills?: VC Advice for Your Startup (+ 5 Strategies for Thriving!)”.Gwen Bell also live-Tweeted the event.

Read More »

“Speak with Angels” – Women 2.0 September event

Looking for funding so you can take your venture to the next level?

Join an intimate conversation with angel investors on Tuesday, September 30th, 2008 at the Angels’ Forum office in Palo Alto. Patricia Roller (co-founder of frog design and member of the Angels’ Forum), Georges Harik (angel investor and former Director of Googlettes, a start-up incubator that operated inside Google), and Carol Sands (founder and managing member of the Halo Fund) will answer questions and help you learn everything you ever wanted to know about early stage funding.

If you’re interested in attending, please email us your answers to the following questions:

  1. Why do you want to attend this event? Why should you be selected to attend this event?
  2. Do you currently own/run your own business, or have an idea for a business? What stage is it in?
  3. Please describe your business.
  4. How do you plan on making money?
  5. Do you plan on participating in Pitch 2009?
  6. If you had the chance to ask only one question to a VC, what would it be?

Deadline to apply for a spot at this exclusive event is September 12, 2008. To apply, send us an email to women2.0@gmail.com with your responses to the above questions. Selected participants will be notified by September 19, 2008. Cost of the event for selected attendees is $50 a person.

* * * * *

UPDATE: Debriefing and Notes from the September 30th, 2008 “Speak with Angels” Event

Angel investing is risky business compared to venture capital, but as Patricia Roller said — it’s about giving back AND making money. Both Patricia Roller and Georges Harik stressed the importance of following up on the introductions or referrals an angel investor gives you bcause even if the angel investor does not invest initially, the interest/investment of their peer(s) may lead them to invest at a later time. Georges Harik stressed the importance of finding a good angel with a strong network to be your first investor, because other angels will be more inclined to follow. Patricia Roller provided a helpful hint that even if an angel investor does not invest, consider asking them to become an advisor and do take their advice, and maybe later, their financial investment will follow their personal/professional investment. Both angel investors spoke to the entrepreneurs about keeping your angel investors and advisors updated — keep your regular reports concise and focused on what’s important. Afterall, your angel investors and advisors are there to help.


A handpicked group of entrepreneurs met with Patricia Roller and Georges Harik to talk about angel investing.

Carol Sands meets the entrepreneurs.

Networking is of the essence.

More pictures from the event are available on Flickr.

Thanks to everyone who came out. The next angel investment event will be in March 2009 — stay tuned!

Beyond the Spark Conference Wrap-Up

Stanford, California – May 10, 2008 – Entrepreneurs and VCs gathered on the grassy lawn of the Stanford Golf Course for the 2008 Women 2.0 and Stanford Women in Business Conference Beyond the Spark: Entrepreneurship Redefined. The conference included panel discussions, an interactive lunch with Silicon Valley movers and shakers, and an afternoon session with Pitch 2008 Finalists. We boasted 300+ entrepreneurs, investors, students, and a special visitor – June Sarpong, top television personality and producer from the UK (MTV UK, T4, and more) and campaigner for the HRH The Prince’s Trust. She is building an influential political and lifestyle platform and will be joining the entrepreneurial ecosystem in LA.

Team Koollage won the 2008 Women 2.0 Business Plan Competition, scoring a private meeting with Esther Dyson and business services worth over $15,0000. Team Gaiagy walked away with the People’s Choice Award, as voted by the audience with their cell phones. TechCrunch covered Pitch 2008 here.
Podcasts of all panels, speakers, and competition finalists are available here.

The vision of the conference was to ignite and inspire – to expand what we know and what we expect from ourselves and our peers. Through the stories of an esteemed panel of speakers (Google.org, d.light design, Market For a Change, allvoices, and many more), we learned how to think and execute beyond Facebook apps and social networks to find NEW ways to make millions while positively affecting change.


Inside the white tent, napkin submissions for the Business Plan Competition lined a wall. Chris Shipley asked aloud: “Business plans or prayer flags?”

