• StrictlyVC: October 16, 2014

    Good Thursday morning, everyone! (Btw, an easier-to-read version is here.)

    —–

    Top News in the A.M.

    Facebook has just rolled out a new emergency check-in feature for natural disasters.

    Apple is hosting its iPad and iMac event today, which you can check out live.

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    One Company Where Data Breaches are Welcome News

    When it comes to data breaches, the headlines this year have become a blur, with the vulnerabilities of one corporate giant after another – American Express, eBay, Home Depot, JPMorgan Chase, Target – put on full display for the world. The pace of breaches has been accelerating, too, with roughly 600 data breaches in 2013 and what experts expect will be800 breaches by the end of this year.

    The trend is lousy for consumers, but it’s exceedingly positive for TeleSign, a 10-year-old, L.A.-based company that handles new account verification and two-factor authentication services for hundreds of huge properties, including nine of the 10 biggest U.S.-based web companies.Yesterday, StrictlyVC caught up with TeleSign CEO Steve Jillings to learn more about his business – and whether TeleSign, which closed on roughly $50 millionin funding in July, might ever raise another round from private investors. Our chat has been lightly edited for length.

    You handle crucial authentication services for some of the biggest, savviest tech companies in the world. Why is this something they’re outsourcing?

    We’re in a business that’s easy to do badly and incredibly hard to do well. A lot of the big tech companies have users in every corner of the world. We’re localized in 87 different languages and deliver authentication events into more than 200 countries and territories – places I’ve never heard of. And our 250 employees — roughly half of whom are in engineering – are focused on authentication 24/7. It’s like asking, “Why aren’t you generating your own power?” Because you can flip a switch and it just works.

    Who are your most direct competitors?

    Our biggest competitive set are companies that do try doing it themselves. A lot of messaging companies that offer up cheap messaging feeds tell their clients that it’s easy to make work and here’s how you do it. We get lots of customers who eventually give up and outsource the entire thing to us. With 20 or 30 people, you just can’t get on top of it. Making this stuff work globally, using messaging as a delivery platform, the complexities are difficult.

    You’re talking about delivering PIN codes as part of the two-factor authentication process. I sign in to Twitter, it asks me for my password, then shoots a code to my phone to ensure that I’m who I say I am.

    Exactly. We deliver access PIN codes, and we deliver the bulk of them through SMS or in a voicemail, and now we’re starting to deliver them through mobile authentication apps.

    People think when you send an SMS, it simply, magically arrives at the other end, but there are many things that can go wrong using the telco layer. And if a customer is waiting on a PIN code that doesn’t arrive, you have a pretty unhappy customer.

    Apple and others are starting to do more with biometrics to authenticate users. Could biometrics put you out of business?

    Face recognition and voice stuff is cool, but that’s about as far as it goes. Biometrics has been around for years, but you probably can’t name one biometric company that’s been successful or gotten to any degree of scale. Voice has too much latency. Facial [biometrics] is getting better, but it’s nowhere near prime time. We think behavioral biometrics is interesting, but that’s also super early. We’re integrating some aspects of biometrics in our stack as incremental data points, but to say it can replace what we do would be a stretch.

    How do you make two-factor authentication easier, so that more people take advantage of it?

    Well, a lot of our clients are now looking at it and saying they’re going to make it mandatory, meaning it will become an opt-out feature rather than opt-in. But we’re also very focused on reducing user friction. It won’t be long before the user experience will be simpler, so that when someone who has registered an account comes back [to use it], we’ll be able to authenticate them based on information that they know, what we know about their device, and their behavior.

    You’ve said in other interviews that your revenue is doubling every year, that it was $24 million in 2012, $50 million last year, and that it’s on track to double again this year. So what’s next? Are you thinking about an IPO? Might you raise more private capital?

    We’ve raised $78 million, including $50 million this summer, and most of that’s still in the bank. The only scenario where we’d raise more now is if we had the opportunity to acquire a company that we couldn’t absorb [with our current resources]. There are a lot of interesting technology companies out there that will struggle to get to scale but that have technology that could be additive to the things we’re doing, and we can get technology in front of the biggest companies in the world in no time at all.

    In the meantime, our goal is to be IPO ready by the end of 2015. We’ll financially be at the scale that we could go public. We think five quarters away is good timing for us. But right now, it’s more of a discipline thing than a hard-and-fast thing.

    —–

    New Fundings

    AdNear, a two-year-old, Singapore-based company whose location intelligence platform caters to advertisers, has raised $19 million in Series B funding from new investors Telstra and Global Brain (a Japanese venture firm), along with earlier investors Sequoia Capital and Canaan Partners. The company has raised $44.5 million altogether, shows Crunchbase. Tech in Asia has more here.

    Blue Box, an 11-year-old, Seattle-based managed cloud hosting provider, has raised $10 million in Series B funding led by an undisclosed strategic investor, with participation from earlier backers Founder Collective,Voyager Capital and the company’s executive team. The company has now raised at least $19.1 million, shows Crunchbase.

    Fresvii, a two-year-old, Redwood City, Ca.-based mobile cloud platform designed for smartphone game developers, has raised $1.8 million in funding from Japanese venture capital firm Nissay Capital. VentureBeat has more here.

    Indicative, a year-old, New York-based service that helps marketers and product managers analyze data from websites and apps, has raised $2 million in seed funding, including from Acadia Woods Partners, Rose Tech Ventures, and Bertelsmann Digital Media Investments, along with numerous individual investors. TechCrunch has more here.

    Osmo, a nearly two-year-old, Palo Alto, Ca.-based hardware games device for kids that connects to any iPad, has raised $12 million in Series A funding led by Accel Partners, with participation from Upfront Ventures and earlier backer K9 Ventures.

    Portal Instruments, a two-year-old, Cambridge, Ma.-based medical device company that’s developing needle-free drug-delivery systems, has raised $11 million in Series A funding led by Sanofi AS, PBJ Capital and an undisclosed U.S. medical-device company.

    Quantopian, a three-year-old, Boston-based company behind a browser-based algorithmic trading platform, has raised $15 million in Series B funding to create its own hedge fund. Bessemer Venture Partners led the round, with participation from Wicklow Capital and earlier backers Khosla Ventures and Spark Capital. The company has now raised $23.8 million to date, shows Crunchbase.

    Razer, a 16-year-old, Carlsbad, Ca.-based company that sells high-end precision-gaming hardware, including tablets and a “smartband” device called Nabu, has raised an undisclosed amount of funding led by Intel Capital at a valuation of more than $1 billion, reports TechCrunch.

    Sapience Analytics, a five-year-old, Pune, India-based company that makes employee productivity software, has raised around $7.4 million in Series B funding from Orios Venture Partners. TechCircle has more here.

    Tongal, a five-year-old, Santa Monica, Ca.-based social media platform that connects creative professionals with brands and causes that need their work, has raised $5 million in Series C funding from earlier investor Insight Venture Partners. The company has raised $21.5 million altogether.

    Viewics, a nearly six-year-old, Sunnyvale, Ca.-based healthcare analytics and data platform company, has raised $8 million in funding led by Canvas Venture Fund. VentureBeat has more here.

    Welltok, a five-year-old, Denver-based health optimization company, has raised $25 million in new funding from Bessemer Venture Partners. The company has now raised $73 million altogether.

    Wilshire Axon Sports, a 1.5-year-old, L.A.-based online fan engagement platform, has raised $2 million in Series A funding led by Mosaik Partners, with participation from an outfit called Albrekca and earlier backer KGC Capital.

    Wirkn, a three-month-old, Toronto, Ontario-based mobile platform whose first app promises users the ability to create a video profile that “shows their personality” to potential employers, has received $400,000 in seed funding led by Kinetic Companies and numerous, unnamed angel investors.

    Wit.ai, a year-old, Palo Alto, Ca.-based natural language startup, has raised $3 million in a seed funding led by Andreessen Horowitz, with participation from Ignition Partners, New Enterprise Associates, A-Grade Investments, SV Angel, Eric Hahn, Alven Capital, and TenOneTen. The Rude Baguette has more here.

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    New Funds

    Causeway Media Partners, a 1.5-year-old, Boston-based growth equity firm that focused on sports-related media and tech opportunities, has officially disclosed in an SEC filing that it closed on $125.6 million for its debut fund. (We talked about that $125 million fund and more with the firm in early July.)

    SAP Ventures, which spun out of SAP four years ago as an independent venture arm, is changing its name to Sapphire Ventures. The firm currently manages $1.4 billion from SAP, including more than $900 million on which it closed last year (a $405 million fund of funds and a $650 million pool that’s being invested in growth-stage companies). It has so far used that capital to invest in roughly 125 companies, including Gild, which makes hiring software and Ping Identity, which makes cloud-based identity management software; it has also backed several venture funds, including Amplify Partners and Data Collective. But when Sapphire raises its next fund in two or three years, it will be talking with investors outside of SAP, too, says a spokeswoman.

