QlikTech discusses quarterly earnings; Radnor-based company now at over 1100 employees and growing



Tom Paine



Radnor-based Business Intelligence software vendor QlikTech reported its Q1 2012 results this past Thursday, which exceeded guidance. Revenue grew by 26% to $79.2 million, and GAAP operating loss was $7.8 million (QlikTech usually emphasizes non-GAAP income, but being a traditionalist I always look at GAAP results first). For the full year 2012, the company raised its guidance for revenue to be in the range of $408.0 million to $418.0 million and non-GAAP operating income to be in the range of $55.0 million to $60.0. At the midpoint of that guidance, revenue would grow 29% over 2011.

Headcount is now at 1157, up 31% over the prior year; there were 103 new hires in the quarter, and the company expects to add more than that in Q2. The last time I checked a couple of quarters ago, perhaps slightly more than 10% of those were based in Radnor. QlikTech is a rather geographically decentralized company.

The major mesage I picked up during the conference call was the growth of large enterprise accounts. QlikTech CEO Lars Bjork spoke of accounts with "tens of thousands" of users. He said the perception some competitors try to paint of QlikTech being largely a departmental solution is inaccurate.

At its Qonnections 2012 Global Partners Conference held in Miami Beach last week, one announcement was the introduction of QlikMarket, QlikTech's version of the App Store that will come on line late in the year. QlikMarket will feature "predefined solutions" for specific applications or verticals from QlikTech partners. The company doesn't have much specific public information out about it yet (apparently its existence was prematurely discovered via an employee's LinkedIn profile).

Bjork says he hasn't seen "big data" apps impacting QlikTech's business yet. In terms of competition, QlikTech usually doesn't talk about specific competitors, although Bjork did say it is "not a greenfield and we're the only ones around, in many cases". Tableau and Tibco's Spotfire are probably two of the most important competitors in QlikTech's specific space. Bjork said he doesn't see any direct competition from any of SAP's HANA-based products at this time, as "its a very different offering". On the mobile front, I got the sense that progress is being slowed by performance related to bandwidth and device capacity issues. Bjork said they are hopeful widespread LTE availability will address some of the bandwidth issues; QlikTech is also said to be working on caching for the iPad.

CFO Bill Sorenson may have hinted at possible small acquisitions later in the year. In discussing cash flow projections, he said they could be impacted slightly buy some "technology tuck-ins" that could materialize during the year. QlikTech has not been acquisitive at all to this point. The company has over $200 million in cash.

QlikTech shares closed today at $28.44, down from $30.82 before Thursday's earnings release. Its market capitalization is now $2.4 billion.



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Daily Links 5/1/2012: SAP appoints new President for North America



Geraldine McBride Named President of SAP North America (SAP Newsroom)
Rejoins SAP from Dell.

SAP's Sikka Fires Back Against Oracle's 'falsehoods' About HANA (CIO.com)

An Obligation To Help Each Other (Women 2.0)
By Joanne Lang (Founder & CEO, AboutOne).

Update: Philly Is Not A Mirage, But Maybe The Philly Tech Scene Is? (Philebrity)

SunGard Announces First Quarter 2012 Results (Business Wire)

Steve Burke Tells CAA Retreat: ‘Movie Business Is In Steady Decline’ (Exclusive) (The Wrap)

Sony virtual MSO play could hinge on Comcast
Conglom studying Xfinity/Xbox loophole
(Variety)

NBC Universal's Style Network and DailyCandy Team Up for StyleCandy
(Ad Age)

Earnings Preview: Comcast to report 1Q earnings tomorrow (AP via Business Week)

FCC delays Verizon bid for spectrum from cable firms
(Washington Post: Post Tech)
Procedural delay.


iBuilding Realty Partners Launches with High-Tech Blueprint for Real Estate Value Creation
(Business Wire)
Will leverage Evolve IP technologies.

Motorola Mobility posts $86 million loss in Q1 on $3.1 billion in revenue, ships 8.9 million phones (The Verge)
Sale to Google still awaits Chinese approval (for which I think they will extract a price); Home segment increases profits.

Heartland Payment profit beats Street on higher volumes (Reuters)
Heartland Payment Systems is based in Princeton.



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Highlights: Last week on Philly Tech News (4/23/2012 to 4/29/2012)



I spoke with founder Anthony Coombs about his new SoLoMo startup, Interact, which launched during Philly Tech Week.

SnipSnap won both top honors at both Mobile Monday Demo Night and Switch Philly, and also saw its app get approved for the App Store.

I wrote about appRenaissances's acquisition of mobile UI platform startup UXFLIP.

UPenn freshman James Feuereisen contributed an article to Philly Tech News on the
award winners in the Weiss Tech House PennVention competition
.

NJTechWeekly's Esther Surden covered the NJTC Venture Conference in late March and contributed two articles: one on the award-winning ventures at the Conference, and another on a panel discussing "strategic" corporate venture investing that featured some Philly participants.

Conshohocken-based ShopRunner, a unit of Kynetic LLC, stepped up its efforts to compete with Amazon Prime by acquiring Boston-based PickupZone, a company that manages pickup points where customers can retrieve products they've ordered.

Blue Bell-based Unisys swung from a loss to a profit in its first quarter, and even more unusually showed revenue growth despite a continued decline in its Federal business.

King of Prussia-based InterDigital, which also announced financial results last week, said it was looking to sell a "modest portion" of its patent portfolio. Last year, InterDigital placed its entire patent portfolio up for auction but decided offers were not attractive enough.

Radnor-based QlikTech posted quarterly results and issued full year guidance slightly above estimates, although slower growth and mounting competition may be concerns.

