Author: Gregory T. Huang

  • Alibris Acquires Monsoon

    Gregory T. Huang wrote:

    Portland, OR-based Monsoon, a maker of software for managing and processing online selling, is being bought by Emeryville, CA-based Alibris, for an undisclosed amount of cash and stock. The acquisition is expected to close in early March, and the companies will continue to operate as separate businesses under their current names; Monsoon CEO Kanth Gopalpur will join the Alibris executive management team. Alibris is an online marketplace for new and used books, music, and movies. It has partnerships (and some areas of competitive overlap) with retailers such as Amazon.com, Barnes & Noble, Borders, and eBay.







  • Smilebox Raises $2M, Keeps Pushing E-Cards and Photo Services

    Smilebox
    Gregory T. Huang wrote:

    Redmond, WA-based Smilebox, a provider of software and photo services for electronic greeting cards, scrapbooks, and photo albums, has raised $2 million in equity financing, according to an SEC filing. The investors weren’t disclosed, but Paul Bialek, Rob Stavis, and Richard Wolpert are listed on the form as directors, and they are all previous investors in the company. Smilebox did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

    We previously reported that Smilebox had raised $400,000 in equity financing last September (when it also acquired photo organizing and printing firm Preclick), but today’s funding looks to be new. Prior to that, the company had most recently raised a $7 million Series B round in late 2007. Its plan seems to be to keep building its leadership in the fast-growing e-card and online photo services sector.

    Smilebox was founded in 2005 by Andrew Wright, the former vice president of games at RealNetworks (and a former Microsoftie before that). Wright remains president at Smilebox, according to the company website.

    The company is backed by Frazier Technology Ventures (Bialek) and Bessemer Venture Partners (Stavis), as well as a distinguished list of angel investors including Rob Glaser from RealNetworks, Paul Thelen from Big Fish Games, Garr Godfrey from GameHouse, and Wolpert, who hails from Chance Technologies.







  • Survey Analytics, Feedjit, Delve Climb Index

    Gregory T. Huang wrote:

    The Seattle 2.0 website announced its monthly ranking of local tech startups based on Web traffic estimates. For January, Cheezburger Network, Zillow, BuddyTV, and Picnik ranked as the top four. In the top 20, gains from the previous month were made by Survey Analytics (IdeaScale) at #5, Feedjit at #7, Cozi at #17, and Delve Networks at #18. New companies on the list include Tanga, Amaranth Games, and BigRuby.







  • TeachStreet Rolls Out Test Prep Sites, Does Lead Generation with Big Partners

    TeachStreet
    Gregory T. Huang wrote:

    “It’s like figuring out what we want to be when we grow up.”

    That’s Dave Schappell, founder and CEO of Seattle-based TeachStreet, an Internet startup focused on helping students and teachers connect through classes and online tools in seven metro areas around the U.S. Today, the company announced an important milestone in its growth: the introduction of two new websites dedicated to helping students prepare for the GMAT and GRE graduate school admissions tests. The sites include access to free practice tests, tools for building personalized study plans, and lists and reviews of local and online test-prep courses from providers like Kaplan Test Prep, Manhattan GMAT, and PowerScore.

    The move is significant in the continuing evolution of TeachStreet, which added online payments and pro memberships last summer to its original revenue model, which was based on contextual advertising. Now, “building content-rich experiences around specific verticals,” Schappell says, will make the company’s websites more sharable and sticky, and generate more traffic—and more revenues based on connecting students with schools and teachers.

    The strategy falls under the umbrella marketing term of “lead generation,” which a lot of Web startups are trying to do—make money by referring customers to other businesses. In fact, TeachStreet has been doing it from day one, by connecting students with classes. Schappell says, “We’ve been seeing ourselves as a lead-gen company. But we didn’t have a lot of the tools. This is the first ‘opening the kimono’ on going and doing traditional lead gen with larger companies.”

    And what makes TeachStreet’s approach special? Most lead-generation sites send “leads”—prospective customers—and then the school or business has to “convert” them to paying customers. “We’re sending them conversions and payments. It’s the evolution of lead gen,” Schappell says.

