This video includes lyrics on the screen
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Dragonfly Fields Necklace- Shaped Beaded Multi-Strand Jewelry Design Tutorial - Duration: 12:24.So many times when we make a necklace we focus on the pendant, the part that's
front and center, and the chain or whatever is going around the sides and
back is an afterthought. Today I thought I would try to mix that up a little bit
and use the chain that's going around the sides as a design element pointing
towards the pendant. Hi there, Sandy here, welcome to another jewelry making video
at keepsakecrafts.net. So I had a fairly modest pendant for my necklace in mind
here, just this cute little dragonfly charm that came from Dollar Bead Box, but
what I wanted to do was make elements of the necklace that actually pointed to it,
so almost like an arrow, and the way I'm going to do that is by using a spacer on
each side. So here I have a couple of two-hole spacers, I apologize I don't know
where these came from, the idea I have, here let me move these out of the way
for a moment, is to string through these holes and you can see as you do that
these strands actually end up pointing right to the center of the necklace,
that's basically the design I have in mind, and of course we'll do some
interesting beads. These are kind of different these are 10 millimeter Czech
glass tabular squares in opaque turquoise with
travertine. So I'm kind of going for greens and bronzes today, so the idea is
just to have the beads decreasing in size, this is a pretty wide spacer you
could go narrower for a subtler effect. I thought it was an interesting way of
showcasing these tabular squares and just having some different shapes, and I
love the way the filigree on the spacers really goes well with my pendant. I
thought it would give the pendant a little bit more presence by dangling it
from a bead cone, and I think what I'm going to do are actually make some loops
of seed beads that will come out of the cone and then through the loop of the
dragonfly just to give it a little bit more interest. Some more travertine this
these are four millimeter Czech glass beads in turquoise brown travertine.
That goes well, and then for some contrast
these are Czech glass beads in Peridot. By the way if you are ever
interested in the materials and supplies that I use on a particular piece in a
video you should know that I always make a blog post to go with these videos and
you will always find a link to it up in the upper right of the video, there's a
little "i" that you can click on, and then there'll be a drop-down list of things
that I've linked to it. Those are called the cards, little cards that you can link
to different things, my blog post will always be on one of those or you can
find it down below in the description box, and that is accessed different ways
depending on the device you're on. So if you're on a laptop it's, I think you
click "Show more." if you're on a tablet or an iPhone there's a little tiny black
arrow down in the bottom right below the video and that will always lead you to
my blog post and at my blog post, like I said, I have links to products and more
information. This is the question you guys ask me all the time and I always
feel bad when it takes me a few days to get back to you with an answer because
you could have answered it yourself simply by going to the blog post. So what
I'm doing here is just taking a little time and laying out a pattern with these
beads, you could do it sort of random but I'm in the mood today for doing it
symmetrically and in a pattern. The longer your beads are from the spacer to
your piece the more narrowly or finely tapered your
line will be. So depending on how strong of a triangular shape you want there. And
then these are, just so you know, Turquoise Brown Travertine. That's kind
of why the colors all go together, just because of that Brown travertine that's
in there. I'm just laying out one side at a time. Of course I'll have to make sure
I have enough beads to do the pattern on the other side or I'll have to get
creative. I kind of like that I like the way those bronzy ones sort of pop out
when I do that. It's getting a little long, maybe there, and of course this is
subject to change as I'm stringing, it may look rather different
once I have the beads on so I may want to change it then. Since, let's see I'm
using three, six, nine, twelve, I need to make sure I have at least twelve of
these so I don't think I want to repeat this pattern up here because I won't
have enough beads. So many times my designs are driven by how many beads I
have, maybe it's not the way to do it but that's just the way it works out
sometimes and I think often in design any sort limitations help you to be more
creative really. Where you were going to do something a certain way by not being
able to you come up with a different solution which is often better and more
interesting than the way you were planning on doing it if you hadn't had
the limitation. I think I'm liking that. So the next thing I'm going to do is get
some bead stringing wire and put all this on there and get an idea of how
it's going to look. One thing as I was stringing I realized I've kinda needed
to figure out how I was gonna hang my pendant before I got the sides strung.
There's a couple of ways you could do it, you could just use a head pin and make
loops but, like I said, I wanted to do some seed beads, so what I've done here
is strung a little over an inch, about 16 seed beads, just do whatever works
proportionately to what you have. I have it centered pretty much on my bead
stringing wire and I've got about 18 inches plenty of bead stringing wire.
I've got some crimps here and what I wanted, what I want to do is put
the crimp over both wires, slide it down to the loop. I don't want it too tight
but just kind of snug it up to hold it in place then it won't be sliding around.
This is going to be hidden inside that bead cone but this will just hold
everything. So I'm not even using crimping pliers just chain nose pliers
to flatten it, give a tug. I was thinking of doing two loops of the seed beads but
they wouldn't fit through this, so you may have to consider that depending on
what you have for a pendant or a charm in the center. Here's something you can
do if you ever find yourself with a seed bead that's being difficult, it's not
always the best solution but you can actually just get a pair of pliers, hold
it over a trash, can turn your head away, and crunch, and actually just break it
out and get it out of your way. there we go,
that's better. These are glass beads so make sure that you do that in a safe way
you don't want little bits of glass flying into your eyes or somebody else's.
I tested this all out first just like that so that'll be my pendant.
I like that, that looks kind of interesting and just
a little bit different. Now for how to string the other strand: I have a thought,
let's see if this works. I've got one side of my pattern already strung so I
think what I'm going to do, let's see because I don't have room
through this unless I used really, really small seed beads and I don't feel like
going and choosing different seed beads I'm just going to slide that down
through the bead cone, through the loop that I made with the seed beads, and back
up through the cone, and I think that will... yeah, that will work. So I'm going to
go ahead and center my bead stringing wires and I'll finish stringing this one
side so we can see if we like the look of it. So I've gone ahead and strung one
half of the necklace and I'm pretty happy with this. Now that it's all strung
and they're coming together at the ends you can see what I meant by the longer
you make these legs the more tapered, so if they're short they're gonna be way
out and if they're longer then they'll be just more fine. Then there's the width
of your space so to keep in mind. So to finish these: on this end I just threw a
bead on here. The next thing I'm going to do is add a crimp over both wires y,ou
could just skip the bead and go right to the crimp. I love my One-Step Crimper. Don't
forget like I said check out the link in the upper right or in the description
box to go to my blog post where I'll have links to the tools and things that I
love to use. Make sure that's secure, once I'm
certain that's not going anywhere I'm going to trim off one of these wires so
I guess I actually cut this way too long, but that's okay, I'd rather have it
too long than too short. I'm just gonna pick up my crimp cover with my
crimping pliers. Not too long ago I did a review of a product it was a crimp cover
closer. Honestly I just find them annoying and I've kind of gone back to
just using my crimping pliers to add crimp covers, just my personal take on it.
I just found them really irritating to use. So what we've done here is gotten
this down to one strand of wire. I think I'm going to put a bead in between the
crimp covers instead of having two stacked on top of each other, then
another crimp and this will be to finish the necklace. I've got some wire
protectors here, you can skip these, they aren't a hundred percent necessary but they
are nice, they're just a nice way of finishing your jewelry. If you want to
learn more about wire protectors and why I like to use them and how to use them I
made a video and that'll be linked in those cards in the upper-right that I
was telling you about. So you go through one channel of that little
horseshoe shape, there's a channel around the outside the rounded part and the
wire just fits right in there, go through the other. If your findings
are closed you want to add them now. I just have a bit of chain that's going
around the back of the necklace, bring your wire back through that crimp and
pull it up snug, go ahead and flatten that crimp and add a crimp cover as
before.
Always test to make sure it's secure before you trim that wire. There that's a nice
finish having the bead in between two crimp covers just looks more like a more
purposeful design. When you get down to this end you may have to do some... there's a
little bit of slack in here because of the way these are looped, you may have to
do a little fiddling and adjusting and repeat on the other side and you're done.
