• At Zetta Venture Partners, a Next-Gen Partnership

    images (6)It used to be that institutional investors wanted to see a long and fruitful relationship between VCs looking to create a new fund together. These “emerging managers” would need that established chemistry to take on entrenched firms, went the conventional wisdom.

    If that thinking persists, LPs made an exception for Zetta Venture Partners, a San Francisco-based early-stage firm that specializes in data analytics startups and closed its debut fund with $60 million last month.

    The firm pairs veteran venture investor Mark Gorenberg, long of Hummer Winblad Venture Partners, with Ash Fontana, a former banking analyst and entrepreneur who most recently worked at AngelList, where he launched online investing and created the first startup index fund to enable the platform’s users to invest in a basket of nascent startups.

    The two “met through a friend” says Fontana, adding that “we live across the road from each other, too, as it turns out.”

    Of course, there’s much more to the partnership, new as it is by traditional standards. The two have strong ideas about the future of data analytics for one thing, says Fontana. They also have highly complementary networks. Says Fontana, “Mark has fantastic deal flow with entrepreneurs like Josh James,” who cofounded the successful web analytics company Omniture before creating the business intelligence company Domo in late 2010. The company, which Gorenberg backed in 2011, has since raised $250 million from investors.

    Fontana, meanwhile, has deal flow from the thousands of entrepreneurs he’s been Ash Fontanainteracting with at AngelList in recent years, he notes.

    He also knows better than almost anyone how to sift through and capitalize on AngelList’s various products, including its jobs platform, which features more than 150,000 candidates, and its company search tool. (“Simply tagging your customers” on the platform can send a widespread message to interested parties and drive sales, Fontana says.)

    As for whether the duo will elbow any of Zetta’s deals onto AngelList’s Syndicates platform for the purpose of gathering additional co-investors, that’s not necessarily likely right now, both say. “We’ll be more of a traditional fund focused on the analytics space,” says Gorenberg, “meaning we’ll mostly be the largest shareholder, though we’ll also be leaning toward the idea of syndicating with others. We want to play well with the industry.”

    Gorenberg points to the Zetta portfolio company EventBoard in Salt Lake City, Ut., which is trying to reinvent the way meetings are run and facilities should be designed. Zetta led the two-year-old company’s $1.5 million seed round last year, but it brought plenty of other investors into the fold, including Josh James.

    In another of its eight investments to date, Lucid, an 11-year-old, Oakland, Ca.-based company whose operating systems make commercial buildings more efficient, Formation 8 led the company’s Series B. That was just fine with Zetta, too.

    “They wanted an analytics-focused fund for the syndicate and invited us in,” says Gorenberg.

    Gorenberg talks at length of the advantages of smaller, more focused funds, in fact, arguing they give VCs “exceptional” deal flow and allow them to add more value to companies than larger funds that are often “more reactive” to opportunities that come through the door.

    Asked about the spate of data-focused funds already up and running — IA Ventures and Data Collective among them — Gorenberg says he doesn’t see them as a threat, nor think Zetta is perceived as one.

    “This is such a massive space. There’s room for all three of us and more focused funds to do extremely well.”

  • StrictlyVC: March 4, 2015

    Good Wednesday, dear readers.

    We have some news!

    We are so very excited to announced our next INSIDER Series event. Guest speakers include:

     Zenefits cofounder and CEO Parker Conrad;

    Lightspeed Venture Partners partner Jeremy Liew;

    Thumbtack cofounder and CEO Marco Zappacosta;

    Sequoia Capital partner Bryan Schreier;

    Pantera Capital Management founder Dan Morehead;

    and seed-stage investor and venture advisor Semil Shah.

    The evening event takes place Wednesday, May 13, at the beautiful Gallery Wendi Norris in San Francisco. We’ll also have yummy hors d’oeuvres and drinks for everyone.

    Space is limited. You can learn more about the agenda here. For tickets, click here. If you’re interested in co-sponsoring the event, please let us know!

    (We’re still hoping to get out to Boston in early June, too. Stay tuned for more details.)

    —–

    Top News in the A.M.

    Japan says iie to Uber.

    Tech companies are scrambling to fix a security flaw that left users of Apple and Google devices vulnerable to hacking when they visited supposedly secure Web sites.

    —–

    New Fundings

    Alation, a 2.5-year-old, Redwood City, Ca.-based company whose enterprise software remains largely in stealth mode, has raised $9 million in funding led by Costanoa Venture Capital and Data Collective, with participation from Andreessen Horowitz, Bloomberg Beta, and General Catalyst Partners. VentureBeat has more here.

    Bhakti Chai, an eight-year-old, Boulder, Co.-based maker of chai tea, has raised $3 million from Colorado Impact Fund, a fund that’s managed by an affiliate of Vestar Capital Partners.

    Blueprint Medicines, a four-year-old, Cambridge, Ma.-based company that’s developing targeted cancer therapies (and has raised $115 million from investors toward that end), has formed a $265 million collaboration with publicly traded Alexion Pharmaceuticals. Boston Business Journal has more here.

    BookKeeping Express, a 31-year-old, Tysons Corner, Va.-based company that sells web-based financial-reporting software, has raised $5.8 million in Series A funding led Paulson Investment Co.

    Brite Semiconductor, a seven-year-old, Shanghai-based ASIC design services firm, has raised $8 million in Series C funding led by Norwest Venture Partners, Gobi Partners, and Semiconductor Manufacturing International Corporation. The company has now raised $30.6 million altogether.

    ChipCare, a six-year-old, Toronto-based company that has developed a hand-held cell analyzer, just raised a $5 million Series A round led by Dallas-based Puffin Partners, with participation from Winfield Venture Group, Epic Capital and returning investors MaRS Innovation and Maple Leaf Angels.

    CloudMine, a nearly five-year-old, Philadelphia, Pa. company whose technology helps businesses securely deploy mobile apps, has raised $5 million in Series A funding led by Safeguard Scientifics, with participation by Ben Franklin Technology Partners, DeSimone Group InvestmentsDreamIt Ventures, MentorTech Ventures, Mid-Atlantic Angel GroupRobin Hood Ventures, and individual investors.

    Culture Amp, a four-year-old, Melbourne, Australia-based employee engagement software company, has secured $6.3 million in Series A funding led by Blackbird Ventures, Felicis Ventures and Index Ventures.

    Daktari Diagnostics, a 6.-5-year-old, Cambridge, Ma.-based company that makes medical diagnostics products, has raised $15.5 million in Series D funding led by Eastern Capital and the Merck Global Health Innovation Fund, with participation from earlier backers Norwich Ventures and Partners Innovation Fund. The company has now raised $52.1 million altogether, shows Crunchbase.

    Eccrine Systems, a two-year-old West Chester, Oh.-based company that uses disposable electronic patches to collect biomarker data, has raised $1.5 million in funding led by CincyTech.

    Farfetch, a 7.5-year-old London-based online marketplace for high-end fashion retailers, has raised $86 million led by DST Global. Other investors in the round, which gives the company a valuation of $1 billion, include earlier backers Conde Nast and Vitruvian Partners. Farfetch has now raised $194.5 million altogether. TechCrunch has the story here.

    Greenhouse Software, a three-year-old, New York-based recruitment optimization platform, has raised $13.6 million in Series B funding led by Benchmark, with participation from earlier backers Social+Capital Partnership, Felicis Ventures, and Resolution Ventures. The company has now raised roughly $25 million altogether.

    Nextdoor, a 4.5-year-old, San Francisco-based private social network that lets members communicate with their neighbors, has raised $110 million in venture capital, including from Redpoint Ventures and Insight Venture Partners, reports the New York Times. The new investment values the company at about $1.1 billion, adds the Times’s report. Nextdoor has now raised roughly $210 million altogether.

    Options Away, a nearly four-year-old, Chicago-based startup that allows consumers to lock-in flight prices before buying tickets, has raised $3.5 million in Series A funding led by OCA Ventures, with participation from Thayer Ventures, Pritzker Group Venture Capital, and some individual investors. The company has now raised $5.6 million altogether.

    PeachWorks, a 10-year-old, Southfield, Mi.-based company whose cloud-based technology helps restaurants track and manage their inventory, staff scheduling and more, has raised $4 million in Series A funding led by Allos Ventures, with participation from Arsenal Venture Partners, Huron River Ventures and Invest Detroit.

    Pressly, a 3.5-year-old, Toronto-based publishing platform that automatically transforms online content into interactive web apps for tablet web browsers, has raised $2.1 million in funding led by Gibraltar Ventures, with participation from earlier backers iNovia Capital and OMERS Ventures. The company has now raised $3.6 million altogether.

    Pulmokine, a 7.5-year-old, Rensselaer, N.Y.-based biopharmaceutical company whose lead drug candidate treats pulmonary arterial hypertension, has raised $1 million in seed funding from Broadview Ventures.

    REscour, a two-year-old, Atlanta, Ga.-based commercial real estate data visualization and intelligence startup, has raised $1.3 million in seed funding led by Jason Calacanis’s Launch Fund and AngelList syndicate, along with TechSquare Labs. The round also included other individual investors.

    Seven Lakes Technologies, a five-year-old, Westlake Village, Ca.-based enterprise software company focused on the oil and gas industry, has raised $20 million in Series A funding from Carrick Capital Partners.

    Spredfast, a seven-year-old, Austin, Tx.-based company whose software helps marketers manage the companies’ brands, including across social media, has raised $24 million in growth funding from Silver Lake Waterman. (Silver Lake Waterman, if you’re curious, provides companies with “growth debt.”) The company has now raised $88.1 million altogether, including from Austin Ventures, InterWest Partners, Lead Edge Capital, and OpenView Venture Partners.

    Tradiio, a year-old, Lisbon-based music discovery platform, has raised $975,000 in seed funding from Espirito Santo Ventures.

    WorldStores, a 12-year-old, London-based online retailer and flash sales platform that sells furniture and other home products, has raised £25 million ($38.3 million) led by Goldman Sachs, with participation from earlier backers Balderton Capital, Serena Capital, and Advent Ventures.

    YouMail, an eight-year-old, Irvine, Ca.-based company whose users download a so-called digital personal assistant that helps them better manage incoming phone calls, has raised $5.5 million in Series B funding from undisclosed investors. The company has now raised at least $20 million, shows Crunchbase.

    —–

    New Funds

    Draper Triangle Ventures, the 16-year-old, Pittsburgh, Pa.-based early-stage venture firm, is hoping to raise $125 million for its newest fund and has raised $68.2 million toward that end, shows a new SEC filing.

    Frontier Capital, a 16-year-old, Charlotte, N.C.-based investment firm focused on software and service companies, has closed its newest fund with $390 million. The firm closed its last fund with $250 million in 2012, according to VentureWire. The Charlotte Observer has more here.

    MediaTek, Taiwan’s largest chip designer launched, has launched a venture group called MediaTek Ventures that’s aiming to invest $300 million across startups in China, Japan, North America and Europe. The company reportedly wants to compete more directly with the world’s biggest chip manufacturer, Qualcomm, which has its own active venture arm.

    —–

    Exits

    Amplidata, a 6.5-year-old, Belgium-based maker of object storage software for public and private cloud data centers, has been acquired by HGST, a subsidiary of Western Digital (which had previous invested in Amplidata). Terms of the deal weren’t disclosed. According to Crunchbase, Amplidata had raised $44.1 million from investors, including Swisscom Ventures, Hummingbird Ventures, Endeavour Vision, and Intel Capital.

    Consumr, a three-year-old, New York-based platform for ratings and reviews of consumer products, has been acquired by Purch, a 12-year-old, Ogden, Ut.- based digital content company with a portfolio of properties designed to ease complex buying decisions. Purch has raised $40.5 million from investors, including Highway 12 Ventures and Village Ventures; Consumr had raised roughly half a million dollars in seed funding from IA Ventures, MESA Ventures, and Lerer Hippeau Ventures. VentureBeat has more here.

    deCarta, a 19-year-old, San Jose, Ca.-based mapping and search company, is being acquired by the ride-sharing company Uber for an unspecified amount, reports Mashable. The company had raised at least $56 million from investors, shows Crunchbase. Its backers include Cardinal Venture Capital, Mobius Venture Capital, Norwest Venture Partners, and Translink Capital.

