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Showing posts with label Money. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Money. Show all posts

Monday, 17 June 2013

Asia’s richest man, Li Ka-shing, is pouring money into burning trash. The real estate tycoon is leading a consortium to buy Dutch waste treatment company called AVR for $1.26 billion

Venture capitalists are the financiers of high-tech innovation. The unique form of equity financing—which exchanges capital for shares in the enterprises they provide—has fueled the rise of revolutionary companies like Intel in semiconductors, Apple in personal computing, Genentech in biotech, Google in search, and Facebook and Twitter in social media.
Silicon Valley has long been the epicenter of venture capital-financed high-technology—something I documented in a series of studies with Martin Kenney of the University of California, Davis, in the mid-to-late 1980s. Our research and the research of others documented the tendency of venture capital and high-tech start-ups to cluster in suburban offices parks in Silicon Valley, the Route 128 suburbs outside Boston, and North Carolina’s Research Triangle, aptly dubbed nerdistans. But a number of recent studies suggest the geography of venture capital and start-ups may be shifting to “urban tech,” from this long-held suburban orientation to cities and urban neighborhoods. Such a shift would be in line with more general urban theory which has long seen dense, diverse urban centers—not suburbs—as cradles of innovation.
Tracing the flow of venture capital across locations has been difficult mainly due to lack of data. The main published sources of venture capital data—such as the National Venture Capital Association  and PWC MoneyTree reports—typically summarize venture capital figures for states and broadly defined regions that tend to not match up with conventional definitions of cities and metros. But the National Venture Capital Association has made available more detailed data to us for a large number of cities and metro areas. While these data do not exactly conform to the metro definitions used by conventional government data sources like the U.S. Census Bureau and Bureau of Labor Statistics, my Martin Prosperity Institute team was able to approximately match it to our economic and demographic data for more than 100 metros. The data, which cover 2012, include figures on the number of venture capital deals or investments and the dollar value of these investments by metro area.

The maps above by the MPI’s Zara Matheson chart the geography of venture capital across the United States, tracing the location of venture capital deals (above) and of the dollar value of venture investment (below). Several key trends jump out from these maps.

First and foremost, venture capital is more distributed than it was in the late 1980s when Kenney and I conducted our original studies. While Silicon Valley remains a leading center for venture investment, it appears less dominant than it once was. Within the Bay Area itself, the San Francisco area has in fact overtaken it as the nation’s leading center for venture capital. In addition, a number of other metros across the United States, including New York City, Washington, D.C., Philadelphia, and Boston in the Northeast are significant centers for venture capital investment, as are Los Angeles and San Diego in Southern California, and Seattle, Austin, and Chicago.
The table below provides more detail on the top 20 metros for venture capital investment, showing how they stack up on total deals, companies, and the dollar value of investment.
Top 20 Locations for Venture Capital Investment