So here's another look at the project that we made. I hope you found this video
helpful. If you would like to get bonus tutorials that I don't share on my You
Tube channel you might check out my Patreon page where you can get extras
for yourself. Thanks so much for watching, happy creating,
bye bye.
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ติว TOEIC - Tenses The Series EP.1 (เมื่อ Tenses เป็นเรื่องง่ายมากกก) - Duration: 4:10.-------------------------------------------
AP Police Recruitment Update 2018 || 3068 Vacancies In AP | Omfiut Tech And Jobs - Duration: 1:50.AP Police Recruitment Update 2018
3068 Vacancies In AP
Omfiut Tech And Jobs
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WrestleMania 34 Kickoff Matches REVEALED! BIG WWE RETURN Announced! | WrestleTalk News Apr. 2018 - Duration: 3:58.Hello and welcome to the WrestleTalk News, I am Luke Owen.
Headline: WrestleMania 34 Kick Off Matches Revealed!
WrestleMania 34 is this coming Sunday and we here at WrestleTalk are gearing up for
it!
We've got a bonus WrestleRamble today going over the go-home show of Raw, and we've
got another one tomorrow for Smackdown Live.
Oli and I will be doing our normal reviews and news episodes, and we'll have bonus
WrestleRambles giving our predictions for both NXT Takeover: New Orleans and WrestleMania.
And it's a good job we weren't planning on predicting which matches will be on the
pre-show, as WWE would have spoiled our fun.
It was revealed on Monday Night Raw and Twitter that Cedrick Alexander vs. Mustafa Ali for
Vacant's Cruiserweight Championship, and both battle royals will be on the 2-hour pre-show
for WrestleMania 34.
Alexander vs. Ali is the culmination of 205 Live's tournament to crown a new champion
and could well be a show-stealer if given time.
The WrestleMania Women's Battle Royal - which once had the controversial name of The Fabulous
Moolah Memorial Battle Royal - sees every other female member of the WWE roster not
involved in either title match vye to win a trophy that looks like bikini bottoms.
It will be interesting to see if WWE get any negative feedback to putting this so-called
historic match on the kick off show, as the Smackdown Live Women's Championship match
was bumped onto the main card last year after fans complained about it being on the pre-show.
The Andre the Giant Memorial Battle Royal sees names like Matt Hardy, Breezango, The
Revival, Dolph Ziggler and Baron Corbin - and will likely have a couple of surprise names
thrown in there like the rumoured to be returning Big Cass.
And going by the house shows since Ultimate Deletion, we could also see a return of Bray
Wyatt as well.
And someone else who had been rumoured to be returning could also enter himself into
the match.
Headline: Big Show WWE Return Confirmed!
WWE kicked off WrestleMania week with Big Show ringing the opening bell at the New York
Stock Exchange [9], but more interestingly came from a sit down interview Show did after
the bell was rung - revealing that he had signed a new deal with WWE and would be returning
soon.
"The rumours of me retiring are false.
I re-signed in January.
A multi-year deal.
For those who wanted me to retire, too bad, so sad, I'm still here."
The rumours of Big Show retiring came last year after his cage match loss to Braun Strowman,
which led to Show taking some off to have hip surgery.
As we mentioned in our WrestleMania 34 rumours video over the weekend, Show had told UPI
that he would be back in a WWE ring by WrestleMania and there had been rumours he could be in
the battle royal on the kick off show.
But even if Show isn't in the Andre the Giant Memorial Battle Royal or Braun's tag
team partner - he's got something else to do over Mania weekend.
Headline: Big Show To Induct Mark Henry Into WWE Hall Of Fame
WWE revealed via Twitter than Mark Henry's Hall of Pain rival The Big Show will induct
him into the WWE Hall of Fame 2018 [12] - which Big Show will apparently do naked (well I'll
be darned).
Henry and Show have a well documented real life friendship outside of WWE, and it's
fitting that Henry's rival during the best run of his WWE career is inducting him.
But just wait a second there folks, we're not done with Big Show announcements just
yet!
Headline: Big Show In Greatest Royal Rumble!
Earlier this year WWE announced they would be holding the Greatest Royal Rumble in Saudi
Arabia on April 27th.
The show will see seven title defenses, a match between John Cena and Triple H, and
the first-ever 50-man over the top rope Royal Rumble.
And WWE's Twitter machine announced some of the entrants into that Royal Rumble - including
Bray Wyatt, Kane, Braun Strowman, Smackdown Live General Manager Daniel Bryan and the
returning Big Show.
Now before anyone questions whether this means Braun isn't winning the tag team championships
at WrestleMania, just remember that the card is always subject to change.
WrestleMania 34 is this coming Sunday and we broke down 10 - that's right - 10 of
the biggest rumours, surprises and potential returns!
Click the video on screen right now for more awesome wrestling content, and read Matt Tennant's
review of New Japan's Sakura Genisis over at WrestleTalk.com.
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YAMAHA R1M R1 vs S1000RR BMW 😈 SUPERBIKE STREET RACES 🏁 - Duration: 10:07.Just saw two R1 s and a Ducati.
Time to merk it.
There's the Ducati.
Time to slice him up.
Now where are those R1 s at.
Setting up for the perfect...
Alright R1.
Too much brake buddy.
You going all the way down?
oh yeah.
Sliced them up.
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How to Paint a Butterfly Fish With Oil Paints - Narrated - Duration: 5:19.Hello my friends and welcome to another Tuesday of tutorial!
I am Leonardo Pereznieto and today we will make an oil painting
of a fish.
We begin by sketching the overall general shape. I am doing this
with a small brush
and blue paint.
But not very much paint.
The brush is nearly dry.
I also sketched some coral, at the bottom, and now
we begin to paint the background,
or the sea.
For this I´m using a mixture of ultramarine blue
and cobalt blue.
While for sketching the fish
I used cyan.
Generally, I use a darker mix for the corners and the edges, and I will
mix a lighter tone
for the center part;
using much less or no ultramarine blue
and adding the cyan to the mix.
The complete list of material is in the description below the video,
as always.
When applying most of the paint I´m doing the strokes in a
similar direction to each other, like slanted, to create that texture
or feeling like the sunlight is coming in that direction, through the water.
And to make this even more evident,
I will add some white to the mix
and apply it.
Like so.
And we can also add some strokes of different tones.
And let´s start painting our fish which will be a Butterfly fish.
It is mainly white, which in the shade looks gray, with yellow stripes.
And this lines that I am painting are seriously not right!
They are tilted.
So I erased them with a rag and draw an axis line, to repaint them
perpendicular to it.
That´s better!
And the lower side of the fish looks gray because it is in shade.
And I will darken this gray even a little bit more.
Like so.
This tone is better. I think.
Some touches up here also, because that fin may be in shade,
and then, let´s give it some light with the white.
Yes! All the upper part will be lighter.
This whole painting is going to be fairly easy. If you don´t have a lot
of experience with oil painting,
this may be a nice project to do.
Let´s refine the outside line a little bit better, and blend it in.
We can do this since the whole painting is wet.
And let´s add the eye...
it´s a black eye.
A bit bigger... like so.
And I will add some further shading and tone to the whole body,
but this time with a very small brush, and in small dabs.
To give the illusion of the texture
of the scales.
And with some titanium white
we can give some nice highlights.
I had been using a flake white which is not as intense, not as a white.
While the titanium white is ideal for the highlights. I made some dark lines
by the yellow ones, and I will add one also by the tail, right here.
And let´s intensify some of the colors.
I don´t want a totally definite line in the border, so I smudge it,
a little bit.
Very good! ¡Excelente!
I like it how it is looking so far.
It also has a big black dot toward the top, right here
and I will test adding some yellow spots to the background.
If I don't fully like them I will take them off.
And let´s paint the coral reef with some reddish brown.
