Category: Austin (Page 102 of 317)

Austin-based Mood Media Completes Deal to Become a Private Company

Austin-based Mood Media Corp. announced Wednesday its acquisition by several investors including Apollo Global Management and GSO Capital Partners.

Mood Media, the parent company of Muzak, is now privately-held and its stock will no longer trade on the Toronto Stock Exchange. The investors paid 17 cents per share Canadian for Mood Media’s stock. The deal allows Mood Media to refinance its existing $650 million debt. The company paid for Chapter 15 bankruptcy protection in federal court last May, according to a Wall Street Journal story.

“The completion of this transaction will improve Mood Media’s financial position and allow us to further bring to life our long-term growth and market leadership initiatives and invest in new, strategic opportunities that strengthen our business,” Steve Richards, President and Chief Executive Officer of Mood Media said in a news release. “We look forward to working with Apollo, GSO and partners to further strengthen Mood’s position as the global leader in delivering Customer Experience solutions. This is an exciting next chapter for the Company, our clients and our partners.”

Mood Media has more than 500,000 client locations worldwide. The company provides sight, sound, scent and social mobile technology systems for restaurants, hotels, banks, retailers and small businesses.

AT&T Launches Second Trial of its Ultra-Fast 5G Network in Austin

AT&T on Tuesday announced the second trial of its ultra-fast 5G network throughout more locations in Austin.

Last year, the Dallas-based company completed the industry’s first wireless 5G business customer trial in Austin.

The company’s second trial delivers “an ultra-fast internet connection to residential, small business and enterprise customers using Ericsson’s 5G RAN and the Intel 5G Mobile Trial Platform,” according to a news release. “The trial participants can stream premium live TV via DIRECTV NOW and experience faster broadband services—all over a fixed wireless 5G signal. The trial benefits from the resources and capabilities of our 5G testbeds in Austin.”

AT&T expects the trial will deliver speeds up to 1 gigabit per second. It tested the technology earlier this year by delivering DIRECTV NOW using mmWave technology at our Middletown, New Jersey lab. It was the first time DIRECTV NOW had been delivered over a 5G connection.

AT&T plans to roll out its 5G wireless service to more customers later next year.

“The technology behind 5G is important. But it’s also about advancing social trends like mobile video streaming,” Marachel Knight, senior vice president, Wireless Network Architecture and Design, AT&T, said in a news release. “In Austin, we’re testing DIRECTV NOW over ultra-fast Internet speeds at a variety of locations. The network of the future will help redefine what connectivity means to both consumers and businesses. This trial helps show that the new reality is coming fast.”

AT&T has seen tremendous growth in data traffic on its mobile network and video now makes up over half of it. Video traffic on its smartphones grew more than 75 percent last year.

Artificial Intelligence Startup SparkCognition Closes on $32.5 Million

Austin-based SparkCognition, a startup focused on artificial intelligence, announced Monday that it has closed on $32.5 million in funding.

Verizon Ventures led the Series B funding round with participating from The Boeing Company, through its Boeing HorizonX unit.

“SparkCognition has pioneered the use of artificial intelligence to bring unparalleled advancements to many of the world’s Fortune 1000 companies,” Vijay Doradla, Director at Verizon Ventures, said in a news release. “We are thrilled to invest in SparkCognition again, and look forward to supporting the company as it continues to transform markets and the businesses of tomorrow.”

SparkCognition has created a data-driven analytics platform for Internet of Things applications with customers in energy, oil and gas, manufacturing, finance, aerospace, defense, telecommunications, and security. SparkCognition plans to use the funds to support its rapid expansion.

“Having industry stalwarts, Verizon and Boeing, support our existing investors in funding this new round of growth serves as tremendous validation of our technology and track record. There is massive demand for our category-leading AI solutions,” Amir Husain, Founder and CEO of SparkCognition said in a news release. “The world is well on its way to an AI-powered revolution – where cognitive systems will truly augment human capabilities, but at machine speed and big data scale. Our real world deployments and on the ground successes speak to the broad applicability of SparkCognition’s AI technology, and the tremendous promise of AI in general.”