    Earth Class Mail, an 11-year-old, Beaverton, Or.-based startup that converts paper mail into electronic correspondences, has filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy with a deal to sell its business to a company called Xenon Resources for $5 million. The company had raised at least $21.4 million, shows Crunchbase. Its backers include Ignition Partners and Keiretsu Forum. Geekwire has more here.

    HotSpot Tax, a seven-year-old, Greenwood Village, Co.-based company that provides tax compliance solutions to the vacation rental industry, has been acquired by the venture-backed sales tax automation startup Avalara. GeekWire has more here.

    —–

    People

    Forbes released its newest billionaires list earlier this week, naming Silicon Valley home to 23 new billionaires. Among them: Elizabeth Holmes, director of the Silicon Valley-based blood-testing firm Theranos; Uber cofounders Travis Kalanick and Garrett Camp; and Uber’s global head of operations, Ryan Graves. Two new billionaires a little farther south, in Venice, Ca.: Snapchat CEO Evan Spiegel — who at 24 is now the youngest billionaire on Forbes’s list — and his 25-year-old cofounder, Bobby Murphy.

    In an interview at the Launch Festival earlier this week, early Twitter investor Chris Sacca said that he “can’t wait” for the industry’s inevitable crash. “I think this whole Valley has gotten way ahead of itself, and I’m excited for the crash, and for all the pretenders to clear out and for the people who are the die-hards, the builders, the people who have been hustling and selling candy in their high school cafeteria, who have been going door-to-door their whole lives, who are built for this game, I can’t wait until it’s just them again.”

    In 2012, former Kleiner partner Ellen Pao alleged she had received a “demotion” when she wasn’t made a general partner at the firm that year, court documents revealed yesterday. “Unfortunately,” she’d written in a letter to her then-mentor, venture capitalist John Doerr, “it does not seem to be a coincidence that Trae and I — the two people who have made recent complaints of discrimination, harassment, and retaliation — have been kept off the committee and are relegated to more junior status.” Doerr, who spent more than five hours on the witness stand yesterday, defended his decision to give a key board seat to general partner Randy Komisar and not to promote Pao. He also said he “couldn’t remember” if he ever considered Pao to be like a “surrogate daughter,” as Pao referred to herself (and others at the firm apparently viewed her).

    Markus Persson — creator of Minecraft, the best-selling computer game of all time — sold his company, Mojang, to Microsoft three months ago for $2.5 billion cash. Since then, he’s been spending money like a drunken sailor and trying to figure out exactly who he is. The results so far are “unimpressive,” reports Forbes in an exclusive interview with him.

    —–

    Data

    Venture capitalists have been plowing money into human-friendly robots. Here is where some of it has gone.

    —–

    Essential Reads

    Watch your back, Amazon. Alibaba is bringing its cloud computing services to the U.S.

    Facebook is reportedly working on a competitor to Twitter mobile-advertising distributor MoPub.

    —–

    Detours

    “I’m sorry to all the mothers I used to work with.”

    Dancing paper cranes.

    —–

    Retail Therapy

    Play your best hand with these, political mastermind.

  • StrictlyVC: March 3, 2015

    Hi, everyone, happy Tuesday!

    —–

    Top News in the A.M.

    The NASDAQ Composite index passed the 5,000 mark yesterday for the first time since the late ’90s technology boom.

    —–

    Ray Lane, Under Oath

    Ray Lane, an emeritus partner at Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers, came across as a good guy yesterday during his testimony in the trial of former partner Ellen Pao, who is suing Kleiner for gender discrimination. But he didn’t do Kleiner any favors, at times seeming to blame himself for mistakes and, at others, undermining Kleiner attorney Lynn Hermle as she tried painting a picture of Pao as too inexperienced for a promotion.

    Much of Lane’s testimony centered on his handling of the complaints of both Pao and Kleiner partner Trae Vassallo, both of whom turned to him before anyone else at the firm to discuss former partner Ajit Nazre.

    Pao had a short-lived but intimate relationship with Nazre, which she confided in Lane in 2007 after hearing Lane remark to Nazre in her presence that it was nice to see him with his wife and children at the Ritz Carlton in Half Moon Bay. (Nazre, Pao told Lane, led her to believe that he had split up with his wife.)

    Roughly four years after that exchange, Nazre showed up in a hotel doorway of Vassallo’s in his bathrobe during a work trip. Vassallo – married with children — also went to Lane before talking with anyone else at the firm.

    In Lane’s testimony about both situations — which he said he viewed as “two very different incidents” — Lane came across as a well-meaning mentor who wasn’t necessarily equipped to handle the information he was being given.

    In one 2007 exchange with Lane, for example, Pao wrote, “Thank you for your help in working through a difficult issue. It’s a really awkward situation. In the interest of moving forward and avoiding more unpleasantness, I’m willing to live with some disagreement over what happened if Ajit can be professional and collegial . . . I’m relieved to able able to put it behind me, glad that you were listening.”

    Lane wrote back that, “I really believe ‘stuff happens’ and both of you are terrific people. . . . this should not be offset by common human behavior. No bridge were burned, mistakes were made, apologies offered, and it’s up to us to move forward, and not shoot ourselves in both feet.” He also encouraged Pao and Nazre to “talk about working together [and moving] forward . . . you both have enormous mutual respect, despite any personal liabilities.”

    Lane’s initial advice to Vassallo similarly seemed to reflect the culture of a small firm unaccustomed to dealing with thorny personal issues. The day Vassallo told him about Nazre’s unwanted advances, said Lane, he suggested that she discuss the matter with the husband so that the couple could decide on a course of action together.

    Lane explained that he thought whatever followed should be up to Vassallo and not Kleiner. Still, said Lane, he worried at the time about Vassallo’s safety – noting that “things could have gone another way, [Nazre] could have pushed his way in” to her hotel room – and expressed regret yesterday at not starting an investigation straightaway.

    “It was my mistake,” he said of waiting until Vassallo wrote a formal complaint about Nazre to Lane and other Kleiner partners roughly one week after coming to Lane.

    It wasn’t the only mistake Lane appeared to acknowledge making.

    Asked by Pao’s attorney why Nazre was promoted to senior partner in 2008, despite Nazre’s relationship with Pao and, crucially, though Nazre lied to Lane when first confronted about it, Lane answered, “Good question.” He went on to explain that Nazre “quickly” confessed to his relationship with Pao, and that Nazre, in Lane’s view, was very knowledgeable about green tech and “an important part” of the firm’s team.

    Perhaps unsurprisingly, Kleiner’s attorney, Lynn Hermle, tried steering Lane to the larger point of whether or not Pao should have received the promotion that Pao is arguing she deserved. Toward that end, Hermle pulled up two emails relating to different CEOs who expressed displeasure in working with Pao.

    One CEO had apparently resorted to ignoring Pao, who recognized she’d have to find another way to win him over and wrote to Lane of the executive: “Frank is hierarchy focused and not as comfortable dealing with me directly so I need to be more ‘velvet-gloved’ (note the number of times it took to get him to copy me on emails).”

    Asked about the exchange, Lane described the CEO as a “difficult character” who is “more than 60 years of age” and “very set in his ways.”

    Hermle also produced an email exchange involving Workday cofounder and co-CEO Aneel Bhusri, who’d been talking with Kleiner about a late-stage investment before Workday went public in 2012.

    Wrote Bhusri to Lane, who forwarded his note to partner Ted Schlein: “Frankly, Ellen seems pretty clueless, can someone else take the lead?” Wrote Lane to Schlein, under Bhusri’s comment, “I kind of agree with him.” Schlein then responded: “She ran the names of folks by me, for diligence. I can’t say I paid too close attention so could be my fault.” Lane then responded to Schlein, “I will talk to [Bhusri] live tomorrow, but we have to put somebody else in or I will handle personally. I did the same as you, allowed Ellen to work it alone.”

    Was this a “major problem?” Hermle asked Lane on the stand. “No,” said Lane. “I don’t think it was a major problem.” Added Lane, “I thought [Pao] wasn’t being sensitive that this was a company that was already valued at more than a billion dollars.” But the bigger issue, Lane suggested, was that Bhusri didn’t like Kleiner’s technical review of Workday, which involved talking with “just a few customers.”

    Said Lane, “Mr. Bhusri disagreed with the approach. I thought the approach was fine.”

    —–

    Ballou PR

    New Fundings

    Booker, a 4.5-year-old, New York-based platform for booking appointments, has raised $35 million in Series C funding led by Medina Capital. Other participants in the round included First Data, Jump Capital, and Signal Peak, as well as previous backers Bain Capital Ventures, Revolution Ventures and Grotech Ventures. The company has now raised $77 million altogether.

    Cheyipai, a six-year-old, Beijing-based second-hand car trading platform, has raised $110 million in Series D funding led by the Chinese social networking company Renren, with participation from Sequoia CapitalMatrix China, Morningside Ventures and CITIC Capital. The company has now raised $185 million altogether, shows Crunchbase.

    Clearbit, a nine-month-old, San Francisco-based startup that’s building business intelligence APIs to help with sales lead-scoring, among other things, has raised $1.5 million in seed funding from SVAngel, S2 CapitalFirst Round Capital, Box Group and Zetta Venture Partners. Clearbit had previously raised $500,000 in seed funding from numerous individuals, including AngelList cofounder Naval Ravikant. (Clearbit represents the first venture investment for Ash Fontana, AngelList’s former head of fundraising projects; he recently joined Zetta as a managing director.)

    Jia, a 10-year-old, Shanghai-based home furnishings e-commerce platform, has raised $160 million in Series D funding from undisclosed investors, according to an official announcement on its Weibo account. China Money Network has much more here.

    Linkable Networks, a four-year-old, Boston-based offers company capable of providing coupons at the individual product level, has raised $11.7 million in new funding led by Blue Chip Venture Company, with participation from angel investors and earlier backers CommonAngels Ventures and Kepha Partners. Linkable has now raised more than $40 million in funding. BetaBoston has more here.

    Man Crates, a 2.5-year-old, Redwood City, Ca.-based startup offering unusual gifts for men, has raised $3.1 million in seed funding from Corazon Capital, OVO Fund, Rothenberg Ventures, Sovereign Capital and Tekton Ventures, among others, reports Venture Capital Dispatch.

    Mersana Therapeutics, a 10-year-old, Cambridge, Ma.-based maker of antibody-drug conjugates, has raised $35 million in Series B-1 funding led by earlier backer New Enterprise Associates. New investors Rock Springs Capital and Elliott Sigal, the former head of R&D at Bristol-Myers Squibb, also participated, along with earlier investors Fidelity Biosciences and Pfizer Venture Investments. The company has now raised $110 million altogether, shows Crunchbase.

    Parse.ly, a 6.5-year-old, New York-based company whose web analytics platform is used by digital publishers looking for audience insights, has raised new funding in the “mid six figures” from The New Republic Fundreports Mashable. The New Republic Fund, formed last fall, is financed entirely by New Republic owner Chris Hughes.

    RockYou, a nine-year-old, San Francisco-based interactive media company that owns and partners with dozens of game titles, has raised $23 million in fresh funding led by Columbia Capital. The company has now raised $172 million altogether, including from Partech VenturesDCM, and SoftBank Capital.

    Tempered Networks, a 2.5-year-old, Seattle-based company whose technology protects industrial control systems equipment, has raised $15 million in Series A funding led by Ignition Partners, with participation from IDG Ventures. The company has now raised $17 million to date.

    ToutApp, a nearly four-year-old, San Francisco-based company that makes toolsets for salespeople, has raised $15 million in Series B funding led by Andreessen Horowitz, with participation from earlier backers Sigma West, Founder Collective, 500 Startups, and Launch Fund. The company has now raised $19.6 million to date.