That on the shaded part, the rest I leave it yellow.
And I will take off the yellow spots after all.
I like them but not thoroughly
Let´s add some more blue to the areas so that it doesn´t look greenish.
Al right! And we should complete this tail which is like a fan, a bit.
More like this, smoother than what I had it.
Al right! Very good!
And now let´s reestablish the fin.
It is a little bit tricky because it is white, but translucent.
However, I let this painting rest for a day, and so now
it is practically dry.
So I can go over it, without it smearing.
Ok, let´s enhance those lights with the titanium white,
we give it the last touches, and it´s ready!
If you enjoyed it please give it a LIKE! share it to your
friends and subscribe to Fine Art-Tips.
And I will see you on Tuesday ;)
Subtitled by Grethel Trejo
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ICO cryptos : Quand la France prépare une certification AMF 🤗 #Exclu #bitcoin - Duration: 10:47.Hi it's LangueDegeek, Meet up Again at the End of this exclusive video
As you know, as Bruno Le Maire Said in "Capital Newspaper" article
no reform until 2019
But I have a small scoop for you
on what is happening in 2018
concerning AMF regulation in France to attract ICO
in Paris. You know that
ICO is the new way to find financing in the 21st century and Paris according to the article of the
newspaper "Les Echos"would be the capital of ICO, I let you discover the video that we have subtitled in french and english
We'll see you after (for conclusion)
I have the chance to work on
the draft bill
for such regulation
this draft bill is going to be
included in border french bill
named the "Loi Pacte"
which could be discussed by French Government
around May 2018
I cannot give you the details of
this draft bill because this is confidential at this stage but
I can give you the headlines
this regulation is not a ban
this regulation is not limits, this regulation is not a restriction
But this regulation is optionnal
Why this is optionnal? Because the role of this regulation
is
to give Ico project
holders the will to come in France
to launch the ICO
And the AMF (financial markets authority)
has seen
for 2018 that
a moment, we need a 100
ICO projects launch
there were
around 30% of scams
or of
ICO which never will end
and with project holders
which sometimes go away with
the fundraise. So i may think... We can
offer you an optionnal regulation
If you come to us with your whitepaper
with some
details and some guarantee about
your project, we can give to you
a Visa, an approval on your whitepaper
obviously not on your business project because
this is not the order of the AMF but
you can check if the whitepaper is clear
is not misleading for the investors
and with this Visa
you could try to
attract more and more retail
investors to subscribe to your
ICOs
The details of this regulation
will be
draft by the AMF
in term of calendar
we are expecting law at the beginning of summer
After the law, we will wait for
the details draft by the AMF but
we expect the AMF has already start
to draft these details so
if we are optimist we can mention that
the whole regulation will be ready to go
at the end of summer or maybe in september
And so
when you are ICO project holder from September
2018, you could choose
to launch your ICO as usual without
without
being care out the AMF, you could choose to submit
your whitepaper to the AMF with such Visa
The last aspect I want to talk about is
the tax aspect, this is one of
difficulty to
When we choose to launch an ICO in France
Your real difficulty in France is not the amount
of the tax, it's how your ICO will be treated
from tax perspective
Before thinking about tax
we have to think about accounting and with
respect to accounting in France we have the "Autorité Nationale
Comptable"/"Accounting standards Authority"
which is already thinking about the issue
of the accounting
treatment of funds raised
by an ICO
we know that soon
this Authority should raise
its view
under accounting treatment of ICOs and
we expect that some ways
or some months after
The French Tax Authority
will also raise some doctrine about
how your fund
the funds raised
for your ICO would be deal with
From tax perspective and the last but not the least
during the annual tax law
for 2019 which is discussed
from September, from fall
2018
we expect to see some
favorable regime for ICO
notably for subscriber
with obligation of the Flat Tax
the famous French Flat Tax
for your gain on
on tokens and maybe we could also have some
legal clarification on the tax
regime applied on the ICO
in this law
I have finished. If you have any questions
Staff : Yes Use this opportunity to ask questions to One of the Maker of the French legislation !
How does this gonna work
concerning the protection's laws in France, if you have certain
let's say that is French, some stuff like that
That is covered under French law
Is it gonna be the same with this new law
for the other international ICOs?
The regime which allow you to submit your whitepaper to the AMF
will only be valable for French Compagny
So if you want such Visa, you have to
set up a company in France
with respect the marketing of
your ICOs
This is another subject, you could create your company in others countries and to try to
obtain investment to the funds from
French residents
Within this context, the existing regulation
still apply as i said in French control protection only
If you are drafting a website to attract
investors in French
You could be subject to French consumer protectionals
If you are
planning some reatup in France to find investors
you could be subject to the
existing French regulation
The minister (Finance) of France
Bruno le Maire which is
talking about ICO
last week said that
it's very want that France
become attractive for
for those projects
the French
The ministry is drafting the law
which will be vote by the French government but
the AMF is just drafting the details
which is called the AMF regulation
Q: Don't you think
that the end result
of having this regulation
in France would be that some
extension of your system which establish that
your companies in France
but they keep all their teams outside of France
and they claim stable
company outside of France
you know not have to pay any tax in France?
There is one thing which correct is that this
regime is going to, has been thinking
to attract company
in France but we are not obliged to
have your team in France
your team, your
concrete activity in France you can only have a holding in France but
if you haven't a holding in France you need to talk
with tax expert
but maybe you still have some tax to pay in France
One think, The AMF when
they will
approval your whitepaper
we want to see some warranty
about your project
so You have to prove that your organization abroad
could meet all this recommendation of gouvernement
I see nothing which prevent you to have the most of your activities abroad
But one thing, the AMF
is the only one which is over to decide
And even if this is not clearly drafted in the law
the AMF can choose to not rent you any Visa
because, they consider that you are just try to circumvent the law
That's IT !
you would have understood that
Paris is actually working to attract to the maximal
foreign funds in order to do these 3.0 fundraises
We used to go in front of the banks
Then we went to participatory financing (crowdfunding)
such as KickStarter, indiegogo and so on
Today we're clearly headed for the ICO.
like the new way of fundraising
don't focus only the Bitcoin
see what an ICO is (Initial Coin Offering)
you will see that there is a lot of projects
it can be about articifial intelligence
it can be about future social networks
it can be about the decentralization of internet itself ! with some Project like substratum (cryptocurrency)
it can be about the decentralization of storage, project SIA (cryptocurrency)
it can be about all the current technical subjects
if you missed the internet shift 20 years ago.
You can't miss the turn of the blockchain.
don't mix Bitcoin, cryptocurrencies, which I name crypto projects
that Bruno Le Maire (French Economic minister)
is now naming "crypto actifs" because it sounds better; when 3 months before we were against it.
and after the G20 we're totally in favor ...
and then Bitcoin
when there' s one that focuses on monopoly bills
there's the one who places their hotel on "Rue de la Paix" (prestigious street in Paris)
and the one who buy all the stations
and we all know over time who's more likely to make a fortune ...
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Bootstrapped Episode 41: Jon Chapman - Duration: 42:26.Welcome to Bootstrapped, a Dingman Center podcast.
I'm Elana Fine.
- [Joe] And I'm Joe Bailey.
- And as all our listeners know,
each episode of Bootstrapped
features a funder or founder from the Dingman Center
and University of Maryland community.
Today we are thrilled to welcome Terp alum
and co-founder and president of EverFi, sorry,
take that back, yes, sorry, rewind.
Today we are thrilled to welcome Jon Chapman.
Jon Chapman is a Smith alum and co-founder
and president of global partnerships of EverFi.
Welcome Jon.
- [Jon] Thank you so much it's great to be here.
- Well just to kick things off a little bit, Jon,
can you talk to us a little bit about your background,
your specifically in education sector?
- Sure, sure, yeah.
So I really have spent my entire post collegiate career
in education in some form or the other.
I had about 10 years of operating experience at Kaplan
within the time I matriculated at Smith.
