mercredi 30 septembre 2015

Evernote's Job Cuts Are a Rare Pullback for Billion-Dollar Startup - Wall Street Journal (blog)

Three years ago, note-taking app maker Evernote Inc. rose to an elite status among startups with a $1 billion valuation.

Now, Evernote is one of the few members of the billion-dollar club to pull back on its growth. On Tuesday, the company cut 47 employees, or 13% of its staff, and told its staff that it plans to close its offices in Taiwan, Singapore and Moscow, a spokeswoman said.

The cuts follow a recent scaling back in business strategy and the resignation of co-founder and CEO Phil Libin, who was replaced in July by former Google Inc. executive Chris O'Neill.

"A smaller, more focused team today will set us up for growth and expansion tomorrow," Mr. O'Neill said in a blog post. "We will launch major foundational product improvements around the core features that you care about most, and we will pull back on initiatives that fail to support our mission."

Evernote's job cuts could serve as a warning to the more than 120 private companies now valued at $1 billion or more, even as an average of two private companies join that club every week.

Fab.com, an e-commerce startup valued at $1 billion in 2013, sold for a small fraction of that amount earlier this year, after the company grew too quickly overseas and burned through its cash. The company failed to right its course through several rounds of layoffs. Gilt Groupe also reportedly laid off about 10% of its workforce back in early 2012, not long after raising capital at a $1 billion valuation.

Evernote is shedding jobs as it attempts to transition from a popular consumer app to a paid subscription service used by professionals in more than 20,000 companies. Its paid subscribers, who pay up to $50 a year for more storage and additional features such as business card-scanning and presentation software, have increased 40% over the past year, Mr. O'Neill said in the post on Tuesday.

The startup shuttered one of its consumer-focused apps, a recipe-saving service called Evernote Food, this week. Its website still offers a wide range of products, including a Web-clipping service, Moleskine notebooks and a scanner.

Evernote has raised more than $300 million from investors including DoCoMo Capital , Meritech Capital Partners, Sequoia Capital and T. Rowe Price .

Libin, who co-founded Evernote and served as its CEO for most of the company's growth, this month joined VC firm General Catalyst Partners. He remains Evernote's executive chairman.

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Alok Mittal to launch tech startup Indifi Technologies - Economic Times

NEW DELHI: Alok Mittal, the former India head of venture capital firm Canaan Partners, is launching his new venture Indifi Technologies, a technology startup that will enable the country's micro and small enterprises to gain greater access to debt financing.

The startup, the formal launch of which is expected to be on Wednesday, marks the return of Mittal to his entrepreneurial roots, more than a decade after he exited his earlier startup, JobsAhead, an e-recruitment venture, after it was acquired by Monster.com for about Rs 40 crore.

"There is a $380 billion debt financing gap in India's MSME segment, and currently, the mechanism is very human intensive. Our technology platform will look to fill the spaces, identify the needs, and work with partners to enable smaller businesses have greater access to low-cost debt," Mittal told ET.

Also joining Mittal as co-founder and chief operating officer in Indifi is Siddharth Mahanot, who was formerly with Indiabulls Housing Fina nce, Edelweiss Financial Services and Citibank. Sundeep Sahi, who was earlier with mobile internet company, IgniteWorld, a joint venture between Yahoo Japan, Bharti & Softbank, has also come on board as a co-founder and chief technology officer.

The five month-old startup has already tied up with three organisations, including, a travel and ticketing platform, a cab aggregator and an ecommerce company, according to Mittal, who declined to share names, citing the existence of non-disclosure agreements signed between the parties.

"We will, essentially, work with anyone who has built marketing and finance platforms, including online travel agencies, B2B platforms for traders and ecommerce companies," Mittal said.

Indifi, which has also signed up with a few lenders, will layer its technology with that of its partners, similar to that created by Chinese ecommerce giant TheAlibaba Group, which has also integrated its lending platforms with its ecommerce sites.

"There are two major issues on the lending side - origination and underwriting. The Indifi platform connects lenders as well as our partners," Mittal said.

The launch of the startup comes at a time when Indian MSMEs, while accounting for more than 80% of the country's total industrial enterprises, and contributing about 45% to manufacturing output, still continue to face significant hurdles in accessing capital.

According to a World Bank Report, about 87% of Indian MSMEs do not have any access to finance and were self-financed.

Indifi, which has been bootstrapped so far, is also exploring alternative funding options, Mittal said.

This is Mittal's first venture since leaving Canaan Partners, after the early-to-mid-stage venture capital firm sold its entire portfolio in India to JP Morgan Asset Management in a deal valued over $200 million.

mardi 29 septembre 2015

This startup turns your car insurance premium into cancer research donations - The Next Web

Everyone wants to give to causes that matter most to them, but sometimes it's hard to wrap your head around providing the funds to actually do so. For some people, parting with $100 or more to donate in a lump sum isn't doable.

San Francisco startup Givesurance is a company that aims to turn something you do every month — make a car insurance payment — into usable funds to donate to charities and non-profits. And today it has announced a partnership with the Ovarian Cancer Research Fund to donate funds to research.

Additionally, the company has also added childhood cancer nonprofit CureSearch, so users can now donate with the aim of ending cancer in kids. The startup on a related social media campaign this month, raising awareness for childhood cancer with the hashtag #MakeItGoldforKids.

"Launching these fundraising campaigns enables us to provide CureSearch and the Ovarian Cancer Research Fund with a creative new way for donors to contribute to the active search for a cure," Givesurance founder and CEO Jennifer Rasiah told TNW.

Givesurance currently partners with more than 200 insurance carriers to turn 3 to 5 percent of a user's insurance premium into a usable donation to use on one of more than 60 partner charities. Whether that's for cancer research, wildlife preservation or another cause, users get to choose where their money goes.

Givesurance released from beta in June, and its partners include insurance carriers Progressive, Travelers and Healthco.

Givesurance

What Taking On Google Taught Me About Startup Traction - Fast Company

In 2006, I sold an Internet company that I had cofounded a few years earlier for millions of dollars. It was a strange company for many reasons, not the least of which was that we had no employees from beginning to end. I wrote every line of code and did all the accounting and customer support.

The terms of the deal were such that my cofounder and I didn't have to work for the acquiring company at all. We were free to move on to other things, and we did. A few months later, my wife and I moved from our 865-square-foot apartment near Boston to a country house 25 miles outside of Philadelphia. I had just turned 27.

She went to her job and I sat at home doing nothing for the first time in my life. We knew no one for a hundred miles in any direction.

Building A Better Search Engine

Naturally, I started tinkering on the computer again, starting about a dozen side projects simultaneously. A year and a half later, I thought I was on to something. I noticed two things that bothered me about Google: too much spam (all those sites with nothing but ads) and not enough instant answers (I kept going to Wikipedia and IMDb). I thought if I could easily pick out the spam and the answers, then I'd have a more compelling search engine.

Traction is a sign that something is working.

Both problems were harder to solve than I initially thought, but I thoroughly enjoyed the work and kept at it. Everyone I talked to about my search-engine project thought I was nuts. You're doing what? Competing against Google? Why? How? Another year later, in the fall of 2008, I flipped the switch, unveiling my search engine to the public.

DuckDuckGo had a rather uneventful launch, if you can even call it a launch. I posted it to a niche tech site called Hacker News and that was the long and short of it. The post was entitled, "What do you think of my new search engine?"

Like many entrepreneurs, I'm motivated by being on the cusp of something big, and I was at the point where I needed some validation. I can survive on little, but I needed something.

I got it.

Granted, the product wasn't anything you'd want to switch to at that point, and people let me know that. It was an Internet forum, after all. However, I still felt there was genuine interest in a new search competitor. I could tell some people were growing wary of what Google was becoming. For example, those initial conversations led me to investigate search privacy and eventually become "the search engine that doesn't track you," years before government and corporate surveillance became a mainstream issue.

In any case, the response I received was enough motivation to keep me going. Which brings me to traction. I needed some.

Traction Trumps All

Traction is the best way to improve your chances of startup success. Traction is a sign that something is working. If you charge for your product, it means customers are buying. If your product is free, it's a growing user base.

Traction is powerful. Technical, market, and team risks are easier to address with traction. Fundraising, hiring, press, partnerships, and acquisitions all become much easier.

