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Tableau Software Opens Austin Office Plans to Hire 150

Tableau Software of Seattle has opened an Austin office and is hosting an open house on Thursday, Sept. 13.
The company, which creates business intelligence software, is hiring developers, sales and operations employees for its professional services practice based in Austin. It expects to hire more than 150 employees locally.
“Austin’s geography, talented workforce and reputation as a business and technology center make it an ideal location for our continued expansion,” Brett Thompson, Vice President of Human Resources at Tableau Software, said in a news release. “We are seeking candidates who share our passion to help people see and understand data.”
Founded in 2003 at Stanford, Tableau has seen double digit sales growth and plans to hire 300 new employees this year.
In addition to Austin and its Seattle headquarters, Tableau also has offices in Kirkland, WA and Menlo Park, Calif. It has international offices in London and Singapore.
Tableau’s temporary office in Austin is located at the Arboretum Great Hills Center at 9600 Great Hills Trail.
The Tableau Austin open house will take place at Maria Maria, 415 Colorado Street in Austin. Doors open at 5:00 p.m. and a presentation by Tableau CEO and co-founder, Christian Chabot, will take place at 6:00 p.m. Attendees are asked to register to attend. Tableau has also provided list of jobs available.

Macheen Lands $10 Million in Financing

Macheen Inc.. a provider of cloud-based services and broadband connectivity, has closed on $10 million in funding.
The Austin-based company reports its existing investors including GemVentures, North Bridge Venture Capital and DFJ Mercury participated in the latest funding round.
“Also among Macheen’s investment group are prominent angels and industry figures Tom Meredith, Mike Maples Sr. and Yechiam Yemini,” the company disclosed in a news release.
In addition,Philippe Vallé with GemVentures will join the company’s board.
Macheen, founded in 2010, provides broadband connectivity to mobile device makers like Lenovo and its Thinkpad laptops. The company provides the Internet connectivity ready as a service which ships with the device. So when the customer gets the mobile device they have immediate access to the Internet.

Noesis Energy Gets $8 million

Noesis Energy Wednesday unveiled a free website for companies to control energy costs in their buildings using big data services and analytics.
Noesis’ site, which underwent a five month beta test, already has more than 4,400 buildings being managed.
The Austin-based company also announced that it closed on a $8 million funding round led by Black Coral Capital and also an investment from Austin Ventures.
“There is no shortage of data in the energy industry. What is lacking are the practical insights required to make both big and small energy decisions so organizations can start realizing the tremendous amount of pent up savings,” Rob Day, partner with Black Coral Capital, said in a statement. “We believe this is why Noesis Energy has seen such impressive growth with energy managers and consultants during their beta period. This has shown us just how much these experts have been looking for a solution like this.”

Bigcommerce Nets $20 Million Investment

E-commerce platform Bigcommerce Wednesday closed on $20 million in funding.
The Austin-based company received the funds from existing investors General Catalyst Parnters and a new investor, Mike Maples of Floodgate.
To date, Bigcommerce has raised $35 million.
“E-commerce is already booming and we’re really focusing on how to help our clients sell more while leveraging affordable online channels that drive qualified traffic,” Eddie Machaalani, co-founder of Bigcommerce said in a news release. “Small and medium businesses shouldn’t need a degree in design and web development to run a successful online store. They want it to be easy and intuitive. We’re radically simplifying the e-commerce experience, enabling the small business not just to compete with larger competitors, but win.”
Bigcommerce plans to use its funding to develop products and expand its sales and marketing teams and hire new employees.
Bigcommerce also announced a “brand overhaul” including a new web site, app store and product design features.
Bigcommerce’s customers include Gibson Guitar, Pandora Jewelers, Collette Dinnigan and Willie Nelson’s Shop.

Talking Technology at San Antonio New Tech

Photo of Cole Wollak at San Antonio New Tech meetup. Photo by Louie Pacilli of Geekdom

About 80 people turned out for the inaugural San Antonio New Tech Meetup at Geekdom Tuesday night.
“I want people to meet new people,” said Cole Wollak, its organizer.
To that end, he had everyone introduce themselves to a stranger and chat for about five minutes. That got the room talking technology.
The 90 minute event also featured three speakers who gave five minute presentations on their ventures.
First up, Dirk Elmendorf, founder of Rackspace, gave an overview of his latest project, Trucking Office. The startup creates accounting and fleet management software for small trucking companies.
“Trucking is a highly fragmented industry,” Elmendorf said.
In the U.S., there are 10 million trucks on the road but the average company has five trucks.
“We focus on companies with under 20 trucks,” Elmendorf said. Right now, those companies are using paper, pencils or their wives to track their expenses, he said.
“We help the small businesses that are really the backbone of our economy,” Elmendorf said. “On the back end, we make their business better.”
While Trucking Office’s competitors use CD-ROM-based software, they do everything online in the cloud. They also make sure their software works well on mobile phones, iPads and any kind of mobile device since many of the truckers access it on the go, Elmendorf said.
To get the word out about Trucking Office, Elmendorf said the company attends trucking shows and takes out Google Adwords. The software starts at $20 per month for two trucks.
Then Troy Toman, vice president at Rackspace gave an overview of Open Stack, the operating system for the cloud. This Rackspace video summarizes the company’s push into the cloud nicely.