    As for the test prep sites, it sounds like TeachStreet saw an opportunity to capitalize on what students really need online, and to build relationships with big partners like Kaplan. “We built it because we were seeing all this activity,” Schappell says. “Hopefully it’ll work.”







  • Pivotal Investments Seeks to Build Regional Network of Future Cleantech Leaders

    Pivotal Leaders
    Gregory T. Huang wrote:

    There has been a lot of talk in the past year (and the past month) about the need to build a critical mass of cleantech and alternative energy companies in the Northwest. Now one venture firm in Portland, OR, is doing something about it, by assembling a talent pool of people with the ability to run serious cleantech companies.

    Pivotal Investments, an early-stage venture fund focused on cleantech and sustainability, is organizing what it’s calling Pivotal Leaders—a new network of community-nominated entrepreneurs and executives who will be voted the most promising candidates to lead new companies in this emerging sector. Nominations are open now, and Pivotal is looking to compile and vet a list of roughly 50 top cleantech business leaders who have ties to Washington, Oregon, Idaho, or British Columbia, by mid-June. The plan will be to organize four or five networking events around these leaders, in different cities, in the second half of the year.

    The proposed network strikes me as exactly the sort of dedicated effort the Northwest needs to get more cleantech investors in Vancouver, BC, for instance, to talk to entrepreneurs and big companies in Portland and Seattle, and vice versa. That, in turn, could help call more national attention to the region and spur its efforts to become a true leader in energy and sustainability—or at least better compete with companies in California and other parts of the country. “We’re interested in building the ecosystem here for green, cleantech jobs,” says Gregg Semler, co-founder and managing director of Pivotal Investments. “This is an enormous economic opportunity for the region.”

    Semler says the Pivotal list will address “a problem that deals with the future.” That is, the community knows who’s running cleantech companies today, he says, but what about five years from now? “To attract capital, you need strong business leaders who can captain these companies. That builds confidence in the investors and sources of capital,” Semler says.

    Pivotal Leaders will most likely be made up of a mix of early-stage entrepreneurs, executives from big companies focused on areas like software or green buildings, and others from traditional business backgrounds who have a strong interest in energy and green technologies. Semler didn’t name any names or offer up any specific examples yet, but he stressed that nominations will be open for the next few weeks, and that Pivotal wants to hear from the innovation community.

    On the investment side, Semler says his venture firm is currently looking at potential deals in solar power, green buildings, agriculture, and energy efficiency. Although cleantech opportunities are still at an early stage, he says, the markets they address are big, global, and mature. And, of course, part of Pivotal’s plan with its new network is to build relationships with the best young talent the Northwest has to offer—and then consider investing in their startups.

    “Our hope is that when these people decide to start a company, they’ll call us,” Semler says. “We want to get to know these people, so they feel confident that we’re a great source of capital and have a strong network to help them grow their company.”







  • Microsoft, Amazon Tie Patent Knot

    Gregory T. Huang wrote:

    Seattle-area tech giants Amazon and Microsoft have signed a patent cross-license agreement that gives each company some access to the other’s patent portfolio, and covers a broad range of technology, including Amazon’s Kindle e-book reader and its use of Linux-based servers. Financial terms of the deal weren’t given, but Microsoft says Amazon (NASDAQ: AMZN) will pay it an undisclosed amount of money under the agreement. Microsoft (NASDAQ: MSFT) also says it has entered into similar agreements with other big companies like Apple, Hewlett-Packard, LG Electronics, Nikon, Novell, and Samsung.







  • Jive Software Gets Interim CEO

    Gregory T. Huang wrote:

    Portland, OR-based Jive Software announced today that CEO and co-founder Dave Hersh has left his post to become chairman of the board. Jive has appointed board member Tony Zingale as interim CEO while it conducts a search for a permanent successor. Zingale is the former chief executive of Mercury Interactive and Clarify. Jive makes social software for businesses including Cisco, Intel, Nike, SAP, T-Mobile. In October, the company raised $12 million in Series B funding from Sequoia Capital to expand its products.







  • How Microsoft’s New Mobile Approach Stacks Up with Apple and Google

    Microsoft
    Gregory T. Huang wrote:

    Pretty soon you might not be able to tell the difference between Microsoft and its most hated rivals. At least in the mobile sector. This would be good news for Microsoft.