In other words, traction trumps everything.

To move the needle for my traction goals at the time, I needed more like 5,000 new visitors a day, not 50.

My last startup had grown using two traction channels: first, search engine optimization (ranking high in search engines for relevant terms), and later, viral marketing (where your customers bring in other customers, such as by referring friends and family through use of the product).

Viral marketing doesn't work well in search because you can't easily bake it into the product by putting stuff between people and their search results. So I tried search engine optimization. The terms "search engine" and "search engines" were too hard to rank for, as the high-ranking companies had been around for a decade and had tens of thousands of links pointing at them from their long histories. "New search engine" was more in my grasp.

I worked hard for many months to rank high for this phrase. The key to good search engine optimization (SEO) is getting links, and you need a strategy to get these links in a scalable way.

Getting stories written about you in blogs and news outlets is a common SEO linking strategy. However, I hit saturation with that channel strategy pretty quickly, and it didn't get me to the top. Something more creative was required.

Getting It Wrong

After much brainstorming and experimenting, I eventually hit upon a good idea. I built a karma widget that would display links to your social media profiles and how many followers you had on each service. People would embed it on their sites, and at the bottom there would be a link back to DuckDuckGo that said "new search engine." This channel strategy worked beautifully. I was number one.

Trouble was, not a ton of people make that search—about 50 a day. So while I did get some traction and a steady stream of new users, it leveled off pretty quickly. It wasn't enough traction to be meaningful. It didn't move the needle.

I was biased by my previous experience.

I made two large traction mistakes here. First, I failed to have a concrete traction goal. In retrospect, to move the needle for my traction goals at the time, I needed more like 5,000 new visitors a day, not 50. Search engine optimization was not going to get me there.

Second, I was biased by my previous experience. Just because my last company got traction in this way didn't mean it was right for every company. These are very natural mistakes to make. In fact, most startups make them. The most common startup trajectory now goes something like the following: Founders have an idea for a company they're excited about. Initial excitement turns into a struggle to build a product, but they do get something out the door. Then they launch.

The founders had expected customers to beat a path to their door, but unfortunately that isn't happening. Getting traction was an afterthought, but now they are focused on it. They try what they know or what they've heard others do: some Facebook ads, a little local PR, and maybe a smattering of blog posts.

Then they run out of money and the company dies.

Sadly, this is the norm. Even sadder, often these products are actually on to something. That is, with the right traction strategy they might have actually been able to get traction and not go out of business.

Getting It Right, Again And Again (And Again)

Given my previous startup success I thought I knew what I was doing. I was wrong. Luckily, I wasn't dead wrong. I had the money to self-fund through my traction mistakes, and so they didn't prove fatal for DuckDuckGo. Not everyone is as lucky.

Around this time I also started angel investing and more seriously advising other startups. I saw firsthand similar struggles and mistakes. I also partnered with Justin Mares, who had founded two startups (one of which was acquired) and recently ran growth at Exceptional Cloud Services, which was acquired by Rackspace in 2013 for millions. He's a growth expert in his own right.

What works in one growth stage eventually stops working.

We set out to help startups get traction no matter what business they were in: from Internet companies to local small businesses and everything in between. We drew on our personal experiences, interviewed more than 40 founders, studied many more companies, and pulled out the repeatable framework they used to succeed.

Since DuckDuckGo's humble beginnings, we have grown five orders of magnitude (10x growth spurts), from that initial 100 searches a day to now over 10 million a day. Each step—from 100 to 1,000, 10,000 to 100,000, 1 million to 10 million—involved figuring out how to get traction again. That's because what works in one growth stage eventually stops working.

This article is adapted from Traction: How Any Startup Can Achieve Explosive Customer Growth by Gabriel Weinberg and Justin Mares with permission of Portfolio, an imprint of Penguin Publishing Group, a division of Penguin Random House LLC. Copyright © Gabriel Weinberg and Justin Mares, 2015.

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lundi 28 septembre 2015

Startup week to brainstorm Great Falls business ideas - Great Falls Tribune

Businessman Jeff Mangan is a co-organizer of the Startup Week Great Falls event to encourage business development.(Photo: Courtesy Photo)

Organizers of a Great Falls area brainstorming event designed to spur new business startups are trying a new approach with a four-evening series of meetings from Oct. 6 to Oct. 9.

Great Falls Startup Week is designed for people interested in starting a business, making their idea a reality, exploring entrepreneurship or mentoring others who are doing so.

The group initially planned a Startup Weekend Great Falls for a long weekend in mid-May, but canceled the event about 10 days before because of "slower than anticipated registration," according to co-organizer Jeff Mangan.

The group received feedback from many folks who expressed some interest, but said they were reluctant to devote so many hours from Friday evening to Sunday evening to the process, which called for selecting specific business ideas and forming teams to brainstorm ways to develop, design, finance and market them, he said.

"We chose a different, more relaxed first step this fall that has a Great Falls feel to it, with a little bit of food, a little bit of learning and questioning and a little bit of fun," Mangan said.

Each night, from 5:30 to 8:30, will feature different business leaders discussing how they launched their businesses, workshops on particular business topics and panel discussions in which business folks and those considering businesses can ask questions.

On Tuesday, Oct. 6, the team that created the Hotel Arvon and Celtic Cowboy will speak; there will be workshops on team building and business model canvas and market validation and time for participants to practice pitching ideas.

On Wednesday, Oct. 7, Alison Fried will discuss how she created Dragonfly Dry Goods; there will be workshops on industry research, marketing and sales as well as marketing experts discussing use of websites, social media and traditional media. There also will be networking roundtables with business mentors.

On Thursday, Oct. 8, Claude Smith of Pasta Montana will discuss market innovation; presentations on patents and business management, a workshop on intellectual property, and a presentation on insurance types for business.

On Friday, Oct. 9, Thad and Heidi Reiste will discuss their new Electric City Coffee business. There also will be a panel on financing featuring the Great Falls Development Authority, commercial banks and the Small Business Administration.

If this event goes well, the group hopes to draw enough interest to try the full weekend approach next year, Mangan said.

"Interested folks can pick and choose which of the evenings will benefit them the most or go to all four," Mangan said.

The event is sponsored by 15 businesses and agencies, Mangan said. Refreshments will be available and no fee will be charged, but organizers ask that folks sign up ahead of time by going to greatfalls.startupweek.co.

Read or Share this story: http://gftrib.com/1FwACKn

Phantom Cyber a Low-Key Startup in a World of Many 'Shiny Objects' - Wall Street Journal (blog)

At any cybersecurity conference these days, the show floor is packed with companies pitching expensive gadgets to block hackers, detect breaches or track the resulting damage.

Too often, though, these products don't talk to each other. Worse, they spew a deluge of security alerts that lull users into complacency.

If the latest anti-hacker technologies are new shiny objects, "maybe they're not quite as shiny as we want them to be," says Jay Leek, the chief information security office for Blackstone Group LP, the private-equity firm in New York.

Such thinking led Mr. Leek to his firm's latest investment in a cybersecurity startup, which he describes as, "not some new shiny object." Instead, Phantom Cyber Corp. offers software to help other security tools work better together and automatically respond to breaches.

For instance, if a sensor made by FireEye Inc. detects malware, Phantom Cyber might ship the malicious code to analysis software by iSight Partners Inc. to determine who is behind the attack. Meantime, it may run a query on software made by Tanium Inc. to identify infected computers that should be quarantined.

Phantom Cyber, based in Palo Alto, Calif., says it can work with most major makers of cybersecurity gear.

It's complicated and nerdy, but it's an unusual tack among modern security companies, which often play up all the ways they fight hackers. Mr. Leek says he hopes companies like Phantom could help firms like Blackstone that now build their own tools to get their other, expensive, products to work together.

Rolling your own security software creates problems, Mr. Leek said, when an in-house programmer decamps for another job. "If those individuals leave, you've got to unravel a lot of spaghetti," he said.

Another alternative would be hiring more security engineers to monitor alerts around the clock. But executives, including Mr. Leek, claim they couldn't find enough qualified security analysts to fill each of those openings, even if it were practical.

On Monday, Blackstone announced that it led a $6.5 million investment in Phantom Cyber, which has now raised $9.2 million to date. The company has about 10 employees, 10 beta customers and hopes to make its first products generally available later this year, founder Oliver Friedrichs said.