Founded in 2013, SparkCognition has raised $48.5 million to date. The company previously raised more than $16 million from investors such as Michael Dell’s private equity arm, MSD Capital, The Entrepreneur’s Fund, Alameda Ventures, Verizon Ventures, CME Ventures, and Brevan Howard. Several existing investors also participated in this round.

HomeAway to Expand to a new 16-Story Office Tower in The Domain

Austin-based HomeAway announced it has signed a lease to occupy a new 16 story office tower in The Domain in the first quarter of 2019.

The vacation rentals company reports the new 315,000 square foot location will be able to accommodate more than 2,000 employees.

“As a global company headquartered in Austin and as the largest and fastest growing consumer tech company based in our hometown, we are well poised to attract the very best talent,” John Kim, HomeAway president, said in a news release. “We’re already hiring at a rapid rate across all disciplines worldwide, and our new offices will help us continue to grow, especially as we look for talented designers, engineers and data scientists.”

The new office building, located at the intersection of Domain Drive and Alterra Parkway, will house HomeAway’s growing product and design, engineering and information technology teams.

“Austin employees are critical to our global growth and success,” Kim said. “Our transition from a sales-driven advertising platform to a tech-driven e-commerce business is already paying off, as our owners and property managers generated $2.7 billion in gross bookings during the first quarter of 2017, nearly 50 percent more vacation rental gross bookings compared to the same time last year.”

HomeAway currently has various office locations in Austin including downtown, North Austin and South Austin. While the additional office at The Domain will allow for consolidation to a more centralized corporate campus, the company also plans to maintain its presence in downtown and in South Austin.

11 Austin Individuals, Companies and Nonprofit Organizations Chosen to Compete at WeWork’s Creator Awards

This week, WeWork announced 11 Austin companies have been selected as finalists for The Creator Awards South Regional Final, which will be held next week at ACL Line.

WeWork selected the finalists from more than 2,000 applications from all across the south. The event is Tuesday, June 27 at ACL Live at The Moody Theater, 310 W Willie Nelson Blvd. It kicks off at 4 p.m. Register and RSVP here.

The finalists will present their idea to compete for financial awards, ranging from $18,000 to $360,000.

“There aren’t too many awards out there for companies like ours,” Abianne Falla, cofounder CatSpring Yaupon, said in a news release. “We’re not a new startup. We haven’t created an app. We’re people who want to makes things better for our community.”

Falla’s company makes tea from yaupon. WeWork’s Creator Awards will give out $1.5 million to “recognize and reward creators.”

WeWork has held other events throughout North America, Europe, and the Middle East. Winners from each event will come together for the global finals, to be held at Barclays Center in New York City on November 30.

The Other Austin Finalists Include:

Incubate: Individuals with an idea or a project that needs funding ($18K – $36K)
Freehand Arts Project
Rancho Alegre Radio
Successful Smiles of Texas

Launch: Businesses or nonprofits that have launched but are still learning ($72K – $180K)
Weird Homes Tour
Kwaddle
Fusebox Festival

Scale: Proven record of success and are ready for the next level (Awards: $180K – $360K)
Maggie Louise Confections
Re: 3D inc
Brian Chase Productions
Grub Tubs
CatSpring Yaupon

UT Austin Spinout Startup GenXComm Lands $1.5 Million in Seed Funding

Sriram Vishwanath, Co-Founder and President of GenXComm, courtesy photo.

One of the latest startups to spin out of the University of Texas at Austin, GenXComm has received a $1.5 million seed round of financing.

The Austin-based startup is focused on doubling the amount of traffic a wireless network can handle. Its patent-pending technology is called S-SIX.

FAM Capital Partners led the investment with investments from the UT Horizon Fund and other investors.

GenXComm, founded in 2016, has created patent-pending technology that doubles the capacity of the available network and increases performance by up to 30 times for dense environments, said Sriram Vishwanath, co-founder, and president of GenXComm. He is also a professor of electrical and computer engineering at UT Austin.

The problem today is that networks “must transmit and receive in either different frequencies at the same time, or at different times on the same frequency,” according to a news release.

“What we are enabling is a whole new class of communications tools that can talk and listen at the same time,” Vishwanath said. “We enable the solution to remove interference.”

