Tag: Austin (Page 25 of 37)

Gazzang Branches Out from its Encryption Roots

By YASMIN GHAHREMANI
Special contributor to Silicon Hills News

Larry Warnock, CEO and president of Gazzang

Something was bothering Larry Warnock. It was 2010 and the former CEO of Phurnace Software had recently finished leading his company through a successful sale to BMC. His next challenge was advising two Houston entrepreneurs on how to realize their business idea.
Mike Umansky and Chris Gillan had come up with an encryption solution for open source software that filled a gaping hole in the cloud computing market. But Warnock felt the name they’d chosen for their company, Critotech, was all wrong. It wasn’t just that it sounded like a relic from a Cold War spy novel. It was that the name’s security connotations would hamstring the company’s growth outside the encryption space, a goal the startup veteran considered crucial to its long-term success.
“I didn’t want to be known as Encryption, Inc.,” says Warnock.
So when he joined the firm as CEO that year, one of the first things he did was look for a fresh web brand name. In a request that sounds like it’s straight out of Seinfeld, he asked his team to come up with a name that meant nothing. He didn’t want the company typecast as it continued to find itself. After some fruitless brainstorming, the team began to look through comic books for words used to denote sounds.
“Sure enough a guy went home and his son found in a comic book a picture of a good guy punching a bad guy and it said ‘Gazang,’” recalls Warnock. “And it was in a little cloud. So we said that’s it.”
Gazang.com was already taken, so they added another Z to make the name Gazzang.
Blank slate in hand, the team has since been writing its own story in the cloud. Management has narrowed the market focus to customers who need Big Data solutions. And it’s got two new cloud tools in the works – one of which will debut in July.

Encryption pays
Not that the founders are ashamed of their encryption roots. On the contrary, their flagship platform-as-a-service software, recently renamed zNcrypt, is turning heads. Gazzang was one of 10 vendors recently selected for the MIT Sloan CIO Innovation Showcase. What’s more, the company recorded its strongest quarter to date in Q1 and its customer base has expanded to 220, including Philips Electronics, the United States Department of Health and Human Services and Boston Children’s Hospital. Healthcare, finance and government are target sectors because they’re required to protect data.
“Compliance was a huge thing for these folks – PCI, HIPAA, SOX – all those guidelines were big challenges,” says Umansky.
He and Gillan first got the idea for zNcrypt while talking with people involved in grid computing and virtual machine automation – the predecessors of cloud computing. Users needed encryption that wouldn’t interfere with the performance of their databases and other applications.
“Chris and I did market analysis and realized that MySQL was the database of choice for these guys,” says Umansky. “It had such huge traction and really there was no way to encrypt that data at rest, so we went out and built our transparent data encryption platform and key management platform.” Transparent data encryption is a process that happens on the fly and behind the scenes so the developer doesn’t have to change the database or underlying application.
“It just happens auto-magically as the data goes to the disk,” explains Warnock. “Then when the data is requested back for processing, its magic key determines if that requester is authorized.”
Because zNcrypt secures the data instantly, it leaves less room for breaches than products that only encrypt periodically. The tool now protects all LAMP-based applications and data. Wendy Nather, research director of the enterprise security practice at 451 Research, says no one else is specializing in database security for the open source community, and it’s a problem that badly needs an answer.
“Every enterprise has open source software somewhere incorporated,” says Nather. “Even if they’re writing their own software, chances are a developer has incorporated some open source components in it. When you’re developing things and you need a lab to play with you’re generally going to turn to open source components because they’re cheaper and you can have as many as you want when you need them.”