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dimanche 27 septembre 2015

5 Reasons To Incorporate Your Startup As Early As Possible - TechCrunch

Imagine you've spent the past 3 years building a startup from the ground up, watching it grow and become a success. Now imagine that somebody who barely contributed to the project claims to own 30% of the company. This horror story is a reality for many founders who don't incorporate their startup soon enough.

First-time entrepreneurs often struggle with when to incorporate and formalize equity split between founders. The legal cost of incorporation is often the first major expense founders face, at a time when funds are scarce.

Since the benefits aren't immediate, it's easy to delay incorporation. Yet, unlike first-time entrepreneurs, serial entrepreneurs often learn the hard way just how quickly things can get ugly, and eagerly incorporate as early as possible.

To the question "when to incorporate my startup?" the answer is simple: the earlier the better. The shareholder agreements, bylaws and other corporate documents lay the foundations upon which a startup can thrive.

Here are the top five reasons to incorporate your startup sooner rather than later.

India fastest growing startup nation: Sunder Pichai - Times of India

SAN JOSE: Google chief executive Sunder Pichai on Sunday described India as the "fastest growing startup nation in the world".

"India is the fastest growing startup nation in the world. Sunder Pichai @google at the Digital India Dinner," ministry of external affairs spokesman Vikas Swarup tweeted.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi landed in the Silicon Valley early Sunday and met tech giants including Cisco's John Chambers, Microsoft's Satya Nadella and Google's Sundar Pichai.

Here's is the key quotes of Sundar Pichai, Google CEO, at the Digital India event:

I was in India last year, I could feel the change. I met hungry entrepreneurs, similar to the ones I meet in Silicon Valley.

He (PM Modi) has accelerated India's efforts in becoming the hotbed of innovation.

India's the fastest growing startup nation in the world.

Stay updated on the go with Times of India News App. Click here to download it for your device.

samedi 26 septembre 2015

Unicorn test: SaaS enterprise solutions provider & Australia's biggest startup ... - SiliconANGLE (blog)

SaaS enterprise solutions provider Atlassian Pty. Ltd., Australia's biggest tech startup, has filed for an initial public offering (IPO).

Details are somewhat vague, with The Wall Street Journal noting that the company has filed the IPO paperwork under the Jumpstart Our Business Startups Act, which is said to permit companies with under $1 billion in annual revenue to file their IPO paperwork confidentially.

Goldman Sachs Group Inc. and Morgan Stanley are underwriting the offering.

Founded in 2002 by Scott Farquhar and Mike Cannon-Brooks, Atlassian offers a range of software as a solution (SaaS) products focused on team collaboration including JIRA, Confluence and HipChat.

Although based in Sydney (Australia) the company also has a strong presence in Silicon Valley not only in headcount but also among startups who use their products.

Most recently Atlassian has been on an acquisition spree, having acquired messaging provider Hall in May and the company behind video and chat conferencing service Jitsi in April.

Unicorn test

Tech initial public offerings have been thin on the ground in 2015, despite the fact that many would argue that the tech sector is in the middle of the second great tech bubble; it could be argued that despite similar insane valuations and venture capital like the last time around, this time companies seem to be somewhat reluctant in testing their valuations on publicly traded markets.

Unlike enterprise storage maker Pure Storage, Inc., another unicorn (startup with a valuation of $1 billion or more) going public in November, Atlassian is a different sort of unicorn, or as The Wall Street Journal somewhat jokingly notes is "unique among software firms for funding its growth by being profitable;" the unicorn test comes into the picture on the consideration of whether publicly traded markets agree with the valuations these companies have raised money on.

RELATED ARTICLE:  Music streaming service Deezer looking to raise money on $1.1b valuation, may IPO As of its last round of $140 million in April Atlassian is believed to be valued at AU$4.7 billion ($3.3 billion) but given the secrecy around the IPO filing, and the fact that the company has yet to go on the record, it's not clear on either how much they are chasing in going public, or what they are valuing themselves at, but that said a tech startup going public that makes a profit is most definitely a rare creature.

Our prediction: whatever Atlassian is looking to raise they'll do handsomely, and deservedly, and Farquhar and Cannon-Brooks will most definitely appear near the top of the richest Australian list in short shrift thereafter.

Pre-IPO Atlassian had raised at least $210 million from firms including Dragoneer Investment Group, T. Rowe Price and Accel Partners.

It's not clear from reports when exactly the float will occur.

Image credit:
lachlanhardy/Flickr/CC by 2.0
  • About
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  • Duncan Riley Duncan Riley Duncan Riley is a senior writer at SiliconANGLE covering Startups, Bitcoin, and the Internet of Things.

    Duncan is a co-founder of VC funded media company B5Media and founder of news site The Inquisitr, and was a senior writer at TechCrunch in its earlier days.

    Tips? Press releases? Intersting startup? email: duncan@nichenet.com.au or contact Duncan on Twitter @duncanriley

    Duncan Riley Latest posts by Duncan Riley (see all)
  • Unicorn test: SaaS enterprise solutions provider & Australia's biggest startup Atlassian files for IPO - September 26, 2015
  • Cloud-based CAD SaaS firm Onshape raises $80m Series D - September 25, 2015
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    Rum Startup And Enrique Iglesias Aim To Make Miami Startup Scene Go Viral ... - Forbes

    [unable to retrieve full-text content]ForbesRum Startup And Enrique Ig lesias Aim To Make Miami Startup Scene Go Viral ...ForbesThere might not be a more appropriate way to spend a weekend in Miami Beach than with a cocktail in your hand. Those of the rum persuasion, particularly in the form of a Mojito, pair well with a Cuban sandwich, a beach chair or even the tropical ...and more »

    vendredi 25 septembre 2015

    Payments startup Square Inc plans 'imminent' IPO filing -source - Reuters

    Payments startup Square Inc plans to file for an "imminent" initial public offering, according to a source familiar with the situation, potentially putting it an a position to be a public company by the end-of-year holiday season.

    Square, which has pioneered the use of instant payments over smartphones, is one of the most richly valued companies in Silicon Valley, worth an estimated $6 billion based on its most recent round of funding.

    Earlier Friday, Fortune reported that Square would file for an IPO in the next two weeks. A spokesman for Square declined comment.

    Market turmoil of the type seen in August, when the Dow Jones Industrial Average closed down 588 points in a single day, could derail IPO plans.

    Square has become one of the most scrutinized start-ups in Silicon Valley. Many venture capitalists have privately questioned whether it is really worth the $6 billion valuation. The doubters have cited heavy competition and tight margins in the payments business.

    An IPO will provide a quick answer to that question, as well as guidance for many of the other private start-up companies dubbed "unicorns," meaning their valuation is $1 billion or more. CB Insights, a venture-capital tracker, says more than 130 such companies now exist.

    Overall, the climate for venture-backed IPOs has weakened this year, with just 44 venture-backed companies listing on public markets in the first half of the year, according to the National Venture Capital Association. That compares with 66 in the first half of 2014.

    Earlier this year, Square had filed for a "confidential" IPO, which lets companies with under $1 billion in annual revenue file registration documents and go through a Securities and Exchange Commission review without public scrutiny. After the review, if the company wishes to continue with an IPO, it makes a public filing.

    Goldman Sachs will serve as lead underwriter, with Morgan Stanley and JPMorgan Chase also participating, Fortune reported.

    Square's IPO comes at a critical time for Chief Executive Officer Jack Dorsey, who is also interim CEO of Twitter Inc. Dorsey has not dismissed becoming permanent CEO of Twitter while staying at Square, but Twitter's board has said that its next CEO needs to be solely focused on that company.

    (Additional reporting by Yasmeen Abutaleb in San Francisco; Editing by Meredith Mazzilli, Bernard Orr and David Gregorio)

    Is Twitter Tech Parody Persona 'Startup L. Jackson' the Banksy of Silicon Valley? - Re/code

    An unlikely figure was featured in a recent AMA session on the tech discovery site Product Hunt: It was the pseudonymous Startup L. Jackson, who is becoming notorious for his searing sass about tech culture, which he publishes in bite-sized bits through his Twitter account.

