Tag: Jason Seats (Page 2 of 2)

TechStar’s Nicole Glaros helps startups succeed

Nicole Glaros showing off her TechStars Cloud belt buckle in San Antonio

The only woman in the TechStars Cloud program, Nicole Glaros relocated from Boulder, Colorado to San Antonio with her husband, two-year-old daughter and one month old baby boy.
“It’s not a hard sell for me,” Glaros said. “To pick up and move for four months is not a big deal for us.”
Her husband Mark loves adventure and discovering new places too, she said.
“From our perspective it was an adventure,” Glaros said.
Adventurous is the perfect adjective to describe the outgoing Glaros, who is accomplished, smart, athletic and pretty and a powerful force in the technology startup world.
“TechStars is such a great environment,” Glaros said. “It doesn’t feel like work. I love what I do. “
Glaros moved into a house near Basse Road and San Pedro in January. She had just given birth to her son, Jackson, in December. Her mother also moved in, relocating for four months from Florida to help out with the kids.
“She put her life on hold,” Glaros said.
Family members are the unsung heroes of TechStars, Glaros said. While the entrepreneurs toil away 12 hour or longer days, seven days a week, spouses, kids, other family members and friends often have to adjust their lives.
Glaros knows their pain. She has worked with more than 100 startup tech entrepreneurs. Before joining TechStars, she founded three startups and worked at a technology business incubator, CTEK and other incubation programs in Colorado.
One day, Dave Cohen, a successful entrepreneur, angel investor and cofounder of TechStars, came to CTEK to pitch his idea for a new kind of technology incubator. CTEK’s leaders didn’t care for the idea much, but Glaros did. She sent an email to Cohen asking if he had time to meet her for a beer. He agreed to meet her for 30 minutes.
When Cohen arrived, he asked Glaros what her startup idea was. She said she didn’t have one. She just liked his TechStars idea and wanted to chat.
“That 30 minutes turned into three hours,” Glaros said.
Glaros ended up joining TechStars in 2007 and now serves as the managing director of the TechStars program in Boulder. She agreed to relocate to San Antonio to help Jason Seats, managing director of the TechStars Cloud with its inaugural program.
TechStars is a highly selective startup accelerator that takes about ten companies per program and provides seed funding from more than 75 different venture capital firms and angel investors. It has five TechStars programs in Boston, Boulder, New York City, Seattle and San Antonio.
The TechStars Cloud was the first accelerator program exclusively focused on cloud-based computing startups. The first class ran from January through April 11th. Each of the companies received $18,000 and access to $100,000 credit line along with thousands of dollars worth of perks including free website hosting, marketing and other services.
“The goal for me to be here was just to give Jason the resources he needed to launch the TechStars Cloud program,” Glaros said. “Working with Jason has been pure joy. He did a wonderful job.”
Seats enjoyed working with Glaros too.
“I will miss working with Nicole immensely,” Seats said. “We had very different styles that gelled quite well together. She is demanding, tough, detailed, insightful and almost always right. I tried to internalize as much of her thought processes as I could to make myself better.”
Glaros said the TechStars Cloud program was the smoothest launch of a new program in TechStars history and she credits Seats, an accomplished entrepreneur who founded Slicehost and sold it to Rackspace, with that.
Glaros was also impressed with the 11 companies to graduate from the TechStars program.
“It was really cool watching them develop,” she said. “I think the highlight is always seeing the progress of the companies. You literally see them evolve from raw potential to a real thing.”
And they appreciated her.
“She’s brilliant,” said Matt Gershoff, founder of Conductrics, in the TechStars Cloud program. “She’s super smart, confident and incredible at being able to distill complexity into a simple narrative.”
Glaros played a key role in helping the companies hone their eight minute pitch to investors.
“She’s not a pushover,” Gershoff said. “She’s definitely respected. She will tell you the truth even if it’s hard to hear. She’s honest.”
Colin Loretz, founder of Cloudsnap in the TechStars Cloud program, also had high praise for Glaros.
“She was awesome to have around,” Loretz said. “She’s seen more pitches and more startups all the way through to Demo Day than anyone.”
“She sees all the problems you can possibly see,” Loretz said.
Glaros has watched entrepreneurs launch a company, exit the company through sale or acquisition and then come back to serve as a mentor in the TechStars program. She calls the mentors – successful technology entrepreneurs who volunteer their time to help the startups – the secret sauce of TechStars.
“It creates a sort of unified cycle of giving back,” Glaros said.
The startup movement gives Glaros hope that these bright entrepreneurs will go on to create jobs and innovative products that will revive the economy.
“The one thing you cannot outsource is brains, talent and creativity,” she said.
The TechStars program has a 92 percent success rate, Glaros said. TechStars latest stats show that 109 companies still operate, nine have failed and eight have been acquired.
The competition is really stiff to get into TechStars. Glaros had just finished selecting the latest companies for TechStars Boulder. She reviewed 1,172 applications for 10 spots.
“The idea is really quality over quantity,” Glaros said.
So how does an entrepreneur make the cut?
“When we’re looking at a company we’re going to take the best team,” Glaros said. “We want a really great team that is super passionate about what they do,” Glaros said. “The idea doesn’t matter much. Ideas aren’t worth anything. It’s the execution of the idea that is important.”
That means the background of the founders count the most even more than the idea they are pitching, she said. And a lot of those founders have a background in engineering, she said.
And few female engineers apply, she said.
Glaros said women also tend to be more risk-averse than men and not as likely to risk everything to startup a company. And they don’t have huge egos and ego plays a big role in being entrepreneur, Glaros said.
“You have to believe you are the only one on the planet that can solve the problem you’re trying to tackle,” she said.
But women make some of the best entrepreneurs, Glaros said.
“Women tend to underestimate how much they can do,” Glaros said. “They outperform their objectives.”
Women also tend to be very open and they ask for help when they encounter a problem, Glaros said.
Now that the first TechStars Cloud program has wrapped up in San Antonio, Glaros has packed up and returned home. But she remembers her time fondly in the city. She enjoyed visiting local restaurants with her family. She thinks San Antonio is a great place to raise kids.
And although TechStars Cloud enters it quiet period, Glaros thinks San Antonio’s startup scene is heating up under the leadership of Seats and Nick Longo at the Geekdom and others.
In Boulder, TechStars has been able to create a technology startup community. How can San Antonio replicate that?
“Community matters,” Glaros said. “When a community comes together and rallies all kinds of entrepreneurial magic happens.”
The community can help by becoming a customer of a startup, volunteering time and expertise and money.
“Embrace them – open up your address book and wallets,” Glaros said “That’s the best thing you can do.”
When successful entrepreneurs mentor and help startups a vibrant startup community can thrive, Glaros said.
“In Boulder, you can get a meeting with just about anyone,” Glaros said. “Accessibility to leadership is huge.”

