Thursday, August 14, 2008

On Your Marks

At the Start Conference last week, although it was not a "deal flow" event, we did get to hear some pitches from some startups. We usually see thirty or forty companies at a GCN event, all of them explicitly seeking private investment, so it was interesting to see a few companies that were simply giving some examples of pitches (and that weren't coached by us).

There were a couple of companies with some market traction I wanted to feature here. Hopefully, we'll feature them at a future GCN conference, as well. But for the benefit of our investor network, I though it worthwhile to mention them on our blog.

Apture provides publishers with multimedia integration capabilities. This post is littered with examples of how it works. Pretty simple; you just highlight the text you want to associate with multimedia, and a box pops up with examples of relevant content from all over the web. You select the item (or items) you want to link and Apture does the rest. When the reader mouses over the link, windows pop up with the linked content. Really just about the coolest thing since draft beer.

Get Satisfaction is a customer service community platform that enables customers and the companies they do business with to interact, collaborate, and resolve issues. A user can ask a question, report a problem, or share an idea about how to get the most out of the product or service. Businesses can respond directly to address the issue, and other users can join in with their fixes, workarounds, hacks, and other advice. So far Twitter, LinkedIn, Doppler, PBWiki are using Get Satisfaction to create stronger relationships with their users. I expect a lot more will, as well.

Monday, August 11, 2008

Ready? Begin.

Big fun last week at the Start conference. About 400 aspiring entrepreneurs filled the Cowell Theater at Fort Mason Center in San Francisco to hear from successful startup vets, service providers, and private investors.

Structured as a series of conversations moderated by Bryan Mason and Jeffrey Veen, the discussions included war stories, practical advice, some comedic horseplay, in an interactive web 2.0 environment.

This last element was the least successful, and the part that I most wanted to see in practice. As it happens, when you put hundreds of laptops in a small room with insufficient WiFi coverage and next to no power outlets, the utopian vision of open source brainstorming quickly becomes clouded. But the idea was cool, even if the execution was less than ideal. I'm sure next year they'll do a better job of that.

Still, some folks did manage to get their questions and comments through to the online moderator, George Oates using Twitter (I gave up on the laptop after lunch and followed the virtual deliberation on my cell phone) and Meebo.

We've been putting on events for entrepreneurs, angel investors, and venture partners for going on a decade, so I was especially curious to see this program. In part because I didn't know anything about it until about four days before it happened. I hadn't seen any conventional marketing; no email blasts, no broadsides, no partner communications, etc. I learned about it through a tweet from @missrogue, who casually told the 9000+ people paying attention to her Twitter stream that she was registering for it.

Naturally, I followed the link she thoughtfully furnished, signed up, and went down for the program. What was very interesting to me was that this was not being presented by a conference organization like GCN, IBF DEMO, etc., but rather it was dreamed up about two months ago by Mason and Veen, and cultivated virally through the various social media proliferating like mushrooms after a hard rain.

And it was a pretty good show, too. Some nice features included the interactive engagement with the audience (which could have worked better, but still cool), the peer-to-peer content, and the craft-brewed draft beer during the afternoon break.

There were also some very interesting new companies giving their venture pitch, about which more in the next installment.

Monday, July 28, 2008

Orking Cows

There is a hot and happening trend in knowledge work these days. It seems to have emerged a couple years ago, largely spontaneously, as disaffected technology freelancers got fed up with the isolation of working in their home offices and the turbulent chaos of working in cafes.

My first inkling of this came when reading a special report in the Economist magazine last April, which discussed the "new nomads" who work wherever they can find signal, whether on their laptop, PDA, smart phones, or blackberries. You see them at Starbucks, the library, and other areas where WiFi is promiscuously available.

On a recent road trip, my GCN colleagues and I sketched out a business plan to create a mental health club for nomadic innovators, a "venture community center" where entrepreneurs could work on their businesses among others of the similar inclinations, with access to GCN's network of domain experts, coaches, investors, etc. When I began to look into it, I discovered we'd reinvented the wheel, albeit a fairly shiny new wheel with a lot of permutations.

