2013 ATDC Startup Showcase Video

Nice video from the Metro Atlanta Chamber highlighting the 2013 ATDC graduate companies and the strategic benefits of that technology hub. Great to see companies like BrightWhistle, KontrolFreek, PatientCo, and Urjanet, which I helped in some way, growing up.

 

While Atlanta Tech Village seems to be getting all the attention these days ATDC continues to be an important node in the Atlanta startup ecosystem. Kinda interesting that the fourth 2013 ATDC grad company, AccelerEyes, is now my neighbor at ATV.

May 13, 2013  |  Comments  |  Tweet  |  Posted in Accelerators, atdc, Startups

No Longer A Startup

I have written a bit about the stages a successful startup goes through in the past. Covering theories such as conceptseed, early stage and growth stages for those that were not reading in 2009.

One of the things I have always believed is that at some point, in the $50 million revenue range, a startup is no longer a startup and is really a small company. Maybe I was wrong. I now think sometimes it happens before that mark. 

I am basing this on my current experience with nCrowd. Back in January when we announced the CrowdSavings acquisition All Things D reported that nCrowd had 70 employees. That number goes down a little as we rationalize the organization and up a little as we purchase the assets of Tippr. But for the sake of discussion let's use it.

If you use David Cumming's Employee Counts as a Proxy for Startup Revenue post with $150,000 (I have always used just a straight $200,000 myself) of revenue per employee for a venture backed startup without a recent large round of funding one could estimate that nCrowd has revenue of about $10 million. That estimate would be low, because our revenue per employee is higher, but it is no where near $50 million. and nCrowd is starting to feel more like a small company than a startup. 

Why is this? The answer is three fold.

One, the way we have grown is partially due to organic geographic expansion and partly due to executing a rollup strategy that also quickened our geographic expansion. The latter has lead to more time being spent on integration then one would normally see for a company the size of nCrowd.

Two, due to the headwinds created by Groupon and LivingSocial, the financial markets are not receptive to investments in the local e-commerce space (and have not been for some time) so our actions are driven by profitability and building long-term value. This is not a bad thing, it just makes things feel a little more small company like than startup like.

Three, I personally don't get to spend as much time as I want talking to customers, growing our member base, and building product. The startupy stuff. My job is much more corporate whack a mole. I get involved in acquisitions, handle the duties that a company Secretary is required to do, the administrative things that our CEO does not have the time or inclination to do himself, and oversee parts of the technology integration of the assets we purchase.

This is all good. But it points out that some startups become small companies much before others and that the $50 million number I have been throwing out there could be a lot lower in certain circumstances. Sometimes a startup becomes a small company before you know it. 

nCrowd is no longer a startup. It's a small company. And that is great progress.

May 7, 2013  |  Comments  |  Tweet  |  Posted in nCrowd, Startups

Give Them A Way To Tell You Something Bad

So last week I attended the Georgia Center for Child Advocacy Change Makers breakfast at the invite of a friend. As promised it was a moving and informative event.

The keynote speaker was Dave Moody whose firm, C.D. Moody Construction Co., is the second-largest minority contractor in Georgia (after H.J. Russell & Co.) and No. 46 in Black Enterprise magazine’s 2012 list of the nation’s 100 largest black businesses. Quite the successful guy, with quite the story. Dave was sexually abused as a child. The Penn State sex abuse scandal drove him to go public with his personal story in order to help others.

His presentation was emotional and moving. And one thing he said really stuck with me. "Always give them a way to tell you something bad." It's true with your kids and applies to business as well. You have to give your employees a way to tell you bad news and believe/support them when they give it to you.

May 1, 2013  |  Comments  |  Tweet  |  Posted in Management, Presentations

Google Local

Not too long ago Wired ran an article on five Google products at risk. One of these at risk products was Google Offers. I think Wired was right. Google seems to be heading in another direction.

That direction is Google Local. Google is moving to a retailer self-service model. Not really surprising. I never really thought that Google liked the high touch sales effort of the deal marketplace model.