TechStars Cloud Demo Day blasts off today in San Antonio

Three months ago, a group of entrepreneurs moved into Geekdom in downtown San Antonio.
Since then, the inaugural TechStars Cloud participants have been toiling away and working to create blockbuster cloud businesses that will change the world.
Some have iterated, pivoted and overhauled their operations countless times. Names have changed. Teams have mixed it up.
But in the end, 11 companies stand ready to present today at the Charline McCombs Empire Theatre in downtown San Antonio.
The event kicks off at 9:30 a.m. and ends around 2 p.m. But a reception later in the evening at the Weston Centre will celebrate the accomplishments of this group of entrepreneurs and their leaders, Jason Seats, founder of SliceHost and Nicole Glaros, managing director of TechStars in Boulder, Colo. Seats and Glaros ran the TechStars Cloud program.
The TechStars Cloud focused on cloud computing and cloud infrastructure. Its mentors included Pat Condon, founder of Rackspace, Jeff Lawson, founder and CEO of Twilio, Brad Feld, head of the Foundry Group, George Kardis with SoftLayer, Rajat Bhargava, founder and CEO of StillSecure and dozens more.
All of the companies received $18,000 and access to more. Today, some of the companies will ask for investment capital, while others are fully funded. The audience will include venture capitalists and angel investors.

Forging the TechStars Cloud companies

At the Geekdom, twice a week, entrepreneurs behind the 11 TechStars Cloud companies gather to pitch their ventures.