“GenXComm’s technology enables multiple transmitters to coexist side-by-side, enabling life without interference,” according to a news release.

GenXComm is already testing its technology and plans to deploy it nationwide through licensing deals and through its own products.

The company, which has 11 employees, plans to use the latest funding to hire key employees and to continue research and development on its technology and testing with strategic partners.

“GenXComm is focused on commercializing a UT-based technology with massive potential,” Nick Tulloh, Senior Investment Analyst with the UT Horizon Fund, said in a news release. “With the increasing adoption of IoT devices and streaming services representing an increasing portion of mobile internet traffic, data demands are outpacing network capabilities. GenXComm plans to deliver quality and capacity improvements across the whole spectrum of networked devices.”

In April, GenXComm presented at the Innovation Center’s StARTup Studio.

This isn’t Vishwanath’s first startup. A few years ago, Vidur Bhargava and Vishwanath invented patented software technology to make wireless networks perform more efficiently at UT Austin. That technology is being commercialized by M87, a startup founded in Austin, which moved to Seattle.

The Movie “For Here or to Go?” Depicts the Plight of H1-B Visa Workers in the U.S.

Rishi Bhilawadikar screenwrter of the movie, “For Here or to Go” courtesy photo.

Rishi Bhilawadikar created the movie, “For Here or to Go?” to tell the story of H1-B Visa workers in the U.S. living in limbo.

He knows the story firsthand.

For 12 years, Bhilawadikar, a native of India, has been in the U.S. first under a graduate student Visa at Indiana University and later as a technology worker with an H1-B Visa, which primarily goes to highly skilled technology workers in the U.S.

“This is an untold story about immigrants in America,” Bhilawadikar said. “They have a lot to contribute but they are shackled in their ability to do so. “

In the movie, Silicon Valley software engineer Vivek Pandit wants to work for a healthcare startup but his work visa is about to expire. He gets caught up in a paperwork nightmare trying to extend it. The movie shines a light on similar struggles of uncounted immigrants in the U.S., Bhilawadikar said.

In his spare time, Bhilawadikar, who is a senior interaction designer for Gap Inc., completed the film in 2015. The indie-film went through the festival circuit before getting screened in public theaters. It is currently playing at Film Desi Theaters on Research Blvd. in Austin through Wednesday.

The movie has appeared on 35 screens in 12 states, Bhilawadikar said.

“A lot of it is based on my experiences as an immigrant worker,” Bhilawadikar said. “I first came to the Bay Area, and I was being asked to work my master’s thesis on a startup idea. But incubators didn’t have the ability to sponsor Visas.“

The film depicts how challenging it can be to pursue ideas and dreams while being on an immigrant status, he said.

“This is a very significant story that no one has been talking about,” Bhilawadikar said.

He says there is a real “gap of empathy for the immigrant worker.”

And few know how immigration works in the US and it leads to all kinds of discrimination. Bhilawadikar said.

“It locks up human potential,” he said.

The U.S. limits the number of H1-B Visa workers to 85,000 annually and about 100,000 more are reissued or extended.

“China and India received 82 percent of all H-1B visas issued in 2016, according to data from the U.S. Department of State,” according to a story in Recode.

“Their existence is completely dependent on the employer,” Bhilawadikar said. “It doesn’t matter if you’ve been here for two years, 12 years or 20 years.”

“My message really is that employers, employees and universities, and organizations need to understand how the laws affect human life,” Bhilawadikar said.

The movie is a call to action to all such organizations that can impact these laws, he said.

Culture can Make or Break a Technology Company

Square Root’s Team, courtesy photo.

By LAURA LOREK
Publisher and reporter with Silicon Hills News

Creating a great company culture isn’t just about having perks like free lunches, Ping Pong tables, and nap rooms.

“They are important in a sense,” said Courtney Branson, head of culture at Square Root in Austin. “Having a Ping Pong table does bring people together and helps build relationships, but it’s not all a company culture is. Having those things won’t make your company a great place to work.”

Having a great company culture can differentiate a startup in the marketplace, said Michele Herlein, Ph.D., workplace expert and Chief Human Resource Officer at Barge, Waggoner, Sumner and Cannon in Nashville.

