RAT.HUB | Dein Startup Podcast Linda Rath
-
- Business
Ich bin Linda Rath und ich interviewe Startup-Gründer*innen um zu verstehen, wie sie ticken, was sie ausmacht und was wir von ihnen lernen können. Zum Gründen braucht man Mut, Fleiß und Glück … und was man sonst noch braucht, das finden wir hier gemeinsam heraus.
Falls ihr Fragen oder Anregungen habt, schreibt mir einfach via Twitter. Mein Handle ist @Lynda420.
Dieser Podcast wird unterstützt vom Medieninnovationszentrum Babelsberg (MIZ). Das MIZ fördert innovative Projekte mit Rundfunkbezug und organisiert Veranstaltungen und Vernetzungsangebote für kreative Medienschaffende. Ich war an zwei vom MIZ geförderten Projekten beteiligt und kann deren Angebote nur weiterempfehlen. Wer mehr erfahren möchte, geht zu https://www.miz-babelsberg.de/. Reicht dort eure Idee ein und erhaltet Innovationsförderung für euer Startup.
Der Podcast wird auch vom Media Tech Hub Potsdam unterstützt. Der MediaTech Hub Potsdam bündelt die lokale Expertise von Spezialisten und Visionären und umfasst ein Lab, einen Accelerator und eine jährliche Konferenz. Wir haben mit unserem Startup Vragments Büroräume im Lab in der Medienstadt Babelsberg gemietet und ich kann auch hier ihre Angebote weiterempfehlen. Weitere Informationen findet ihr unter https://www.mth-potsdam.de/.
Credits:
Konzipiert und produziert von Linda Rath mit Unterstützung von Stephan Gensch
Foto Linda Rath: Stefan Walter für Causalux Fotos
Podcast Cover: Nicole Koppe
Musik/Jingles: Mara Niese
-
Thomas Seymat | ARTE
Welcome back to the international edition of my podcast Rathhub. Today, I am joined by journalist and innovator Thomas Seymat who just became the Head of Innovation and Digital for News at European public broadcaster ARTE.
I have known Thomas for almost a decade now and met him while he was working as an immersive journalist at euronews in Lyon. Since then, he has been a residential fellow at the prestigious Reynolds Journalism Institute at the Missouri School of Journalism and he's been a teaching professor at several academic institutions in France.
Some key takeaways:
Thomas talks about how his team looks like and where innovation is implemented at ARTE.
We discuss some of the challenges in journalism (spoiler alter: yes, it is trust, yes, it is revenue models but also a lot more) and how innovation can tackle that.
Thomas gives us some great advice for young journalists in the future and what we need to teach them right now.
More links:
Mediapart
Arte Info auf Insta
Welcome to the international edition of my podcast Rath Up. I am your host Linda Rath and I interview entrepreneurs who I admire and look up to. I want to know more about their business AND .... What drives them? What inspires them? I believe you need so much more than just talent and skills to be successful in business. So, let's find out what secrets our entrepreneurs will reveal to us.
If you have any questions or want to share some thoughts, feel free to contact me via Twitter @Lynda420. I am your host Linda Rath and I am looking forward to connecting with you in my next episode.
This episode is brought to you by Media Tech Hub Potsdam. It is one of 12 digital hubs in Germany, initiated by the Federal Ministry of Economics and Energy – and the only one with a focus on MediaTech. it encompasses a working space, an accelerator and an annual conference and i highly recommend you check it out if you want to start a business and look for networking opportunities. I am an entrepreneur myself and our startup Vragments used to be located at the media tech lab in Potsdam.
Credits:
Produced by Linda Rath
Photo by Thomas Seymat
Photo Linda Rath by Stefan Walter for Causalux Fotos
Podcast Cover by Nicole Koppe
Music/Jingles by Mara Niese -
Jodi Nelson-Tabor & Adrian Weber | Virtual Production
Hochschule Mittweida`s media management students organize an annual media conference called Medienforum. Last year, we could actually witness a - what I would call - Virtual Production Dream Team aka VPDT because Jodi Nelson-Tabor and Adrian Weber not only attended the conference but gave two significant state of the industry kind of keynotes that really pushed the limits on how we view film production these days.
Here is Jodi's keynote at the Medienforum:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wQfTiDfYOE0
Here is Adrian's keynote at the Medienforum:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RcBG0g8ds3U
Before they went on stage, I was able to interview BOTH in the podcast bus
located outside the event. The interview was filmed, if you prefer video, check out this YouTube link.