Chris Shipley (Guidewire Group) has an early morning fireside chat with Rachel Payne (Google.org).

Rachel Payne (Google.org) fields many questions from the audience about Google.org.

Dr. Maggie Haersch (VOICEMAP), Dr. Jwala Karnik (JawalCo), Pat McEntee (AuxoGlobal), and Amy Love (Protégé Performance Group) are on the morning’s
panel assembled by SWIB.

Amy Love (former CEO of the Forum for Women Entrepreneurs) encourages entrepreneurs to be proactive and be heard.

Afternoon panel: Erica Estrada (d.light design), Amra Tareen (allvoices), and Leila Chirayath (Market for Change).

Erica Estrada (d.light design) holds up the $25 solar-powered flashlight that illuminates homes in developing third-world countries.

Melanie Swan (MS Futures Group) moderates the afternoon panel.

Erica Estrada (d.light design) inspires the audience to do good. She regularly conducts field work in places like India, China, and Burma.

At lunch, each table had one or two “lunch leads” — entrepreneurial movers and shakers in the Silicon Valley.

Karen Hartline (CommunityNext), Katherine Barr (Mohr Davidow Ventures), and Angie Chang (Women 2.0).

Jeni Diaz and Roseanne Wincek (imthemusic) with Mary Wallace (Wallace Productions).

The judging panel lines up in front of the stage to hear the pitches from the five finalists of the 2008 Women 2.0 Business Plan Competition.

Mythili Sankaran (Koollage) pitches.

Margot Eiran (Gaiagy) pitches.

Debbie Cheng and Lindsay Tabas (Skill Shop) pitch.

Hope Schultz and Bill Zaccheo (WebVet) pitch.

Kristyn Heath (Passive Devices) pitches.

The judges voted Koollage winner of the 2008 Women 2.0 Business Plan Competition!

The audience used Mozes to vote for the “People’s Choice Award”, which went to Gaiagy.

How to vote using Mozes.

Winner of the People’s Choice Award – Gaiagy!

Hope Schultz (WebVet) talks to Joanne Wan (GigaOm).

Shannon McClenaghan (Jimmyjane), Sharon Vosmek (Astia), and Dana Florescu (Oracle).
Dr. Jwala Karnik (JwalaCo).
Artise Hardy (Strategic Analytics), Aihui Ong (Women 2.0), and June Sarpong (The Prince’s Trust).

Lindsay Tabas and Debbie Cheng (Skill Shop).
Tiffany von Emmel (Dreamfish).

Rachel Payne (Google.org) and Leila Chirayath
(Market for Change).

Patricia Roller (frog design) is also a member of the Angels’ Forum.

Maya Baratz (MochiMedia) and friends.

Marleen McDaniel (Women.com).

Audree Halasz (dutchy) with friend.

Leila Chirayath (Market for Change) and Alice Wang (FTVentures).

Susan Lucas-Conwell (SD Forum).

Mitchell Tsai (Spiritual Business Companions) and Amra Tareen (allvoices).

Aihui Ong and Shaherose Charania (Women 2.0).
Current SWIB girls with the founder of SWIB.

Despite sharing the same last name, Angie Chang
and Annie Chang (LOLapps) are not related.
Pokin Yeung and Shaherose Charania (Women 2.0) with Alka Gupta (Ojas Group).

Pictures are from the photo galleries of Shirley Lin, Mitchell Tsai, and Angie Chang with permission. Please go to their galleries to find more pictures from the event. If you took pictures from the event and would like to share them, please use the tag women2.0 on Flickr or leave a comment below.

Intrapreneurship event wrap-up

Thanks to our esteemed speakers Nina and Cynthia, and our moderator Indu, we learned that intrapreneurship is about lobbying, pitching your efforts, getting allies, leveraging resources, exuding empathy, etc.

