Mike McCue quotes:

+1
Share
Pin
Like
Send
Share
  • Let's say you go to a friend's wedding, or Thanksgiving, or Halloween. It'd be great the next day to see what went on with your friends' Thanksgiving weekend, or all the costumes they wore on Halloween, and be able to look back and see what they wore the year before, and the year before that.

  • My parents were entrepreneurs. They ran a small ad agency in upstate New York.

  • I.B.M. was my college education, effectively. They were very good at teaching you management.

  • Articles themselves are condensed to narrow columns of text across 5, 6, 7 pages, and ads that are really distracting for the reader, so it's not a pleasant experience to 'curl up' with a good website.

  • As an entrepreneur, in many ways it's like looking into the crystal ball for what my company will hopefully go through as it starts to think about bigger challenges - scaling internationally, getting ready to go public, and all those different things.

  • If you're Burberry or Gucci, you're not going to run a banner ad. To get brand ad dollars to move to digital, you need to create a beautiful experience.

  • In high school, I started my first company, called M Cubed Software. We named it that because it was me and two other guys named Mike.

  • I had been reading magazines a lot, and I love magazines, and so I was always asking myself why is it that these gorgeous articles just don't translate well to the web? Presentation was one aspect of it.

  • The iPad is a superior consumption device for material on the Web.

  • Twitter can be incredibly valuable as an open communications mechanism, but if you close too many things down too quickly, if you think about it too short-sightedly, you could easily do a lot of damage to that ecosystem.

  • What the iPad does is it opens people's minds to a new way of doing things. They're actually thirsting for it.

  • Twitter was created as an open platform, an open communications ecosystem, and I hope it can stay that way. You have to be really careful not to let money get in the way of that.

  • I was really excited by the idea that people were sharing information now and discovering information in a totally new way on the Internet via Twitter and Facebook, yet that experience was pretty clunk and just lots of bit.ly links.

  • Today, when you combine the web with the iPad, you have the most advanced medium for human thought and communication ever created.

  • The iPad is creating a new format for reading content. One of the things that's happening as a result is the world of personalized news aggregators, which is a category that's been around for quite some time, is getting new life.

  • One of the things that Flipboard is great at is certainly looking at the news in a realtime format, which a lot of the personal news aggregators don't really focus on, so you can see things right up to the minute.

  • Kind of like Google crawls the Web, we crawl the social networks. Where Google analyzes links and Web pages, we look at the same thing with people. So we can tell, for example, who you interact with more frequently. Or if it's not frequency, maybe it's consistency.

  • Let's leverage the power of the Web - don't get rid of it, but make the Web beautiful again. We need to give the content room to breathe and give magazine-style advertisements the opportunity to flourish.

  • The Web as we've known it for a long time has been pages linking and pointing to other pages.

  • Having run Tellme before, one of the things I learned about running a big network is it's one thing to have some people not be able to get on the way they want to get on, but as long as people who are on the network are having a good experience, you're totally cool.

  • You don't feel like you have to interact with a whole bunch of people when you get on Flipboard. It's not a source of social anxiety.

  • Even in the face of massive competition, don't think about the competition. Literally don't think about them. Every time you're in a meeting and you're tempted to talk about a competitor, replace that thought with one about user feedback or surveys. Just think about the customer.

  • Our whole goal is to basically feature publishers' content and get people to click over to that content on the website.

  • Personalized news aggregators are geared around connecting you to news sources; we're about connecting you to your friends. To people you're inspired by. To people that you're following on Facebook and Twitter.

  • Ever since I first used a computer in the early '80s, I've thought of it as a fundamentally new medium for the dissemination of ideas which can transform people's lives and the society we live in.

  • My dad died from cancer when I was 18, and my mom was in a really tough spot. So I wanted to try to help at home. I had started doing some technology consulting.

  • Facebook is about seeing what your friend is doing. Twitter, you follow different people. Flipboard is about passions and interests and topics, and so it's the same social web that all of these products are letting you look at, but Flipboard is coming at it from a more topical point of view.

  • As a publisher, you should decide what content is free and what you'd pay for. You have to get the packaging right, but people will pay for content.

  • A magazine is so much more beautiful than what's online,

  • Even in the face of massive competition, don't think about the competition. Just think about the customer.

  • What drives me? Surrounding myself with amazing talent to craft a breakthrough product which can be used by millions of people to change the world.

+1
Share
Pin
Like
Send
Share