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Bigcommerce’s First Acquisition is in Austin: Zing

Nate Stewart, Zing's co-founder and CEO

Nate Stewart, Zing’s co-founder and CEO

In its first acquisition, Bigcommerce announced Tuesday its purchase of Zing, an Austin-based startup that provides mobile retail technologies.

The terms of the deal were not disclosed.

Zing’s team of five employees will join Bigcommerce. The company has also acquired Zing’s intellectual property.

Zing moved to Austin three years ago and has raised less than $1 million to build its point of sale technology for retailers to manage their inventory online and in store, said Nate Stewart, its co-founder and CEO. An investor introduced Zing to Bigcommerce a few years ago, Stewart said.

Zing started out as Zing Manage, and then became Zing Checkout and now its just Zing, Stewart said. When Stewart moved from Los Angeles to Austin, he worked out of Capital Factory where he met Zack Angelo, who became the company’s chief technology officer. Zing has been a partner working with Bigcommerce for two and a half years, Stewart said.

“Their vision is so similar to ours,” Stewart said. “It’s exciting.”

Bigcommerce plans to integrate Zing’s payment technology into its software and make it available to its customers. The technology allows retailers to sync online and in-store inventory and allow for in-store pickup. The software also allows retailers to track customer data and purchases online and in store. Bigcommerce has 85,000 retail customers and 30 percent of those have physical stores.

“Nate and the Zing team have done a remarkable job extending the Bigcommerce platform in a way that enables our merchants to do this and more, and I have full confidence in their expertise and IP will further advance and expand our omni-channel strategy,” Eddie Machaalani, co-founder and CEO of Bigcommerce said in a news release.

Bigcommerce, founded in 2009, has received $125 million in funding from SoftBank Capital, American Express, Telstra Ventures, General Catalysts, Revolution Growth and Floodgate. Bigcommerce has offices in San Francisco, Austin and Sydney.

Bigcommerce, which has 250 employees in Austin, is hiring for a variety of positions. Stewart, in particular, is looking for Scala developers.

Betts Recruiting Opens Austin Office

The Betts Recruiting Team in Austin, photo courtesy of the company.

The Betts Recruiting Team in Austin, photo courtesy of the company.

In yet another sign that Austin’s tech industry continues to boom, California companies are opening up offices here.

The latest is Betts Recruiting, a firm which specializes in placing sales and marketing tech talent that generate revenue with local tech companies.

The company’s local customers include Dropbox, MongoDB, StitcherAds and Main Street Hub.

Betts Recruiting’s new office is in Hanning Row on Sixth and Brazos. Mario Espindola, managing director for the Southwest, will head up the new office. The office will also work with clients in Dallas, Houston and San Antonio.

“Austin is known as ‘the next Silicon Valley’ and is becoming one of America’s most important centers of tech innovation,” Carolyn Betts, founder and CEO of Betts Recruiting, said in a news release. “As more tech companies continue to launch in Austin or move to Austin, the city is becoming more of a magnet for top tech talent.”

Betts Recruiting, one of the top 100 Women-owned businesses, also has offices in San Francisco, New York and Dublin, Ireland.

WeWork is Already Full and Looks to Expand in Austin and Texas

By HOJUN CHOI
Special Contributor to Silicon Hills News

WeWork Congress, photo courtesy of the company

WeWork Congress, photo courtesy of the company

WeWork, a startup that offers short-term leases to businesses in need of office space, has expanded to Austin and, despite only having launched in February, is already operating at full capacity with over 500 members.

The New York-based company currently operates in cities across the globe, including major cities in the United States, Israel, U.K. and in Amsterdam. Occupying an office space in the heart of downtown Austin, on the corner of Sixth Street and Congress Avenue, WeWork Congress marks the startup’s first expansion into Texas.

Adam Neumann, the company’s co-founder and chief executive officer, said the WeWork brand is largely about cherishing collaborative experiences, and working together to find new solutions for problems.

“It’s about being a global citizen for the world,” Neumann told Silicon Hill News during a launch party in March.