I was I guess fortunate enough to get them
to help support my tuition and getting
my traditional MBA as part of kind of moving back here
to the DC area in 2004.
And then finished out my time there in '07
and then at the beginning of '08 as we just talked about
a little over 10 years ago we started EverFi,
on January 17th 2008 and obviously
been involved with EdTech since then
and we'll talk more about that today.
- I know we have a lot to cover but I gotta ask,
2008, that's an interesting time to be starting a company.
There's a lot going on in the markets at that time.
- It was, it was interesting.
In an odd way, though it really gave us
some wind in our sales because the first content area
we started to launch the company around
was financial literacy, and even though it was
a tumultuous time with the economy and the recession
there certainly was a spotlight
on consumers' basic understanding of financial literacy
and particularly where we were focusing
which was young adults and high school.
So in that way it was difficult
from a capital markets perspective and obviously
getting the resources you needed to,
we truly had to bootstrap our business--
- [Elana] Ding.
- As is the name of this appropriate name
of this podcast.
But fortunately we did that for the first few years
and then the venture market started to kind of come around.
- [Joe] Can you tell us exactly then how you bootstrapped
and then what kind of revenue are you generating
from kind of day one?
- Well from day one we really I think,
and this served us well,
we very much focused on driving revenue.
We wanted to create a technology company
that wasn't necessarily on the traditional
get-a-lot-of-users-and-then-monetize-it basis.
We really wanted to create customers, create revenue.
And so we created a model
where we built our learning platform.
We introduced it into schools
but we got somebody else to pay for it.
And by paying for it and licensing it
they were private labeling it.
And so once we had a first MVP of our learning platform
we were quickly able to get some revenue and really
work our way through those first two years before
our fist venture raise.
- So EverFi is a well known company here in the DC area
but for those who aren't familiar--
- [Jon] Still crazy to hear that.
(laughing)
- So can you just step back a little bit
talk about what the original value proposition was
when you launched and what you saw
in the market at that time?
- Sure, sure.
So we are an education technology company at our core,
but we're a very unique one.
We saw a real need back in 2008 to create content
around critical skills.
And you know that first critical skill area
was financial literacy.
We saw a need to teach that in the classroom
using learning technology.
There was more and more proliferation
of using that type of technology by teachers.
And at the same time we saw a need
for the private sector to get involved.
Think about something like financial literacy,
its always been sort of the providence
of banks and credit unions and other financial institutions.
To support that type of learning but had been done
sort of in a way that had been phoned in.
There's been, you know paper-based workbooks,
a volunteer comes in for a day,
kids heads hit the desk out of sheer boredom.
And we said we can reinvent this, we can reimagine,
using technology, using gamification,
using the latest new media to teach kids
about financial literacy in a way
that they could understand it
and we could pass that credit along to institutions.
- So let's follow up because in class
we talk a lot about finding product market fit.
So when you talk about financial literacy for kids,
was this all kids in all classrooms
or were you going for a certain target market
who maybe their parents weren't teaching, they weren't
as financial literate, or--
- It was very much a target market.
It was high school aged students,
which is where most of the requirements
in K-12 public schools were coming to teach this.
So one of the other dynamics playing out here is
you had a growing focus on core subject accountability,
so, you know, No Child Left Behind kind of things
around math and reading and English language arts.
So that skills like financial literacy were falling
to the cutting room floor.
And teachers were wholly focused on those other areas
and so we were able to sort of bring, use technology
as a catalyst and an assistant to try to teach those
topics again in a unique way.
And so we focused on high school because that's where
we felt it was the most immediate fit.
You had students going into the work force,
maybe post secondary, taking on student loans.
They needed to have these skills under their belt.
And so we really used that as a particular age group.
We also went after communities of need.
We went after the communities who needed us the most.
We began the business across some of the poorest communities
in the southeastern part of the US.
We're talking about communities across rural Alabama,
Mississippi, Louisiana.
These were folks who we felt like they were kind of
falling at the short end of the stick in terms
of the technological resources, you know a lot of
urban centers and kind of wealthier communities
had these resources but we wanted to make sure
we provided those communities with the resources
we were creating first.
And so that was definitely a targeted market.
- So you're targeting clearly the high school
students to make sure they have the financial literacy
there's a need for this not only because
they should have it but also
because of the way the curriculum is
evolving, but where is the funding coming from?
- So that's a great question and that's really
I think where we really stuck our landing.
Those same communities I described are kind of
qualify as low to moderate income communities
based on obviously the US census but also based
on a bank's business footprint.
And we're here in Washington, DC where all regulations
are made and one of the oldest regulations of the banking
industry is the Community Reinvestment Act obligations,
where a bank has to execute on fair lending practices
and fair business practices across their entire footprint
including low to moderate income parts of it.
So they are required by law to provide education
around not only to consumers trying to take out
a mortgage if you're an adult,
but also many times this type of investment
into the youth in the community.
So we found our funder in those banks
who had CRA requirements.
- So in just, because this is really important part
of how your model works and so--
- [Jon] It's a very important part.
To dig into that a little bit, so when you went out,
so you were on one side of your two-sided market
which Joe loves, so this is like an added bonus for you.
(laughing)
So you have the students that are your target
that you're getting providing that service,
but you it sounds like a pretty real need for these banks
to be able to say, let me get the job done for you
easy because you have this Community Reinvestment Act
that while I'm sure they care a lot about it,
often not the core part of their business and something
that probably hangs over their head and you're saying
easy, you and, okay--
- Turnkey way for you to fulfill
that regulatory requirement.
Do it in a reimagined and creative way.
That, based on our value prop of our business,
we private label that learning platform as yours.
So one of our first customers and still one of
our biggest customers today I'm so proud to say,
is BB&T Bank, huge bank here in the middle Atlantic
and across the southeastern United States.
Headquartered in North Carolina.
We created the--
- And great supporter of the Smith School, thank you, BB&T.
- Oh good, yes, they're fantastic.
I give them all the plugs they can get.
We created the BB&T Financial Foundations Scholars program.
It started with a single community center
in Richmond, Virginia, where we drove $2500 of real revenue,
which at that time felt like a million dollars.
I literally remember sprinting down to the B of A here
where we just opened up our corporate account
on Wisconsin Ave, which is right near our studio here today.
And building that program for them there.
And then that expanded now expanded initially to
about 100 schools in North Carolina and now today
they're in 1000 schools across their
I think 10 or 11 state footprint.
So it was certainly filling a need for the financial
institution as well as the students and the teachers
in the schools.
- But it seems like it was more than just sticking
the landing, I mean the level of difficultly of this
is difficult because you've got to figure out
how to be scalable from day one.
So can you describe kind of scalability constraints?
- Yeah, so those were real.
I mean obviously technology is a good scaling accelerant,
as we all know.
Our ability to deploy this to a lot of schools quickly
in a remote way was there, but one of the things
we learned early on and has stuck with us to
our core today
and I think we've proven it out as a key part
of our value proposition is we knew we needed
though not just to be able to deploy
through only our technology,
we had to build a team of individuals
that could build relationships locally with schools.
So our, I started the business with two friends
of mine from Bowdoin so I went to Bowdoin
for undergrad obviously a proud Terp for my business school.
My first co-founder and I we were together
for the first year.
So our third partner, so my first co partner is
Tom Davidson, by the way, shout out to TD,
and then my, our third partner was Ray Martinez
and we hired Ray specifically or brought him on
as a partner to be our first person who could go
bring our technology to schools.
Ray really built the infrastructure of how
we work with teachers today.
And now we have almost 200 full time employees
that work all across the US and Canada
and deliver our technology to the classroom.
And that's how we were able to scale.
And it's not the traditional kind of
super high margin because these are full time employees
this is an investment, but we wouldn't have the stickiness
and the impact we've had today
if we didn't have those folks.
- So talk a little bit about what your product
and service is.
