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Wild Basin Investments Focuses on Angel Investing in Austin

By SUSAN LAHEY
Reporter with Silicon Hills News

Rosa McCormick and  Laura Kilcrease at the Herb Kelleher Center Speaker Series of the McCombs Business School at UT

Rosa McCormick and Laura Kilcrease at the Herb Kelleher Center Speaker Series of the McCombs Business School at UT

Wild Basin Investments has an interesting spot in the Austin angel world. A family office, meaning an investment firm run for a particular family, Wild Basin invests in a broad spectrum of early stage companies. The current portfolio includes enterprise software companies, mobile, CPG, pharmacology, medical devices and food.
Wild Basin’s managing director Rosa McCormick was the first speaker in the Herb Kelleher Center Speaker Series of the McCombs Business School at UT Tuesday night at the AT&T Executive Education and Conference Center. McCormick is also president of Key Light Capital LLC, the company’s venture firm. Laura Kilcrease, who is sharing the Entrepreneur in Residence spot with Brett Hurt, interviewed her.
Wild Basin started in 2007 with the idea of seeding three to eight Austin startups a year with amounts ranging from $50,000 to $150,000. In recent years, the company has switched to giving larger amounts to fewer companies, about three a year, partly because, as an evergreen fund, its portfolio has grown with companies it continues to support as well as new startups. An arm of Wild Basin, Key Light Capital, does larger deals and more direct investment. Key Light manages the legacy venture capital portfolio for the family’s future generations.
“We are industry agnostic and opportunistic…diversification is something we embrace as a strategy,” McCormick said. It also has a lot of flexibility in how investments are structured. But that means the company has to do due diligence on a number of different industries before making investments.
“One of the nice challenges about the job is you can dig in and learn something new, but that also makes it that much harder,” said McCormick. “And to a large extent you have to make sure you have validation from people with deep domain expertise. You need a third party to look at it and provide third party validation.”
As part of its strategy to invest in diverse companies, Wild Basin collaborates with other angels and funds that have deep knowledge of the industries where they invest. McCormick serves on the board of the Central Texas Angel Network
“Wild Basin will lead deals, but it takes a lot of effort to lead a deal. You need to make sure can devote the correct resources to it. We don’t take sole investor in a round position. That is in contrast to the strategies employed before by the principals where we were the first monies in or the only monies in. That was, on balance, a very successful financial strategy but it had hard losses. You are the only person at the table when something goes wrong.”
Their partners, she said are “people who have similar interests or similar business models.” Once they’ve partnered with an investment fund or angel, they may reconnect with that fund. A big question, she said, is how the other investor acts “when things go wrong…if they handle that well, you know those people are people you can do deals with in the future.”
Wild Basin structures deals in a number of different ways, McCormick said. In answer to a question she said the company has never done revenue based funding, but she thinks it’s an interesting idea. She also said they might consider working with a company that’s already partially funded, as long as there were not too many complexities in working out the deal with other funders—such as nonstandard terms.
Unlike some investors who are looking for a quick return, Wild Basin is investing in order to create wealth for generations of a family. Which makes the fund more risk averse than some might be but also gives it a long view.
“We constantly reevaluate a strategy and experiment. But you run an experiment and you don’t get any data back for a long time. We don’t know what good decisions we’ve made and what bad, and we won’t know for a while….things seem to be going well.”
Wild Basin is Austin-centric. And in the years she’s been dealing with startups, McCormick said, the quality of the deal flow has increased greatly.
“There are more and more folks who come into the entrepreneurial process with some grounding in being an entrepreneur….. There is a higher percentage of folks coming up to speed on terms and term sheets. Before we had be very careful to walk them through it. We needed them to understand what deal was going on. Now I think people are very savvy.”
The next Herb Keller speaker event will be October 15. The speaker will be announced about 10 days before the event.