    And like a scene out of the satirical HBO comedy "Silicon Valley," techies turned to this anonymous comedian for guiding wisdom, despite the fact that they don't know anything about Jackson's history, agenda or biases. In the Q&A, people posed serious questions about "evaluating a company's moral compass," "focusing on retention versus growth" and "the potential of blockchain-based technology," and Jackson responded in kind with measured, thoughtful answers instead of jokes.

    "When you have a microphone, you start thinking about what you can do with it," Jackson said in the AMA.

    startup-l-jackson-product-hunt-ama

    ProductHunt.com

    To date, Jackson is the only fake person to have taken the stage during Product Hunt Live, and it was one of the site's most popular AMAs yet. Founder Ryan Hoover wouldn't release exact numbers, but he said Jackson attracted nearly as many questions and viewers as celebrity investor Ashton Kutcher's Q&A. Jackson received 243 comments to Kutcher's 265, a sign of his rising influence in Silicon Valley.

    Unlike Kutcher, however, Jackson's motivations are obscured by his anonymity. The man (or woman) could be a venture investor who wants to scare people off his company targets, a bitter failed founder attacking old enemies, or a wise, retired tech Buddha with a lot of spare time to get sassy.

    To get a sense of his satirical sensibility, a compendium of Jackson's "greatest hits" can be read here. Earlier this month, one of his most popular tweets made fun of Google's new sans-serif logo:

    He is indiscriminate in his mockery, targeting big corporations, small startups, investors, advisers, common wisdom, cliches and other Silicon Valley topics. He'll poke fun at top tech figures:

    Go after an entire country:

    And then turn his gaze to San Francisco fashion:

    It's somewhat similar to the Fake Steve Jobs blog that journalist Dan Lyons ran in 2006, but as of yet, no one has figured out who is behind Startup L. Jackson. Also, unlike Lyons, Jackson has started giving advice to companies and investors — skim his latest tweets and you'll see that plenty of them are more preach than parody:

    Jackson has been raising awareness for what he sees as important issues in tech — like diversity and equality — leading to a mix of both sincere and comedic content.

    "I get to be the absurdist jester, the satirist, or occasionally a voice of reason, depending on my mood," Jackson told Re/code over email. "Come for the bad puns, stay for the analysis of platform economics?"

    In the last six months, Jackson's Twitter followers have nearly doubled, from 35,000 in March to 57,000 now. It's still a tiny audience compared to some other well-known Twitterati, but his influence is evident in other ways.

    Respected investors like Marc Andreessen and media figures like the New York Times' Farhad Manjoo regularly engage Jackson in Twitter discussions about tech culture and practices.

    Andreessen told Re/code, "We think we know who he is, and if so, Startup L. Jackson fully deserves that respect." But when pressed to reveal the identity, Andreessen simply said, "No spoilers."

    Pressed to reveal the identity of Startup L. Jackson, Marc Andreessen simply said, "No spoilers."

    Besides Andreessen, Jackson is followed by a group of well-known tech leaders, including Reddit founder Alexis Ohanian, Uber CEO Travis Kalanick, Dropbox CEO Drew Houston, Twitter founder Ev Williams, Slack creator Stewart Butterfield and PayPal founder Max Levchin.

    The general partners at the Valley's top investment firms — Greylock, Andreessen Horowitz, Benchmark and more — also follow Jackson, as do the CEOs at hyped startups like Instacart, Sprig, DoorDash, HotelTonight … the list goes on and on.

    Many hypothesize that Jackson is an experienced entrepreneur or investor because of how informed some of his posts are. "The person is clearly deeply knowledgable about the entire startup and big company ecosystem right now, and deeply technical from the occasional code tweets," Josh Elman, investor at the firm Greylock, told Re/code.

    Jackson's recent blog post about Twitter, where he argues that its product is "fucking fine," was aggregated by news site Techmeme and stirred up debate, despite the fact that there was nothing funny about it.

    "Startup L. Jackson is a true must-read for people who need to stay current on tech," said Gabe Rivera, founder of Techmeme. "I mean this quite literally — after reading Techmeme, I'll scan his tweets before I get around to checking places like Hacker News (if I do that at all)."

    Despite his implicit expertise, with Jackson's rise in power comes questions about his ethics and intentions. Who is this satirical shepherd everyone is starting to follow — and is he leading us off a cliff?

    Who is this satirical shepherd everyone is starting to follow — and is he leading them off a cliff?

    Ed Zitron, a publicist in Silicon Valley running the boutique EZPR firm, finds the adulation disconcerting. "We know nothing of his qualifications, who he is, what he's done, what he will do and yet there's people who want him to speak to them like a strange prophet," Zitron said. "Why the hell are you going to a parody account for your advice?"

    Jackson's anonymity is a natural solution to tech's cult of positivity, where criticism is vilified and sunny optimism and support are applauded. Many are afraid to be entirely honest, lest they hurt their professional relationships. With the safety of secrecy, Jackson can "cut through all the bullshit," said Matt McGunagle, founder of fitness trainer software StrengthPortal.

    Many of the people who asked Jackson questions in the Product Hunt Q&A told me that's why they trust him. "He's like a parent that chides you when you do something stupid, but tells you they still love you and are proud of you," said Gregory Koberger, founder of developer service Readme.io. "That's exactly what we need."

    In his AMA, Jackson claimed that his fake persona is more or less the same way he is in real life, and that he's not using it for protection. He likes that the anonymity forces people to engage with his ideas instead of his identity.

    "People should be thinking for themselves," Jackson told Re/code later. "They should be collecting a diverse set of perspectives and coming to their own conclusions."

    He snarkily chalked up the fact that he hasn't been found out to "the state of tech journalism." (Just FYI, Jackson: That's like waving a red flag at a bull, and I will now stop at nothing to discover you.)

    No one has managed to unmask Jackson yet. Semantic analysis by one developer pointed to Dustin Curtis, founder of blog site Svtle, but Jackson denied it. Others who have been targeted — Marc Andreessen, seed investor Hunter Walk — also say they're innocent.

    "I swear it's not me, unless I fall into a fugue state periodically where I blog and tweet without conscious knowledge," Walk told Re/code.

    A special few, like Product Hunt's Hoover, have been let in on the secret, but they're staying mum. Jackson admitted in a recent interview with Hoover that his co-workers from an earlier job know it's him, so it's "inevitable" he'll be discovered. He snarkily chalked up the fact that he hasn't been found out to "the state of tech journalism." (Just FYI, Jackson: That's like waving a red flag at a bull, and I will now stop at nothing to discover you.)

    "Perhaps one day when he is revealed we'll see what agenda, if any, he pushed," said Paul Robert Cary, creator of the video-aggregation app Findie. "Right now, he's the Silicon Valley equivalent of Banksy."

  • Contact Carmel DeAmicis:
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  • jeudi 24 septembre 2015

    Monthly startup event testing Saratoga Springs location - Albany Business Review

    Startup Tech Valley event testing Saratoga Springs location - Albany Business Review

    Startup Tech Valley usually skips October. But this year, the monthly networking and… more

    Startup Tech Valley is heading north next month.

    In October, the monthly networking event series for entrepreneurs, investors and mentors to meet and discuss business over brews will be held in Saratoga Springs. The events are usually held in Revolution Hall at Brown's Brewing Co. in downtown Troy.

    Startup Tech Valley usually skips October. But this year, the monthly networking and… more

    "We're excited to be partnering with Saratoga TechOUT and the Saratoga Chamber of Commerce to bring Startup Tech Valley up north, which is something we hadn't done before," said Jason Kuruzovich, the founder of the program, sponsored by Severino Center for Technological Entrepreneurship at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute.

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    Kuruzovich started the series in October 2013 to build an entrepreneurship community. He lives in Saratoga and considered bringing something similar to that city.

    Startup Tech Valley is teaming up with Saratoga TechOUT and the Saratoga Chamber of Commerce for the event. TechOUT, which runs semi-monthly, draws around 100 people for networking at the city's restaurants and bars.

    "In October we have a yearly celebration called the entrepreneur of the year, so we usually don't host Startup Tech Valley. But I said, 'If you want to run it, we'll help promote it.' Steve Wilcox, Todd Shimkus and Cathy Hill have really put it together," Kuruzovich said.