    —–

    New Funds

    Y Combinator will likely raise a fund that could be several billion dollars is size, say Business Insider’s sources. The idea: to compete with the hedge funds and mutual funds that have been pouring capital into its more mature portfolio companies like Airbnb. Y Combinator is in “very preliminary-stage discussions” says one BI source of discussions between the accelerator and investors.

    —–

    IPOs

    RainDance Technologies, an 11-year-old, Billerica, Ma.-based company that makes genomics-research tools, has filed to go public. The company said it could raise up to $60 million in the offering. Its biggest outside shareholders include Alloy Ventures, which owns 13.3 percent of the company; Quaker BioVentures, which owns 18.5 percent; Mohr Davidow Ventures, which owns 34.4 percent; Acadia Woods Partners, which owns 8 percent; and NCD Management, which owns 6.1 percent.

    Veracode, an 8.5-year-old, Burlington, Ma.-based cybersecurity company, is planning to go public in May, reports Fortune. Veracode has raised more than $110 million from investors, including Wellington ManagementAtlas Venture, .406 Ventures, StarVest Partners, Cross Creek Advisors, Meritech Capital Partners, Polaris Partners, In-Q-Tel,Symantec, and Rovi Corp.

    —–

    Exits

    Fab, the nearly four-year-old, New York-based e-commerce company, has officially sold to PCH, which isn’t disclosing final terms of the deal. More here.

    Mavenir, a 9.5-year-old, Richardson, Tx.-based mobile infrastructure company, has been acquired by the Ottawa-based business communications company Mitel in a cash and stock deal worth $560 million. Mavenir had gone public in late 2013 after raising just more than $100 million from investors, including Austin Ventures, North Bridge Venture Partners and Alloy Ventures. The WSJ has more here.

    Paydiant, a five-year-old, Wellesley, Ma.-based payments startup that licenses a technology platform used by big retail chains to create their own mobile wallet apps, has been acquired by PayPal, the eBay payment unit, for around $280 million. The company had raised roughly $35 million from investors, including Sands Capital Ventures, Stage 1 Ventures, North Bridge Growth Equity & Venture Partners, and General Catalyst Partners. Recode has more here.

    Prismatic, a 4.5-year-old, San Francisco-based company whose app recommends news articles to users based on what their connections are enjoying, is on the block and Microsoft is the front runner to acquire it, reports TechCrunch. More here.

    Square 1 Financial, the Durham, N.C.-based publicly traded venture capital-focused lender, is being acquired by L.A.-based PacWest Bancorp for about $790 million in stock.

    —–

    People

    Mary Lou Jepsen, who spent the last three years running the Display Division at Google X, is joining Facebook-owned Oculus VR sometime this month, reports Recode. Jepsen reported directly to Google co-founder Sergey Brin.

    Kirt McMaster, the CEO of Cyanogen, a startup that allows users to add new features and themes to their Android phones without compromising performance, has fighting words the mobile titans. “The tier one OEMs like Samsung are going to be the next generation Nokias in the next five years,” he tells Business Insider. “They’re going to be slaughtered. We think long term Apple itself will have problems because they’re just not good at competing at the low end.”

    —–

    Essential Reads

    The sparkle in bitcoin: data security.

    Twitter videos are now embeddable on websites.

    A Goldman Sachs-backed messaging and social networking service is planning to roll out broadly to Wall Street this summer.

    —–

    Detours

    The best tennis clubs in the U.S.

    Fat? Sick? Blame your grandparents’ bad habits.

    —–

    Retail Therapy

    Howdy.

  • StrictlyVC: March 2, 2015

    Hi, everyone, welcome back. We don’t have a column today — busy morning — but hopefully you’ll find some useful intel below.:)

    —–

    Top News in the A.M.

    Barry Silbert’s Bitcoin Investment Trust is poised to become the first publicly traded bitcoin fund, beating the Winklevoss Bitcoin Trust to the punch through a backdoor route to public listing. The WSJ has the story here.

    Google‘s Sundar Pichai just confirmed that the company will become a wireless provider of sorts in the “coming months.” The Verge has more here.

    —–

    New Fundings

    Airbnb, the 6.5-year-old, San Francisco-based company whose platform enables travelers to book the rooms and sometimes entire homes of people willing to rent them, is raising up to $1 billion in fresh funding at a $20 billion valuation, according to TechCrunch sources, who say $500,000 has already been raised. Airbnb has already raised roughly $800 million from investors across half a dozen previous rounds. Its backers include TPG Growth, T. Rowe Price, Dragoneer Investment Group, Founders Fund, Sequoia Capital, DST Global, Andreessen Horowitz, and General Catalyst Partners.

    Atlas Obscura, a 5.5-year-old, Brooklyn-based site where people share images and stories from their travels around the world, has raised $2 million in seed funding from a long list of investors, including New York Times Co., Graham Holding Co., Bertelsmann Digital Media Investments, New Atlantic Ventures, Treemark Capital, John BattelleHenry Blodget, Alexis Ohanian, and Kevin Ryan.

    Chiasma, a 14-year-old, Newton, Ma.-based biopharma company that has developed an oral treatment for an endocrine disease called acromegaly, just raised $70 million from Rock Springs Capital, Sofinnova Ventures, and an undisclosed public investment fund, along with earlier backers MPM Capital, F2 Capital, 7 Med Health Ventures, Abingworth and ARCH Venture Partners. The company has now raised $176 million altogether, shows Crunchbase.

    High Fidelity, a nearly two-year-old, San Francisco-based startup whose webcam technology creates characters that can interact in virtual worlds, has raised $11 million led by Vulcan Ventures. The company has now raised $17.5 million altogether. TechCrunch has more on the funding here. GigaOm talked with High Fidelity’s founder, serial entrepreneur Philip Rosedale, about the company last November. Video here.

    Jampp, a 3.5-year-old, London-based mobile marketing company, has raised $7 million in Series A funding led by Highland Europe, with participation from Endeavor Catalyst, Innova and NXTP Labs. The company has raised $7.6 million altogether, shows Crunchbase.

    Lyric Pharmaceuticals, a 1.5-year-old, San Francisco-based developer of gastrointestinal therapeutics, has raised $20.4 million in Series A funding co-led by Sante Ventures, Third Point Ventures, and earlier investor RiverVest Venture Partners. New investor Aperture Venture Partners also participated in the funding, according to a news release. The St. Louis Business Journal has more here.

    Nasty Gal, the 8.5-year-old, L.A.-based fashion company known for its edgy aesthetic, is reportedly raising another $16 million in funding led by retail veteran Ron Johnson, with earlier backer Index Ventures participating. The company has now raised $65 million altogether. Venture Capital Dispatch has more here.

    Outfittery, a nearly three-year-old, Berlin-based e-commerce startup that curates men’s outfits for its users, who pay for what they want to keep and send back the rest, has raised $20 million in new funding led by the Nordic venture firm Northzone. The company has now raised $37.8 million altogether, shows Crunchbase.

    Peoplevox, a 6.5-year-old, London-based maker of warehouse management software for e-commerce companies, has raised $6 million in Series A funding led by Index Ventures, with participation from angel investors. More here.

    TrulyMadly, an eight-month-old, New Delhi-based dating platform, has raised $5 million in funding from Helion Venture Partners and Kae Capital, reports DealCurry. The outlet notes that in India, online dating has been slow to gain traction owing to social issues, but it adds that things are changing quickly.

    YesGraph, a 2.5-year-old, Palo Alto, Ca.-based company whose technology aims to make the process of inviting new users to join an app more intuitive (and less reliant on users’ entire list of contacts), has raised $1 million in seed funding led by Bloomberg Beta. More here.

    Yikuaixiu, a 10-month-old, Beijing-based online-to-offline platform for automotive after-sales service like maintenance, has reportedly raised $12 million in Series A funding from Lightspeed China Partners.

    —–

    New Funds

    Alibaba, the Chinese e-commerce giant, is setting aside 10 billion New Taiwan dollars ($316 million) to invest in entrepreneurs from Taiwan who launch and grow their businesses through Alibaba’s online platforms. The move follows Alibaba’s recently announced plans to similarly set aside 1 billion Hong Kong dollars ($129 million) to invest in Hong Kong-based startups. Venture Capital Dispatch has more here.

    Finistere Ventures, a 10-year-old, San Diego-based venture firm that invests in food, energy and health-technology companies, has raised a $150 million fund called Finistere II, it announced late last week. The fund will focus on tech startups of various stages that promote food productivity, sustainability, and nutrition.

    The Social+Capital Partnership, the four-year-old, Palo Alto, Ca.-based venture firm founded by former Facebook VP Chamath Palihapitiya, is looking to raise a new, $450 million fund, according to a new SEC filing. The firm’s two previous funds were $275 million and $325 million in size, respectively.

    A new SolarCity fund that will help finance the installation of residential solar power systems, has raised $300 million from Google. According to both companies, the new fund will cover the upfront cost of solar panel installations for thousands of homeowners in 14 states; homeowners will either pay SolarCity for electricity produced by the solar panels or monthly rent for the panels if they are leasing. The L.A. Times has more here.

    —–

    IPOs

    The number of IPOs on the AIM, London Stock Exchange’s junior market, reached an eight-year high last year with 75 transactions, a figure said to show that smaller companies are now looking to IPOs to fund growth as an alternative to getting acquired. More here.

    —–

    Exits

    The publicly traded networking equipment company Aruba Networks has been acquired by Hewlett-Packard in a deal valued at $3 billion. More here.

    Emerging Threats, a 12-year-old, Lafayette, In.-based cyber security research firm, has been acquired by publicly traded Proofpoint for roughly $40 million in cash and stock. The company had raised at least $2.4 million from investors, including HALO Capital Group and Elevate Ventures, shows Crunchbase.

    In the latest merger of chip companies, NXP Semiconductors is acquiring its smaller peer, Freescale Semiconductor, in an $11.8 billion deal that creates a chipmaking giant for “industries as varied as automobiles and mobile payments,” reports the New York Times. More here.

    TaxiForSure, a nearly four-year-old, Bangalore-based aggregator of car rentals and taxis in India, has been acquired by $200 in cash and stock by its bigger rival, Ola. TaxiForSure had raised $44 million from investors, including Helion Venture Partners, Bessemer Venture Partners, Accel India Ventures, and Blume Ventures. Like the recent merger of China-based rivals Didi Dache and Kuaidi Dache, the deal appears designed to create a larger, stronger India-based rival to Uber as the ride-sharing juggernaut looks for growth abroad.

    TrialPay, a nine-year-old, Mountain View, Ca.-based e-commerce payment platform that offers targeted promotions, has been acquired by Visa for undisclosed financial terms. TrialPay had raised $55.8 million from a sizable list of investors, including Battery Ventures, DFJ, Baseline Ventures, Index Ventures, and Atomico.

    —–

    People

    David Besbris, a longtime VP of engineering at Google who took over as head of the company’s Google+ product less than a year ago, has been replaced by Bradley Horowitz, a longtime VP of product for Google+, reports TechCrunch. Besbris took over Google+ after Vic Gundotra, who’d started and led the initiative, left the company. It isn’t clear if Horowitz is his “long-term or short-term replacement,” says TechCrunch.

    Led by Penn State alums Matt Brezina and Adam Smith, who founded the startup Xobni and later sold it to Yahoo, a handful of early Y Combinator alums plans to provide $10,000 this summer to four or five teams from Penn State. They will also host weekly dinners for the startups, a la Y Combinator. TechCrunch has the story here.

    Jenny Fielding, a managing director at startup accelerator Techstarstells VentureWire she has been asked to run Barclays Accelerator, a program created by Barclays and Techstars that will welcome financial technology startups for the first time in New York over the summer. Fielding had spent several years at J.P. Morgan Chase and Morgan Stanley before launching her own mobile-company, Switch-Mobile (acquired by a New York-based company called Via One). More recently, she ran a digital growth fund for BBC Worldwide.

