“Anyone who has never made a mistake has never tried anything new.” — Albert Einstein

Sharat Sharan’s On24: Lead Generation Through WebCasting (Part 1)

Monday, September 24, 2007 | No comments

Check other articles in the series...

SM: Please describe your personal background : Family, upbringing, early career, etc. leading up to this venture.

SS: I grew up in New Delhi, India and my dad was a senior military officer. We had a lot of change every two years as we moved from place to place. This taught me how to make new friends and how to adapt to survive in a way.

I got my BS in electrical engineering and had an opportunity in 1984 to go to the best management school in India or go to the US for graduate studies in computer science. I decided to go to the US, where I got my Masters degree in Computer Science from Virginia Tech.

After graduate school – around 1986, I started at Online Computer Systems, a software start-up focused on CD-ROM based systems. This was when the beginning of the information revolution and Online Computer Systems was a leading player. Reed Elsevier eventually acquired the company.

I then joined AT&T Labs at the height of the organization’s prominence, focusing on telecommunications and wireless for five years. I was originally part of the technical staff at AT&T Bell Laboratories and then became product manager for AT&T’s International Switching Business before I moved to business development at AT&T Wireless Systems. While working at AT&T, I earned my MBA from the University of Chicago in 1989.

I then joined Hearst New Media after Alfred Sikes, former FCC Chairman, joined as President. This was around 1993-1994. At the time, Hearst New Media was forging “interactive media” before what most people would eventually associate as interactive media.

I was able to advance quickly to group vice president of Hearst New Media Group during my time with the organization. I helped build some of the largest new media businesses, including Hearst Home Arts (now iVillage/NBC); Houston Chronicle Interactive; and Hearst New Media Center.

I was also responsible for the investment that Hearst made in Netscape and was an early advisory board member to the company.

By 1996, I was driven to start or join a start-up company. As a senior level executive with a large company, I was interested in building out a company from the early stages. I decided to relocate to Silicon Valley and become involved with ON24 as a co-founder in 1998.

This segment is part 1 in a 6 part series
Jump to part: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6

You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.


Free Updates

Subscribe to feed (learn more)

Or get updates by e-mail:

Recent Comments

  • I congratulate the engineers on this projects Sramana. I recently saw a documentary showing the rate of glacial melting that feeds the Ganges and a photographer… David Bristow on Vision India 2020: Gangotri
  • Dear Sramana, I fully agree with you and today we need people like you who are not only Visionary but also have practical solutions. This type of Micro fin… valmik soni on Vision India 2020: Bioscope
  • Thanks Sramana-Reading this piece brought be back to my childhood memories in calcutta during 70s and 80s- growing up in our ancestral home on Harish Mukherjee … Anindya Bose on As India Builds (Part 8)
  • Sramana, I remember seeing such social messages on Doordarshan when I was in primary school ("Mile Sur mera tumhara.." and "Ek-Anek"). So this point is valid… Arpit Agarwal on Vision India 2020: Bioscope
  • Sramana, I was following your site for quite some time.I am trying to learn a thing or 2 from your postings.Your postings are very detailed and insightful. … live mirchi on Welcome Problem, Unwelcome Time
  • Arpit, Landholders are not necessarily the segment we're after, here. We're after the poor. I have a very hard time believing that India has reached a level … Sramana Mitra on Vision India 2020: Bioscope

From Related Sites