    That’s my take after thinking more about Microsoft’s announcement last week of its heir apparent to Windows Mobile—the Windows Phone 7 Series operating system. Today, more details have emerged on how Microsoft is planning to integrate digital music and multiplayer video games into its smartphones, via its Zune service and Xbox Live, respectively. Of course, it’s all still a ways away—the first phones with WP7 won’t arrive until the end of this year.

    Microsoft’s mobile overhaul is hardly surprising, given how widely its efforts to make software for smartphones have been panned. And Windows Mobile executives have been talking about putting music, video, and games on phones for at least six years. But what’s interesting here is how Microsoft’s strategy lines up against some of its main competitors who have entered the mobile realm much more recently.

    It looks like Microsoft’s WP7 will follow Apple’s proprietary development model more closely than Google’s open-source approach. Microsoft wants its mobile applications to be designed around a unified set of specifications for hardware and software. That means Microsoft mobile apps should run smoothly across different devices, as long as they support the WP7 operating system and user interface. Although some might criticize this as a “closed” approach—like the iPhone system and Windows PCs—it should avoid some of the problems of the open-source ecosystem, like forcing developers to tweak their code for each device’s interface. (As for Research in Motion, maker of the BlackBerry platform, and Nokia, which mainly uses the Symbian operating system, Microsoft might be thinking about acquiring one or both of them—not sure if that would make sense though.)

    More broadly, the latest Microsoft push has renewed discussions about how the Redmond, WA, company stacks up against other tech giants across different businesses. At least one observer, Preston Gralla from Computerworld, thinks Apple is vulnerable because its success is tied too closely to CEO Steve Jobs; meanwhile, Google has a near monopoly on Web search and advertising, which bodes well as mobile handsets become more powerful and capable of running faster Web searches and applications. But others would say Apple has built a strong culture of product innovation that would survive a Jobs departure, while Google is a one-trick pony that is too dependent on ad revenues. In most of these arguments, Microsoft sits in the middle—with enough of an operating systems business to survive a long time while it moves more deeply into search, mobile, and entertainment. And that’s probably where it wants to be, for now.

    Of course, I wonder what Seattle-based Amazon will have to say about all of this. That’s a question for another day.







  • Amazon Kindle E-Books Expand Reach

    Gregory T. Huang wrote:

    Seattle-based Amazon.com announced today that its Kindle Digital Text Platform can now be used by authors and publishers to upload their electronic books in Spanish, Portuguese, and Italian to the Kindle Store. The service is already available for English, French, and German books. Amazon (NASDAQ: AMZN) also said yesterday that its Kindle application is now available as a free download for BlackBerry devices. That extends the reach of Kindle e-books beyond Kindle devices, iPhones, iPod Touch, and PCs.







  • ARPA-E Director Arun Majumdar Meets with Bill Gates, Advises Local Startups, Speaks at UW

    ARPA-E
    Gregory T. Huang wrote:

    There’s no better way to kick off a Seattle visit than to have a two-hour meeting with Bill Gates. That was Arun Majumdar’s morning yesterday.

    The director of ARPA-E, the new $400 million research agency within the U.S. Department of Energy, was on tour to promote novel energy R&D programs and get feedback from innovators across the country. He and Gates had an in-depth discussion about energy and climate change—some of the greatest problems facing humanity, and what Majumdar called “the challenge of our lifetime.” Earlier this week, Gates addressed these same points in his talk at the TED conference in California, calling for very fast-paced “miracle” innovations to increase energy efficiency and production while reducing carbon emissions.

    It sounds like Gates and Majumdar are very much on the same page. Before being appointed to lead ARPA-E, where he reports to Energy Secretary Steven Chu, Majumdar was a professor of mechanical engineering and materials science at UC Berkeley, and also led research programs at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory. His expertise includes energy conversion, transport, and storage, from the nano-scale level to large energy systems.

    After his meeting with Gates yesterday, Majumdar convened a group of about a dozen local energy entrepreneurs and investors, including Lars Johansson and Byron McCann of Northwest Energy Angels, Rick LeFaivre of OVP Venture Partners and the UW Center for Commercialization, Alla Weinstein of Principle Power, Rick Luebbe of EnerG2, Christina Lomasney of Modumetal, Jill Watz of Vulcan Capital, Niki Parekh of Bio Architecture Lab, Dan Rosen from Alliance of Angels, Chris Tagge of LivinGreen Materials, David Kaplan from V2Green (GridPoint), and Daniel Malarkey of the Washington State Department of Commerce.

