Tag Archive | "Venture Capital"

New early-stage investor Kayweb Angels wants to keep startups in New York

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Kayweb Angels, a new fund for early-stage companies has launched in New York. The fund, started by CEO Haig Kayserian is part of Australia-based web services firm Kayweb.

The firm hopes to provide a step between simple VC investing and major angel infusions, Kayserian told VentureBeat today. The focus on this specific phase of a startup’s life cycle would consist of infusions of money, expert advice from VCs familiar with similar projects, and a major dose of input from developers who have faced the same obstacles and have an “insider’s view.”

“New York is crying out for tech talent, with many, including Mayor Michael Bloomberg, promoting the city as the hub for the best startup ideas, without the tech talent to match,” said Kayserian. “Our experience living and dealing in New York as web developers has made us believers in this notion, and who can argue when you look at the success of New York startups like Foursquare?”

Kayserian argues that the slippage of tech talent to the West Coast, and Silicon Valley specifically, could be slowed or even halted if the angel community spent more time nurturing talent at the developer level.

“Traditional angel investors provide seed capital, which is usually spent by web and mobile startups on building their product. As no product exists, the equity they demand can be as high as a controlling share of the company,” said Kayserian.

“VCs similarly provide the capital at seed stage, and almost always ensure you lose decisions [over controlling] your startup. They can do this as [the startups] are very fresh and have no product to show,” he said.

In that type of climate, Kayserian said there is a real need for a new class of investors who help startups build a product for a more modest level of equity, where the developers maintain a controlling share of the business.

That would mean that when the time comes for a startup to approach a traditional angel investor or VC, they would already have a version of their product built. Startups would then theoretically be in a stronger negotiating position when it comes to control and other general management issues.

Kayserian said that Kayweb Angels expects to hold a portfolio of five investment projects by the end of summer and add a further five between then and the following summer.

The company’s usual development commitment is valued at between $150,000 to $300,000 at the seed stage. With 10 investments planned over the coming year, it aims to have a fund size of around $2 million.

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What’s cooler than a million dollars? Changing a million lives

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Impact investingHenry Ford once said that a business that makes nothing but money is a poor business. Impact investing takes that thought to a new level.

Impact investors look for businesses that have a positive social or environmental impact as well as the potential for financial return. These enterprises can be anything from schools to mobile carriers serving the poor. Can profit-led companies solve social problems? Impact investors think they can.

One of the pioneers in the field is the Omidyar Network, created by Pierre Omidyar, the founder of eBay, and his wife Pam. Amy Klement, who leads Omidyar Network’s Access to Capital initiative (and previously headed up payments at PayPal) told me that Omidyar’s approach to philanthropy was formed by eBay. “By providing tools and a platform, he saw what people could do with opportunities. Ebay created more than 1 million new entrepreneurs” Klement said.

The Omidyar’s initially created a non-profit, family foundation but quickly realized that this imposed a lot of restrictions on what they could do. It was very difficult to make for-profit investments in social enterprises. “According to the tax laws, if something is a business it can’t be for good.” explained Klement. ”Through eBay the Omidyars had seen that businesses can have social impact and lasting social impact. They are sustainable, they are scalable in a way that non-profits generally aren’t.”

So the Omidyars created a new organization that could invest. The network uses a range of tools including non-profit grants, direct equity investments and debt investments, and it also invests in funds like the Ignia venture capital fund (which I’ll get to shortly). It has made grants to, or invested in companies like Wikipedia and P2P microfinance lenders Kiva.

Profit and loss is easy to measure, but how do you measure social impact? Klement explains. “We look at reach and engagement. Reach you can think of as breadth — the number of lives touched. And there we look for scale. We want to touch hundreds of thousands, if not millions, of lives. Engagement is depth — to what extent are we touching those lives. How deep is the impact?”

One of the network’s current investments is in Bridge International Acadamies, a chain of schools based in Nairobi, Kenya, and founded by an ex-technology entrepreneur. “He founded this school-in-a box model. It’s a highly replicable franchise model where he can scale these schools quite quickly. The education system in Kenya is completely broken. Teachers show up about 50 percent of the time. Even when they do show up, the average teaching time per day is about 90 minutes. The free government schools are not really free by the time people pay for uniforms and supplies and often bribes to the teachers,” said Klement.