Jason Seats with laptop, Nicole Glaros behind him and Nicholas Longo, Geekdom director , listening to TechStar Cloud pitches

Jason Seats and Nicole Glaros, TechStars Cloud managing directors, critique those pitches along with a handful of others, ranging from interested bystanders to serious angel and venture investors and other TechStar members.
“Jokes are only good if they land,” Seats said at the end of one pitch.
“I was totally wrapped up in the story, which was great,” said Glaros in response to another pitch.
“I want to see more interactions with data and the service,” said Seats.
“It was just a little too dragged out,” Glaros said. “I want you to move through it faster.”
“Maybe you need less of those slides,” Seats said.
The goal is by April 11, the TechStars Demo Day at the Charline McCombs Empire Theatre in downtown San Antonio, that the 11 companies rate at least an eight on a presentation scale that ranges from one to ten. At this session, almost three weeks from Demo Day, most of the companies rank at seven or lower. (Seats takes away a point from those presenters still using notes and almost all of the presenters are still reading from note cards.)

One of the TechStars Cloud entrepreneurs pitching his venture during practice

Since January, this group of startup entrepreneurs have gathered at the Geekdom, a collaborative workspace on the 11th floor of the Weston Centre. All of them relocated here from outside Texas. They came from Portland, Madison, Wisconsin, New York, Boston and other cities. They rented houses and apartments downtown. San Antonio Developers Ed Cross and David Adelman helped them secure housing, Seats said.
Most of the names of the companies are embargoed until Demo Day. But Cloudability, a Portland-based company, has already publicly posted about its involvement in the program. The company, which launched in November of 2011, has created a software platform that allows companies to track their cloud spending online. The company’s software draws from hosting companies’ data. It has more than 1,000 companies from 72 countries signed up to manage nearly $52 million in cloud spending. Cloudability has 10 employees and has already raised $1.2 million in a seed round of funding.
Mat Ellis, the company’s founder, has written about his TechStars incubator experiences on his company’s blog. Cloudability also participated in the Portland Incubator Experiment’s inaugural class.
Cloudability is one of the more mature startups involved in the TechStars Cloud program. Some of the companies are just starting out.
“It’s been a good program,” said Seats, during a recent interview at his office. “I feel like everyone has gotten a lot of value out of it.”
The TechStars program has had its ups and downs. Some people left the program. Other startups completely revamped their companies. But that’s Ok, Seats said.
In fact, the first phase of the program focused on the TechStar members’ ideas and setting up a foundation for their businesses. The TechStars’ 170 mentors hammered the entrepreneurs with questions and poked holes in their business plans.
“You either crumble or adapt,” Seats said. “Good ideas respond positively to that kind of pummeling.”
Seats compared the process to forging metal.
“The first month is about applying enough beatings to see if this is the right direction,” Seats said. “What’s working or what’s not working?”
During the second phase, the companies did mentor “dating” to match up with the right mentors for their business. In the end, each team got between three to six lead mentors, Seats said.
The last phase of the program is all about execution, Seats said. The TechStar Cloud companies spend countless hours programming, working on business fundamentals, marketing and more. They often work until late into the night and on the weekends.
But the TechStar Cloud startup founders have also had some fun. They all went to South by Southwest in Austin in March. They also regularly go to local bars, restaurants and museums together.
But in the final weeks of the program, everyone is focused on nailing their presentation pitches and running their businesses.
“For the majority of these companies, this is their shot,” Seats said.

You’re Invited to TechStars Cloud Demo Day on April 11th

In January, entrepreneurs from all over the country arrived in San Antonio for the first ever TechStars Cloud.
Nicole Glaros, one of the program’s directors, moved to San Antonio with her family for the three month program.
Jason Seats, the other director, says the program is coming to a conclusion with TechStars Cloud Demo Day on April 11th at the Charline McCombs Empire Theater at 226 N. St. Mary’s Street.
At the event, 11 TechStars Cloud teams will give eight minute company pitches to the audience which will include investors, TechStar mentors, family and friends as well as community members.
To reserve a seat, you’ve got to RSVP on Eventbrite because the event is expected to be at capacity.
Angel and other investors can also contact Jason Seats directly about reserving a seat at the event.
TechStars Cloud Demo Day runs from 9:30 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. with an after party at the Weston Center Terrace starting at 7 p.m.