“It’s the secret sauce,” Herlein said.

Companies that focus on culture outperform others by three times, Herlein said.

“It’s not the perks,” she said. “The culture is really defined by how things are done. The way people feel, how they are treated and if people are able to make a difference and use their own talent to add value to the company…What creates a great culture is a company where an employee feels valued.”

Austin has several startups with great company cultures. Fortune Magazine and Great Place to Work named Square Root, AgileCraft, AcademicWorks, BP3 Global to its 2016 list of the nation’s best small to medium sized businesses.

Square Root sees company culture as essential to success, said Chris Taylor, its founder and CEO. The bootstrapped, private company, founded in 2006, makes store relationship management software and has 55 employees and $12 million in annual revenue.

Square Root learned about the importance of company culture after it hit 18 employees and two talented workers left the company, Taylor said. It was because the company hadn’t articulated its values and its mission, he said.

From that point forward, Square Root did just that, he said.

“We made company culture a huge priority,” he said.

Its mission statement is to “transform the relationship between brands and their stores.” Its values, which are framed and hang on the walls of the conference room, are to “think big, do bigger, be customer inspired, partner and thrive.”

Having someone in charge of human resources and company culture is extremely important, Taylor said.

A lot of tech companies skip adding a human resources executive in the beginning but as they become bigger that position can become essential in preventing a toxic workplace.

“When you are first starting out you put everything before the people because you are just in it and you’re racing to develop the next big thing,” Branson said. “I came on board and I really tried to make our values come to life.”

Square Root set up a system to hire employees based on its values, Branson said. Every job candidate meets with several executives and each one ranks them. Branson interviews candidates for cultural fit.

Recently a job candidate scored well with everyone but Branson. He was dismissive of her and her questions. She ranked him lower than everyone else so they didn’t offer him a job and started the process over again.

Having a toxic company culture can be detrimental to a startup, Taylor said.

The importance of a healthy company culture came to light recently in Silicon Valley with online ride-hailing company, Uber. Earlier this month, Travis Kalanick, its founder, took a leave of absence following a “series of scandals stemming from its bad boy culture,” according to the New York Times.

Uber’s problems stem, in part, from a blog post by one of its former software engineers, Susan Fowler, who wrote about being hit on by her boss and reporting it to human resources and being told to either endure it or find another assignment.

That kind of behavior can lead to a toxic workplace if companies try to keep Rockstar engineers happy by bending the rules and making allowances for their behavior, Taylor said.

The key is to create an environment where everyone can thrive, Branson said. And having a diverse culture helps, she said.

Square Root does provide perks to employees and they do help keep employees engaged and happy, but company communication is key, Branson said. The company executives meet with employees on a regular basis.

Among Square Root’s most popular perks is an annual $3,000 tuition reimbursement that employees can use on anything to learn a new skill like scuba diving.

And recently Square Root’s COO Elizabeth Schwartz took a sabbatical to complete a five-month hike on the Pacific Crest Trail.

The company also has a monthly event called “knitting” in which employees gather on the lawn to share something they are passionate about outside of work. Topics have included whiskey, fostering dogs, and writing stories for children.

Last fall during Fortune Magazine’s Great Place to Work conference for small to medium sized businesses in Austin, Herlein toured Square Root.

“They really were putting intention on culture from the ground up,” Herlein said. “They were putting processes in place to make sure the people they hired were congruent with the company’s values.“

Square Root’s campus consists of five 1920s craftsman style bungalows in Clarksville, less than a mile from downtown. Its campus has a unique neighborhood feel that was very inviting, she said.

A healthy company culture ensures that employees take good care of customers, she said.

“Everyone should always be continually learning, growing and progressing,” Herlein said.

Leadership needs to demonstrate trust and integrity, she said.

Sometimes problems arise in a company culture when someone is promoted into management. They might be a great engineer, but they might not make a great manager, she said.

“It’s got to be the decision of leadership that you don’t tolerate those behaviors,” Herlein said. “The traits you condone are what you’re going to get.”

Maintaining Square Root’s great company culture as it gets larger is extremely important, Taylor said.

“Every person you hire is going to move your company culture,” he said.

