Daily Links 1/30/2012: No word on report that Philly papers are for sale



BOSSES AT PHILLY PAPERS SILENT ON NY POST REPORT (JimRomenesko.com)

SAP may license HANA to Oracle in future: co-CEO (Reuters)

SAP: avoid wearing The Wrong Trousers (Dennis Howlett/ZDNet Blogs)

The Entrepreneur Give-and-Take (Wharton Magazine)

Pep Boys Enters Into Definitive Agreement to be Acquired by The Gores Group (Press Release)

Pennsylvania PSERS’ Cautious Approach To Venture Is Bringing Mixed IRRs: Slideshow (PE Hub)

Monetate Nearly Triples Revenue in 2011 (PR Web)

Filling in the gaps as Big Pharma downsizes
Bucks software firm manages drug-trial data. And it's hiring.
(Philadelphia Inquirer)

Deals website Choozon with Yahoo! veterans raises over $1M (Philadelphia Business Journal)

Comcast reveals social TV strategy that rewards subscribers in patent application (FierceCable)

#visitUS: Help Curate a Philly Foursquare List, Get Philly a City Badge (Geekadelphia)




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Comcast CEO looking to expand global reach (Bob Fernandez/Philadelphia Inquirer)

Hedger pausing on print (New York Post)
Sounds like Philadelphia Media Network may be on the block, again.


Phillies Phanatic appearance on 30 Rock







Wall Street Reflects on Comcast-NBCUniversal Ahead of Deal’s First Anniversary (Hollywood Reporter)

If You're Waiting on FiOS, You Could Be Waiting a While
30% of Verizon Customers May Wait Years for Upgrades
(Broadband Reports)


$35 Million Investment in iCIMS Means More Monmouth County Jobs: Minority investment made by Bala Cynwyd-based Susquehanna Growth Equity



Esther Surden


Hazlet-based iCIMS received a $35 million minority investment from Susquehanna Growth Equity (SGE, Bala Cynwyd, Pa.) last month. The company, which provides human resources software as a service (SaaS), says it sees tremendous growth in the small and medium business market and will use the investment to address that market.


According to Susan Vitale, chief strategic officer, iCIMS plans to use some of the investment to hire in New Jersey. The company now has about 200 employees across its operations, with approximately 140 in N.J. By the end of 2012 it expects to add 85 more positions, 75 percent of them in N.J., Vitale said. The firm is looking to add software engineers and marketing and product management personnel.

Vitale said company headquarters will remain in Monmouth County, although "I can't commit 100 percent to staying in Hazlet, because we are bursting at the seams", she noted. Much of the company's talent pool consists of New York commuters tired of traveling to the city. "iCIMS does a lot of college recruiting as well. We do a really good job of bringing in young, hungry talent from Monmouth County who may have gone to school elsewhere … We have a great corporate culture,” which makes iCIMS competitive for software engineers, she added.

iCIMS experienced explosive growth in 2011, adding an average of one new customer every business day, Vitale said. The firm was included in the Inc. 500|5000 list of America's fastest-growing private companies for the sixth consecutive year. Profitable and privately held since 2003, iCIMS had been pouring money back into its operations. “There is a huge opportunity right now. Ours is an $11.1 billion dollar industry, and among small- and medium-sized businesses there is a lot of greenfield [opportunity] out there in terms of folks who do not yet have a system. We felt this was the right time to approach the market aggressively,” Vitale said.

Colin Day, iCIMS president and CEO, said while the company could have achieved growth on its own, the investment “will help us dramatically accelerate our aggressive expansion plans. We look forward to offering deeper and broader services and support to our users.”

SGE's Scott Feldman, Amir Goldman and Jonathan Klahr will join the iCIMS board of directors. All three currently serve on the boards of multiple software companies. iCIMS was represented in the transaction by Raymond James & Associates.

(Editor's note: iCIMS reported 2010 revenue of $25.6 million, according to its listing in Inc. Magazine's 2011 Inc.500/5000 issue.)


Esther Surden is Publisher and Editor of   New Jersey Tech Weekly , and a contributor to Philly Tech News. This article originally appeared in New Jersey Tech Weekly.