Bob Metcalfe, co-inventor of Ethernet, who also attended the party, said signing five-year or three-year leases can be burdensome to young and small companies. By offering solutions for this problem, he believes that companies like WeWork help the city foster a better atmosphere for entrepreneurs.

“These leases are for 30 days, and it’s a very ‘hip’ space,” Metcalfe said. “They have aimed it right at the small business community, so it’s just a fantastic thing.”

Photo courtesy of WeWork

Photo courtesy of WeWork

In all 30 of its locations, WeWork offers its members rates on monthly leases, which are sold as packages with various amenities, such as free wireless Internet and printing. Members can also take advantage of open lounging areas that can be used for large social events or casual networking.

WeWork also connects its members to resources that help them manage their business, including discounted rates on health insurance plans and affordable solutions for payroll services.

Rates for the Austin location currently range from $45 to $350.

“It’s this idea of allowing you to focus what you’re super passionate about, but also having a culture of openness and collaboration,” Vice President of Business Development Matt Shampine said.

Shampine said Austin’s vibrant community of entrepreneurs, as well as the city’s unique personality are, largely in part, what caught the expansion team’s attention. During its expansion to central Texas, which took a little over year, Shampine said that the team reached out to local industry leaders as well as the Austin Chamber of Commerce to get in touch with the city’s business community.

“We try to be a part of the transformation of a neighborhood, so in terms of where we could have had our first location in Austin, this is an awesome spot,” Shampine said.

Shampine, who operated his own design and development agency out of a WeWork office space before officially joining the company in 2011, now oversees the company’s business operations. He said the startup will preserve the qualities that first attracted businesses to its spaces during its infancy as it plans for further expansion.

In 2014, the Wall Street Journal reported that the startup was valued at about $5 billion and speculated that the company was planning to go public within the next several years.

Austin is already the home to more than a dozen different coworking office space providers, such as Tech Ranch and Capital Factory that also offer businesses short-term leases. The diversity of its membership base, Shampine said, is what makes WeWork coworking spaces unique from similar shared workspaces.

“Our membership includes tech startups as well as independent lawyer firms. We also have people in accounting, public relations and marketing,” Shampine said. “Everyone here can help each other be more successful, because they each provide a different service.”

Whurley (William Hurley), co-founder of financial technology startup Honest Dollar, was one of the first members to join WeWork Congress. The seasoned serial entrepreneur said he was reeled in by the potential of expanding his business to the other WeWork locations around the world.

“We’re already looking at offices in New York and San Francisco,” Hurley wrote in an email. “The international capabilities were a huge draw for us.”

Honest Dollar, which launched during SXSW, offers small businesses affordable and transparent retirement plans for their employees. Since its launch, the company has grown to 20 people from its original two founders.

“More important than the facilities are the quality of startups we’re around; it’s super inspirational,” Hurley said. “And since startups are our client base, we literally have an office inside a floor full of potential users.”

Photo courtesy of WeWork

Photo courtesy of WeWork

Mark Lapidus, head of Real Estate at WeWork, who answered questions via email, said that the company is currently looking at potential properties for a second location in Texas. Lapidus also wrote that the company has made plans to expand the current office space in the fall.

A small team manages day-to-day operations and organizes social events for its members at each WeWork location.

“All of our community management teams use technology for supporting members, as well as for promoting collaboration in each location and across the globe,” Carly Langley, community manager of the Austin branch, wrote in an email. “Our digital team has built amazing products for us to manage our communities seamlessly.”

Hojun Choi is a student in Professor Rosental Alves’ Entrepreneurial Journalism Class at the University of Texas at Austin.

IBM Shines a Spotlight on Millennial Entrepreneurs

By LAURA LOREK
Reporter with Silicon Hills News

CDY-qpnUEAARcpMIBM put five startups run by millennial entrepreneurs in a house on Lake Travis in Austin this week to work on their ventures.

“They went through a five day accelerator,” said Amber Armstrong, program director of IBM Social Business in Austin.

During the week, the teams had to do a variety of challenges ranging from meeting with customers, partners and venture capitalists to learning how to best pitch their social good ventures, Armstrong said.

The week culminated in a pitch session for IBM’s a New Way to Startup competition Friday afternoon at Trinity Hall in downtown Austin.