    Each event draws between 100 and 180 entrepreneurs, investors and potential collaborators from the area for each session. The format in Saratoga will be the same: five startups do five-minute presentations followed by five minutes of Q&A.

    "[Saratoga], like Troy, has an emerging tech scene and we want to show we're all one big happy tech community," Kuruzovich said. "There's definite value in trying to spread what we've been trying to do in Startup Tech Valley. Maybe this is something we do in October in Saratoga and something we do in the spring in Schenectady."

    The October event will be held on Oct. 14 at Universal Preservation Hall. Register for it here.

    Universal Preservation Hall is a former church built in 1871 at 25 Washington St. in Saratoga. In recent years, it's been used as an event and performance space. The Albany Business Review profiled the hall's evolution last month.

    Chelsea covers technology and money

    Property Spotlight: Riverview Center

    mercredi 23 septembre 2015

    Market Your Startup Online For Less Than $20 a Week - Huffington Post

    Just started your business on a very limited budget? Like many small businesses, marketing your business can be a very expensive task. Launching a startup is an exciting endeavor but the reality is you need marketing to get the ball rolling. Otherwise, your new business will fail to gain any traction in the early stages.

    How a business is marketed plays a major role in everything from how the brand is perceived to its success. Companies like Apple, Google, and Coca-Cola are some of the top brands in the world with billions of dollars in market value. But they certainly didn't get there overnight. These brands took decades before they were able to reach that point. Even the biggest companies in the world began as startups.

    So, as a small startup, what can you do to market your business when you have a limited budget? Here are some online marketing strategies you can get started with for less than $20 a week to start bringing in sales:

    1. Bing AdsGoogle is by far the most popular search engine in the world. But advertising on AdWords can cost several dollars a click depending on the keywords you bid on. Not a very practical or affordable option for most startups.

    Bing is often left as an afterthought but it can be a great source of targeted traffic for much less. In fact, advertising on Bing is 33.5% cheaper in terms of cost per click compared to AdWords. Less competition also means better ad positions.

    A smaller marketing budget can actually result in greater efficiency. When paid traffic is not resulting in sales, you need to figure out why. It forces you to carefully analyze key metrics such as click through rate and conversions. Even a small budget of a dollar a day can lead steady targeted traffic that translates to sales.

    2. Facebook AdvertisingFacebook is the largest social medial network in the world with over a billion active users.

    This platform represents a huge opportunity to reach practically an y demographic at a fraction of the cost. Compared to other advertising mediums (e.g. newspapers, magazines, radio, etc.), Facebook is extremely cost effective with an average of $0.25 per 1,000 impressions. The minimum ad spend is one dollar a day which potentially puts your startup in front of 4,000 people.

    Facebook is a massively powerful platform for any startup. Advertising to promote your posts ensures you get even more exposure and recognition for your brand. Similar to Bing Ads, you can specify targeting options based on certain demographics. This lets you reach more of your target market and increase the effectiveness of your ads.

    3. RetargetingMost online visitors leave without ever converting; but, what if you could bring them back to your site?

    Retargeting lets you do exactly that and the way it works is rather straightforward. A tracking tag on your site places an anonymous cookie in the browser for previous visitors. Your ads then appear on other sites they visit. Retargeting is extremely powerful as it allows you to stay connected with your audience and increases brand exposure.

    AdRoll is one of the largest retargeting platforms and works with a vast majority of advertising partners such as Facebook, Twitter, Google, Yahoo, and Microsoft. It even offers more advanced targeting option based on specific actions. You can easily get started with a retargeting campaign for less than a dollar a day and eventually increase your spending as your budget allows.

    Start SlowBetween Facebook Advertising, Bing Ads, and retargeting, you can expect to spend a few dollars a day. The effectiveness of your campaigns ultimately depends on a number of factors. But for less than $20 a week, you get great value for your money and a potential return on your investment. Once your startup begins generating results, you can gradually ramp up your ad spending and invest in other online marketing channels.

    Quirky, the startup behind the coolest gadgets we never knew we needed, is ... - Quartz

    Quirky, a startup that helps makers develop their ideas, announced Tuesday that it has filed for bankruptcy and is selling its Wink smart-home system.

    The platform, where inventors submit ideas and collaborate on projects, made notable gadgets including the Aros smart air conditioner, and the app-enabled Nimbus alarm clocks. There were also practical tools like a flexible surge protector for small spaces, and an all-in-one snow shovel and ice-scraper set.

    Some of Quirky's best-sellers were also among its simplest, like Cordies, which organized unruly wires and a four-in-one wine opener. Other hits were items we never knew we needed, such as Pawcet, the water fountain for dogs. In its heyday, the New York-based startup fielded 2,000 ideas per day.

    But a number of Quirky's picks never saw the light of day before the company ran out of money. After struggling to find fresh funds, founder and CEO Ben Kaufman stepped down in August.

    Wink emerged as Quirky's most viable product and was the focus of those fundraising efforts. It's a smart-home hub that connects to devices from a variety of brands including Nest, General Electric, and Phillips, and is sold by retailers including Amazon and the Home Depot.

    With the bankruptcy, Wink will find a new home. Quirky entered into an agreement to sell it for $15 million to Flextronics International. However, it could go to another bidder if a higher or better offer is made.

    Quirky's site features hundreds of projects that are listed as "in development," including a device that makes your bed and a bluetooth-enabled jump rope, which was submitted to the site three years ago.

    Earlier this year, Quirky scrapped development on its own products in order to focus on partnerships with companies like Mattel, Poppy, and GE.

    mardi 22 septembre 2015

    Baltimore's new startup district - Technical.ly Brooklyn

    Full disclosure: Downtown Partnership of Baltimore is a sponsor of Baltimore Innovation Week 2015, which is organized by Technical.ly. The sponsorship is not related to editorial coverage. On a Friday afternoon in June, Staq cofounders James Curran and Mike Subelsky turned over the giant scissors to Greg Cangialosi. Sporting a Staq T-shirt, the tech community leader cut the ribbon on the adtech startup's new offices.

    Located on the fourth floor of a building above 8 Market Place, the ceremony was held one story above a space where DreamIt Health's Baltimore accelerator program helped six health-focused startups over the winter.

    It was a short walk from Cangialosi's office just a couple of buildings over at MissionTix, the online ticket seller where he has served as CEO for the last two years. For about four years, MissionTix and parent company Mission Media were the only tech-focused businesses in the immediate vicinity.

    That has since changed.

    "Traditionally, Power Plant Live! has really only catered to the happy hour and nightlife crowd, so it's good to begin to see more of a mix of activity happening all day long."

    Greg Cangialosi, MissionTix

    While leaving Staq, this reporter ran into two of the company's new neighbors: Noah and Nate Weiner, cofounders of health IT startup Avhana Health. Dressed in button-downs and khakis and carrying work bags, the brothers looked a little out of place amid vendors preparing for that evening's edition of The Gathering food truck rally.

    The nightlife typically associated with Power Plant Live! is crossing paths with the startups that are beginning to populate the downtown area.

    "Traditionally, Power Plant Live! has really only catered to the happy hour and nightlife crowd, so it's good to begin to see more of a mix of activity happening all day long," said Cangialosi.

    As Jason Hardebeck, another tech community leader, put it, "Most people had no idea there was an office building back there."

    At least in the Power Plant, that change can be partially traced to the Cordish Companies. The Baltimore-based development firm that owns plenty of splashy real estate, including Power Plant Live!, has office space in the buildings around the entertainment complex. Recently, they were hearing from smaller companies, and began designing space that's geared toward startups.

    Advertisements - Continue reading below

    "What we learned is that when these companies started finding us, we started to notice a trend in what they were looking for," said Cordish Development Director Alex Fine.

    The two floors of 8 Market Place have open workspace and shorter-term leases. In the fall, Cordish is opening more offices and coworking space to the third floor, where DreamIt Health was located over the winter. Called Spark, the 20,000-square-foot space will have a craft beer bar and fitness room amid offices and suites, along with larger shared areas for meetings and events that are designed to foster collaboration. Being close to restaurants and nightlife doesn't hurt either, and Cordish can even offer parking.

    Spark

    Inside a Power Plant Live! building is Spark, a new coworking space that has housed the DreamIt Baltimore startup accelerator program. (Photo by Stephen Babcock)

    Central location

    But beyond the amenities, startup founders Technical.ly Baltimore asked also said they appreciated the location.

