Hello everyone, just wanted to let you know that I will now be located at www.siliconcalley.com. I’ve been working on the site for awhile, I wanted to do it myself. The reason it took so long was because I had to learn how LOL. Hey, I did say this blog was about me learning. So, if you subscribe, make sure you re-subscribe there. I also added some new features, and will be writing more often. Hope to see ya there!
Startup Camp opportunity
24 05 2008I thought I would tell you LA entrepreneurs about a great opportunity in Silicon Valley. On Techcrunch, I saw a post about Startup Camp, so I thought I would share it.

Startup Camp is a two-day event that occurs on July 10-11 in Silicon Valley, before Foo Camp (July 11-12). Startup Camp is hosted by O’Reilly AlphaTech Ventures, and will have room for 6-8 startups. It will focus on fundraising, PR, working with investors, and viral marketing. Speakers will include:
Michael Arrington: founder of TechCrunch; co-founder of Achex, Zip.ca and Pool.com
Caterina Fake (tentative): co-founder of Flickr
Mark Fletcher: founder of Bloglines and ONElist
Marc Hedlund: co-founder of Popular Power and Wesabe
Howard Morgan: founding investor of Idealab; partner at First Round Capital
Evan Williams: co-founder of Pyra Labs (blogger.com), Odeo, Obvious Corp and Twitter
It will be a great weekend, and you should definitely apply. If you’d like help with the application, I will help you, but you have to take me as your +1. We need to show Silicon Valley its not all beaches and mixers down here! We can work too. If you’d like to apply on your own, apply here by June 6. Good luck!
xoxo,
SiliconCalley
Comments : 2 Comments »
Tags: michael arrington, o'reilly, silicon valley, startup camp
Categories : Events, Startups, Uncategorized
Web’s Day Off – Brunch @ Malibu Inn
17 05 2008
You know how I looove to brag about the LA tech scene. We may not be the center of the tech universe like our Northern counterparts, but we can have geek brunches on the beach. Take that Silicon Valley!

I will be hitting it up, along with my trusty sidekick Abbie aka BusinessBoomer (hopefully, she doesn’t even know she’s going yet). I’d love to meet everyone, so please say hi! I’m sure you’ll recognize me, so you have no excuse. There are a lot of tech events this week that I will hopefully be going to, so either check back here or follow me on Twitter to see which ones I will be at. Here are the deets:
Sunday, May 18, 2008 11:30 am – 2:30 pm Malibu Inn 22969 Pacific Coast Highway Malibu, CAComments : 5 Comments »
Categories : Events, los angeles
Storybids presents a new way to monetize user-generated video
15 05 2008Local SoCal startup, Storybids, is making waves with the launch of their product placement marketplace, aimed at online video creators. The idea is that advertisers will be able to use Storybids’ search capabilities to find online video producers that fit the audience they are looking for. They gauge viewership, subscriptions, and ratings by genre or age demographic. Video creators can also post storyboards and trailers with media selling proposals, and then the ad buyers can bid on their placement.
It has been said that the average American sees 3,000 advertisements over the course of a day. That seems like such an outrageous number. So either the Union of Concerned Scientists is lying, or we have just gotten really good at ignoring them. We fast forward through commercials, ignore banner ads, change the radio station during commercials, and skip past the ads in magazines. I have done a lot of research on the subject for my business. All of the examples I have just given, are examples of inactive, or passive, marketing. Active marketing is what happens when you are selling someone a product when you have their complete attention. This is why Social Media Marketing is so effective. For example, when you are watching a Youtube video and seeing a hot girl ask for a can of Monster, you are paying attention, and the advertiser sold a can of Monster.
I’m sure this is what Founders Joseph Morin and Juan Prado were thinking when they started working on Storybids. The two, from Irvine, CA, spent two years researching and developing before they secured a “Series A” round of venture capital financing in August 2007 from STN Labs, a Toronto based VC. A few months later in February 2008, they soft launched Storybids in beta.
Storybids also offers online media distribution and video analytics measurements. They do this by search engine optimizing the final video, and the submits to several video hosting sites like Youtube, MyspaceTV, Metacafe, DailyMotion, and Veoh simultaneously allowing dashboard reporting on the video’s performance.
I like the idea, but I hope that people don’t go to crazy with it. Next thing you know, you’ll start seeing videos like this with ads. “Charlieeee, you bit my delicious Oscar Meyer Wiener Hot Dog. And that was really good!”
Go LA Startups!!
xoxo,
Calley
Comments : 1 Comment »
Tags: LA startups, la tech, making money on youtube, siliconcalley, storybids
Categories : Startups, los angeles
Zhura – A step in the right direction
15 05 2008
I think it’s only appropriate – this being a LA tech blog and all – that we feature the up-and-coming technology I like to call Hollywood 2.0. Hollywood 2.0 is something that has been on the tip of every Angeleno’s tongue for months. Everyone here – and in most other cities – knows about The Writers’ Strike. While everyone else was wondering if they would ever see McDreamy and Meredith Grey lock lips again, some of us were thinking about what this would do for the future of film and television. One person who definitely got it right was Eric MacDonald, CEO and Founder of Zhura.