The teams included:

Stephen Garten with Charity Charge at IBM's New Way to Startup competition

Stephen Garten with Charity Charge at IBM’s New Way to Startup competition

Charity Charge, a credit card that lets consumers designate money to support charities. #NewWayCC

Stretch Recipes, a mobile phone app that lets people plan healthy meals on a budget. #NewWaySR

The Lassy Project, an app that notifies the local community when a child goes missing. #NewWayLP

Sproutel, a healthcare platform that makes Jerry the Bear, an interactive learning companion for the 18 percent of children with chronic illnesses. #NewWaySP

Owlet Baby Care that has created a sock monitor for infants to detect dangerous heart rates and oxygen levels. #NewWayOW

Even though the teams pitched before a group of judges, IBM did not announce the winner. The winner of the overall event will be announced in July.

The competition actually began at South by Southwest. At that event, ten teams spent a few days together in a house in Tarrytown. They had to pitch at SXSW and the field was narrowed down to five finalists.

IBM is sponsoring the New Way to Startup competition and filming the entire competition for a reality web series. It has released the first episode and plans to release more episodes in coming weeks. The contest also focuses on how the teams use IBM Verse, a business email solution and Watson Analytics, predictive analytics and data visualization.

Starting Friday and running through June 15th, each finalist must work to generate fan impressions online on Twitter using their unique hashtag. Fans get to vote for the favorite team by tweeting their unique hashtag. On July 1st, IBM will announce the winner of the New Way to Startup competition. That winner will receive a trip to the exclusive TED@IBM event.

“We’re trying to show that IBM has the ability to help smaller companies,” Armstrong said.

IBM wants startups to be able to harness the tools and technology in the cloud that it also markets to large enterprise businesses, Armstrong said.

“The house was amazing. It was beautiful. It was a great oasis,” said Lauren Foster, founder of Stretch Recipes.

But the ability to make connections through the IBM accelerator was the biggest benefit, Foster said. She met with Whole Foods, which plans to launch a pilot program in Austin with her Stretch Recipes app.

HomeAway Reports First Quarter Loss and Company Reorganization

imgresHomeAway announced its earnings on Thursday along with a company reorganization.

The Austin-based vacation rental company reported a net loss of $2.1 million or two cents per share for the first quarter of 2015, compared to profit of $4.4 million or 5 cents per share for the same quarter a year ago. The company blamed the loss on a $3.6 million tax expense.

HomeAway, which just celebrated its 10th anniversary in February, also reported a nearly 13 percent increase in revenue to $119 million in the first quarter, compared to $105 million for the same quarter in 2014.

HomeAway’s stock, traded under the symbol “AWAY” on the Nasdaq exchange, is down almost 14 percent on Friday. It is currently trading at around $27.75 a share.

HomeAway also announced its President and Chief Operating Officer Brent Bellm plans to resign in June to pursue other opportunities. HomeAway Co-founder and Chief Executive Officer Brian Sharples will resume the role of president.

In addition, Chief Product Officer Tom Hale will become the Chief Operating Officer of HomeAway. And Senior Vice President of the Americas Jon Gray becomes the company’s Chief Revenue Officer, Jeff Hurst becomes the company’s Chief Strategy Officer and Senior Vice President of Global Customer Experience Jeff Mosler becomes Chief Service Officer.

And Carl Shepherd, Co-founder of HomeAway and Chief Strategy and Development Officer, plans to retire in the second half of the year. He will remain on HomeAway’s board.

Datical Snags $2.25 Million More in Funding

imgres-3Datical, a database management company, announced Thursday that it has received an additional $2.25 million in funding.

That brings the Austin-based startup’s total Series A round to $5.9 million. The company previously closed on $3 million in Series A funding in December of 2013.

Mercury Fund led the latest round with participation from Austin Ventures and other investors. The company plans to use the money for sales and marketing operations and for development of its flagship product, Datical DB.

In addition, Datical announced that Derek Hutson, former President of Hart InterCivic, has joined Datical as president and CEO.

Datical’s flagship product, Datical DB let companies update applications on their databases easily and efficiently. The company reports it has a growing base of customers among the Fortune 1000.