Fostering Business Ties Between Austin and Frankfurt, Germany

Professor Ralf Steinmetz with Technische Universitat Darmstadt talking about Frankfurt's growing software and high tech region

Professor Ralf Steinmetz with Technische Universitat Darmstadt talking about Frankfurt’s growing software and high tech region


By LAURA LOREK
Founder of Silicon Hills News

At the W Hotel in downtown Austin the focus was on the high tech region of Frankfurt, Germany on Tuesday evening.
Hessen Trade and Invest and FrankfurtRheinMain Corp. sponsored the event, which featured networking and speakers from Texas, a Frankfurt university, Austin-based HomeAway and Frankfurt-based Crytek.
John Steen, Texas Secretary of State, and 20 people from Texas travelled to the Frankfurt region last April. The German people were very friendly and had traits similar to Texans, he said. He said he hopes to foster even more collaboration between the two areas.
Germany is known for engineering, said Professor Ralf Steinmetz with the Technische Universitat Darmstadt. The region also has more than 8,000 information technology companies, a number that is even higher than Silicon Valley. The region has 350 partners and 17 research organizations with a concentration in the software industry. And a lot of software is focused on the automobile industry. The region also has more than 70 game developers and publishers in the Frankfurt area, Steinmetz said.
One of the featured speakers was David L. Adams, CEO of Crytek USA, a game development company. He joined Crytek in January within a few days of shutting down Vigil, a gaming studio whose parent company THQ went bankrupt. The studio hired many of Vigil’s former employees.
“We went from being unemployed to being Crytek USA within a few days,” Adams said.
Crytek USA now has 50 employees and it’s working on a couple of projects with its Frankfurt counterparts, Adams said. One project is Ryse, an action/adventure game for Microsoft’s new Xbox video game console. The office is also working on another project that hasn’t been announced yet, he said.
Another speaker, Brent Bellm, chief operating officer of HomeAway, said the vacation home company publishes a magazine in Germany. It’s the only publication the company does, he said. HomeAway, founded in 2005, has become the world’s largest vacation rental marketplace. Today, it has 1,400 employees and is available in 171 countries with 775,000 listings. The company expects $350 million in revenue this year.
Frankfurt is HomeAway’s headquarters for central Europe, Bellm said.
“Frankfurt is, by far, the best place to do business in Germany, if you are trying to connect to Germany from outside Germany,” Bellm said. It’s a 20-minute taxi ride from the center of downtown to and from the airport, he said. It’s really easy to get around the city, he said. And the workforce is also diverse, well educated and hardworking, Bellm said.
“We’re big advocates for the Frankfurt region,” he said.

SpareFoot Donates Storage Space to Colorado Flooding Victims

imgres-5Austin-based SpareFoot is donating a month of storage to businesses, families and individuals who need temporary space because of the massive flooding.
SpareFoot will pay up to $100 for the first month of self-storage rent for facilities within a 75 mile radius of Boulder, Co.
The offer is good until Oct. 16th.
“The images of the destruction in Colorado are heartbreaking. Our thoughts go out to the communities that have been hit hard by this disaster,” SpareFoot CEO Chuck Gordon said in a news release. “While human lives obviously are the most important consideration in a situation like this, we at SpareFoot hope our offer of free storage space can help people in Colorado recover from the floods.”

