Are you a writer, designer, communicator, artist or creative type who wants to turn your skills into a successful business?
If so, this event is designed especially for you.
You?re invited to Creativity is Good Business: How to Earn a Living with Your Mad Talent on December 4, 2012, from 7?9 p.m.
This is the very first DIY Business Meetup, and it takes place at Wix Lounge (10 W. 18th Street, 2nd Floor, New York, NY), for $15.
The event features two groundbreaking media entrepreneurs?YPulse Founder Anastasia Goodstein and mediabistro Founder Laurel Touby.
About the speakers:
Anastasia Goodstein
Founder, YPulse
Expert on Teen Culture
Anastasia Goodstein most recently led the product development and marketing for the Inspire USA Foundation?s primary service, ReachOut.com, a digital space where teens and young adults can improve their understanding of mental-health issues, develop resilience, build their coping skills and increase help-seeking behavior.
She has worked in media for 15 years and helped launch youth-oriented web and television properties for brands like Oxygen, AOL and Current TV before founding the influential youth marketing site Ypulse.com.
Anastasia was one of the first graduates of the Medill School of Journalism?s new media program at Northwestern University, where she earned an MSJ in 1999. Her first book, Totally Wired: What Teens & Tweens Are Really Doing Online, about teens and technology, was published by St. Martin?s Press in 2007.
Laurel Touby
Founder, mediabistro
Startup Investor and Advisor
Laurel Touby is the founder of mediabistro.com, a website that has revolutionized the way people in the media industry do business, connect and communicate. Before Friendster.com, MySpace, Facebook or HuffingtonPost, there was mediabistro, a site devoted to community building, social networking and career improvement for the millions of professionals working in journalism, publishing, advertising, marketing, design and other media-related specialties.
Laurel graduated from Smith College with a degree in economics and soon after landed her first job at a large New York City ad agency. She then went on to a successful career as a business writer and editor, working at a range of magazines and newspapers (both full time and freelance), from New York to Business Week to the now-defunct Working Woman.
In 1994, Laurel and another freelancer decided to host a cocktail party in order to meet new people. Thus began a series of ?media salons,? which ultimately led to the founding of Mediabistro. The original gatherings started out small. Once a month, a dozen or so writers and editors met up at a local bar.
By 1996, Laurel?s guest list numbered in the thousands. That year, she took the party online by launching a web site with a gossipy bulletin board, insider job listings and user-generated event listing pages. She wrote a business plan and successfully closed a $1 million round of funding in March 2000, from Bill Ackman (Pershing Square, then Gotham Partners) and Marty Peretz (TheStreet.com/The New Republic).
During her time as CEO, she pulled the company through two recessions, pivoted, managed growth with minimal resources, developed audience online via social marketing and created new, money-making product lines. More than 2 million media professionals worldwide have registered on the site. Users subscribe to mediabistro?s many services, which include educational seminars, conferences, events, forums, and industry-specific blogs, such as the popular TVNewser. This database of media people, was built contact-by-contact from zero to millions strictly via word of mouth.
Following the sale of the company for $23 million to Jupitermedia (now known as WebMediaBrands), Laurel began advising small seed-stage startups and doing some investing. Her investments include biltboard.com, Fashion GPS and Appboy. She left mediabistro.com in June 2011 and continues touching the entrepreneurial community in various ways, including via a monthly co-hosted Cereal Entrepreneurs breakfast, ongoing startup advising and as a TechStars mentor. Until April 2012, she hosted ?Secrets of Successful Startups? on CBS Interactive; past episodes can be found at bit.ly/startupsecrets1.
Married to writer and Bitch Magnet rocker Jon Fine, Laurel serves on the Media & Marketing Task Force of the Cooper-Hewitt National Design Museum. The Manhattan Chamber of Commerce honored Laurel with the ?Entrepreneur of the Year Award? in 2007, and Smith College awarded her The Smith College Medal in 2010.
Special Thanks to:
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