How to, how is it used and how do students engage?
- Sure, so today I'll start actually with K-12.
I'll explain three segments really quickly
but we'll focus on K-12 because that's really
the founding part of the business.
So in K-12 just today we still run
our financial literacy curriculum.
The learning platform, think of it as
a highly engaging gamified learning experience,
probably anywhere from 10 to 15 hours of content
that gets supplemented into an existing class.
So typically is high school for financial literacy
stick with that example, or in a lot of career
and technical education classes.
So teachers will use us again, back to that first
thought of teachers are really focused on core subjects,
this becomes a nice scalable engaging supplement
that teaches important skills in often required classes.
And so we are delivering that during the school day.
Our staff that I just mentioned before is working
with those local educators.
Again when we present it out it's private labeled
as an initiative, as sort of a public private sector
initiative on behalf of a bank like BB&T or
TCF Bank in the Twin Cities or US Bank or Mass Mutual
as an insurance company that we work with
all across the US.
They are taking credit.
When a student goes in they're seeing it
being brought to them by that organization,
however the curriculum itself is very neutral.
Meets all privacy requirements.
Has no marketing intention behind it
because we could not operate at the depth we do
in the schools if we had that.
But again, goes back to that regulatory requirement
for those financial institutions, that's a painpoint
or meeting for them and the value proposition
or increasingly because we work with a lot
of different organizations now today
it's also just a great community marketing
kind of, creates a nice halo effect around
their brand, that they're bringing this kind
of education technology into schools, into communities
they care about.
So providing that branding, providing that deployment
into schools, we do a lot of events
and earn media recognition to make sure
that our private sector partners know
that they're providing these types of educational
technology resources to schools in K-12.
So that's K-12.
I can stop there now and I can go into the other segments--
- Yeah so before we move on, because I think that there is,
there's gotta be a value proposition beyond
just kind of the regulatory need to do this,
I mean you're doing the private labeling, you're trying
to build community awareness.
I mean, talk about that and what your customers are saying
about your service.
- Yeah, so I think in many ways it has evolved.
I mean it's still, there's still that regulatory need,
but it's evolved beyond that.
You talked about Elana talked about the outsourced
ability to meet these regulatory requirements.
In many ways we are also an outsource resource
for meeting marketing and awareness objectives
as well.
I'll use another pretty unique example,
one that I'm really proud of and one I spend
a lot of my time on today.
Which combines a couple of passions of education
and sports for me.
So we actually run the community education programs
for all four of other major sports leagues.
The best example to that
is our National Hockey League program.
We run a program called Future Goals so it's a different
content area in K-12 than financial literacy.
It's around science, technology, engineering and math.
And in particular the careers associated with those areas,
using the game of hockey to inspire students to learn
about those things.
And so and that is again back to the private label
initiative, is private label to all 31 NHL clubs.
So if a student here in the DC area is doing it
as a Washington Capitals program, a student in Boston
is doing it as a Bruins program, so forth and so on.
- And so how is that student accessing that content.
- In much the same way I described our financial literacy.
In this case it's just a middle shool aged target group.
It's done thorough, in this case we're done through more
traditional subjects, we're typically working with more
science and math teachers.
- Okay so it's still through the schools but just
with the hockey, okay, got it.
- That's our core bread and butter, it's always, we're up to
now 20,000 K-12 schools across the US and Canada.
And we just layer in different critical skills content.
STEM careers, financial literacy, entrepreneurship,
health and wellness, and we take different private sector
foundation based partners and create private label
programs for different size communities
that they care about.
- And when you say you're working with schools,
are you working with kind of administrators that
then push it then down to, I mean, the school systems?
- It's a good question.
We take a combination approach as the way
I always like to describe it.
So yes, top down through administrators, we meet
with superintendents, curriculum directors,
other administrators.
To try to get them excited about the vision
or the resources we're providing.
But then also from the bottom up,
so classroom to classroom, teacher to teacher,
certainly school building to school building,
principals have a lot of influence over that
direction in the school building basis.
So our full time staff of implementation managers
that I was eluding to before they're building
a blend of those relationships so that's the combo.
- Just as a follow up then when you look
at customer churn or stickiness is the term
you mentioned earlier, are you finding that
once you have kind of all the different stakeholders
kind of all on board with the product
that it's very unlikely that they're gonna leave?
- From an educational perspective we have good stickiness.
However we do have challenges because the reality
of public schools is teacher turnover, administrator
turnover, changing dynamics and requirements
within a district, obviously we all know
although education in the US is very local,
a big reason why we made the decision to have those
localized staff of almost 200 folks today.
Because there are changing environments that we always
have to stay on top of.
And we have to convince our partners who actually
license our program that that's why we have to stay
on top of it, because there is a level of just churn
of just teacher and administrator that we
are managing each academic year.
And our schools team does an absolutely fantastic job
of managing that dynamic.
And I'm proud to say our churn numbers
are in good shape because of it.
But it's not without its challenges.
- So we see a lot of EdTech companies coming through
the Dingman Center presenting to our Dingman Center
Angel Investor Network and the number one concern
our angels have is selling to K-12
and creating the channels, the pipe that you have created
is probably the envy of every EdTech company behind you
is that kind of following.
So what advice would you give to other companies,
obviously no need to compete with you guys,
but who are looking to sell into for a variety tools
into K-12 what advice could you without giving away
your secret sauce but what is your advice to selling--
- I think for us it's based on our first decision
with our model.
We don't ask the district for anything.
So what we're selling them is the value proposition
of the use of our technology.
We made a bet early on that we could never scale
to the level of revenue that we wanted to be at,
by selling directly to school boards, by being
in the middle of a West Des Moines, Iowa school board
and going singing for your supper everywhere across
the company that was not going to be scalable.
We thought that the getting the private sector involved,
creating these private label programs for them
was the better way to do it.
And that's proven to be successful.
It's, I don't have a secret sauce for how to sell
directly to districts.
I mean the only think I'd probably tell fellow EdTech
entrepreneurs is if there are issues you can tackle
perhaps at a state or provincial level
where there is some funding for scaled size contracts
that might be the way to go.
But it's really never been a direction we've gone
other than to sell the value of our learning platform.
- I've got to imagine, if I'm a superintendent
and you say hey I've got a great piece of your
curriculum that's been really successful and the price
is zero dollars, you probably have that administrator's
attention.
- [Jon] Absolutely you got that exactly right.
- But there's also gotta be a feedback loop
where these students who are using it administrators
are helping you improve their product.
Can you talk about how you've evolved the product over time?
- Absolutely and from the very beginning one of
the the core pieces of our value proposition
was our ability to measure the impact
to our learning platform.
So we have always been maniacal about understanding
first of all making a bet back to our sponsors, those
BB&Ts of the world, saying we are going
measure how many students use the program,
how long they spend on it, how much they learn,
how their attitudes and behaviors change
as a result of the interface with it.
We're gonna measure that and we're gonna report that
back to you every year.
And you can hold us accountable.
If we hit our goals we keep going.
If we don't, you can hold us accountable and fire us.
So that measurability has been helpful for the sponsor,
but, to your question Joe, it's also very helpful
to the school administrator.
It's very helpful to them to understand
how does their student population think
about financial literacy or entrepreneurship.
- What are the things that you're measuring?
What are those goals or metrics?
- So there are basically two dimensions.
One is a knowledge based goal.
Around financial literacy or any other topic
we want to understand the did the student know,
does the student know coming out than they
knew coming in?
The second dimension is how did we
influence their behavior.
So we think about something like STEM careers
with National Hockey League and other partners
that focus on that.
Are we getting kids more excited about potentially
becoming a data scientist?
That they might have otherwise not have even known
existed as a career.
- And your platform is able to measure that
with all the users that are using the platform?
- As they're going through the learning experience
they're intermittently answering questions
that are kind of reflection based questions
that can capture that attitude and behavior.
