Page 297 of 351

Three San Antonio Biotech Startups Present at T3DC

Cover Photo
BY ANDREW MOORE
Reporter with Silicon Hills News

Start-up companies are crucial to the San Antonio economy, said San Antonio City Manager Sheryl Sculley.
“We recognize that new and young companies and the entrepreneurs that create them are the engines of job creation and critical to economic recovery,” she said. “In fact, studies indicate that net job growth occurs in the US economy primarily through startup firms.”
Sculley spoke at the Texas Technology Development Center – or T3DC’s first quarterly luncheon held last Tuesday. T3DC is part of the Texas Research and Technology Foundation. Headed by H. Randall Goldsmith, T3DC helps incubate and fund new medical companies in the San Antonio area.
Sculley said one of the key parts of San Antonio’s economic development is forging partnerships with T3DC, Geekdom, the UTSA CITE incubator, the San Antonio Clean Energy Incubator, and the TechStars Cloud program.
At the event, three local biotechnology startups presented their companies.

GenSpera
First up, GenSpera gave an overview of G202, its lead drug, which is in Phase 2 clinical studies for treating liver and prostate cancer.
The drug has a molecule called a peptide that acts as a grenade pin – only releasing when it comes in contact with a solid tumor formed within a patient’s body. This allows the drug to release an extremely powerful cancer killing agent at just the right time to only kill the cancerous cells nearby without re-entering a patient’s bloodstream and damaging other parts of the body.
According to Dr. Craig A. Dionne, GenSpera’s president and CEO, the drug has some decisive advantages over the competition. While patients taking the drug may suffer from nausea, rashes, and fatigue in the first few days of treatment; the drug avoids more damaging side effects. Patients taking G202 suffer no hair loss, no effect on the cardio vascular system, no effect on the liver, and no effect on their bone marrow – all of which are problems encountered with other cancer treatments. The drug can also be used for a longer term than other treatments. Dionne sees a major opportunity in the current market to sell the drug to bigger pharmaceutical companies.
“Drugs in the oncology space with positive phase two data commonly go for a billion dollars,” Dionne said. “It seems like an absurd number but it illustrates how desperate large pharmaceuticals are for drugs to fill their pipeline.”
Dionne claims that GenSpera could get to that point in 18 months to a year.
GenSpera has raised $18 million since 2007 and has only $2.5 million left in the bank. It is currently looking for funds to complete its phase 2 studies.

Evestra Inc.
Emerging biopharmaceutical research and development company Evestra Inc. presented second at the luncheon. It received a $50,000 check from T3DC.
CEO Dr. Ze’ev Shaked said its mission is “to develop and commercialize high-value innovative women’s health products.
Established in 2008, Evestra originated as part of the Organic Chemistry Department of Texas Biomedical Research Institute. The company has raised $8 million since 2008 and expects to have raised $12 million by 2015. Evestra is working hard to put its products on the market as soon as possible. Its leading product is the E112 vaginal ring contraceptive.
“We are putting all our resources to commercialize this as quickly as possible with our European partners,” Shaked said.
The E112 product is going into phase one and will have clinical trials later this year. The company is starting early-stage trials with other products as well. Evestra is planning to move to the Texas Research Park – another extension of the TRTF — later this year to conduct more research and development.
“We are poised to become a major player in women’s health,” Shaked said.

