YC Demo Day

Nice vid showing a few clips of presenting at Y Combinator’s Demo Day in Boston. 

This came from Scott Kirsner who has a nice write up of the day via Dharmesh Shah who also has good summary of the event. I know Dharmesh via Steve Derezinski who was in charge of VentureLab before Stephen Fleming showed up on the scene. 

I suppose that makes me two or three degrees from Paul Graham depending on how you count them.  Well actually I am two because Paul Judge knows Paul Graham.  Point of ramble is we are all connected.

August 16, 2008  |  Comments  |  Tweet  |  Posted in Startups

Quote of the Week

"Do or do not, there is no try."

Yoda

In The Empire Strikes Back to Luke Skywalker on the planet Dagobah when he tries to extract his submerged X-wing fighter from the swamp using the Force.  Luke fails because he does not believe that he can succeed.

August 15, 2008  |  Comments  |  Tweet  |  Posted in Quotes

A New Hope

Last week I delved a bit into the concept of business clusters and made a promise to address the subject of how a stronger consumer technology cluster may emerge in Atlanta.  In the post last week I spent a lot of time focusing on one of Michael Porter’s key findings in cluster development, that anchor companies play a disproportionate role in seeding cluster development.  This week I want to pull another key finding that is not only important to cluster development but also to entrepreneurial opportunities into the discussion.

New firm and cluster opportunities arise at the intersection of existing clusters.

This is really an important concept and leads of course to the question of what types of clusters currently exist in Atlanta. As pointed out in the Porter report financial services,transportation/logistics are strong broad clusters and the technology cluster draws its roots on telecommunications and media. Beyond that I personally believe that we have strong technology clusters in logistics, Internet security, and payment processing.  Maybe Internet services as well if you include the likes of Cbeyond, Cox, EarthLink, and Knology in that mix.

But roots in telecom and media. That is interesting.  Real interesting.  Particularly when one starts thinking about "new" media.  I kinda hate the term.  Nobody really knows what it means.  Even Wikipedia, a new media form in and of itself fails.  Webopedia has the best definition I could find:

New Media is a generic term for the many different forms of electronic communication that are made possible through the use of computer technology. The term is in relation to old media forms, such as print newspapers and magazines, that are static representations of text and graphics.
New media includes: Web sites, streaming audio and video, chat rooms, e-mail, online communities, Web advertising, virtual reality environments, integration of digital data with the telephone, such as Internet telephony, digital cameras, and mobile computing. 

In other words it includes a lot, including the fine content you can find on FoG.  But it is much more than that and it just so happens that Atlanta has a pretty strong foundation in new media. 

Atlanta has a strong foundation in new media?  Here I go, being all crazy once again.  But I typically like to back up my crazy statements with specific facts, so here goes.

According to Comscore Media Metrix (part of a long forgotten Atlanta win), three of the top 50 Web properties in the U.S. are based in Atlanta and have a combined reach of just over 50% of the Internet audience (in a given month half of the Internet user in the U.S. visit these properties).  The properties are Turner at #12, Weather at #16, and Cox at #44. 

Yeah folks, Turner’s Web properties are the 12th largest in the country in and of themselves reaching 23% of all Internet users.  This includes not only Cartoon Network but NASCAR.com, PGA.com, and PGATour.com among their smaller properties like TNT and TBS.  Turner is a new media powerhouse.  Larger then Facebook.  By about 15%.  Can you say anchor?  And remember:

Anchor companies play a disproportionate role in seeding cluster development…producing numerous spin-out companies, which strengthen key elements of the cluster.

But that’s not all.  I wish I had full access to Comscore’s numbers so that I could get a bit more granular, but I don’t.  Regardless, both Careerbuilder and Time Warner with CNN have significant presence in Atlanta.  Significant like buildings full of people working on core new media services.  In you include Careerbuilder and TW in the Internet reach numbers that I outlined above the total reach jumps to 78%.  You can discard this if you want and my argument still holds.  There is a strong new media cluster in Atlanta.  Why no one talks about this is beyond me, but its there.   I know it’s there.  And I am not alone.  That gives me hope.

The 250 or so people packed into Turner last fall that sat and listened to 60 companies pitch their wares at the New Media Business Exchange gives me hope.

Noro Moseley Partners hiring Greg Foster to head up a new media practice gives me hope.

A very prominent new media entrepreneur/executive working behind the scenes to put together, for lack of a better term, a MediaLab (think a VentureLab that extends beyond the boundaries of Georgia Tech) focused on new media startups gives me hope.

Having 60 people come together over a weekend to create Skribit gives me hope.

The Boostphase effort, a seed stage investment company for capital efficient startups gives me hope.

Seeing two very interesting companies emerge from Turner in the past two months give me hope.