Taylor wants to make sure those employees move the culture in the right direction.

Editor’s note: As part of the day-long NewCo Austin conference, Square Root’s COO Elizabeth Schwartz and its CEO Chris Taylor are giving a talk at 4 p.m. on Wednesday at its offices to talk about “Take a Hike: How Our Culture Supported My 5-Month Sabbatical.”

One of Square Root’s offices, courtesy photo.

Amazon to Buy Austin-based Whole Foods Market for $13.7 Billion

Amazon announced Friday plans to buy Austin-based Whole Foods Market in a deal valued at $13.7 billion.

“Millions of people love Whole Foods Market because they offer the best natural and organic foods, and they make it fun to eat healthy,” Jeff Bezos, Amazon founder, and CEO said in a news release. “Whole Foods Market has been satisfying, delighting and nourishing customers for nearly four decades – they’re doing an amazing job and we want that to continue.”

Under the deal, Whole Foods Co-Founder John Mackey will remain CEO and the company will continue to be based in Austin, according to a news release. And all stores will continue to operate under the Whole Foods Market brand.

“This partnership presents an opportunity to maximize value for Whole Foods Market’s shareholders, while at the same time extending our mission and bringing the highest quality, experience, convenience, and innovation to our customers,” Mackey said in a news release.

The deal is expected to close in the second half of this year pending shareholder and regulatory approvals.

Founded in 1978 in Austin, Whole Foods Market is the leading natural and organic foods supermarket with sales of $16 billion in 2016. It has more than 460 stores in the U.S., Canada, and the U.K. and it has 87.000 employees.

The Austin business community is glad Whole Foods will remain locally based.

“It’s great to hear that Whole Foods, an iconic homegrown company, will remain an integral part of our local community,” Mike Berman, a spokesman at the Austin Chamber of Commerce said in a news statement. “This game-changing announcement is yet another example of the strong creative culture and talent throughout the Austin region that enables innovative businesses to start, grow, and attract a significant level of investment. While this move will hopefully result in more opportunities for Austin, we can’t be complacent. To help Austin remain an attractive job generator, we need to stay focused on recruiting new headquarter companies, building venture capital, and helping small businesses grow.”

Tom Ball, co-founder and managing director of Next Coast Ventures, sees Austin as a “natural fit for Amazon’s growth strategy.”

“The deal makes a lot of sense for a number of reasons, especially with Amazon’s local physical footprint already established on the AWS side of the house,” Ball said in a news statement. “No one is quite sure yet how Amazon will parlay its technology ambitions into existing Whole Foods locations, however, Bezos surely saw the size of Whole Foods influence in the grocery market segment and felt like now was the time to strike a deal. Austin will undoubtedly be a test market for some of these broader technology initiatives as Amazon extends its reach into brick and mortar.”

Procore Technologies Hosts Summer Solstice Kick-Off Party for Austin Tech Community

Procore Technologies, which makes construction management software, is hosting a Summer Solstice Kick-Off party next Thursday.

And you’re invited.

The event takes place at Procore’s Austin office at 221 W. 6th Street on the 18th floor starting at 5:30 p.m. It features light dinner and drinks, but you must RSVP.

“It’s not often that we get the chance to open our doors to the Austin community, so we’re taking full advantage by throwing a little party and giving away something BIG!” according to Procore.

Procore advises people to bring their business cards to enter their big giveaway.

The Austin office is the second largest office for Carpinteria, Calif.-based Procore Technologies. It opened three years and late last year it moved into a much larger office space on the 18th floor of the Chase Tower building downtown. Procore has more than 50 employees in the 16,000-square foot Austin office and is rapidly hiring.

Procore Technologies makes cloud-based project management software used in all types of construction projects from industrial plants to university facilities and retail centers and more.

Tooey Courtemanche, the company’s CEO, founded Procore Technologies in 2002. The company has raised $179 million since its inception, according to its Crunchbase profile.

Forbes reported last December that the company reached unicorn status after raising a $50 million venture capital round that now values the company at more than $1 billion.

Editor’s note: This is a sponsored post for Procore Technologies, which is an advertiser with Silicon Hills News. For more information on the party,
click here.

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