video platformvideo managementvideo solutionsvideo player

Grapevine founders Eric Larson and Richard Ortega gave the final presentation on their customer review aggregator aimed at the restaurant industry. The site culls customer reviews from ten different review sites such as Yelp, Google and Trip Advisers and then sends an e-mail alert to a restaurant manager once a new review is posted.
The site launched on July and has 22 customers so far.

Grapevine-NeverGonnaGiveYouUp-Video from Grapevine on Vimeo.

SXSW Hosts a Health Data Hackathon in Austin


South by Southwest Interactive is inviting coders and designers in the Austin area to participate in a Hackathon at the end of this month.
The SXSW hackathon focuses on finding “a correlation between health-related data and patient care.” The 24-hour event takes place Sept. 29th and 30th at Conjuctured Coworking at 1309 East 7th Street in Austin. It will feature five people per team with SXSW prizes awarded for the top teams.
The event is free. But it’s limited to the first 50 people to sign up at the Eventbrite site. Right now, 39 spots remain.

SANewTech Seeks to Foster San Antonio’s Technology Community

Cole Wollak, founder and organizer of San Antonio New Tech, a new monthly technology meetup at Geekdom.


Cole Wollak wants to help foster San Antonio’s growing technology community.
So he created San Antonio New Tech, a new technology meetup that takes place on the first Tuesday of every month at Geekdom, a downtown collaborative coworking site for geeks.
The first gathering takes place next week and 75 people have registered to attend. The event features short presentations from Dirk Elmendorf, one of the founders of Rackspace who now runs a startup called Trucking Office, Troy Troman with Rackspace talking about its Open Cloud and Open Stack initiatives and Eric Larson and Richard Ortega, founders of Grapevine, a startup based at Geekdom.
The idea is to fill the Geekdom room with like-minded people who can discuss their ventures, bounce off new ideas, socialize, network and collaborate.
“That diversity could create awesome serendipitous events,” Wollak said Friday afternoon during an interview at Geekdom.
The San Antonio New Tech meetup is the kind of grass-roots events that Geekdom seeks to foster, said Nick Longo, its director. The coworking site, founded last November, has quickly grown to 425 members and is currently expanding from the 11th floor to include the 10th floor of the Weston Centre.
“I like when the community, the geeks, the entrepreneurs, creators, organize their own events,” Longo said. “Because that’s organic.”
Wollak, a 2011 engineering graduate of Trinity University in San Antonio, previously worked as program manager for TechStars Cloud, headed up by Jason Seats. He also interned at FlashScan3D. He’s working on his own stealth startup and plans to announce it publicly in coming months.
Wollak has always had an interest in entrepreneurship. He help start the entrepreneurship club at Trinity University and he worked on organizing the 3 Day Startups in San Antonio.
He learned about the New Tech meetups while helping to run the TechStars Cloud program. Meetups regularly take place in New York, San Francisco, Boulder, Colo. and Denver. He wanted to create the same kind of community building event here. Wollak also hosts the San Antonio Open Coffee gathering every other Tuesday in San Antonio. It’s a group of people interested in talking about technology whether it’s a local startup or the latest news coming out of Google or NASA.
The focus of the San Antonio New Tech meetup is to foster the city’s tech community, create awareness about what’s happening locally and to provide a destination for newcomers to San Antonio who are technology and entrepreneurially focused to get to know the community, Wollak said.

