Jason Calacanis Quotes
Top 91 wise famous quotes and sayings by Jason Calacanis
Jason Calacanis Famous Quotes & Sayings
Discover top inspirational quotes from Jason Calacanis on Wise Famous Quotes.
Journalists have misquoted people for so long - and quoted them out of context that for many people like to have their words on record.
Back in the '90s, folks were not sure if they could trust the Web, and frankly, a lot of the services back then didn't provide massive value.
You have to get in the limelight based on what you do, how creative you are, and not how much money you make.
There is no luck, you work hard and study things intently. If you do that for long and hard enough you're successful.
I like to get attention for the things I think are important. And I think it is important that entrepreneurs - especially young ones - not be abused.
The reason I bought the Tesla was to help fund the Model S - and because I like things that are fast, sexy and high-tech.
I get a lot of emails from entrepreneurs. The best ones are short, to the point and include some question and/or the product
Social media, like blogs, are truth-seeking technologies. In fact, the Internet itself is the greatest truth-generating device ever created.
Very, very few podcasts have made it to scale, and to me, that says this business will never be big.
My first company produced 'Silicon Alley Reporter' magazine, where I held the dual titles of CEO and Editor.
When I was coming up as an entrepreneur, I had to fight for everything I got, and there was no clear roadmap of how to be successful.
Imagine being 30 years old, thinking you were a media titan, and now you are labeled a 'scam artist.'
Even if you're a relatively small player in search, that can still mean a company that's worth several billion dollars.
Commercial real estate is really a black box: its super opaque, and it's hard to get the information.
YouTube has made a lot of changes to support time on site - a statistic they care about. But subscriber support is lacking.
Search folks don't understand editorial. I'm not afraid of editorial costs, just like machine-search folks are not afraid of computer servers.
The blogosphere is real, and it can be really harsh on fakes ... so, if you're a phoney, you're going to get your bell rung.
For three or four decades, we've been sitting here in front of this TV consuming a one-way medium that we had no control over.
The down market favours the small two-, three-, four-person company, not the huge company with 100 people losing half a million dollars a month.
I've become addicted to playing poker because you're constantly faced with confusion, and winning is trying to make sense out of nonsense.
If folks focus in on a niche and own it, there is a good chance they could make half a living from blogging.
If I said I was going to make a newsletter that made $2-$3 million a year, no one would question me. If I say, 'It's a blog,' everyone questions me.
The only way to make podcasting a real big business would be if you could somehow get the top seven podcasters to team up and make a mega-network.
When it comes to individual bloggers, they have many choices now that include blogging for a network or going solo.
Until you use the iPad for a couple of weeks, you can't appreciate it. But it quickly becomes your primary consumption device.
I only take causes or write about things that I am passionate about, and I do it with a certain flair and a sort of wink and a nod.
Excellence is everything today, and most people aren't excellent. If you're not excellent - like truly excellent at what you do - you're toast.
Today you can start a blog, build an audience, and give the advertising slots to AdBrite or Google AdSense.
It turns out a human being in two, three or four hours can build a search result that's much better than Google, Yahoo or Ask.
Jon Miller would be amazing for Yahoo because he is extremely good at building display advertising businesses and buying young startups.
If you are delusional, sometimes the reality catches up with your delusion, and then all of a sudden you are a genius.
I think you need to have a very strong angel community that is committed to mentoring up-and-coming entrepreneurs.
I'm not an investor in Meerkat, sadly, or, Periscope - I missed both of those - however, I do have a lot of inside information.
The companies that won't do well will be the me-too companies: the fifth, sixth, seventh version of Twitter, etc.
America might be a dying empire, but it's not going to die in our lifetime - and it doesn't have to die at all.
If you've got a good job, you should bust your butt to make your company as successful and profitable as possible.