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Instacart Teams Up with Austin’s Tomlinson’s Pets for Deliveries

tomlinsons-facebook-ad-1200x627It’s a real drag when the giant bag of dog food in the pantry is empty and the dogs are hungry and there’s no time to run to the store.

Never fear, there’s a solution to this nagging problem.

The dogs have got to eat. And Instacart and Tomlinson’s Pets in Austin will make sure of that. They’ve teamed up to provide same-day delivery directly from the pet store. (Anyone remember Pets.com? They used to deliver giant 20 pound bags of dog food for free, but they’re out of business. The economics just didn’t make sense. But it sure was convenient for pet owners.)

Now the solution for the millenium age is Instacart, a same day grocery delivery service, combined with Tomlinson’s Pets, which has nine locations throughout Austin and surrounding areas. Customers can now get a “curated selection of food, treats, toys and essentials for customers’ favorite furry friends, making pampering their pets as simple as having groceries delivered right to their door.”

And here’s a way to do good by just ordering pet supplies through this new partnership. They plan to donate $1 to Austin Pets Alive for each order placed this month.

“We want to make it as easy as possible to find and feed your pet the healthiest food available,” Scott Click, Owner of Tomlinson’s Pets, said in a news release. “Many of the healthy foods we carry aren’t found in big box stores or online, so Instacart is providing our customers with a great way to get local, natural pet products without sacrificing convenience.”

The deliveries will take place Monday through Saturday from 11 a.m. until 7 p.m. and Sunday from noon until 6:00 p.m.

Pipeline Fellowship Launches in Austin to Invest in Women-Led Startups

By LAURA LOREK
Reporter with Silicon Hills News

Pipeline Fellowship Launches in Austin, courtesy photo.

Pipeline Fellowship Launches in Austin, Founder and CEO Natalia Oberti Noguera (in the red shirt), courtesy photo.

Pipeline Fellowship Founder and CEO Natalia Oberti Noguera spoke recently at a Women 2.0 conference in San Francisco.

She talked about her experience as a LGBT Latina entrepreneur and afterwards a black woman approached her tearfully and thanked her for sharing her experience.

It turns out the woman got invited to pitch at a tech event in Los Angeles in 2014 and when she got there a prominent investor handed her his trash to throw out. She explained who she was and that she was pitching and he still told her to throw out the trash.

The woman said, “This is why I want to be a successful entrepreneur so I can become an angel investor and, in turn, fund people of color entrepreneurs so they don’t have to go through what I went through.”

“You can and you will change the face of angel investing,” Oberti Noguera told her.

And that’s Oberti Noguera’s mission.

“If we have more women, as well as men of color – diversity on the angel investing side, the concept of ‘the other’ that is so prominent changes,” Oberti Noguera said. “It’s going to become less “the other’ and more us. That’s what I find really powerful and that will help to improve the situation.”

Oberti Noguera, who was named one of Business Insider’s “30 Most Important Women in Tech Under 30,” is launching the first Pipeline Fellowship cohort in Austin. Pipeline Fellowship is an angel investing bootcamp aimed at training high net worth women how to become angel investors.

Pipeline Fellowship runs programs in Ann Arbor, Atlanta, Boston, Chicago, D.C., Memphis, Miami, New York City, Philadelphia, Pittsburgh and St. Louis. And it is expanding this Spring to Detroit and Austin.

The goal is to create more capital for women entrepreneurs, Oberti Noguera said.

The deadline to apply to belong to Pipeline Fellowship’s first Austin cohort is Friday, Feb. 13th. To qualify, accredited female investors must have an annual income of $200,000 or $300,000 joint income with spouse for the past two years or $1 million net worth excluding residence. Candidates also must be interested in a group learning model and they must have a passion for philanthropy or social change. Pipeline Fellows range in age from late 20s to 60 plus.

Oberti Noguera dubs the Pipeline Fellows “angels in training” or “sharks in training.”

“Entrepreneurs are everywhere,” Oberti Noguera said. “Capital isn’t.”

“There’s this assumption that if you want funding you should go to Silicon Valley,” Oberti Noguera said. But many people are not wanting, willing or able to do that. So Pipeline Fellowship seeks to bring the capital to female entrepreneurs wherever they live, she said.

“We’re activating local capital for entrepreneurs,” she said.

The Pipeline Fellowship involves three stages. The first is the educational component which provides information ranging from how to do due diligence to portfolio strategies. The next phase involves mentoring in which the women are paired with experienced angel investors for “street smarts,” Oberti Noguera said.