Otherwise, enjoy this episode here.
Welcome to the international edition of my podcast Rath Up. I am your host Linda Rath and I interview entrepreneurs who I admire and look up to. I want to know more about their business AND .... What drives them? What inspires them? I believe you need so much more than just talent and skills to be successful in business. So, let's find out what secrets our entrepreneurs will reveal to us.
If you have any questions or want to share some thoughts, feel free to contact me via Twitter @Lynda420. I am your host Linda Rath and I am looking forward to connecting with you in my next episode.
Credits:
Produced by Cornelia Kanter for HSMW Medienforum
Production Setup kindly provided by the Podcast Bus (see above)
Photo Linda Rath by Stefan Walter for Causalux Fotos
Podcast Cover by Nicole Koppe
Music/Jingles by Mara Niese -
Aela Callan | head set
I am very honored to be calling Aela Callan as my first guest on the second season of my podcast RAT.HUB. Aela is an award-winning journalist and filmmaker, she worked as a foreign correspondent at Al Jazeera and produced documentaries for Al Jazeera's 101 East program. She was selected for a prestigious John S. Knight fellowship for journalism innovation at Stanford University and a few years ago she started her own company called head set.
When I met Aela more than five years ago, we regularly discussed how virtual reality is going to change journalism and how it can help tell better stories. How times have changed. I remember Aela always went to all the international conferences to see the latest and best VR experiences and she's had a very clear understanding of what immersive technologies can do for journalism. i am beyond excited to speak with her.
Some key takeaways:
head set is an immersive technology company that offers virtual reality training for people who work in high-risk environments, e.g. journalists, humanitarians and diplomats. head set develops immersive scenarios that help prepare physically and emotionally for what happens when you are in the midst of a big story.
She understands herself as a journalist first rather than an entrepreneur, so setting up a sales process has been something completely outside of her comfort zone.
Aela underlines: "Journalists are on a 24/7 frontline now, whether it's physically covering unrest in the streets because of Covid protests which is very relevant to our scenario or on the frontlines of Twitter with the cyberbullying and harassment that goes on now. We have a culture of many different parties attacking the media."
VR training sessions are different from traditional training sessions - "Journalists find it more realistic and more emotionally impactful than scenarios played out by actors."
With regards to her company, she states "I don't think you ever finish product development."
She tells us how she set up her company team and highlights "recruitment is difficult [...] Knowing what you need is half of the battle. But then being able to ask helps with attracting the right talent to your team and being able to keep them with interesting work and interesting projects."
Some management tips for a digital-first company:
during the pandemic, she has managed her team via zoom and slack
regular stand-up meetings help - open for anyone on the team (even if it is not their specific topics being discussed)
leave quietly at any time is possible
every day of the week is devoted to something: product development day, dev days, co-founder meetings
regular lunch roulettes
Friday open door coffee for non-work related subjects
read-outs from every meeting with specific action items is imperative
As a manager, you want to be checking in, not checking up.
Some tools to use
Canva
Miro
Trello
Keybase
Slack
Whatsapp
Google Drive
"An exit doesn't have to look like what investors say an exit is"
More links:
head set
Virtual Human Interaction Lab at Stanford University
Uncanny Valley
UK Research and Innovation
Prof. Albert (Skip) Rizzo - here is one of his talks: VR Exposure Therapy for PTSD
Bethnal Green Ventures
Fire Panda
I am Rohingya
Welcome to the international edition of my podcast RAT.HUB. I am your host Linda Rath and I interview entrepreneurs who I admire and look up to. I want to know more about their business AND: What drives them? What inspires them? I believe you need so much more than just talent and skills to be successful in business. So, let's find out what secrets our entrepreneurs will reveal to us.
If you have any questions or want to share some thoughts, feel free to contact me via Twitter @Lynda420. I am your host Linda Rath and I am looking forward to connecting with you in my next episode.
This episode is brought to you by Media Tech Hub Potsdam. It is one of 12 digital hubs in Germany, initiated by the Federal Ministry of Ec -
Gayatri Parameswaran | NowHere Media
Today, I am joined by Gayatri Parameswaran. She is a journalist and co-founder of Nowhere Media, an immersive storytelling studio that explores how you can achieve meaningful narratives through immersive experiences. Her projects have not only been featured at festivals such as SXSW, Sundance and Venice film festival. Her latest VR experience Kusunda has actually won the Tribeca Storyscapes Grand Jury prize just a few weeks ago.