InvestmentsDeals
RankMetropolitan Area
(listed by core city)
Dollars
(Millions)
Share of TotalNumberShare of Total
1San Francisco-Oakland, CA$6,89625.6%74419.7%
2San Jose-Sunnyvale, CA$3,98514.8%41511.0%
3Boston, MA$3,10111.5%40810.8%
4New York, NY$2,2698.4%37910.0%
5Los Angeles, CA$1,6776.2%2326.1%
6San Diego, CA$1,1344.2%1032.7%
7Seattle, WA$8863.3%1123.0%
8Austin, TX$6262.3%872.3%
9Chicago, IL$5472.0%711.9%
10Washington, DC$4841.8%1173.1%
11Philadelphia, PA$3471.3%1052.8%
12Denver, CO$2641.0%531.4%
13Atlanta, GA$2621.0%531.4%
14Boulder, CO$2561.0%401.1%
15Minneapolis-St. Paul, MN$2560.9%290.8%
16Santa Barbara, CA$2510.9%140.4%
17Phoenix, AZ$2140.8%150.4%
18Raleigh-Cary, NC$1840.7%280.7%
19Pittsburgh, PA$1670.6%762.0%
20Provo-Orem, UT$1620.6%140.4%
Greater San Francisco, including Oakland, tops the list with nearly $7 billion dollars in venture capital investment in 2012, or one in four of all of venture investments, compared to $4 billion or 15 percent, for San Jose, the Silicon Valley. Together, these two Bay Area centers account for more than $10 billion in venture investment, roughly 40 percent of all dollars invested, along with 30 percent of all venture capital deals.
The Bos-Wash corridor is another major center for venture investment. Greater Boston is next with just over $3 billion in venture capital investment (11.5 percent) followed by New York with $2.3 billion (8.4 percent). Washington, D.C. is 10th with nearly $500 million, and Philadelphia 11th with roughly $350 million (1.3 percent). Together, the metros that make up the Bos-Wash corridor account for $6.2 billion in venture capital investment—23 percent of the total.
Southern California is also a significant attractor of venture capital investment. L.A. ranks fifth overall with $1.7 billion in venture investment (6.2 percent of the total), San Diego sixth with $1.1 billion (4.2 percent), and Santa Barbara 16th with roughly $250 million (slightly less than one percent). Together the Southern California area accounts for $3 billion in venture investment, about 11 percent of the total.
Other leading venture capital centers include: Seattle ($886 million), Austin ($626 million), Chicago ($547 million), Denver ($264 million) and nearby Boulder ($256 million), Atlanta ($262 million), Minneapolis-St. Paul ($256 million), Phoenix ($214 million), Raleigh-Cary ($184 million), Pittsburgh ($167 million), and Provo-Orem ($162 million).
Eight additional metros account for more than $100 million in venture capital investment: Salt Lake City, Cleveland, Houston, Detroit, Baltimore, Dallas, Portland, and Santa Rosa.
Overall, the Bay Area remains the leading center of venture capital investment by far. But San Francisco now attracts more venture investment than the Silicon Valley proper. Boston ranks third, but New York is close behind. This supports the contention of a more general urban shift venture capital back toward urban centers.
Future posts will look even more closely at this shift. Next up, I will chart the determinants of venture capital investment across metros. I’ll then turn to the micro-geography of venture capital investment within U.S. metros using even more fine-grained data made available to us by the National Venture Capital Association and Dow Jones. These data cover telephone area codes and zip codes. Using these data, I’ll look in even greater detail at the pattern of urban versus suburban venture capital across America’s metro regions.
Richard Florida is Co-Founder and Editor at Large at The Atlantic Cities.
Read More:http://qz.com/94939/san-francisco-not-silicon-valley-is-the-hub-for-us-venture-capital/

Sunday, 16 June 2013

Make Money On Internet

Unless you're a freegan and have found a way to live entirely off the grid, you probably need some sort of steady income in order to survive. The traditional way to earn money, of course, is by having a job. You work for a company or start your own, and the work you do earns you money, which you spend on things like a mortgage, rent, food, clothing, utilities and entertainment.
Most people typically work from their company's central location, a physical space where everyone from that organization gathers to exchange ideas and organize their efforts.
But a few lucky souls have found ways to make money within the comfort of their own home. With the Internet, an ever-changing arena for businesses, some people looking to earn money are finding ways to do so. Some forms are best for part-time endeavors for those looking to make a little extra money on the side, while others can lead to full-time jobs and Internet success stories.
We've put together a list of our top 10 ways to make money on the Internet, in no particular order. On the next page, we'll start with an old favorite.

Spoken-Word Artist Rives on the Internet
Spoken-Word Artist Rives on the Internet
Watch this video from TED (www.ted.com) featuring three minutes of fast-paced, whip-smart wordsmithing from spoken-word artist Rives, who has a few unconventional ideas about how the Internet should be run.
TED Conferences
Unless you're a freegan and have found a way to live entirely off the grid, you probably need some sort of steady income in order to survive. The traditional way to earn money, of course, is by having a job. You work for a company or start your own, and the work you do earns you money, which you spend on things like a mortgage, rent, food, clothing, utilities and entertainment.
Most people typically work from their company's central location, a physical space where everyone from that organization gathers to exchange ideas and organize their efforts.
But a few lucky souls have found ways to make money within the comfort of their own home. With the Internet, an ever-changing arena for businesses, some people looking to earn money are finding ways to do so. Some forms are best for part-time endeavors for those looking to make a little extra money on the side, while others can lead to full-time jobs and Internet success stories.
We've put together a list of our top 10 ways to make money on the Internet, in no particular order. On the next page, we'll start with an old favorite.
Selling stuff that you don't need but others are willing to buy is a popular way to make money over the Web.
Sean Gallup/Getty Images
Most people today are familiar with the concept: You have things you don't necessarily need but others are willing to buy, and you can auction off the items on eBay or other online auction sites. Simply gather your goods, create a seller's profile and start selling.
It sounds simple, but it takes some practice to sell successfully. Creating persuasive and legitimate product pages for the goods you're selling will help get buyers interested. It's also important to set reasonable minimum bids to ensure that people will buy. And remember to deliver the kind of customer service that will garner positive feedback ratings and to communicate with buyers to let them know you're reliable. The more positive feedback you receive, the more people will be willing to do business with you. And that, of course, means more money.
 Blogging


