Monday, April 9, 2012

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SEC Filing: Chris Sacca Raising $25M For New Fund, Lowercase Spur

Apr 09, 12:17PM

lowercase-capital-1According to a new SEC filing, investor Chris Sacca is raising as much as $25 million for his new fund, Lowercase Spur. As Bloomberg BusinessWeek reported a month ago, Sacca is in the process of raising capital for Lowercase Spur, which is set to invest in startups over the next ten years. It was unclear how large the fund would be, but that number could be around $25 million. Sacca raised nearly $50 million in 2010 for Lowercase Capital, and operates a number of funds. Lowercase I appears to invest early-stage startups, and Sacca operates another $1 billion fund that buys secondary market shares of companies such as Twitter and Facebook.


Woopra's New Dashboard Lets Publishers See Exactly Who's Visiting Their Site

Apr 09, 12:00PM

Woopra New DashboardWhen you hear the phrase "real-time analytics" you probably think of Chartbeat (at least I do), but it's not the only company in the field. In fact, a Lebanese startup called Woopra has been offering its own real-time services since 2008. And you may be hearing more about it soon — it recently opened an office in San Francisco, and today it's launching version 5.0 of its service. Founder and CEO Elie Khoury demonstrated the new version for me about a week ago. The change should be immediately obvious to Woopra users, since the Live Dashboard has been completely redesigned. Beyond looking a bit cooler, the new layout has an additional benefit: The entire dashboard now fits in a single window. That means you can see all of the data that Woopra deems most essential without having to scroll down — a seemingly minor change that could end up make life easier for people who leave Woopra open all the time or check the dashboard many times throughout the day.


AOL Sells 800 Patents For $1 Billion To Microsoft [Memo To Staff]

Apr 09, 11:06AM

aol-logo-12This just in: one chapter of AOL's patent journey is coming to an end. The company is selling 800 patents to Microsoft for just north of $1 billion. Tim Armstrong, the CEO of AOL, says that the company will continue to sold on to about 300 patents and patent applications as a result of that, spanning "core and strategic technologies" around advertising, search and content generation. Full memo below. More to come.


Study: CIOs May Like To Talk The Social Media Talk, But Only 10% Walk The Walk

Apr 09, 10:25AM

walking suitThe use of social media in the enterprise has been a path well-trod by companies using mass market tools like Twitter, Facebook and LinkedIn to communicate with peers, customers, investors and anyone else who might be interested in what they're up to. But when it comes to the most senior information executives, they're actually a little antisocial. According to data compiled by social software provider harmon.ie, only about 10 percent of CIOs in the top companies -- Fortune 250 and and Global 250 -- actively use public social networks. Within that group, only four CIOs write blogs, and more than one-third either do not have LinkedIn profiles, or have profiles with fewer than 100 connections.


"The Hacker Company": Facebookers Snag A Vintage Sign For New HQ

Apr 09, 9:07AM

Screen Shot 2012-04-09 at 1.12.56 AMIt all started last April when former Facebook engineer Chris Putnam (of  fame) was visiting his girlfriend's mom in Lake City, FL and saw the striking sign -- 'The Hacker Company." Putnam, who had left Facebook in August 2010 to do his own thing, felt an immediate affinity for the sign, after all, he actually had been hired by Facebook after hacking the site so hard it got co-founder Dustin Moskovitz' attention. "I'll always feel pretty close with the culture and all my friends there, so I immediately thought 'Man, this should be on FB's campus,'" Putnam said. So he posted a picture of it to Facebook with the caption, "Facebook NEEDS this sign."


Sephora Doubles Down On Tech: In-Store iPads, Revamped Website, Pinterest Tie-In

Apr 09, 6:05AM

sephoraSephora, the cosmetics retailer, is still best known for its brick-and-mortar shops that let customers test out high-end makeup, skincare and fragrance products with less pressure than typically comes with department store beauty counters. But that doesn't mean the company, which has its US headquarters in San Francisco, isn't focused on the increasingly important world of virtual shopping. To that end, Sephora today rolled out what it's calling a "social and mobile makeover." The new updates are pretty visual, so we swung by Sephora's San Francisco flagship store to talk with its senior vice president of digital, Julie Bornstein, about the company's strategy. Watch the video above to see why Sephora is embracing the constant comparison-shopping element that the web has brought, how the company's San Francisco headquarters influences its tech focus, and more.