Google Local is distributing offers though Google Maps for Android. Within Google Places merchants can set their own promotional offers, set a promotional period, and cap the number of promotions that consumers can use. They have adopted a ScoutMob like "Use Now" button. Currently there is no cost to merchants to place a promotion during the "trial" period, which if it is anything like betas at Google could go on for a long, long time.

It will be interesting to see how this pivot works for them.

April 29, 2013  |  Comments  |  Tweet  |  Posted in Deals

nCrowd Scoops Up Tippr

It's a big week for nCrowd. It was move week and we are settling into our new Atlanta Tech Village office. But the bigger news is that we are announcing an acquisition.

All Things D broke the news this morning that nCrowd has purchased the assets of Tippr out of Seattle.

It is the largest acquisition that we have made to date. The purchase includes the Tippr and Groupalicious web properties, a subscriber base of more than one million consumers, and some intellectual property rights. 

This is nCrowd's 20th acquisition. It pretty much solidifies our position as the number three participant in the local offers market as we continue to evolve away from the deal space. Our operating footprint is expanding from being focused on the  Southern/Plains regions to a national footprint where we will be able to provide merchants online customer acquisition services from New York to Honolulu.

At the moment we are executing well on the rollup strategy that we devised in the fall of 2011.

April 24, 2013  |  Comments  |  Tweet  |  Posted in Deals, nCrowd

On Business Radio X

The fine folks over at Atlanta Business Radio invited me in to talk a little bit about what we are doing with nCrowd and why both consumers and merchants like our business. Lee Kantor and Stone Payton were great hosts. I was first up. If you have an interest and 10 minutes you can listen to the interview here.

It was also great to catch up with my friends from Clearleap who also happened to be on the show at the end.

April 4, 2013  |  Comments  |  Tweet  |  Posted in nCrowd

Georgia Game Development Industry

Yesterday the Georgia Game Developers Association hosted Georgia Digital Day at the Georgia state capital. 

At the event GGDA released a study prepared with accounting firm Habif, Arogeti, & Wynne and reported on by the Atlanta Journal and Atlanta Business Chronicle. The total economic activity of the gaming industry in Georgia has grown from $73 million in 2008 to $1.6 billion in 2012. This figure is expected to reach $1.9 billion this year. A good deal of this growth is being driven by the Georiga  Entertainment Industry Investment Act which offers a 20 percent tax credit for qualified entertainment industry productions including film and gaming.

There are over 75 game studios in Georiga supporting something in the range of 1,600 jobs. On average these jobs pay $85,000. 

It's good to see a nice little gaming cluster forming.

March 22, 2013  |  Comments  |  Tweet  |  Posted in Games

Moving To Atlanta Tech Village

As reported by Atlanta Business Cronicle staff writer Urvaksh Karkaria nCrowd is moving to Atlanta Tech Village.

This move came about shortly after David Cummings announced his plans for the Village. I reached out to him, told him we were about to sign a lease, and wanted to see if there were a possibility for a company of our size to get some space. The reply was "we have a perfect suite" for you. And they did.

While not a big fan of Buckhead (I have spent the vast majority of my time in Atlanta working within two miles of 14th and Peachtree in Midtown), we decided to make the move for four reasons. It was less expensive then our current cost and the Midtown options we were considering. The lease was shorter in duration. There is more flexibility if our space needs expand beyond expectations with the option to rent co-working spots and pay in advance additional offices in the building. Finally, like ATDC (which nCrowd is a little mature for) the ATV setup promotes serendipitous interactions.

The Atlanta Tech Village was a pretty easy call for me. David and his team were both flexible and easy to work with to get the deal done. To give you an example the lease was only four pages long compared to the twenty one page version that was provided by an alternative building. Our employees that have seen the space love it and are looking forward to the move.

In a short time ATV has created a second hub beyond Tech Square for technology companies to consider. Looking forward to being a part of this new community.

March 18, 2013  |  Comments  |  Tweet  |  Posted in Accelerators, nCrowd