    Hyper-entrepreneur Elon Musk‘s Hyperloop will soon move from concept to reality in California, according to Hyperloop Transportation Technologies, a year-old company that says it will build a functioning test track for the high-speed transport tube in California by 2019. More here.

    —–

    Jobs

    Sanofi-Genzyme BioVentures is looking for an associate vice president. The job is in Cambridge, Ma.

    —–

    Data

    Inspired by investor Semil Shah‘s quick and dirty research last month into which VC firms are best at spotting so-called unicorns early on (in consumer tech), CB Insights has mapped out exactly who backed what when.

    —–

    Essential Reads

    On Friday, Uber revealed that up to 50,000 drivers’ names and license numbers may have been compromised in a data breach. The company has subpoenaed GitHub to find out who hacked its database.

    —–

    Detours

    “House of Cards” season three: a binge review. (Read only if you have “binge” watched all 13 episodes!)

    Kobe Bryant confronts a long—and possibly painful—goodbye.

    Welcome to Caleb’s Humane Meats.

    —–

    Retail Therapy

    A Go Pro-like camera, at a fraction of the price.

    Sweet dreams for a young knight.

  • StrictlyVC: February 27, 2015

    Happy Friday, everyone! Hope you have terrific weekend, and we’ll see you back here bright and early on Monday.:)

    —–

    Top News in the A.M.

    This morning, Ericsson filed seven new lawsuits in a U.S. court and is asking the U.S. International Trade Commission to block Apple products from the U.S. market.

    In what we’d guess is unrelated news, Apple has announced a surprise media event to be held March 9. So. Excited. Can’t. Breathe. [Faints.]

    —–

    In a Heated Market, a Secondaries Player Casts a Wide Net

    When Manhattan Venture Partners publicly launched last month, the merchant bank joined a growing number of players who are matching investors with startups that are in no apparent rush to go public.

    Talking recently with StrictlyVC, plugged-in investor and AngelList cofounder Naval Ravikant opined that it’s “possible that the amount of secondary trading going on in Silicon Valley under the covers is going to match the amount of primary financing soon” as household names like Uber and Airbnb and Dropbox move more slowly than expected toward IPOs.

    Perhaps it’s no wonder then that Manhattan Venture Partners is casting its net far beyond the Bay Area. Last week, we talked with the firm’s cofounder, Jared Carmel, and its chief economist, Max Wolff, about which markets, exactly, the new outfit is chasing.

    Most of the so-called unicorns are headquartered — broadly speaking – in Silicon Valley. But you’re also looking elsewhere. Why?

    JC: We’ve expanded overseas because we’re starting to see demand for what we do from [India-based] Flipkart and [China-based] Xiaomi and the like. Those companies aren’t current customers, but [the China-based e-commerce giant] Alibaba was one of the big positions we took last year. We had a significant amount of shares that came from an executive last April, prior to its [September] IPO.

    MW: We see the center of gravity in pre-IPO tech companies beginning to drift both south and east from the U.S., which is pretty consistent in terms of the global economy as it drifts more toward the global south away from the U.S. and Europe. It’s much more advanced in the global macro sense than in the private company sense. Today and in the foreseeable future, Northern California will remain at the center of a lot of this activity. But right now, as large and aggressive as Uber’s [$40 billion] valuation is, it’s still $5 billion less than the valuation of Xiaomi, a handset maker that no one in the U.S. has really heard of outside of the business press. We’re at a moment historically where we’re living in the long shadow of the largest tech IPO ever – Alibaba, which, by the way, when we first began talking with people about it [long ago], they thought was a [brand of] hummus.

    Culturally, are secondaries seen as an acceptable practice in China and elsewhere? Obviously, in the U.S., they were long stigmatized as a last resort for troubled companies.

    MW: There’s more acceptance of secondaries and more acceptance of high, late-stage valuations than at any time in the recent past. We’ve seen large [foreign] institutional investments in secondary shares really since Facebook, and given that many of those investors – who’ve also backed LinkedIn and Tesla and Twitter – made money, we’re seeing them come home and really start to introduce [secondary investments] to the whole market.

    JC: It’s still pretty new in the U.S., so it’s even newer in many countries, and I don’t think it’s as well-understood or accepted as in the U.S. But as we’re starting to see companies get into seven-plus years in their lifespan, and they’re seeing their best employees heading off to other projects and companies, they’re beginning to understand that a secondary or liquidity program can also act as a retention tool.

    You’re also talking with U.S. companies and investors. What are you seeing? What’s hot and what’s not?

    JC: Games [companies] have really been in the doldrums, owing to private and public investments that didn’t necessary end well in recent years. Social is definitely deeply out of favor. Another sector that people are much less excited about are flash deal sites. Red hot: privacy, private messaging, and driver logistics companies.

    —–

    New Fundings

    Accela, a 16-year-old, San Ramon, Ca.-based company that makes cloud-based civic-engagement software, has raised $143.5 million in new financing led Abry Partners, with participation from Landmark PartnersJ.P. Morgan Private Equity, and Karlani Capital. The company had raised at least $50 million across two previous rounds, shows Crunchbase.

    Citymaps, a 4.5-year-old, New York-based mobile app company whose visual maps help users discover and mark favorite places, has raised $6 million from new investors Nokia Growth Partners, Coatue Management and Acadia Woods, with participation from earlier investors. The company has now raised $11 million altogether, shows Crunchbase.

    Emailage, a nearly three-year-old, Chandler, Az.-based company that makes a fraud-detection system that relies on email addresses to produce a fraud risk score, has raised $3.8 million in funding led by Felicis Ventures.

    FreshWorld, a year-old, Bangalore-based startup that delivers fresh fruits and vegetables straight from farmers to homes using GPS-enabled smart carts, has secured an undisclosed amount in funding from Indian Angel Network and Infosys cofounder Kris Gopalakrishnan.

    Grofers, a 14-month-old, Gurgaon, India-based company that helps facilitate on-demand delivery for local store owners, has raised $10 million in Series A funding led by Tiger Global Management and earlier backer Sequoia Capital. The company has now raised $10.5 million altogether. TechCrunch has more here.

    InMoji, a year-old, San Francisco-based mobile marketing startup, has raised $1.25 million in seed funding led by former PayPal Media COO David Chang, with participation from PayPal’s StartTank and Atlas Venture through its Boston Syndicates. Boston Business Journal has more here.

    JRNL, a new, Las Vegas-based company whose private journaling application is designed for Web and mobile use, has raised an undisclosed amount of seed financing from Varkain, a Las Vegas-based venture capital firm.

    Kobalt, a 15-year-old, New York company whose computer system scours payment systems around the world to make sure royalty money ends up where it belongs, has raised $60 million in new funding from Google Ventures and Michael Dell. The company has now raised $116 million altogether, shows Crunchbase. The L.A. Times has the story here.

    LeadDesk, a five-year-old, Helsinki, Finland-based cloud call center software company, has raised $6.2 million in Series A funding led by Dawn Capital, with participation from the public fund Finnish Industry Investment.

    LoveCrafts, a 2.5-year-old, London-based builder of social marketplaces for crafts communities, has raised $7.5 million in funding from Balderton Capital. More here.

    PlayFab, a year-old, Seattle-based company that provides back-end support for game studios (it spun out from the gaming company Uber Entertainment last year), has raised $7.4 million in funding led by Benchmark Capital, with participation from Madrona Venture GroupStartup Capital Ventures, and individual investors, including Orbitz CEO Barney Harford. The company has now raised $9.9 million to date, shows Crunchbase.

    PracticeGigs, a seven-month-old, Boston-based peer-to-peer learning marketplace designed to help people improve their skills at tennis — and eventually, other sports and activities — is raising a seed round of funding that so far includes Andy Miller of Constant Contact and Jeff Fagnan at FKA (the tech venture capital firm Formerly Known as Atlas) and others. BetaBoston has more here.

    Skully, a two-year-old, San Francisco-based company whose $1,500 augmented reality motorcycle helmets are schedules to ship to its first customers this summer, has raised $11 million in Series A funding led by Walden Riverwood Ventures and Intel Capital, with participation from Formation 8, Eastlink Capital, Techstars, and Western Technology Investment, which had earlier contributed $500,000 in venture debt. Skully had previously raised $2 million in seed funding and more than $3.4 million in a crowdfunding campaign on Indiegogo. Venture Capital Dispatch has more here.

    SOLS, a two-year-old, New York-based 3D-printing company that prints custom shoe insoles, has raised $11.1 million in funding from Tenaya Capital, Melo7 Tech Partners and earlier backers Founders Fund and Lux Capital. The company has now raised $19.3 million altogether, shows Crunchbase. TechCrunch has more here.

    Twenty20, a 3.5-year-old, Marina Del Ray, Ca.-based photography marketplace connecting stock photo buyers with everyday smartphone photographers, has raised $8 million in Series A funding led by Canaan Partners, with First Round Capital, Bullpen Capital, and VersionOne Ventures participating. The company has now raised $9.7 million altogether, shows Crunchbase.

    Trov, a 2.5-year-old, Danville, Ca.-based company whose app helps users easily organize and value the things they own, has raised $6.5 million in new Series B funding led by Anthemis Group of Geneva. The company has now raised $13.3 million altogether. PandoDaily has much more here.

    —–

    New Funds

    AXA Equitable Financial Services, the 200-year-old, Paris-based multinational investment banking firm, has formed a venture unit with a 200 million euro ($224.3 million) fund that it intends to invest in insurance, asset management, financial technology and health-care services startups.

    GGV Capital, a 15-year-old, Menlo Park, Ca.-based company whose newest bet is the home-buying business Opendoor (profiled here yesterday), is raising a $450 million growth fund to invest in startups that it has backed with its last two funds, reports VentureWire. In May of last year, the firm, which focuses on the U.S. and China, raised $620 million for its fifth venture fund. It typically plugs between $5 million and $25 million into its portfolio companies.

    Illumina, the San Diego-based genetic analysis and sequencing company, has raised a new, $40 million fund to match investments raised by companies that pass through an accelerator program it’s been running in San Francisco for roughly a year. Funding for the investment vehicle, called Accelerator Boost Capital, was provided by Viking Global Investors, Illumina tells VentureWire.

    —–

    Exits

    Aereo, the digital video service that threatened to disrupt the television industry and filed for bankruptcy in November, attracted less than $2 million for its assets at a bankruptcy auction, reports Bloomberg. TiVo won its trademark, customer list and certain other assets; RPX, a patent risk-management company, bought its patent portfolio; and Alliance Technologies, a computer consulting company in Des Moines, Ia., acquired some of its equipment.

    Pluck, a 12-year-old, Austin, Tx.-based company that sells social media software to companies that want to create communities around their existing web properties, has been acquired for undisclosed terms by Sprinklr, a subsidiary of publicly traded Demand Media. Terms aren’t being disclosed. According to Crunchbase, Pluck had raised at least $17 million from investors, including Reuters, Mayfield Fund, and Austin Ventures.

    —–

    People

    Amazon has hired Jay Carney, former press secretary for President Obama, as senior vice president for global corporate affairs — which is a new position, says the company. Politico has more here.

    Sue Biglieri, the longtime CFO of Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers, took the stand yesterday in Ellen Pao’s gender discrimination suit and revealed that in 2011, at least one general partner earned up to five times more than a junior partner at the firm, owing to the profits they receive from Kleiner’s investments, plus their management fees. (Junior employees instead receive salaries and bonuses.) Kleiner attorney Lynn Hermle said that as a junior partner, Pao’s total compensation in 2011 was $516,000. That’s not so shabby, though Pao has argued she’d be making far more today had she been promoted. Business Insider has the story.

    Former Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers investor Ajit Nazre, who former partner Ellen Pao says pressured her into having an affair then retaliated against her when she ended their relationship — contributed to her 2011 performance review, even though he wasn’t listed as a contributor. Venture Capital Dispatch has the story here.

    Ted Schlein, a Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers managing partner who, like Kleiner CFO Sue Biglieri, took the stand yesterday in Ellen Pao’s gender discrimination suit, said repeatedly he couldn’t remember relevant details about performance reviews he’d helped write about Pao or email exchanges he’d had about her and with her. Fortune has the story here.