    —–

    IPOs

    Bank of America Merrill Lynch researchers observed in a note this morning that the S&P 500 index peaked right after Alibaba‘s September 19th IPO — eight minutes after its IPO, to be exact. “Since then US and global stocks have fallen 10 percent and cyclical sectors such as energy, materials and industrials have been decimated,” they added.

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    Exits

    Anametrix, a four-year-old, San Diego-based company whose cloud-based software presents a holistic view of the effectiveness of paid, owned and earned media, has been acquired by Ensighten, whose software helps companies manage the code on their websites that controls digital marketing functions. Terms of the acquisition weren’t disclosed.

    —–

    People

    Actor Christian Bale is reportedly in talks to play Steve Jobs in the Sony biopic “Jobs” that’s being written Aaron Sorkin, who is dividing the film into three long scenes, each taking place backstage before one of Apple’s famous product launches. Variety has the story.

    Stephen Blyth, the new head of Harvard’s endowment, will have his work cut out for him, reports Harvard Magazine. More here.

    TV personality Stephen Colbert is threatening to sue Google for getting his height wrong, listing it as 5’10” rather than 5’11”. “Seriously, 5’10?,” said Colbert on his show yesterday. “Those are Matt Damon numbers. That’s down there in the stale air Johnny Depp is sucking.”

    George Lucas, the creator of “Star Wars,” on why so many Hollywood tycoons and directors were in attendance at Vanity Fair’s New Establishment Summit in San Francisco last week: “Do you smell that?” Lucas said to the New York Times. “It’s the smell of money.”

    —–

    Jobs

    Google Capital, the growth equity fund backed by Google, is looking for an associate. The job is in Mountain View, Ca.

    —–

    Essential Reads

    Apple will stop selling Fitbit devices at its retail stores as it makes room for its own Apple Watch.

    LinkedIn‘s advertising business has “become the fastest growing business in LinkedIn’s history,” CEO Jeff Weiner tells Ad Age, adding, “I don’t mean the fastest growing marketing-solutions business. I mean the fastest growing business, period.”

    HBO has finally decided to offer a standalone broadband version of its service beginning next year, but it’s likely to come at a cost to parent Time Warner.

    —–

    Detours

    The ump who blew the ’85 World Series wants a rematch.

    Some perfume commercial.

    As hourly wages for entry level work fall, more parents extend the deadline for their kids’ financial independence.

    —–

    Retail Therapy

    An upscale portable brew kit, for the urbanite who likes to hike.

    Is it us or does this have disaster written all over it?

  • One Company Where Data Breaches are Welcome News

    steve jilllingsWhen it comes to data breaches, the headlines this year have become a blur, with the vulnerabilities of one corporate giant after another – American Express, eBay, Home Depot, JPMorgan Chase, Target – put on full display for the world. The pace of breaches has been accelerating, too, with roughly 600 data breaches in 2013 and what experts expect will be 800 breaches by the end of this year.

    The trend is lousy for consumers, but it’s exceedingly positive for TeleSign, a 10-year-old, L.A.-based company that handles new account verification and two-factor authentication services for hundreds of huge properties, including nine of the 10 biggest U.S.-based web companies.Yesterday, StrictlyVC caught up with TeleSign CEO Steve Jillings to learn more about his business – and whether TeleSign, which closed on roughly $50 million in funding in July, might ever raise another round from private investors. Our chat has been lightly edited for length.

    You handle crucial authentication services for some of the biggest, savviest tech companies in the world. Why is this something they’re outsourcing?

    We’re in a business that’s easy to do badly and incredibly hard to do well. A lot of the big tech companies have users in every corner of the world. We’re localized in 87 different languages and deliver authentication events into more than 200 countries and territories – places I’ve never heard of. And our 250 employees — roughly half of whom are in engineering – are focused on authentication 24/7. It’s like asking, “Why aren’t you generating your own power?” Because you can flip a switch and it just works.

    Who are your most direct competitors?

    Our biggest competitive set are companies that do try doing it themselves. A lot of messaging companies that offer up cheap messaging feeds tell their clients that it’s easy to make work and here’s how you do it. We get lots of customers who eventually give up and outsource the entire thing to us. With 20 or 30 people, you just can’t get on top of it. Making this stuff work globally, using messaging as a delivery platform, the complexities are difficult.

    You’re talking about delivering PIN codes as part of the two-factor authentication process. I sign in to Twitter, it asks me for my password, then shoots a code to my phone to ensure that I’m who I say I am.

    Exactly. We deliver access PIN codes, and we deliver the bulk of them through SMS or in a voicemail, and now we’re starting to deliver them through mobile authentication apps.

    People think when you send an SMS, it simply, magically arrives at the other end, but there are many things that can go wrong using the telco layer. And if a customer is waiting on a PIN code that doesn’t arrive, you have a pretty unhappy customer.

    Apple and others are starting to do more with biometrics to authenticate users. Could biometrics put you out of business?

    Face recognition and voice stuff is cool, but that’s about as far as it goes. Biometrics has been around for years, but you probably can’t name one biometric company that’s been successful or gotten to any degree of scale. Voice has too much latency. Facial [biometrics] is getting better, but it’s nowhere near prime time. We think behavioral biometrics is interesting, but that’s also super early. We’re integrating some aspects of biometrics in our stack as incremental data points, but to say it can replace what we do would be a stretch.

    How do you make two-factor authentication easier, so that more people take advantage of it?

    Well, a lot of our clients are now looking at it and saying they’re going to make it mandatory, meaning it will become an opt-out feature rather than opt-in. But we’re also very focused on reducing user friction. It won’t be long before the user experience will be simpler, so that when someone who has registered an account comes back [to use it], we’ll be able to authenticate them based on information that they know, what we know about their device, and their behavior.

    You’ve said in other interviews that your revenue is doubling every year, that it was $24 million in 2012, $50 million last year, and that it’s on track to double again this year. So what’s next? Are you thinking about an IPO? Might you raise more private capital?

    We’ve raised $78 million, including $50 million this summer, and most of that’s still in the bank. The only scenario where we’d raise more now is if we had the opportunity to acquire a company that we couldn’t absorb [with our current resources]. There are a lot of interesting technology companies out there that will struggle to get to scale but that have technology that could be additive to the things we’re doing, and we can get technology in front of the biggest companies in the world in no time at all.

    In the meantime, our goal is to be IPO ready by the end of 2015. We’ll financially be at the scale that we could go public. We think five quarters away is good timing for us. But right now, it’s more of a discipline thing than a hard-and-fast thing.

    Sign up for our morning missive, StrictlyVC, featuring all the venture-related news you need to start you day.

  • StrictlyVC: October 15, 2014

    Good Wednesday morning, everyone! (Web visitors, here’s an easier-to-read version of today’s email.)

    —–

    Top News in the A.M.

    There’s a new security vulnerability called Poodle that looks to have bite, reports Wired.

    If Republicans win back the Senate come Election Day, that power shift could shake up tech policy in a handful of ways, reports the Washington Post.

    Fitbit fans, rejoice. The company is about to introduce two new activity trackers, says Gizmodo.

    —–

    Saying Goodbye to Age-Driven Lists

    Last week, Fortune released its annual “40 under 40” list, and, as is always the case, writes its assistant managing editor, there was blowback about who was featured. One complaint about this year’s list is that there are just 15 women, which, she acknowledges, is “not parity – far from it.” However, she still defends Fortune’s reasoning, saying the business achievements of women under age 40 don’t match men of the same age group.

    The silver lining, continues the editor, is that “when you look at women between 40 and 44, the universe of powerful women explodes in number — and their roles are much bigger. The sweet spot for women in business, I would argue, is ages 40 to 44.”

    Maybe we’re supposed to slow clap here. Instead, we’d like to propose to Fortune and other outlets that they stop ranking businesspeople by age. Age lists are absurd on almost ever conceivable level.

    If you’re still in your twenties, you might not appreciate how weird it is that leading business publications celebrate professionals based on the year in which they were born. But it’s a fairly ghoulish obsession and worse, it feeds into society’s growing disregard for everyone over the age of 40.

    That’s a whole lot of people. According to U.S. Census Bureau figures from 2010, 30.6 million Americans, or roughly 10 percent of the population fell between the ages of 18 and 24 years, while 82.1 million or 26.6 percent fell between 25 and 44 years of age and roughly the same amount of people were between the ages of 45 and 64 years old.

    It isn’t fashionable to care about age diversity. Google didn’t disclose its employees’ ages in its diversity report. Neither did Facebook, Yahoo, LinkedIn or Pinterest, and there wasn’t much of an uproar about the subject. Everyone was too focused on how white and male-dominated each company appears to be.