TrueAbility Launches its AbilityScreen at LinuxCon and CloudOpen

Frederick "Suizo" Mendler, Co-Founder and Luke Owen, CEO of TrueAbility

Frederick “Suizo” Mendler, Co-Founder and Luke Owen, CEO of TrueAbility

For companies needing to assess the technical aptitude of technical job candidates, TrueAbility has a solution.
The San Antonio-based company launched its AbilityScreen this week. The online platform tests the skills of Linux professionals and provides that information to companies.
TrueAbility released its flagship product at LinuxCon and CloudOpen in New Orleans on Monday. The conferences run through Wednesday. TrueAbility is also running a Linux Showdown, a competition for Linux professionals to compete for prizes. It’s the fourth contest TrueAbility has held. The contest which tests Linux professionals in a live server environment is available nationwide online for anyone to compete at TrueAbility.com.
“We make it easy for IT professionals in these cloud technologies to prove their ability,” said Luke Owen, Co-founder and CEO.
The AbilityScreen costs $499 monthly for 50 assessments and $129 for a single assessment. The tool allows employers to measure a job seeker’s abilities in the “technologies, platforms, vendor certifications and industry standards that their company uses today,” Owen said.
To date, the year old startup has raised $2.75 million from 13 investors, said Frederick “Suizo” Mendler. TrueAbility, based at Geekdom in downtown San Antonio, has 10 fulltime employees and two contractors. Its customers include Rackspace, Bazaarvoice and WPEngine.
The company is targeting hiring managers in a variety of industries. The job candidates taking the AbilityScreen assessment must solve real problems in a “live server environment, instead of the traditional technical interview process which typically includes technical trivia, multiple choice questions, or white-boarding exercises,” Owen said.

Disclosure: TrueAbility advertises with Silicon Hills News and Geekdom is a sponsor of Silicon Hills News.

BuzzBee Opens an Office in Austin

BB_logoBuzzBee, a technology marketing and communications firm based in Seattle, is opening an office here.
Mary Rose Becker, formerly director of marketing at Dell, will head up the Austin office.
BuzzBee, founded in 2000, has some big time clients in Austin. Chief among them is AMD, the big chip maker. They also count Microsoft and Intel as clients.
“We are thrilled that BuzzBee has chosen Austin as their next key market for expansion. They will be a great fit for the City of Austin based on their culture and innovative industry vision,” Stephen Kreher, the Austin Chamber of Commerce’s director of economic development, said in a news release.
“BuzzBee has been on a growth trajectory for the past several years. We’ve taken our time in finding the perfect market for expansion and continued growth. While considering offices in other major cities, Austin won out because of its booming economy and diverse tech landscape,” Founder and CEO, Michele Bourdon Keeffe said in a news release “We are thrilled to be in such a dynamic, tech-savvy city as Austin and are looking forward to helping clients drive results.”

Adometry Expands into New Headquarters

By SUSAN LAHEY
Reporter with Silicon Hills News

Paul Pellman, Adometry’s CEO and Casey Carey, chief marketing officer

Paul Pellman, Adometry’s CEO and Casey Carey, chief marketing officer

Adometry, the Austin Ventures startup that aggregates and analyzes data from multiple advertising streams, is growing like gangbusters and Thursday had an open house to celebrate its new space in the Lakewood Center Building II on Capital of Texas Highway.
“We have 110 people,” said Casey Carey, chief marketing officer. “We’ve doubled in a year and we probably will be at 150 by the end of this year. We have the first right of refusal on some additional space downstairs.”
What Adometry does, for clients like Lenovo, Hulu, Hyatt and Charles Schwab, is to analyze data from digital media ads like banner and display ads, email marketing campaigns, SEO, social media and other touchpoints as well as data from “top down” advertising like broadcast and print, analyzes it and creates dashboards so customers can know which ad dollars are producing the most return on investment.
The data from the “top down” advertisers comes from the same places it always did—audience demographics and other information that can’t be tracked to specific users. But the company also incorporates data that might influence the campaigns, like news events and economic changes. Each client is assigned an account manager, a data engineer, a data scientist and a business analyst. They’re all needed, Carey said, because “this is a really hard data management problem.”
20130912_172422“There’s a lot of disparate data and every company’s data is different. People get excited about the attribution (attributing revenue to a specific ad source) and the reports. And the hard part we don’t take a lot of credit for is all the data management. That’s one of the things we’ve learned over 70-plus clients. We’re mastering it, but it’s been a little bit of a journey because there’s new stuff coming up all the time. For example, nobody’s really doing this for Twitter. The big question on the table is how do you track users across devices?”
Without cookies, which many mobile devices lack, data tracking is nearly impossible.
But the company faces another challenge, the challenge of the “new truth.” One of Adometry’s jobs is helping CEOs and advertising and marketing managers adjust their perceptions of what’s really bringing in the revenue after years of incorrect assumptions.
Adometry’s Austin roots began with a company called Click Forensics, founded by Tom Cuthbert and Tom Charvet in San Antonio. The company focused on reducing click fraud that burned up dollars spent on Google Adwords campaigns. The company started in 2007 and received $21 million from Austin Ventures, Sierra Ventures and Shasta Ventures. By 2011, Google was tackling click fraud more aggressively internally and Click Forensics bought Adometry out of Redmond, Washington and launched its suite of online marketing analytics.
Adometry is focused, Carey said, on “companies who have a fairly large adspend and have access to a high-value conversion event.” But its ultimate destination is still up in the air.
Paul Pellman, Adometry’s CEO was serving as entrepreneur in residence for Austin Ventures when he was introduced to the company. He acknowledges that Austin loves its homegrown success stories like Home Away and Bazaarvoice. On the other hand, he said, Adometry is a venture company which is “looking to have a liquidity event. “
“One of two ways to have a liquidity event is either an acquisition by strategic buyers or going public and most are acquisitions. From a strategic standpoint, we’re solving a really important problem for marketers. We’ve put a great team in place and we want to keep accelerating that and let the liquidity take care of itself. “