    Avhana's Nate Weiner said he appreciated the chance to be in the middle of things.

    "One of my favorite methods of management is walking meetings and I love the ability to walk by the harbor," he said. "Being downtown also made it easy for our employees since it is centrally located compared to all the different places they live all over the city."

    "We wanted a place that we could easily partner with other firms and a central place for commerce."

    Delali Dzirasa, Fearless Solutions

    Subelsky, the Staq cofounder, called it "inspiring" to be in an area with a lot of business activity.

    "I'm meeting with very different people from other industries now, on a regular basis, just by being central," Subelsky said.

    Delali Dzirasa, president of Fearless Solutions and an advisor to Cordish on Spark, cited proximity to both CyberPoint and Chick-fil-A as benefits.

    "We wanted a place that we could easily partner with other firms and a central place for commerce, and Spark and downtown Baltimore provide both," he said.

    American Technology Services was drawn into the fold. The Fairfax, Va.-based IT services firm has been around since 1994, but just opened an office in Baltimore in the high-rise at 250 W. Pratt St.

    CEO Jeff Chandler said the company mainly works with government contractors and foundations. Baltimore represented a chance to connect with new clients in distribution and light manufacturing, as well as tap into an attractive workforce.

    When he was scouting locations with a commercial real estate broker, Chandler said he looked at Canton, as well as suburban locations like Towson and Reistertown.

    Ultimately, the firm settled on a location downtown because of its proximity to transportation like the interstates and MARC train.

    "We need to be able to get to prospective clients easily," Chandler said.

    For all of the plaudits and seemingly natural fits, however, the city's central business district is something of a new frontier for tech startups.

    Growth of the tech community has mostly centered around Southeast Baltimore, where the Emerging Technology Centers (ETC) incubator has been located (whether in Canton or its current Highlandtown space) since 1999, and South Baltimore, where Betamore is located in Federal Hill.

    "It's going to be interesting to see the flip-flops bump into the suits," said ETC President Deb Tillett.

    A look down Pratt Street, with R2i on the left. (Photo by Stephen Babcock)

    A look down Pratt Street, with R2i on the left. (Photo by Stephen Babcock)

    A little help

    Larger Baltimore-based tech companies like R2integrated and CyberPoint have headquarters on West Pratt Street, but downtown remained relatively unpopulated by startups even as areas like the Bromo District on the western portion of the neighborhood appeared to call out for the kind of "revitalization" that tech communities often bring.

    "Our sense that we'd gotten over the last couple years from tech in Baltimore was that people weren't gravitating toward the central core," said Caroline Peri, director of economic development at the Downtown Partnership of Baltimore.

    So when it comes time for the companies to picture themselves in this more staid area, the Downtown Partnership provides help. In the fall of 2014, the organization announced the TechConnect program, which provides grants of up to $10,000 to companies that agree to move into the central business district area for at least a year.

    The program has given grants to six startups so far, all of which are planning to take office space in the 8 Market Place building. Along with money, Peri, Downtown Partnership Director of Economic Development Mackenzie Paull and other staff also help the companies locate space and navigate a commercial real estate process they typically haven't had experience in.

    DreamIt Health, the first grant recipient, became a big catalyst. Incubators tend to have an anchoring effect.

    Kevin Keenahan of health IT firm Tissue Analytics said TechConnect essentially coordinated the company's entire move from Johns Hopkins' FastForward East incubator in East Baltimore, which the wound-care company quickly outgrew. Avhana Health's Nate Weiner called the program "invaluable."

    "TechConnect was able to help us identify the different office spaces available in the city and even helped arrange tours," Weiner said. The only prior real estate experience Weiner had was coworking during DreamIt Health.

    "When it comes to Baltimore really being able to take the next step in the maturation process, we'll know that'll happen once our downtown is thriving."

    Alex Fine, Cordish Companies

    The combination of TechConnect and the Cordish space has also attracted companies into the city limits from Baltimore County. Fearless Solutions and cybersecurity company PaRaBaL are moving from UMBC's research park and incubator, respectively, while another cyber company, Deep Run Security, relocated from Owings Mills.

    Peri said the program has enough money to help two more startups, and a lot of office space that's been identified beyond Power Plant Live! While Cordish appears to have created an inviting spot, whether the rest of downtown will become a tech hub remains an open question.

    Enough momentum?

    Advocates for the area like the Downtown Partnership have heard many complaints. Office space is too expensive, they're told. There's a lack of parking. They also acknowledge the lack of retail around the area in general. And then there's the perception that it's a place for suits who work in banking or finance.

    But vacant space remains, and that may be near the top of important factors at this point. When preparing to launch TechConnect, Peri and Paull set out to find available space that would be ideal for startups. They found some surprises, like an area on the 12th floor of the American Building that they didn't know about before.

    "It took getting inside the buildings to find out who had different types of space," Peri said.

    In the past, startups may not have considered downtown because it didn't have the kind of space they were considering (think open floor plans, collaboration space, kitchen amenities, etc.). Now that Baltimore startups are growing up, that's changing.

    With Spark, Cordish is targeting startups that are ready to graduate from incubators like ETC and Betamore (which are both currently at or near capacity anyway). The speed with which the space is filling up shows there are plenty of local companies prepared to make that jump, officials say.

    "I think what it shows is that demand outstrips supply," tech executive Hardebeck said.

    The focus on tech isn't an accident, as it's considered one of the fastest growing sectors of the economy in the city. If a downtown tech community ultimately blossoms, that will likely be good for Baltimore as a whole.

    "When it comes to Baltimore really being able to take the next step in the maturation process, we'll know that'll happen once our downtown is thriving," Fine said.

    -30-

    Raising Money For Your Startup? Remember, It's A Process - Forbes

    [unable to retrieve full-text content]Raising Money For Your Startup? Remember, It's A ProcessForbesBy Danny Wong. After Blank Label raised outside funding through a seed round of $1.1 million, I started getting emails asking me how we did it. The email senders would write that they didn't attend Harvard Business School or University of Pennsylvania ...

    lundi 21 septembre 2015

    Startup Insider: How Apu Gupta Built Curalate -- The Future of Image Analytics ... - Huffington Post

    Startup Insider is a series of articles with the goal of helping aspiring founders and entrepreneurs understand the ins and outs of starting a startup. We hope to dig deeper and showcase stories, advice and lessons from founders, investors and other key players in the growing startup ecosystem all over the world. You can sign up to stay up to date with this series here.

    ---

    Timing is one of the biggest factors when it comes to the success of startups. Sometimes, even if you have the best idea in the world, your startup ends up failing because it simply wasn't the right time and consumers simply weren't ready for it. Curalate CEO Apu Gupta under stands both failure and timing better than most entrepreneurs.

    2015-09-21-1442839358-1517811-IMG_6393.jpg Curalate Cofounder Apu Gupta

    Apu's experiences with failure and timing, with a little bit of luck led him to cofound Curalate, an image-analytics and marketing software that helps companies utilize images to drive sales. They currently have over 700 business clients, including well-known brands like Nordstrom, Michael Kors, Urban Outfitters, Gap, Target and more. They've raised over $12M, becoming one of the fastest growing Philadelphia startups.

    While Curalate has become one of the hottest startups creating a whole new industry of image analytics, Apu's startup journey has been anything but ordinary. Apu and his cofounder Nick Shiftan along with e arly employee Brendan Lowry had to go through a pivotal period before arriving at Curlate.

    I sat down with Apu to discuss his startup journey so far, how he got into entrepreneurship, lessons he has learned, the future of visual analytics and more.

    Growing up in Silicon Valley

    Growing up in Silicon Valley, Apu has always been interested in technology. He recalls really admiring the deep belief that tech companies like Apple had that they could really change the world.

    At an early age, Apu would start learning about software development. He recalled, "What I loved about software fundamentally was that it had no limitations. It seemed like the only limitation was your brain. There were very few physical limitations. You kind of feel like you can build anything."

    This early interest in technology would lead to Apu pursuing a career in the tech industry as a product manager. However, ironically, Apu started getting bored of being surrounded by people only from tech.