The Bridge International schools cost less than $4 per pupil per month, which is in line with the costs of the government schools. There are now 25 schools making Bridge International the largest chain of schools on the African continent, and that will expand to 100 by the end of the year. Within 5 years the schools will serve a million children.

Another investment is D.light which makes solar lanterns to replace kerosene lamps. Kerosene causes millions of burns a year and serious respiratory system problems. One use is equivalent to smoking 2 packs of cigarettes. D.light has shipped more than a million lanterns to India, Africa, and Haiti and is poised for exponential growth.

Klement told me that once you screen for social impact, this type of investing is similar to traditional VC investing but “We are prepared to take more risk because we are entering markets that are less developed” like India and Sub-Saharan Africa. The network invests in the range of $1 to $3 million per deal. The Omidyar Network is also one of the investors in the $100 million Ignia fund, a VC fund based in Mexico that invests in businesses that provide products and services to bottom-of-the-pyramid (BOP) people, the poorest sector of society, but expects venture capital-level returns.

I asked founder Álvaro Rodríguez Arregui why he started the fund. “There is tremendous lack of access to basic, quality products and services in the base of the pyramid,” he said. The poorest people often pay over the odds for goods and services. If you don’t have a credit history, you can’t get a post-paid mobile phone plan, and pre-paid minutes are a lot more expensive. If you live in an area with no electricity, you have to pay someone more to charge your phone.

Ignia’s definition of positive impact is the following: ”If you provide this product or service to the BOP, will it improve their quality of life? The way we define our impact is providing access to basic products and services to as many people as possible as soon as possible. The only way to grow as fast as possible is through returns. The more profitable you are, the faster you grow and the faster you deliver on your mission.” Ignia invests in a range of sectors from healthcare to financial services and telecommunications.

Rodríguez Arregui started fundraising for Ignia in November 2007. It was a challenge. There was the small matter of the financial crisis, and Ignia invests in a company for up to 15 years, a longer horizon that most investors are used to. But there was a more fundamental problem. ”We are at the intersection of VC and impact investing. The biggest challenge was definitely fund-raising because not many people believe that intersection exists. Because of the way we have been educated, we believe that it is either impact or returns and that there is a conflict between those two in that there is an embedded philosophy which is ‘profit is bad’. We don’t believe that is the case.”

“I am a huge believer that businesses with purpose end up being significantly stronger than those that don’t have a purpose. I am convinced that when you wake up in the morning every day to try to address a mission, it’s a much stronger motivator than when you walk into the office every day and just want to make a buck,” he said.

It’s early days for Ignia, but its star investment Finestrella has grown 9-fold in the last year. Finestrella provides affordable, post-paid mobile phone plans to the BOP. 86 percent of people in Mexico have access to a mobile phone, but they only take incoming calls. Outgoing calls are made on public pay phones, which are much cheaper than pre-paid minutes. People still spend up to 30 percent of their income on mobile services.

Finestrella has defined a set of algorithms that it uses to assess the creditworthiness of people who don’t have an official employment history, bank account or credit rating. If they meet the criteria, customers are offered a post-paid mobile phone plan at much lower rates than pre-paid.

Finestrella started in 2010 and will have 35,000 customers by the end of this year. It already has $8 million in revenue (which is considerable in a country like Mexico) and is growing exponentially. The target is to have 800,000 customers by 2015.  A couple of Silicon Valley VC funds, one of which is Storm Ventures, have also invested in Finestrella.

One of Ignia’s investment team, Joshua Motta, explained why BOP businesses can make excellent returns. “Those activities which have the highest financial returns tend to have the highest social returns. Major corporations and even entrepreneurs have overlooked the BOP segment of the population and dismissed them outright simply because of their low earning power. But aggregated (BOP is 70 percent of the population in Mexico), the BOP actually has a huge amount of disposable income” according to Motta.

Motta maintains that corporations often don’t understand the needs of the BOP and just sell their standard products more cheaply in emerging markets. This strategy is often ineffective. Procter and Gamble discovered this with its detergent. ”In Western markets the quantity sold per unit is quite large. The BOP can’t afford a gallon of detergent. What P&G discovered was that if it used smaller packet sizes, literally single-use tablets, it was able to sell substantially in the BOP,” said Motta.