    Those I talked to after the meeting were very positive. They said Majumdar stressed the importance of risk-taking in R&D, and sought feedback from local leaders on things like who the customer will be for ARPA-E projects. This is a critical issue. The whole effort is modeled after the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA), which has the Department of Defense as its main customer, and falls under a centralized policy. In the case of ARPA-E, however, Majumdar is navigating a discontinuous set of customers—essentially the entire energy market.

    Arun Majumdar (image courtesy of Lawrence Berkeley National Lab)

    One key takeaway from the entrepreneur meeting was that the U.S. government needs to create a technology “pull” as well as a push. Majumdar noted in the meeting—as he also did in a recent presentation to Congress—that government is one of the largest consumers of energy (think buildings, transportation, and so on). So ARPA-E needs to use that power to create adoption and purchasing standards, as local leaders discussed with Majumdar.

    “The U.S. government can come back and say, ‘We’re going to create a buying policy,’ and only buy production processes that have [a higher] level of efficiency,” says Lomasney from Modumetal, a Seattle-based nanotech startup that hopes to reinvent the metals industry. “ARPA-E has to supply the technology, but it also has to be the first adopter.”

    Majumdar also gave a public talk at the University of Washington yesterday, hosted by the Department of Computer Science & Engineering. The theme was to address the “three Sputniks of …Next Page »







  • Nathan Myhrvold Shares Plan to Create Invention Capital Industry, but Skeptics Abound

    Intellectual Ventures
    Gregory T. Huang wrote:

    Intellectual Ventures has been making a lot of waves lately. Today the Bellevue, WA-based firm, focused on the business of invention and patents, laid out its arguments for creating a new industry of “invention capital,” in a Harvard Business Review article penned by CEO and co-founder, Nathan Myhrvold. In a separate piece, the New York Times’ Steve Lohr addresses some longstanding questions from Myhrvold’s detractors, who call him a patent troll (more on this below).

    In the HBR article, Myhrvold, who is coming off his talk at the TED conference in Long Beach, CA, presents the thinking behind his firm’s efforts to establish a separate marketplace for inventions, loosely following the models of venture capital and private equity. He also gives a status update on where Intellectual Ventures stands, and the formidable challenges it faces.

    Invention capital is really the big vision of the company—with patent acquisitions as part of its overall strategy—and it’s fascinating to see how much things have progressed since the summer of 2008, when Myhrvold first spoke with me about it. Back then, the discussion was heavy on the historical context and the need for a new system to nurture inventions and inventors. In terms of results, it was largely wait and see. Now, it’s clear the company’s efforts worldwide are starting to pay off.

    Myhrvold writes that Intellectual Ventures has 30,000-plus patents in its portfolios, most of them purchased. To critics who would say the company doesn’t invent anything itself, he notes that its 30 staff inventors and 100-plus consultants applied for 450 in-house patents in 2009, placing it in the world’s top 50 filers (ahead of Boeing, Johnson & Johnson, 3M, Mitsubishi, and Toyota); and that its wider network of 1,000-plus inventors in seven countries applied for more than 1,000 patents last year.

    On the technology licensing and patent acquisitions front, he writes that Intellectual Ventures has made deals with more than a hundred Fortune 500 companies and their international equivalents, and that the firm’s “licensing activity has so far earned more than $1 billion.” To put that figure in perspective, Intellectual Ventures has raised some $5 billion from mostly undisclosed large investors (Microsoft is one).

    In the Times piece, Lohr quotes critics who call Myhrvold’s outfit “Intellectual Vultures” and say the company uses its huge patent trove as leverage to extract hefty licensing fees. These critics also question Myhrvold’s penchant for setting up hundreds of shell companies and affiliated entities; by masking who actually owns Intellectual Ventures’ patents, this strategy reportedly makes it more difficult for other companies to know where they stand in negotiations with Myhrvold’s firm. Myhrvold is unapologetic about these tactics in the Times article, saying he’ll give up secrecy as soon as everybody else does.