Invictus Medical

Daniel Mendez of Invictus Medical, photo by Andrew Moore

Daniel Mendez of Invictus Medical, photo by Andrew Moore

Start-up Invictus Medical received a check for $100,000 from the T3DC. Their product, called the aqua bonnet, is a cranial support device designed to prevent infants from developing plagiocephaly – a flattening of an infant’s head caused by the head’s weight. Infants sleeping on their back for long periods of time often risk developing this condition — caused by the shifting of cranial plates. Plagiocephaly has been shown to delay child development and motor skills in their early school years. The Aqua Bonnet diffuses pressure equally around an infant’s head, preventing the plates from shifting.
The device was invented by UTSA graduate Daniel Mendez, who entered and won the UTSA CITE entrepreneurship and technology competition with his invention in 2010. He later won Top Honors at the 2011 Innotech Beta Summit conference as well. Mendez now serves as the CTO of Invictus Medical in addition to pursuing an MBA at UTSA.
Presenter and company CEO Tom Roberts says 25 percent to 30 percent of babies a year develop this condition, and the risk is even higher with premature births.
“The reason we exist at Invictus Medical is to improve the lives of new born babies and healthcare providers that take care of them,” Roberts said.
Roberts said Invictus will start by focusing on the 500,000 babies in the neonatal intensive care unit – or NICU – market. He claims that the company can break even by hitting as little as 2% of this market and is confident about the future.
T3DC is the lead investor for Invictus Medical. The prototypes will be produced by Globe Medical in Houston Texas and the clinical partner for the device is the University of Texas at San Antonio. The company needs to raise $500,000 to commercialize their product. According to Roberts, the company started raising money in January and is already half way there.

Startups Pitch at Dell Tech Innovators Day

imgres-7A lucky 13 startups got a “golden ticket” on Thursday to pitch their businesses to the president of Dell and other top Dell executives.
“I’m super excited about being here and having this opportunity,” said Tonia Thompson, co-founder of Springcreek Systems, which makes software that eliminates duplications in customer relationship management systems.
Thompson worked for Dell until last summer when she left to start her own company. She participated in its first Tech Innovators Day headed up by Ingrid Vanderveldt, Dell’s entrepreneur in residence. Vanderveldt also heads up the Dell Center for Entrepreneurship, launched last December. The Tech Innovators Day brought a variety of startups to Dell’s headquarters in Round Rock to help them make connections, she said.
“First of all, as an entrepreneur, when you’re building a company everyone dreams of how do they do business with a Dell. How do they get in the door?” Vanderveldt said. “We’ve completely opened up the doors.”
zewzvDell’s President Steve Felice wanted to talk to the people building companies with the next big ideas, Vanderveldt said. He attended the afternoon pitch session. He never left the room or took a phone call despite all the news happening with Dell right now with rumors of a potential leveraged buyout underway. He gave the startups his full attention.
“As we become more of a solutions company we’re going to add more companies,” Felice said. Dell is also seeking to promote a culture of innovation and creativity, he said. Felice spoke briefly to the group before the entrepreneurs each gave five-minute pitches to him and other high-level executives at Dell followed by a question and answer session.
Dell has made more than $10 billion worth of acquisitions in the last four years to re-make the company beyond its origins as a PC maker and to build a broader portfolio of products and services. But Dell has startups at its heart. The often-repeated story about how Michael Dell founded the computer company in 1984 in his dorm room at the University of Texas and then built it into a Fortune 500 Company is legendary in Austin.
The startups, from Austin, San Antonio, Houston, Dallas and Chicago, hope to do that some day too. Many were recommended by tech accelerators and co-working spaces including 1871, Capital Factory, ATI and Tech Ranch or Dell’s Small Business Think Tank events.
“They come from a variety of different industries but they’re all focused on how can they use technology as a path to success,” Vanderveldt said.
The startups asked Dell executives for contracts, mentorship, advice, investments and more.
Stacy Yamaoka, co-founder of Austin-based Deohako, which makes tablet mounting systems, recently returned from presenting her products at the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas. She also previously participated in a Dell Think Tank event aimed at small businesses in Austin.
Yamaoka asked for a $250,000 contract from Dell to supply Deohako’s mounting system for Dell’s tablet computers.
Timothy Porter, founder of Appddiction Studio in San Antonio, makes an app to prevent bullying in schools. He asked for a $350,000 investment to hire more sales staff and take the app, which is in 65 schools, nationwide.
Susan Strausberg, co-founder of 9WSearch, a financial search engine, is also seeking investment and strategic partners. Strausberg formerly founded Edgar Online. She moved to Austin and launched 9WSearch to create an intelligent search engine for financial data.
Erine Gray, co-founder of Aunt Bertha, pitched his website search engine for finding and applying for human services such as food, housing, healthcare, education and jobs. He got inspired to create the company after he became his disabled mother’s guardian at the age of 26. He had to find services and help for her and he didn’t know where to go. Founded in September of 2010, Aunt Bertha has four full time employees, an intern and two contractors. More than 23,000 people have searched for services using Aunt Bertha.
Aunt Bertha is a software as a service company that sells application processing software, but it’s evolving into a data and intelligence company, Gray said.
“This is just a great chance to work for a great Austin company and build a valuable service,” Gray said. “I jumped at the chance to come. I’m fortunate to have been selected.”
Ed Bellis, CEO of Risk I/O, based in Chicago, pitched his vulnerability assessment and management software. His company, founded in 2010, has raised $6 million and has more than 2,000 customers. It has also processed 10.2 million vulnerabilities. He asked to partner with Dell.
Shion Deysarkar, CEO of Houston-based Datafiniti, a search engine for data, has 330 customers with $1.1 million in revenue. Deysarkar asked Dell for access to its Project Copper server technology and startup pricing on its products.
This is the first time Dell’s held this kind of event, Vanderveldt said. Dell is seeking to identify the next companies for mergers and acquisitions, she said. In the feedback from the executives, Dell will consider what the next steps will be, she said. There are no guarantees any buyouts or investments will happen.
“It’s an experiment,” she said. “Anything can happen from today.”
Dell plans to hold many more Tech Innovators Days and will publish information on the next ones on its website, Vanderveldt said.
“We’re looking for who is pitching a fascinating idea,” Vanderveldt said.
Under the Dell Center for Entrepreneurship, the company has programs for entrepreneurs at all different stages from early-stage bootstrappers to funded companies, Vanderveldt said. Last summer, Dell launched the Founder’s Club, an invitation-only program for companies with funding and now has 50 companies enrolled and a waiting list to get in. Dell also has the $100 million Dell Innovator Credit Fund, which invests in startups.
Grapevine, founded by Richard Ortega and Eric Larson in San Antonio, asked for a chance to partner with Dell. The company makes a reputation management software system. It aggregates customer reviews from several different sites online and then sends an email alert to the company. Larson thought the day spent at Dell was well worth it.
“We got assurance we will be given a phone number to call,” said Larson. “At the very minimum, we’ll get feedback on our product. All in all, this has been a great experience.”
The startups weren’t the only ones who got value from the event.
On Friday morning, Dell’s President Felice tweeted “Dell’s Tech Innovators Day reminds me that it’s important to stay thirsty, innovative and entrepreneurial.”