Whoosh Traffic Helps Businesses Improve SEO Rankings

By Susan Lahey
Reporter with Silicon Hills News

In her early 20s, Erica Douglass seized every opportunity that arose—taking jobs instead of finishing college, rescuing discarded bits of servers from her employer’s dumpster to sell on eBay—and wound up building a successful hosting business.
It was a roller coaster ride that sapped her physically and emotionally. In the end, she almost went under, but managed to sell the business at the eleventh hour for $1.1 million.
Now she wants to do it again.
Douglass is co-founder of Whoosh Traffic, a Search Engine Optimization or SEO firm whose software tools help businesses not only improve, but also understand, their search engine rankings. Many of her customers are small businesses, but she also serves Gannett Inc., a Fortune 500 company. She wants to remove some of the mystery in which SEO is enshrouded. And unlike her last business, which she built in the Silicon Valley, she’s building this one in the Silicon Hills of Austin.
Douglass is originally from Indiana. She moved to the Bay Area for college to study management information systems. Part time, she handled desktop support for Cobalt Network. Then, Sun Microsystems bought Cobalt, announcing they only wanted full time employees. So Douglass dropped out of school and became one of six developers behind Sun.com.
While working for Cobalt, she discovered the company was pitching servers that had issues in the dumpster. She repaired them and sold them on eBay for extra cash. There were so many, she had servers and server parts piled up around her in her cubicle. That’s when somebody noticed her little enterprise and decided to put the kibosh on it. She still had one server. And, it dawned on her, she could make a lot more money renting out the server than she could selling it, anyway. That was the birth of her hosting business.
In San Jose, data center space was cheap, largely because of the bankruptcy of Metromedia Fiber Network which had taken up a ton of space and now announced it was more than $3 billion in debt. Douglass snatched the opportunity to build her hosting service in the void. She built the number of servers over time and traded project work for a 20-year-old switch to connect all her servers to the data center’s network and wound up picking up some of MFN’s former customers.
At the time, she was still making a living as a freelance web developer. She’d advertise in Craigslist and create websites up and down the coast. But income from her hosting service was rapidly overtaking income from the web hosting business. Near the end of 2002, her grandmother invested in her hosting business. She helped her buy more servers and space. By the end of 2004, she transitioned from a web developer to a hosting company. She hired her first employee in 2005 and bought an entire set of office furniture and equipment from a bankrupt firm for $1,500.
After that, things grew so rapidly. They got out of hand. She hired more people. Secured loans and racked up $120,000 in debt to suppliers. The company was working constantly but she wasn’t watching where the money went. And it went faster than she realized.
“I thought we were going to go out of business,” Douglass said. “I had to delay my tax payment to the IRS and lay off half my staff. That was the worst day of my life.”
The data center gave her a strict payback schedule of $20,000 per month. The only way she could make it was to double customers’ rates. She didn’t tell customers they were going to go out of business. She figured half her customers would leave, even though their new rates brought them in line with everybody else. As it turned out, 95 percent of their customers stayed.
“By working 16 hours a day, we pulled through. The revenue shot up by so much I thought this would be a good time to start the conversation about selling the business.” She contacted all other data centers to ask if they had any extra space and quickly started filling up racks of servers. She had a good reputation. And she was becoming an expert at SEO.
She figured she could sell the company for $700,000 or maybe even a million.
“I had watched this Oprah episode (my guilty pleasure) where Jim Carey said he was a struggling comedian and he decided to write a check to himself.” The check was for $10 million and dated 1995. That year, he made $10 million. Douglass wrote a check to herself for $1 million dated 2007 dollars. “You have to be clear with what you want,” she said. “I wanted a million dollars.”
In the end, she got $1.1 million. Ten percent of it went to employees. Sixty thousand dollars went to debt.
Douglass, meanwhile, had worked herself sick. She felt horrible but could never get a diagnosis. It turned out to be Celiac’s Disease. She took a year off and changed her diet. When her body started to recover, she began to dabble in SEO.
She read a lot about affiliate marketing and discovered a system by Ritoban Chakrabarti called Profit Instruments. The system identifies the search keywords customers use when they’re ready to buy a product, which are different from those used when they’re just browsing. With his product, she spent a year writing her book and blog about how to make money on the Internet. Within 20 minutes of offering it online, she’d made $90. By the next day she’d made $3,000. By the end of day five, she’d earned $22,000. She then sent out an email to 70 people on her list who had bought the product and asked what other product they were looking for. For example, if they offered Chakrabarti’s link building service for $79, would they buy it? Yes.
That’s how it started. Whoosh evolved to helping customers with SEO and transitioned to selling software that helps website and business owners get the rankings they want. There’s a keyword research tool, a tool that shows where you rank compared to competitors–and why competitors outrank you–and a tracking tool to show your progress. It’s all cloud-based. And prices for all tools start at $19 a month.
But the biggest advantage as far as Whoosh’s customers are concerned is the company’s flexibility.
Alexander Jovicich, director of Search Engine Optimization at Gannett Inc., said his company had evaluated something like 200 tools before discovering Whoosh.
“We had been in the market for quite some time looking for a company to fulfill both audits and fulfillment for thousands of clients,” he said. “Whoosh was the only one flexible enough to accommodate our needs. It was really a joint development…a partnership role.”
Adsense Flippers, a company based in the Philippines, builds small niche websites using Google Adsense as the monetization tool. Cofounders Justin Cooke and Joe Magnotti agree that if there’s an issue or a change in the Google rules or Whoosh’s software, they can get straight answers right away.
“We like to work with companies that have real people behind them,” said Cooke. “We can email Erica and make feature requests, ask for bug tracking. It’s fun. We feel like we’re part of the experience.” With Whoosh he can track their more than 2,000 sites but still provide reports on a single site his company is thinking of selling. Whoosh provides reports and graphs along with a daily email.
Previously, the partners said, they dealt with a lot of lesser options.
“There are a lot of bad tools,” Magnotti said. “We’ve weeded through the good and the bad and there is a lot of bad….or they start out fine but if the company doesn’t continue to keep them updated and they break down. Whoosh is cloud based. We don’t have to worry about keeping it updated.”
This time, Douglass isn’t letting anything escape her notice. Especially finances. After starting the company in 2011, she and cofounder Parnell Springmeyer moved the business to from the Silicon Hills to the Silicon Valley. Basically, California business taxes were too high. Now the company, including developer Brian Bigelow and senior designer Brian Fryer, operate out of the Capital Factory.
She hasn’t said what number her current dream check has written on it.