Zhura is an web-based application for screenwriters. I think everyone in Los Angeles can say that they know at least a writer or two (the barista at Starbucks is constantly asking me to pass along his treatment), and they aren’t usually the most technologically advanced people we know. Zhura gives them a space to write and edit their blog using advanced editing tools, share their scripts privately with friends and colleagues, and collaborate with other screenwriters.
You first sign up for a free account. Then you continue to your personal section, which is your workspace. You use professional screenwriting tools to write and edit your script from any computer. Then you can create a private group, where you can invite your friends and colleagues to view your script. The workspace in this section, allows everyone who was granted access to read and simultaneously edit your script. It also keeps track of who made what correction. Finally, there is the public section. This is where you can apply a Creative Commons license to your script, and open your script up to the public. Then all the Zhura members on the site at the time, can comment on your script, and with the right license, make corrections to it.
There are obviously amazing features on this site. The portability, document sharing, and the edit-tracker, are all very useful. But what interests me most, is the Web 2.0 aspect. This kind of community can really help turn amateurs into professionals. I used to be a member on ModelMayhem, a photography social network site. You post pictures, and photographers, makeup artists, models, stylists, and agents could comment on them. I started on it in the very beginning so I saw a lot of pretty terrible photographers. Occasionally I will go back and look around, and all of the people I dreaded seeing had turned into really amazing photographers! Constructive criticism from people in your industry, can really help someone grow in their field.
In my opinion, a community based on making life easier for screenwriters, will definitely do well. I can’t tell how many times I’ve seen an out of work actress “accidentally” attack a writer in the middle of the street. These guys could definitely use a break. Aside from all that though, I do believe that Zhura will have a very big part in the future of online video. Making a new generation of writers, will result in a new generation of Hollywood. That’s what Hollywood 2.0 means.
xoxo,
Calley
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Tags: hollywood, Hollywood 2.0, la, la tech, los angeles, modelmayhem, screenwriting, Startups, technology, web-based applications, zhura
Categories : Hollywood 2.0, Startups

#3 












Twittering from Mars?
29 05 2008I promised myself I would not partake in the constant Twitter chatter, but I had to step in on this one. Twitter is being used for probably the coolest thing ever, and no one is covering it. So here it is.
On May 25, 2008, the Mars Phoenix Lander announced its landing on Mars on Twitter. This event, however, was eclipsed by Mike Arrington’s profound Twitter post and the ensuing debate. From my point of view, that of a tech-influenced publicist, I see several major problems with this whole situation and how it was treated by NASA.
I should probably include some background information before I point out the glaring missteps. NASA announced in July of 2007 that it was launching a web 2.0 campaign in an attempt to get people excited about the space program again. They set out to use social networking sites like Facebook and Twitter to connect to their younger demographic, hoping to inspire this generation to be more interested in science and space exploration. It’s a great idea, in theory.
Please note: I truly hope that this is taken in the purely productive tone of which I meant it to be. Before we can truly understand how to do something better, we need to understand what was done wrong.
The first problem, as I see it, was putting this campaign in the hands of someone who is probably older, with a background in either traditional PR and marketing, or even possibly, technology (speculation). Getting someone who has a lot of experience in technology and marketing, is a very common mistake. Obviously, you hired someone who was not a Facebook user or Twitterer, but they knew about the technology and thought it would be wise to use these very popular platforms. The logical thing to do would have been to use someone with experience with that demographic, and experience in influencer marketing (i.e. someone like me). Who would better understand the social network demographic than someone who was in said demographic? Exactly.
The second problem, and possibly one of the biggest, was not paying attention to key bloggers. There is no shortage of amazing bloggers with a huge network of followers. If you want to address a large group of people who are clearly social network users, why not state your intentions to a blog like Techcrunch? Considering they use material from people who send messages on Facebook, I think they might pay attention to an email from NASA. Twitter didn’t even blog about this project. Message to Twitter – While you were responding to the “Twitter!” post on Techcrunch, with your “Techcrunch?” post, NASA was using YOUR site to send the first images from Mars on this mission. Nicely done.
The third problem, is not as much of a problem as it is a suggestion. If you want to be involved with emerging technology and Silicon Valley culture, do some research. Take a lead from people who have done what you are trying to do, and have been doing it for awhile. New media, usually involves new methods. For example, the best viral marketing tool on the web, is video. If you want young people to think that NASA is cool again, then stop releasing videos of NASA with boring, old people. Connected Ventures posted a video on Vimeo that was all of the employees doing a lip dub of “Flagpole Sitta” by Harvey Danger, in place of a job ad. They wanted young smart people, so they posted a fun video, showing how cool it would be to work there. You’re NASA! If you guys just had a sense of humor and produced some fun videos and released them on Youtube and other video sites, you might get a better response. People love aliens and UFO videos, and you are the space program. I’m sure it wouldn’t be too hard to figure something out.
We all understand that space exploration is not as popular as it once was. There was a time that people lived and breathed NASA. It was estimated that one fifth of the population of the world watched the live transmission of the first Apollo moonwalk, and one quarter of the world’s population watched the Christmas Eve transmission during the ninth orbit of the moon with Apollo 8. Right now, @MarsPhoenix has 8,858 followers on Twitter. Great leaps have been made since 1969. With all of this new technology, and NASA’s partnership with social media, people can actually participate in space exploration, instead of watching from the sidelines. We can do this in a way that no previous generation has ever been able to do. But you can’t just use the technology and expect people to find it. Use an integrated approach, including old media. Attract the older demographic, the people who did actually watch the Apollo 8 Christmas Eve transmission. You have a long way to go to get people excited about the space program again, but you can do it. Hey, you made it to the moon didn’t you? This should be easy.
In case you were wondering if there is a connection to LA in this article, there is. Mission design and control for the Mars Phoenix expedition is handled by the NASA Jet Propulsion Center in Pasadena, CA.
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Tags: marketing advice, mars phoenix, marsphoenix, nasa, Twitter
Categories : Commentary, Marketing, Twitter