Cospace in North Austin Shuts Down and Pivots Its Business

imgres-6Cospace, one of Austin’s original and popular coworking spaces, shut down last week.
The site, located at Highway 183 and Lamar in North Austin, is working with TechRanch, a nearby tech incubator and coworking site, to relocate its members.
While the physical space is gone, the Cospace brand continues to live on and serve entrepreneurs and professionals nationally through a coworking search engine that also provides economic and real estate information.
“In July 2012, partners affiliated with the workspace
launched the Cospace online site to index and promote every work environment; connecting skilled professionals with the right place to work,” according to a news release.
“I am very proud of the positive impact Cospace coworking has had in the startup community,” Kirtus Dixon, Managing Partner of BlindOx LLC, owner/operator of the Cospace coworking space, said in a news statement. “I will be eternally grateful for all of our customers and colleagues, some of who gave of themselves without any expectation of return. It’s been a great run.”
“Collaborative, accessible work spaces are one of the keys to innovation and working through a cospace should be an option to anyone,” James Weddle, head of Cospace Ventures, the management and holding company for the Cospace brand, said in a statement. “We are proud to continue to support the coworking movement through our web service. I am particularly excited about the role the web service, Cospace.co, can play in helping students, entrepreneurs, skilled professionals, and even cities, bring innovation to market.”
In the past few months, this new, virtual Cospace has grown to serve over 1,000 spaces throughout the country and is connecting nearly 100,000 professionals each month with the ideal work space.
“We’ve mapped over 50 work environments in Austin alone and the insight, from doing that, to Austin’s future as an entrepreneurial community
is tremendous,” Paul O’Brien, Co-founder and developer of the Cospace.co web service, which will be developed further in a new entity, said in a statement. “Cospace.co has helped thousands of skilled professionals, teams, and startups find the right work environment in Austin while working
closely with stake holders invested in the economic development of Austin and surrounding cities to understand how and where to invest
further in creating environments that will foster innovation, help employ Austin, enable success for entrepreneurs.”
The classes and education programs Cospace formerly operated are being acquired by Brainco; a school of advertising, interactive studies, and design, recently relocated from Minneapolis to Austin. Brainco will be further developing and serving such popular classes in Ruby on Rails, iOS app development, WordPress, and other skills through spaces throughout Austin.