    But regardless of what his critics say, Myhrvold has clearly thought a lot about the hurdles that must be overcome in order for new markets ruled by inventors to take off. Here are three of his main ones:

    Managing risk. Myhrvold points out that insurance companies, pension funds, and mutual funds have figured out strategies to deal with this, and that the money it takes is comparable to VC …Next Page »







  • Microsoft-Yahoo Search Deal Approved

    Gregory T. Huang wrote:

    Tech giants Microsoft and Yahoo announced today they have received clearance for their search and advertising agreement from U.S. and European regulators. The news means the companies can move forward with their plan to transition Yahoo’s search platforms to Microsoft’s Bing (which should be complete by the end of this year), while Yahoo will handle sales for both companies’ search advertisers globally. The Microsoft-Yahoo search alliance was first announced last July, and is seen as a major effort to compete more effectively against Google in search and online advertising.







  • RealNetworks, With Narrowed Focus, Seeks to Help Consumers Manage Digital Media Clutter

    Real Networks
    Gregory T. Huang wrote:

    You might not know it, but you could say RealNetworks is being reborn today. The Seattle-based company (NASDAQ: RNWK) is announcing a new version of RealPlayer SP, its signature software for downloading, sharing, and transferring personal videos to smartphones and other devices. The new features include quick video editing—so you can keep just the parts you want—as well as compatibility with devices like Nexus One and Droid smartphones. The new product also provides easier ways to share video and audio with social sites like Twitter, Facebook, and YouTube.

    OK, that doesn’t sound earth-shattering, but it’s the first tangible step in Real’s revamped strategy that president and acting CEO Bob Kimball first outlined last week. Essentially, Real is doubling down on its core offerings—digital media management for consumers, and media software-as-a-service for wireless carriers—while it sheds its less lucrative digital music and gaming businesses.

    Indeed, it is a time of sweeping changes at RealNetworks, brought about largely by founder and former chief executive Rob Glaser’s stepping down last month. I recently spoke with Jeff Chasen, a vice president of product development at Real who leads the RealPlayer group, to get more details on the company’s new priorities as well as to hear more of the thinking and context around the latest product.

    Chasen is a longtime company veteran who worked on RealJukebox, often hailed as the first commercially viable digital music organizer, back in 1998-99. He says the new RealPlayer product has roots in two trends of the past few years—the rise of portable devices like phones and game consoles, and user-generated video. That led to the release of RealPlayer 11 in 2007, and ultimately to RealPlayer SP, which was rolled out in beta form last June. So far, the company says, RealPlayer SP has been downloaded 70 million times, and has been used to download more than 100 million videos. (The software is free but also available in a premium, paid version.)

    Feedback from consumers has helped shape the latest version, which appears to be simpler and easier to use. “We’ve been working on our vision [for you] to access your video wherever you want,” Chasen says. That might mean a clip from YouTube, or something you shoot on your own Flip camera, for example—it is meant to work for any format and on any device. “We listened to what people said in the last six or seven months. We’ve taken a simplicity approach,” he says.

    In terms of competition, Chasen freely admits that tech giants like Apple, Google, and Microsoft are all trying to help consumers manage their personal digital media—videos, photos, music. And large photo sites and services like Photobucket, Picasa (run by Google), and every video company out there all have various offerings to help with pieces of the problem. But so far, he says, “nobody’s really resonated” yet—and so a smaller company with deep expertise, like Real, still has an opportunity to own the space.

    “We all have digital messes on our laptops. Nobody’s making sense of that,” Chasen says. “We want to try to be the guys you relate to in helping you solve these problems. It’s all part of your content.”

    Lastly, I asked Chasen to talk about Real’s current prospects for innovation. “Focus is really important. It’s about simplifying and getting to the stuff that matters to our vision,” he says. “We keep teams small, and we allow innovation to happen. We won’t do as many things as we did before. We are focused on this vision, and on making consumers love our software.”







