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Strategies & Market Trends : The New Economy and its Winners -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Lizzie Tudor who wrote (23772)3/24/2005 11:41:36 PM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 57684
 
Colubris collects $15M in Series C funding

masshightech.com

03/08/2005 10:30 AM

Waltham’s Colubris Networks Inc. continues its rapid growth by securing a $15 million third institutional round of funding, led by Menlo Park Calif.-based Doll Capital Management. The new funds bring Colubris’ total funding to $36 million.

Colubris manufactures wireless local area network (WLAN) products for service providers and enterprises worldwide. The company secured an exclusive deal with Tennessee-based Power and Telephone Supply Co. in January and is reporting a fourfold sales growth year-over-year.

The new funds will be used to help expand the company’s expansion internationally, according to a company statement.

The WLAN market has garnered industry buzz of late, as the demand for wi-fi services has increased worldwide. Framingham-based analyst group IDC predicts the worldwide WLAN carrier and enterprise infrastructure market could grow by an average of 17 percent annually over the next three years, topping $2 billion by 2008.

Additional investors in Colubris’ funding round include Prism Venture Partners, Mid-Atlantic Venture Funds, Grand Banks Capital and The Business Development Bank of Canada.



To: Lizzie Tudor who wrote (23772)3/25/2005 12:21:18 AM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 57684
 
'Google Effect' Spurs M&A Activity

ventureeconomics.com

Constance Loizos

Mar 24, 2005

Wonder what's behind the recent spate of Internet-related M&A? The answer is Google. The search company's “rise has generated a fair amount of fear and uncertainty in established players, who feel compelled to be more aggressive in adding new services and features,” says venture capitalist Bill Burnham. Burnham is a managing director at Celsius Capital in Palo Alto, Calif., and a former e-commerce analyst at Credit Suisse First Boston. He says that it's no coincidence that AskJeeves, Flickr and Snapfish were snapped up last week.

Google's market cap hit $49 billion, topping eBay's $48 billion and Yahoo's $43 billion, giving it plenty of currency to go on a buying binge. Tor Braham, co-head of technology investment banking at Deutsche Bank Securities in New York, agrees that Google's rise is behind the recent rash of M&A. He says that he's currently working on 15 Internet M&A transactions. “There's a huge wave of consolidation happening and we're still only in the second to third inning,” he says.

Over at Perseus Bank in San Francisco, managing director Steven Fletcher is fielding an increasing number of calls from companies looking to buy advertising and search technologies. “Google's a huge factor,” he says. “We have a dialogue with most of the major Internet players and all of them are looking for acquisitions driven largely by the development of the advertising/search space. I'd say that there's much more activity than last year.”

The whole ecosystem around Google is good for venture-backed startups looking for an exit, says Gary Little, a general partner at Morgenthaler Ventures in Palo Alto, Calif. “From an investor standpoint, it's the best example of the new economics of the Internet in terms of attracting and monetizing users,” he explains. “The fact that Google and Yahoo are growing so fast and so profitably is an indicator that their customers are also growing profitably on the Web. Otherwise, those customers wouldn't be spending the money that's going into Google's and Yahoo's coffers.”

Last week, Barry Diller's InterActive Corp. (IAC), which owns Expedia and Hotels.com, announced its $1.9 billion acquisition of publicly traded search engine AskJeeves in an effort to compete with Google in the online advertising market. Fletcher suggests that DoubleClick, the once high-flying online advertising company, may be IAC's next big acquisition.

Three other deals were more subtly reactionary — and doubtless less expensive. Yahoo bought the Canadian photo-sharing site Flickr, which lets people upload digital images from computers and camera phones, publish them in their blogs, and share them with other Flickr users. In short, it allows Yahoo to better compete with Google in the fast growing business of social networking, which Google entered into last year with the launch of its social network service called Orkut. Meanwhile, Hewlett-Packard Co. snapped up photo site Snapfish for similar reasons, and newspaper giants Knight Ridder, Tribune and Gannett each bought 25% of Topix.Net, a search company that scans the Web and aggregates headlines from thousands of sites by topic and geography. No terms were disclosed for any of the deals.

Flickr and Topix.net were bootstrapped by their founders and hadn't received institutional backing; Snapfish was bought from a company called District Photo Inc., which purchased it from its venture investors in 2001. Companies, such as Yahoo and HP, are also investing in nascent technologies that help them compete with Google, says Brad Burnham, a managing director of Union Square Ventures in New York (and no relation to Bill Burnham).

As an example, Burnham of Union Square points to Flickr, which “had no revenue and no obvious way of getting revenue,” he says. “The thing about it is that it's a new way to get information,” he says. “Google transformed the ability to find the information that you wanted to find.”

Newer upstarts, such as Flickr and RSS startup Technorati as well as Del.icio.us, a social bookmarks manager, are broadening what people can find are fundamentally different than search, he says. Technorati and Del.icio.us. have not been acquired. Technorati has raised an undisclosed amount of venture funding from August Capital, Mobius Venture Capital, and Draper Fisher Jurvetson; Del.icio.us has not announced any institutional backing.