    —–

    Jobs

    Siemens Venture Capital is looking to add a vice president to its team. The job is in Boston.

    —–

    Essential Reads

    Google just made “mobile friendliness” a ranking signal.

    Google also just paid $25 million for exclusive rights to the “.app” top-level web domain.

    Talk about a bad sport.

    —–

    Detours

    A 14,000-square-foot, five-bedroom, five-bath duplex penthouse in San Francisco has come on the market for a whopping $49 million.

    Awe-inspiring satellite photos from around the world.

    R/C drifting in Yokohama, Japan.

    —–

    Retail Therapy

    Now that’s a set of speakers.

  • StrictlyVC: February 26, 2015

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

    —–

    Top News in the A.M.

    The Washington Post, on today’s net neutrality vote: “It’s easy to point to the coming FCC’s vote as another indication Silicon Valley’s time has come in Washington. But here’s the reality: The industry has already arrived.”

    Susan Biglieri, who has served as the CFO of Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers since 2001, is set to testify to this morning in the Ellen Pao case. Topics she’s sure to touch on: partner compensation.

    —–

    Opendoor Raises $20 Million for Its Audacious Home-Buying Business

    Opendoor, a year-old, San Francisco-based company, is on a mission to make residential real estate liquid by making it simple to buy and sell it online.

    Investors are buying what it’s selling. This morning, the company is announcing $20 million in fresh funding led by GGV Capital, a round that brings the company’s total outside funding to $30 million.

    Consumers are buying Opendoor’s pitch, too. The 20-person company is now buying one house per day – sight unseen — in its test market of Phoenix. Home owners need merely give it their address and some basic details, and using public market information about historical home sales and OpenDoor’s own proprietary data about market conditions, the company arrives at an offer price that’s just one to three points below what the seller might fetch on the open market roughly three months into the future. (That’s the average time, it says, required to sell a home in the U.S.)

    The big question now is whether the whole operation is sustainable. Certainly, the risk and reward associated with what it’s trying to pull off is enormous.

    Consider: After Opendoor acquires each home, it must ensure the home is up to code in order to resell it. The repairs alone can likely get complicated, as any homeowner can attest. But each home is also given numerous cosmetic upgrades that will give it so-called curb appeal. Think everything from new kitchen cabinets to light landscaping.

    Opendoor can (and surely intends) to sell its homes at a premium, based on those upgrades. But it’s a lot of work, the kind that involves contractors and lawn maintenance workers, in addition to Opendoor’s growing team of developers. More, hanging on to that inventory in the meantime is a huge risk. Though the company’s equity certainly helps, as does a partnership with a bank that gives it debt to use, the housing market is highly sensitive to interest rates and other macroeconomic factors. In Phoenix, for example, where Opendoor has been testing out its service for the last several months, up to a quarter of the homes that are listed for sale are eventually taken back off the market.

    CEO Eric Wu — a serial entrepreneur who cofounded Opendoor last year with investor-operator Keith Rabois — acknowledges the challenges, but he seems convinced that none are insurmountable. Partly, that owes to the progress Opendoor has made as a software company, whose platform can now (Wu says) seamlessly address everything from property assessments to quickly presenting offers to potential customers to handling the payment of the house to overseeing the infrastructure involved with holding and reselling it.

    Wu also knows that there’s tremendous pain associated with home buying today, and where there is pain, there is opportunity.

    In fact, Wu is already envisioning the day that Opendoor both buys homes, then resells others it owns to those same customers, creating one of those virtuous cycles that the digerati like to talk about.

    “Longer term,” says Wu, “we’d love to have a path where we transact 5 to 35 percent of all homes. Once that occurs, this business really starts to evolve into us solving pain points for homeowners, from [allowing them to easily sell their homes] to helping them [purchase] another with high-quality renovations. We definitely think we can touch both buyers and sellers.”

    The company could even get into the financing business eventually, Wu suggests. There’s “lot of headache and stress in securing mortgages today,” he notes. OpenDoor has enough work ahead of it right now, but it’s “something we’ll look at down the road,” he says.

    —–

    New Fundings

    3D Robotics, the six-year-old, San Diego-based personal drone manufacturer co-founded by former Wired magazine editor Chris Anderson, has raised $50 million led by Qualcomm, reports VentureWire. The company has now raised $85 million in funding to date, including from Ooga Labs, True Ventures, Foundry Group, SK Ventures, O’Reilly AlphaTech Ventures, and Mayfield Fund.

    Airtable, a two-year-old, San Francisco-based company that makes complex databases usable on users’ mobile phones, has raised $3 million in funding, including from Box Group, Caffeinated Capital, CrunchFundData Collective, Freestyle Capital, and numerous individual investors, including Bebo cofounder Michael Birch. TechCrunch has more here.

    Ardusat, a young, Salt Lake City, Ut.-based education company focused on enhancing student engagement through hands-on experimentation, has raised $1 million in seed funding from Space Florida, Fresco CapitalSpire and other investors. The outlet edSurge has more here.

    Branch Metrics, a nearly year-old, Palo Alto, Ca.-based software company focused on mobile deep linking (where pages inside of mobile apps are accessible immediately with the click of a link), has raised $15 million in Series A funding co-led by earlier investors New Enterprise Associates and Ben Narasin of TriplePoint Capital, with participation from Pejman Mar Ventures, Zach Coelius, and Cowboy Ventures. The company had previously raised $2.75 million from many of those same investors.

    Chefs Feed, a three-year-old, San Francisco-based content platform that offers food suggestions from top chefs, has raised $4 million in Series A funding led by Artis Ventures, with participation from Haas PortmanStructure Capital, Subtraction Capital and individual investors. The company has now raised $8.2 million to date.

    Comet Biorefining, a nearly six-year-old, Ontario-based maker of cellulosic glucose technology, has raised an undisclosed amount of funding led by Sofinnova Partners.

    Coolan, a nearly two-year-old, San Mateo, Ca.-based company that employs analytics and artificial intelligence to predict server failure and avert data center outages, has raised an undisclosed amount of seed funding from investors, including Keshif Ventures, North Bridge Venture Partners, and The Social+Capital Partnership. More here.

    Dtex Systems, a 15-year-old, San Jose, Ca.-based company whose software prevents cyber security breaches originating within an organization, has raised $15 million Series A funding co-led by Norwest Venture Partners and Wing Ventures.

    Exablox, a 4.5-year-old, Mountain View, Ca.-based cloud storage provider, has raised $16 million in Series C funding from Dell Ventures. The company has now raised $38.5 million altogether, including from DCM, Norwest Venture Partners, and U.S. Venture Partners.

    Getable, a five-year-old, San Francisco-based company whose mobile tools are used for ordering and tracking construction equipment, has raised $5 million in Series A funding led by The Social+Capital Partnership. The company has now raised $8.2 million altogether, shows Crunchbase.

    IronSource, a 5.5-year-old Tel Aviv-based ad tech company, has raised $20 million roughly six months after raising an $85 million round from a syndicate of U.S. and China-based investors that the company describes as among the largest strategic partners in mainland China. The company is expected to go public later this year or early next year, says Forbes.

    LocoMotive Labs, a 2.5-year-old company that makes play-based apps for children with special needs, has raised $4 million in Series A funding led by Softbank Ventures Korea and TAL Education Group, with participation from earlier backers K9 Ventures, Kapor CapitalNewSchools Venture Fund, D3Jubilee, and individual investors. The company has now raised $5.15 million altogether.

    Luxe Valet, a nearly two-year-old, San Francisco-based on-demand valet startup, has raised $20 million in Series A funding co-led by Redpoint Ventures and Venrock Partners. The company has now raised $25.5 million to date, shows Crunchbase.

    Lytro, a four-year-old, Mountain View, Ca.-based company whose cameras capture the entire light field around a picture, has reportedly raised $50 million in new funding led by GSV Capital, with participation from all of its earlier investors, which include Allen & Co., Greylock Partners, Andreessen Horowitz, New Enterprise Associates, and K9 Ventures. Unfortunately for between 25 and 50 of its 130 employees, Lytro is also about to “make some cuts in some areas so we can staff up in some new ones,” CEO Jason Rosenthal tells Recode. “Fifty million dollars is a nice big number,” he adds, “but it is not unlimited. We had to make some pretty tough decisions.”

    Klipfolio, a 14-year-old, Ottawa, Ontario-based business intelligence company, has raised $6.2 million in Series A round led by Omers Ventures, with participation from the company’s seed investors, including BDC Capital, Mistral Venture Partners, Acadia Woods, BOLDstart Ventures, CommonAngels Ventures, and Fundfire. The company has now raised $7.7 million to date.

    Orca Pharmaceuticals, a 2.5-year-old, Abingdon, England-based startup at work on developing oral drugs for chronic inflammatory diseases, has struck an agreement with the much larger British drug developer AstraZeneca to receive up to $122.5 million if it hits various milestones. The deal also gives AstraZeneca the option to buy Orca’s compounds at the end of the collaboration.

    Pivot3, a 12-year-old, Austin-based vendor of hyper-converged infrastructure, has raised $45 million in funding from Argonaut Private Equity, S3 Ventures, InterWest Partners, and Wilson Sonsini Goodrich & Rosati. The company has now raised $184.8 million altogether, shows Crunchbase. Forbes has more here.

    TopOPPS, a year-old, St. Louis, Missouri-based company that makes predictive analytics software for sales teams, has raised $2 million in funding led by Cultivation Capital. The company has now raised roughly $4 million, it says. More here.

    SecureKey Technologies, a seven-year-old, Toronto-based maker of identity and authentication software, has raised $19 million in Series C funding led by Blue Sky Capital and earlier backer Rogers Venture Partners. The company has now raised $75.7 million altogether, shows Crunchbase.

    Shark Punch, a four-year-old, game development studio with offices in San Francisco and Helsinki, has raised $1.2 million in seed funding led by London Venture Partners, with participation DN Capital, Reaktor Polte, and other investors.

    Unify Square, a seven-year-old Bellevue, Wa.-based company that sells software, services and support for Microsoft Lync/Skype for Business (it was started by Microsoft veterans), has raised $8.2 million in Series B funding from individual investors with backgrounds at Yahoo, IBM and Ariba. The company has now raised $22.2 million altogether. GeekWire has more here.

    Zimperium, a 4.5-year-old, San Francisco-based mobile security company that protects smartphones against advanced cyber attacks, has raised $12 million in new funding led by Australia’s Telstra, with participation from Japan’s TOYO Corp. and earlier backers Sierra Ventures, Lazarus Israel Opportunities Fund, and Samsung. The company has now raised $20 million altogether, shows Crunchbase.

    —–

    New Funds

    MicroVentures, a 5.5-year-old, Austin, Tx.-based equity crowdfunding platform, is now enabling its investors to fund startups in the portfolio of the accelerator and seed-stage venture firm 500 Startups. Crowdfund Insider has more here.

    —–

    People

    Chi-Hua Chien, who until last October served as an investing partner at Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers, took the stand yesterday in the gender discrimination and retaliation case of former Kleiner partner Ellen Pao, who has said she was systematically excluded from opportunities that were provided to men at the firm, including a ski trip to Vail and an all-male dinner party at the apartment of former Vice President Al Gore. Pao has stated in court papers that Chien didn’t invite women to the dinner because they “kill the buzz.” Said Chien yesterday, “I never said that or anything like that . . . The quotes in the lawsuit, the things she claimed I had said, the events she claimed I organized—it was very, very hurtful.” Some of the emails brought into testimony seemed to bolster Pao’s argument, however, including a note from Chien to Path CEO Dave Morin, in response to Morin’s request to add a woman to the Vail trip. “Why don’t we punt on her and find 2 guys who are awesome. We can add 4-8 women next year.” (There were no more ski trips after that.) More here and here.

    Twitter CEO Dick Costolo talks with the New York Times about how he decides what’s abuse on the platform, and what he thinks constitutes free speech. Says Costolo: “One way of thinking about it is: I may have a right to say something, but I don’t have a right to stand in your living room and scream it into your ear five times in a row.”

