大统华每周特价 信达超市每周特价 龙翔、龙胜超市(Oceans)每周特价 佳乐超市每周特价

加拿大密西沙加华人网™

 找回密码
 注册
查看: 3895|回复: 0

Back from the Brink

[复制链接]

165

主题

497

帖子

17

精华

新手上路

宣德郎(正七品下)

Rank: 1

积分
10
获赠鲜花
0 朵
个人财富
100 金币
注册时间
2006-2-3
发表于 2007-1-14 23:45 | 显示全部楼层 |阅读模式
友情提示: 请千万不要登入陌生网站输入QQ号和密码,以防诈骗。
联系我时,请说明是从哪儿看到的,谢谢。
北美华人新生活

保帮家电维修李师傅



心理热线



新客户展示位
更多广告请点击
中文黄页


有您的支持
我们会做得更好
--优秀的产品,优秀的企业![/SIZE]8 l2 x1 x8 N) [  f4 Q3 A3 k# {

% M! o2 U$ W1 ^Back from the Brink0 ~8 ?3 \# a8 Y8 D

+ E( e9 Q6 Y0 a- s" F
2 P* p& |* _6 @2 {9 tAs told to Darren Dahl
: z, v; f" F  h/ a8 VMonday, January 8, 20079 H0 K1 i, C9 W

/ `  K5 A: A2 ^* H) j6 M3 E& L' n+ R$ O5 M0 \% W( B( @1 `
: N1 `: A# J' v  x% l
$ @9 m3 R/ Q2 Q: m6 Z  j( n( I
: W# s1 W) L6 e# i

2 t  C7 E5 ?( j9 b3 D0 z1 C! W1 \2 ]! J) L+ f
Geomagic Inc. Co-founder and CEO, Ping Fu! V5 S( a" B+ Y6 r; @

" m, b4 u* J; n1 a: Gwww.geomagic.com[/COLOR]
: a, y! T9 |" J8 y: q[EMAIL=\"inquiry@geomagic.com\"]inquiry@geomagic.com[/COLOR][/EMAIL]8 j6 K4 l) G+ F0 x- y2 e* h
% W, V3 @' [2 z8 c
Business Type:Software+ a9 {2 n+ f: K- ]8 x- J! U
2005 Revenue:$15 million
, Q7 S+ x8 @+ R( A) H- Q7 H/ q6 \( FNo. of Employees:1004 ~  t0 e5 J+ u5 `

4 }* T3 h+ _( n9 F" Q6 r
% ^% P5 E# y! y/ e# U$ i[/COLOR]   F& K0 Y* j# \3 S4 i4 J
5 Q% Z& U" ?% x- n2 ]9 Q

1 A. g, N: ?2 r$ i# T3 q8 `Ping Fu\'s journey as [I]Inc.[/I] magazine\'s 2005 Entrepreneur of the Year[/COLOR] began 25 years ago, with her escape from communist China. After stops in New Mexico and California, she headed to Illinois, where she worked with Marc Andreessen on the creation of an early Internet browser called Mosaic. Inspired by the mid-1990s technology boom, she set out to start her own company. In 1999, she arrived in Raleigh, N.C., and began to grow that company, Geomagic, which makes software that\'s revolutionizing the manufacturing industry through its three-dimensional design tools.    \"I was a reluctant entrepreneur in the beginning. I was working at the University of Illinois managing the Mosaic project. Then Netscape went public in 1995 and that changed everything. After that, everyone I knew in high-tech was starting companies. That\'s when I thought I might as well start one as well.  1 \* y% @3 U  C, I* m* D3 f, [& ~( N6 S* k
\"The difference for me was that I didn\'t want to start an Internet company like everyone else. My husband, Herbert, and I had been using a supercomputer to digitize shapes. We were modeling small things like atoms and enormous things like galaxies. What intrigued me was that we were in the middle of the digital revolution where everything from music to desktop processing was going digital. I wondered how we could do the same thing to manufacturing. The idea of making digital designs as easy as taking a photo excited me. ( [1 V$ U5 \' W7 F
\"Then, in 1997, I went out and raised some money like any other entrepreneur. Money was easy if you had a good story. Our story was better than good. I told people to imagine walking into a Nike store to get your foot scanned to make your customized hiking boots, or watching a model of your daughter\'s teeth and how they will change the next two years. The applications could be endless.6 y& ~+ v! r) ]2 _& {9 B
\"We quickly raised $2 million and landed our first two customers, Mattel and Boeing. We picked them carefully as partners because they offered the chance to test our software on a large variety of shapes, everything from Barbie dolls to jet turbines. # h. B. @9 a1 G: a6 j8 G6 d8 U
\"We delivered our first product two years later and raised some more venture-capital money. Then I made my first mistake. I used the money we raised to hire seasoned managers to run the company. I was just following what every other high-flying company was doing. I didn\'t understand that managers from companies like IBM, GE, or Pratt & Whitney didn\'t understand how to run a start-up company. I thought people could make miracles, and they couldn\'t. Our company, like many others, took a downturn because we chased the wrong customers and lost money.
4 V1 v4 X5 L$ K9 m\"The company was at the brink of death and I needed to make something of our hard work. I went to our VCs and asked them to let me take the company back and run it. I told them I was their best bet. To their credit, they let me.1 z, I  T4 R+ n& ]
\"I took the company back in 2001. I had $1 million in the bank and 15 employees and I had to lay half of them off. I had to mortgage my house to help pay for the ones that stayed. We adopted a mantra -- DROOM -- which meant Do Not Run Out of Money. This was a far harder time that when we were a start-up. The key was that we believed in our technology. Our mission was to deploy three-dimensional technology for the benefit of humanity.
: F5 h  f9 T' L! }/ T: C# ^! B3 E\"Our turning point was a key $2 million contract from a customer. That gave us cash for another nine months. Then a couple more deals followed. Our customers were telling us that they believed in our technology and they didn\'t want to see us die. I also started hiring the right kind of people this time, people that shared our entrepreneurial values. They helped me make the company profitable again in 2003. It was a miracle.\"
古人曰:忠、孝、义、勇、信、德、诚、容、仁 一种语言的空间分布是衡量一个文化集团命运的尺子。如果该文化集团兴旺发达,则其使用的语言就会在地理范围上不断扩大,反之,则会缩小,甚至终于灭绝。
密西沙加中文黄页
您需要登录后才可以回帖 登录 | 注册

本版积分规则

广告合作(Contact Us)|关于我们|小黑屋|手机版|Archiver|加拿大密西沙加华人网

GMT-5, 2024-12-4 21:23

Powered by Discuz! X3.4 Licensed

Copyright © 2001-2021, Tencent Cloud.

快速回复 返回顶部 返回列表