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App Puts Patients and Providers on the Same Page

By TIM GREEN
Reporter with Silicon Hills News

Jason Bornhorst, CEO and co-founder of Patient.io

Jason Bornhorst, CEO and co-founder of Patient.io and Filament Labs

Corinthian Health operates 20 centers where patients get critical intravenous drug treatments for chronic neurological and autoimmune diseases.

The monthly sessions of infusions can last up to eight hours. If the patient isn’t properly prepared or the complex drug mix is off, the patient can suffer significant side effects such as severe headaches and nausea. If worse comes to worst, the patient might have to give up the treatments.

To help patients manage their preparation and monitor conditions between treatments, Texas-based Corinthian has turned to a smartphone app called Patient IO developed by Austin startup Filament Labs.

The patients who use the app have done away with the packets of paper of care instructions and guidelines the doctor sent home with them and phone calls with their care team.

Instead they get reminders on their phones about drinking enough water and taking their meds. Corinthian’s staff can check in with their patients and the patients can quickly notify the staff when they have headaches or other problems. The app also has a library of medically vetted information about the patient’s disease.

Bucky Staggs, Corinthian’s science liaison, said the information flow between provider and patient enables them to work together effectively to improve care.

“It’s the biggest innovation I’ve seen in management for chronic disease patients,” said Staggs, who’s been a registered nurse for nearly 30 years. “It has absolutely improved the quality of care that we deliver to these chronic patients every time we see them.”

He said it’s essential to have a two-way bridge between patient and staff.

“For example, if we know you’re having side effects we can modify your next infusion to prevent that from happening again,” he said.

Colin Anawaty, Co-founder and the Chief Product Officer of Patient.io and Filament Labs

Colin Anawaty, Co-founder and the Chief Product Officer of Patient.io and Filament Labs

Filament co-founders Jason Bornhorst, the company’s chief executive, and Colin Anawaty, the chief product officer, created the app out of the ashes of a previous fitness-related venture. They’ve found more interest and money in the digital healthcare business.

Patient IO is part of a wave of digital health products responding to health care changes that hold providers more accountable for patient outcomes and that encourage patients to take active roles in their treatments.

Filament expects annual revenue of $1 million this year. It’s raised $1.5 million in seed rounding funding from Corinthian Health and Arcadia, another customer, as well as Mercury Fund, Techstar Ventures, Geekdom Fund and a number of angels. Bornhorst said the company plans to seek Series A funding in the first quarter of 2016.

Bornhorst brings the experience of a serial entrepreneur to Filament Labs. When he was a student at the University of Michigan he started several companies. One, Mobiata, was bought by Expedia and still develops all of the company’s mobile travel apps.

Forbes noticed the healthcare turn, putting Bornhorst on its list of “30 Under 30” in healthcare for 2015.

Filament was selected for the first class of Techstars Austin on the basis of its fitness app, called Healthspark. The app would send reminders to users about exercise. The company even had a deal for the Aetna insurance company to distribute the app to its policyholders.

However, the app met the same fate as a Fitbit stuck in a sock drawer or a treadmill used as a clothes rack. Encouraging fitness, it turned out, was not a sustainable business.

Bornhorst said they needed some convincing to switch gears. “We got dragged into changing the app.”

Austin entrepreneur Josh Kerr was one of Filament’s mentors in Techstars and he and other mentors consulted with Bornhorst and Anawaty about pivoting.

“Both Jason and Colin wanted the same thing out of this company,” Kerr said. “They shared all the right core values. They both believed in the same end goal and were motivated by all the right reasons. They had complimentary skills and the resources they would need to be successful.”

Refocused, Bornhorst and Anawaty and their team went to work.

“It was no trivial thing,”Bornhorst said. “We totally rebuilt the platform.”

Kerr said that from his point of view, Bornhorst and Anawaty worked through some tough times together, but emerged with a much stronger company targeting a much bigger market.

Filament’s staff of 10, builds out and markets the app, working out of a building populated by other startups and tech companies. The team has many of its meetings at nearby Sweetish Hill Bakery.

Today, the app has thousands of users across 25 clinical sites, Bornhorst said.

The Corinthian site in San Antonio has a group of patients that pass on Patient IO’s benefits to fellow patients, Staggs said.