“They learn from real people on the ground sharing experiences,” she said.

Lastly, they participate in a pitch summit. Women entrepreneurs looking for funding submit applications. The group invites eight to ten women to pitch their ideas, and then the Pipeline Fellowship cohort selects one company to invest in as a group. The company gets from $15,000 to $50,000 in seed stage investment.

“Early capital is critical to get the company to the next level,” Oberti Noguera said.

Since Pipeline Fellowship launched in April of 2011, the program has trained 100 women as angel investors.

“We’re creating capital for women looking to do good and women looking to do well,” Oberti Noguera said. “To put it candidly, currently traditional VCs and angels aren’t filling the role.”

Pipeline Fellowship connects female investors and entrepreneurs with opportunities beyond their network and reach, Oberti Noguera said.

“We’re deconstructing the system and creating a new one,” she said. “If we have more diversity on the angel and VC side, then we are going to be more open to diversity on the entrepreneur side.”

Candidates are encouraged to apply by Friday.

PWP Growth Equity Invests in BuildASign.com

imgres-10BuildASign.com, a bootstrapped online sign printer which also sells home decor items, Tuesday announced it has received an investment from PWP Growth Equity.

The Austin-based private company did not disclose financial details of the investment.

Founded in 2005, BuildASign.com has been on a steady growth track. (Silicon Hills News did this story in 2012 on its success.)

BuildASign plans to hire more employees, invest in sales, test new products and grow its existing business with the investment, according to a news release.

“This year BuildASign.com turns ten years old and we are extremely excited about this new chapter,” Dan Graham, CEO and co-founder said in a news statement. “This investment will allow us to be more growth focused than ever before and will give us an edge in the competitive landscape as we move forward.”

Graham will continue to run the company as CEO. Co-founder J.R. Kraft will no longer be president. David Ferguson and Chip Baird, both partners at Perella Weinberg Partners and co-heads of PWP Growth Equity, will join Graham and Kraft on the Board of Directors.

BuildASign.com also runs EasyCanvasPrints.com and AlliedShirts.com. It has more than 270 employees.

San Antonio-based SeatSmart Launches Online Ticket Marketplace

imgres-1A new online broker to fan ticket marketplace, SeatSmart has launched.

The San Antonio-based startup has raised $750,000 of its $1 million seed round funding led by angel investors Lew Moorman and Pat Matthews, both former Rackspace executives. Additional investors include ten large brokers nationwide.

SeatSmart plans to use the money to hire additional employees, continue product development and on marketing.

SeatSmart features hundreds of thousands of tickets to sporting events, concerts and theater shows for sale at five to 50 percent less than other ticket brokers such as StubHub and SeatGeek, according to Brett Cohen, the company’s CEO and co-founder.

SeatSmart, which has five employees, spun out of Best Tickets, a ticket broker in San Antonio, which Cohen’s father founded 20 years ago. Cohen saw an opportunity to create a new online ticket broker to fan marketplace. The advantage is that the broker doesn’t have to pay large markup fees to the marketplace or platform operator and the consumer doesn’t have to pay add-on fees for purchasing tickets online. The other co-founders are Jerome Cohen, chairman of the board, Aaron Pearson, chief technical officer and Andrew Powell-Morse, chief marketing officer.

“It’s a new business model to help consumers save money and brokers make more money,” Cohen said.

The site launched early last month and already has more than $100 million of preferred tickets listed from brokers, Cohen said. It launched just before the Super Bowl and several people bought tickets through the site at a discount from other online ticket marketplaces, Cohen said.

“This is the type of business model that can be disruptive,” said Matthews, an investor in SeatSmart. The key is that SeatSmart charges brokers a flat fee to list their inventory and doesn’t charge the customer any mark up fees. By cutting out middlemen from the websites, SeatSmart created a better marketplace by connecting brokers to consumers, Matthews said.

“Everybody wants to save money,” Cohen said. SeatSmart helps customers avoid expensive markup fees, he said. SeatSmart also lets brokers control the end price of their tickets and to gain new customers. “We have real deep relationships with a lot of these brokers throughout the country. For us, it was important to allow these other brokers to sell directly to fans.”

Four Austin Startups Chosen to Advance in the 1776 Challenge Cup

unnamed-4Four Austin startups will go on to compete in the 1776 Challenge Cup Competition.

The winners include PenPal Schools in the education category, Lucelo Technology in the energy & sustainability category, Keet Software in health category and StormPins in the transportation and cities category.