Move Your Startup to Austin for Free at SXSW Contest

austin-city-limitWant to move your startup to Austin for free?
Then check out this contest at South by Southwest. “The amazing “welcome package” will go to one lucky startup at SXSW that wants to move to Austin,” according to Joshua Baer, co-founder of Capital Factory.
At SXSW on Friday, Capital Factory is kicking off the Interactive conference at SXSW Startup Village at the Hilton Hotel in salons A-C on the fourth floor with room for 1,000 people.
First, Joshua Baer will led a session on Intro to Angel Investing.
Next, they’ll showcase five of the hottest startups in Austin that can get profitable on $1 million or less, followed by five startups from outside the city. Then one winner will be selected to move to Austin for free.
The relocation package includes more than $50,000 worth of benefits including three months rent in a three bedroom house, six months of co-working at Capital Factory, six months of server hosting, moving expenses, six months of a storage unit, six months of local groceries, six months of Ramen noodles and more.
Apply to pitch by February 24th. You can also RSVP to attend on Facebook.
“If you are accepted, you will receive one complimentary SXSW Interactive badge.”

Admittance Technologies Receives $1.99 Million from ETF

imgres-3Admittance Technologies has received $1.99 million investment from the Texas Emerging Technology Fund.
The San Antonio-based company created the CardioVol technology platform to measure blood volume measurement using pacemaker to detect disease and treat patients with the devices.
“We are thankful for the investment from the ETF and the expertise that Startech provided during the process,” Dr. Marc Feldman, Founder and CEO of Admittance Technologies, said in a news release.
Dr. Feldman is a Professor of Medicine & Engineering at UT Health Science Center at San Antonio as well as the co-winner of the 2010 Chancellor’s Entrepreneurship Award for the University of Texas system.
Funding from the Texas Emerging Technology Fund allows researchers at the University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio to take “their ideas from concept to commercialization,” said David Weiss, vice president for research at the university.

We Are Austin Tech Launches Second Season

imgres-2We Are Austin Tech, a weekly video site highlighting Austin area technology entrepreneurs, has just launched its second season.
Its latest post features a profile of Gazzang CEO Larry Warnock.
The site has done more than 25 video interviews featuring some of the city’s most prominent technology leaders including Bob Metcalfe, co-founder of ethernet and 3-COM and now professor of innovation at the University of Texas and video game visionary Richard Garriott and his latest venture, Portalarium. Other interviews featured Pike Powers, Bryan Mennell (SubtleData), Andrew Allison (Main Street Hub), Mellie Price (Front Gate Tickets), Sam Decker (ex-Bazaarvoice, Mass Relevance), Kevin Koym (Austin Tech Ranch), and Lloyd Armbrust (OwnLocal.com).
The site got its inspiration from We Are NY Tech and seeks to put a spotlight on the innovators in the local technology community.
“The goal is to evangelize the people that empower the Austin tech scene in order to attract more talent and opportunity to the city,” according to a news release.
The We Are Austin Tech site is made up of prominent technology leaders like Austinpreneur Joshua Baer (founder, Otherinbox and The Capital Factory), Ruben Cantu (CORE Media Enterprises), René Lego (SolarWinds), Austen Trimble (OwnLocal.com), Nicholle Jaramillo (The Capital Factory), and Paul Schomer (Radio Crowdfund). Austin-based Thinktiv designed and created the original site, which WPEngine hosts.