Practicing intrapreneurship within your organization is a way to gain credibility and a track record – all the tools are at your fingertips, from colleagues to materials. Below are pictures from the event:

Women 2.0 Intrapreneurship Fireside ChatWomen 2.0 Intrapreneurship Fireside Chat

Women 2.0 Intrapreneurship Fireside ChatWomen 2.0 Intrapreneurship Fireside Chat

And thanks to Annie Chang, we have notes from the event! You can find them after the jump.

Read More »

July’s Garden Party Mixer a hit!

Thanks to everyone who came out to join the Women 2.0 community this month and hear from our esteemed speakers Rachel Cook (Vibe Capital, Minti) and Katherine Barr (Mohr Davidow Ventures)! We spent the wonderfully sunny afternoon lunching on delicious eats from Gramercy Park Catering and meeting tons of women with amazing stories and entrepreneurial pursuits.

Women 2.0 July Garden Party MixerWomen 2.0 July Garden Party Mixer

  Networking over lunch  
  Annie Chang (right) fields questions.  

Women 2.0 July Garden Party MixerWomen 2.0 July Garden Party Mixer

  Rachel Cook talks entrepreneurship.  
  Katherine Barr leads a negotiation exercise. 


We are so grateful to industry greats Rachel and Katherine for spending the afternoon coaching and talking to us! For more pictures from the event, check out our Facebook photo album.

Winners Declared for Napkin Business Challenge

The Women 2.0 Pitch Night was a smashing success! Over 150 people came to CNET to support women entrepreneurs who pitched their businesses to venture capitalists and successful women executives. The finalists fielded tough questions from the judges and in the end, only two teams received grand prizes of $1500 each, pitch coaching from Guidewire Group, and meetings with Tim Draper of Draper Fisher Jurvetson and Michael Moritz of Sequoia Capital.

The winning teams were Laser-Seal (envisioning faster, cleaner wound closures in the operating room with laser technology), and O’Light (O for Organic!) which aims to create fashionable, OLED lighting concepts. The audience voted with their cell phones using Mozes to determine O’Light as the crowd favorite, making O’Light the recipient of the People’s Choice Award.

Laser-Seal team wins Napkin Business ChallengeO Light wins twice - the Peoples Choice Award

Tags for Flickr: women20, upcoming:event=150336



Women 2.0 extends another big THANK YOU to our sponsors who made this event possible. We also thank everyone who helped out, from volunteers to bloggers. To Annie Chang for coordinating the event and being a superb hostess. To all the participants in the Napkin Business Challenge. To the Women 2.0 community of entrepreneurs, tech mavens, and the business-savvy. To us, the movers and shakers. Congratulations, and cheers!

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Wine & Cheese Mixer Wrap-up

Our first Women 2.0 mixer kicked off to a great start with an evening of wine, cheese, conversation, and of course, plenty of influential and aspirational women from across the Bay Area! On Thursday, a group of around 30 entrepreneurs, techies, and professionals gathered in a cozy home in Palo Alto to mingle and meet other like-minded peers.

These bimonthly mixers are intended to catalyze connections and provide resources for your own ongoing projects. We know how hard it is to be young professional working your tail off in the Valley, and to still be expected to be energized to work on through the nights on your own stealth-mode projects and other priorities. Some women that I met that evening are actively involved in non-profits, knitting circles, education, and cultural organizations.

We had an abundance of wine, artisan cheese and sparkling juices for the non-alcoholics! Ideas are meant to be shared, and we hope that more and more women will start attending these regular meetups to exchange their thoughts on technology, entrepreneurship, and business. There will always be traditional networking events, yet Women 2.0 is striving to do something different and more engaging — to meet other women who are intelligent, motivated, and dedicated. I emerged from the evening refreshed and inspired to continue working hard so that the next time I meet an affiliate from Women 2.0, I can share with her my progress, and hear her achievements as well.

Wondering how to get a hold of someone you met at one of our events but lost their card? We are proud to announce our new Profile Card feature in the Members section! Before or after going to a Women 2.0 event, you can read up people beforehand and see what they do, because it’s rarely just one thing. For example, I may work at a startup by day, and by night, I am a contributor to several blogs and also volunteer for the NAACP.