Strategy For Startups: The Innovator's Dilemma

Apr 09, 5:00AM

929005910_a12cbbc1ecStrategy. Unfortunately, it suffers from a bad reputation among startups. It is associated with consultants who are paid millions of dollars only to come back with a two-by-two matrix of animals. Not that there is anything wrong with it. Some of my best friends are consultants. However, strategy is crucial for startup success. Startups usually operate in an environment of constrained resources while competing with strong incumbents. Hence, the right strategy can be a matter of life and death. This post is the first in a series of posts that will explore concepts in strategy and how they apply to startups.


Hooking Users In 3 Steps

Apr 09, 3:00AM

Screen Shot 2012-04-05 at 1.49.04 AMThe truly great consumer technology companies of the past 25 years have all had one thing in common: They created habits. This is what separates world-changing businesses from the rest. Apple, Facebook, Amazon, Google, Microsoft, and Twitter are used daily by a high proportion of their users and their products are so compelling that many of us struggle to imagine life before they existed. But creating habits is easier said than done. Though I've written extensively about behavior engineering and the importance of habits to the future of the web, few resources give entrepreneurs the tools they need to design and measure user habits. It's not that these techniques don't exist -- in fact, they're quite familiar to people in all the companies named above. However, to the new entrepreneur, they largely remain a mystery.


[Excerpt] Fundraising: From $1,000 To $1,000,000

Apr 09, 1:30AM

fundraisingEditor's Note: The following is an excerpt from Onswipe CEO Jason L. Baptiste's new book The Ultralight Startup: Launching a Business Without Clout or Capital. If you pay attention to the headlines about startups getting millions of dollars of funding from investors, venture capitalists, or partnerships, you might think the fund-raising process happens overnight. It all sounds so easy: Some entrepreneur with a thousand dollars in his pocket creates a great PowerPoint investor presentation, secures a few meetings with important people, and bam! A handshake, some signatures, and the deal is done. The reality is a little trickier. Fund-raising is a process, and although the right pitch might come in handy, in this chapter I'll discuss the practical start-to-finish way to think about fund-raising that will get you the money you want in the end.


Silicon Valley Needs To Take Itself More Seriously*

Apr 08, 11:48PM

Screen Shot 2012-04-08 at 4.42.08 PM
"Silicon Valley is high school, except it's only the smart kids, and everyone has a lot of money." -- Kim Taylor, "Silicon Valley" star.
For an industry so reliant on the wholehearted embrace of the future, many technologists and pundits seem so completely resistant to change it's mind-boggling.


Push Notification And The Beginner's Mind

Apr 08, 11:43PM

underconstructionPush notification and the fabric it creates are about what comes next. Not what we know, but what we're about to know. The next step, the one we're about to take, the moment when the foot is in the air and hasn't yet figured out exactly where to land. It's like putting english on a tennis return, or the release of the ball in a pitch, the moment when you commit to whatever the strategy is. Sometimes it's about gathering every possible piece of information and then acting with that full authority. Other times it's about keeping the beginner's mind, clear of opinion and calculation. What matters is the context — who or what or why we are following. Realtime is not just the up-to-date quality but the metadata that surrounds each object: why do we find this person interesting, what does this information suggest will come next, and so on. Only when we can be reasonably satisfied of the quality of our pipeline can we begin to trust it.


Patent Law 101: What's Wrong And Ways To Make It Right

Apr 08, 10:30PM

Patent-Law1Patent blogs were lit up after the Supreme Court's decision in Prometheus v. Mayo. Some have hailed the decision as a "harbinger of progress to come" while others have denounced it as revealing "just how little the Court understands the nuances of science, philosophy and language – let alone the patent law itself." Describing the decision as "controversial" is probably an understatement. The opinion focused primarily on Section 101 of the United States Patent Act, which sets out the basic categories of patent eligible subject matter. The statute is short and sweet: "Whoever invents or discovers any new and useful process, machine, manufacture, or composition of matter, or any new and useful improvement thereof, may obtain a patent therefore ..." So simple, right?


Things To Consider Before Saying "I Do" To Investors

Apr 08, 9:15PM

i doThe right investor, the kind who can help startups get over the inevitable "We're Fucked It's Over" (WFIO) moments, can turn a startup into a multi-billion dollar company. The fact is that choosing the right investors, whether it be at the seed level or at a Series B or C stage is a life-changing decision for an entrepreneur and a startup. The wrong investor match could derail a startup. "It's like a marriage and it might even last longer." That's how Kleiner Perkins partner Chi-Hua Chien describes the relationship between investor and entrepreneur. And he's not joking in the least bit.