I asked Klement and Rodríguez Arregui what trends they see in impact investing. Both see momentum picking up and more money coming into the sector. Companies like Wells Fargo and JP Morgan are putting money into this new asset class. Rodríguez Arregui thinks that a lot of the talent in the social investing world comes from the non-profit sector rather than business and that more business expertise is needed.

Finally, Rodríguez Arregui explains that people need to be clear on why they want to get into impact investing. ”Do you want to do good, or do you want to feel good? It’s much easier to feel good by giving away meals to starving kids in Sudan, but you are not going to solve any systemic problem in the world by doing that. The outcomes of impact investing are much more long-term. This is business, and business is messy and you have to make hard decisions. When your only purpose is to feel good, you are not willing to make those hard decisions,” he said.

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Deals & More: GoPro snaps up funding for wearable cameras

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Today’s funding announcements include companies that develop cameras, distribute customer reviews and manage APIs:

GoPro brings in funding for action video recorders: The developer of the HD HERO line of wearable and gear mountable cameras has raised has raised an undisclosed yet “substantial” round of funding from Riverwood Capital, Steamboat Ventures, U.S. Venture Partners, Sageview Capital and Walden International. The company, based in Half Moon Bay, Calif., is popular among pro athletes, pro video producers and consumers alike for its cameras and accessories, which will now be sold in all Best Buy stores nationwide.

PowerReviews raises $10M to generate customer feedback: The customer review service has raised a new round of funding led by Four Rivers Group with participation from Woodside Fund, Menlo Ventures and Tenaya Capital. Based in San Francisco, the company provides the technology for user-generated reviews to more than 5,000 retailers including Brookstone, Drugstore.com and Diapers.com.

Mashery gets $11M to manage APIs: The provider of tools and services for API (application programming interface) management has raised a fourth round of funding led by OpenView Venture Partners with participation from existing investors Cisco, Formative Ventures, First Round Capital and .406 Ventures. The San Francisco company, which was founded in 2006, today has a network of more than 100,000 developers and has more than 100 clients including Netflix, The New York Times and CNET.

Newtopia grabs seed funding to whip you into shape: The personalized health coaching service has raised an undisclosed amount of seed funding from BDC Venture Capital and Canadian angel investors, peHUB reports. Founded in 2008, the company provides lifestyle management advice to users in the form of individualized health plans, coaching support and exercise help.

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Incubator BoomStartup announces the 10 companies it will mentor this summer

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Utah-based startup incubator BoomStartup announced the 10 companies it has selected to participate in its second annual class. The three-month summer program gives promising new tech companies a shot at early additional funding and attention from potential investors on the hunt for the next hot concepts.

The companies in the Class of 2011 are ChampionVillage, CircleFive, Explorer.io, FaceTags, Golf Compete, Jumbas, OER Glue, PromoKube, Proz and VuTherapy.

BoomStartup is a mentorship-driven seed accelerator for web, mobile and software startups and is a founding TechStars Network Member.

Independent mobile ad network JumpTap raises $25 million

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It seems that there’s still room for independent mobile advertising networks. Mobile advertising company JumpTap announced today that it has completed a $25 million financing round. The capital will be used to recruit new employees and for product and technology development. The company recently hired high-level executives to support growth in the future.

The funding comes from existing investors including AllianceBernstein, General Catalyst, Redpoint Ventures, Summerhill Ventures, Valhalla Partners and WPP. There were also unnamed new investors involved.

JumpTap claims that over the past 18 months it has experienced accelerated growth with significant increases in mobile ad network traffic, client ad campaigns and deeper reach into major verticals such as automotive, entertainment, consumer packaged goods and financial services. The network reaches 83 million consumers each month, a 30 percent increase from last year.

The company has already hired 35 new employees this year including chief media and revenue officer Todd Anderman, who was previously the digital content head of U.S. publisher Hachette Filipacchi Media. In September 2010, the company hired new CEO George Bell from venture capital firm General Catalyst.

There’s a lot going on in mobile ad networks nowadays. Online marketing company ValueClick acquired mobile ad network Greystripe in April for 75 million. Google purchased previously AdMob for 750 million and Apple acquired Quattro Wireless for $275 million.