Chasing Big Data
Gazzang has continued to refine its direction, shifting slightly when Big Data began to gain
attention. Big Data refers to huge data sets that are not well suited to be handled by current relational databases – usually petabytes or exabytes of information. Much of the data created today couldn’t be processed in a relational database anyway because it is unstructured. It comes from smart phones, tablet computers, cameras and numerous other connected devices.
Data and distributed file system technologies like Hadoop, Cassandra and MongoDB can turn these otherwise lost bits of data into valuable information that companies, governments,science organizations and the like can analyze for insights. Marketers use Big Data to understand aggregate buying behavior and computer scientists use it to analyze the interactions of thousands of nodes in a network.
Gazzang realized that its zNcrypt architecture would fit with technologies like Hadoop and decided Big Data is the way of the future. It’s a change from what the founders initially envisioned but Warnock says that’s par for the course in startup-land.
“Every startup I’ve been in, when we ultimately had great success it was different than what we thought it was going to be,” he says.
Investors are happy with the way things are turning out too. Austin Ventures provided Gazzang with Series A funding worth $3.5 million and has been pleasantly surprised by the turn of events.
“The customer set they’ve gotten has been a little bit different than we originally thought it would be but better in some ways because the deals are larger and the sales cycle is frankly a little bit shorter,” says Thomas Ball, general partner at Austin Ventures.
With all the hype around the cloud and Big Data, Ball concedes that Gazzang risks getting lost in a game of lingo bingo.
“I think positioning and rising above the clutter is the biggest challenge because everyone wants to use the term cloud now,” he says. “But when people see how good the product is and how easy it is to scale, it’s an easy sale.”

In the pipeline
Next up on Gazzang’s agenda: zTrustee, a universal key manager for a wide variety of applications. zNcrypt manages keys for data it encrypts but zTrustee will work with any kind of key, certificate or token used for a wide array of computing processes. It’s intended to be a “single point of trust” for keys and the policies around them, and it will launch in July.
Later this year the company will roll out zOps, a console to monitor and diagnose issues with cloud computing functions.
It’s all part of Warnock’s vision for market expansion beyond the encryption space.
“A lot of the data center tools that exist were never built for the cloud,” he says. “So there’s actually a market opportunity to rebuild all the tools people have been relying on but in this new architecture.”
If Warnock has his way, when people say the name Gazzang they’ll hear a bat hitting a home run.
“What we’re doing with Gazzang and what I think works best in early-stage is to swing for the bleachers,” he says. “We are going to be wildly successful or an epic disaster.”
Whatever the outcome, one thing is for sure. The game will certainly be interesting.

Polygraph Media launches Facebook data analytics software

Facebook has 900 million users generating gobs of public data every day.
Their comments or likes on Facebook pages can provide valuable insights for marketers.
But it’s often difficult to mine the data to sort through everything to find meaningful information.
That’s where Polygraph Media comes in.
The Austin-based startup this week launched its Polygraph Reports, which allows marketing agencies and brands to employ data mining and analytics for Facebook.
“We’re mining publicly available information,” said Chris Treadaway, founder of Polygraph Media and author of “Facebook Marketing: An Hour A Day.”
“Facebook probably represents the greatest opportunity for marketers to understand what the consumer is saying and what they want,” Treadaway said. “It’s creating terabytes of information everyday on what consumers are thinking and saying.”
Polygraph’s software collects data from Facebook pages and subscriber-enabled profiles, and produces more than 40 charts, graphs, and data visualizations to give marketers information about their marketing campaigns and strategies.
The service offers an alternative to Facebook Insights, which Facebook provides on its site.
Polygraph mines the source data that makes up Facebook Insights to give companies more information, Treadaway said.
“A lot of people are suspicious of Facebook Insights,” Treadaway said. “The numbers just don’t jive.’’
So Polygraph created an unbiased alternative by collecting and evaluating every social interaction that might take place on a Facebook page.
“We can tell brands who left a comment, what time did they do it and what did they respond to,” Treadaway said. There’s a ton of informational content that can be boiled down into what did all the women say, what did all the men say and how many interactions take place within an hour of a post, he said.
One of Polygraph’s biggest competitive differentiators from Facebook Insights is that brand cannot get information on their competitors. With Polygraph reports, they can, Treadaway said.
“Facebook is the largest self-contributed database of information that the world has ever seen,” Treadaway said.
Polygraph brings data mining, analysis and reporting tools to anyone who wants to analyze business to consumer activity on Facebook. The software shows marketers how their Facebook marketing campaigns and strategies work based on data.
“The data doesn’t lie,” Treadaway said. “The data tells a lot of things that you’re trusting people to tell you. I trust the data more than I trust some self-interested consultant. If they have bad numbers, do they want to share them?
Founded in 2008 as a couponing site aimed at small businesses, the company originally raised $235,000. But it has since shifted its business to the data mining space. Polygraph Media has five employees. In June, the company will begin its push to raise venture capital to expand its development team.
“We’ve all heard how if Facebook were a nation, it would be the third largest country on Earth. So it’s common sense that brands have focused so much attention here,” Brad B McCormick, principal at 10 Louder Strategies and a former senior digital leader at Ruder Finn, Porter Novelli and Cohn & Wolfe global agencies, said in a news release. “But just because a company can be on Facebook doesn’t mean they know how to be on Facebook and measure success. Acquiring Facebook “likes” is just the first step for brands. Ongoing engagement that builds brand equity is the holy grail of Facebook. But all too often today, brands and agencies are measuring success with empty platitudes and without data or relevant benchmarks,” McCormick continued. “Polygraph Media offers by far the most robust Facebook analytics I have ever seen. It not only gives brands new insights into their own performance, it allows them to compare each of their KPIs against their competitors, in real time. It’s a game changer.”
Later this year, Polygraph will launch data mining tools for Twitter, LinkedIn, Youtube and other sites.
Already, more than 25 brands, major agencies and consultants use Polygraph reports. It is offered as a software as a service model. Pricing is based on the size of Facebook Pages that are analyzed.
“The launch has been really successful. We’ve had good response to our pricing,” Treadaway said. “People have picked up from the data that they can do all kinds of creative things.”