Social Good Summit Austin Seeks to Change the World

29628_454415774619480_67076159_aThe second annual Social Good Summit Austin takes place on Sept. 24th at the Austin Community College Eastview Campus at 3401 Webberville Road.
The event runs from 1:30 p.m. to 7:00 p.m.
The keynote speakers include Mina Chang, president of Linking the World, Carl Dorvil, founder and CEO of Group Excellence, Michael Cress, Chairman of Rachel’s Challenge and MollyBeth Malcolm, special assistant to the president at Austin Community College.
Its theme is “Me to the Power of (We)” that translates into empowering people to make social change.
Mashable’s Social Good Summit, which takes place Sept. 22-24 in New York during United Nations Week, inspired Ruben Cantu, Elijah May and Stephen Vogelpohl, the founders of Austin’s event, to start a local annual conference focused on technology, media and social change.
The organizers are currently running a CrowdTilt crowdfunding campaign to raise funds to giveaway to people with great ideas for social change at the event. By contributing to the campaign, you can get a ticket to the event. Then at the event, the crowd decides who gets the money from “The Social Innovators Fund.” So far they have raised $3,265 from 39 contributors of a $5,000 goal with ten days left.
“The whole purpose of the fund is to democratize social good,” said Cantu, the event’s executive director. “The event is free but if you want voting rights then contribute to the cause. You don’t have to give any money, you can still show up, but you can’t vote.”
Participants can get voting rights by contributing as little as $5 or as much as they want, Cantu said.
In addition to speakers, the Social Good Summit features a fastpitch competition showcasing local social entrepreneurs who are working to change the world. Six teams will give three-minute pitches during the event. Then the crowd gets to vote on which team gets the social innovators fund money.
The six teams pitching include Cameron Gibson with Dollar a Day, Joshua Jake Vaughn with Connect2Good, Carl Settles with E4Youth, Jose Briones, Frugal Innovations, David Schwartz, NGO and Social Enterprise Hub and Jessica Lowry, Key to the Street.
Last year, more than 140 people attended the event. This year, Cantu expects from 150 people to 200 people.

Upstream Commerce Expands with an Austin Office

imgres-4Upstream Commerce, which makes competitive pricing software for retailers, announced the expansion of its U.S. presence with a new office in Austin.
Bill Fanning, formerly with Bazaarvoice, will serve as the company’s general manager North America and vice president of sales.
“We’re delighted to add Bill’s perspective, depth of experience, and incredible energy to our leadership team, to continue to help retailers around the world compete more effectively,” Upstream Commerce CEO Amos Peleg said in a news release.
“I’m particularly excited to be part of the Upstream Commerce team as we help retailers turn real-time big data into major pricing and product assortment opportunities,” Fanning said in a news release.
Upstream Commerce’s customers include Staples and ToysRUs. It chose Austin because of its technology industry and talent pool.
Peleg and Shai Geva founded the company, based in Tel Aviv and Boston, in 2010. They have raised $4.25 million in venture capital so far, according to its Crunchbase profile. Its investors include YL Ventures, Bright Capital and private investors.