The term of art in the movement (it's so embryonic as to hardly constitute an industry -- yet) is "". It manifests in a number of models, but the common features are a community workplace occupied by people working on their own projects, but actively collaborating, brainstorming, and socializing.

One of the godmothers of this movement is Tara Hunt, co-founder of CitizenSpace in San Francisco. I had an opportunity to visit her operation last week, and it was fascinating. For one thing, it was within sight of the location of the first startup I worked for back in the 1980s, Friend Technologies (introducing a service called "voice mail"; you may have heard of it). But the other thing that I found intriguing was that it was largely unoccupied, even though they are sold out. Startling at first, upon reflection I realized it made sense; when you're a one-man-band, you're not spending a lot of time at a desk. You're out there, meeting with folks, adding value at client premises, and prospecting for new business. CitizenSpace is an agreeably funky loft space with a dozen desks and an airy conference room. There was indeed a meeting taking place in the conference room, but aside from Tara, there was only one other solitary worker at a desk.

CitizenSpace is organized around a co-op model. It's not intended to produce a profit, but rather be a crucible for creative collaboration. The members are all "desk residents"; that is, they have a desk that is theirs alone, and pay a monthly rent for the use of it. While some coworking spaces are similarly aligned, others are more explicitly business models that can produce surplus cashflow, while preserving the core principles of the coworking movement. These include;
  • Openness – Willingness to share ideas freely, without license. Open-source brainstorming.
  • Collaboration – Creative interaction that promotes innovation and new science.
  • Community – Sharing risks and rewards, obligations and opportunities.
  • Sustainability – Combining resources so that less is used by more.
  • Accessibility – Minimizing barriers.
I also visited Sandbox Suites in San Francisco, a commercial coworking scene, and that was also sparsely occupied at midday and midweek. Two conference rooms were busy (and their posted schedules looked pretty full, as well), but the rest of the space was pretty empty. They have resident desks like CitizenSpace, but also ad hoc access to tables, chairs, desks and a wifi network (called "hot desking") for a monthly membership fee, depending on part-time or full-time use.

It is a very attractive, casual, vaguely hip space, not at all like an "office". There is a conversation pit of black leather sofas and easy chairs. A row of cubicles separated by translucent plastic panels were lined up against one wall, but otherwise it was all very "open plan" cafe style furnishings.

I also visited a launch party in Fresno for OfficeBay, a spinoff of another casual workspace operation called CargoBay, which started up 18 months ago, offering 50 10'x10' hardwall offices with a desk and IP telephone for $399 a month. The play here is that there are also rollup-door storage units, a shipping and receiving dock, and a photo studio (a lot of Ebay auctioneers operating there). The new place has larger offices for up to 6 workers, a cluster of individual cubicle resident desks, and a hot desk area off the main lobby. This is a more overtly commercial work space operation, and not very aligned with the coworking movement, but it is clear that the potential for collaboration and community is there, as well.

From reading the Google coworking group and wiki page, it's clear that coworking is in its infancy, and seems to have the most traction in major urban centers in established technology corridors. In midmarket communities, coworking is primarily following a "jelly" model, which is sort of a flash mob of people who coordinate via twitter or text message to descend on a library community room or cafe to spend the day working together.

I think the coworking model has great potential for incubating emerging growth companies. Existing incubator programs have been problematic, and have largely failed to stimulate interdisciplinary collaboration. I think this is due to the limited number of dedicated office spaces that can be supported in that model.

In a coworking space, significantly higher numbers of companies can be supported, since the resources are randomly deployed as available and as needed. It also provides a venue and audience for guest speakers, panel discussions, workshops, and networking events explicitly focused on entrepreneurship and business development themes. There can be a social dimension as well, such a karaoke or Guitar Hero night.

The connections that can be made in this sort of intentional community can be very immediately valuable, indeed. These are the types of professional relationships colleagues form in large corporate workplaces, and are what freelancers miss the most when they begin working exclusively from home. As in corporate office relationships, these connections can become long-term allegiances, forming a network of like minds. I think successful coworking venues will be the ones that put resources into stimulating and sustaining collegial connections. For the innovator wanting to start and grow a great company, coworking is like a petri dish for ideas.