GVU’s Journalism 3G gives me hope.

Sitting down with Georgia Tech students and watching their excitement as they explain their startup concept gives me hope.

AngelLounge gives me hope.

More Atlanta startups in the new media space then I can mention gives me hope.

I could go on.  And I hear it in the comments already.  Hope is not a strategy.  And it’s not.

But to paraphrase a certain senator from Illinois, that’s not the type of hope I am talking about.  It’s much larger than that.  It’s the same hope that makes you want to go out and start a company.  Or grow a company.  It’s the hope of a much larger opportunity.  The hope of being part of something larger.  A larger opportunity that we need to seize.

For me, it’s more than hope.  It’s a belief.  A belief that in the next ten years Atlanta can establish itself as strong in the new media space as we have in the Internet security space. 

But hope and belief is not a strategy.  Where does that leave us?

Let’s go back to Porter’s key finding,  new firm and cluster opportunities arise at the intersection of existing clusters.  Is he right?  Yep.  The most recent example.  Firethorn.  Financial services meets telecommunications.  Acquired by Qualcomm for $210.  Cha-ching!

Look at opportunities at the intersection of existing clusters.  They are big.  That really gives me hope.

But what would really, really give me hope is if everybody stops comparing here versus there.  There wins.  End of discussion.   So let’s talk about something interesting.  What do you do to seize the opportunity?

What gives you hope?

August 14, 2008  |  Comments  |  Tweet  |  Posted in Entrepreneurship, Internet, Web/Tech

Moving Forward

All the chatter that has been going on online sure has the early stage entrepreneurial group buzzing.  About 40 or so showed up for Open Coffee yesterday at Tech Square.  Heck, there were even at least two investors in the mix (Greg Foster of NMP and Clark Gilder) and at least one company (I ain’t saying) that attended was talking raising venture capital.  I am expecting to see an equally energetic crowd at Startup Drinks this evening at Fado.

Given all this activity Alan Taetle and I have decided to hold off on the Open VC gathering he announced in the comments over the weekend.  ATDC wants to officially get involved and work with Alan, other investors, and the entrepreneurial community to more comprehensively have an impact in moving things forward.  Once that gets in place it will be announced over on PeachSeedz.

If you have any constructive thoughts (please no more self flagellation) leave them in the comments.  Or if you think they are better shared face to face I am now open on 2 this Friday and may just cruise over to Starbucks and be MOOF if you want some quiet conversation.

August 13, 2008  |  Comments  |  Tweet  |  Posted in Angels, atdc, Entrepreneurship, Venture Capital

Can You Do It?

That according to Charlie Paparelli of Paparelli Ventures is the question going through an angel investor’s mind during the first one on one meeting with an entrepreneur.  Cindy Cheatham has a full write up over on PeachSeedz.

The three step process Charlie laid out to get the first meeting were;  1.  Get ready to pitch by clearly understanding the opportunity, how to exploit it, and build the team to do it;  2. Qualify investors (and Charlie’s web site does a great job of laying out the type of entrepreneur he wants to talk to); and 3.  Pitch. 

Make an investor believe that you can do it and you will get the second meeting and more.

August 11, 2008  |  Comments  |  Tweet  |  Posted in Angels, Entrepreneurship, Venture Capital

Observations on Observations

My friend Jeff Haynie wrote a nice missive on why he moved to the Valley entitled "What’s wrong with the Atlanta startup ecosystem and how to fix it."  It’s a pretty long post and a worthy read.  Jeff’s a smart guy and I generally agree with him on most things.  I have some observations of Jeff’s musings.

"My parents personally invested $250,000 of their own money as well."

Jeff hit up his relatives for early stage funding.  Have you?  If you can’t get your Mom to write you a check (I don’t care for how much) how can you expect a stranger to do so.

"I didn’t want to raise outside investment until we had a product, revenue and customers."

Like I said, Jeff is a smart guy.  Waiting until have have a product before raising capital significantly increases valuation.  Waiting until you have revenue before raising capital significantly increases valuation.

"Local VC money is mostly non-existant. It’s a supply-demand problem essentially. Low supply of great startups and some big hits, very little demand. (Note: I didn’t say lack of money)"

I agree 100% with this statement.  And this is not the "fault" of the people that invest.

"The local community is a relationship-based economy. It’s who you know … The ‘ole boy network. The valley is a meritocracy."

I disagree 50% with this statement.  As I said last week, if you have a good idea and a good team you can get funded in Atlanta.  The valley is indeed a meritocracy.  So is Atlanta, but you gotta perform.

"We have no real track record of big successes we can tout."

100% disagree.  See here.  And regardless of who funded them they count.

