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재능넷 2014-05-03 15:13:11
원문 기사 : http://www.gukjenews.com/news/articleView.html?idxno=84587 (서울=국제뉴스) 김학영 기자 = 현대의 사람들은 다양한 재능을 가지고 있다. 사진, 프로그래밍, 악기연주 등 단순한 취미를 넘어 전문가 수준의 능력을 발휘하고 있다. 하지만 기존엔 개인들이 재능을 활용하여 돈을 벌기가 수월하지 않았다. 이에 다양한 재능을 사고 팔 수 있는 재능마켓이 급부상을 하고 있다. 이 재능마켓 시장에 재능판매 수...
(서울=국제뉴스) 김학영 기자 = 현대의 사람들은 다양한 재능을 가지고 있다. 사진, 프로그래밍, 악기연주 등 단순한 취미를 넘어 전문가 수준의 능력을 발휘하고 있다. 하지만 기존엔 개인들이 재능을 활용하여 돈을 벌기가 수월하지 않았다. 이에 다양한 재능을 사고 팔 수 있는 재능마켓이 급부상을 하고 있다. 이 재능마켓 시장에 재능판매 수수료10%의 최저가를 선언해 화제를 모으고 있는 젊은 사업가가 있다. 재능넷의 강정수 대표가 그 주인공이다. 강 대표는 고등학교를 다닐 때부터 IT사업을 시작해 크고 작은 다양한 IT사업 이력을 가지고 있다. 강대표의 이색적인 사업이력은 '미스터강' 이라고 포털사이트에 검색하면 바로 확인이 가능하다. 그의 대표적인 사업으로는 일당유머, 온걸, 던파닷컴(던아모), 온걸, 주닥 등의 사업이 있으며, 이중에서 재능넷과 같은 유형의 오픈마켓 사업만 2번을 했었다. 온걸은 국내최초 여성의류 전문 오픈마켓의 사업이었으며, 주닥은 국내최초 주식종목을 거래하는 신개념 플랫폼 오픈마켓 사업이었다. 그리고 인천기능경기대회 웹디자인 심사위원으로도 활동하고 있다. 이번에 강대표가 사업화하는 ‘재능넷’도 이러한 플랫폼의 오픈마켓 신사업인데 재능넷의 특징은 사람과의 ‘재능’을 거래하는 재능형 오픈마켓 신사업이다. 재능 마켓은 이미 해외에서도 큰 거래 시장을 형성하고 빠른 속도로 커져가고 있다. 이스라엘의 Fiverr(파이버)는 현재 연거래금액이 몇천억원이상의 규모로 커졌다고 한다. 강대표는 앞으로의 미래에는 직장의 개념이 없어지고 이러한 재능형 거래로 새로운 종류의 직업이 생겨 날것이라고 예견했다. 이렇게 시대의 변화를 정확히 읽을 줄 아는 강 대표는 다양한 재능을 가지고 있지만 활용할 방법을 모르는 재능인 들을 위해 재능넷을 오픈했다. 돈이 오가는 사이트다 보니 보안에 중점을 두고 가장 안전한 거래 시스템인 이니시스를 도입했다. 현재 여러 가지 재능마켓들이 존재하지만 이니시스 결제를 이용한 사이트는 재능넷이 유일하다. 또한 재능을 판매하는 사람들이 부담을 줄일 수 있도록 판매 수수료도 업계 최저인 10%로 책정했다. 그 동안 사업을 하며 쌓아둔 노하우를 활용하여 운영의 혁신을 이뤘기에 가능한 수수료이다. 재능넷은 디자인/생활서비스/음악ㆍ영상/문서/마케팅/컴퓨터ㆍ프로그래밍/비즈니스 카테고리에 관련된 다양한 재능인 들이 활동을 하고 있다. 특별한 재능을 필요로 하는 소비자는 재능넷에서 자신이 원하는 재능인을 찾을 수 있고 결제를 한다. 재능 판매자는 소비자가 원하는 일을 해주고 서로간의 거래가 완료가 되면 판매자에게 입금이 되는 방식이다. 어떻게 보면 기존의 오픈마켓과 비슷한 거래방식이지만 무형자산을 판매하는 것이기 때문에 수정요청, 재수정요청 등 기존 오픈마켓에 없는 기능들이 추가되었다. "과거 혼자서 즐겼던 취미가 지금은 이익을 창출하는 자산이 되는 세상입니다."라며 "어떤 작은 재능도 누구에게는 유용하게 사용될 수 있는 만큼 우리나라 국민 모두가 CEO가 되는 재능넷으로 키우고 싶습니다"고 강 대표는 포부를 밝혔다. 창조경제는 거시적이고 멀리서 찾는 것이 아니다. 자신의 능력을 이용해서 이익을 창출하고 시장을 형성하는 것. 바로 그것이 박근혜 대통령이 말하는 창조경제일 것이다. |
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점핑너츠 2014-05-03 15:02:07
원문기사 : http://techcrunch.com/2014/04/30/finishing-its-third-batch-koreas-kstartup-accelerator-sees-great-hope-for-seouls-tech-ecosystem/?ncid=rss KStartup, a Seoul-based non-profit accelerator started by David Lee and KJ Byeon and operated by both of them along with Yoonjin Chang, is designed to not just assist startups, but to build a wider ecosystem. “It’s a harder jo...