Tuesday, July 22, 2008

DEMOfall 08 | Sept. 7-9, 2008 | San Diego, CA

DEMOfall08 is the place to be for emerging technologies, companies, and products. DEMO has acted as a launch pad for some of today’s greatest innovations. From TiVo, Java, E*TRADE, and Palm in the 90s to OddPost, GrandCentral, IronPort, VMware, Salesforce.com, and Six Apart more recently, DEMO has consistently delivered products that change the dynamics of the marketplace.

With 18 years and 1,500 launched products under DEMO’s belt, we’ve witnessed astounding results. In the past four years alone, DEMO companies have raised over $2.5 billion dollars following their debuts at DEMO. Over 40 of these companies have been acquired by tech giants such as Adobe, Cisco, Yahoo!, Nokia, Viacom, Google, Microsoft, Symantec, Motorola, and more.

Executive producer, Chris Shipley, has met with about 500 companies across the globe to hand select the 70 most influential products to launch at DEMO. According to Ms. Shipley, these products must make an impact on their markets.

“I look at technology not with an engineer’s zeal for elegant code, but with a human eye for usefulness, practical advancement, and social change . . . But I can still get jazzed by significant technical innovations that simplify and enhance the lives of corporate, mobile, and personal users.”
Join us and experience innovation as it is unveiled for the very first time. Register here and save $600: http://www.demo.com/F8GCN

Friday, July 18, 2008

Like Talking To Bill Walsh About Football

I got to spend some time with a hero of mine recently. GCN presented the New California 100 conference in Davis last month, which culminated in a banquet to honor the central valley's top 100 privately-held companies, and to induct the inaugural class of the New California Hall of Fame. As part of that awards ceremony, I gave the "Legacy Market Leadership" award to Fred Franzia, the founder of Bronco Wine Company, the fourth largest winery in the US, shipping more than 20 million cases per year.

The best part, though, was getting to enjoy his company during the dinner, and listen to some of his observations about the winery industry in general.

For those who don't know, Bronco made a pretty big splash a few years back with the introduction of the Charles Shaw Winery brand, the first so-called "super value" wine. You may know it by its more popular sobriquet "Two-Buck Chuck". This is the wine distributed exclusively by Trader Joe's for $1.99 per bottle in the western states.

Someone asked Fred one day "how can you sell a great wine for only $2 a bottle?" He replied "I only make a dollar a case, but I sell a million cases a year. You do the math." He's also on record as saying "No bottle of wine is worth more than ten dollars." This may be hyperbolic, but he may have a point.

I love wine, and I love bargains. The truth is that making good wine is not significantly differentiated from making good paint or making good motor fuel. It's process manufacturing, and assuming you use good ingredients, pay attention to the process, and strive for quality, you should be able to make a good product. Franzia understands this.

The wine industry is actually three separate lines of business; agriculture, process manufacturing, and marketing. Bronco has innovated aggressively in all three areas. For one thing, Bronco has nearly 40,000 acres under viticultivation (and adding a section a year), making it the largest winegrape grower in the world. Secondly, Bronco has streamlined the production process, squeezing cost out of every step. Bronco is building the first new wine bottle plant in decades, further consolidating their vertical integration and controlling both cost and quality for maximum value to the customer.

Finally, Bronco has broken the monopoly of the three-tiered distribution model, which is critical not only for Bronco, but for the industry as a whole. Consider this; a ton of grapes costing $2000 per ton will produce a bottle of wine that retails for around $20. The retailer takes 40-45% on sell, the distributor take 20-25%, and after the cost of goods sold, the winemaker pockets about $3. If he sells that bottle to a customer in his tasting room for "10% off list", he pockets $15.

By negotiating directly with Trader Joe's to carry the Charles Shaw product, Bronco eliminated a critical factor contributing to the high cost of wine.

So getting the chance to sit with Fred Franzia and listen to him talk about his experiences, the history of his family (producing wines in California for more than a century), and his insights into delivering excellent quality at a substantial discount to the prevailing pricing in the industry was a memorable experience.