“Patients who use it and understand the value are talking to their fellow patients,” he said. ”Our internal growth (of the app) is from current users advocating to fellow patients.”

That’s accountability Filament likes.

Seeking High Tech and Low Tech Solutions to Low Voter Turnout

By LAURA LOREK
Reporter with Silicon Hills News

Tracey Jaquith with Internet Archive's Political Ad Tracker Project

Tracey Jaquith with Internet Archive’s Political Ad Tracker Project

Why don’t more people vote?

Only about 36 percent of the voting population turned out for the 2014 midterm elections, the lowest turnout election since 1942, according to stats from the United States Election Project.

That’s a big problem and a group of experts in technology, journalism, civics and elections met at the Belo Center for New Media at the University of Texas at Austin campus last week to discuss how to get more people civically engaged. They participated in an invitation-only daylong conference hosted by the Annette Strauss Institute for Civic Life focused on increasing civic engagement before, during and after elections.

The conference featured speakers from Google, Microsoft, Code for America, Rock the Vote, Vox Media, Texas Tribune, the clerk of Travis County and many more.

Lots of information and tools to encourage voters already exist online. Tammy Patrick, senior advisor with the Presidential Commission on Election Reform, a bipartisan policy center, produced a report with recommendations to increase voter turnout at SupporttheVoter.gov. Patrick participated in a panel on how can election officials and nonprofits better inform and engage the public.

Another panelist, Ashley Spillane, president of Rock the Vote, is often asked “Why can’t I vote on my phone?” Rock the Vote, a nonpartisan, nonprofit organization, works to encourage young people to register to vote and vote.

People can file their taxes securely online and they think they should be able to cast their ballot that way too, Spillane said.

Today, the technology and security are still not up to par on the Internet to create systems in the United States that allow people to vote online, according to VerifiedVoting.org.

But there are lots of people working to make voting easier and better for everyone.

To encourage people to be more civically engaged and to vote is one of the latest challenges the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation took on. On Wednesday morning, the foundation announced the winners of its Knight News Challenge on Elections. The foundation received more than 1,000 submissions and awarded $3.2 million to 22 winners.

“Ten of the winners will receive investments ranging from $200,000 to $525,000 each, while 12 early stage ideas will receive $35,000 each through the Knight Prototype Fund,” according to the Knight Foundation.

Among the winners, Vote by Smartphone by Long Distance Voter received $325,000 to make it easier for people to vote by absentee ballot by using their smartphone to sign up for an absentee ballot.

“There are two things I really love in the world. I really love technology and I really love Democracy. I especially love using technology to reduce barriers to voting so that more people can participate in Democracy,” said Debra Cleaver, founder of Long Distance Voter, a nonprofit tech startup.

Voting absentee is a pretty difficult process, Cleaver said. In 2008, with $5,000 Cleaver and group of four friends launched the Longdistancevoter.org website to teach people how to vote by absentee ballot and to make it easier. They got half a million visitors within six months, Cleaver said.

Today, the site has had 3.5 million visitors, Cleaver said. By the end of 2014, the site had helped more than 600,000 people sign up to vote by absentee voters, she said.

A study by the Pew Research Center showed that in 2014, 70 percent of the people who didn’t vote reported they didn’t vote because they didn’t have time to get to the polls, Cleaver said.

“Which is a problem that you can solve entirely by signing everyone up to vote by absentee ballot, which happens to be what we do,” Cleaver said.

They decided to build an application that lets you sign up for absentee ballot using your smartphone. They partnered with DocuSign to use their technology to allow people to sign their absentee ballot application by taking a picture on their smartphone. Then they partnered with another company to handle the printing and mailing of the applications.

Vote by Smartphone has enough funding to run a pilot in two states, Cleaver said. It is seeking additional funding to expand the pilot to ten states, she said. And its ultimate goal is to have the technology in all 50 states by 2020 so any registered voter who wants to vote by absentee ballot can sign up just using their phone.

Another Knight Challenge winner, the Internet Archive plans to use its $200,000 grant to hire a new staff member to help create its project, the 2016 Political Ad Tracker, said Tracey Jaquith with the Internet Archive. The project seeks to establish a searchable database of political ads from 2016 primary election states for voters to check for accuracy. The project will partner with PolitiFact, the University of Pennsylvania’s FactCheck.org, the Center for Public Integrity and others.