    Bob Grady has been appointed a partner at the San Francisco-based private equity firm Gryphon Investors. Grady previously spent five years at the Wyoming-based investment firm Cheyenne Capital, where he served as a general partner and managing director; he was also formerly a managing director and global head of venture and growth capital at The Carlyle Group. Grady is also a longtime Republican operative.

    Venture capitalist Bill Gurley of Benchmark isn’t done warning the industry about its reckless behavior. Yesterday, he published half a dozen reasons that today’s late-stage private rounds are very different from an IPO — and why investors would be wise to curb their enthusiasm for them.

    Yahoo CEO Marissa Mayer is upholding a long tradition at Yahoo of overpaying people to keep them from leaving, reports Business Insider. One of the outlet’s sources says a prized employee in the company’s ad sales group makes a stunning $2.5 million a year — up from the $450,000 he was making before Mayer arrived. Meanwhile, Jeff Bonforte, the senior vice president in charge of Yahoo’s communication products, is “rumored” to be making roughly $5 million a year, says BI.

    —–

    Jobs

    Illumina Ventures, a corporate venture unit of the bioinformatics giant Illumina that’s focused on life sciences, is looking for a global head. The job is in San Diego.

    —–

    Essential Reads

    One billion viewers and no profit; the WSJ takes a hard look at YouTube.

    Google has created a computer that can teach itself dozens of games —and wins.

    Gartner, the research firm, has predicted a third of all jobs will be lost to automation within a decade. Academics who used to dismiss such findings are starting to worry they’re true, too.

    —–

    Detours

    Downhill biking through the Himalayas.

    Examining pricey museum sleepovers.

    —–

    Retail Therapy

    Mugs for mustachioed men.

    Outlet snouts.

  • StrictlyVC: February 25, 2015

    Hi, everyone, hope your Wednesday is off to a great start! (Psst, web visitors, this version of today’s email is easier to read than what you see below.)

    —–

    Top News in the A.M.

    Tomorrow, the FCC is expected to approve regulating Internet service like a public utility.

    China has been dropping some of the world’s leading tech brands from its approved state purchase lists in an apparent response to revelations about widespread Western cybersurveillance.

    —–

    The Real Reveal in the Kleiner Case

    “Pao didn’t have the necessary skills for the job. She didn’t even come close.”

    So said employment attorney Lynne Hermle yesterday in her opening comments about Ellen Pao, the CEO of Reddit and a former partner of Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers, the storied venture firm that Pao is suing for gender discrimination and retaliation.

    We don’t want to underestimate Hermle, who is notoriously tough and is presumably just getting warmed up. (The trial is expected to last four weeks.)

    Still, her strategy seems risky, given how unclear it is what skills are “necessary” to becoming a great venture capitalist.

    Certainly, Pao’s educational background is textbook, with degrees from Harvard’s business and law schools, not to mention an undergraduate degree in electrical engineering from Princeton. Pao also logged time at Microsoft, TellMe, and BEA Systems, giving her the kind of operating experience that is often (but not always) a prerequisite for the job.

    We’ll spare you the laundry list, but we could probably come up with hundreds of general partners with similar backgrounds. Among them: famed VC Jim Breyer of Accel Partners, who had part-time jobs at Hewlett-Packard and Apple, as well as a stint as a McKinsey consultant, before nabbing his MBA at Harvard and heading straight into Accel.

    Still, Hermle might argue, there’s much more to venture capital than education. In fact, she is already beginning to paint Pao as highly political, citing performance reviews that state Pao “seems to have a sense of entitlement rather than earning her position” and is “not viewed as a good team member” and “not 100 percent reliable” in supporting her colleagues. (Indeed, one detail that surfaced yesterday was that Pao suggested Kleiner fire Trae Vassallo, a former Kleiner colleague who helped to lead deals in Nest Labs and Dropcam, among others.)

    The implication seems to be that trust and respect within a venture firm are key. And in theory, it’s easy to see why. No one wants to work with a backbiter.

    Unfortunately, backbiters are sometimes also rainmakers, and in venture capital, returns are the name of the game.

    Yes, it’s nice if you can find team members who are both supportive and know how to produce fat returns, but that’s not always the case. Because of the typical pay structure within a firm — with certain partners receiving far better economics than others — it’s often not so easy to be diplomatic, either.

    The truth is that what goes on inside most venture firms isn’t nearly so collegial as GPs would have their LPs believe. They may talk about chemistry; they may applaud each other publicly. But when it comes down to it, venture capital is as cutthroat a business as you’ll find. You make money for investors or you get kicked out — and anyone who has been around long enough can tell you that everything else is a façade.

    Much has already been written about Ellen Pao and whether and what her case against Kleiner tells us about gender discrimination inside venture firms.

    What’s more likely to be revealed in this very public case is that partnerships are far more fragile than the industry would have us believe.

    Ballou PR

    New Fundings

    CENX, a six-year-old, Hoboken, N.J.-based company whose software helps wireless carriers manage their data networks, has raised an undisclosed amount of growth financing from its previous backers, including Cross Creek Advisors, DCM, Ericsson, Highland Capital Partners, Mesirow Financial Private Equity, and Verizon Ventures.

    FundThrough, a year-old, Toronto-based online business lending startup, has raised $2.2 million led by Real Ventures, with participation from Origin Merchant Partners, Five Elements Ventures, Barlow Lane Holdings and individual investors.

    Iotera, a four-year-old, Bay Area-based-company that produces GPS devices with what it says are months of battery life, has raised $1 million in seed funding led by earlier backer ZenShin Capital Partners, with participation from Crunchfund, Startup Capital Ventures, String Ventures, EarlyMarket and Rubicon Venture Capital. TechCrunch has the story here.

    Mavenlink, a 6.5-year-old, Irvine, Ca.-based company whose cloud-based software helps distributed teams manage and scale the projects, has raised $15 million in equity and a $4 million credit facility from Carrick Capital Partners and Silicon Valley Bank.

    NCino, a three-year-old, Wilmington, N.C.-based company behind a web-based operating technology for banks and financial-services companies, has raised $29 million in Series B funding led by Insight Venture Partners. Earlier backers, including Wellington Management, former Morgan Stanley Chairman and Chief Executive John Mack, and Promontory Financial Group founder and CEO Gene Ludwig, also joined the round. The company has now raised $49 million to date. Forbes has more here.

    Q4 Web Systems, an 8.5-year-old, Toronto-based company whose services cater to investors relations professionals (including making investor websites), has raised $5 million led by Plaza Ventures, with participation from Atlas Venture and Silicon Valley Bank.

    RtTech Software, a four-year-old, New Brunswick, Canada-based company whose data software aims to help manufacturing companies improve their asset availability, asset utilization and utilities consumption, has raised $3 million in Series A funding led by McRock Capital, with participation from earlier backer New Brunswick Innovation Foundation.

    Telltale Games, a 10-year-old, San Rafael, Ca.-based digital publisher that releases interactive episodic content on a monthly schedule, has raised an undisclosed but “significant” amount of strategic funding from Lions Gate Entertainment Corp. that VentureBeat hears is $40 million. The company had raised roughly $14.5 million previously, including from Granite Ventures and IDG Ventures.

    Wigo, a 13-month-old, Boston-based startup whose mobile application enables college students to find out where people they know are going out, has raised $1.5 million in seed funding led by Great Oaks Venture Capital, with participation from the startup foundry Blade, GGV CapitalGreylock Partners, KEC Ventures, and individual investors. The company has raised $2.2 million altogether. Business Insider takes a look at it here.

    Xero, an 8.5-year-old, Wellington, New Zealand-based publicly traded maker of online accounting software, has raised $100 million from Accel Partners, with its largest institutional investor, Matrix Capital Management, chipping in another $10.8 million. Financial Review has more here.

    —–

    New Funds

    Notation Capital, a new, Brooklyn-based seed-stage firm founded by former Betaworks colleagues Nicholas Chirls and Alex Lines, has closed its debut fund with $8 million. Venture Capital Dispatch has much more here.

    Institutional Venture Partners, the 35-year-old, Sand Hill Road firm is looking to raise a new fund, reports VentureWire. Its sources say the firm is targeting more than the $1 billion it raised in 2012 when it closed its fourteenth fund, too.

    Pereg Ventures, an early-stage venture capital firm that operates in the U.S. and Israel and is backed by Nielsen NV, has completed initial fundraising for its debut fund with $25.1 million, it tells VentureWire. It was initially targeting $50 million and it’s still aiming to raise more capital, it says.

    —–

    IPOs

    GoDaddy, the 18-year-old, Scottsdale, Az.-based online service that helps people and businesses set up web sites, took another step to becoming a publicly traded company yesterday, filing its sixth updated S-1 since filing to go public last June. The company is fast-growing but also a “big money loser,” notes USA Today, which continues to make its offering anything but certain. If the company does go public, it will be a long time in coming. GoDaddy tried going public in 2006, too, but it later pulled its offering. Former CEO Bob Parsons, who was replaced in 2012, said at the time that he yanked the offering because he found the quiet period that came along with it “suffocating” as it prevented him for doing radio, TV, or his-then weekly Internet radio show. (The company was also losing money, according to that earlier S-1.)

    —–

    Exits

    Meritage Pharma, a seven-year-old, San Diego-based company that’s been developing prescription products to treat gastrointestinal and atopic diseases, has been acquired for $70 million and up to another $175 million in potential future payouts. The buyer: Shire, a Dublin, Ireland-based company that targets markets such as rare diseases, neuroscience and internal medicine. Meritage had raised $35 million from Domain Associates, Latterell Venture Partners and Vertical Group.

    Toro, a 2.5-year-old, San Francisco-based startup that helps developers promote their apps on Facebook and was formerly known as Red Hot Labs, has been acquired by Google for undisclosed terms. Toro had raised $1.5 million in funding from investors, including Andreessen Horowitz, Greylock Partners, SV Angel, General Catalyst PartnersKeith Rabois, Chris Dixon, Bill Tai and Guitar Hero co-creators Charles Huang and Kai Huang. TechCrunch has the story here.

    —–

    People

    Yesterday, in a San Francisco courtroom, venture capitalist Trae Vassallo testified that like Ellen Pao — the former Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers partner who is suing the firm for gender discrimination and retaliation — she endured several upsetting episodes with a then (married) senior partner at the firm, Ajit Nazre. To wit, she said he invited her for drinks one night to discuss strategy but that during the meeting, he started to make advances. Vassallo, who is herself married and has three children, also recounted being invited by Nazre to a business meeting in New York where the two were to meet DoubleClick CEO David Rosenblatt. Rosenblatt never arrived, and Nazre later showed up in the door of Vassallo’s hotel room wearing a bathrobe and slippers, asking to be let in. More here.

    —–

    Jobs

    Citi Ventures is looking for an investing group head. The job is in New York.

    —–

    Essential Reads

    Apple was told to pay $532.9 million after a federal jury said yesterday that its iTunes software used a Texas company’s patented inventions without permission. Apple is pledging to appeal. Said Apple spokeswoman Kristin Huguet to Bloomberg: “Smartflash makes no products, has no employees, creates no jobs, has no U.S. presence, and is exploiting our patent system to seek royalties for technology Apple invented. We refused to pay off this company for the ideas our employees spent years innovating and unfortunately we have been left with no choice but to take this fight up through the court system.”

    —–

    Detours

    How an undocumented immigrant from Mexico became a star at Goldman Sachs.

    You know it’s cold when . . .

    —–

    Retail Therapy

    For all the DJs in the house. (Josh Felser, we’re looking at you.)

  • The Real Reveal in the Kleiner Case

    400“Pao didn’t have the necessary skills for the job. She didn’t even come close.”

    So said employment attorney Lynne Hermle yesterday in her opening comments about Ellen Pao, the CEO of Reddit and a former partner of Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers, the storied venture firm that Pao is suing for gender discrimination and retaliation.