There are some things no man should know about making wine; Fred Franzia knows all of them.

Saturday, June 14, 2008

New California Hall of Fame touted

Today's Stockton Record chimes in with a preview of The New California 100 event and the New California Hall of Fame:
Hall of fame gets 8 Valley leaders: Business moguls honored Tuesday
Stockton developers Fritz Grupe and Alex Spanos will be among eight business leaders inducted into the New California Hall of Fame in recognition for their legacies of business, philanthropic and civic contributions to the Great Central Valley.

Individuals selected for the hall of fame founded and led companies headquartered in the 19-county Valley region of California stretching from Shasta to Kern County.

They will be honored at a Tuesday dinner at the first-ever New California 100 Conference in the Robert and Margrit Mondavi Center for the Performing Arts at the University of California, Davis. The conference also will name 100 companies that have contributed to regional prosperity by generating revenue and jobs. Sixteen companies in San Joaquin County are on that list.

The others to be inducted are Archie Aldis "Red" Emmerson, founder of Sierra Pacific Industries, Redding; Newton T. Enloe, founder of the Enloe Medical Center, Chico; Ernest and Julio Gallo, co-founders of E&J Gallo, Modesto; Tom Raley, founder of Raley's Stores, West Sacramento; and Fred Ruiz, co-founder of Ruiz Foods, Dinuba.

"These business legends represent what makes California's great Central Valley fertile ground for the next generation of innovation and prosperity, and can serve as continued reminders of how to be successful in business in California and around the world," said Jon Gregory, chief executive officer of Golden Capital Network, a nonprofit networking, training and consulting group that is one of the conference sponsors.

The conference Tuesday will also feature a full slate of speakers and give business leaders the chance to gather to share stories and chart how they can collectively continue to make California golden for business, he said. These companies being honored account for more than $50 billion in annual revenue and support more than 250,000 jobs in the region, he said.

The event will feature industry discussions lead by expert panelists from the finance, venture capital, academic and other sectors. Some top 100 company CEOs will share their stories of challenge, solution and accomplishment, and early-stage entrepreneurs will share their market solutions and paths to success.

Chris Soderquist, general partner with Davis-based Golden Capital Venture Funds, said the conferences will be staged annually to bring together business leaders from top companies, venture capitalists, entrepreneurs in promising new businesses, municipal elected officials and economic development specialists.

The original intent is to celebrate business success in the Central Valley, he said. But bringing together a wide variety of business sector players promises to promote business growth in the region at a time when there's a lot of "rhetoric" ranging from talk about a poor economy to poor air quality, he said.

"Things obviously are growing, but the grounds are a lot more fertile to grow even more so," Soderquist said.

For more information about the conference and the California Hall of Fame dinner, which together will run from 7 a.m. to 9 p.m., or to register, visit www.thenewcalifornia100.com. Cost is $325 per person for the conference and $450 for the conference and dinner.

The following 16 companies headquartered in San Joaquin County were named to the New California 100:

AG Spanos; Grupe Co.; Bank of Stockton; Building Material Distributors Inc.; Coastal Pacific Food Distributors; Collins Electrical; Delicato Family Vineyards; Diamond Foods; Duraflame; Interstate International Inc.; Klein Bros Ltd.; Mid Valley Plastering; Musco Family Olive Co.; Pacific Coast Producers; PAQ Inc.; and the Poly Processing Co.

The conference is being sponsored by Golden Capital Network; the Great Valley Center, a nonprofit Central Valley think tank; Hamilton Lane, an independent, private equity asset management service; and UC Davis.

Thursday, June 12, 2008

Entrepreneurs will flood Davis: UCD Conference promotes startups

In today's Davis Enterprise ... great encapsulation of Venture Communities and the New California 100 event.

Entrepreneurs will flood Davis: UCD Conference promotes startups
By Claire St. John | Enterprise staff writer | June 12, 2008 12:06

Business is booming in Yolo County.

Next week, two events will bring Yolo County to the attention of Central Valley investors and entrepreneurs, creating a synergy here that could lead to more investment, more local industry and more money pumped into local governments, service providers and community ventures.