Last year, the Greater Austin Chamber of Commerce named Datical as one of its A-List Startups to watch for 2014.

Loop & Tie Selected for National Association of Realtors’ REach Accelerator

logo-ada157a8fbb157c8a747cc6f5e4963cfSecond Century Ventures has selected Loop & Tie and six other organizations for its 2015 class of REach, a growth technology accelerator program.

Second Century Ventures is the investment arm of the National Association of Realtors. The class, which is focused on the real estate and related industries, officially kicks off this week. It provides education, mentorship and market exposure.

“This year’s REach class is made up of truly phenomenal organizations that are innovating both within and beyond the real estate space,” Dale Stinton, president of SCV and NAR CEO, said in a news release. “The entrepreneurial spirit and energy that this class embodies will resonate greatly with the NAR community.”

The seven companies range from seed stage to well-capitalized startups. They have collectively raised more than $35 million.

Loop & Tie is an Austin-based company which is part of the Capital Factory Accelerator. It recently received a $100,000 investment from Steve Case, co-founder of America Online and venture capitalist.

Loop & Tie is an online gifting service that lets companies send unique gifts to customers. The startup has raised $725,000 to date. In 2012, Rodell and Jeffrey Schwartz founded Next One’s On Me, which later evolved to Loop & Tie.

The other startups include Asset Avenue of Los Angeles, BoostUp of Detroit, Guard Llama of Chicago, NotaryCam of Newport Beach, CA, Pro.com of Seattle and TermScout of Denver. They were chosen from hundreds of companies that applied to REach this year.

The Portugal and Austin Tech Connection

imgres-2A delegation of business leaders from Portugal is in Austin this week to study the city’s technology startup ecosystem.

The IC2 Institute of the University of Texas at Austin is hosting the group of 40 people, which includes Portuguese companies, incubators, venture capitalists and angel investors.

On Wednesday, the group visits Tech Ranch, the Austin Technology Incubator, the South by Southwest offices, Capital Factory and Techstars.

On Thursday, the group meets at the AT&T Education and Conference Center with local technology leaders and city officials in a daylong Texas-Portugal Venture Growth Workshop.

The program provides information about opportunities for launching or co-locating firms in Portugal and in Central Texas, said Marco Bravo, project director focused on global technology innovation at IC2 Institute.

“Our main goal is to get them connect and let these interactions happen,” Bravo said.

Mark Cuban’s Tips to Succeed

IMG_5517Billionaire Mark Cuban, owner of the Dallas Mavericks, star of Shark Tank and co-founder of Cyber Dust, recently spoke at the University of Texas at Austin. He gave advice to college students on how to successfully manage their academic life and their careers. But the advice could equally apply to anyone at any stage of their life or career.

Challenge Yourself

Cuban graduated from Indiana University with a degree in business administration. He took all of his hard classes during his freshman and sophomore years so he could “party like a rock star” the last two years. He focused on entrepreneurship, accounting and stats. At 18, he took a graduate level statistics class.
“If I can take this class and pass it, I can kick ass on anything,” Cuban said. “I wanted to test myself. I got in. I got an A.”

Learn How to Learn

“The thing about college, being here at UT, it’s a great school, but the most important thing you’re going to learn is how to learn,” Cuban said. “Because the only thing that is a certainty once you graduate is that it’s going to be completely different than it is today…. You don’t live in the world you were born into.”

Don’t Try to Be Perfect

“Trying to pick the perfect major – trying to take the perfect classes – forget it,” Cuban said. “It doesn’t work that way.”
Instead, try different things and see what happens. Learn how to program. Understand math. Biology is going to be more important.
“I took one tech class when I was in college and I cheated to get through it,” Cuban said. But he advised the students not to cheat.

Don’t Stress

“Kids stress too much,” Cuban said. “You’ll figure it out.”
When you are 20, 21, 22, you’re allowed to screw up. It’s when you get older that people are less forgiving. So make mistakes when you’re young and learn from them.