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Daily Links 1/27/2012: Datatel says 'fewer than 40' cuts after SunGard HE deal closes



Datatel cuts 'fewer than 40' after deal with SunGard Higher Ed closes (Washington Business Journal)

Motorola Mobility's Cable Sales Fall 11% In Q4
Set-Top Shipments Down 3% in Fourth Quarter But Up 6% for Full-Year 2011
(Multichannel News)

Like Sports On Cable? Pay Up. Don’t Like Sports On Cable? Pay Up, Anyway (Peter Kafka/All Things D)

Comcast's Split-Personality Problem (Jonathan Takiff/Philadelphia Daily News)

SAP Takes On Oracle Database, Salesforce Cloud
(Information Week)

SAP Extends Offer For SuccessFactors While Government Entity Investigates (CRN)

Ametek Q4 beats Street, sees strong 2012 (Reuters)
Also acquires O'Brien for about $175 million from Industrial Growth Partners.


Investors bet $16 million on growth in application delivery market (Computerworld)
On Kemp Technologies, New York-based firm in which Edison Ventures just led $16 million round.

The Neat Company Is Putting Paperless in the Cloud [Macworld / iWorld 2012] (Cult of Mac)
Neat's soon to be launched Cloud services may open new opportunities for it.

More Venture Capital Dollars Flow To Health IT (Information Week)

FiOS Being Installed in East Mt. Airy (Mt. Airy Patch)


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Italian firm completes purchase of Telford-based Accu-Sort from Danaher for $135 million



Tom Paine


Telford (Montgomery County) based Accu-Sort has been acquired by Datalogic S.p.A. of Italy from DC-based Danaher Corp. for $135 million. The deal, which was originally announced in November, closed on January 20.

Accu-Sort provides Auto ID Systems for the Material Handling Industry, including barcode systems, dimensioning systems, label print and apply systems, and sortation systems. It employs approximately 250 people. Founded in 1971, Accu-Sort holds about 80 patents. 57 of which are registered in the US. Some 79% of its revenue comes from the US, so further international expansion is a key opportunity. To that end, Accu-Sort opened new offices in China and India late last year.

In 2010, Accu-Sort generated revenue of $92.3 million, while in the first half of 2011 revenue was $51.4 million. The company has EBITDA margins of about 20%.

Datalogic says the acquisition will enable it to improve its global leadership in the industrial stationary scanners segment, with a market share of 31% compared to 16% previously.

Danaher, a $12.8 billion (revenue) industrial manufacturer, acquired Accu-Sort in 2003 for $63 million plus a potential earnout. At the time, Danaher cited Accu-Sort revenue as being about $90 million, so the company does not appear to have grown much over the past decade.



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Daily Links 1/26/2012: SAP says its HANA in-memory database will be able to run ERP by 4th quarter of 2012



SAP's HANA In-memory Database Will Gain Ability to Run ERP This Year (PC World)

The Guy That Created SAP's Hottest Product Ever Thinks It Will Squash Oracle Like A Bug (Silicon Alley Insider: Enterprise)

Steve Case: Washington is No Also-Ran (PE Hub)

Motorola Mobility's Larry Robinson on the move to video gateways over DVRs (FierceCable)

Motorola Mobility Announces Fourth Quarter and Full-Year Financial Results (Press Realease)
Home business revenue for 4th Quarter down 11% from prior year.


Guidewire lights up Wall Street (San Mateo Daily Journal)

When Metadata Comes to Twitter (PC World)
On filtering out Chris Lehmann's (head of Philly's Science Leadership Academy) sports tweets.

Quality Systems, Inc. Reports Record Fiscal 2012 Third Quarter Results (Business Wire)
Revenue up 23%, net income up 20%. Quality Systems' primary business is NextGen Healthcare of Horsham.


TW Cable Sheds Video Subs, Gains in Broadband (Light Reading Cable)

AT&T Punches Up TV, Recedes On Wireline Broadband In Q4
Telco Completes U-verse Buildout At 30 Million Households
(Multichannel News)

Cable Supplier Pulls a Gold Brick From the Wall (Philadelphia Inquirer)

FCC Enforcement Bureau Says Comcast's Tennis Channel Order Is In Effect
Cable Operator Should Be Required to Comply Immediately with ALJ's Decision on Carriage
(Multichannel News)

Fab.com gears up for huge expansions: open doors, new shops, international ops (VentureBeat)
Sounds great, but is Fab.com immune from some of the problems hitting other flash sales sites? First Round Capital was an early backer.



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Daily Links 1/25/2012: SAP has big plans for HANA, database software, mobile, Newtown Square



SAP Sees Higher Profit on Mobile Software (Bloomberg)

SAP bullish on 2012 after record results (Reuters)

Why is SAP bullish about 2012? (Dennis Howlett/ZDNet Blogs)
Definite read.

Fighting Words from SAP (Wall Street Journal: Tech Europe)
Snabe reiterates highly ambitious goals for Database Management software market. Realistic, or just trying to scare Oracle?