    And, people like lists; they drive traffic and ad revenue. We get it.

    But the relentless focus of Silicon Valley and the broader business press on wunderkinds is discrimination, pure and simple. It’s also terrible for business given the skills of older employees and entrepreneurs.

    In Fortune’s postmortem about its “40 under 40” list, its editor proposes numerous reasons for the “long list of incredibly powerful women in their early 40s,” pointing to women’s busy early childcare years, as well as the comparatively thin numbers of female entrepreneurs as compared with men. She closes by saying it’s her hope that “one day the 40 under 40 [list] will reach parity.”

    Our hope is that Fortune spends a little less time worrying about business leaders’ birthdays when celebrating business leaders. That’s the real problem. And it’s remarkably easy to avoid.

    —–

    New Fundings

    Bicycle Therapeutics, a five-year-old, Cambridge, England-based developer of peptides for use in fighting cancer and other diseases, has raised $31.9 million in new funding from return backers Atlas VentureNovartis Venture Fund, SR One, SV Life Sciences and Astellas Venture Management. The company has now raised around $38 million altogether.

    Brainly, a five-year-old, Krakow, Poland-based social learning network designed to help students help each other with schoolwork, has raised $9.4 million in Series A funding led by General Catalyst Partners, with earlier investors Point Nine Capital and Runa Capital participating. Brainly is planning to use part of its fresh capital to open an office in New York City.

    Columbia Green Technologies, a Portland, Or.-based maker of so-called green roofs, has closed a combined debt and equity financing round led by Yaletown Venture Partners, along with several existing investors. The size of the round is undisclosed.

    Cratejoy, a nearly two-year-old, Austin, Tx.-based company that’s trying to “democratize” subscription business technology, has raised $4 million in Series A funding to launch its platform that companies can use to start their own e-commerce subscription services. CRV led the funding round, which brings the company’s total funding to $6.2 million. Others of its investors include ACE Venture Fund, Andreessen Horowitz, Capital Factory, Maverick Capital, Start Fund, SV Angel and Y Combinator.

    DNAtrix, a nine-year-old, San Diego-based oncolytic immunotherapy company, has raised $20 million in Series B funding led by Morningside Ventures, with participation from earlier backers Mercury Fund and Targeted Technology Fund. The company has now raised roughly $40 million, shows Crunchbase.

    Drop, a two-year-old, New York-based company whose interactive recipe platform works with a free app and connected kitchen scale, has raised $2 million in seed funding co-led by Frontline Ventures and Innovation Works, with additional investors including PCH, VegasTechFund and WI Harper Group.

    EverTrue, a four-year-old, Boston-based social donor management platform (it helps hundreds of organizations identify alumni and other donors), has raised $8 million in Series B funding led by Bain Capital Ventures, with participation from Silicon Valley Bank. The funding brings the company’s total financing to $14.5 million.

    Geofeedia, a three-year-old, Chicago-based company whose software helps organizations filter and analyze geo-tagged social media content in real-time across multiple sources, has raised $3.5 million in Series A funding led by Hyde Park Venture Partners, with Blue Vista VenturesGlade Brook Capital, and numerous individual investors like former ExactTarget CMO Tim Kopp, participating.

    Guahao, a four-year-old, Weiji, China-based online medical services platform, has raised more than $100 million led by Tencent Holdings. TechNode has much more here.

    Hello Doctor, a nearly two-year-old, Tel Aviv-based mobile application that addresses specific needs of people in complex medical conditions, has raised $700,000 in seed funding from unidentified investors said to come from Google, Facebook and the pharmaceutical industry.

    Loopd, a year-old, San Francisco-based company that makes location-tracking tools for conferences, has raised $1 million in seed funding, including from venture capitalist Tim Draper, Salesforce CEO Marc Benioff and Vuclip co-founder Xinhui Niu. TechCrunch has more here.

    Minerva Project, a two-year-old, San Francisco-based university that combines online learning with dorm life (students live together and classes are face-to-face, facilitated by faculty on a proprietary live video platform), is raising new $70 million in Series B funding, reports Venture Capital Dispatch. The round is being co-led by TAL Education Group, a China-based, publicly traded tutoring services provider for schoolchildren, along with the venture firm ZhenFund and the private equity investor Yongjin Group. Benchmark, which had provided the company with $25 million in Series A funding in 2012, is also participating in the new round.

    Nara Logics, a four-year-old, Cambridge, Ma.-based artificial intelligence company, has raised $6 million in Series A-2 financing from previous investors and new investors, including .406 Ventures. The company has now raised $13 million in Series A funding, including from the investment advisory firm Account Management of Boston. BostInno has more here.

    Orderbird, a 3.5-year-old, Berlin-based company that makes iPad point-of-sales systems for bars, restaurants and clubs, has raised $10 million in Series B funding led by ConCardis, with other, undisclosed investors participating. The company has now raised $14.4 million to date, shows Crunchbase.

    Ozy Media, a two-year-old, Mountain View, Calif.-based online media company, has raised $20 million in Series A funding from German publisher Axel Springer. The company has now raised $25.4 million altogether, including from Ron Conway and Larry Sonsini.

    Quantance, a six-year-old, San Mateo, Ca.-based company whose semiconductors increase the data speed and battery life of mobile devices, has raised $6 million in new fund, according to an SEC filing that lists a $9 million target. The company had previously raised $44.8 million, including from DoCOMo Capital, Granite Ventures, InterWest Partners, and TD Fund, shows Crunchbase.

    Rigontec, a 10-month-old, Bonn, Germany-based developer of RNA-based immunotherapeutics used to treat cancer and viral diseases, has raised about $12 million (€9.45 million) in Series A funding co-led by Wellington Partners and Boehringer Ingelheim Venture Fund, with NRW Bank and High-Tech Gründerfonds participating.

    Risk I/O, a three-year-old, Chicago-based vulnerability threat management platform, has raised $4.5 million in Series A funding led by Costanoa Venture Capital, with participation from return backers USVP, Tugboat Ventures and Hyde Park Angels. The company has raised $10.5 million to date.

    S2C, an 11-year-old, San Jose, Ca.-based developer of SoC/ASIC prototyping systems, has raised $4.6 million in Series C funding co-led by GVT Fund and Industrial Technology Investment Corp.

    Selecta Biosciences, a six-year-old, Watertown, Ma.-based company that helps make other biologic drugs on the market safer, has raised $20 million from new investors I2BF, Eminent Venture Capital, and an undisclosed backer, along with earlier investors Polaris PartnersFlagship Ventures, OrbiMed Advisors, NanoDimension, Rusnano, and Leukon Investments. The company has now raised $78.6 million altogether. Xconomy has more here.

    Thismoment, a 6.5-year-old, San Francisco-based digital marketing company that helps brands distribute user-generated content to engage their customers, has raised $17.6 million in Series D funding from earlier investors Sierra Ventures, Trident Capital and UMC Capital. The company has now raised $52 million to date, shows Crunchbase.

    —–

    New Funds

    Canaan Partners, the 27-year-old venture firm, with offices in the U.S., Israel, and India, has officially filed the paperwork required of its tenth fund. According to an early August report in peHUB, the firm is raising a $600 million fund with a $650 million cap. The firm closed its ninth and most recent fund with $600 million in 2012.

    CommonAngels, a Boston-area angel investment group, has closed its fourth fund at $26.5 million, up from its previous, $13 million fund, raised in 2010. Xconomy has more here.

    Lightbox, a Mumbai, India-based venture firm, has closed its newest fund with Rs 600 crore. The firm says it was initially targeting $90 million, but raised the target due to increased demand. The Times of India has more here.

    Osage University Partners, a Bala Cynwyd, Pa.-based venture firm that focuses on startups that are commercializing university research, is looking to raise up to $200 million for its second fund, according to an SEC filing that shows it has already raised roughly $151 million.

    Vintage Investment Partners, an Israel-based investment firm, has closed its latest fund of funds with $144 million of commitments, reports VentureWire, which says that Vintage is moving beyond its near-exclusive focus on Israel and now plans to invest in Israel, the U.S., and Europe.

    —–

    People

    Henrique De Castro, the former Google advertising executive who joined Yahoo as COO under Marissa Mayer and was later sent packing, $100 million under arm, is on the hunt for a new job, says Business Insider. Reportedly, De Castro has already met with a couple high profile venture capital firms; he’s also interested in joining the board of a startup, or becoming a startup advisor.

    Facebook COO Sheryl Sandberg and her husband, SurveyMonkey CEO Dave Goldberg, are leaning into a new home in Menlo Park, reports the Silicon Valley Business Journal. More here.

    Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg is giving $25 million to a foundation tied to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention foundation to fight the spread of Ebola, he announced in a Facebook post yesterday, characterizing the Ebola outbreak as at “a critical turning point.”

    —–

    Jobs

    Saudi Aramco Energy Ventures, a unit of the Saudi Arabian Oil Company, is looking to hire a portfolio manager. The job is in Dallas. (H/T: Iris Dorbian)

    —–

    Data

    Datafox takes a look at the nearly 60 privately held companies now valued at more than $1 billion, breaking them down by top investors, sectors, and more. (If you click through its slideshow, you’ll find a downloadable spreadsheet that the firm has assembled and might be worth saving.)

    —–

    Essential Reads

    Snapchat’s real business plan. Hint, it’s not ads.

    Another day, another UberX horror story.

    Apple and Facebook now pay for employees wanting to freeze their eggs to help them (work) carve out the (work) lives they want (work). (Kidding. Sort of.)

    —–

    Detours

    Stunning architectural photography.

    Inside the tallest condo in the Western Hemisphere.

    Martha Stewart and Gwyneth Paltrow are going to have to take it outside soon.

    —–

    Retail Therapy

    Put your old iPad to good use. Turn it into a foosball table.

  • Saying Goodbye to Age-Driven Lists

    Lgiphy-facebook_sast week, Fortune released its annual “40 under 40” list, and, as is always the case, writes its assistant managing editor, there was blowback about who was featured. One complaint about this year’s list is that there are just 15 women, which, she acknowledges, is “not parity – far from it.” However, she still defends Fortune’s reasoning, saying the business achievements of women under age 40 don’t match men of the same age group.

    The silver lining, continues the editor, is that “when you look at women between 40 and 44, the universe of powerful women explodes in number — and their roles are much bigger. The sweet spot for women in business, I would argue, is ages 40 to 44.”

    Maybe we’re supposed to slow clap here. Instead, we’d like to propose to Fortune and other outlets that they stop ranking businesspeople by age. Age lists are absurd on almost ever conceivable level.

    If you’re still in your twenties, you might not appreciate how weird it is that leading business publications celebrate professionals based on the year in which they were born. But it’s a fairly ghoulish obsession and worse, it feeds into society’s growing disregard for everyone over the age of 40.

    That’s a whole lot of people. According to U.S. Census Bureau figures from 2010, 30.6 million Americans, or roughly 10 percent of the population fell between the ages of 18 and 24 years, while 82.1 million or 26.6 percent fell between 25 and 44 years of age and roughly the same amount of people were between the ages of 45 and 64 years old.

    It isn’t fashionable to care about age diversity. Google didn’t disclose its employees’ ages in its diversity report. Neither did Facebook, Yahoo, LinkedIn or Pinterest, and there wasn’t much of an uproar about the subject. Everyone was too focused on how white and male-dominated each company appears to be.

    And, people like lists; they drive traffic and ad revenue. We get it.

    But the relentless focus of Silicon Valley and the broader business press on wunderkinds is discrimination, pure and simple. It’s also terrible for business given the skills of older employees and entrepreneurs.

    In Fortune’s postmortem about its “40 under 40” list, its editor proposes numerous reasons for the “long list of incredibly powerful women in their early 40s,” pointing to women’s busy early childcare years, as well as the comparatively thin numbers of female entrepreneurs as compared with men. She closes by saying it’s her hope that “one day the 40 under 40 [list] will reach parity.”

    Our hope is that Fortune spends a little less time worrying about business leaders’ birthdays when celebrating business leaders. That’s the real problem. And it’s remarkably easy to avoid.

    Sign up for our morning missive, StrictlyVC, featuring all the venture-related news you need to start you day.

  • StrictlyVC: October 14, 2014

    Hello, dear readers, hope your Tuesday is off to a fine start! (Web visitors, this version of today’s email is easier to read than what you see below.)

    —–

    Top News in the A.M.

    Ireland announced today that it’s changing its tax code and, in the process, closing one of the world’s most famous corporate-tax loopholes.

    If you thought that Dropbox was hacked last night, think again, says the company. “Recent news articles claiming that Dropbox was hacked aren’t true. Your stuff is safe. The usernames and passwords referenced in these articles were stolen from unrelated services, not Dropbox.”

    —–

    Why You Can Probably Forget About Going Public in 2014

    You may have noticed: The market has been hitting the skids as investors grow nervous over a broadening array of concerns from Ebola to expected interest rate hikes. In fact, as of the market’s close yesterday, U.S. stock indexes had fallen nearly 10 percent since the beginning of last week — nearly enough to constitute an official correction.

    Things aren’t looking so great for recent tech issuers, either. Despite their highly celebrated IPOs, the shares of Yodlee, Wayfair, Hubspot and even Alibaba are down from their first day “pops,” and that “doesn’t work for IPO investors,” notes Kathleen Smith, a principal of Renaissance Capital, which manages an exchange-traded fund that tracks recent IPOs. “All these IPOs are not showing post first-day performance, which makes it hard for [other, still-private companies] to come out.”

    The IPO market is tied to the whims of the stock market, of course, but there are specific reasons that new tech stocks are sinking, says Smith. First and foremost, she says, the issue is linked to who, exactly, is acquiring new shares. “All this year, we’ve had a different set of buyers. It’s not the individual investors or small cap managers who, 10 years ago, might have talked up the stocks they were buying. They aren’t big commission generators for Wall Street, so it’s harder for them to get allocations,” she says.

    Smith thinks new issuers have been pricing their shares too richly, too. “It’s all about price discovery,” she says. “Public market investors aren’t tolerating excessive valuations. If companies think they come out at high valuations and watch their shares continue to rise, well, we’re not in that kind of market.”

    There’s also the so-called Alibaba effect to consider, notes John Fitzgibbon, founder of the research firm I.P.O. Scoop, which tracks IPOs. He compares the anticipation that surrounded the Chinese e-commerce giant’s September 19 IPO to what happened when both Facebook and Google went public, saying that in all three cases, public market investors have struggled with what next to get excited about. “The circus has left town,” says Fitzgibbon. “Alibaba was a one-day event. And now we’re back to the reality of the stock market, which is performing under the shadow of the [broader] stock market.”

    Fitzgibbon characterizes the market’s recent gyrations as a “healthy, sobering pullback.” Stocks are “bought on hype, held in greed and sold in fear. That’s your cycle,” he says, while declining to speculate about whether investors are likely to buy, hold, or continue to sell in the immediate future.

    Smith sounds more convinced that continued trouble lay ahead. “Private investors must be feeling nervous,” she says. “I know Box has talked about coming public. I see big companies in the pipeline. And a lot of them, I wonder about.”

    —–

    New Fundings

    2nd Watch, a four-year-old, Seattle-based cloud IT operations company that helps its users leverage Amazon Web Services, has raised $10 million in C1 funding, roughly 10 months after closing its $23 million Series C round last year. Top Tier Capital Partners led the new funding, with participation from earlier investors Columbia Capital and Madrona Venture Group. The company has now raised $37.6 million altogether.

    C-B4, a six-year-old, Herzliya, Israel-based predictive analytics company, has raised $6 million in funding from Sequoia Capital. Geektime has more here.

    CarTrade, a five-year-old, Mumbai, India-based online marketplace for new and used cars, has raised roughly $30 million in new funding led byWarburg Pincus, with earlier investors Canaan Partners and Tiger Global participating. Tech in Asia has more here.

    Checkr, a six-month-old, San Francisco-based startup that expedites background checks on new hires and delivers them in bulk to businesses, has raised $9 million in funding led by Accel Partners, with Khosla Ventures, SV Angel, Data Collective, Google Ventures, and a long list of notable individual investors participating. Venture Capital Dispatch has more here.

    EcoVent, a two-year-old, Boston-based startup whose wireless vents open or close based on the real temperature and humidity conditions of a room, has raised $2.2 million in a seed round via an AngelList Syndicate. The company has now raised $3.3 million to date, including from Tony ChenStewart Alsop, and TechStars, shows Crunchbase.

    Footmarks, a two-year-old, Bellevue, Wa.-based mobile retail app that delivers personalized content, including about deals and sales, to in-store customers, has raised $1.85 million in seed funding. Shawn Englund, the founder and former CEO of Learn Live Technologies, led the round. The company has raised $1.9 million to date.

    Fullbridge, a four-year-old, Cambridge, Ma.-based accelerated business education program, has raised $5 million in new funding from undisclosed high-net-worth individuals, along with earlier backer GSV Capital. The company has now raised $12.5 million to date, shows Crunchbase.

    Invitae, a two-year-old, San Francisco-based company whose genetic tests screen for hereditary disorders, has raised $120 million from a long list of new investors, including The Broe Group, Decheng CapitalDeerfield Management, OrbiMed, Perceptive Advisors, Rock Springs Capital and Wellington Management Company. Earlier investors Casdin Capital, Genesys Capital, Genomic Health, Randy ScottRedmile Group and Thomas McNerney & Partners also joined the round. The company has now raised $207 million altogether.