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Why now is the “second golden age” for VC tech investing, says new report

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A new report issued today by venture capital company Clearstone Venture Partners on how well the venture capital community is doing says that VCs who put their money into technology startups now will get the best return on their money since the boomtimes of the dotcom era last decade.

Titled “The State of Venture Capital in America,” the report says that because conditions have improved considerably due to a shakeout in the number of VC players involved in the tech sector, there’s been a reduction in capital allocated, making the money VCs do invest count even more.

It concluded that the top three reasons for superior performance returning to the venture capital asset class are: a scarcity of capital leading to better returns to those who are investing; far higher valuations being awarded to successful companies at their IPOs; and the rising importance of businesses going global sooner in their life cycle.

The significant decline in VC funding raised since the dot-com bubble burst — only $12 billion in 2010, versus more than $80 billion in 2000, and $37 billion in 2007 — has combined with a high uptick in money pouring into clean technology deals, which made up 17 percent of venture investments in 2010, to create ideal conditions for investing.

These factors and a sluggish IPO market could lead to a second “Golden Age” of tech investing on the part of venture capitalists, said the report.

“While the asset class has been largely abandoned by institutional investors, this disinterest will paradoxically lead to superior returns in the future,” William Quigley, managing partner at the Menlo Park, Calif.-based outfit and author of the report told VentureBeat.

That makes it a prime environment for investors looking to find bargains at the seed stage level and large payouts when popular companies such as Zynga, Facebook and Twitter do go public.

“Investors in the hot start-up companies of today, Facebook, Groupon, Zynga [etc.] will do fantastically well,” said Quigley who has seen a number of his early-stage investments go public, including MP3.com, Tickets.com, Emusic and PeopleSupport.

However, he warned that because most of the new Silicon Valley companies already have an existing product and gone global, public shareholders in these company will be taking on substantially more risk this time than they did versus their investments in the leaders from the last tech cycle.

“The iconic companies of the dot com and telecom bubble, such as Amazon.com, eBay and Juniper Networks were priced at very attractive valuations when they were offered to public shareholders  Amazon went public at less than 1 times forward 12 month revenues,” he said.  “I don’t see the same fantastic opportunity for IPO investors this time around.”

“The newest crop of high-profile IPOs will be fully priced, with all of the risk that implies for public investors,” he added.

The report also said that taking a data-driven prospective, conditions today in the private and public capital markets bode well for superior performance and a to return to the venture capital asset class this decade.

“Specifically, the rewards accruing to private investors in the leading tech companies of today far exceed what private investors used to earn from their investment in the best companies of previous tech cycles,” it said.

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Game fundings and acquisitions rise 130 percent to $1.89B in 2010

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Video game acquisitions and funding deals rose 130 percent to $1.89 billion in 2010, up from $819 million in 2009, according to market researcher IHS Screen Digest.

The number of fundings and acquisition deals combined was 210 during last year, up 36 percent from a year earlier, thanks to the disruption in the game business caused by the growth of online and social networking games. Our own count found that game fundings hit $1.05 billion raised across 91 deals in 2010, up 58 percent from $663.1 million across 115 deals a year earlier.

There were 123 fundings and 87 acquisitions during the year, IHS Screen Digest said. There were 20 to 24 acquisitions every quarter, double the rate of the year earlier.

The numbers cover funding and acquisitions activity in all areas of games except mobile. Oddly enough, that’s the most active area of the game business today, and Screen Digest says it tracks that market separately.

“Two key trends fueled the robust pace of funding and acquisitions in gaming during 2010,” said Steve Bailey, games analyst at IHS. “First, it was driven by burgeoning activity in the fast-evolving sphere of online gaming, with particular emphasis on social network gaming. Second, movement in funding and acquisitions also has ramped up between Western markets and entities in Asia, centered likewise on the growth to be found in various aspects of online gaming.”

Companies in all regions are starting to go global, raising the likelihood of international deals. The total declared value of funding deals in social network games alone rose 300 percent in 2010.

The biggest funding event was when Chinese online gaming giant Tencent invested $300 million in Russia’s Digital Sky Technologies, which itself has invested in social game companies such as Zynga. Zynga raised $147 million from Japanese investor Softbank. But we noted the biggest funding of the year was Providence Equity Partners investing $150 million in ZeniMax, which acquired id Software, whose upcoming game Rage is pictured at top.