SAP AG: Flush from 2011 financials and hiring hundreds, including about 500 in Newtown Square (Philadelphia Business Journal)

Objections due Feb. 21 on Verizon Wireless, Comcast deal (Philadelphia Inquirer)

Amazon looking into taking on Netflix (New York Post)

Netflix earnings beat expectations, stock jumps more than 10 percent (San Jose Mercury News)

Netflix streaming users now outnumber DVD subscribers 2:1 (Gigaom)

Apple's first fiscal quarter, by the numbers (ZDNet Blogs)

Why Apple's Restrictive iBooks Author Rules May Not Be Legally Enforceable (Read Write Web)
Two Philly area experts weigh in.

Philly Gamification Start-Up Hiring Dozen Employees (FINS)
I recently profiled Hoopla Software here.

SevOne Announces Record Revenues and Growth for 2011 (Marketwire)
These year end press releases by private companies are often short on hard facts (their right), but SevOne does say that revenue grew "almost 70%" in 2011, which would put it at around $15 million based on the $8.9 million it reported for 2010 for the Inc. 500.

TE Connectivity 1st-period net down 1.9% (MarketWatch)
TE Connectivity, formerly Tyco Electronics, has its operational headquarters in Berwyn.

SEI Investments' 4Q profit tumbles 29 pct. (AP via CBS News)

Paying for Public Transit in Philadelphia: as Simple as Tapping a Credit Card or Waving a Smartphone
ACS, A Xerox Company, Helps Philadelphia Install One of the Nation’s First Open Fare Payment Systems for Public Transit

(Business Wire)



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Newark, Delaware-based Quantum Leap Innovations launches Buzz, a different approach to social media analytics



Tom Paine


Joseph Budner Elad has spent much of the past 12 years developing a "Pattern Based Analytics" engine, which uses a combination of statistical, mathematical, heuristic and other tools to discover patterns in data that otherwise might not be seen by different methodologies. Elad, born in Israel, came to the US to do graduate studies at the Univesity of Delaware before getting drawn into the entrepreneurial world. The company he founded, Quantum Leap Innovations, has about 15 employees and is based in the Delaware Technology Park in Newark. Up until now, most of Quantum Leap's work has been project-oriented, particularly for the Department of Defense, and also for corporations such as DuPont and and Verizon, and Life Sciences companies. Examples of major projects include tracking pandemic influenza outbreaks, discovering patterns in Health Care fraud, and analyzing the trading patterns of individual traders. Quantum Leap says its approach allows "flexible discovery, visualization and analysis of informative patterns in large, complex data environments". Gartner named Quantum Leap one of its "Cool Vendors" in the Life Sciences sector for 2011.

Now Elad is making a pivot; while not walking away from the project business that currently pays the bills, Quantum Leap last week introduced Quantum Leap Buzz, a desktop app for analyzing trends and connections from the information posted on Twitter. Its available for Mac or PC for $10 per year beginning on February 29; until then a beta version can be downloaded for free. A more sophisticated version geared towards businesses is planned for release in the Spring with a price in the $500 per year range. The present version works only with Twitter, though Quantum Leap may eventually expand the software to work with Facebook and Google+ also. I used the beta version this past weekend to try to keep track of and separate all the rumors and facts coming out about Joe Paterno's declining health on Twitter, and found it helpful.

Moving from a project-oriented business to providing a software tool to a broad user base (Elad would like to have a million users) involves significant challenges. Though he is not taking on venture funds now, telling me in a phone interview that Quantum Leap is profitable and has no debt, Elad does have a powerful braintrust helping as advisors. Board of Directors members include Rick Bennett, a marketing consultant who contributed to Oracle's and Salesforce's early market succeesses and specializes in using guerilla maketing techniques to get early stage products noticed; he is also a member of Safeguard Scientifics' Technology Advisory Board. Others are Stephen H. Coltrin, a Bucks County resident and founder of Coltrin & Associates, Inc., a New York public relations firm which helped launch Palm Computing and the Salt Lake Winter Olympics, and Michael A. Cusumano, Ph.D., Sloan Management Review Distinguished Professor of Management at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology's Sloan School of Management. I asked Elad if he had considered forming partnerships with more established business intelligence software providers such as QlikTech or Tableau, but he says Quantum Leap is determined to build its own brand. Bennett says the company seeks to take a viral marketing approach to spread product adoption.

Social Media Analytics is a hot field right now. Salesforce acquired Radian6 for $326 million last year, and SAP recently formed a partnership with NetBase. SAS Institute is a major player, IBM has some excellent technology, and there are many startups focused on different segments of the market.







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