Dell Becomes World’s Biggest Startup

dell2Dell stockholders approved a $24.9 billion deal Thursday to let Founder Michael Dell and Silver Lake Partners buyout the company and take it private.
In a special meeting, the stockholders approved the deal in which they will receive $13.75 in cash and a dividend of 13 cents per share. They will also receive eight cents per share in a dividend for the fiscal third quarter.
The vote excluded the shares held by Dell, his family, the board of directors and some managers.
The deal will help Dell, based in Round Rock, in its evolution from its roots as a PC manufacturer to a software, cloud-computing, data and storage company.
“As a private enterprise, with a strong private-equity partner, we’ll serve our customers with a single-minded purpose and drive the innovations that will help them achieve their goals,” Dell said in a news release.
He also thanked the company’s 110,000 employees worldwide.
Dell also issued a letter to his customers.
“We are going back to our roots, to the entrepreneurial spirit that made Dell one of the fastest growing, most successful companies in history,” Dell wrote. “We’re unleashing the creativity and confidence that have always been the hallmarks of our culture. We plan to serve you, our customers, with a single-minded purpose and drive the innovations that will help power your dreams.”
“We stand on the cusp of the next technological revolution. The forces of cloud, big data, mobile and security are changing people’s relationship with technology, just as the PC did almost 30 years ago.”
The deal is expected to close by the end of Dell’s third quarter subject to regulatory approvals.
Billionaire Carl Icahn, a Dell shareholder and Southeastern Asset Management, opposed the deal, which was first announced last February. He thought the price was too low and fought to get a better offer. Dell and Silver Lake did raise their offer but Icahn was still not satisfied. He withdrew his opposition earlier this week and issued an open letter to Dell shareholders.
“Mr. Dell celebrated the victory with a big barbecue at his house, according to people with knowledge of the matter. But he said that much hard work remains,” according to this story in the New York Times. “When asked how significant the leveraged buyout will prove in the history of Dell, he said, “It’s a better question a couple of years from now.”

Promoter.io Featured on A Slice of Silicon Hills

By ANDREW MOORE
Reporter with Silicon Hills News

Promoter.io imageEvery business understands the importance of creating loyal customers.
However, they may not know how many loyal customers they actually have or why those customers are loyal in the first place.
Founded by Chad Keck and Ricardo Reyna, Promoter.io was created to help companies guage customer loyalty by measuring their “net promoter score” – a customer loyalty metric invented by Fred Reichheld and explained in his book “The Ultimate Question.”
The net promoter score is measured by a customer’s response to a single question: “How likely are you to refer our brand to a friend or colleague?” Customers answer on a scale of zero to ten, and then specify the most important reason for their response in an open ended format. Customers who select nine or ten are “promoters,” and customers who select zero to six are “detractors.” The final score is the percentage of promoters minus the percentage of detractors.
The questionnaire is normally sent to customers by email and is used by Rackspace Hosting, Apple, USAA and Southwest Airlines. According to Bain and Company, companies with a high net promoter score tend to outperform industry competitors.
Promoter.io is working to make this metric accessible to smaller scale operations and startups in a less expensive way. The startup handles the email questionnaires for its clients and aggregates the resulting scores and feedback on a dashboard so businesses can know why they are gaining or losing loyal customers and make better decisions with their products or services.
Promoter.io has just finished its inital pilot program with ten companies in which they sent out more than half a million questionnaires. Some participants received response rates of 15 percent to 50 percent, well above the industry norm of around two percent.
Promoter.io will be releasing their beta to the public in the next couple weeks. The startup has already raised $184,000 in seed stage funding from a handful of San Antonio investors, the Geekdom fund, and personal contributions.
Promoter.io is currently looking a front end developer and designer.

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