What The Cloud Doesn't Do

Apr 08, 8:37PM

CloudsWe're at a technological inflection point, a major branch of computing is splitting off and everyone from the sysadmin to the CEO is wondering what it will mean. The usual cabal of vocal technologists isn't helping the situation. The chatterboxes maintain a constant chant of change: "Cloud, Cloud, Cloud!" Yet they fail to contextualize it in the overall IT architecture. They imagine a bright future where all servers will hum along in ultra-efficient datacenters (preferably solar powered) diligently tended to by the infrastructure-as-a-service providers. Why would you ever host your own server?


>From Team Player To Coach = From Entrepreneur To CEO

Apr 08, 7:45PM

montana_walsh2For entrepreneurs, navigating a career through the Valley can be a lot like competitive sports. Similarities include locker room leadership, a shifting playbook and ongoing onslaughts from opponents. What is perhaps the most important likeness to highlight, however, is the requisite sense of what your place is in the game. The differences between each role in a company and team are substantial, and shifting between them requires a lot of adjustment, sacrifice, and changing skill sets. Players focus on their own performance while coaches manage for peak performance of the team as a whole, and player-coaches do a little of both.


An Open Letter To IBM CEO Virginia Rometty

Apr 08, 7:04PM

virginia-romettyPeople like to kick up a fuss about sexism in tech and how this contributes to a lack of women in the field, whether that's through badly promoted "perks" at hackathons, over-abundance of alcohol at events or scantily clad women in promo videos, etc. But do you want to know why there's sexism in tech? Because it comes from society at large, and even at the very top, we allow it to happen. Traditionally, the Augusta National Golf Club has bestowed honorary green jackets representing membership to the club upon the CEOs of its three main television sponsors for the U.S. Masters – except for this year. Virginia Rometty is the current CEO of IBM, and so far has not been given membership – like every other CEO before her, solely because she is a woman.


Fly Or Die: Swivl

Apr 08, 6:40PM

Screen shot 2012-04-08 at 1.01.37 PMYou've met the Swivl before. Back in November, Satarii debuted the Swivl (formerly known as the Star), and we went hands-on with the substitute camera-man around Christmas. Good times. But today is judgement day. Actually, today is Easter, but let's just roll with it.


How The IPO Ruined Google

Apr 08, 5:16PM

Groupon-Tops-Google-at-IPOI'm a Google-phile. Or at least, I was. Lately, my gut's felt a bit wobbly every time someone mentions the big G. Page, Brin and company have lost their focus. Once, they helped us all find the stuff we needed. Now, they spend their time in slap fights with Facebook. It's almost like the Googlers are no longer in charge at Google. That's because they're not. The Google IPO put the company's fate in the hands of investors. And it's ruined the company. IPO-bashing is popular right now. But I'm not just jumping on the bandwagon here. The evidence is pretty damning: Pre-IPO, Google was laser-focused on being the best tool on earth for search-and-discovery, and they appeared unstoppable. Post-IPO, the company has lurched from one social media debacle to another.


Pinterest's Unlikely Journey To Top Of The Startup Mountain

Apr 08, 4:00PM

ben silbermannOver the past 12 months, I've had the pleasure of interviewing some of the Valley's best entrepreneurs and investors at Startup Grind. People like Naval RavikantKevin RoseTony ConradMG SieglerJeff Clavier, and others have inspired us with stories and trials they have overcome to get where they are. In February we hosted Pinterest founder Ben Silbermann in Palo Alto. He is one of the most humble entrepreneurs I have met in my seven years in Silicon Valley. The story of Pinterest's founding is more valuable to me than most startups because it is a reflection of what a lot of founders who regularly read TechCrunch go through in the everyday startup grind.


Real Estate Will Always Be The Best Investment: Time To Augment It

Apr 08, 1:00PM

model homeI spend a good portion of my day thinking, researching, and analyzing our industry, our world, consumer habits, and the technology products that enhance and cause fundamental change within it. My job is quite literally to see where the puck is going and get there first. My goal is to gain insight into the direction before the shot is hit, before the trajectory is set, and if possible, before the puck is even dropped into play. Over the past months I've been mentally mulling over the profundity of Real Estate. Throughout history, real estate has been the most coveted, fought-over, and valuable resource to humanity. Entire civilizations were created, and wiped out, on their level of success in securing it and the access it provided for their people. In the modern age, this has meant the creation of vast amounts of wealth for those who control and monetize it according to their needs, for both countries and individuals alike.



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