    We don’t want to underestimate Hermle, who is notoriously tough and is presumably just getting warmed up. (The trial is expected to last four weeks.)

    Still, her strategy seems risky, given how unclear it is what skills are “necessary” to becoming a great venture capitalist.

    Certainly, Pao’s educational background is textbook, with degrees from Harvard’s business and law schools, not to mention an undergraduate degree in electrical engineering from Princeton. Pao also logged time at Microsoft, TellMe, and BEA Systems, giving her the kind of operating experience that is often (but not always) a prerequisite for the job.

    We’ll spare you the laundry list, but we could probably come up with hundreds of general partners with similar backgrounds. Among them: famed VC Jim Breyer of Accel Partners, who had part-time jobs at Hewlett-Packard and Apple, as well as a stint as a McKinsey consultant, before nabbing his MBA at Harvard and heading straight into Accel.

    Still, Hermle might argue, there’s much more to venture capital than education. In fact, she is already beginning to paint Pao as highly political, citing performance reviews that state Pao “seems to have a sense of entitlement rather than earning her position” and is “not viewed as a good team member” and “not 100 percent reliable” in supporting her colleagues. (Indeed, one detail that surfaced yesterday was that Pao suggested that Kleiner fire Trae Vassallo, a former Kleiner colleague who helped to lead deals in Nest Labs and Dropcam, among others.)

    The implication seems to be that trust and respect within a venture firm are key. And in theory, it’s easy to see why. No one wants to work with a backbiter.

    Unfortunately, backbiters are sometimes also rainmakers, and in venture capital, returns are the name of the game.

    Yes, it’s nice if you can find team members who are both supportive and know how to produce fat returns, but that’s not always the case. Because of the typical pay structure within a firm — with certain partners receiving far better economics than others — it’s often not so easy to be diplomatic, either.

    The truth is that what goes on inside most venture firms isn’t nearly so collegial as GPs would have their LPs believe. They may talk about chemistry; they may applaud each other publicly. But when it comes down to it, venture capital is as cutthroat a business as you’ll find. You make money for investors or you get kicked out — and anyone who has been around long enough can tell you that everything else is a façade.

    Much has already been written about Ellen Pao and whether and what her case against Kleiner tells us about gender discrimination inside venture firms.

    What’s more likely to be revealed in this very public case is that partnerships are far more fragile than the industry would have us believe.

  • StrictlyVC: February 24, 2015

    Hi, happy Tuesday, everyone!

    —–

    Top News in the A.M.

    Apple is now more than double the size of Exxon — and everyone else.

    —–

    A Team Player Strikes Out on His Own

    Like many venture capitalists, Ashmeet Sidana watched his firm, Foundation Capital, grow smaller during his nearly nine-year tenure, narrowing from a $750 million fund closed in 2008 to a $282 million fund closed in 2013.

    In some ways, its downsizing was inevitable. As the costs of starting both consumer-facing and enterprise startups has shrunk, the industry has largely become split among very small funds that can nurture these efficiently run startups, and very large funds that can help get the survivors either sold or taken public.

    It left Sidana, who parted ways with Foundation in 2013, thinking about a big opportunity that he could chase with fewer dollars. Specifically, he began obsessing about the huge gulf between the best data centers — built by the likes of Amazon and Google, where one system administrator can manage 10,000 servers — and traditional enterprise data centers, where one administrator still sometimes manages just 25 to 50 servers.

    Because those traditional enterprise data centers will never go away entirely, owing to privacy and security and latency concerns, and “because you have this radical efficiency on the other side,” entirely new companies will be created between the two, says Sidana.

    It’s that belief that has driven a number of Sidana’s angel investments over the last half year, including in startups Signal Fuse and Menlo Security (both of which remain in stealth mode).

    That thesis, along with Sidana’s track record – his past board seats include FreeWheel, acquired by Comcast for $350 million and Altor Networks, acquired by Juniper for $95 million – has also attracted the attention of institutional investors.

    Indeed, this morning, Sidana is officially taking the wraps off his new firm, Engineering Capital, as well as its debut, $32 million fund, whose LPs include Foundation Capital founder Kathyrn Gould, investor-academic Steve Blank, and the fund of funds firm Cendana Capital. (We made brief mention of the fund in yesterday’s newsletter.)

    Sidana hasn’t made any investments out of the fund yet, but he says that Engineering Capital plans to build a concentrated portfolio of between 12 to 15 companies across such sectors as storage, networking, management, and security. “Any company leveraging this trend in IT” is fair game, he says.

    Sidana will also be the first, anchor investor in them all if he has his way. “I’ll lead the round, price it, and take a board seat, which is different from a lot of other enterprise funds that are making small investments,” he says, calling his a“ rifle shot versus a shotgun approach.”

    Asked how he settled on his new brand, Sidana — who once ran product management for one of VMWare’s flagship products, and who plans to run his firm single-handedly for now — says Engineering Capital aims to represent “venture capital for engineers.”

    He adds with a laugh, “My joke is to ‘engineer’ the capital for them.”

    ——

    New Fundings

    Chewse, a four-year-old, L.A.-based platform that makes it easier for offices to order meals from certain restaurants at pre-determined times, has raised $1.7 million in seed funding, including from Telegraph HillInnoSpring, 500 Startups, Chris Sacca, Ben Ling, Richard Chen and other angel investors. TechCrunch has more here.

    GuideSpark, a seven-year-old, Menlo Park, Ca.-based company that provides employers with customizable video templates for conveying human resources information in a more digestible way, has raised $22.2 million in Series C funding led by Meritech Capital Partners, with participation from earlier backers IDG Ventures, New Enterprise Associates and Storm Ventures. The company has now raised $42.4 million to date, shows Crunchbase.

    HomeLane, a seven-month-old, Bangalore, India-based company that boasts of integrated interior design and manufacturing capabilities that allow its customers to customize their homes, has raised $4.5 million in Series A funding led by Sequoia Capital, with participation from Aarin Capital. YourStory has more here.

    Knowmail, a year-old, Tel Aviv, Israel-based developer of email-management software for businesses, has raised $1.2 million in seed financing from Plus Ventures, 2B Angels, AfterDox and INE Ventures.

    LocoMotive Labs, a 2.5-year-old, Berkeley, Ca.-based developer of play-based educational apps for children with special needs, has raised $4 million in Series A funding co-led by SoftBank Ventures Korea and TAL Education Group. Earlier backers, including D3Jubilee, K9 VenturesKapor Capital, and NewSchools Venture Fund, also participated in the round. The company has now raised $4.6 million altogether, shows Crunchbase.

    Mack Weldon, a four-year-old, New York-based company that makes “high-tech” socks, underwear, and undershirts, has raised $4 million in Series A funding from RiverPark Ventures, Bridge Investments and Lyrical Partners. The company has now raised $5.9 million altogether.

    Metamarkets Group, a nearly five-year-old, San Francisco-based analytics platform for buyers and sellers of programmatic advertising, has raised $15 million in Series C funding from City National Bank, Data Collective, IA Ventures, Khosla Ventures, True Ventures, Village Ventures and individual investors. The company has now raised $43.5 million altogether, shows Crunchbase.

    Prexton Therapeutics, a three-year-old, Geneva, Switzerland-based company that’s developing therapeutic compounds to treat central nervous system conditions including Parkinson’s disease, has raised 8.7 million euros ($9.8 million) in Series A funding from Sunstone Capital and Ysios Capital, with participation from earlier investor MS Ventures.

    Roadster Online, a year-old, San Francisco-based company that promises to find great prices on new cars for customers, then deliver the car to their doors, has raised $1.8 million in seed funding from undisclosed sources, reports VentureWire.

    Sikka Software, an 11-year-old, Milpitas, Ca.-based software-as-a-service company with a practice-management platform for dentists, optometrists, veterinarians and the like, has raised $5.5 million in Series B funding led by new investor Sierra Ventures, with participation from earlier backer ATA Ventures.

    Space Time Insight, an eight-year-old, San Mateo, Ca.-based company whose analytics software aims to help companies in asset-intensive industries (like utility companies) make faster, better decisions, has raised $8 million in funding from the energy supplier E.ON SE and NEC Corp. The company has now raised $50 million altogether, including from EnerTech Capital, Novus Energy Partners, and Zouk Capital, shows Crunchbase.

    Vigilant Biosciences, a four-year-old, Miami, Fl.-based company whose point-of-care and lab-based products help healthcare practitioners to more easily assess the risk of oral cancer, has raised $5.5 million in Series B funding from White Owl Capital Partners, venVelo, the Florida Institute for the Commercialization of Public Research, and earlier, unnamed investors. The company has now raised $7.8 million to date.

    —–

    IPOs

    MaxPoint Interactive, a nine-year-old, Morrisville, N.C.-based SaaS platform that runs targeted digital marketing campaigns to drive in-store sales, yesterday announced plans to raise $75 million in an IPO by offering 6.5 million shares at between $10.50 and $12.50 per share. The company, backed by $11 million from Trinity Ventures and Madrona Venture Group, will be entering a public market that’s hasn’t been kind to ad tech since early last year.

    —–

    Exits

    Authy, a three-year-old, San Francisco-based startup with a two-factor authentication app, has been acquired by the cloud software service Twilio for undisclosed terms. The app will continue as a standalone service, but its capabilities will be added to Twilio’s API, reports Recode. Authy had raised $3.8 million from investors, including Y CombinatorCorazon Capital, Salesforce Ventures, StartCaps Ventures, and Data Collective.

    Camel Audio, a 15-year-old, London-based company known for its range of plug-ins, synthesizers, effects, and sound libraries, appears to have been quietly acquired by Apple. MacRumors has the story here.

    Heptares Therapeutics, an eight-year-old, Welwyn Garden, England-based clinical-stage biotechnology company that’s been developing treatments for Alzheimer’s and other diseases, has been acquired by Sosei Group, a Japanese biopharmaceutical company, for up to $400 million, if certain milestones are met. Heptares had raised at least $21 million from investors, including Takeda Ventures and Clarus Ventures, shows Crunchbase.

    Kindermint, a two-year-old, Tampa, Fl.-based online resale store that specializes in gently used kids’ clothing, has been acquired by the six-year-old, San Francisco-based used-clothing retailer ThredUp for undisclosed terms. Kindermint appears to have raised a tiny seed round from an undisclosed source; ThredUp has meanwhile raised roughly $50 million from investors, including Upfront Ventures, Highland Capital Partners, Trinity Ventures, and Redpoint Ventures.

    —–

    People

    The rapper (and, more recently, startup investor) Chamillionaire is the newest entrepreneur-in-residence at L.A.-based Upfront Ventures. Partner Mark Suster explains why here.

    The high-profile showdown between Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers and former Ellen Pao — who is suing the firm for $16 million for gender discrimination and retaliation — kicks off at 9.am. PST this morning in San Francisco Superior Court. The San Jose Mercury News is promising readers a play-by-play here. Meanwhile, Fortune has posted both sides’ pre-trial briefs here.

    James Proud, a 23-year-old entrepreneur with a new sleep tracking device called Sense, receives high praise in Wired, even if it’s “too soon to say whether Proud’s sleep monitor will develop into a credible success story.”

    Troubled payday lender Wonga has just laid off 325 employees, sold off a unit of its business, and lost its chairman. More here.

    —–

    Job Listings

    IDG Ventures is looking to hire an associate. The job is in San Francisco’s Presidio park.

    —–

    Data

    A typical billionaire has $3.1 billion. Here’s where most of them live.

    —–

    Essential Reads

    Digital natives still love books. “I can’t imagine reading Tocqueville or understanding him electronically,” says a junior at American University. “That would just be awful.”

    Pebble thinks it can hold off the tech giants by going back to its Kickstarter roots with its new watch, called Time.

    —–

    Detours

    Ranked: The salary bump you can expect from a graduate degree, by major.

    Mad Magazine’s best spoof ads.

    The Googlifier.

    —–

    Retail Therapy

    AdVenture Capitalist.