Gayatri gives a raw account of the true hustle that is being a foundHER. Juggling one two three projects simultaneously, having to pitch ideas to potential investors and managing teams - all while keeping her creative juices flowing. She is a true warrior and I applaud her resilience.
When I met Gayatri, we co-organized a VR pop up studio in Berlin, we also co-participated at a panel at the Perugia journalism festival and she gave the keynote at one of the VR conferences i co-organized with Frederic Dubois.
I've been able to explore her work over the years and I am honored that she is here with me today.
Some key takeaways:
Keeping a language alive means keeping a culture alive. Kusunda is a VR experience that lets you explore the world of the Kusunda language.
"I am very inspired by reality ... We let ourselves be guided by reality and people in real life ... There is something special to immersive technologies and what it can do for storytelling."
Currently, Nowhere Media is doing research about how stories about intangible cultural heritage affects people when they are told in different media/formats.
"There is something magical over there that's happening inside the VR headset."
Kusunda started with a core team. Then they received seed funding for the prototype. Step by step, additional funding came in to start imagining what an extended version of the story could look like.
The project had some real life impact, including a language revitalization program.
Gayatri's book recommendations:
Woman at the edge of time
Any book by Ursula Le Guin
More links:
Nowhere Media was featured on Voices of VR
Another moving VR experience by Nowhere Media: Home After War
Welcome to the international edition of my podcast RAT.HUB. I am your host Linda Rath and I interview entrepreneurs who I admire and look up to. I want to know more about their business AND .... What drives them? What inspires them? I believe you need so much more than just talent and skills to be successful in business. So, let's find out what secrets our entrepreneurs will reveal to us.
If you have any questions or want to share some thoughts, feel free to contact me via Twitter @Lynda420. I am your host Linda Rath and I am looking forward to connecting with you in my next episode.
This episode is brought to you by Media Tech Hub Potsdam. It is one of 12 digital hubs in Germany, initiated by the Federal Ministry of Economics and Energy – and the only one with a focus on MediaTech. it encompasses a working space, an accelerator and an annual conference and i highly recommend you check it out if you want to start a business and look for networking opportunities. I am an entrepreneur myself and our startup Vragments used to be located at the media tech lab in Potsdam.
Credits:
Produced by Linda Rath
Photo Gayatri Parameswaran by Gayatri Parameswaran
Photo Linda Rath by Stefan Walter for Causalux Fotos
Podcast Cover by Nicole Koppe
Episode Cover Art by Stephan Gensch
Music/Jingles by Mara Niese -
Mercy Abang | Journalist
It took me many moons to publish this episode (Mercy and I actually talked back in September 2021). Finally, I can share this interview with Mercy Abang! She is a Nigerian journalist living in Berlin. About 5 years ago, I met her in Bonn at a workshop at Deutsche Welle. She has freelanced for the Associated Press, Al Jazeera, BBC and the Columbia Journalism School, among others. She just started working at Hostwriter as one of two managing directors. Congratulations!
In this episode, we talk about the Twitter ban in Nigeria and what this means for the civic online space and journalism, we cover the challenges of being an entrepreneur and we discuss in how far journalists should embrace technology. She gives us a glimpse of what's important to her and how she prioritizes her work and her life.
Some key takeaways:
Social media platforms help journalists with marketing and distribution and should be used accordingly. Having the right content is simply not enough.
However, journalists should not just focus on one platform. The more you increase the visibility on other platforms the better and when one falls flat (as we saw in Nigeria), you can rely on others. Diversify your distribution strategy.
Don't underestimate the importance of VPN and other technological opportunities to ensure free speech.
Mercy decided to go back to business school. Why? We have to start looking at money. as a journalist, you have to know business. As a journalist, you need an entrepreneurial mindset.
Content creation is more than a buzzword for gen z.
Platforms like facebook and Google take a new role/position in the media ecosystem and changes how individual journalists can position themselves within that ecosystem.
We have no idea how the future of the media look like.
Journalists should embrace innovation and not fight it. Journalists should adapt to innovation and not fight it.
Everybody has become a journalist, everyobody has become a storyteller, everyobody has become a content creator, everybody has become a broadcaster.
Mercy expects more journalists to think outside the box and say ... the world is changing.