TechStars Cloud companies are “like little soft baby chicks”

The first TechStars Cloud program kicked off in San Antonio on Jan. 19 with 11 companies that all moved to the city from outside the state.
Jason Seats and Nicole Glaros, managing directors, run the TechStars Cloud program at the Geekdom, a collaborative workplace in downtown San Antonio on the 11th floor of the Weston Centre. The three-month incubator and mentoring program ends with a demo day in April. TechStars are’t revealing the names of the companies involved in the program until Demo Day.
Meanwhile, the folks at Rackspace Hosting did this hilarious video with Seats and Glaros recently.
The video starts off serious, but you have to hang with it until the end.
Glaros has some great comments.
“We do a lot of hazing here at TechStars cloud,” says Glaros. “You have to be top of mind and of body.”
“Somewhere between 90 and 100 percent of these companies are just elaborate money laundering schemes,” Glaros said.
She gives the companies “diapers and wipes” when they walk in the door because they are so young.
Meanwhile, Seats says the companies are like “little soft baby chicks” and that they just want to cuddle them.

TechStars Cloud kicks off Jan. 9 in San Antonio

Jason Seats, managing director of the TechStars Cloud, says hundreds of companies applied to the program. In the end, TechStars choose 11 companies. All of them are from outside of San Antonio. Seats is not revealing the company names until April 6th at TechStars Cloud Demo Day.
Nicole Glaros, one of the founders of TechStars in Boulder, will also move to San Antonio for the 13-week program with her family. Seats says the program will serve as the catalyst San Antonio needs to ignite its high-tech startup community. All of the companies will be located at Geekdom, a collaborative workspace at the Weston Centre in downtown San Antonio.