    He shared, "For all the talk about diversity in Silicon Valley, the one area where it wasn't that diverse was professional experience." Wanting to meet people from other industries, Apu decided to pursue his MBA at the Wharton School of Business.

    From BSchool to Entrepreneurship

    At Wharton, Apu would meet Madhukar Gangadi who would convince Apu to join him to start MedPlus, which would become the fastest growing and second largest pharmacy chain in India. While Apu initially decided to do consulting first after getting his MBA, he would eventually decide to fly to India, becoming the COO & CMO of MedPlus.

    MedPlus would put an emphasis on growth, serving close to a million customers by their third year in operations. Apu recalled how non of the management team were pharmacy guys, they were all tech and startup guys who wante d to grow a company really really fast.

    He shared, "What I love about the tech industry besides creating the future, is that I work in the only industry in the planet where growing 80%-100% plus year over year is considered okay. We work in a hypergrowth industry. Everything we do is about growth. How do you grow as fast as you can possibly can. It's super stressful but it's also really fun."

    2015-09-21-1442839926-7661740-11296856_101607350191893_2018697948_n.jpgFancy Formal Fridays at Curalate (Photo taken from Curalate Instagram)

    Back to the US - 'Odd Jobs'

    After 3 years, MedPlus had grown to over 4000 employees but Apu and his wife decided that it was time to move back to the US.

    Apu shared, "I went back to the US right as the recession hit." Perfect timing?

    He added, "I had this wonderful time in India. I built this really successful company back in India and I couldn't get a job in the US. I really wanted to work in tech but the tech industry wouldn't hire me because my background wasn't in tech anymore."

    Apu's wife would end up getting a job in the East Coast and Apu would have to settle for odd jobs that he couldn't stick with. He tried out real estate private equity trying to convince himself that he was a real estate guy. This would be short-lived and after several other odd jobs, Apu knew he had to come up with something.

    If Apu couldn't get a tech job, he would make one for himself. Desperate to find a tech job or start a tech startup, Apu went ahead and started going to networking session left and right. Fortuantely enough, this would pay off as he would get connected to Nick Shaftan, who would end up becoming his cofounder.

    Apu shared, "I got on a phone call with him and our interests aligned and we both wanted to build companies." This mutual appreciation would lead them to come together to work on their first startup idea: Storably, an AirBnB for driveway and basement storage.

    Not as easy as you think

    Apu and Nick would go to work, flying to the Valley and hitting Sandhill road with one pitchdeck that two smart guys with good backgrounds. Apu shared, "For some unknown reason, these very well regarded investors said, we believe in you two."

    They would end up receiving seed-funding from New Enterprise Associates, First Round Capital and MentorTech Ventures and they were off to the races. Heavily modeled after AirBnb, Storably received a lot of press upong launching. However, traction wouldn't come as easily. Apu shar ed, "It was a disaster. We tried so many different things for months. We even tried to expand to New York."

    A bit discouraged with money burning every single day, Apu and the rest of the Storably team had to make a tough decision early on after realizing that there was no way they were going to hit the metrics their investors had set for them.

    Apu shared, "We were very unemotional and very objective about thinking about the progress of our business and I think that was for me probably the single best thing we did."

    While media highlights the story of all these entrepreneurs who persevere and stick with their idea no matter what, dropping Storably would turn out to be a blessing in disguise for Apu and the rest of the team.

    2015-09-21-1442840102-9892033-11875443_417254128477796_193516339_n.jpg Curalate helps you turn the billions of photos shared daily into points of sale (Photo taken from lishaluuluu Instagram account)

    "We invested in you guys, figure something out"

    After making the decision to close down Storably, Apu and the founding team decided to return the remaining investment to their investors. However, they would be met by this response, "We invested in you guys so go figure it out. Figure out what you want to do next but do it in a month."

    With 30 days to figure out their life's passion, Apu, Nick and Brendan went to work, brainstorming and writing down all the ideas they had in a Google document. In 7 days, they would come up with 70 ideas that was shortlisted into 7, a few of which they decided to prototype and test out.

    One of these ideas was DrinkedIn, a play on LinkedIn, that would match professionals with other professionals the y could grab drinks with for networking. They had built the landing page for DrinkedIn in 3 hours. Apu shared, "There were all these glorious promises like, 'our algorithms would connect you to people like you'. And our algorithm was an intern and whenever you signed up, our printer would print your profile and our 21 year-old intern would connect people who had similar interests."

    While DrinkedIn would receive international press and gain a pretty good amount of traction in a short amount of time, the team didn't really know how to turn it into a business. But this was a great confidence booster that would kickstart the team into picking the one idea that everyone in the team was passionate about.

    The idea? An analytics tool for Pinterest that would end up becoming Curalate.

    The Future of Image Analytics

    As they started building the first prototype for Curalate, the team realized that it wasn't just ab out Pinterest, it was about pictures.

    Apu shared, "The insights we realized is that fundamentally consumers were beginning to communicate with pictures rather than words and that was really fascinating to us because if consumers start to communicate with pictures, the web itself was never engineered to parse pictures, it has always been made to parse text."

    He added, "There is something very deep about the human experience that is rooted with imagery and whats fascinating about this is as people communicate more and more visually, the way that consumers learn about their world, about products, about experiences, about things that brands care about is through pictures."

    These realizations were correct and Curalate has grown to work with over 700 brands from all over the world with a team of 95 employees running the show across offices in Philadelphia, New York and Seattle.

    But how did Apu and his team know that this was the right idea? Timeliness.

    Apu s hared, "Every other idea we were looking at didn't need to be started today. If we didn't start DrinkedIn right now, DrinkedIn could be started later. If we had any hope of winning, it had to be started right now. The reason why is in tech, it is very rare that you get to start a company in a space that doesn't exist. Tech is a very competitive industry that most businesses that get started start by building a better mouse trap on something that already exists. That was not our case. There was nothing in visual analytics and there was nothing in visual marketing that existed 3.5 years ago. We were the first, and that also motivated us."

    2015-09-21-1442840287-1509423-11939468_470160309821757_651634716_n.jpgThe Curalate Product and Design team working on the user journey (Photo taken from andyodore's Instagram account)

    Tweeting Their Way to Their First Customers

    While it took 6 months for Curalate to build their first product, they already had multiple brands lining up for their service early on. How? Twitter.

    Apu shared, "What we were able to do without necessarily having accurate data, was use directional data. Brendan had this amazing idea to go after brands through Twitter."

    Apu and Brendan would tweet to big brands saying, 'did you know that you are getting X amount of impressions on Pinterest in the last week?' Apu shared, "We couldn't be 100% sure that number was right but the reality was neither could they."

    Because of this, 95% of the brands that they tweeted at ended up replying and asking if they could talk more about the service. Apu said, "We didn't know how to price it. But we knew that the re was a market for it in a way that we never felt before. That's when we knew we had to go big with this."

    Growing Pains

    While Curalate seemed to hit product-market fit early on, Apu would face growing pains as Curalate was growing so quickly that they needed more people to handle all their customers.

    Apu shared, "Now we had money and we had business coming into our door and we were doing well but we really didn't know who to hire. We didn't know what sorts of people made sense. We hired way too slow in the beginning. I can tell you with hindsight. As strong as our first year was in business, we could have been twice as strong if we leaned in more and hired more."

    Eventually, Apu and the rest of the team had enough confidence in the business that they started expanding, opening an office in New York then Seattle.

    The Amazing Thing About Entrepreneurship

    Apu took some time to reflect upon h is entrepreneurship journey before sharing with me a few of the milestones and things he enjoys about running Curalate.

    He shared, "I find it such a privilege every single day that companies that have been around for 50 years that have built a brand that consumers love meet with us so we can come educate them and meet with them and help them improve their business through the software we're creating."

    This software that Curalate produces has evolved over the years, building more functionality and becoming more consumer facing.

    Apu shared, "All of a sudden, we weren't just touching thousands of brands, we were directly touching millions of consumers every single day. We had millions of users interacting with software and things we were putting on web pages."

    2015-09-21-1442842211-8035003-11264748_1689132131315954_512524136_n.jpg

    "Startups aren't just a lot of time. It's also a lot of mental time"

    Apu shared, "Even when I'm not here physically in the office, I'm always thinking about it and that's difficult for other people. All of a sudden, you lose all of your interests and you become less interesting to people. I have to put a lot of time into this. Which means over time, I'm less interesting to some people and that's hard and it's a big sacrifice and there are enormous sacrifices that you pay for this like your health, friends and other interests."