Several Austin startups competed at the Capital Factory Thursday night in the Austin regional Challenge Cup. The winners advance to the global Challenge Cup competition to be held in Washington, D.C. in May. That event will feature 64 startups from 16 regions. They will compete for $650,000 in prizes.

“Last year, seven startups from Austin advanced to the Challenge Cup global finals and Houston-based Water Lens, which competed at the Austin Challenge Cup, was named the American winner of the Energy competition,” according to new release.

“Austin has become a leading hub for innovators who are leveraging their creativity to drive positive change in complex, entrenched industries,” Evan Burfield, co-founder of 1776, the global incubator and seed fund, said in a news release. “We’re proud of the extraordinary talent and innovation displayed tonight, demonstrating once again that great ideas with the potential to reshape our world are emerging outside Silicon Valley—and that Austin is a place where groundbreaking ideas are growing and flourishing.”

Ireland House, the First Irish Consulate in Texas, Opens in Austin

By LAURA LOREK
Reporter with Silicon Hills News

Sean Storan, vice president, Patrick M. Howlin, executive vice president and director of North America and Gerard Hayes, vice president, with IDA Ireland, which is opening a new office in downtown Austin.

Sean Storan, vice president, Patrick M. Howlin, executive vice president and director of North America and Gerard Hayes, vice president, with IDA Ireland, which is opening a new office in downtown Austin.

Austin’s booming tech sector is prompting Ireland to open a consulate and trade office in Austin, its first in Texas and only the seventh in the U.S.

The office, dubbed Ireland House, will be housed in the Bank of America building on Congress Ave. It will contain a new consulate, offices for the Investment Development Agency, known as IDA Ireland, government direct investment agency into Ireland and Enterprise Ireland, the country’s economic development agency. The office will have from six to eight employees initially.

“We’re trying to create an awareness here that the Irish government has a presence here in the state,” said Patrick M. Howlin, executive vice president and director of North America for IDA Ireland.

The other offices are in Boston, Chicago, Atlanta, Mountain View, Irvine, Calif. and Austin. They have 36 people throughout those offices.

Gerard Hayes, vice president, and Sean Storan, vice president of technology, will head up the Austin office for IDA Ireland. Hayes will focus on smaller and early stage tech development companies and Storan will work with bigger companies. Enda Meehan, based in Chicago, will oversee the Austin office.

“When companies are looking at international expansion that’s a big decision for any company,” Howlin said. They look at a lot of factors and one is they want stability in the country they locate in.

“Ireland has a very long track record as being the initial host location for companies expanding into Europe,” Howlin said.

Dell has three facilities in Ireland in Dublin, Limerick and Cork and has been doing business there since 1990. SolarWinds, Dropbox and BMC Software and other tech companies with an Austin presence also have operations in Ireland.

Other tech giants like Google, Facebook, SAP, Intel, IBM, Saleforce, Siemens, HP, Microsoft all have offices in Ireland.

Ireland has the availability of a wide talent pool for companies to tap into, Howlin said. And the country has research institutions and provides a cost competitive environment and a good tax structure for international companies, Howlin said. The Irish corporate tax rate is 12.5 percent, less than half of the rate in the United Kingdom, according to IDA Ireland.

“There’s also a lot of similarities between Austin and Dublin,” said Hayes. “It’s a tech cluster similar to Austin.”

Dublin calls its tech hub “Silicon Docks,’’ the shipping and warehouse district which is being converted into a big tech hub.

The direct flight on British Airways from Austin to London takes just nine hours and then people can take direct flights to Dublin from there, Hayes said. It’s really easy to get there, he said. Direct flights to Ireland are available from Washington, New York and Chicago.

The new Ireland House will cater to technology companies looking to put a footprint in Europe to service their customers there as well as companies with existing operations in Ireland, Howlin said.

“Ireland is also home to a significant number of life sciences companies,” Howlin said. They will explore opportunities to do business as Austin grows its life sciences industry with the new Dell Medical School, he said.

Enterprise Ireland will work with Irish companies that are looking to get a foothold in the U.S.

Austin already has a big Irish community, Hayes said. The city has a social club, started in 2004, called the Celtic Cowboys with more than 500 members. The Irish Network also opened a formal networking group in Austin last fall.

Ireland also has a conference called The Web Summit, which started five years ago and has been dubbed as the South by Southwest of Europe. It attracted 500 participants its first year and 20,000 in 2014.

Ireland will have a presence at Startup Village at South by Southwest in March.