    Loggly, a five-year-old, San Francisco-based company whose cloud-based log management software helps its customers track machine-based events in their IT infrastructure, has raised $15 million in Series C funding led by Harmony Partners, with previous investors participating. The company has now raised $43.3 million altogether, including from Matrix Partners, Trinity Ventures, Data Collective, True Ventures, and Cisco.

    Magic Leap, a three-year-old, Hollywood, Fla.-based still-stealth company that says its hardware and software will deliver “cinematic reality,” is raising up to $500 million in a new round that looks to involve a consortium of investors, including Google and Andreesseen Horowitz, sources tell Recode. The company disclosed back in February that it had raised $50 million from undisclosed investors for its “proprietary human computing interface technology.”

    Melotic, a months-old, Hong Kong-based cryptocurrency technology company, has raised $1.2 million in seed funding led by Ceyuan Ventures, a China-based venture firm. Other investors to participate in the round include Lightspeed China; Barry Silbert’s Bitcoin Opportunity Corp.; 500 Startups; and Marc Van Der Chijs, co-founder of the popular Chinese video sharing website Tudou.com.

    Pluto.TV, a months-old, L.A.-based web-video aggregator that organizes streams into about 100 channels, such as music, news, and sports, has raised $500,000 from satellite broadcaster BSkyB. The company had raised an earlier round of funding, including from United Talent Agency CEO Jeremy Zimmer and Terry Semel’s Windsor Media. Variety has more here.

    Raze Therapeutics, a new, Cambridge, Ma.-based biotechnology company that’s developing oncology therapeutics that target metabolic pathways to prevent tumors from surviving and growing, has raised $24 million in Series A funding from Atlas Venture, MPM Capital Management, MS Ventures, Partners Innovation Fund, Astellas Venture Management, and Novartis.

    Speakr, a four-year-old, L.A. based service that connects brands with influential people on social-media networks and was formerly known as twtMob, has raised $2.9 million in seed funding led by Toba Capital, with participation from Allegro Venture Partners and individual investors. The company has now raised $3.8 million to date.

    VerbalizeIt, a three-year-old, New York-based language translation startup, has raised $830,000 in seed funding from FG Angels, the angel syndicate of Foundry Group; Galvanize Ventures; and individuals, including Daniel Saul and Walter Winshall. The company had earlier raised $1.4 million in funding from Bullet Time Ventures and others. Venture Capital Dispatch has the story here.

    Vyu, a 10-month-old, L.A.-based social content app that helps users follow and share their favorite TV shows and to discover new ones, has raised $825,000 in seed funding led by Jabbar Internet Group, with other, unnamed investors participating.

    —–

    New Funds

    Life.Sreda, a two-year-old, Moscow-based venture firm focused on financial technology startups (from seed- to later-stage), is raising a $100 million second fund as it plans to shift the vast majority of its investments to U.S. and European startups, reports VentureWire. The firm’s newest investments include Scorista.ru, a Russian online credit assessment service for micro finance institutions that raised an undisclosed amount of seed funding last month, and SumUp, a Dublin, Ireland-based mobile point-of-sale company that raised $13 million in Series C funding in August.

    —–

    IPOs

    Good Technology, the mobile security startup, is postponing its IPObecause of worsening market conditions.

    As of last week, a couple of Bay Area biotech companies were planning to test the IPO market this week. We’re guessing that will change; stay tuned.

    —–

    Exits

    Cloudscaling, an eight-year-old, San Francisco-based cloud-computing startup, is being acquired by EMC Corp. for less than $50 million, reports Bloomberg. Cloudscaling had raised $14 million from investors, including Trinity Ventures, Juniper Networks, and Seagate Technology, shows Crunchbase.

    —–

    People

    Ben Bayat has joined the Oakland, Ca.-based venture firm Illuminate Ventures as a senior associate. Bayat, who will focus on enterprise cloud and mobile opportunities, was previously head of West Coast sales for IBM’s networking clients. He also recently nabbed his MBA from the UC Berkeley Haas School of Business.

    Looks like Microsoft cofounder Bill Gates and his family may be spending more time in Southern California. Reports say Gates, whose daughter jumps horses competitively, just acquired a 229-acre horse ranch in San Diego.

    Dorian Satoshi Nakamoto, the man Newsweek claimed was the apparent founder of Bitcoin, is raising money in order to sue Newsweek over the piece.

    Google‘s executive chairman Eric Schmidt tells EU policy makers in Berlin that Google is no monopoly, oh no. “If you are looking to buy something, perhaps a tent for camping, you might go to Google or Bing or Yahoo or Qwant, the new French search engine. But more likely you’ll go directly to Zalando or Amazon . . . last year almost a third of people looking to buy something started on Amazon — that’s more than twice the number who went straight to Google.”

    —–

    Jobs

    Qualcomm Ventures is looking for a financial analyst. The job is in San Diego.

    —–

    Data

    CB Insights just released its third quarter venture capital activity report. You can click through to read its many findings here. (Note: to download the entire 114 pages, you have to be a subscriber.)

    Meanwhile, Gil Dibner, a partner at DFJ Espirit in London, has pulled together some third-quarter data about venture capital in Europe and Israel. (“I decided that I wasn’t happy with any of the available data sources on venture capital deals” about either place, he writes.) Here’s what he found.

    —–

    Essential Reads

    Google is introducing a new Express membership, similar to Amazon Prime, that costs $95 per year or $10 per month.

    There’s Product Hunt. Now there is Closed Club, too (though we kind of prefer Product Grunt).

    —–

    Detours

    Why private donations aren’t helping America’s poor.

    Airplanes, computers, and the human factor, in this month’s Vanity Fair.

    Life lessons from Larry David.

    —–

    Retail Therapy

    Halloween is fast approaching. Time to buy a costume for your dog. (This one is also terribleamazing.)

  • Why You Can Probably Forget About Going Public Any Time Soon

    saynotoiposYou may have noticed: The market has been hitting the skids as investors grow nervous over a broadening array of concerns from Ebola to expected interest rate hikes. In fact, as of the market’s close yesterday, U.S. stock indexes had fallen almost 10 percent since the beginning of last week — nearly enough to constitute an official correction.

    Things aren’t looking so great for recent tech issuers, either. Despite their highly celebrated IPOs, the shares of Yodlee, Wayfair, Hubspot and even Alibaba are down from their first day “pops,” and that “doesn’t work for IPO investors,” notes Kathleen Smith, a principal of Renaissance Capital, which manages an exchange-traded fund that tracks recent IPOs. “All these IPOs are not showing post first-day performance, which makes it hard for [other, still-private companies] to come out.”

    The IPO market is tied to the whims of the stock market, of course, but there are specific reasons that new tech stocks are sinking, says Smith. First and foremost, she says, the issue is linked to who, exactly, is acquiring new shares. “All this year, we’ve had a different set of buyers. It’s not the individual investors or small cap managers who, 10 years ago, might have talked up the stocks they were buying. They aren’t big commission generators for Wall Street, so it’s harder for them to get allocations,” she says.

    Smith thinks new issuers have been pricing their shares too richly, too. “It’s all about price discovery,” she says. “Public market investors aren’t tolerating excessive valuations. If companies think they come out at high valuations and watch their shares continue to rise, well, we’re not in that kind of market.”

    There’s also the so-called Alibaba effect to consider, notes John Fitzgibbon, founder of the research firm I.P.O. Scoop, which tracks IPOs. He compares the anticipation that surrounded the Chinese e-commerce giant’s September 19 IPO to what happened when both Facebook and Google went public, saying that in all three cases, public market investors have struggled with what next to get excited about. “The circus has left town,” says Fitzgibbon. “Alibaba was a one-day event. And now we’re back to the reality of the stock market, which is performing under the shadow of the [broader] stock market.”

    Fitzgibbon characterizes the market’s recent gyrations as a “healthy, sobering pullback.” Stocks are “bought on hype, held in greed and sold in fear. That’s your cycle,” he says, while declining to speculate about whether investors are likely to buy, hold, or continue to sell in the immediate future.

    Smith sounds more convinced that continued trouble lay ahead. “Private investors must be feeling nervous,” she says. “I know Box has talked about coming public. I see big companies in the pipeline. And a lot of them, I wonder about.”

    Sign up for our morning missive, StrictlyVC, featuring all the venture-related news you need to start you day.

  • StrictlyVC: October 13, 2014

    Happy Monday/Columbus Day/Indigenous Peoples’ Day, everyone. Hope it’s off to a great start.:) (Web visitors, here’s an easier-to-read version of today’s email.)