If you have a particular passion for something, whether it's a hobby or an obsession, and you have something to say about it, blogging could be a profitable way to pour out your endless stream of thought. The key here, as with many other services on the Internet, is in selling advertising.After starting up a personal blog, many writers sign up for ad services like Google AdSense, which post those familiar sponsored links you often see at the top and on the sides of Web sites. The more times your blog readers click on those ads, the more money you'll make through the ad service. This works fine if you're a casual blogger, and you may make some extra spending money. But if the blog is consistently interesting, well-written and really takes off, you may be approached by companies who want to reach your fan base with graphical advertising around your blog. Some of the more successful blogs, like I Can Has Cheezburger? and Boing Boing, have become pop-culture phenomena, and their creators have been able to quit their day jobs and blog full time because of the money they make from advertisers.

Domain Name Flipping
 Based on luck, strategy and business savvy, domain name flipping can be one of the more lucrative ways to earn a living online. The term comes from the real estate trick that involves buying old, undervalued houses, fixing them up to make them more attractive and modern-looking and selling them for a much higher prices.
In this case, the old and outdated place is not a house, but rather a domain name -- the main address for a Web page. With a little bit of searching, dedicated domain flippers locate unused, poorly maintained Web sites that have generic and recognizable identifiers and buy them. They usually pay a few hundred or even a few thousand dollars, but after extensive updates that make the site more business- and user-friendly, the domain name can fetch several times more than it was originally worth. The domain bird-cage.com, for instance, was bought for a mere $1,800 in 2005 -- after a redesign two years later, the site was sold for $173,000 to a bird cage vendor [source: Bhattarai].

Search engine optimization Reviewing
Search engine optimization (SEO) is a growing area for Internet-based employment. SEO is a means of improving the results from a search engine so that they represent the closest matches and most reliable resources for the user's desired results.
As a contract SEO reviewer, working through a company like Leapforce, you can aid in this optimization. You start each evaluation task by judging a user's intent based on the key word combinations provided and your own knowledge of popular culture in the user's locale. Then, you use a set of given guidelines to evaluate how particular search results match that user's intent.
SEO reviewing can offer a steady income from home, but there are some risks. First, an SEO reviewer has to run reliable antivirus software and have a good, strong defense against malware. That's because viewing certain Web sites during evaluation tasks could introduce malware to the computer. Second, an SEO reviewer must be willing to view potentially offensive material, such as pornography. As a reviewer, you may be asked to check whether a given site contains malware or pornography, so you're putting your computer at risk as part of the job description.
To Read More Please Click: http://www.howstuffworks.com/how-to-tech/5-ways-to-make-money-on-internet.htm

Mr Blair is said to be worth between £60million and £80million

Blair's dirty money: As his tentacles reach Mongolia, how the ex-PM is making millions from some of the world's most evil regimes

  • Tony Blair is to advise Mongolian leaders on 'good governance'
  • The former Prime Minister won't say how much he is earning from the deal
  • Mr Blair is said to be worth between £60million and £80million
By Paul Scott
|

Dirty money: Mr Blair has just struck up a deal with Mongolia to give leaders advice on 'good governance'
Dirty money: Mr Blair has just struck up a deal with Mongolia to give leaders advice on 'good governance'
With every passing month, Tony Blair looks more and more like a deposed emperor who has systematically set up his own government in exile.
How else should we view the inexorable rise of his shadowy and quasi-political network of businesses, whose tentacles stretch from his smart offices next to the American Embassy in London into every corner of the globe?
This week, it was revealed the former Prime Minister has added a new country, Mongolia, to his burgeoning portfolio of business interests.
He has signed a contract to advise the Central Asian country’s leaders on ‘good governance’ through his money-making Government Advisory Practice.
And what does Mongolia have in common with most of the places Mr Blair does his business deals?
The answer is: pots of money. The once dirt-poor nation is about to strike it rich, thanks to vast copper and gold mines in the Gobi desert.
Blair won’t say how much he is earning from the tie-up — and his large team of spin doctors routinely deny almost any figures relating to his myriad international deals — but we can be sure it’ll run into millions.
How else could he bankroll 200 employees — a figure he’s set his sights on growing to 500 over the coming years — in his expanding network of offices around the world?
At the centre of this nexus of money and power is 60-year-old Blair himself, who is guaranteed a warm welcome — befitting an international statesman of the highest rank — when he is feted by some of the world’s most dirty and corrupt tin-pot leaders.
 