    Apu added, "People try to make startups look sexy but there is nothing sexy about startups. I just wish people would stop glamorizing over startups because there is nothing cool about this. There are these outlier stories where startups come out of nowhere and get bought for millions of dollars but t hey're rare. They do happen but the vast majority of this is a lot of work."

    While startups aren't as sexy as people believe, Apu still finds fulfilment in growing Curalate, hoping that one day, their employees will become successful entrepreneurs as well.

    Apu shared, "It's messy and infuriating at times but it's incredibly rewarding at times. For both my cofounder and I, for us the biggest reward, isn't a financial reward. To us the biggest reward would be if we can instill within out employees the skills needed to become the next generation of successful entrepreneurs. Our organization is all about insights and giving people insights and educating them. I want to see a lot of entrepreneurs built out of this. Just like how there is a Paypal mafia, I want to see a Curalate mafia. You know maybe one day, we'll produce the next Elon Musk."

    Want to learn more about Curalate? Check out their founders' story video below and visit their website here.

    ---About the Author---

    David Ongchoco is a student entrepreneur and avid storyteller from the Philippines studying at the University of Pennsylvania majoring in what he likes to call, LIFE. He is currently working on expanding his for-purpose organization YouthHack. It's David's goal to make an impact in the lives of as many people possible while constantly learning new things every single day. If you have any interesting startup stories, David can be reached via Twitter @DOitChoco. You can also email startupinsider.official@gmail.com.

    Former Google head says his startup will become the next $1.5 billion 'unicorn' - Business Insider

    Ex-Managing Director of Google UK, Dan Cobley wears Google Glass as he speaks at the Institute of Directors annual convention in London September 18, 2013. See Also The former boss of Google UK explains why he left to become a fintech investor Google's former No. 2 in Europe just launched a startup that gives you a completely free credit score Google Apologizes To Customers Angry Over Nexus 4 Delays

    The former UK head of Google has launched a new venture, which he claims will become the next "unicorn" – $1.5 billion-turnover success story – by offering the nation's workers a solution to their money worries.

    Dan Cobley, who left Google in August last year to focus on the new start-up, said that SalaryFinance would "be talked about in some of the same sentences as unicorn businesses over the next few years."

    The new fintech – financial technology – company allows working people to consolidate their various loans and credit cards debts through a single SalaryFinance loan, which is then repaid through salary deductions.

    This could cut the interest payable on the total by a third, the company claimed.

    The business, which was launched by Mr Cobley and co-founder Asesh Sarkar today, aims to work with large employers across the country to funnel customers into the business. It has already announced deals with Saga, the over 50s group that employs 15,000 people in the UK, alongside Agilysys, the 2,000-strong outsourcing firm, which works with local councils, and white goods retailer AO.com, which has 2,000 staff.

    This kind of lending is extremely popular in Mexico, Brazil and parts of the US. In the UK, individual employers and some local players offer similar schemes but SalaryFinance is seeking to become the household name. "We're looking to do this on a national scale and we're talking to big employers," said Mr Sarkar.

    unicorn ship boatSalaryFinance has raised £3m from Mr Cobley's venture capital fund Brightbridge to cover the development of the platform and operating costs. The loans will be provided by the UK's two largest peer-to-peer lending firms, Zopa and Ratesetter .

    The company is the latest in a serious of fintech pioneers to challenge the might of the high street banks. "The average working person in the UK has unsecured debts of £4,000," said Mr Sarkar. "If you were to go onto the websites of big banks today, the average quote on that is 22pc. We charge a fixed 7.9pc. We are expecting a rapid take-up."

    According to the founders, employers will use SalaryFinance as a tool for attracting and retaining staff. "There's lots of competition over salaries," said Mr Cobley. "Organisations are increasingly trying to invest in the rest of the package and being able to offer something that is the equivalent of a 3pc pay rise is is incredibly powerful."

    Mr Sarkar, who worked in banking for 13 years, came up with the idea for the venture when his family's nanny admitted to having money troubles. "A lot of her salary was going on credit cards and loans, which she was struggling to pay off," he said. "I gave her a loan to pay the total and she saved 8pc on her outgoings. She was less stressed and as an employer it felt good to give something back."

    This original loan was interest-free but SalaryFinance makes a small margin on the loans it offers to customers.

    The company claims that it takes just 30 minutes to load a new organisation onto its platform, and that its technology its compatible with all existing payroll schemes.

    "The problem we face is consumers thinking we're too good to be true," said Mr Cobley. "These people are used to being offered attractive interest rates by banks only to find they are much higher later in the process. We have a job to convince people this is exactly as it sounds."

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    dimanche 20 septembre 2015

    Get Set for the Fourth Annual Austin Startup Week - Silicon Hills News

    File photo of Jacqueline Hughes from Austin Startup Week's Startup Crawl. Photo by Laura Lorek.

    File photo of Jacqueline Hughes from Austin Startup Week's Startup Crawl. Photo by Laura Lorek.

    Austin Startup Week is a great time to socialize and network with people in the Austin startup community and to learn something new.

    This is the fourth annual five day event. It kicks off Monday, Oct. 5th and runs through Friday, Oct. 9th. It started in 2011, the same week Silicon Hills News launched and we've covered it every year. Jacqueline Hughes and Joshua Baer created the event to put a spotlight on the city's startup community.

    Baer has also declared Monday, Oct. 5th, the first day of Austin Startup Week, as vintage T-shirt day. Baer is a passionate and vocal advocate of quality T-shirts as a great marketing vehicle for tech startups.

    One of the big events every year is the Austin Technology Council's Battle of the Tech Bands, in which members of various tech companies with bands compete to be crowned the best band. It takes place Monday night, Oct. 5th, at Mohawk.

    The Built in Austin job fair is also a great place to find a new gig. This event also takes place on Monday right before the Battle of the Tech Bands at Mohawk. It starts at 3:30 p.m. and runs until 6 p.m.

    A new event this year is the Women in Tech mixer put on by Gina Helfrich at the Scarborough Building, 101 W. Sixth Street, Eighth floor. Helfrich flew in for Austin Startup Week in 2013 and then decided to move to Austin and work in tech. The event is co-sponsored by "Feminist Hack ATX, Women Who Code ATX, PyLadies ATX, Austin All-Girl Hack Night, EdTechWomen ATX, recruitHER, Third Coast InnovateHER, Lesbians Who Tech, Women in Data Science ATX, ATX Women Hardware Hackers, and Austin Pair Programming."

    On Wednesday, UK Trade & Investment Office will host Britain Open for Business, a Texas breakfast for startups and technology companies interested in expanding their business to the United Kingdom. It will feature experts from UK-based law firm, Taylor Wessing and UK-based accounting firm Blick Rothenberg. The event will kick off at 8:30 a.m. at Old School, 401 E. Sixth Street.

    To further showcase the international flair of this year's startup week, also on Wednesday morning, an Austin technology startup has a chance to win an all expense paid trip to Oslo, Norway for Oslo Innovation Week. The pitch competition is being put on by Fred Schmidt and will be held at Capital Factory.

    To add to the bounty of riches on Wednesday at 10 a.m., PR Over Coffee's Dave Manzer is hosting the third annual "Meet and Pitch the Tech Writers panel" at Capital Factory. The event features Stacey Higginbotham with Fortune, Tom Cheredar with Gigaom, Jared Wynne with the Daily Dot and Laura Lorek with Silicon Hills News.

    To cap off the day, Wednesday evening, Ruben Cantu hosts the Austin+Social Good Summit featuring its third annual fast pitch competition.

    Like the fireworks at the end of a great event, on Thursday, the Austin Startup Crawl takes place. It gets bigger and bigger every year as does Austin's startup community. It is limited to the first 5,000 people to sign up for the crawl. It even has its own app, which provides an updated map of all the startups participating in the crawl.

    Austin Startup Week concludes with a hangover breakfast on Friday morning.

    Austin Startup Week is free, but the organizers do want everyone to register to attend the various events around town. It is sponsored this year by Capital Factory, Hired, Techstars and Taecho Group.