    —–

    Top News in the A.M.

    The launch of Apple Pay is upon us.

    A production company is trying to make a reality show about venture capitalists. We’ll be waiting on tenterhooks for this one.

    —–

    Hiten Shah: Mr. Tough Love

    I’m sitting at a cafe in San Francisco’s North Beach neighborhood with Hiten Shah, and he’s telling me what’s right and wrong with StrictlyVC. The good news: it appears to have so-called product-market fit. The bad: its site is far too basic, though Shah puts it much more charitably. “It’s not like a criticism, but let’s make the design better. We can fix it with just some little tweaks.”

    In all likelihood, I’m one of at least five new people who will, over the course of the week, sit down with Shah, a three-time entrepreneur and occasional angel investor who has gained renowned in the Bay Area as an active startup advisor, and who is often sought out as a “growth hacker.” (Shah’s two most recent companies, bootstrapped Crazy Egg and venture-backed KISSmetrics, both help businesses measure and optimize their sites, their social and mobile applications, and their revenue.)

    I’ve sought him out for a latte and some light conversation. Our conversation has been edited for length.

    You spend a lot of time with entrepreneurs, many of whom are thinking about growth. When is it the right time to start obsessing over it?

    Well, first, I think growth hacking and all these tactics that people are sharing are good, but there isn’t enough conversation around the work that you have to do first. People tend not to spend a lot of time on foundational stuff before they start trying all kinds of random things. As for when to start thinking about growth, the common adage around here is that you want to think about it after you’ve hit product-market fit, meaning that enough of your customers already love what you’re doing that lots of other people in the world would probably benefit from your product.

    Is there a percentage of customers who have to really love a product? What’s the tipping point?

    There’s all kinds of market research around this. One stat suggests that if 12 out of 30 people really love your product – meaning they’d be very disappointed if it disappeared – you have what resembles product market fit. A small group can be very impactful in helping you understand [your product].

    You make occasional angel investments, including in the shared inbox app Front, which just raised $3.1 million in seed funding. Are bigger seed rounds the way to go? Any thoughts on this newish trend of serial seed rounds?

    The advice I always give people is to hold off on trying to raise money until they’ve removed as much risk as possible from their product. The startups they’re competing with today are much farther along than they were seven to 10 years ago.

    On the debate over whether companies should do seed rounds and [whether two rounds dilutes founders too much], it’s entrepreneurs’ fault. Maybe they received bad advice, but it’s more likely that they’ve overspent.

    Overspent on rent? Employees?

    Sometimes they spend money on marketing before they have product-market fit, or they hire too many people too fast, or they pay too much in rent.

    I’d think the latter would be particularly tricky, given the steep price of office space in San Francisco specifically, where so many startups want to be.

    I do think rent is an issue, but the talent pool here – from executives to [lower level staffers] — is higher than anywhere else right now, so if you’re not here, you have to offer all kinds of crazy things or else be the number one company in your area, which is hard. In San Francisco, you can be a [mid-tier] company and still hire a lot of great people. Luckily, there are lots of shared workspace options for startups, like Heavybit Industries.

    I think a bigger issue is a lack of education around operating an early-stage business.

    Why don’t you write a handbook?

    I don’t like writing. I’m doing a 30-day blogging challenge. I’m on day four and I’m still dreading what I’m going to write about.

    —–

    New Fundings

    BizEquity, a four-year-old, Wayne, Pa.-based company that provides business valuation services, has raised $5.1 million in funding from Frost Brooks, a new London-based private equity firm.

    Gainsight, a five-year-old, Mountain View, Ca.-based company that helps businesses manage customer accounts in the cloud, has raised $25 million in Series C funding led by Bessemer Venture Partners and Lightspeed Venture Partners. The company has raised $54.1 million altogether, shows Crunchbase, including from Salesforce Ventures, Summit Partners, Bain Capital Ventures, and Battery Ventures.

    Jukin Media, a five-year-old, L.A.-based multiplatform media company, has raised $1.2 million from investors including Bertelsmann Digital Media and Mandalay Entertainment CEO Peter Guber. Earlier this year, Jukin raised $1 million from a group that included Disney’s Maker Studios.

    MindTickle, a three-year-old, Mountain View, Ca.-based company whose gamification products are used to train employees, customers and partners, has raised $1.8 million in seed funding backed by Accel Partners and unnamed angel investors.

    Monsieur, a 1.5-year-old, Atlanta-based company that makes a robotic bartender, has raised $2 million in seed funding from BIP Capital, with participation from Base Ventures, Paul Judge, TechSquare Labs, NFL linebacker Derrick Morgan, and Glen Davis of the L.A. Clippers.

    Simplestream, a four-year-old, London-based provider of multi-platform live streaming and “catch-up” TV services has raised “substantial funding” from Beringea.

    Smartzer, a nearly two-year-old, London-based startup whose interactive video platform allows users to make purchases by clicking on video content, has raised $400,000 in seed funding from serial entrepreneur Jamie True and other, undisclosed individual investors. TechCrunch hasmore here.

    VoloMetrix, a three-year-old, Seattle-based business analytics company, has raised $12 million in Series B funding led by Split Rock Partners, with earlier investor Shasta Ventures participating. The company has raised $16.9 million to date, shows Crunchbase.

    Wahanda, a six-year-old, New York-based online health and beauty marketplace that helps users book appointments, has raised $26 million in funding from Recruit Strategic Partners, Fidelity Growth Partners Europe and Lepe Partners. The company has now raised $37.6 million to date, shows Crunchbase. TechCrunch has more here.

    —–

    New Funds

    Sequoia China is raising its fifth fund, according to a newly filed Form D that states the fund has yet to begin fundraising and that the amount it intends to raise is “indefinite.” Sequoia China had raised $200 million for its first fund in 2005; $250 million for its second fund in 2007; and $350 million for its third fund in 2010. The firm has been investing out out of its fourth fund, closed with $350 million in 2012. As Forbes noted in a profile of Sequoia China earlier this year, the “franchise firm” of 42-year-old Sequoia Capital on Sand Hill Road is very much its own outfit stylistically, including using a “big staff a la Andreessen Horowitz in Silicon Valley versus the still largely partner-driven style at Sequoia in the U.S.” The reasons why: the firm’s founding managing partner, Neil Shen, “believes in grooming young talent, sometimes taking associates and analysts straight out of business school.” The firm’s staff of roughly 50 is also seen as “critical” as “China’s market is harder to gauge, the books trickier to study.”

    SVB Capital has closed its seventh venture capital fund of funds at its $330 million hard cap, VentureWire reported on Friday.

    —–

    Exits

    Government Outreach, an 11-year-old, Pleasanton, Ca.-based company that eases communication between government agencies and citizens, including via iPhone apps, has been acquired by Accela, a 15-year-old, San Ramon, Ca.-based maker of civic engagement software. Government Outreach doesn’t appear to have raised outside funding. Accela has raised $50 million, most of it from the New York investment firm Bregal Sagemount.

    Subdelivery, an online food delivery service based in Brazil, has been acquired by Delivery Hero, the three-year-old, Berlin-based company that now runs a worldwide network of online food ordering sites. TechCrunch has more here.

    —–

    People

    Ryan Hoover, the 27-year-old founder of Product Hunt, is having a moment.

    —–

    Jobs

    Amazon is looking for a corporate development pro to add to its Amazon Web Services team. The job is in Seattle.

    AppDynamics, a very well-funded, six-year-old startup that develops application performance management software, is looking for a senior financial analyst. The job is in San Francisco.

    —–

    Data

    M&A activity for venture-backed startups hit $20.9 billion in the third quarter, the highest it’s been since the third quarter of 2000, according to VentureSource. Some other stats sure to thrill and terrify in equal parts: The number of third-quarter deals rose 9 percent from a year earlier while the amount raised increased by an astonishing 65 percent. Of the 139 deals sewn up in the third quarter, the median acquisition price was $75 million.

    Of the 115 healthcare accelerators in the world, 87 are in the U.S., and most of them are geared to digital health and under two years old, says venture capital investor and healthcare business consultant Lisa Suennen. More here.

    —–

    Essential Reads

    Twitter is joining the growing number of tech giants rushing into mobile payments. In fact, Reuters reports that one of France’s largest banks is teaming up with the social network this week to enable customers to transfer money via tweets.

    Venture capitalists return to backing science startups.

    Demographic trends for every big social network.

    —–

    Detours

    What happens when second graders are treated to a seven-course, $220 tasting meal.

    A celebrated bartender takes over The Mark Hotel in New York.

    —–

    Retail Therapy

    This isn’t your great, great, grandmother’s gramophone.