Editor’s note: Interesting video interview with Erica Douglass on Women 2.0

PR Pro Laura Beck on We Are Austin Tech

Laura Beck, PR expert and founder of Striped Shirt, photo by We Are Austin Tech

Reporters like to work with PR people who know their craft backwards and forward.
Laura Beck is one of those seasoned pros who understands the demands reporters face writing stories on deadline. She can connect a reporter to the right source in a timely manner. She also knows the key people in the technology industry in Austin and San Antonio. And she’s just good at what she does.
That’s why I was sadden when she left Porter Novelli, one of the premiere high tech PR firms in Austin, a few years ago. But I understood her decision. I left the San Antonio Express-News after eight years to write a book and I eventually launched my own technology news site. Sometimes change is really good for the creative spirit and to challenge the old ways of doing business.
I’m also glad Beck still does some freelance PR work for organizations like the Austin Technology Council and the Austin Technology Incubator. And she’s launched her own business, Striped Shirt. It’s the perfect place to get the right outfit to cheer on your favorite sports team or just for a cute striped shirt.
Beck also gives back to her community and has volunteered as a mentor at the University of Texas’ 1 Semester Startup.
She has far from “retired” and for reporters and central Texas’ technology community that’s a good thing.
This week, We Are Austin Tech featured Beck as one of the movers and shakers in the Austin technology industry in its weekly video release.

SwRI Leads Open Source Consortium for Robot Makers

Editor’s Note: Southwest Research Institute in San Antonio is a nonprofit research and engineering organization with more than 3,000 employees and revenue of $581 million last year. It’s one of the gems of San Antonio’s technology community. You can read more about the organization here. They do work for companies and government agencies and they have more than 4,000 projects open at any time.

By Michael Girdley
Special Contributor to Silicon Hills News

Southwest Research Institute’s Robotic Operating System – Industrial, known as ROS-I by Michael Girdley

The software systems that control big industrial robots on manufacturing lines have long been closed, proprietary and often written from scratch.
A new initiative from Southwest Research Institute’s (SwRI) Robotics and Automation engineering group called “Robot Operating System – Industrial or ROS-I” aims to change that: SwRI recently announced the formation of a consortium of robot manufacturers, integrators and others interested in cooperating on ROS-I.

ROS-I is based on the Robot Operating System led by Willow Garage in Menlo Park, CA. ROS was introduced about 5 years ago and has since spread like wildfire through the research community.
In cooperation with Motoman of Japan, a manufacturer of industrial robots, SwRI Senior Research Engineer Shaun Edwards spent a year at Willow Garage learning ROS and developing the basis for ROS-I for industrial application.
While the controllers running the proprietary software that come with the industrial robots from vendors like Motoman or Panasonic do a great job with basic tasks like moving to fixed points or applying a weld, they are lacking in the more complex problem solving that ROS does well. ROS-I leverages those strengths to excel at the hard problems involved in operating a robot like path planning or image recognition. For example, most efficient path planning is a difficult problem when you’re dealing with three dimensional spaces, confined operating spaces and a robot with six or seven degrees of movement.
The hope from SwRI is for a win for all the parties involved in the consortium. For robot manufacturers and consulting companies, they can see new applications of their product. For example, the first initiative from SwRI is around bin-picking, where a robot has a mixed set of objects to choose from and visually picks the one needed.
The open source robotics consortium effort is currently taking applications and hopes to have its first meeting early next year. For more information, please visit the SWRI site.

About Michael Girdley: He’s an entrepreneur, budding technology investor, reformed programmer and author, part-time Crossfit instructor and writer living in Southtown San Antonio. He can be reached at Michael@girdley.com and his personal website is Girdley.com.

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