- And so clearly you're very knowledgeable in selling
into the K-12 sector but you mentioned other
verticals, so I know you've expanded into corporate
and executive ed.
Can you talk about in the company,
one, what the products are there,
but even more importantly how you as a company
decided to add on other verticals and get up to speed
on selling in a totally different way?
- Well it's a great question.
So I think it started when we did our Series A raise
in 2010.
One of our main use proceeds of that round was to acquire
an existing business that was operating higher ed.
And they were operating delivering
an alcohol education course to first year students
across probably several hundred US based campuses.
But we saw very similar mission and ethos fit
to what they were doing.
They were based in Boston.
They're called Outside the Classroom.
And they were a great organization we thought you know what,
they would be a really interesting way for us to understand
the higher ed market.
Because it had the same sort of feel as financial literacy
you had a requirement, typically a mandate of the campus
to teach these types of skills.
It was done typically for all first year students.
So by making that acquisition and entering into higher ed
we understood that there were a lot of higher ed based
topic areas that were similar to financial education.
The economic model is a little different though.
Because Outside the Classroom and since forth EverFi,
had in the case of higher ed been able to license
directly to the colleges.
Issues like alcohol responsibility and more and more
important today issues like sexual assault prevention
are obviously required, they're top of mind requirements
in higher ed.
But there's budget and there's mandate to put forth
those types of earning experiences for students
and now for faculty and beyond.
- It's like concern number one of every college president
right now.
- So we created a slightly different economic model
but it had the same again kind of regulatory pressure,
helping a student and kind of faculty administration
population deal with a tough issue.
And we were able to do that starting in 2011
when we completed acquisition and I'm proud to say
through a couple of other subsequent acquisitions
we're now in almost 2,000 higher ed universities.
We are the number one player in that space
around alcohol responsibility, sexual assault prevention,
both for students and faculty.
And then what's interesting about that is in a couple of
those follow on acquisitions that have happened over the
last two years we ended up acquiring two of our
bigger competitors in higher ed who also
were doing corporate education.
So they were doing the same type
of compliance for employers.
- This is all private label right, so if I go into
a university it's gonna look like it's coming
from the university not, but what does that do
to your company in terms of branding and awareness?
I mean, you're the company that's all over the place
but nobody knows about.
- Well it's a--
- [Elana] Until they listen to this podcast.
- Exactly, exactly.
We can get to our fundraising and things like that
but that's certainly put us on the map a bit.
It's actually a label we welcome.
We've said from the very beginning you can read
articles about us back in 2009 we want to push credit
out to the edges, make this all about our partners
whether they're a bank like BB&T or a university like
Maryland, we want to give them the credit for doing this
and we're okay we always use the metaphor
we're okay being the Intel chip inside.
We don't need to be the Dell or the Apple.
- Because that's part of your value proposition, they
don't have to share the credit with you, they're getting
to take the credit.
- So when I teach my IT class I do kind of talk about
the Chris Anderson book about free and giving stuff away.
Have you considered or have you tried kind of that
give something away for everybody and take a look
at where the customers are and potentially then say
hey look University of Maryland you've got
thousands of subscribers that are using our service,
what about going ahead and entering into a partnership here.
- We did that actually as a, we deployed that
as a tactic a few years ago as we saw the requirements
around Title IX really being strengthened around
sexual assault prevention.
We, one of the things that had happened when we
originally built our higher ed course,
sexual assault prevention was sort of within
our alcohol, it was a piece within the alcohol
education experience and we said you know what,
first of all Title IX and compliance aside
it needs to be a bigger piece.
I mean this I a too important too unfortunate
an issue.
And so what we did is we create its own course
we gave it its own context and then we actually
gave it away for a period of time.
We told schools use this for a year.
You don't have to, we won't charge you anything.
It really angered the company we ended up acquiring
because they thought it was kind of a race to the bottom.
But what it did was it proved that our curriculum
could add some value, could give the campus
a necessary tool to meet a new requirement,
and they ended up eventually becoming a lion share of them
becoming paying customers after that--
- So success or failure?
- [Jon] It was a success.
- Success, okay.
- For sure.
But that's, so that's really the only time
we've ever kind of experimented with that kind of tactic
like you described, but definitely a success.
- And so since the title of our podcast
is Bootstrapped, we want to, we talk a lot
EverFi had a very big, like I think $190 million
round within the last 12 months.
Very visible, you kind of eluded to that certainly,
that certainly raised visibility.
Can you talk a little bit about one, that round, and what
I think for our listeners to understand like
their thought of our listeners are thinking
I'm trying to raise $250,000 and convince angels
or venture capitalists to give me those kind of dollars.
What do you do to pitch, raising 190 million dollars?
- Shouldn't we start by saying congratulations?
- Congratulations, yes, yes.
- 190 million.
You don't have to count out how many zeros are after that.
But that's a lot, that's, congratulations.
- First of all congratulations, now answer my question.
(laughing)
- No, no, it's all right.
- [Elana] Where was the company at that point and where
were you looking to and what was the...
- In a new venture finance was absolutely by the way
my favorite course at Smith.
- [Elana] Did you take with Mark Grovic, can you give him
a shout out maybe?
- No actually since retired Bob Baum.
- Bob Baum we were literally
just talking about Bob Baum minutes ago.
- Love that guy.
- I love him as well.
- We'll dedicate this episode to Bob Baum.
- You should, you should. - We will.
- I want you to.
- Holly, take, yes, we will, we promise.
- He was truly my entrepreneurial inspiration,
he knows that.
New venture finance is a process.
You both know this.
I think one of the threads in the process
from when you raise from when you bootstrap
to your Series A to your 190 million dollar round,
like we just did our Series D.
The common thread is you're selling stock in your company
so whether you think that stock's worth $250,000
or collectively $190 million investment you're selling
the value of your stock.
And so that was always really important to us
and I think a great lesson and my partner Tom
came from venture capital so he sat at the other side
of the table and I've just learned so much
from his perspective on that.
From now being on our side of the table
versus the other side of the table.
Is when you're raising that first round
you can't be desperate and say I, we really need this money
we're burning, we're gonna go out of business.
You've gotta believe that you know what we've got
something valuable, you're purchasing shares
in my business, in our company.
And so whether again that's $250,000, 190 million,
it's all an evolution.
And we went into it at every round knowing the types
of investors we wanted.
We always went after kind of top tier investors
not that everyone doesn't want to but we were fortunate
enough to convince them of what we were doing.
We started her locally at New Enterprise Associates
up in Chevy Chase.
They kind of lead our A venture round in 2010
the one we used to acquire that higher ed business.
And then as we kind of moved along we got lucky
with other individuals.
Jeff Bazos lead our Series B round with his
personal investment vehicle Bazos Expeditions
not affiliated with Amazon, what he used, basically
to buy the Post.
And in every stage after that
we finally got to the point last year
where most companies of our size you're kind of considering
the private equity route.
You've started to get big enough where your valuation
can warrant a private equity size check.
For us though what was really unique and what we're super
excited about going forward is we didn't just take
traditional private equity investment, we were
a recipient of a special kind of vehicle out of
TPG's growth fund called The Rise Fund.
It's a social impact investing vehicle.
Obviously designed to support businesses like ours.
And what's interesting today is there's just not
a lot of quality inventory for those, for the proliferation
of the member of those funds to go out and invest.
Especially one that it's scaled to our size
to our level of impact.
And so it was a perfect combination for us
and because it was the social impact fund
it never felt too intimidating because we were really proud
of the business we had built and the impact we were having.
And we knew that we were the type of businesses
that these type of funds were created for.
And so I think it gave us a little bit of a unique
kind of confidence and I know that doesn't really
necessarily maybe really resonate
with all of your listeners,
or others that come through Smith because they may not be
creating companies that can be a recipient of a social
impact investment vehicle,
but for us that was a big part of it.
So it made the number and the size of the round
a little less intimidating
again we just knew we were selling the value of our company,
and we were doing so to have an impact.
