Category Archives: Business

Joining WHERE

I recently decided to join WHERE, Inc. as the new Chief Innovation Officer.  There (again) is the why and the what.

Why did I decide to join WHERE?  For many reasons.  First, I always want to work with top-notch people.  I was fortunate to do that with EveryScape, and again I’m fortunate to be able to join such a gracious and amazing team at WHERE.  I’ve known Walt (CEO) for years now, and am privileged and honored to work for and with him and his team.

Second, success is infectious.  WHERE has been profitable for the last 6+ quarters; amazing coverage of the mobile, local, social markets; ad network handles over 2 billion requests and 50 million consumer reach; 4+ million consumer app users; great relationship with the carriers; amazing vision and reach with the merchants and SMBs; and much more.  Fuck, need I say more?

Third, growth.  By “growth,” I mean both for the company and personally. WHERE will kick some ass this year.  And I certainly hope to kick some ass and learn/grow at the same time.  Life without learning is death.

Now for the what.  What will I be doing at WHERE as Chief Innovation Officer?  Lots!  It’s an opportunity of a lifetime to be able to straddle both business and tech sides of a coin.

A bit more philosophically, I think innovation happens in two general categories — something very new or something that is a combination of the existing to create a new.  I’m not sure if anything in life really falls into the first category.  I mostly believe in the second category, where innovation manifests itself when people come together to share and build synergistically (BTW, I hate that word — synergy — cuz it’s sooooo over-/mis-used).  I believe WHERE already has all the right ingredients to create many innovative products and services, which makes my job easier (ha!).

Ok, it’s a fuzzy answer but what I hope to do is to nurture and help the growth of WHERE to the next level.  If I can add an ounce to that goal, I am successful.


What’s Next — Internet 3.0

Xconomy’s Greg Huang wrote a great article about what may be next for me (Greg’s a pretty amazing story teller).  Let me continue that line of thought and provide some snippets of evolving idea(s).

We certainly live in interesting times (blessing or a curse?).  Many of the technologies have become mature (v 1.0) and now are crossing over to the next version (v 2.0).  Mobile, cloud, social, smart phones, etc. are no longer pieces of technologies that cater only to the early adopters but has very much crossed the chasm to the rest of the world.

The mapping of the physical world (the “offline”) to the cyber world (the “online”) has begun in full force, from games (a la Foursquare) to servicing local merchants (a la Groupon).  Let me be provokative — I would venture to say that Internet 1.0 was search (e.g. Google), Internet 2.0 was social (e.g. Facebook), and Internet 3.0 is mapping of the offline to online — and NOT “semantic web.”  (Sorta ironic that no one really seems to know the semantics of “web 3.0″ is..)

Internet 3.0, offline to online mapping, is only showing just the tip of its iceberg.  Let the land rush begin!


The Why and the What?

There are two questions that I’m asked the most — why and what’s next?

Why am I leaving EveryScape? I think Galen’s MHT article summarizes it well.  I founded EveryScape in 2002, and only just left.  When I updated my LinkedIn profile, it said I was with EveryScape for 8 years and 8 months.  If I get to live to be 80 years old, then it’s more than 10% of my life.  10%!!!  I think of myself as an entrepreneur and a startup guy..  But the facts say I’m a delusional fuck!  Well, to be fair, we had to reinvent EveryScape a few times, so I do consider it like 3 companies rolled into one (Pretty amazing what a great team we have at EveryScape!).

Why did it take me so long to leave? One thing my parents taught me early in my life is to follow through.  I wanted to do multiple (and unorthodoxed) degrees as an undergrad — Art History, Studio Art, and Computer Science.  I’m proud to say I got it done in 4 years.  I’m proud to have finished my Ph.D.  I’m proud to have brought EveryScape to where we are today.  It was just my time…

What’s next? I have no fucking idea.  I would love to start another, if the opportunity is there.  I would love to join another team that challenges one another and pushes/changes the market and the ecosystem.  For now, it’s an open book.  Exciting and scary.  Stay tuned.


Leaving EveryScape

After 8 years and 8 months (longer than my Ph.D!), I’ve decided to leave EveryScape. It was an amazing journey, and am so thankful to everyone who I had the privilege to work together with. Many of us became more than just coworkers, and became close friends. And at the end of the day, these relationships are what matters.

So thank you. I will certainly keep you posted on my next journey. Hope that we can cross paths again.


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