  • Yapta, Kayak Team Up in Travel Search

    Gregory T. Huang wrote:

    Seattle-based Yapta, the online airfare-tracking service, announced today it has formed a partnership with travel search site Kayak, based in Norwalk, CT. Financial terms of the deal weren’t given, but Kayak will power the flight search engine on Yapta.com, which should give consumers more options in tracking fares and planning travels. Kayak is also interested in pairing Yapta’s service with its own search results. Yapta, which was founded in 2006, says it has tracked prices for more than 3 million flights and has saved its members a total of more than $300 million.







  • How to Win the Future of Social Mobile Gaming: The Z2Live Story

    Z2Live
    Gregory T. Huang wrote:

    Take two technology areas that Seattle is best known for: mobile and gaming. Mix them together in a fast-growing market (iPhone multiplayer games), put some shrewd venture capital behind it (Madrona Venture Group), and what do you get? Answer: Z2Live.

    This isn’t two guys in a garage working on their passion. This Seattle startup was very carefully built, and the story of how that happened—and why—holds lessons for anyone interested in building the most promising tech companies of the future.

    Let’s flash back to November 2008. The tech community, like everyone else, was reeling, and diving into the depths of the recession. But Apple’s iPhone was already huge, game applications were taking off, and there were plenty of talented people with gaming and mobile expertise looking for work around Seattle. So Paul Goodrich and his partners at Seattle-based Madrona decided to make a big move in mobile, initially based around the iPhone.

    The first step was to assemble the best possible team. Madrona hired Damon Danieli, a 14-year Microsoft veteran and senior developer who had designed some of the core features of Xbox Live, including its community and multiplayer offerings. If there’s anyone who knows the technical problems of social gaming, it’s him. Danieli got matched up with David Bluhm, who previously co-founded Medio Systems, a Seattle-based mobile search and advertising company. Bluhm has been involved with more than 20 startups—including two that went public and seven that were acquired—and also has experience at Motorola and Hewlett-Packard. (Danieli and Bluhm happen to both be University of Washington alums—Danieli in electrical engineering and computer science, Bluhm in mechanical engineering.)

    Madrona invested a seed round of $1 million that fall, and followed it up with $3 million more last summer. The big idea was to develop a software platform to enable multiplayer social gaming across all mobile devices and all wireless networks—something that did not exist yet—and start with the iPhone and iPod Touch.

    It sounds tricky, and it is. There are big technical challenges involved in making reliable and efficient connections between gamers across networks and devices—especially while they’re in the middle of a game. For starters, the Internet has routers that don’t accept inbound requests, and you have to set up a new server to negotiate those connections, as Bluhm explains. (It’s similar to the problem Skype has solved for Internet communications.) To do it right, you have to “serve the game” on the gaming nodes themselves. That means using the processing of the individual consoles or mobile devices to do the networking between players.

    So that’s the concept behind Z2Live—“creating the multiplayer experience for the mobile device, starting with iPhone,” Bluhm says. That means enabling players to talk to other players during …Next Page »







  • Cozi CEO Confirms $5M Funding, Affirms Advertising Business Model

    Cozi
    Gregory T. Huang wrote:

    Maybe online advertising revenues are coming back—at least in certain markets. That’s what I thought after catching up yesterday with Robbie Cape, the founder and CEO of Seattle-based Cozi. Earlier this week, the family-focused software company disclosed in an SEC filing that it has raised $5 million in new equity funding. The news was first reported by paidContent and then TechFlash.

    Cape declined to give details about the new investment, other than to say it comes from a new strategic investor. He said the deal does not reflect any shift in the company’s strategy or revenue model. “We’re still fanatically focused on families, and we’re very bullish on the advertising business model,” Cape said. He added that in terms of advertising, the company was oversold in five of the last six months of 2009, and it has “significantly expanded” its reach over the last several months. (I took this to mean it has brought in a bunch of new advertisers as well as end users.)

    Cozi now has about 2.5 million registered family members (representing 1.3 million families). That’s up quite a bit from 1.5 million people (and half a million families) last June. The company makes Web-based software to help busy families coordinate their schedules, organize their activities and chores, and communicate with each other. Its software runs on PCs, laptops, touchscreen devices, and smartphones. Cozi currently has 23 employees.

    The company has benefited from strong partnerships with companies like Dell, MeadWestvaco, Meredith Corp., Nestle, and Gannett. It previously had raised about $16 million from angel investors, Gannett, and others.