David Pace with the Associated Press presented the AP’s project “The Next Generation Beyond Exit Polls,” which received a $250,000 grant to capture more accurate polling results around elections. It will do a series of experiments in the fall elections and next year to come up with a new methodology that will build on the legacy of the exit poll, Pace said.

The largest grant for $525,000 went to a project titled “Inside the 990 Treasure Trove” by the Center for Responsive Politics and Guidestar. The project seeks to better inform the public about who is funding campaigns through a partnership with Guidestar to reveal the sources of so-called “dark money.

Not all of the ideas were high tech.

Duerward Beale with Sharp Insight in Philadelphia

Duerward Beale with Sharp Insight in Philadelphia

Sharp Insight plans to use its $250,000 grant to train 50 barbers in 25 barbershops to be disseminators of nonpartisan information to help their clientele understand the importance of voting and being involved civically, said Duerward Beale, the project’s leader in Philadelphia.

“We think we can reach 6,000 men in barbershops directly,” Beale said.

BarkHappy Launches a Social Networking App for Dogs in Austin

Daily-Match2 (1)A social networking app for dog owners made its debut in Austin this week.

It’s BarkHappy, a location based meet up and search app, for dog owners. The app, which is available on Android and IOS devices, lets dog owners discover other dogs in their area through geolocation. The app lets dog owners arrange meetings so the dogs can socialize.

BarkHappy also lets dog owners find dog friendly places to visit such as restaurants, bars, hotels, parks and more through an interactive map.

“We believe dogs are happiest when they’re out being social with their humans and meeting other dogs,” Ninis Samuel, founder and CEO of BarkHappy, said in a news release. Samuel’s adopted dog, Kerby, served as inspiration to launch the service that focuses on creating an active social lifestyle with your dog.

Dog owners can create profiles for their dogs on the app. The app also sends daily matches for their dog of potentially compatible pups.

BarkHappy plans to launch in other cities in the future.

BarkHappy isn’t the only app tackling the dog socialnetwork. Others include Pack, DoggyDatez and 3MillionDogs.com.

Integreon Opens Austin Office with Plans for 300 Employees

unnamedIntegreon, a global outsourcing firm, held a grand opening reception at its new office in Austin on Thursday night.

The New York-based company plans to create more than 100 jobs initially with the potential to reach 300 jobs in the next few years, according to a news release.

The company currently has 30 employees in Austin and more than 2,500 worldwide, said Bob Gogel, the company’s CEO, during a presentation at the company’s Austin office Thursday night which was livestreamed on the Internet.

Its new global delivery center in Austin is an expansion of the company’s US operations. The new office will assist its law firm and corporate clients who are seeking outsourced legal and administrative services. Its main client is Pfizer Pharmaceutical company.

Integreon’s new offices are in the Davis Springs Spectrum Business Park at 9900 Spectrum Drive. It shares the same building with LegalZoom.

Austin’s major competition for Integreon’s new office was Detroit, but Austin won about because it has better weather, according to a company blog post.

Favor Adds New VP of Engineering and Plans Further Expansion

Michael Nels joins Favor as its new vice president of engineering.

Michael Nels joins Favor as its new vice president of engineering.

Favor, a personal delivery service, landed in Austin in the summer of 2013 and has quickly grown.

Founders Zac Maurais and Ben Doherty moved here from California and launched a grocery and food delivery service. It quickly gained visibility for its runners who wore bright blue T-shirts with a faux tuxedo front.

The service, which started initially in central Austin, has spread throughout the city, state and beyond. And it’s no longer just delivering groceries or food. Its Favor runners fetch everything from bandages at Walgreens to dry cleaning.

In March, the company landed $13 million in Series A venture capital from Silverton Partners, S3 Ventures and Tim Draper. To date, the company has raised $16.9 million in four rounds of funding.

As part of the latest financing, Favor has done some hiring. It just announced this week that Michael Nels has joined the company to lead its engineering team. Nels comes from SolarWinds where he was vice president of software development.

He joined Favor to head up the engineering for a startup in a fast-paced industry, Nels said.