To: Lizzie Tudor who wrote (23772)3/25/2005 8:19:46 AM
From: stockman_scott  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 57684
 
Top gun: Tableau nabs software pioneer
_______________________________________

By Jeff Meisner
Staff Writer
Puget Sound Business Journal (Seattle)
From the March 21, 2005 print edition
bizjournals.com

Just weeks after launching his third startup, Seattle software pioneer Jeremy Jaech has joined fast-growing data-mining company Tableau Software Inc. as an adviser.

Tableau makes software designed to help large businesses and government agencies today -- organize enormous silos of data.

Jaech, who co-founded online calendar and events company Trumba Corp. in July 2004, is also the founder of Aldus Corp. and Visio Corp. He sold Aldus to Adobe Corp. for $525 million in 1994 and Visio to Microsoft Corp. for $1.3 billion in 1999.

Jaech's is the latest marquee name added to a growing roster of technology veterans at the 18-employee data-mining startup, which should double to 36 by the end of 2005.

Tableau's chief technology officer is Pat Hanrahan, a co-founder of computer animation pioneer Pixar. Hanrahan won two Academy Awards for his work at Pixar.

Hanrahan, a Ph.D. in computer science, was instrumental in Tableau's landing $5 million from blue-chip Silicon Valley venture capital firm New Enterprise Associates in August 2004.

NEA venture partner Forest Baskett, a Tableau director, is a professor in computer science and electrical engineering at Stanford and a veteran of Silicon Graphics.

As an adviser to Tableau, Jaech will act as a sounding board for the startup's CEO, Christian Chabot, a former venture associate of another powerful Silicon Valley venture firm, Mobius Venture Capital.

His main role is to guide the startup as it tries to break into the data-mining sector.

Tableau's software uses 3-D graphics to help users recognize and show relationships and patterns culled from vast amounts of data.

Tableau is quickly gaining market share, landing Fortune 500 customers such as Safeway, Wells Fargo Bank, Google Inc. and America Online.

Jaech said it's critical in 2005 that Tableau land even more top customers so it can prove its applications will make it easier for large organizations to make sense of their piles of data.

In the coming weeks, Chabot expects to announce a distribution agreement with one of the world's largest database makers. Chabot would not disclose which company Tableau is dealing with.

The agreement will give the startup access to a vast array of potential customers, Chabot said.

Most of Tableau's technology is the result of research conducted by a small group of Stanford University researchers, led by Hanrahan.

In 1997, the U.S. Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency contracted Hanrahan to develop graphics software that makes it easier to understand and query the information contained on databases.

Hanrahan and his Stanford cohorts worked for five years on the project. By 2002, they had a working graphical interface for the government called VizQL. It later became the underlying technology at Tableau.

Seeing commercial possibilities, Hanrahan teamed up with Chabot, an alum from the Stanford Business School, and co-founded Tableau in 2003. By the time Hanrahan called NEA's Baskett, Tableau was already cash-flow positive, said NEA general partner Scott Sandell.

"I had a meeting with Tableau last June in Menlo Park," said Sandell, a Tableau director along with Baskett. "I was immediately taken by the project."

Sandell and Baskett had to fight to get in on the deal. Tableau already had term sheets from five other venture firms.

"I don't think they've used a nickel of our money. They didn't really need it. It's just sitting in the bank," Sandell said.



To: Lizzie Tudor who wrote (23772)3/25/2005 8:26:42 AM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 57684
 
A Unified Theory of VC Suckage

______________________________

paulgraham.com

March 2005

A couple months ago I got an email from a recruiter asking if I was interested in being a "technologist in residence" at a new venture capital fund. I think the idea was to play Karl Rove to the VCs' George Bush.

I considered it for about four seconds. Work for a VC fund? Ick.

One of my most vivid memories from our startup is going to visit Greylock, the famous Boston VCs. [1] They were the most arrogant people I've met in my life. And I've met a lot of arrogant people.

I'm not alone in feeling this way, of course. Even a VC friend of mine dislikes VCs. "Assholes," he says.

But lately I've been learning more about how the VC world works, and a few days ago it hit me that there's a reason VCs are the way they are. It's not so much that the business attracts jerks, or even that the power they wield corrupts them. The real problem is the way they're paid.

The problem with VC funds is that they're funds. Like the managers of mutual funds or hedge funds, VCs get paid a percentage of the money they manage. Usually about 2% a year. So they want the fund to be huge: hundreds of millions of dollars, if possible. But that means each partner ends up being responsible for investing a lot of money. And since one person can only manage so many deals, each deal has to be for multiple millions of dollars.

This turns out to explain nearly all the characteristics of VCs that founders hate.

It explains why VCs take so agonizingly long to make up their minds, and why their due diligence feels like a body cavity search. [2] With so much at stake, they have to be paranoid.

It explains why they steal your ideas. Every founder knows that VCs will tell your secrets to your competitors if they end up investing in them. It's not unheard of for VCs to meet you when they have no intention of funding you, just to pick your brain for a competitor. This prospect makes naive founders clumsily secretive. Experienced founders treat it as a cost of doing business. Either way it sucks. But again, the only reason VCs are so sneaky is the giant deals they do. With so much at stake, they have to be devious.

