Koret House Benefits If You Attend Best of the Bay Party

Wed, Jul 6, 2011

Uncategorized

Larry Chiang writes about entrepreneurship and pre-entrepreneurship. He edits the Bloomberg BusinessWeek channel “What They Don’t Teach You at Business School”. After Chiang’s Harvard Law keynote, Harvard Business wrote: “What They Don’t Teach You at Stanford Business School“ (the same title as his NY Times bestseller). If you read his scandalously awesome “What a Supermodel Can Teach a Stanford MBA” and “How to Get Man-Charm”, you will like his latest post:

Koret House Benefits If You Attend Best of the Bay Party


By Larry Chiang

This is a party I attend every year.

I put on my uniform (khaki pants, black shoes, and an oxford) and get there 5 minutes before the party starts. Instead of previewing the party, I thought I’d just explain it in 4000 words (aka four pictures because a picture is worth…)

ENJOY and see you Thursday.

Guess over or under. The time that these two have known each other is 45 minutes. Email me, larry @duck9 .com your guess

Secret disc Code for Best of the Bay expires Midnight TUES: AA4A/AA4AVIP

Live Music and tons of restaurants!

My fave party = Best of the Bay

Best of the Bay donation package with me, Larry Chiang, wrangling you at Fashion Week in NYC (Now known as Mercedes Benz Fashion Week)

If you liked this… default

Larry’s mentor Mark McCormack wrote this in 1983. His own book came out 09-09-09. It is called ‘What They Don’t Teach You At Stanford Business School
*** BONUS ***

a party invite for you…


This post was drafted in an hour and needs your edits… email me if you see a spelling or grammatical error(s)… larry@larrychiang com

Larry Chiang started his first company UCMS in college. He mimicked his mentor, Mark McCormack, founder of IMG who wrote the book, “What They Don’t Teach You at Harvard Business School”. Chiang is a keynote speaker and bestselling author and spoke at Congress and World Bank.

Text or call him during office hours 11:11am or 11:11pm PST +/-11 minutes at 650-283-8008. Due to the volume of calls, he may place you on hold like a Scottsdale Arizona customer service rep. If you email him, be sure to include your cell number in the subject line. If you want him to email you his new articles…, ask him in an email :-)

You can read more equally funny, but non-founder-focused-lessons on Larry’s Amazon blog


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