KStartup, a Seoul-based non-profit accelerator started by David Lee and KJ Byeon and operated by both of them along with Yoonjin Chang, is designed to not just assist startups, but to build a wider ecosystem. “It’s a harder job here versus a lot of the Valley accelerators,” says Lee, who currently serves as partner on the team. “There is a lot that is taken for granted in the Valley, because everyone there is in the same industry.”
The team is focused on Korean entrepreneurs, but they have had several international founders, including one who previously graduated from YC.
The differences noticed by international investors in Korea can range from small nitpicks to fundamentally divergent approaches to business. Korean entrepreneurs often use localized English vocabulary, such as SNS instead of social network or IR instead of fundraising, that can result in confusion for global investors. More substantively, Korean startups are often pushed by advisers to emphasize their intellectual property and early revenue possibilities, approaches that are antithetical to the typical investment philosophy of Silicon Valley’s Sand Hill Road.
To ready founders for the world of entrepreneurship, the accelerator organizes a series of bootcamps led by leaders from Silicon Valley and New York to teach skills like fundraising, user interface design and customer acquisition – areas that are lacking in the nascent local market. These mentors stay in residence for a focused three days of activities, and since the inception of the program, some 33 mentors have stopped by KStartup to teach their skills.
For KStartup’s third demo day, held yesterday at the D.Camp co-working building, the team focused on the fundamentals of great startup pitches, something Lee learned through his involvement with Y Combinator. The team offered advice on what slides to include and how much text to include (always less!) and also offered English advice for their founders, some of whom had never presented before in the language. The resulting demo day was attended by some 200 people, about double from last year’s total.
Following the program, the team continues to push their startups to focus on product, and help them fundraise as well. Of the 20 startups that have completed the first two batches, 9 have raised follow-on funding from local and international investors. One example is Korbit, which raised $400,000 from Silicon Valley investors as the first bitcoin exchange in the Korean market.
Lee emphasizes that patience is a key element of working in an early ecosystem. “It’s more like iron mining versus panning for gold, it’s about unlocking the big stones than just finding the flecks.”
Below is a short description of the 10 companies who presented at KStartup’s demo day.
Chinchin
Chinchin is a social club startup app that is designed to create a better way to meet new people than Facebook’s current product offerings. Social networks allow you to keep up with your current friends, and thus, it is hard to meet new people via existing social networks. Online dating services offer options for building romantic relationships, but Chinchin is designed to allow you to build new relationships through your mutual friends without the risk of rejection. They currently have 2,600+ beta users across their iPhone and Android, and the company highlights that their 90 day retention is around 30%.
REH – Reality Expands Here
REH is a game studio building games around the concept of “always on” and “always connected” mobile devices. Their game tracks your location and detects collisions between your “force field” and those of other users of the game. When the collisions take place, a battlefield engine takes over where you compete to expand your borders to cover the physical location. Thus, the game takes place both in the physical world and in an online fantasy world. The company hopes to use in-game ads as a business model.
Jumping Nuts
Kakao Story is a popular app among Korean users, but it lacks certain key features desired by teenagers who prefer writing long stories as small comments, as well as blogging around webtoons. Jumping Nuts is an app designed to provide a new social experience for teens around these sorts of social modes, and the app also provides granular controls over followers to ensure that users can decide who sees their content. Since their launch seven weeks ago, they have had about 22,000 unique visitors.