More links:
Mercy Abang
Mercy Abang is one of two new managing directors at Hostwriter
Mercy Abang on Al Jazeera's Listening Post
Tim Ferris Blog
Christiane Amanpour
Welcome to the international edition of my podcast Rath.hub. I am your host Linda Rath and I interview entrepreneurs who I admire and look up to. I want to know more about their business AND: What drives them? What inspires them? I believe you need so much more than just talent and skills to be successful in business. So, let's find out what secrets our entrepreneurs will reveal to us.
If you have any questions or want to share some thoughts, feel free to contact me via Twitter @Lynda420. I am your host Linda Rath and I am looking forward to connecting with you in my next episode.
This episode is brought to you by Media Tech Hub Potsdam. It is one of 12 digital hubs in Germany, initiated by the Federal Ministry of Economics and Energy – and the only one with a focus on MediaTech. it encompasses a working space, an accelerator and an annual conference and i highly recommend you check it out if you want to start a business and look for networking opportunities. I am an entrepreneur myself and our startup Vragments used to be located at the media tech lab in Potsdam.
Credits:
Produced by Linda Rath
Photo Mercy Abang by Mercy Abang
Photo Linda Rath by Stefan Walter for Causalux Fotos
Podcast Cover by Nicole Koppe
Episode Cover Art by Stephan Gensch
Music/Jingles by Mara Niese -
Mariana Santos | Chicas Poderosas
Today, I am joined by Mariana Santos. She is a journalist and founder of Chicas Poderosas, a non-profit organization that aims to empower women, journalists and the leadership of women in media. Chicas provides training to have more leadership skills, to navigate better and to come up with one's own story ideas. Also, LGBTQ+ and other minorities whose voices have been marginalized in media orgs are supported by Chicas Poderosas.
Mariana started this community in 2013 while she was an ICFJ fellow. Today she runs it full-time with her team and a board of directors and experts in the different areas of journalism, entrepreneurship, business, innovation and design thinking.
Mariana was also a JSK Knight fellow at Stanford in 2015 and a Knight International Journalism Fellow back in 2013-14 working all across Latin America in major newsrooms and with independent journalists.
I met her many moons ago at Stanford where she organized a week-long workshop/conference evolving around entrepreneuship and innovation in journalism. Years later, she invited me to Lisbon to talk about immersive journalism and again, she was able to bring together people from all over the world creating a save space to experiment and innovate. She says about herself that she is a "Portuguese girl who wants to change the world, and is working on it right now."
Some key takeaways:
The drive of chicas is the magic of being together, feeling the energy of each other ... so the pandemic has been extremely challenging.
Being a chica means believing in yourself. it is a mindset
"We need to find role models. We should be listened to."
"We've been very passionate about changing the reality for women."
"I thought about quitting."
"I wanna be there for my team, I wanna hug them."
"My energy became my currency."
"We want to bring more women into technology."
Great team exercise: Try to do the tasks of your colleagues. We need to see each other as team mates and understand what we each of us are doing.
Important question: How do you establish a culture of trust?
To do projects, you need: talent, time, and money.
Mariana is living in Portugal, running a business in the US that has actions in Latin America.
i am not a business woman naturally, but i became one.
No toxic people, no toxic environments.
Mariana's book recommendations:
Lead together
Welcome to the international edition of my podcast Rath Up. I am your host Linda Rath and I interview entrepreneurs who I admire and look up to. I want to know more about their business AND .... What drives them? What inspires them? I believe you need so much more than just talent and skills to be successful in business. So, let's find out what secrets our entrepreneurs will reveal to us.
If you have any questions or want to share some thoughts, feel free to contact me via Twitter @Lynda420. I am your host Linda Rath and I am looking forward to connecting with you in my next episode.
This episode is brought to you by Media Tech Hub Potsdam. It is one of 12 digital hubs in Germany, initiated by the Federal Ministry of Economics and Energy – and the only one with a focus on MediaTech. it encompasses a working space, an accelerator and an annual conference and i highly recommend you check it out if you want to start a business and look for networking opportunities. I am an entrepreneur myself and our startup Vragments used to be located at the media tech lab in Potsdam.
Credits:
Produced by Linda Rath
Photo Mariana Santos
Photo Linda Rath by Stefan Walter for Causalux Fotos
Podcast Cover by Nicole Koppe
Episode Cover Art by Stephan Gensch
Music/Jingles by Mara Niese