Adometry Raises $8 Million in Venture Capital

imgres-1Adometry, formerly Click Forensics, announced it has completed an $8 million round of financing.
The Austin-based company plans to use the money to develop products, recruit employees and expand into new markets.
Shasta Ventures led the financing round which included participation from Austin Ventures and Sierra Ventures. In addition, Shasta Venture’s Jason Pressman will join Adometry’s Board of Directors.
The company plans to further develop its Adometry Attribute™ platform, which provides marketers with analysis of the performance of their cross-channel marketing campaigns.
“Our focus has always been to deliver the best possible products for advertisers so that our customers and agency partners around the world are better able to understand and make decisions about their marketing spend,” Paul Pellman, CEO of Adometry, said in a news release.
Click Forensics, originally founded in San Antonio, bought Adometry in 2011 and changed its name.

Geekdom Fund Awards $25,000 to SportyBird

20130118_111315Want to keep track of your kids’ soccer stats throughout the season and years?
SportyBird.io, a new San Antonio-based startup, has created a mobile application for that.
Founded by Josh Swank, 28, and John Trenholm, 27, SportyBird has created a cloud-based platform for community soccer teams to collect player stats throughout the season.
One parent at each game uses the mobile app to compile stats and then they are uploaded to a database for all the parents, players and the coach to access. The company plans to make money by charging a subscription fee up to $70 a year.
SportyBird is the latest recipient of a $25,000 investment from the Geekdom Fund. The pre-seed stage funding will help the startup to create their product, Swank said. They plan to conduct a beta test for the next two months and then launch publicly, he said.
“I am impressed with Joshua’s tenacity,” said John Mosher, a member of the Geekdom Fund’s selection committee. “He was initially rejected by the Geekdom Fund but did not give up. He worked very hard and came back with a very focused product. This is exactly the type of company that Geekdom and the Fund should be supporting. They are developing a very interesting niche product that I know from personal experience is very needed.”
Swank went to college on a soccer and academics scholarship at Duke University and ended up transferring to Georgia State. He currently works as a commercial real estate investor and coaches soccer at night.
Trenholm, who ran a web hosting business in high school in Houston, started working at Rackspace in 2006 while attending the University of Texas at San Antonio. He recently left Rackspace to finish his degree and launch SportyBird.
Trenholm and Swank first met at 3 Day Startup San Antonio. They had a much broader soccer-based idea they first tried to pursue. But they decided to focus instead on compiling stats on players and community games.
“My favorite part about SportyBird is that as a 3 Day Startup team they kept going afterwards,” said Nick Longo, director and co-founder of Geekdom. “From the original idea and their passion about kids and soccer, they found a great tool to make parents and coaches to track how well the kids do and how the games go. Can’t wait to see the first launch and all the other sports they can do next.”

Geekdom is a sponsor of Silicon Hills News

Austin Dreamit Ventures Underway

DreamItVenturesDreamit Ventures in Austin kicked off on Jan. 2 with nine teams located at the Capital Factory in downtown.
The teams include doccaster, which provides one place for sponsors, exhibitors and speakers at events to share presentations, brochures, and whitepapers which attendees can easily engage from their mobile devices; Figlabs, cloud-based mathematical platform for engineers and scientists; NewCastic, a a marketplace for journalist and business sponsored stories; Planana, an event sponsorship platform; Seer, an intelligent organizing platform; Stereotypes, a music social network; TrendKite, media analysis firm; Pincam, a platform for creating highlighted video clips and YEVVO, a a platform for live social video broadcasting.
Dreamit Ventures, based in Philadelphia, launched its first ever Austin program which will culminate with a Demo Day during South by Southwest Interactive. The program gives entrepreneurs $25,000 in exchange for a 6 percent stake in the company. It also provides office space and all kinds of startup services including legal, accounting and marketing. Entrepreneurs must relocate to Austin for the program.
Dreamit Managing Partner Kerry Rupp is running the Austin program.

« Older posts Newer posts »

© 2025 SiliconHills

Theme by Anders NorenUp ↑