ModacTV
ModacTV is a new app that allows you to see your friends’ reactions while they watch videos. As users watch videos, they can write comments that appear as thought bubbles, which are then shared with their friends. The goal is to create a communicative video service that can be more engaging than current offerings from YouTube and Vine. Like many social services in Asia, the company hopes to monetize through the selling of emotive stickers, which can be placed over the video to express a wider range of reactions than mere text.
MyDrives
MyDrives bills itself as a storage consolidation service, which makes it easier to find files across different cloud providers like Dropbox and Google Drive, as well as local storage. After installing the software, MyDrives indexes all sources of files and creates a master directory. When it comes to sharing the files, MyDrives can create an easy set of links no matter how the file is saved to quickly get your file to other users. It hopes to develop a premium service such as smart backups and unlimited sharing links. The app is currently in beta testing and is expected to be released soon.
Linky
Linky is a business messenger so that you can easily listen to feedback from customers and build relationships. Linky needs to be downloaded by the owner of a store, but customers only need to navigate to a special URL to provide feedback, lowering the friction for customers to be social with business owners. Owners can chat with their customers, offer discounts and free goods, and accept requests. Locally, the app competes with Kakao Plus accounts, which are priced out of range for most small businesses at $20,000. Linky is $25 per month for business owners.
eTALK – Everybody Talk to Me
eTALK allows you to talk with celebrities by interacting with pre-recorded videos of them online, making it feel like you are actually talking to the celebrity (obviously, it requires a bit of suspension of disbelief). Celebrity videos are taken from soap operas, movies, and other sources of content, which the company has licensed from several providers. Long-term, the founders hope to expand the software beyond merely entertainment, to also include language learning and general social videos.
NetStory
NetStory is a game studio that focuses on a mobile shooting RPG series called Demon & Demon. They have developed a new battle system that can be best best described as a continuous shooting game designed for mobile devices, while also focusing on classic RPG elements like a main storyline, characters, and inventory of items. They are freemium with an in-app purchase model for unique items, and “attractive characters.” Their second game is called Tower of Doom, which is an action-based MMORPG. The founders have extensive experience at several of Korea’s top game studios, such as Nexon.
KBeat
KBeat is designed for K-Pop fans to share their excitement of the popular music genre by uploading their own content. Unlike competitors like Allkpop and Soompi, two leading K-Pop sites that have a professional staff of writers and content producers, KBeat is designed to focus exclusively on fans expressing their own feelings about music. They are developing a subscription box targeting K-Pop fans that provide gifts and other paraphernalia.
Easiaid – Media Mining
The goal of this video advertising platform is to move from pre-playing video ads to in-video advertising that allows viewers to purchase products they see. Their software “mines” videos for products and locations, and connects users to online stores. One example is a user watching a music video, and being connected to the artist’s product page or concert schedule where the user can buy tickets. The company takes a small scrape of the transaction of any purchases made.
리올플레이 2014-05-02 19:57:13
◇손주바보(sonjoo)/키위플/무료/안드로이드가족간의 정을 북돋아 주는 편리하고 센스 있는 가족사진 공유 애플리케이션이 출시됐다.스마트폰 사용에 익숙치 않은 부모님으로 하여금, 별다른 조작 없이 잠금화면에서 바로 귀여운 손주들의 사진을 확인할 수 있는 서비스를 제공한다. 그동안 아이 사진 공유를 위해 다른 복잡한 앱을 사용하고 계셨다면, 이번 기회에 부모님 스마트폰에 간단히 활용할 수 있는 손주바보 ...
디엘토 2014-05-02 16:48:22
아톰런처 2.1.1 버전이 릴리즈 되었습니다.이번 업데이트의 키포인트는 지원언어를 기존 한국어, 영어, 일본어, 중국어에 추가로 인도네시아어, 프랑스어, 러시아어, 헝가리어로 확대하였습니다.아톰런처는 전세계 200여개국에서 서비스되며, 코어기능에 충실하면서 가볍고 빠른 런처를 선호하는 런처유저들을 중심으로 사용자 팬덤을 넓혀가고 있습니다. 이번 다국어 지원 중 일부는 전세계 아톰런처의 사용자들이 자발적으로 ...
빅베이신캐피탈, ‘전세계 아이들의 그림 그리기 SNS’ 예스튜디오에 투자
예스튜디오주식회사 2014-05-01 18:41:20