"What few winners we’ve had, they don’t feel compelled (or even obliged) to re-invest / give-back to the local community."

With the exception of Tom Noonan lately this is pretty much the case.  His and John Imlay’s commitment to giving back has spawned too many startups to count.  Stephen Fleming and I were talking the other day how we need to create a culture of successful entrepreneurs that compete with each other to get in on the best startup deals so they have bragging rights.  There are about five four people in Atlanta that could make a huge difference here.  Tom, Tripp Rackley, Chris Klaus, Marc Fluery and Jeff Arnold  immediately come to mind.  Goading them will not increase their involvement.

"We don’t have any real early stage venture investors in Atlanta."

But we do.  I was sitting in a room of about 50 of them on Thursday.  Mike Eckert, Tom Noonan, and Mitch Free all actively do pre-product/pre-revenue deals.  So does Imlay.  Clearleap, Endgame, Damballa, Flux Media, Global Crypto, Pramana, Purewire, Qoil, Qualtre, SparkIP, Suniva, and WorthPoint were all funded as early stage companies.

"Nor would they (NMP) have done the deal if it was 3 guys just out of GA tech with no experience."

I can’t speak for NMP and wish that they would speak for themselves.  But I think that if you removed Nolan and Jeff from the equation and replaced it with somebody like Paul Stamatiou and another equally savvy person I don’t think it would have changed the interest level much.  They just would want to bring in some experienced members to the team.  And BTW, a quick look through Storm’s portfolio does not show any such beasts.   

"The problem with Noro isn’t that they’re not a good firm. They are not experienced early stage investors. They haven’t had a great track record and most of their partners haven’t had any amount of reasonable success."

Before this all sprung up I was having lunch with Greg Foster.  He told me that NMP could expect to do about 20 deals with their current fund.  Of these deals they expect around 30% to be pre-revenue.  I can’t speak to the level of success that they have had with early versus late and would welcome seeing the analysis of such things.  All I know is Alan Taetle lives in a nicer house than mine. 

"West coast money specifically told me they did not want local money involved."

The comment stream would indicate that this is not the case.

"All the local events (that are meaningful) are being driven almost exclusively by entrepreneurs (myself included). The burden is heavy. Everyone needs to participate. Everyone needs to be involved."

First my creds on this.  Spearheaded Startup Weekend, give BarCamp a little push and helped out, PitchCamp mentor, and too many ATDC related activities to mention.  Younger entrepreneurs are driving a lot of the new events in town.  Everyone does indeed need to participate.  But some of the calls that I have seen demanding that investors and VCs fund things is just misguided.  More on this later but as an entrepreneur, and I am speaking as an entrepreneur, the investor is your customer.  You have to treat them as such.  Go look at the BarCamp SF sponsors.  VCs are not funding such things there, why should they here (except of course Startup Weekend: ))?

I don’t have a horse in this race. I sit right in the middle.  At the intersection of entrepreneurs wanting to get funding and investors looking for deals.  What I see is people talking on two different planes. I will close with this thought.  In the world of biology species adopt to their ecosystem in order to thrive and only after they thrive do they significantly impact the ecosystem.  The same holds true for Atlanta technology.

August 9, 2008  |  Comments  |  Tweet  |  Posted in Angels, Entrepreneurship, Venture Capital

Double Digits

Kate turned 10 yesterday.  Like all birthdays ending in a zero this was a big one.  Highlight of the day was a little trip to Lenox Mall for an ear piercing.

Dsc_0032_4

She was pretty brave about the whole thing.  And so, so proud once it was done. 

She became a little less serious later in the evening helping with her own dinner.

Dsc_0046_2

My little girl is growing up. 

  |  Comments  |  Tweet  |  Posted in Personal

Business Clusters

Last week I posted an article highlighting consumer technology startups in Atlanta with a promise to explain why not many of them make it big.  Here is that explanation.

It stems from the work of Michael Porter.  Porter is the preeminent scholar of our time on the subject of business strategy and competitiveness.  If you have any formal business training you know of his work.  In 1990 Porter wrote The Competitive Advantage of Nations where he introduced the theoretical framework (not only software development uses frameworks) of business clusters. 

A cluster is simply the geographic concentration of interconnected businesses, suppliers, and associated institutions in a particular field.  Clusters come in all ages, shapes, and sizes.  Film production in Hollywood, technology in Silicon Valley, and thoroughbred horses in Kentucky, all are examples of clusters.  Heck even the NYC diamond district which mostly comprises one block on one street is a cluster.  Clusters are everywhere and one can easily surmise given the title of the book that clusters create competitive advantage.  And they do.