    Backpacks for photojournalists. (H/T: InsideHook)

  • StrictlyVC: February 23, 2015

    Good morning, everyone! Hope you had a wonderful weekend. (Web visitors, this version of today’s morning email is easier to read than what you see below.)

    —–

    Top News in the A.M.

    Google has just launched YouTube Kids.

    Twitter gets behind the FCC’s “net neutrality” proposal.

    To eliminate bugs within iOS, Apple is reportedly planning to launch the first-ever public beta program for it, beginning with the iOS 8.3 next month. What that means: any iPhone user will be able to give Apple’s unreleased iPhone software a test run before its final release (though the program will be restricted to 100,000 people).

    —–

    Kathryn Gould: The Kingmaker in the Background

    Most venture capitalists don’t curse like sailors. Most can’t boast a 90 percent internal rate of return over the course of their investing careers, either. Kathyrn Gould — the inimitable founder of Foundation Capital, who today spends much of her time today on her vineyard in the foothills of California’s Sierra mountain range — is known for both.

    In select circles, Gould, who got her start in VC in the late ’80s at the now-defunct firm Merrill, Pickard, Anderson & Eyre, is also known for mentoring up-and-coming investors. We talked recently about her views on the industry – and which VCs she’s betting on right now.

    You used to make angel investments, including a $50,000 investment in the software business Demandforce that returned $2 million when the company was acquired by Intuit in 2012. Why stop?

    I made three angel investments, and I wouldn’t say I won’t do more, but I’m a perfectionist and for me, making angel investments [requires as much time and effort] as running a firm. My lifetime IRR is 90 percent and I’m not going to mess with my numbers just to screw around.

    [Early-stage Investor] Mike Maples and I put our personal money into Demandforce before we started Floodgate, but chance favors a prepared mind, and while I could still [make angel bets], I don’t want to.

    When you say that “we” started Floodgate, what do you mean?

    Mike [who logged time at Silicon Graphics and Trilogy Software, then cofounded a company, Motive, that went public in 2004] briefly floated through Foundation Capital [in the early 2000s] so I knew him, and we used to strategize about what was happening in venture business.

    He’d started to dabble with his own money, including investing in Twitter, which wasn’t an obvious winner. I’d retired [from Foundation in 2006], but I said, “If I were to do [another fund], I’d raise a small amount of money” [because of the changing economics of startups]. And we said, “Sh_t, let’s put together a business plan and do this thing.” So we mapped out how we’d do it, I helped him with his slides, and I introduced him to my three best investors at Weathergage, Horsley Bridge Partners, and the University of Chicago, and there he was.

    Are you an LP in Floodgate?

    Yes, though I help these guys, then invest in their firms, but I don’t get any special treatment.

    Who else have you helped get started?

    We [at Foundation] were investors in [entrepreneur-investor] Mar Hershenson’s companies. We invested in her [analog circuit company Barcelona Design], and when she developed this consumer penchant and hooked up with [angel investor] Pejman Nozad to launch their venture fund, I said, “Let me help you; I know classy institutional investors that will invest.” Even though I loved what they were doing, their written business plan was a goddamned mess. It was very random. And your slides have to be credible to go raise money from decent investors. I still see [Nozad and Hershenson] all the time to talk about things that are happening and give them ideas, and I’m an investor [in their fund].

    Most recently, I worked with Ashmeet Sidana, who was a GP at Foundation Capital for [nine years] and [left in September 2013] and started doing his own angel investing. We’d get together at a coffee shop in Portola Valley and I’d ask him what he was doing, and I was like, “This stuff is f_cking great, you should be doing this in a bigger way.” So we wrote his business plan, created his slides, I introduced him to several of his investors – he also has several Indian investors – and he just closed his first solo fund with $33 million. I think his firm, Engineering Capital, will be very successful.

    People will read this and start reaching out to you for introductions.

    I don’t want people calling me. I’m not going to help you raise your super sucky fund. I’ve know Mar for 20 years, Maples for 15. I’ve known Ashmeet for 15 years.

    I feel like I’m in the best of the best [of these small funds]. I think all the good ones are getting started or have started.

    For more of our interview with Gould, including the advice she always gives newer investors, click here.

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    Ballou PR

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    New Fundings

    AlleyNYC, a two-year-old, New York-based co-working space, has raised $16 million in funding led by Vandewater Capital Holdings, with participation from Entrepreneur Media.

    Brickell Biotech, a six-year-old, Miami, Fl.-based pharmaceutical company focused on acquiring, developing, and commercializing drug therapies for skin conditions, has raised $10 million in Series C financing from undisclosed investors. The company has now raised $25.4 million altogether, including from Palisade Capital Management and the South Korean beauty products company AmorePacific Ventures.

    DriverUp, a newly launched, Dallas-based company that hopes to draw accredited investors into the business of auto lending, has raised $50 million in Series A funding led by Emerald Development Managers and RRE Ventures. You can check out its site here.

    Grabble, a 1.5-year-old, London-based social fashion discovery and commerce platform, has raised £1.2 million ($1.9 million) in funding from a long list of mostly European angel investors.

    M4JAM (Money For Jam), a 10-month-old, Cape Town, South Africa-based platform that breaks large projects into smaller jobs and enlists independent contractors to complete them, has raised an undisclosed amount of funding from Tencent Holdings and Naspers, via their joint WeChat Africa venture. TechCrunch has more on why the deal is strategically interesting here.

    Main Street Hub, a 4.5-year-old, Austin, Tx.-based company that helps small, independently run businesses manage their social media marketing, has received $20 million in debt financing from Silicon Valley Bank. The company has now raised a total of $40 million, including from Harrison Metal and Bessemer Venture Partners. TechCrunch has more here.

    NoBroker, a two-year-old, Bangalore, India-based peer-to-peer property listings startup that aims to squeeze brokers out of the rental process, has raised $3 million in Series A funding from SAIF Partners and Fulcrum Ventures. According to TechCrunch, the company had previously raised an undisclosed amount of seed funding. More here.

    OrbitHCI, a five-month-old, Boston-based company that’s developing a watch and a tablet that aim to make it easier for the elderly to remotely see and communicate with loved ones, has raised $1 million in seed funding from Google Ventures and Atlas Venture. Venture Capital Dispatch has much more here.

    Pepperfry, a four-year-old, Bangalore, India-based home and lifestyle e-commerce platform, is reportedly talking with new and earlier investors about a $70 million to $80 million Series D round. The company has so far raised $28 million across three rounds to date, including from Norwest Venture Partners and Bertelsmann. BusinessLine has the story here.

    Philz Coffee, a 12-year-old, San Francisco-based chain of coffee shops, has raised $15 million in Series B funding led by earlier investor Summit Partners, with participation from Cowboy Ventures, Crunchfund and individual investors. The company has now raised $30 million altogether.

    Postmates, a nearly four-year-old, on-demand delivery service, has raised $35 million in Series C funding from earlier backer Spark Capital, reports Techcrunch. Postmates is a service that lets users order anything from local stores and have it delivered directly to their home for a small delivery fee. The company has raised a total of $58 million, including from Matrix Partners, SoftTech VC, Crosslink Capital, Scott Banister, Naval Ravikant, Russell Simmons, Thomas Korte, Shervin Pishevar, Dave Morin and David Sacks.

    Round.me, a year-old, Palo Alto, Ca.-based company that turns panoramic photos into virtual tours, has raised a $3 million in funding led by April Capital. TechCrunch has more here.

    Tilson Technology Management, an 18-year-old, Portland, Me.-based company that builds telecommunications networks, has raised $2.2 million in funding from Rand Capital, a Buffalo-based venture firm, and CEI Ventures of Maine. The company has raised $2.9 million altogether, it says.

    TrueFacet, a 14-month-old, New York-based platform that sells pre-owned jewelry, has raised $1.7 million in seed funding from Founders’ Co-Op,Maveron, Social Leverage, Trilogy Equity Partners and individual investors. The company had earlier raised $118,000 in funding from Techstars.

    Urban Airship, a five-year-old, Portland, Ore.-based mobile marketing company, has raised $21 million in Series D funding, including from Franklin Park & Associates and QuestMark Partners. The company has now raised $67.6 million altogether, including from August CapitalFoundry Group, True Ventures and Verizon Ventures.

    Viv Labs, a 2.5-year-old, TK-based artificial-intelligence startup whose three cofounders also cofounded the virtual personal assistant company Siri (famously acquired by Apple in 2010), has raised $12.5 million in Series B funding. The round was led by Iconiq Capital, with participation from earlier backer Horizon Venture and Pritzker Group Venture Capital. The company has now raised $22.5 million altogether, reports TechCrunch.

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    New Funds

    Homebrew, the nearly two-year-old, San Francisco-based early-stage venture firm cofounded by Hunter Walk and Satya Patel, has closed its second fund with $50 million, up from the $35 million it had raised for its inaugural fund. Walk, who says the firm has backed 17 startups to date, writes about the firm’s new fund here. Among Homebrew’s newest investments is Eero, a year-old, San Francisco-based company whose routers aim to blanket its customers’ homes in fast, reliable WiFi.

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    IPOs

    eASIC, a 16-year-old, Santa Clara, Ca.-based integrated-circuits company, has filed to raise up to $75 million in an IPO, despite an inhospitable environment for chip companies. One analyst tells the San Jose Mercury News that it has a “tough row to hoe.” Says another: “I’m not sure this IPO is going to go through, to be honest with you.” The company’s biggest backers include Seagate, which owns 14.6 percent of the company;Khosla Ventures, which owns 20.8 percent; Crescendo Ventures, which owns 15 percent; and Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers, which owns 8.8 percent. More here.

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    Exits

    Airpost, a two-year-old, Toronto-based startup that helps IT managers monitor their employees’ cloud applications, has been acquired by Box for undisclosed terms. More here.

    Flexus Biosciences, a two-year-old, San Carlos, Ca.-based immune-oncology company, has been acquired by Bristol-Myers Squibb in a deal worth up to $1.25 billion, including an $800 million up-front payment and up to $450 million in future payments depending on various milestones. Flexus has raised just $38 million from investors, including the publicly traded drug maker Celgene, Kleiner Perkins Caulfield & Byers, and The Column Group. Xconomy has more here.

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    People

    Austin Ventures is closing shop.

    Jon Bradford, the head of TechStars London, is leaving the network, reports TechCrunch. Bradford has been involved in accelerator programs for years, including as founder of a U.K.-based accelerator called Ignite and cofounder and CEO of Springboard Cambridge & London. No word yet on his next move.

    Josh Miller, a product manager at Facebook, is among a growing number of privacy-minded “Tweet deleters,” reports Fusion. Explains Miller of why he wrote a piece of code that deletes his tweets after seven days, “My opinions aren’t permanent in my head (I often change my mind over time), and they’re not permanent when shared around the dinner table (nobody is recording our conversations) . . . So it just doesn’t make sense to me that they would be permanent online.”

    Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg talks with Bloomberg about the company’s mission to get everyone in the world online: “The reality is just that a lot people can’t afford to pay for data access in some of these areas; then they probably aren’t ad markets, and it’s probably not going to be a place where it’s going to be particularly profitable [for Facebook] in the near term. In fact, we’ll probably lose a bunch of money—just because supporting Facebook as a service, and storing the photos and content that people want to share, costs money. We probably won’t offset it by making much.”

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    Jobs

    Twilio is looking for a new head of corporate and business development. The job is in San Francisco.

    Zynga is looking for a director of corporate development. The job is in San Francisco.

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    Essential Reads

    Google’s Android Auto team built its own driver distraction lab to help determine which tasks people do frequently while driving, and which should be banned, reports the New York Times. According to its story: “Music is most definitely in. Streaming video? Most definitely not. Most social media will also be blocked, and texts can be sent only with voice commands.”

    How Etsy alienated crafters and lost its soul.

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    Detours

    New, fascinating work by the digital artist Erik Johansson.

    How we talk about our teachers.

    Going commando takes on new meaning.

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    Retail Therapy

    You could buy a second home in Healdsburg. A castle outside of Paris would be more interesting, though.


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