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Deals & More: Inspirato gets $11M for luxury vacation rentals

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Today’s funding announcements include services for planning vacations, snagging fashion deals and pleasing hotel guests:

Inspirato gets $11M for luxury vacation rentals: The high-end travel company has closed a new round of funding from a group of individual investors including CEOs and venture capitalists. The company, co-founded by eBay’s first lawyer Brad Handler, gives members access to luxury rental homes in upscale destinations. Members join by paying a one-time fee of $15,000; annual renewals cost $2,500.

Ideeli raises $41M to offer more brands: The popular flash sales site has raised a third round of funding led by Next World Capital with participation from Cue Ball Capital, StarVest Partners, Constellation Growth Capital and Kodiak Venture Partners. The New York-based company, which competes with Gilt Groupe and RueLala, plans to use the latest funding to expand its brand offerings and improve its technology. Ideeli currently has 4 million members.

MConcierge gets funding to help hotels serve guests: The developer of a mobile concierge service has raised an undisclosed amount of funding from Real Ventures, Montreal Start Up, Palos Capital and Positron Inc. The Montreal-based company creates software tools to help the hospitality industry with tasks, such as room service orders and wake up calls, that are traditionally handled by a concierge desk.

Spiceworks brings in $25M for IT management service: The Austin, Texas-based company has raised a fourth round of funding from Adams Street Partners, Tenaya Capital, Institutional Venture Partners, Austin Ventures and Shasta Ventures. The company, which develops free IT network management software, claims that IT professionals for more than 25% of the world’s small and mid-sized businesses use Spiceworks.

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Crowdsourced design site 99designs raises $35M

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99designs99designs, the popular site where startups and other small businesses can crowdsource their graphic design needs, has raised $35 million in a first round of funding from Accel Partners.

A first round of this size may seem like another sign of a venture capital bubble, but 99designs isn’t your typical early-stage investment. It was founded in February 2008, and has been bootstrapped and profitable until now. Customers can buy customizable logo designs off-the-shelf (metaphorically speaking) for just $99, or they can host design contests for things like logos and websites, where they only pay for the design that they like best.

99designs says that it has hosted more than 75,000 designs already and that it has paid designers $19 million to-date.

Accel is most famous for being an early investor in Facebook, but it has also succeeded in bringing relatively mature, bootstrapped companies into the venture capital fold in the past, most notably with Atlassian, a project-management company that raised a $65 million first round led by Accel last year. In fact, Atlassian and 99designs also share an Australian origin — 99designs is based in Melbourne and San Francisco.

Angle investors Michael Dearing, Dave Goldberg, Stewart Butterfield, and Anthony Casalena also participated in the round.

“99designs caught my attention when I realized that nearly every one of the early stage companies and entrepreneurs I work with was turning to them to get great design work done,” Dearing said in a press release. “The team has created a marketplace that is easy for companies to get onboard with, and also a boon for designers who can go after any of the hundreds of jobs open at any one time.”

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Kevin Rose raises $1.5M for mobile development lab Milk

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kevin-roseMany venture capitalists like to say they invest in people, not ideas. That seems particularly true in the case of Milk, Kevin Rose’s new mobile development firm, which just raised $1.5 million in angel funding.

Rose, of course, is famous for founding social news aggregator Digg, but he resigned earlier this year, after the company launched a controversial redesign and seemed to stagnate. He reemerged in April with Milk, which he said consists of a small team that will experiment with different app ideas, hopefully launching four-to-six ambitious apps in a year.

The funding was first reported in TechCrunch and confirmed on the San Francisco company’s Twitter account. Investors include Digg backers Mike Maples, Jr. (of Floodgate) and David Sze (of Greylock Partners), as well as Ron Conway, Dave Morin, Philip Rosedale, Ev Williams, Joshua Schachter, Ashton Kutcher, Philip Kaplan, Chris Sacca, Gary Vaynerchuk, Tony Hsieh, TechCrunch’s Michael Arrington, and others. (Yes, it’s a crazy list.)

The “development lab” model seems to be a nice career path for entrepreneurs who have launched one or two successful companies and now want to create cool new products without the headache of running a mature company. AdMob Omar Hamoui recently announced his own project, Churn Labs, which has backing from Sequoia Capital.

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