    “The best news is we’re consistently seeing more and more companies coming to talk to us, about assisting them with their strategy in the home,” Cape said. “We’re poised for an incredibly exciting 2010.”







  • RealNetworks Spins Off Rhapsody, Urban Airship and Swype Raise Cash, Winshuttle Buys A1, & More Seattle-Area Deals News

    Gregory T. Huang wrote:

    There were a bunch of small deals in the Northwest this week. Some hot spots were mobile, business software, and alternative fuels.

    —Portland, OR-based Urban Airship, a mobile software startup, raised $1.1 million in a deal led by True Ventures. Seattle-based Founder’s Co-op also participated in the round. Urban Airship makes infrastructure for mobile messaging services that lets companies send news and alerts to iPhones and other mobile devices.

    —Seattle-based Kashless, an online classifieds and local promotions startup, acquired the patent portfolio of Mercata, the former Bellevue, WA-based volume discount dot-com owned by Paul Allen’s Vulcan Capital. Terms of the deal weren’t announced, but Vulcan has gained an equity stake in Kashless. Using the technology, Kashless has rolled out a sister site, Tippr, focused on group-buying deals from local merchants.

    —Seattle-based Swype, a mobile text-input software firm, raised $1 million in a deal led by Docomo Capital. The funding is an extension of Swype’s recent $5.6 million Series B round led by Nokia Growth Partners and Samsung Ventures. The new investment should help the company continue to expand into international markets and mobile platforms.

    —Bothell, WA-based Winshuttle, a business software firm, acquired German company A1 Professional Software, whose team will remain in place as a subsidiary. Financial terms of the deal weren’t given. Winshuttle sells software to help corporations shuttle data and bridge the gap between Excel spreadsheets and other familiar programs and German giant SAP’s business-management software.

    —Bellevue, WA-based SinglePoint acquired M2Junction, a mobile advertising startup based in Hyderabad, India, for an undisclosed price. SinglePoint makes a mobile software platform for delivering things like brand messages and interactive coupons within text messages. The deal should help the company sell its services to Indian content publishers, mobile operators, brands, and ad agencies.

    Propel Fuels, the alternative fuel company founded in Seattle and now based in Sacramento, CA, raised $12 million in Series C equity financing led by new investor Craton Equity Partners, along with $8 million in debt financing. Existing investors Nth Power and @Ventures also participated in the equity round. The cash will help Propel expand its network of stations, which sell ethanol and biodiesel fuels, around California.

    —Seattle-based RealNetworks and MTV Networks are spinning off their digital music service joint venture, Rhapsody, as a separate company. RealNetworks (NASDAQ: RNWK) will no longer be the majority owner and operator of Rhapsody; the new company will not have a single majority owner. The move looks to be a significant step in making Real more focused and profitable.







  • Kashless Acquires Mercata Patents from Vulcan, Rolls Out New Group Buying Site, Tippr

    Tippr
    Gregory T. Huang wrote:

    “I believe it’s the pocket aces of IP in group collective buying,” Martin Tobias tells me.

    Tobias, the Seattle entrepreneur and investor who heads up the online community site Kashless, is talking about his latest strategic move. His company has acquired the patent portfolio of former Bellevue, WA-based dot-com Mercata from Paul Allen’s Vulcan Capital, and is using the technology to power a new group-buying website called Tippr.

    The intellectual-property portfolio consists of more than half a dozen granted patents, with a couple dozen more in the works, covering areas like price optimization, demand curve modeling, and buyer-seller interaction models. Financial terms weren’t disclosed, but as part of the deal, Vulcan Capital now has an equity stake in Kashless. (Tobias says Tippr is a separate entity, but it is part of the Kashless family of related sites.)

    It’s certainly an interesting move for Kashless, which started in 2008 as an online recycling classifieds site and has recently focused on promotions for local merchants to reach customers. Tippr, the new site, features deals from local stores—restaurants, cafes, entertainment sites, museums—where you can buy discount vouchers online. The key is that as more people sign up for a deal, its value gets better. So 10 people each may buy a $22 hot dog voucher for $10, say, but if 50 people buy it, the voucher becomes worth $30. That’s called an “accelerating deal,” and Tobias says his newly owned IP covers that type of dynamic price adjustment based on demand.