TechStars for a day at Geekdom

The TechStars Cloud could serve as a catalyst to ignite San Antonio’s startup technology community.
That’s because ten new startups will locate here for the 12-week program, which kicks off in January. Also, Nicole Glaros, TechStar managing director, will move here with her family. She will run the TechStars Cloud along with Jason Seats.
On Saturday, about 120 applicants, mentors, funders and others gathered at Rackspace’s new collaborative workspace downtown, called Geekdom. The 15,000 square foot offices on the 11th floor of the Weston Centre will host the TechStar Cloud companies.
At TechStars for a Day, applicants listened to speakers and panel discussions about what it’s like to be a TechStars entrepreneur. They also networked. The program ended at 4 p.m. but many stayed until past 6 p.m. to drink Dos Equis and Shiner beer and chat.
Seats ran the TechStars for a Day program. People sat in bright red, black and white stools and chairs or on large red bean bags in front of a giant screen on which Seats projected the images of Glaros and TechStars Founder David Cohen, both located in Denver, via Skype. Glaros is in the last trimester of her pregnancy and can’t travel right now. But she gave sage advice and insight into the program.
“TechStars’ secret sauce is its mentors,” Glaros said, which include some of the best and brightest minds nationwide, she said. “These mentors are giving freely of their time to make sure these companies get to the next level.”
Glaros told the room to “put down your smart phones and start talking” and to “participate actively” to get the most out of the day. She also told them to “nail your elevator pitch. It should be two sentences and less than 30 seconds.”
“Don’t hog too much of anyone’s time,” Glaros said. “Keep conversations to five minutes.”
And on that note, Glaros’ broadcast froze. Seats tried to fix the connection, which prompted Rackspace Chairman Graham Weston to say “This is the only production in town where the guy running the show is also the audio and visual guy.”
The lean production speaks to the culture of the TechStars startups to do as much as they can on strict budgets. But all of the TechStar Cloud winners get money. They receive $18,000 and access to a $100,000 loan. They must relocate to San Antonio for the duration of the program, which culminates in April with a TechStars Cloud Demo Day, in which they pitch their companies to investors. Weston, Rackspace Founders Pat Condon and Dirk Elmendorf have provided the funding for TechStars Cloud for the next four years.
Cohen, also spoke to the group via Skype because his mother was visiting him. TechStars has already funded 100 companies of which nine have been acquired by larger companies and 14 have failed. Collectively, the startups have raised $100 million. Anyone can apply for the program, including foreign companies, as long as they obtain Visas. The program is about “a community” of expertise around funding technology startups, Cohen said. Successful entrepreneurs serving as mentors, combined with alumni and TechStar’s network of 75 venture funds and angels nationwide help to make the program a success, Cohen said.
“A large focus is on quality,” Cohen said. TechStars provides 10 mentors to one company, he said.
“Our goal is to make every single company we fund successful,” Cohen said.
The two biggest startup killers are lack of a market for a product and issues with the team, Cohen said. TechStars mentors can help with those issues because they have faced them before in their own startups. To succeed, the companies need to “be the best in the world at what you do,” Cohen said.
Trying new things, failing and learning from the mistakes are some of the biggest advantages startups have over large and well funded companies, Cohen said.
In response to a question from the audience, Cohen said the biggest misconception about TechStars is it’s “only for very young companies or 21 year old white dudes.” The average age of a applicant is 31 and the age range of TechStar entrepreneurs is generally between 22 and 42 years old, although they’ve had older entrepreneurs, he said. Lots of companies are already established in a market but need help getting to the next level, Cohen said.
“Many companies come into TechStars with $1 million in revenue or $1 million in funding,” he said.
The inaugural TechStars Cloud program focuses on “companies that are building the cloud and not building on the cloud,” Cohen said. The cloud provides companies the ability to deliver computer services online.
After the overview of the program and advice from Cohen and Glaros, Seats introduced Weston to the crowd.
“The legacy of this man is going to be all about this town,” Seats said. “Graham Weston has done more for this town than any single man since Davy Crockett.”
Rackspace knows how to help startups because it was one not too long ago.
At a San Antonio hamburger joint in 1998, Weston and his partner Morris Miller met with three Trinity University students, Elmendorf, Condon and Richard Yoo, the founders of Rackspace, a startup hosting company. Rackspace has since evolved into a publicly traded hosting giant with $1 billion in revenue and nearly 4,000 employees. It is San Antonio’s largest technology company and Weston, Elmendorf and Condon want to create more like it.
Weston, referencing the book “The Coming Job’s War,” said most of this country’s net new jobs are produced by companies less than five years. Startups are fueling the country’s economic growth now and into the future, he said.
Then Weston gave a pitch on the city’s shining attributes that would have made the Greater San Antonio Chamber of Commerce proud. He mentioned the city’s low unemployment rate and huge medical and biotechnology industry, which is larger than the tourism industry. He touted the city’s rapidly developing urban life with thousands of apartments and condos being built in the downtown area and the city’s 68 miles of bike trails and 11,000 acres of urban parks. San Antonio has affordable housing, Weston said.
“You can buy a great house for less than $200,000,” he said.
San Antonio has the benefits of a large city, but the feel of a small town, Weston said. It’s kid friendly and a great place for families, he said. He also mentioned the city’s 31 higher education institutions and 100,000 students and its thriving arts community.
The city also has five Fortune 500 companies and a few large private companies like USAA and HEB. The startup community in San Antonio is poised to take off, Weston said.
“The founders and I are determined to create the next Rackspace over the next 20 years,” Weston said.
Weston then introduced Seats, who founded Slicehost, which Rackspace acquired in 2008. Rackspace’s cloud revenue has grown from zero to $200 million since that acquisition, Weston said. One of the requirements of the acquisition was that Seats move to San Antonio, Weston said.
“He’s the sort of entrepreneur San Antonio needs more of,” he said.
Seats has an office in Rackspace’s Geekdom and is looking forward to helping other entrepreneurs succeed with their ventures.
In addition to the entrepreneurs, Ned Hill, a venture capitalist with DFJ Mercury in Houston, gave the audience advice on how to seek funding. DFJ Mercury provides investments ranging from $50,000 to $1 million and has $110 million under management. One of DFJ Mercury’s hot portfolio companies is Austin-based Game Salad, which allows anyone to create a game for a variety of devices without knowing any coding.
Hill often gets asked “How do I choose the right VC?” He says “The right VCs are easy to spot. They are the ones writing the checks.”
He told the entrepreneurs to be flexible and persistent.
“You’ve got to be really good at telling your story,” he said. VCs invest in ideas that make sense and have value and in people who are passionate and know their market better than anyone, he said. “Vision, passion and drive,” Hill said. “Let it shine though. Don’t give up, make it happen.”
Deals can take only a few days or up to a year to get funded, he said. DFJ Mercury likes to own at least 20 percent of the company upon exiting the investment. VCs like to see the opportunity to earn ten times their investment when they give a company money, but most deals don’t earn anywhere near that, he said.
He advised the entrepreneurs to always be thinking about their exit strategy, especially if they receive funding.
“You can’t be in it for the lifestyle,” he said. “If you’re not able to sell a company in five to seven years then you’ve got a problem. Try to exit your business within five years.”
Elmendorf told the group that one of their greatest strengths was not knowing a lot.
“You literally have no idea how hard it is what you’re trying to do,” he said.
But that’s ok, and failing is also Ok, he said.
“As long as you keep doing this, it’s a learning process,” he said. “Failing is totally awesome as long as you don’t stop. If you stop and go get a real job, then you’re a failure.”
Starting a company is a “messy, hard endeavor,” Elmendorf said.
Startup companies need to know what problem they are trying to solve. It’s easy to get sidetracked, so entrepreneurs must constantly focus and ask themselves what they’re trying to work out, he said.
Entrepreneurs often play multiple roles in the organization early on, but they’ve got to spin those off and hire more people as the organization grows.
“I was HR because I had the most jobs,” Elmendorf said. “I slowly carved off the other things that weren’t related.”
Other panel discussions and talks featured former Techstars entrepreneurs, some who succeeded and others who did not.
Don’t be afraid to try something that doesn’t work out, said Josh Fraser, founder of EventVu and Torbit. He shut down EventVue after three years in February of 2010. EventVue created an app that allowed people to network at conferences. After closing up shop, he started getting calls from Facebook and other large companies that wanted to hire him. He also got calls from former investors who wanted to know what he was working on next. He’s now founder of Torbit.
Donning a brown stetson and cowboy boots, Lance Walley founder of Chargify and a TechStars Cloud mentor, talked about customer acquisition and pricing.
“Pick a niche and charge enough for your products,” he said. “If you know who your customer is, you can acquire them.”
In a later panel featuring other TechStar mentors, Rackspace Founder Condon said that narrowing the market and focusing the product on a specific customer is the best way to succeed.
“You have to say no to a lot of folks,” he said.