  • Hiten Shah: Mr. Tough Love

    Hiten ShahI’m sitting at a cafe in San Francisco’s North Beach neighborhood with Hiten Shah, and he’s telling me what’s right and wrong with StrictlyVC. The good news: it appears to have so-called product-market fit. The bad: its site is too basic, though Shah puts it much more charitably. “It’s not like a criticism, but let’s make the design better. We can fix it with just some little tweaks.”

    In all likelihood, I’m one of at least five new people who will, over the course of the week, sit down with Shah, a three-time entrepreneur and occasional angel investor who has gained renowned in the Bay Area as an active startup advisor, and who is often sought out as a “growth hacker.” (Shah’s two most recent companies, bootstrapped Crazy Egg and venture-backed KISSmetrics, both help businesses measure and optimize their sites, their social and mobile applications, and their revenue.)

    I’ve sought him out for a latte and some light conversation. Our conversation has been edited for length.

    You spend a lot of time with entrepreneurs, many of whom are thinking about growth. When is it the right time to start obsessing over it?

    Well, first, I think growth hacking and all these tactics that people are sharing are good, but there isn’t enough conversation around the work that you have to do first. People tend not to spend a lot of time on foundational stuff before they start trying all kinds of random things. As for when to start thinking about growth, the common adage around here is that you want to think about it after you’ve hit product-market fit, meaning that enough of your customers already love what you’re doing that lots of other people in the world would probably benefit from your product.

    Is there a percentage of customers who have to really love a product? What’s the tipping point?

    There’s all kinds of market research around this. One stat suggests that if 12 out of 30 people really love your product – meaning they’d be very disappointed if it disappeared – you have what resembles product market fit. A small group can be very impactful in helping you understand [your product].

    You make occasional angel investments, including in the shared inbox app Front, which just raised $3.1 million in seed funding. Are bigger seed rounds the way to go? Any thoughts on this newish trend of serial seed rounds?

    The advice I always give people is to hold off on trying to raise money until they’ve removed as much risk as possible from their product. The startups they’re competing with today are much farther along than they were seven to 10 years ago.

    On the debate over whether companies should do seed rounds and [whether two rounds dilutes founders too much], it’s entrepreneurs’ fault. Maybe they received bad advice, but it’s more likely that they’ve overspent.

    Overspent on rent? Employees?

    Sometimes they spend money on marketing before they have product-market fit, or they hire too many people too fast, or they pay too much in rent.

    I’d think the latter would be particularly tricky, given the steep price of office space in San Francisco specifically, where so many startups want to be.

    I do think rent is an issue, but the talent pool here – from executives to [lower level staffers] — is higher than anywhere else right now, so if you’re not here, you have to offer all kinds of crazy things or else be the number one company in your area, which is hard. In San Francisco, you can be a [mid-tier] company and still hire a lot of great people. Luckily, there are lots of shared workspace options for startups, like Heavybit Industries.

    I think a bigger issue is a lack of education around operating an early-stage business.

    Why don’t you write a handbook?

    I don’t like writing. I’m doing a 30-day blogging challenge. I’m on day four and I’m still dreading what I’m going to write about.

  • StrictlyVC: October 10, 2014

    Good Friday morning, everyone, hope you have an outstanding weekend! (Also, here’s an easier-to-read version of today’s newsletter.)

    —–

    Top News in the A.M.

    Google is planning to release a whale of a smartphone.

    Twenty-year-old Amazon is opening its first bricks-and-mortar store, right across from the Empire State Building in New York.

    —–

    L.A. has been receiving a lot of attention from investors lately, as local venture capitalist Mark Suster enthusiastically observed in a detailed overview of the market yesterday. Indeed, as Suster noted, SVAngel’s David Lee and early Twitter investor Chris Sacca are among a small but growing number of investors who’ve relocated to L.A. to capture its upside.

    Erik Rannala certainly gets it. Rannala was a product manager at eBay who went on to spend nearly three years running the seed-stage firmHarrison Metal with his former eBay colleague Michael Dearing.
    The gig, in Palo Alto, was great. But when another former eBay colleague, Will Hsu, proposed working together in L.A., where Rannala’s wife grew up, he leapt at the opportunity, forming the L.A-based accelerator MuckerLab with Hsu in 2011. (The two have since raised a $20 million seed fund called Mucker Capital.)

    As far as Rannala is concerned, there’s a lot of love about the L.A. scene. For one thing, entrepreneurs are “more cautious with their burn because capital isn’t nearly as plentiful in L.A. as in the Bay Area, or even New York.” He likens their mindset to someone “growing up during the depression . . . even when you eventually have infinitely more capital, it’s harder to shake the frugality that was learned the hard way in leaner times.”

    Many entrepreneurs in the Bay Area “haven’t experienced that,” he notes.

    Valuations are also “more reasonable,” Rannala says, insisting that “dollar for dollar, you’re getting more for your money down here than in the Bay Area at the top of the cycle.”

    Rannala thinks it’s a little easier for L.A. entrepreneurs to escape the groupthink of Silicon Valley, too. “We’re seeing a lot of entrepreneurs here who are looking at existing industries that are getting software enabled [and figuring out how to expedite their transition] rather than doing purely derivative things like social,” though there’s plenty of that, too.

    Rannala points, for example, to Santa Monica-based Surf Air, a members-only, California-based airline that offers unlimited flights for a $1,750 a month. The venture-funded company started flying last year with three used single-engine turboprops that seat seven passengers. It recently ordered 15 new Pilatus PC-12 NG aircraft. (MuckerLabs wrote the company’s first check; it has gone on to raise $18.8 million altogether.)

    Everything said, Rannala, who still travels regularly to the Bay Area, is trying to be pragmatic about L.A.’s boom times. Though he doesn’t think for a minute that “LA is a flash in the pan” – for a long list of familiar reasons, he argues that the tech ecosystems in both L.A. and New York “are not short-term phenomena” — he also notes that a “shortage of indigenous local capital up and down the stack,” could mean problems if the market turns.

    Bay Area investors are “inclined to invest outside the Bay Area right now, particularly when it comes to companies that are further along,” Rannala observes. “It’s [to be determined] how this evolves when we’re at the bottom of the cycle.”

    —–

    New Fundings

    Agronomic Technology, a year-old, New York-based company that provides software and data to help growers improve their financial and environmental performance, has raised $2.2 million in seed funding from Armory Square Ventures, Arthur Ventures and Cayuga Venture Fund.

    Alien Technology, the 20-year-old, Morgan Hill, Ca.-based maker of RFID chip tags, has raised $35 million in new funding led by Shanghai Ruizhang Investment Co., with some unnamed, earlier investors participating. The round brings the company’s total funding over the years to a $330 million. VentureBeat has more here.

    BitFury, a three-year-old, San Francisco-based company that makes specialized chips for bitcoin mining, has raised $20 million in new funding, including from venture capitalist Bill Tai, former VeriFone CFO Bob Dykes, Google Maps co-founder Lars Rasmussen and earlier investor, the Georgian Co-Investment Fund. The company has now raised $40 million altogether.

    BrightFunnel, a two-year-old, San Francisco-based predictive analytics software company that targets business-to-business marketers, has raised $2.5 million in seed funding led by Resolute Ventures, with Bloomberg Beta, Crosslink Capital and Tekton Ventures participating. The company has raised $3.2 million to date, shows Crunchbase.

    CloudFactory, a four-year-old, Durham, N.C.-based distributed workforce company, has raised $3 million in Series A funding, including from Durham investor Sovereign’s Capital and VRBO founder David Clouse. The company had previously raised $700,000.

    Devign Lab, a new, Korea-based company that’s building a peer-to-peer marketplace and merchant payment tools around bitcoin, has raised $200,000 in seed funding from K Cube Ventures, a Korean venture firm. Coindesk has the story here.

    Digital Reasoning, a 14-year-old, Nashville, Tn.-based company whose machine learning algorithms are capable of analyzing human language data (to assess fraud and more), has raised $24 million in Series C funding led by Goldman Sachs and Credit Suisse NEXT Investors. The company has raised at least $29 million to date, shows Crunchbase.

    mParticle, a two-year-old, New York-based mobile data startup, has raised $1.5 million in seed funding from Harbinger Capital, Battery Ventures and earlier investor Bowery Capital. mParticle has now raised $6 million altogether, including from Google Ventures and Greylock Partners.

    Muufri, a months-old, San Francisco-based company making “animal free milk,” has raised $2.1 million from 10 investors, shows an SEC filing. More here.

    PathSensors, a four-year-old, Baltimore, Md.-based company whose biological aerosol collector system detects and identifies biological threat agents, is looking to raise $2.1 million, shows an SEC filing. The company has previously raised $1.9 million, including from Maryland Venture Fund.