It explains why VCs tend to interfere in the companies they invest in. They want to be on your board not just so that they can advise you, but so that they can watch you. Often they even install a new CEO. Yes, he may have extensive business experience. But he's also their man: these newly installed CEOs always play something of the role of a political commissar in a Red Army unit. With so much at stake, VCs can't resist micromanaging you.

The huge investments themselves are something founders would dislike, if they realized how damaging they can be. VCs don't invest $x million because that's the amount you need, but because that's the amount the structure of their business requires them to invest. Like steroids, these sudden huge investments can do more harm than good. Google survived enormous VC funding because it could legitimately absorb large amounts of money. They had to buy a lot of servers and a lot of bandwidth to crawl the whole Web. Less fortunate startups just end up hiring armies of people to sit around having meetings.

In principle you could take a huge VC investment, put it in treasury bills, and continue to operate frugally. You just try it. Investor money runs out of a startup's bank account as if it had legs.

And of course giant investments mean giant valuations. They have to, or there's not enough stock left to keep the founders interested. You might think a high valuation is a great thing. Many founders do. But you can't eat paper. You can't benefit from a high valuation unless you can somehow achieve what those in the business (with no apparent embarrassment) call a "liquidity event," and the higher your valuation, the narrower your options for doing that. Many a founder would be happy to sell his company for $15 million, but VCs who've just invested at a pre-money valuation of $8 million won't hear of that. You're rolling the dice again, whether you like it or not.

Back in 1997, one of our competitors raised $20 million in a single round of VC funding. This was at the time more than the valuation of our entire company. Was I worried? Not at all: I was delighted. It was like watching a car you're chasing turn down a street that you know has no outlet.

Their smartest move at that point would have been to take every penny of the $20 million and use it to buy us. We would have sold. Their investors would have been furious of course. But I think the main reason they never considered this was that they never imagined we could be had so cheap. They probably assumed we were on the same VC gravy train they were.

In fact we only spent about $2 million in our entire existence. And that gave us flexibility. We could sell ourselves to Yahoo for $50 million, and everyone was delighted. If our competitor had done that, the last round of investors would presumably have lost money. I assume they could have vetoed such a deal. But no one those days was paying a lot more than Yahoo. So unless their founders could pull off an IPO (which would be difficult with Yahoo as a competitor), they had no choice but to ride the thing down.

The puffed-up companies that went public during the Bubble didn't do it just because they were pulled into it by unscrupulous investment bankers. Most were pushed just as hard from the other side by VCs who'd invested at high valuations, leaving an IPO as the only way out. The only people dumber were retail investors. So it was literally IPO or bust. Or rather, IPO then bust, or just bust.

Add up all the evidence of VCs' behavior, and the resulting personality is not attractive. In fact, it's the classic villain: alternately cowardly, greedy, sneaky, and overbearing.

I used to take it for granted that VCs were like this. Complaining that VCs were jerks used to seem as naive to me as complaining that users didn't read the reference manual. Of course VCs were jerks. How could it be otherwise?

But I realize now that they're not intrinsically jerks. VCs are like car salesmen or petty bureaucrats: the nature of their work turns them into jerks.

I've met a few VCs I like. Mike Moritz seems a good guy. He even has a sense of humor, which is almost unheard of among VCs. From what I've read about John Doerr, he sounds like a good guy too, almost a hacker. But they work for the very best VC funds. And my theory explains why they'd tend to be different: just as the very most popular kids don't have to persecute nerds, the very best VCs don't have to act like VCs. They get the pick of all the best deals. So they don't have to be so paranoid and sneaky, and they can choose those rare companies, like Google, that will actually benefit from the giant sums they're compelled to invest.

VCs often complain that in their business there's too much money chasing too few deals. Few realize that this also describes a flaw in the way funding works at the level of individual firms.

Perhaps this was the sort of strategic insight I was supposed to come up with as a "technologist in residence." If so, the good news is that they're getting it for free. The bad news is it means that if you're not one of the very top funds, you're condemned to be the bad guys.

Notes

[1] After Greylock booted founder Philip Greenspun out of ArsDigita, he wrote a hilarious but also very informative essay about it.

[2] Since most VCs aren't tech guys, the technology side of their due diligence tends to be like a body cavity search by someone with a faulty knowledge of human anatomy. After a while we were quite sore from VCs attempting to probe our nonexistent database orifice.

No, we don't use Oracle. We just store the data in files. Our secret is to use an OS that doesn't lose our data. Which OS? FreeBSD. Why do you use that instead of Windows NT? Because it's better and it doesn't cost anything. What, you're using a freeware OS?

How many times that conversation was repeated. Then when we got to Yahoo, we found they used FreeBSD and stored their data in files too.



To: Lizzie Tudor who wrote (23772)3/25/2005 10:03:52 AM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 57684
 
"Despite rising mortgage interest rates and slowing sales, California home prices comparing February 2004 to February 2005 continued their phenomenal rise."

sfexaminer.com