“We intend to expand globally,” Nels said.

Already, Favor is in Austin, San Antonio, Houston, Dallas, Denver, Nashville, Washington, D.C. and Miami. The company has also grown from two employees in 2013 to 50 employees today. Their headquarters is an old house on West Sixth Street.

Favor faces a lot of competition from other companies chasing the same market like Instacart, Postmates, Burpy and others. Favor’s customer service sets it apart from the competition, Nels said. And the demand is high for its services, he said.

“We run errands for basically anything that is legal,” Nels said. “People either spend their time or their money running errands.”

And Favor has found, in this booming economy, people are short on time and are willing to pay Favor runners to act as their personal assistants. The company’s mobile app is available on both Android and IOS mobile phone platforms. Favor makes money by charging a $6 delivery charge plus a percentage of the total value of the goods delivered. Tip is extra.

By the end of the year, Favor expects to have 70 employees, Nels said. With the latest round of funding, the company is building out its engineering, product team as well as marketing, branding and sales, Nels said.

“We are in complete growth mode,” he said.

Veteran-Led Startups Debut at the Bunker Austin’s Elevator Pitch

By LAURA LOREK
Reporter with Silicon Hills News

Rodney Curry, founder of TacTikes at the Bunker Austin elevator pitch event at Capital Factory.

Rodney Curry, founder of TacTikes at the Bunker Austin elevator pitch event at Capital Factory.

At well over six feet tall with a strong build, Rodney Curry, a retired member of the U.S. Army’s 101st airborne division, wears a camel colored bag slung over one shoulder.

He’s still got the close-cropped haircut of a soldier but instead of an army uniform, Curry wears shorts and a T-shirt emblazoned with the logo of his startup company, TacTikes.

And the army-style bag he’s carrying is a rugged diaper bag with modular attachments designed to take your baby from diapers to Kindergarten and beyond.

Curry showed off the bag at an elevator pitch event at Capital Factory Tuesday to showcase veteran-owned startups. TacTikes is one of 11 companies, which just graduated from the Bunker Austin’s first cohort of veteran-led startups. The Bunker Austin also worked with I-Corps, an entrepreneurship program led by the University of Texas’ IC2 Institute. The first program launched in January and ran for six months.

“It’s been one of the greatest learning experiences of my life,” Curry said. “In a nutshell, it has opened me up to a vast network of folks that can provide capital, help me with my branding and marketing and supply chain.”

And he’s worked with mentors at nearly every stage of his company’s development, Curry said. TacTikes recently launched a Kickstarter campaign and has already raised $6,222 of its $45,000 goal with seven days left in its campaign.

IMG_6280Curry also got to pitch Tuesday to a producer of Shark Tank. The special audition, held in conjunction with the Bunker’s elevator pitch event, allowed select veteran-run companies to try out for the show. They will find out in the next few weeks if any of the companies will be featured.

Curry’s two-year-old daughter served as inspiration for the new line of diaper bags.

“I wanted to create something I wanted to carry around and something that had a lot more utility than what’s currently in the marketplace,” Curry said.

He launched TacTikes last summer and attended an entrepreneurial bootcamp for veterans with disabilities at Texas A&M before joining the Bunker Austin. He had a prototype of his bag by December and after going through the Bunker training he launched a Kickstarter this month to ramp up manufacturing. The bags cost $144.99 each.

“We live in a throw away world and I fight that status quo by building a bag that will last as long as you want it,” Curry said.

In addition to TacTikes, the first Bunker Austin cohort included Battle Beds, CoolMellon, F7 Group, HireOurHero, WiseRides, Horton Oil Tools, Sockwork, Unsweet Tea, Uride and V-Threat.

“The cohort helps each entrepreneur actively build and expand their company,” said Johnathan Paul Wojtewicz, co-founder of the Bunker Austin, who served in the U.S. Marines.

Wojtewicz founded the Bunker Austin with Joseph Kopser, co-founder and CEO of RideScout who served in the U.S. Army for 20 years before retiring in 2013 as a Lieutenant Colonel and Blake Hogan, who served as a First Lieutenant in the U.S. Marines and has run a few startups. The veteran founders saw the need for a one-stop shop in Austin to help veteran-run companies launch locally.