The application deadline for the Rackspace TechStars Cloud program is Monday, Nov. 7.

TechStars Cloud applicants meetup in San Antonio

The deadline to apply for the TechStars Cloud program is Monday.
But already the program has received several hundred applications for the inaugural TechStars program in San Antonio, said Jason Seats, managing director for TechStars Cloud and cofounder of Slicehost, which San Antonio-based Rackspace acquired.
On Friday night, several of those entrepreneurs met with Rackspace employees and tech company mentors at the Esquire Tavern on the Riverwalk downtown. Some of them travelled from Nashville, Portland, San Francisco, Madison, Wisc. and the United Kingdom.
On Saturday, they will gather on the 11th floor of the Weston Centre downtown from noon until five to hear speakers from Rackspace including one of the founders, Dirk Elmendorf and Rackspace Chairman Graham Weston along with speakers from TechStars.
Seats calls it “TechStars for a day.”
Elmendorf says Rackspace has remade the 11th floor of the Weston Centre into “Geekdom” with plenty of space for start up companies to work and mingle.
The 13-week TechStars Cloud program will start in January and culminate with the TechStars Demo Day in April in which the selected companies will pitch to potential investors. San Antonio is the fifth site for a TechStars program with other locations in Boston, Seattle, New York and Boulder, Colo.
“This location is all about cloud,” Seats said.
The cloud is like “the plumbing of the Internet,” Seats said. It’s the “heavy-lifting technology stuff that takes place behind the scene.”
Seats says the applicants for the TechStars Cloud program, so far, have more of a business to business focus, rather than a business to consumer focus. The applicants span a wide range of industries including music, hosting, infrastructure, video and gaming.
The interest in the program is high because not only do the 10 TechStars Cloud companies receive $18,000 in initial investment but they receive mentoring and access to a network of accomplished entrepreneurs and potential funders.
“It’s a fantastic time to start a new company,” Seats said. “If you’re a developer with a great startup idea, the economy is not hurting for you.”
Most of the TechStar cloud companies will come from outside of San Antonio, Seats said. He expects just one to two to be from this area. And he hopes that the injection of new talent into the San Antonio startup community will serve as a catalyst to spur further companies here. And he hopes some of the companies may decide to stay in San Antonio permanently upon completion of the program.
Seats has met with several of San Antonio’s angel investors and he says the community is starting to invest in technology and biotechnology companies locally.
“There is no scarcity of money in San Antonio,” Seats said. “There’s always money for good ideas and good people.”
Seats just returned from TechStars Demo Day in Seattle. He was especially impressed with Romotive, which creates a kit to turn an iPhone into a robot, Everymove, which works with companies to provide healthy incentives to their employees, Vizify, a social network data analysis site and GoChime, connecting brands with people on social media.

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