    Peel, a five-year-old, Mountain View, Calif.-based company whose smartphone and tablet apps allow users to control their TVs, has raised $50 million in new funding from Alibaba Group. The company has now raised $86.7 million altogether, including from Lightspeed Venture Partners, Redpoint Ventures and Translink Capital.

    Puralytics, a seven-year-old, Beaverton, Or.-based maker of water purification systems, has raised $1.1 million as part of a round that’s targeting $2.3 million, shows an SEC filing. The company had raised $4 million last year from Keiretsu Forum.

    Ranovus, a 2.5-year-old, Ottawa, Ontario–based maker of multi-terabit interconnect solutions for datacenter and communications networks, has raised $24 million in Series B funding from Azure Capital PartnersDeutsche Telekom, BDC Venture Capital, OMERS Ventures and Export Development Corp. The company has raised at least $35 million to date, shows Crunchbase.

    Shine Medical Technologies, a four-year-old, Madison, Wi.-based company that makes medical tracers and cancer treatment elements, has raised $125 million of debt and equity financing from Deerfield Management, a New York-based health-care investment firm.

    Spensa Technologies, a five-year-old, West Lafayette, Ind.-based precision agricultural startup that operates an online pest management system, has received $1.3 million from investors, including Elevate Ventures, an Indiana-based nonprofit to help entrepreneurs and emerging startups; Foundry Investment Fund, a Purdue fund; mTerra VenturesZionsville Precision Ag Venture; and individual investors. The company has now raised $2.5 million to date.

    Spin Transfer Technologies, a seven-year-old, Fremont, Ca.-based developer of magnetoresistive random access memory technology (to bring faster switching speeds to chips), has raised $70 million in new funding led by Woodford Investment Management, with Invesco Asset Management and the London private wealth management fund SandAire participating. The company had previously raised $36 million in a 2012 round, shows Crunchbase.

    Totspot, a six-year-old, New York-based mobile marketplace for parents to buy and sell children’s clothing, has raised $1.8 million in seed funding led by GGV Capital. Other investors include 500 Startups, AME Cloud Ventures, and QueensBridge Venture Partners.

    Voxa, a year-old, Atlanta-based email intelligence startup, has raised $1.5 million in seed funding co-led by Ethos Capital Partners and Information Security Systems founder Tom Noonan, with participation from Premiere Global Services and earlier investor Atlanta Ventures. PandoDaily has more here.

    —–

    IPOs

    HubSpot, the eight-year-old, Cambridge, Ma.-based marketing software company, went public yesterday, raising $125 million in the process. Its shares opened at $32.99 — a 32 percent jump from their IPO price of $25. They closed at $30.10, giving the company a valuation of $914 million.

    —–

    Exits

    Equivio, a 10-year-old, Tel Aviv, Israel-based text analysis company, is being acquired by Microsoft for $200 million, reports the WSJ.

    MedXT, a two-year-old, San Francisco-based startup that has developed technology to host and display medical images from the cloud, is being acquired by the storage company Box for undisclosed terms. The company appears to have raised just $140,000, including via Y Combinator. VentureBeat has more here.

    Xyo, a four-year-old, Berlin-based app search engine and contextual advertising technology, has been acquired by publicly traded Mandalay Digital Group for undisclosed terms. The company had raised an undisclosed amount of funding in 2012 from Eric Wahlforss, Klaas Kersting, and Signia Venture Partners, shows Crunchbase. TechCrunch has more here.

    —–

    People

    Gregg Brockway has been named the chief executive of Maker Media, the publisher of Make magazine; producer of the Maker Faires events franchise; and operator of Maker Shed, an online retailer of DIY electronics, kits and books. A serial entrepreneur who previously cofounded Chairish, Tripit, and Hotwire, Brockway had spent the last six months as a venture partner at O’Reilly AlphaTech Ventures.

    There’s no love lost between investors Carl Icahn and Marc Andreessen, who began battling publicly over the fate of PayPal earlier this year. Now, the two have taken comically pointed jabs at each other on television, with Andreessen characterizing Icahn as the “evil Captain Kirk,” and Icahn — throwing restraint completely out the window — saying Andreessen has “screwed more people than Casanova.” Icahn added that Andreessen’s “squeaky voice” is so high-pitched that “only a dog” can hear it. (Andreessen has since updated his Twitter bio to read: “The quintessential guy that is wrong with corporate America… Hard to hear, talks with a squeaky voice that only a dog can understand.”)

    Brian McLoughlin has stepped down as a general partner at the L.A.-based venture firm Upfront Ventures, reports Fortune’s Dan Primack. He spent a dozen years with the firm; he’s becoming a venture partner atFintech Collective, a New York-based firm that focuses on seed and early-stage investments in the financial services industry. Last last year, Upfront promoted former HauteLook CMO Greg Bettinelli to partner.

    Yesterday, Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella told an audience of mostly women at the Grace Hopper Celebration of Women in Computing that asking for a raise isn’t the best way to get one. “It’s not really about asking for a raise, but knowing and having faith that the system will give you the right raise,” he said, shocking attendees. Nadella later backtracked, writing a memo to Microsoft employees that said, “I answered that question completely wrong.”

    George Reichenbach, who cofounded Braemar Energy Ventures, has passed away at age 85. More here.

    Y Combinator founders Paul Graham and Jessica Livingston sit down with Bloomberg’s Emily Chang for what they say is their first joint interview.

    Scenes and photos from this week’s Vanity Fair New Establishment Summit in San Francisco.

    —–

    Jobs

    McKinsey & Company is still in the market for an M&A analyst in New York.

    Nike is looking for a senior director of business development for its “innovation” unit to research and source partnership opportunities, including for its Converse brand. The job is in Portland, Or.

    —–

    Essential Reads

    Both Uber and Lyft get an “F” from the Better Business Bureau.

    The “D,” meanwhile, gets an A+ from reporters.

    —–

    Detours

    The intelligent life of the city racoon.

    Commercial break handshakes.

    The world’s coolest offices.

    —–

    Retail Therapy

    Killer sugar cubes.

  • VC Erik Rannala on the “More Cautious” L.A Startup Scene

    erikrannalaL.A. has been receiving a lot of attention from investors lately, as local venture capitalist Mark Suster enthusiastically observed in a detailed overview of the market yesterday. Indeed, as Suster noted, SVAngel’s David Lee and early Twitter investor Chris Sacca are among a small but growing number of investors who’ve relocated to L.A. to capture its upside.

    Erik Rannala certainly gets it. Rannala was a product manager at eBay who went on to spend nearly three years running the seed-stage firm Harrison Metal with his former eBay colleague Michael Dearing. The gig, in Palo Alto, was great. But when another former eBay colleague, Will Hsu, proposed working together in L.A., where Rannala’s wife grew up, he leapt at the opportunity, forming the L.A-based accelerator MuckerLab with Hsu in 2011. (The two have since raised a $20 million seed fund called Mucker Capital.)

    As far as Rannala is concerned, there’s a lot of love about the L.A. scene. For one thing, entrepreneurs are “more cautious with their burn because capital isn’t nearly as plentiful in L.A. as in the Bay Area, or even New York.” He likens their mindset to someone “growing up during the depression . . . even when you eventually have infinitely more capital, it’s harder to shake the frugality that was learned the hard way in leaner times.”

    Many entrepreneurs in the Bay Area “haven’t experienced that,” he notes.

    Valuations are also “more reasonable,” Rannala says, insisting that “dollar for dollar, you’re getting more for your money down here than in the Bay Area at the top of the cycle.”

    Rannala thinks it’s a little easier for L.A. entrepreneurs to escape the groupthink of Silicon Valley, too. “We’re seeing a lot of entrepreneurs here who are looking at existing industries that are getting software enabled [and figuring out how to expedite their transition] rather than doing purely derivative things like social,” though there’s plenty of that, too.

    As an example, Rannala points to Santa Monica-based Surf Air, a members-only airline that offers unlimited flights for a $1,750 a month. The venture-funded company started flying last year with three used single-engine turboprops that seat seven passengers. It recently ordered 15 new Pilatus PC-12 NG aircraft. (*MuckerLab wrote the company’s first check. Surf Air has gone on to raise $18.8 million altogether.)

    Everything said, Rannala, who still travels regularly to the Bay Area, is trying to be pragmatic about L.A.’s boom times. Though he doesn’t think for a minute that “LA is a flash in the pan” – for a long list of familiar reasons, he argues that the tech ecosystems in both L.A. and New York “are not short-term phenomena” — he also notes that a “shortage of indigenous local capital up and down the stack,” could mean problems if the market turns.

    Bay Area investors are “inclined to invest outside the Bay Area right now, particularly when it comes to companies that are further along,” Rannala observes. “It’s [to be determined] how this evolves when we’re at the bottom of the cycle.”

    *An original version of this story reported that MuckerLabs was not an investor in Surf Air. Apologies for the mix-up.


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