Studies show that veteran entrepreneurs are almost twice as likely to succeed over their civilian peers when starting a new business, Wojtewicz said.

The Bunker helps plug the startups into resources and training they need as well as mentors who help advise their businesses, Wojtewicz said. Mentors include Bob Metcalfe, Ethernet inventor and professor of innovation at the University of Texas, U.S. Congressman Michael McCaul and Kevin Koym, founder of Tech Ranch.

At the Bunker’s event Tuesday, the entrepreneurs actually pitched their ideas during an elevator ride from the 16th floor to the lobby. Mentors and investors gave the entrepreneurs feedback on their pitch on the ride back up to the top.

In addition, nine of the 11 companies in the Bunker cohort, presented their companies in front of a packed room. More than 210 people registered for the event.

Marcus Carey, founder of vThreat.

Marcus Carey, founder of vThreat.

“I did meet someone who is going to help us out big time on the elevator,” said Marcus Carey, founder of vThreat and Chief Technology Officer.

vThreat has created a software as a service platform that does enterprise attacks and solutions to show companies where their vulnerabilities exist on their network. Its product is called vThreat Cloud. Carey has raised $650,000 in angel and seed stage investment.

Carey, an expert in cybersecurity, previously served in the U.S. Navy as a cryptologist stationed on a ship in Scotland and at the National Security Agency in Maryland. He originally launched the company in Herndon, Virginia after participating in a special cyber security incubator. But he’s from Marlin, Texas and he relocated the company to Austin.

“I wanted to be part of the Bunker as soon as I heard about it,” Carey said. “It’s an amazing organization. It does put veteran entrepreneurs in contact with mentors and investors.”

vThreat’s office was located at Capital Factory and now they are moving into their own offices.

Michael Ray, who served in the Marine Corp., launched WiseRides to help people, particularly service members, buy used cars.

More than 37,000 mom and pop car dealers in the U.S. sell used cars but there’s a huge gap in educating people on car ownership. The service recently launched in Killeen. Its bootstrapped right now, Ray said. The Bunker Austin program gave Ray a competitive advantage, he said.

“It’s given me access to things I couldn’t do on my own,” he said. “I’ve had conversations with Google and IBM at Capital Factory. We have mentors that come in and give time to us.”

Robert Dicks and his twin brother Charles Dicks, who served in the U.S. Air Force, recently launched Uride Transportation to help people get to healthcare appointments. No shows in the healthcare industry is a $120 billion a year problem, Robert Dicks said.

The Bunker Austin provided guidance, access and resources, Charles Dicks said.

“It just expanded our network and pointed us where we needed to go,” he said. “And it filled in the knowledge gaps.”

Mario Barrett, co-founder of Sockwork and Purpose Outfitters.

Mario Barrett, co-founder of Sockwork and Purpose Outfitters.

Sockwork, a sock subscription service that donates 10 percent of its profits back to charities, also participated in the Bunker Austin and is currently running a Kickstarter campaign for its new brand, Purpose Outfitters, which makes socks dedicated to fallen soldiers.

Sockwork launched its business in 2014 as part of Cratejoy, a subscription box platform, with a $2,000 investment and sold $120,000 worth of socks its first year, said Mario Barrett. He founded the company with his wife, Tina.

“We went from zero to almost six hundred customers in our first six months,” Barrett said. “We stopped doing advertising until we could figure out the fulfillment side.”

Barrett eventually hired a fulfillment company out of Portland, Oregon. Now he handles everything with a computer and a phone. Barrett previously served in the U.S. Army for five years and the National Guard for two years. He is a University of Texas McCombs School of Business MBA graduate. He and his wife both work full time and work on the business after hours. They’ve hired Tina’s sister as their first full time employee.

“We can double our business this year if we really go after it,” Barrett said.

Purpose Outfitters has a day left in its Kickstarter campaign. It has raised almost $10,000 of it $15,000 goal. Each pair of socks contains the name of a fallen soldier stitched into the fabric and the label will contain information about the hero. The socks, made in North Carolina, will be delivered by November if the Kickstarter is successful, Barrett said.

“The Bunker was able to introduce us to people, Barrett said. “It convinced us to go out and be daring with our marketing.”