“There’s already significant U.S. investment in Ireland,” Howlin said. “It’s a key factor that has helped us come through the difficult times we’ve had.”

Ireland is expanding its offices all over the U.S. to better serve U.S. companies, Howlin said. Today, 1,033 overseas companies have operations in Ireland with 161,112 employees and 531 of those companies come from the U.S.

Upland Software Names Tim Mattox as its New President

Upland Software LogoUpland Software, a cloud-based software maker, Wednesday announced the promotion of Tim Mattox to president.

Mattox previously served as the company’s chief operating officer. He will retain that role along with assuming the duties of the president focused on customer experience strategy and vision.

“With his in depth corporate strategy and operations expertise, Tim has been instrumental in establishing systems and processes that are creating a solid foundation for our company growth,” Jack McDonald, Chairman and CEO of Upland Software said in a news release. “As Upland continues expanding, I am excited that Tim will be focused on our customers receiving the utmost quality, value and service from their investments in Upland’s offerings.”

Mattox joined Upland last year. Before that, he worked at Dell for about 15 years as an executive focused on strategy, operations and marketing.

Mattox holds BS/MS degrees in electrical engineering and computer science from MIT and an MBA from Stanford’s Graduate School of Business.

“Upland has the people and technology to create and deliver significant value to our customers,” Tim Mattox, President and COO of Upland Software said in a news release. “I look forward to extending our commitment to customer success by making sure every organization and individual partnering with Upland has a positive and rewarding experience.”

Volusion Gets $55 Million in Venture Capital

gI_102581_Funding Blog AnnounceVolusion, which makes e-commerce software, has received $55 million in venture capital led by Main Street Capital Corp.

The Austin-based company plans to use the money to further develop its enterprise platform, Mozu, and its small to medium sized business platform, Volusion.

“Supporting Volusion’s vision as they generate significant growth with the Mozu platform is a natural fit for us,” Dwayne Hyzak, Chief Operating Officer and Senior Managing Director of Main Street Capital Corporation said in a news release.
“Not only do we look forward to Mozu creating even more waves in the enterprise ecommerce space, but we are very excited about the opportunity to expand Volusion’s proven model of success and profitability.”

Volusion released Mozu last year and reported it has quickly gained customers.

“Mozu’s first year went better than any of us could have anticipated and this round of funding will be instrumental in fanning the fire of Mozu altering the enterprise space,” Clay Olivier, CEO of Volusion said in a news release.

“This funding is a major milestone in taking our organization to the next level as we move toward an IPO,” Olivier said.

Silicon Labs Buys Bluegiga in Finland for $61 Million

imgres-9Silicon Labs announced Wednesday its acquisition of Bluegiga Technologies Oy, based in Finland, for $61 million in cash.

The Austin-based company reported the acquisition expands its wireless hardware and software solutions for the Internet of Things marketplace.

Bluegiga makes wireless products such as ultra-low power Bluetooth Smart, Bluetooth Classic and Wi-Fi modules as well as software products.

“With Silicon Labs’ wireless, microcontroller and sensor portfolios gaining considerable traction in the IoT markets, the timing of this acquisition couldn’t be better,” Tyson Tuttle, CEO of Silicon Labs said in a news release.

Silicon Labs plans to continue operations in Finland.

Civitas Learning Lands $16 Million in Venture Capital

imgres-8Civitas Learning, a three year old education technology startup, announced Tuesday it has secured $16 million in funding.

Rethink Education led the investment with additional funding from existing investors Austin Ventures and Emergence Capital. To date, the company has raised $32 million in four rounds from seven investors, according to its Crunchbase profile.

Civitas, which has 100 employees, plans to use the funds to continue to grow its business. Recent customers include Texas A&M University, University of Washington, The University of Texas at Austin and Florida International University. “Civitas Learning currently manages data across hundreds of campuses, helping more than 2.3 million students navigate the complex journey through college,” according to a news release.

Civitas has created an online platform that provides data and data analysis to students, faculty, advisors and administrators. The software can help a student develop personalized major and course recommendations or help faculty and advisors identify students in need of help.

“Civitas Learning’s intense focus on quantifying its impact on student success rates is a breath of fresh air for the education sector, and continues to produce remarkable results,” Rick Segal, Managing Director of Rethink Education said in a news release. “Their unique approach to working in close collaboration with higher education institutions and building a community of thought leaders is very powerful. The company and its partner institutions are truly bringing actionable data science to the front lines of education.”

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