Sparefoot teams up with Penske to make moving and storage easy

Move it and store it.
Austin-based startup Sparefoot has teamed up with Penske Truck Rental to make it easy for folks to move and store their belongings this Memorial Day weekend.
Sparefoot informs us that this coming Tuesday is known in the business as “Crazy Tuesday” because it’s the unofficial biggest day of the year for the storage industry.
“This collaboration with SpareFoot will make for a more convenient moving experience for our customers,” Don Mikes, Senior Vice President of Rental for Penske Truck Leasing, said in a news release.
SpareFoot is the world’s largest online marketplace for consumers to find and reserve self-storage units, with comparison shopping tools that show real-time availability and exclusive deals.

Cyfeon to pitch at Disrupt NYC

Austin startup Cyfeon is pitching its software today at TechCrunch’s Disrupt NYC.
Cyfeon is the first Austin startup picked for the battlefield competition in the combined ten-year history of TechCrunch Disrupt events in New York and San Francisco. More than a thousand new companies from around the world applied to be a part of Startup Battlefield, and only 30 were selected.
Cyfeon’s technology, called Answer Factory, uses data to help businesses make decisions.
The company will present for six minutes to a panel of venture capitalists, angel investors, entrepreneurs and technologists. The winner receives $50,000 and the “Disrupt Cup.”

AustinTechSource launches

Photo by John R. Rogers with Viusalist Images in Austin

To attract tech talent, the Greater Austin Chamber of Commerce with Experience Inc. today launched AustinTechSource, an online talent community.
The focus of the site is to attract mid-to-senior level technology workers to the Austin region. The site allows employers to post openings, review resumes and connect directly with qualified job-seekers. The site has 2,000 jobs seekers and 37 companies including Bazaarvoice, Microsoft and Google registered so far.
“Economic growth flourishes when employers are able to couple a favorable business climate with the right talent pool,” Clarke Heidrick, Board Chair, Austin Chamber, said in a news statement. “As a new talent initiative of the Chamber, AustinTechSource will support all Austin companies, big and small, with their goals of efficiently finding topnotch, experienced tech talent.”

NextIO secures $12.3 million in venture capital

NextIO has received $12.3 million of venture capital.
The Series F funding is led by existing investors and an undisclosed strategic investor.
Austin-based NextIO plans to use the money to further expand sales and marketing and its product offerings. The company plans to double its revenue this year, K.C. Murphy, its president and CEO, said in a news release.
NextIO has customers in the Internet, aerospace, automotive, oil and gas, government and finance industries. The company makes networking hard and software products for data centers.