Well if they do I want some where I live and this of course leads to the question of how clusters are formed.  In a report entitled "Clusters of Innovation Initiative: Regional Foundations of U.S. Competitiveness" funded by the Council on Competitiveness and authored by Porter the following was explained as ways to enhance the development of clusters:

• Clusters can be strengthened by increasing awareness of the cluster among local firms and organizations: Not only must firms be aware of the presence of a local cluster, they must also get together and coordinate activities to improve the cluster’s business environment.  Acceptance of new companies is important if the cluster is to grow quickly and reach a critical mass.
• New firm and cluster opportunities arise at the intersection of existing clusters:  Economic development strategies can leverage these opportunities to diversify a regional economy.
Anchor companies play a disproportionate role in seeding cluster development:  Anchor companies support cluster development by acting as magnets for other major companies; organizing other companies in the cluster for collective action; supporting projects that improve the local quality of life; and producing numerous spin-out companies, which strengthen key elements of the cluster (emphasis mine).
• Institutions for collaboration can significantly increase the success rate of start-up companies:  Cluster development depends in large part on generating new companies from within a region.  Successful regions almost always have a hospitable environment for start-ups.

Another important finding of this study was the outcome of The Cluster Mapping Project.  The Cluster Mapping Project identified 41 types of clusters in the U.S. economy.  While any given region will have some employment in the vast majority of these clusters, regional economies are typically very strong in only a handful.  So what clusters are present in the broad Atlanta regional economy?

It just so happens that Porter also wrote yet another report entitled "Clusters of Innovation Initiative: Atlanta-Columbus" which answers that question.  Running 168 pages it actually answers that question, though aging a bit, in great detail.  The report identifies financial services, transportation/logistics, and information technology, as strong Atlanta regional clusters.  Yes technology. 

The Atlanta technology cluster was the ninth largest in the United States (population appropriate if you will) and the second fastest growing in the country.  The report further identifies what it calls communications services (think telco and Internet), and software development as strong within the tech cluster.  And believe it or not it even mentions Web development as a well established cluster.

The report lays out the development of Atlanta’s technology cluster as such:

Atlanta’s information technology cluster draws its roots from Atlanta’s historical strengths in telecommunications and more recent strength in media companies.   In the 1960s and 1970s, telecom companies like AT&T , GTE, and WorldCom expanded operations as the region grew and telecom expanded throughout the country.  Turner Broadcasting, CNN, and Cox Communications were established in the 1980s to offer both cable service and new television content.  These companies found Atlanta to be fertile ground because of its skilled technical workforce that remained in the area after World War II and the strong flow of new talent provided by Georgia Tech’s industrial and electrical engineering programs.

In the late 1970s and early 1980s two software companies, Management Science America and Peachtree Software, enjoyed strong growth, and when sold to larger companies, made their leadership teams wealthy. The success of these firms and their founders did not result in an immediate boom in software or info tech firms, as was the case in other smaller regions.  Instead, the impact of these firms’ success was somewhat “lost” in the economy of a major metro area where big companies, major banks, and real estate developers were the primary job providers and held public “mindshare.” 

It was not until 1997-98, with the success of MindSpring, one of the first large national Internet service providers, that a widely recognized anchor firm developed.  MindSpring’s success and a growing national market encouraged other Internet-based entrepreneurs to expand businesses based in Atlanta including iXL, a web developer, and Internet Security Services, an Internet security firm.  The business community, universities, media, and existing venture capital firms lined up to support the development of Internet firms in the wake of these successes and the growing recognition that the “new” economy was real. 

And goes on to conclude:

Atlanta’s information technology cluster has thrived over the last five years.  Building from regional strength in software, communications, and financial services, entrepreneurs have established Atlanta as a broad-based IT region. Through state-led investments in research, education and infrastructure, an innovative technology business incubator, and the efforts {of} multiple private sector entrepreneurs, Atlanta has developed a broad-based cluster.  Seeing significant growth only over the past three years, Atlanta got a “late” start in the e-commerce and Internet area of this cluster, but is now home to a number of nationally recognized firms like WebMD, ISS, and MindSpring. The entrepreneurs who started these firms have been critical in the development of the cluster, both through the success of their firms and through the personal and corporate investments they have made in other regional firms.

Now there are some obvious factual errors in the report but really only one that bears correcting for my purpose.  Unlike the folks at MSA and ISS, the entrepreneurs that started iXL, MindSpring, and WebMD have not made broad investments that produced numerous spin-outs within the Internet cluster (for a variety of reasons that are either obvious or best discussed over a beer).  iXL, MindSpring, and WebMD did not act as anchors. And that is the root cause for the lack of a strong consumer Internet cluster producing large and successful companies in Atlanta.

But there is a new hope, which I will discuss next week.

August 5, 2008  |  Comments  |  Tweet  |  Posted in Business, Internet, Startups