And political contacts in high places only help grease the wheels of his various opaque business ventures, which have propelled the ex-Labour leader into the ranks of the super-rich.
Depending on whom you believe, he is now worth £60 million to £80 million.
Sources close to Blair told me this week that the model for his growing organisation is the equally secretive U.S. global management consultancy McKinsey.
World traveller: Where the former Prime Minister is making money all over the world
World traveller: Where the former Prime Minister is making money all over the world
The vast company, which advises world governments and business leaders, refuses to name the people it does business with, or discuss its multi-billion-pound deals.
Sure enough, staff lists of the ex-PM’s Africa Governance Initiative (AGI) — the charity he set up in 2008 — as well as Tony Blair Associates, the umbrella operation for his Government Advisory Practice (GAP), read like a Who’s Who of former McKinsey executives.
They include German-born Stephan Kriesel, the GAP head; Joe Capp, who runs Blair’s South American organisation; and Nnaemeka Okafor, who is the AGI’s head in Nigeria.
Blair, who has links to McKinsey going back to his time in office, has also copied the U.S. firm’s policy of hiring super-bright young graduates from Oxbridge, Harvard, Princeton and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, instead of relying on experienced business managers.
Increasingly, Blair’s UK headquarters — in a Georgian townhouse in London’s Grosvenor Square, for which he pays £550,000-a-year rent — resemble the seat of power of a president or prime minister. (On the mantelpiece in his cream-coloured office are pictures of him with elder statesmen such as Nelson Mandela.)
Wealthy: With millions flowing in, Blair has set up a byzantine network of inter-related companies to funnel his vast earnings
Wealthy: With millions flowing in, Blair has set up a byzantine network of inter-related companies to funnel his vast earnings
But the difference is that as well as seeking power and influence, Blair is also after big money. He has installed his own ‘trading floor’ — complete with Wall Street-like computer screens — overseen by David Lyon, a former MD at Barclays Capital.
A team of staff is licensed by the Financial Services Authority so they have the power to advise clients and invest money on their behalf from this room, using the Reuters 3000 Xtra electronic trading platform.
With millions flowing in, Blair has set up a byzantine network of inter-related companies to funnel his vast earnings.
The effect is that his financial affairs are largely cloaked in a web of secrecy.
What we do know is that his Government Advisory Practice is administered through a company called Windrush Ventures.
Latest accounts show it had an income of £16 million and made profits of £3.6 million.
What we can be certain of is that those figures are just the tip of the iceberg.
For his part, Blair insists that, despite his globe-trotting, he is a UK taxpayer and his companies are registered here for tax purposes.
So just how far do the tentacles of Blair Inc reach around the world? And how ethical are the regimes that are enriching the former Labour leader  to such an extraordinary degree?

Friday, 14 June 2013

Directory of Blog Advertising Opportunities Earn Money from Your Blog By Susan Gunelius

Following is a list of companies that provide advertising opportunities for bloggers to generate an income from their blogs. These are in alphabetical order.
This directory is meant to give a comprehensive list of advertising opportunities for bloggers, but is not intended to be an endorsement by About Web Logs. Do your research to make sure a new advertising or blog monetization opportunity is right for you and your goals for your blog before you commit to anything.

Adgenta
AdKnowledge
AVN Ads
Bidvertiser
Blog Ads
BlogHer Ads
BrightAds from Kanoodle
Casale Media
Chitika's eMiniMalls
Clicksor
CrispAds
DoubleClick
Fastclick
Google AdSense
Industry Brains
IntelliTXT
Kontera
Peak Click
Pheedo
RevenuePilot
Text Link Ads
Text Link Brokers
Tribal Fusion
Value Click
YesAdvertising

Affiliate Advertising
Amazon Associates
eBay Affiliates
All Posters Affiliates
Commission Junction
Associate Programs
Affiliates Directory
Refer-It

Read More: http://weblogs.about.com/od/monetizingablog/qt/AdvertisingDir.htm

5 Links To Make Money As A Blogger

Help You Make Money Blogging

Learn how to increase your earning potential as a blogger with tips, tricks and ideas to monetize your blog and turn your blog into a money-maker. From affiliate ads and product reviews to ebooks and donations, you'll learn the many ways you can monetize your blog.