College is Important for Success

IMG_5521_2“If you want to get into business, you have to learn the language of business: accounting, marketing, sales,” Cuban said. “There’s never been a business that succeeded without sales.”
Billionaire Peter Thiel, co-founder of PayPal, created the Thiel Fellowship to provide a select group of high school graduates an alternative to college. Cuban said that’s fine for a few people, but for the rest of the world “it’s stupid,” he said.
“You should go to school,” Cuban said.
It’s not to say that you can’t be successful without college but college gives people a distinct advantage especially when it comes to business, Cuban said. He also told them to pick the college they can afford.

Set Goals and Give It Your All

“The whole point is you do control your own destiny,” Cuban said. “So many people think there are external forces that are going to conspire to keep me from doing this and this…. But when it’s all said and done the one thing in life you can control is your effort.”
“You’ve got to get out there and do something. You can control it. There’s no excuses. Either you put in the work or you didn’t,” Cuban said. “Regardless of what your major is regardless of what your goal is you might want to save the world, you might want to cure the world. You might want to make the world better for everyone around you. That’s phenomenal. I don’t care what your goal is. I don’t care where you want to be in five, ten or twenty years. The only one who can control the effort is you.”

Austin Seeks to Become a Hub for the Space Industry

By LAURA LOREK
Reporter with Silicon Hills News

CCqugkaUgAAxn-sThe end of NASA’s space shuttle program was the beginning of the commercial space age and the race to Mars.

The Texas Space Economy Initiative seeks to cultivate that industry and Austin wants to serve as the hub of innovation in the new space race.

In January, the Austin Chamber launched an initiative to focus on space. Paul Baffes, chief architect for change management at IBM, serves as the co-chair of the Greater Austin Space Economy Task Force.

On Wednesday, the University of Texas at Austin’s Master of Science in Technology Commercialization Program sponsored the Blast Off Austin panel discussion on ways to nurture the space industry in Austin. UT just launched a master’s degree in Space Entrepreneurship.

The event, which took place at the AT&T Education and Conference Center, featured an overview of commercial space industry by Rick Tumlinson, chair of Deep Space Industries and Orbital Outfitters. He’s also founder of a new non-profit in Austin called the New Worlds Institute, which plans to put on a conference in the fall focused on space exploration. Tumlinson recently moved to Austin.

“What’s happening is the idea has become real now that we can settle space,” Tumlinson said.

Efforts are already under way to build colonies in space, Tumlinson said. The Space Exploration, Settlement and Development Act of 2015 is a bill that will be introduced in the House of Representatives to make space settlement a national space policy goal, he said.

“We are going to be growing communities in space,” Tumlinson said. “It’s already happening. We’re going to go and we’re going to do incredible things. We’re going to create a new civilization.”

Emergent Space Technologies opened an office in Austin eight years ago with three engineers, said Brendan O’Connor, the company’s vice president of technical services and chief software architect. The company’s main customer is NASA. It chose Austin because of the software industry here and the University of Texas at Austin’s Center for Space Research.

Barton Bollfrass, founder of Fathom Academy, has created a commercial astronaut training facility in Austin. He’s training the workforce for the new space industry. In 12 months, Bollfrass will have a new training facility. He’s training blue collar workers to become the electricians, plumbers, construction workers and more in space. He said wealthy individuals are privately funding his project. He declined to give specifics.

“Space is accessible if you have good ideas and you have the passion for it,” Bollfrass said. “

The space industry is really small in Austin right now. Austin has 47,000 high tech companies that employ 25 percent of the city’s overall workforce, said Michele Skelding, senior vice president of Global Technology Innovation at the Austin Chamber of Commerce.

In comparison, the life sciences industry has 200 companies and Austin has just a few companies in the space industry right now, Skelding said.

Austin can connect with Houston, San Antonio and Dallas to help foster the space industry here, Skelding said.

The space industry is a $314 billion market and Austin sees a big demand for growth in space exploration and technology. That includes satellites; launch providers, spacecraft components, in-space services, software and robotics.

Austin is also competing with Silicon Valley and Seattle to become the hub of space innovation, Tumlinson said.

“Texas is the hub of new space and Austin is the hub of Texas,” Bollfrass said. Austin needs to foster the feelings of cooperation and collaboration to grow the space industry

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