We’ve been talking about putting an Advisory Board together. And before we get to a $9 Billion valuation, we’re going to do something about this issue of too few women on tech company boards thing. It just makes sense for our company and for a group of partners who have daughters. (Some of them have wives as well!). This is the start, then, of the process: identifying a great list of potential candidates. Here’s the list the NYT BITS blog pulled together for Twitter. As unlikely as it seems, they would of course be amazing Content Carnivores Advisory Board Members. Why not? Many of these all-stars have strong media credentials. Why not consider a start-up dedicated to the highest quality online content possible?

Content Carnivores (CC) rallies old and new media around one core: Great writing.

    • Joanne Bradford Currently president of the San Francisco Chronicle, her career has spanned old and new media: Demand Media, Yahoo, Microsoft and BusinessWeek.
    • Wenda Harris Millard The president of MediaLink, a media and advertising strategy company, was chief sales officer at Yahoo and an executive at DoubleClick, among other media and tech executive roles.
    • Geraldine Laybourne The founder of Oxygen Media and former executive at Nickelodeon and Disney-ABC Cable Networks has tech experience on the boards of Electronic Arts, Symantec and Kandu, a tech start-up for children.
    • Indra Nooyi The chief executive of PepsiCo also has a background in tech, having run corporate strategy and planning at Motorola.

PR is often about pushing the ‘about me’ section of a business–but when working in concert with a CC program, ‘about me’ is matched to what people type in the search box to create a natural discovery process.

    • Margit Wennmachers A partner at Andreessen Horowitz, a venture capital firm that invested in Twitter, she started and sold a public relations firm and knows tech and marketing inside and out.
    • Susan Lyne The chief executive of AOL Brand Group and formerly of Gilt has a career that has spanned magazines, TV, movies and tech.
    • Angela Ahrendts The chief executive of Burberry is a branding expert.
    • Shelly Lazarus The chairwoman emeritus and former chief executive of Ogilvy & Mather, the advertising agency, has deep expertise in branding and marketing.
    • Charlotte Beers Another former Ogilvy & Mather chief executive also worked as an under secretary of state charged with polishing America’s image abroad after the Sept. 11 attacks.
    • Cindy Gallop The founder of the United States branch of Bartle Bogle Hegarty, the advertising agency, has an unprintable motto that would fit in well in Silicon Valley.

The great thing about content is multi-media opportunities. Why aren’t companies bringing their ideas to life with video? audio? animations? CC is built to help.

    • Ann Fudge The former chairwoman and chief executive of Young & Rubicam Brands, the advertising agency, has deep public-company board experience.
    • Anne Sweeney The president of Disney/ABC Television Group, and a chairwoman of Disney Media Networks, is overseeing the transition to digital media.
    • Lauren Zalaznick She has free time after recently leaving NBCUniversal, where she worked on digital media, TV and movies.
    • Diane Nelson The chief content officer of Warner Brothers Interactive Entertainment and president of DC Entertainment oversees characters like Harry Potter and Superman.
    • Sherry Lansing The former chief executive of Paramount Pictures has tech experience on the board of Qualcomm.
    • Kay Koplovitz The Founder of USA Network knows the TV business, and also co-founded Springboard Enterprises, a nonprofit for women entrepreneurs.
    • Judith McHale The former chief executive of Discovery Communications, which owns the Discovery Channel, was also an under secretary of state and now invests in tech start-ups.
    • Shonda Rimes The screenwriter, director and producer who created Grey’s Anatomy and Scandal is also an avid Twitter user.
    • Ann Moore Few people know more about publishing than the former chief executive of Time Inc.
    • Cathie Black The former president and chairwoman of Hearst Magazines and publisher of USA Today would be a better fit at a digital media company than she was as New York City Schools chancellor.
    • Cindi Leive The editor in chief of Glamour has expertise in media, publishing and fashion.
    • Joanna Coles The editor in chief of Cosmopolitan understands print media and reaching different audiences.

Stay tuned as we reach out to find inspiring people for the Content Carnivores Advisory Board. And if you pass on the Twitter Board invite, we’d be glad to talk.