The Bunker Austin has outgrown its current home at RideScout’s headquarters and plans to co-locate inside Capital Factory. The Bunker Austin is currently accepting applications for its next class, Wojtewicz said.

Continuum Analytics Gets $24 Million in Venture Capital

imagesContinuum Analytics has closed on $24 million in Series A funding led by General Catalyst Partners and BuildGroup.

The Austin-based startup plans to use the funds on product development, sales and marketing and community development.

Continuum makes Anaconda, the leading modern open source analytics platform built on Python, an open data science language. The company has previously received $10 million in funding from angel investors and a Defense Advanced Research Project Agency (DARPA) award. To date, the company has raised $34 million.

Continuum Analytics’ Anaconda platform has more than two million users including 200 of the Fortune 500 companies and 8,000 universities. Its customers include Boeing, Procter & Gamble, Pepsi, Schlumberger, the U.S. Department of the Treasury and the Securities and Exchange Commission.

Travis Oliphant and Peter Wang founded the company in 2012.

“The Anaconda platform continue to be a trusted standard for the world’s best data scientists and a main driver in the Python movement,” Lanham Napier, former CEO of Rackspace and now co-founder of BuildGroup, said in a statement.

Accenture Acquires Chaotic Moon

Ben Lamm, founder of Chaotic Moon, photo by John Davidson

Ben Lamm, co-founder of Chaotic Moon, photo by John Davidson

Accenture has scooped up an Austin original: Chaotic Moon.

The terms of the deal were not disclosed.

Chaotic Moon, founded in 2010, is known in Austin as a creative technology studio, that pushes the boundaries of technology. In 2014 during SXSW, the studio launched a drone and tasered an intern at its offices. It has also created motorized skateboards controlled with a smartphone.

But Chaotic Moon also has a big business creating apps and other technology projects for brands including General Motors. The company works on strategy, digital design, prototyping and development.

Accenture bought Chaotic Moon to expand its “rapid prototyping and creative technology capabilities, as well as a regional foothold in the talent-rich Texas market.”

“Chaotic Moon is a place where ideas are realized, conversations are sparked, and problems are solved through creativity and technology by having the best talent,” Ben Lamm, chief executive officer and co-founder, said in a news release. “With Accenture Interactive, Chaotic Moon will continue to design and build technology of consequence for our existing clients, as well as Accenture’s roster of many of the world’s biggest brands.”

Techstars Cloud Fall Program is Accepting Applications

techstars5Techstars Cloud is back at it again.

The fall program, which kicks off Nov. 2nd and runs until Feb. 11th with a two week break for the holidays, is now soliciting applications.

This is the second Techstars Cloud program for 2015. The first one ended in April with ten companies pitching at Demo Day.

“This program will be the fourth Techstars Cloud program, and my second as Managing Director,” Blake Yeager wrote in a blog post.

The Techstars Cloud program provides each startup with $18,000 in funding for a 6 percent stake in the company and access to $100,000 convertible note, a loan that converts to equity and can make the equity stake higher. The startups also get mentorship and assistant from a variety of technology experts and companies.

Techstars Cloud is having an informational session about the program this Wednesday at the Geekdom events center in San Antonio starting at 6 p.m.

Main Street Hub Lands $25 Million in Financing, Plans to Hire 300

images-4Main Street Hub, which makes a marketing platform for small businesses, last week announced the closing of $25 million in venture capital to support its rapid growth.

The Austin-based startup, founded in 2010, has raised $66 million to date, according to CrunchBase. The company closed on its Series C equity financing round from Vista Equity Partners. Previous investors included Bessemer Venture Partners and Harrison Metal Capital.

Main Street Hub plans to use the funds to hire 300 people in its Austin and New York offices by the end of the year.

It also plans to use the money to introduce several new products.

“Marketing a local business has become significantly more complicated since the days of the Yellow Pages, and today’s consumers expect a two-way conversation across a variety of online channels,” Andrew Allison, co-founder and co-CEO of Main Street Hub, said in a news release.

Main Street Hub sells a marketing platform that includes social media, customer reviews, mobile, and email marketing to help local businesses attract and retain more customers.

Silicon Hills News did this profile on the company in 2013.

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