Davis, which has long been interested in keeping more UC Davis spin-off companies and entrepreneurs within city limits, has spent the past few years focused on economic development. To that end, it created the Business and Economic Development Commission and invested in an Angel Investor Fund, designed to bring investors and entrepreneurs together. Several other Yolo cities and the county also invested.

On Monday, the effort goes public with the launch of the Yolo Venture Community Web site and a workshop for entrepreneurs and business owners.

On Tuesday, UC Davis' Mondavi Center will host the New California 100 Conference, at which 100 Central Valley companies - including nine Yolo County businesses - will be honored, and seven individuals will be inducted into the New California Hall of Fame.

Together, the 100 companies generate more than $50 billion in revenue and employ 250,000 people.

'There are 65 to 70 angel investors and venture capitalists coming to the event, so it's the largest number of investors to convene in the Central Valley at one event,' said Chris Soderquist, a native Davisite and a general partner at Golden Capital Venture Funds.

'There should be between 400 and 600 people at the event, primarily principal executives at the top companies, entrepreneurs and other civic and economic leaders.'

The city of Davis - along with Woodland, Winters, West Sacramento and Yolo County - invested matching funds in Golden Capital Venture Funds to create an Angel Investment Fund, connecting high net-worth investors with budding companies in the region.

The collaboration also allows investors to have confidence in their investments, as Golden Capital Venture Funds vets all start-ups and ensures they have access not just to money, but to intellectual and social resources.

Those local investors and businesses will come together on Monday at the Veterans' Memorial Center, 203 E. 14th St. in Davis. The day will begin at 1:30 p.m. with a business seminar, featuring faculty from UC Davis, University of the Pacific and Sacramento State. Topics will focus on entrepreneurship and the economy, new technologies and the next big thing, business planning, financial planning for startups and pitching a business to Angel and venture capital investors.

At 4 p.m., hosted wine and hors d'oeuvres will be served, followed by a panel of local business founders, including Anthony Costello, consultant for Bazu Media; John Argo of Bloo Solar; Kerry Sachs of Puroast; Cameron Lewis, CEO of VuStik; and Julie Morris, CEO of Marrone Innovation Organics. The panel will be moderated by Meg Arnold, director of business development and entrepreneurship with UC Davis InnovationAccess.

'The future of a healthy economy in Davis is in large part due to us being able to develop these small start-up companies,' said Costello, who is also vice chairman of the city's Business and Economic Development Commission. 'Davis is a great place to start up a business, with a great base of employees, an affluent community, great downtown office space and the university. It's becoming a premier institution in the world for development research ideas.'

Soderquist will introduce the launch of Yolo Venture Community, an online social network and education platform that will enable entrepreneurs, investors and professional service providers in Yolo County to connect with each other and leverage the financial, intellectual and human resources of the greater California Venture Communities network.

'We're trying to organize capital to better support local business,' Soderquist said. 'To me, what's refreshing and rewarding is it's kind of stunting the rhetoric, or shelving the rhetoric, and really moving toward pragmatic ways we can encourage and support entrepreneurs and innovation.

'There's been so much talk about it, and instead of talking, we're actually doing it, we're finding out from the entrepreneurs what do they need, how can we support them, and connecting them with the financial and intellectual resources they need to grow their company.'

There is still time to register for any of the events Monday and Tuesday. Visit http://venturecommunities.com/go/yolokickoff and http://www.thenewcalifornia100.com for more information or to register.

Details
What: Business seminar and Yolo Venture Community kickoff
When: Free seminar from 1:30 to 4 p.m. Monday; Yolo Venture Community kickoff from 4 to 7 p.m. Monday
Where: Veterans' Memorial Center, 203 E. 14th St.
Admission: Free
Info: http://venturecommunities.com/go/yolokickoff

Learn more
What: New California 100 Conference and California Hall of Fame inductee dinner
When: 7:30 a.m. to 9 p.m. Tuesday
Where: Mondavi Center for the Performing Arts at UC Davis
Cost: $195 for conference, $300 for conference and Hall of Fame dinner
Info: Call (530) 893-8828 or visit http://www.thenewcalifornia100.com