- And just for our listeners just so you're clear.
You're talking about Series of funding
and they're labeled A, B, C, so you're D, and frankly
we don't often get to talk to entrepreneurs
who has gone through that many rounds.
And it sound like by the time you got to D
you were, you kind of knew your audience a lot.
Which round was the hardest.
I've always wanted to find out, was it A, B, C, or D?
It's like a multiple choice exam.
- [Jon] It's definitely A or B.
- [Joe] Really, okay so this makes our listeners happier.
So the dollar amount goes up but it becomes easier.
- Well you understand the fundamentals
of your business better, right?
You understand what it takes to grow, what your risk
factors are, you just got more reps under your belt.
Like my unfortunate Patriots who lost, they've been
to the Super Bowl eight times it's easy when you've been
there eight times to not let things affect you.
So yeah, A and B's hard, A's hard because you're
you're tying to really prove you've got a scalable
concept but yet you're still really small.
B is tricky too because once you've gotten over that
you sort of go through some awkward teenage adolescent
phases of scaling and growing your business.
So I'd say those two are definitely
the more challenging ones.
- And how important was it to get somebody
like you know, your partners really for A and B, I'm sorry,
what's the name of the firm in Chevy Chase?
- [Jon] New Enterprise Associates.
- And then you had Bezos and his money too.
- I mean those were always, and in between we'd always
made a very concerted effort to create individual investors
even if they had smaller stakes in those lead folks
behind us.
We were able to collect folks like Evan Williams
one of the co-founders of Twitter,
Eric Schmidt the chairman at Google and his adventure fund,
these were--
- Pretty good list.
- These were folks that we wanted involved
in what we were doing
as well as others that are lesser known but guys
up in New York, Rethink Education that's done a lot of
great education investment and have been a fantastic
partner of ours, we had them as well.
So we always wanted to create folks that we felt
gave us strength, not just in terms of like,
we knew at the end of the day they are just giving
us capital to help us grow our business
and you never want to expect anything more than that
but certainly the strength of those, that association
was a powerful thing for us.
- And so we know when you raise that kind of money
any amount of money, there's expectations
of your investors and what growth looks like
and what the next steps are.
So what next do you guys see yourself as an IPO
prospect, is there, my sense would be like not building
this to necessarily sell it yet, but what do you think
is gonna happen?
- We're still having a lot of fun which is good.
My two co-founders Tom and Ray as well as the many other
talented folks on our executive team are ones who are
still we're really tight
and I think we have a really good rhythm.
So yeah, we're not going anywhere anytime soon.
I think there's probably two outcomes.
I think yeah, there's an IPO, that's obviously
in our company stage that's one of the potential outcomes.
We have great models like 2U, we're really close
to Chip and his team and that business and watching
them go public and really succeed as a public company.
That's one option.
Or I kind of eluded to before you see this proliferation
of social impact funds and there may be possibilities
where we could get other one of those involved
as we continue to grow and certainly any private equity
investor wants to that's a natural kind of occurrence
is they invest at one stage and may turn it over
to another fund so I think that's probably another
potential option.
But who knows, we're still.
- And you're having fun.
- [Jon] We're still having fun, yeah.
- So last question for you, Jon, is to think about,
we have, as Joe mentioned a lot of our listeners
are either in startups, want to be, thinking about
launching something.
Can you, and are in that where like
everything seems so hard.
Every part of the business, you can't look anywhere
where you say oh that's the easy thing
that I'm gonna do today.
But as you look back to get, what can you, advice
could you pass along for those entrepreneurs
who look at where EverFi is like if we could only
be where that is, like what do you think were some of
the key decisions that you made in those really hard times
that helped you get where you are today?
- I'd say a couple things.
Number one I mentioned this earlier in our conversation.
Go after revenue.
Figure out what your model is.
Whatever it is.
Ours is unique, it doesn't have to be exactly like ours.
Figure out what that is and stay focused on it.
It doesn't mean you can't be focused on your product
or other pieces of the business, but really understand
your economic model and what's gonna help you reach
the performer you've created.
Just stay maniacally focused on that.
Hold your team accountable to that.
That's number one.
Number two, and this is a little more fluffy
but at the end of the day it's true.
You have to have to always believe that you're gonna get
to where you're gonna get.
You have to walk around, when we talked about
our network back in the day I used to joke
with Tom our co-founder, he'd always talk about
our school network if we were in like five schools
in a district we'd sort of like assume that we were
gonna be in the rest of the 15 so we'd sort of say,
oh yeah we're in 20 and we're in 1,000 when maybe
we were starting to move there.
But you've gotta kind of sort of have a little
bit of swagger and belief that you're bigger
than you are.
- You're a Patriots fan, right?
- That's right, that's right, and so, that is,
a yeah, I've got a little bit of Massachusetts bravado
to me that's where I grew up.
I think that's gotta be,
you've gotta take that into the room.
Whether you're meeting with a superintendent,
whether you're meeting with a dean of student affairs,
whether you're meeting with a CEO of American Express.
It doesn't matter.
You have to show that what you're creating
is gonna be something really special and really unique,
and let that shine through.
If that happens, whatever you're in you will succeed
and you will get there but that's a big piece as well.
- Well Jon that's great advice.
Thank you so much for being in studio today.
And we're excited to watch where things go
over the next couple years.
- Absolutely.
- Thank you, Jon.
- [Jon] My pleasure, thanks for having me.
- So I thought, hearing from Jon really delivered
on what I had hoped to in this interview,
because I think that one, the way they have developed
a very unique business model, and he also had,
can articulate both sides how he's getting a job
done for both sides.
Specifically a very acute painpoint for the banks,
that when most people look at their business model
they probably don't understand.
So recognizing that there was a way to pair these two,
the need for this kind of education in the classroom,
and then all the way over here a very separate
customer for them and be able to match them together
to create this really incredible platform
is just really impressive.
- How many times, Elana, do you and I sit down
with startups, with founders, with students,
and say fall in love with the problem?
And absolutely the whole story of EverFi is,
here's the problem that was presented.
We have a financial crisis we have to go ahead
and ask these banks to go ahead and provide
some financial literacy.
Banks don't know, or they're certainly not in their DNA
to be all about education, and so he's taking his background
from Kaplan, recognizing that there's a way to
go ahead about this that's much more scalable,
it's gonna be engaging to the students through gamification,
it's just a great story.
And then of course to the theme of of course
our podcast about bootstrap the idea of saying
look, I know there isn't a very healthy capital
market out there so we're gonna go ahead and bootstrap this
get the revenue, do as much as we can to scale it out.
The white labeling or the private labeling to go ahead
and make sure that you can do it, fantastic.
- And I think that also whenever you do a, some kind of,
whenever you do an analysis of what was happening
at the time when a startup was really able to really
get traction, and put all the pieces together,
EverFi is just a perfect example of what was happening
at that time.
Because of the financial crisis because of, as he mentioned,
No Child Left Behind, Common Core, the evolution,
things changing in the regulatory environment
in both places, and like you mentioned, the team
that they had put together was a really unique
combination at the time.
And gamification being a new thing from a perspective,
EdTech and not just video games.
And so pulling that all together at a very unique time.
You kicked off the episode saying wow, 2008 what a crazy
time to start a company.
Well you know what it was the exact right time
to start this company.
- Yep, I mean, how many times has like the right idea,
even the right people but the wrong time.
I think everything kind of aligned for them
back in 2008.
- And I think my interest in watching kind of
their funding pattern is really interesting
to hear him talk about the people that he brought in
as funders along the way and all the different,
we talk about with entrepreneurs all the time,
and even students.
Anyone kind of putting a brand together.
Whether it's your personal brand or your company,
what are, where do you allocate your time to make sure
that you have certain credentials, and check the box
in certain places.
And I think they did a really good job of that
by bringing on BB&T.
