Friday, April 16, 2010

Moments away from a Winner

After radiant applause following the final start-up company pitch, audience members were invited to use a secure, text-messaging voting system to determine their choice of the $250 Audience Choice Award. Additionally, guest speaker Aaron Patzer was invited to pick his choice for the $500 Speakers' Choice Award. Audience members eagerly submitted their choices as the votes were tallied and the suspense began to build. Then, hosts Shalav Gupta and Vatsala Kabra approached the stage to reveal the winner.

6 comments:


  1. Wow, that's a wonderful business. I'd like to learn more about the organization, as well as how to enhance my skills, as my sir has assigned me an essay to write. I gathered a few items from economics thesis topics list service. It is quite beneficial to me in this essay.

    ReplyDelete
  2. After any match there is joy and there is applause for them and there is a place of joy for them because they won the final. Everyone says congratulations after congratulations, just as they are happy, similarly the professional CV editing service in Dubai is also happy to edit the CV and give it to the people. When everything is done after winning the match then they go on stage and give their statement.

    ReplyDelete
  3. If you’re aiming to be the winner in your job search, start with a flawless cv format for dubai crafted by experts.

    ReplyDelete
  4. Exciting pitch event! The secure voting system sounds efficient. It's great Aaron Patzer was there to offer his insights. The suspense must have been intense! This reminds me of the thrill of achieving a top score in Snow rider , truly rewarding.

    ReplyDelete
  5. What a cool event! I love when there's an interactive element like audience voting – it really makes you feel part of the excitement. That suspense building up sounds intense, like when you're a tiny cell in Agario, trying to grow but constantly aware of bigger players lurking. Hope the winners were deserving!

    ReplyDelete
  6. That's such a cool idea for audience engagement! Text-message voting adds a nice interactive touch. I wonder if it ever backfires, though. Like, in horror games, sometimes simple choices have huge, unforeseen consequences. Imagine if a super popular pitch got edged out by some obscure one because of a last-minute text surge. Always keeps things interesting, right? Good way to build suspense!

    ReplyDelete