    “The patents provide a really deep well for us to tap into unique and powerful features,” he says. “We’ve thought pretty deeply about how someone does a fast follower in the collective buying space. One thing you need is super strong IP.”

    For now, Tippr is available to consumers just in the Seattle area, but the plan is to expand to 20 cities in two months. That sounds awfully ambitious, but Tobias says he has already made progress in hiring sales people in cities like Los Angeles, San Francisco, Portland, and Boston. There are currently five advertised open positions in the company.

    Besides the challenges of expanding geographically, the main question would seem to be why group-buying should take off now, when it didn’t back in 2001, when Mercata shut down. Tobias says with the rise of e-commerce, and sites like Yelp and Craigslist, consumers see going online as their first option for deals and such—and online marketing is much more viable in 2010 than in 2001. “The numbers are here now,” he says.

    What’s more, Tobias emphasizes the value of Tippr for local businesses, many of which have been suffering a 20 to 30 percent decline in revenue during the current recession. “This isn’t pay per click, or Google customer acquisition. This is, ‘How do I get the customer to walk in my door,’” he says.

    Tippr faces stiff competition from other group-buying sites around the country like Groupon, based in Chicago, LivingSocial in Washington DC, and BuyWithMe in Boston (which just raised $5.5 million last month). But Tobias insists that he now has obtained a competitive edge. “None of those have IP protection,” he says. “And I do.”







  • Urban Airship Gets Funded

    Gregory T. Huang wrote:

    Portland, OR-based Urban Airship, a mobile messaging startup, has raised $1.1 million led by True Ventures, with participation from Seattle-based Founder’s Co-op. The news was first reported by Rick Turoczy of Silicon Florist. Urban Airship provides software infrastructure for mobile messaging services like Apple Push Notifications, which lets companies send news and alerts to iPhones and other mobile devices.







  • Winshuttle Expands to Germany with Acquisition, Keeps Growing Through the Recession

    Winshuttle
    Gregory T. Huang wrote:

    The global expansion continues for Winshuttle, one of the unsung heroes of the Seattle tech scene that I highlighted back in August. The Bothell, WA-based software company is announcing today it has acquired the German firm A1 Professional Software.

    Financial terms of the deal weren’t given, but Winshuttle is keeping the A1 Professional team of eight employees in place at a subsidiary organization in Bremen, Germany. The trans-Atlantic move is not surprising, seeing as Winshuttle’s main business is built around helping customers get maximum productivity out of management software from German tech giant SAP.

    The new German subsidiary, called Winshuttle GmbH, is led by A1’s founder and president, Klaus Garms. The acquisition immediately adds a few prominent customers to Winshuttle’s lineup, including an airline (Lufthansa), an electronics powerhouse (Siemens), and a maker of printing presses (Heidelberger Druckmaschinen). The company’s existing German customers include drugmakers like Bayer and Merck KGaA. It also has a number of other global customers, including Starbucks, Nike, Johnson & Johnson, and Proctor & Gamble.

    Winshuttle was co-founded in 2003 by Vikram Chalana and Rajat Oberoi, who remain the company’s chief technology officer and chief business development officer, respectively. The firm, which was bootstrapped and never took any outside capital, makes software to help corporations shuttle data and bridge the gap between Excel spreadsheets (and other familiar programs that anyone can use) and SAP’s sophisticated business-management software. Last summer, Winshuttle had about 70 employees worldwide, spread across offices in the U.S., France, England, and India. It now has 90 employees.

    Lewis Carpenter, Winshuttle’s CEO, calls Germany a “key market” for SAP software users. The acquisition “allows customers and partners within a critical region of Europe to get enhanced support and access to new products,” Carpenter says in a company statement.

    Like almost everyone else, Winshuttle’s sales slowed in the early part of 2009, but the company seems to be back on track. Its total sales for last year climbed by 48 percent over 2008, when it was projected to make about $10 million in revenue. Winshuttle says it added 70 new customers in the fourth quarter of last year, while remaining profitable. Although the current sales growth isn’t as fast as Winshuttle experienced in previous years—when it was doubling revenues annually—it seems like a more mature and sustainable growth rate for an increasingly global company.