Mass Relevance closes on $3.3 million in venture financing

Mass Relevance announced Wednesday that it has closed a $3.3 million venture capital funding round.
Austin Ventures led the series A round and other investors included Battery Ventures, Floodgate Fund, Allegro Venture Patners and Metamorphic Ventures.
Mass Relevance plans to use the money to accelerate its growth. Sam Decker, the company’s founder and CEO, said the company planned to triple in size this year in an interview with Silicon Hills News late last year.
Mass Relevance has 120 clients that use its real-time social media curation platform. It also signed a deal with Twitter last November that officially made Mass Relevance Twitter’s first curation partner licensed to re-syndicate Twitter content.
“The financing comes as leading brands, ranging from Madonna and MTV through Target and Purina, turn to Mass Relevance to use real-time social content to drive engagement on television, web and mobile,” according to the company. Its clients include the “Big Four” television networks, 7 of the top 10 2011 cable networks, as well as top brands like Target, Cisco, Ford, Samsung, New York Giants, Pepsi, Purell and Victoria’s Secret.
“People around the world are actively participating in social conversations about brands, media and entertainment, and this content is passing us by faster than ever before,” Decker said in a news statement.
A year ago, Mass Relevance raised $2.2 million in a large seed stage round of funding from Austin Ventures, Floodgate and angel investors.

WhaleShark Media Buys Miwim, a French Coupon Site

WhaleShark Media has acquired Miwim, an online coupon and deal site in France.
The terms of the deal were not disclosed.
Austin-based WhaleShark Media connects consumers with multiple daily deal and coupon services like Deals.com and CouponShare.com as well as deal sites outside of the U.S.
Founded in 2010, WhaleShark Media has received $300 million from several venture capital firms including Austin Ventures, Google Ventures, and Institutional Venture Partners.
Last year, WhaleShark Media made more than $70 million in revenue as part of the $1.7 billion in sales generated for its merchant clients.
The company has 170 employees worldwide, including 120 in the U.S. It plans to hire another 50 employees this year.
The acquisition of Miwim’s web portfolio, which includes online coupon site Bons-de-Reduction and cash-back website Poulpeo, combined with WhaleShark Media’s existing portfolio of European websites, VoucherCodes.co.uk in the U.K. and Deals.com in Germany, positions WhaleShark Media to provide coupons to consumers that represent 70% of the ecommerce activity in Western Europe.
Olivier David and Francois Larvor, the founders of Miwim, will continue to serve as co-General Managers of Miwim and 20 other employees will join WhaleShark in France.

Finalists for the Ernst & Young Entrepreneur Of The Year Central Texas Awards

Ernst & Young announced the finalists for the entrepreneur of the year central Texas award.
The winner will be announced on Thursday, June 7th at a gala at the Hilton Downtown Austin.
Here’s the nominees:

Timothy League
Alamo Drafthouse Cinemas

Dan Graham
BuildASign.com

Barry Evans
Calxeda, Inc.

Glenn Garland
CLEAResult

Jim Stimmel
CLEAResult

Jeffrey Dachis
Dachis Group

Allen Gilmer
Drilling Info, Inc.

Brian Sharples
HomeAway, Inc.

Jonny Jones
Jones Energy Ltd.

Phil Miner
The Miner Corporation

John Arrow
Mutual Mobile

Kevin Cunningham
SailPoint

Mark McClain
SailPoint

Samir “Sam” Hanna
SAM, Inc. (Survey And Mapping, Inc.)

Gail Summers Page
Vermillion, Inc.

Calxeda raises $20 million of a $30 million offering

Calxeda, which makes energy-saving chips for servers that power data centers, has raised $20 million of a $30 million offering, according to a statement filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission.
The Austin-based company, founded in 2008 as Smooth Stone, announced $48 million in funding in November of 2010.
Calxeda’s funders include Advanced Technology Investment Co., ARM, Battery Ventures, Flybridge Capital Partners and Highland Capital Partners.
For more on the company, read the profile Susan Lahey wrote last year.

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