You deserve a break from your hectic life so take a second to write up your own Profile Card. Thanks to everyone who attended our event! We hope you enjoyed our schwag from Smalltown, Renkoo, and TheMintPages.

Converting Passion to Business – Panel Debriefing



The Converting Your Passion into a Real Business panel & mixer yesterday saw a very wide range of panelists from a variety of different experiences. Our panelists started some really cool businesses in some pretty “novel” industries and gave us some great tips on when (and when not to) pursue your dreams, and how to do it while providing us with some great laughs and stories on the way.

We even got to see some actual products!

Thank you to all the speakers for providing such a fun panel. They were all-stars, taking things that most people wouldn’t even think of doing and making it their full-time job! A special thank you to the speakers for making it out: Ariel Poler, Liz Gannes, Shannon McClenaghan, Amy Andersen, Christopher Surdi, Tim Johnson, and an erstwhile Nick Douglas.

We really appreciate your involvement in Women 2.0 and you guys rock!!! The support and response we received from the community has just been amazing.

Many thanks to: Stanford BASES for getting us the room, Women in Business, Stanford GSB, Tara Hunt, Elisa Camahort, Robert Leathern, MJ Kim, and everyone else that blogged about us and helped get the word out, and to my co-coordinators: Angie Chang, Shivani Sopory, and Shaherose Charania for putting it together, and to Noah Kagan for being a rock star. Last but not least, thanks to everyone who came out that night and we will keep you posted on future events!!!

To join the mailing list and find out about future Women 2.0 events, please sign up here.

More pictures from the night can be found here.

(Flickr tag: women20)

1st Women 2.0 Conference Debriefing

The first Women 2.0 Conference on “Starting a Startup” brought in more women than I had ever seen at an Entrepreneur27 conference, or any entrepreneurial/tech event that I’ve ever been to, for that matter. The conference covered all topics from the Web 2.0 bubble, to how to get funding, to the personal challenges each of the speakers faced. Basically, the conference was a three hour crash course in being an entrepreneur.

If any of you didn’t get the chance to attend the conference and want to meet some cool girls (or if you did attend and still want to hang out with us), Women 2.0 is planning another social for the month of June so keep checking back if you’re interested!

We would like to thank all of the speakers and discussion leaders for their support and participation. All of them were truly inspirational and enjoyable to listen to, talk with, and meet. A big thank you to our speakers – Sandy Jen, Elaine Wherry, Mary Hodder, Emily Chang, Jessica Hardwick, and Joyce Park; and to our discussion leaders – Cathy Kirkman, Patricia Nakache, Indu Navar, Kristin McDonell, Barbara Rybka, and Elizabeth Bastiaanse.

There were a bunch of people that helped with this conference. Many thanks to: Wen-Wen Lam, Angie Chang, Shaherose Charania (my co-coordinators); Holly and Malika for getting us a room at AOL; Jennifer Chen for posting to the Intel mailing list and bringing us some attendees; Noah Kagan
for helping out with whatever was needed; Keshav Malani, Zachary Zarate, and Melissa Mendavia for helping out with registration and picking up food; the GeekEntertainmentTV team for videotaping the conference and taking cool pictures; Limelife, Meebo, LinkedIn, Yelp, and Zazzle for getting us promotional items; all the people that blogged about Women 2.0; the Meetro and Stirr guys for attending the conference and being just a few of maybe the 10 guys at a Women’s Conference; Luke Murray for attending the conference even though he’s from Kentucky; Gwen Tan who will be working on W2.0 in Singapore; Bert, the security guard that opened the doors for us at AOL and helped us set up; Ambika Sopory and Tram Tran for taking pics at the conference; all the people that rolled out of bed on a Sunday morning to attend a conference; and tons more people. Also, we would like to give a special thanks to The Indus Entrepreneurs (TiE) for sponsoring the event.