Subscribe in a reader

Mark Evans

the blog - examines the world of telecom  and  technology  from  a distinctly Canadian perspective.

the person - lives in Toronto, CA with  his  wife  and  three children, and  works  as director of community with PlanetEye Inc.
Pod-Planet.com Feeds
View Article  TechCrunch 101

If you've ever wondered about how to get some love from TechCrunch, here's how (it's a video featuring Guy Kawasaki having a"fireside chat" with Michael Arrington). It's really yet another sign Arrington is the Web 2.0 man of the moment (even the Wall St. Journal wigged into this reality recently). Of course, you have to ask how much of an impact getting profiled on TechCrunch really provides - other than having your servers being hammered for a few days. Tags: , ,

View Article  Mesh meet-up on Nov. 15

Just a reminder that the mesh meet-up is happening Nov. 15 at the Irish Embassy Pub in downtown Toronto. If you're entrepreneur, media, public relations consultant, or just interested in the Web, please join us.

View Article  Start-Ups on the Cheap

Nothing like a fluffy New York Times story about the success of low-cost Web start-ups such as Meebo to stoke the entrepreneurial fires. Apparently, all it takes is a couple thousand dollars and you're off to the races. If it was only that easy! Addendum: Just to be clear, getting a start-up off the ground can be done fairly inexpensively if you've got an idea and a pretty good programmer or two to develop the service. Then, you put the cool service/widget/product on some cheap servers, issue a standard 'hey, we just launched our beta' press release, and pray to the Web 2.0 gods that TechCrunch somehow deems you worthy of coverage. Sometimes, you win the lottery with this formula (Flickr, YouTube, Digg) works but it's not so easy or so cheap for the rest of us. Truth be told, getting a service created is only half the battle; selling and marketing it continues to be huge challenge even in this low-cost Web 2.0 environment. Why? Well, gaining attention and convincing customers to actually purchase your product/service/widget is difficult and expensive because competition is intensive. The ability to create a cool Web service for next is nothing is fine - except there are dozens of other entrepreneurs who can follow the same recipe as well. So what's the bottom line? It's relatively cheap and easy to get in the race but winning can be an expensive proposition.

My blog has moved. Check out the new Mark Evans. It's part of my mini-blog empire that also includes All About Nortel and Twitterrati. You can subscribe to Mark Evans Tech by clicking on the RSS symbol above.
Search
Login
User name:
Password:
Remember me