They didn't just, they found a brand name bank.
They knew they needed a brand name to go with.
They went and found brand name investors
and sold their case to that when they could have taken
other capital and then let it all come together.
- Not just the way in which they're working with the banks.
The way they're working with the people helping fund them.
I mean they recognize their partners.
And you know, yes it is much more difficult
in Series A and B to go ahead and raise the financing,
but to vet your partners, to be very selective,
to understand, to have the patience.
You know how many times have you worked with entrepreneurs
who are saying I need to move quickly before somebody
copies my idea, and it takes a real kind of patience
for an entrepreneur to go ahead and wait and say
no we're gonna make sure we do this the right way.
We should have asked Jon how many times did he pass
on other banks that might have wanted to do this?
Before finally saying no this is the right fit.
- Well I think that wraps up a great episode
of Bootstrapped.
We promised Jon that we'd dedicate this episode
to Bob Baum, - Shout out to Bob.
One of our all time favorite professors at the Smith school.
So once again for listening to Bootstrapped,
a Dingman Center podcast.
I'm Elana Fine you can follow me @elanafine or through
thedingmancenter@umd_dingman.
- And I'm Joe Bailey you can follow me
on Twitter @josephpbailey.
And for all of our listeners I know I close out
the episode by encouraging you to bootstrap your next
venture, we actually invite you to go ahead
and bootstrap today so that when you're talking about
your Series D ten years from now you can go ahead
and be a guest on Bootstrapped.
So please do bootstrap your next venture.
Thanks.
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주부 9단이 알려주는 가위 없이 매듭 쉽게 푸는 방법 ► Love In The MoonLight Plus ► https://goo.gl/rhN6Xp - Duration: 2:36.-------------------------------------------
ICO cryptos : Quand la France prépare une certification AMF 🤗 #Exclu #bitcoin - Duration: 10:47.Hi it's LangueDegeek, Meet up Again at the End of this exclusive video
As you know, as Bruno Le Maire Said in "Capital Newspaper" article
no reform until 2019
But I have a small scoop for you
on what is happening in 2018
concerning AMF regulation in France to attract ICO
in Paris. You know that
ICO is the new way to find financing in the 21st century and Paris according to the article of the
newspaper "Les Echos"would be the capital of ICO, I let you discover the video that we have subtitled in french and english
We'll see you after (for conclusion)
I have the chance to work on
the draft bill
for such regulation
this draft bill is going to be
included in border french bill
named the "Loi Pacte"
which could be discussed by French Government
around May 2018
I cannot give you the details of
this draft bill because this is confidential at this stage but
I can give you the headlines
this regulation is not a ban
this regulation is not limits, this regulation is not a restriction
But this regulation is optionnal
Why this is optionnal? Because the role of this regulation
is
to give Ico project
holders the will to come in France
to launch the ICO
And the AMF (financial markets authority)
has seen
for 2018 that
a moment, we need a 100
ICO projects launch
there were
around 30% of scams
or of
ICO which never will end
and with project holders
which sometimes go away with
the fundraise. So i may think... We can
offer you an optionnal regulation
If you come to us with your whitepaper
with some
details and some guarantee about
your project, we can give to you
a Visa, an approval on your whitepaper
obviously not on your business project because
this is not the order of the AMF but
you can check if the whitepaper is clear
is not misleading for the investors
and with this Visa
you could try to
attract more and more retail
investors to subscribe to your
ICOs
The details of this regulation
will be
draft by the AMF
in term of calendar
we are expecting law at the beginning of summer
After the law, we will wait for
the details draft by the AMF but
we expect the AMF has already start
to draft these details so
if we are optimist we can mention that
the whole regulation will be ready to go
at the end of summer or maybe in september
And so
when you are ICO project holder from September
2018, you could choose
to launch your ICO as usual without
without
being care out the AMF, you could choose to submit
your whitepaper to the AMF with such Visa
The last aspect I want to talk about is
the tax aspect, this is one of
difficulty to
When we choose to launch an ICO in France
Your real difficulty in France is not the amount
of the tax, it's how your ICO will be treated
from tax perspective
Before thinking about tax
we have to think about accounting and with
respect to accounting in France we have the "Autorité Nationale
Comptable"/"Accounting standards Authority"
which is already thinking about the issue
of the accounting
treatment of funds raised
by an ICO
we know that soon
this Authority should raise
its view
under accounting treatment of ICOs and
we expect that some ways
or some months after
The French Tax Authority
will also raise some doctrine about
how your fund
the funds raised
for your ICO would be deal with
From tax perspective and the last but not the least
during the annual tax law
for 2019 which is discussed
from September, from fall
2018
we expect to see some
favorable regime for ICO
notably for subscriber
with obligation of the Flat Tax
the famous French Flat Tax
for your gain on
on tokens and maybe we could also have some
legal clarification on the tax
regime applied on the ICO
in this law
I have finished. If you have any questions
Staff : Yes Use this opportunity to ask questions to One of the Maker of the French legislation !
How does this gonna work
concerning the protection's laws in France, if you have certain
let's say that is French, some stuff like that
That is covered under French law
Is it gonna be the same with this new law
for the other international ICOs?
The regime which allow you to submit your whitepaper to the AMF
will only be valable for French Compagny
So if you want such Visa, you have to
set up a company in France
with respect the marketing of
your ICOs
This is another subject, you could create your company in others countries and to try to
obtain investment to the funds from
French residents
Within this context, the existing regulation
still apply as i said in French control protection only
If you are drafting a website to attract
investors in French
You could be subject to French consumer protectionals
If you are
planning some reatup in France to find investors
you could be subject to the
existing French regulation
The minister (Finance) of France
Bruno le Maire which is
talking about ICO
last week said that
it's very want that France
become attractive for
for those projects
the French
The ministry is drafting the law
which will be vote by the French government but
the AMF is just drafting the details
which is called the AMF regulation
Q: Don't you think
that the end result
of having this regulation
in France would be that some
extension of your system which establish that
your companies in France
but they keep all their teams outside of France
and they claim stable
company outside of France
you know not have to pay any tax in France?
There is one thing which correct is that this
regime is going to, has been thinking
to attract company
in France but we are not obliged to
have your team in France
your team, your
concrete activity in France you can only have a holding in France but
if you haven't a holding in France you need to talk
with tax expert
but maybe you still have some tax to pay in France
One think, The AMF when
they will
approval your whitepaper
we want to see some warranty
about your project
so You have to prove that your organization abroad
could meet all this recommendation of gouvernement
I see nothing which prevent you to have the most of your activities abroad
But one thing, the AMF
is the only one which is over to decide
And even if this is not clearly drafted in the law
the AMF can choose to not rent you any Visa
because, they consider that you are just try to circumvent the law
That's IT !
you would have understood that
Paris is actually working to attract to the maximal
foreign funds in order to do these 3.0 fundraises
We used to go in front of the banks
Then we went to participatory financing (crowdfunding)
such as KickStarter, indiegogo and so on
Today we're clearly headed for the ICO.
like the new way of fundraising
don't focus only the Bitcoin
see what an ICO is (Initial Coin Offering)
you will see that there is a lot of projects
it can be about articifial intelligence
it can be about future social networks
it can be about the decentralization of internet itself ! with some Project like substratum (cryptocurrency)
it can be about the decentralization of storage, project SIA (cryptocurrency)
it can be about all the current technical subjects
if you missed the internet shift 20 years ago.
You can't miss the turn of the blockchain.
don't mix Bitcoin, cryptocurrencies, which I name crypto projects
that Bruno Le Maire (French Economic minister)
is now naming "crypto actifs" because it sounds better; when 3 months before we were against it.
and after the G20 we're totally in favor ...
and then Bitcoin
when there' s one that focuses on monopoly bills
there's the one who places their hotel on "Rue de la Paix" (prestigious street in Paris)
and the one who buy all the stations
and we all know over time who's more likely to make a fortune ...
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