SAP's CFO said its Cloud business would not be profitable in 2012 and that the outlook for 2013 was unclear, which is not surprising because many Cloud businesses are not profitable at this point. Also, SAP's German employees are reportedly concerned about what they perceive as an increasing Corporate emphasis on the US relative to Europe.


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Subscribe to Philly Tech News Weekly Highlights by Email



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Daily Links 4/30/2012: Comcast Sports Group and Philly-based OneTwoSee Partner to Launch App to Enhance Local MLB Broadcast Coverage



Comcast Sports Group and Philly-based OneTwoSee Partner to Launch a Second Screen Application to Enhance Local Broadcast Coverage of MLB Games (PR Newswire)

In Search of Apps for Television (New York Times)

TV in real dime
Hulu, networks to change model of free streaming
(Claire Atkinson/New York Post)

Canoe NYC Office To Shut Its Doors May 23
Operator-Owned Advanced Advertising Venture Refocusing Efforts on VOD Ads
(Multichannel News)

Comcast/Verizon Combo Steers Clear of FiOS (Light Reading Cable)

Microsoft buys stake in Nook, college textbook business (Ars Technica)

At last: Violin to push out HANA appliance
It's why SAP invested
(The Register)

Teradata Debuts In-Memory System for SAS Analytics (Enterprise Apps Today)


42Floors’ PDA: The War For Talent Among Startups Needs A New Approach. Here’s Why (TechCrunch)

Allscripts names new chairman amid turmoil (AP via Chicago Sun-Times)

Saatchi Healthcare Embraces ‘Science’ (MediaBistro: AgencySpy)
Yardley-based Saatchi & Saatchi Healthcare Innovations is now Saatchi & Saatchi Science.



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Hoping for FiOS, some cities now feel abandoned by Verizon (Bob Fernandez/Philadelphia Inquirer)




SAP Workers Chide Management’s U.S. Shift, Euro am Sonntag Says (Bloomberg)


Interact, a SoLoMo Facebook app for iOS, launches during Philly Tech Week



Tom Paine



SoLoMo (Social, Local, Mobile) is a hot segment right now. SoLoMo apps help people to identify and interact with people in their proximity who they might already know or share common interests with. SoLoMo generated a great deal of buzz at last month's South By Southwest Interactive conference in Austin, where some of the startups in the field pushed their apps with hopes of achieving rapid Twitter-like adoption by trend setters (apparently, none really did). That doesn't mean the market isn't going to take off, but there is probably going to have to be some fine tuning before it does.

Now Philly has a locally based entry in the market, Interact, which launched this week and presented at two Philly Tech Week events: one held by appRenaissance (which did much of the development work), and at Mobile Monday Mid-Atlantic's Demo Night. Interact is now available for download from the App Store. Interact had originally hoped to debut at SXSW, but the app wasn't quite polished enough yet.

Interact is a product of Ivy Development and Technology, Inc., founded by Anthony Coombs, whose impressive background includes a sociology degree from UPenn and two previous startups he founded. Coombs said in a phone interview with Philly Tech News that Interact is designed primarily to help people meet and connect with people they don't already know within a certain distance (predefined by the user based on GPS) having common traits or shared groups or interests from their Facebook profiles. For example, Coombs could be in an airport and see that another Penn grad there wants to connect with him. There are different directions this app can go in. One is to emphasize more personal or social connections. Another is to emphasize professional connections; Coombs is considering incorporating the LinkedIn API so users can see the professional qualifications of who they are connecting with or perhaps screen out people on that basis. The third angle is monetization and how to do that; it could be set up within a retail district, for example, so that stores that fit your interests can let you know about deals they have on when you are nearby.



The key issue is that you don't want to be a walking target for every salesperson (I am reminded of the life insurance salesman who hounds Bill Murray in Groundhog Day) or someone who wants to hit on you for whatever reason. Coombs has put considerable effort into finding ways for people to protect their privacy, but developing more options in between protecting your privacy while still being open to desired connections will still need more work (not only for Interact but for similar apps), from what I understand.

Anthony Coombs


Coombs emphasizes that Philly is his test bed, and that he is building his user base in the market he knows best. Along that theme, Interact ran an "Are you the 'Most Connected Student' in Philadelphia ? " contest, with winners at each campus receiving iPads or other prizes based on having the most Interact Connections. The contest was scheduled to end today.



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UPenn's Weiss Tech House holds PennVention Innovation Fair finals

James Feuereisen









Kinecthesia, a belt-mounted navigation device for assisting the visually impaired (see a demo), took first place and $5,000 after besting 11 other finalists in the University of Pennsylvania’s PennVention competition, where $20,000 in prizes were awarded on April 18.


Forty-three student teams, a record, entered the first phase of the
competition back in February, and faced a rigorous process to narrow the field to twelve. Kinecthesia was started by junior computer engineering students Jeffrey Kiske and Eric Berdinis, who have been working on their product for nearly a year now.


Kiske says “After seeing the competition this year, I can't really say I was expecting to win. All of the teams were so well put together and presented very well".


The second place winner was Invisergy, which makes a solar powered window that is completely transparent and can be implemented into existing infrastructure. Invisergy has participated in other pitch competitions and is in the running for the MIT Clean Tech Competition.

The third place winner was The Campus Rep. The Campus Rep is a tool for startups to easily access students to represent them on college campuses across the nation. They are already on the ground at several schools and are planning a large scale expansion.


The panel of nine judges, who selected the winners and the sponsored prizes, included Michael Aronson of MentorTechVentures, serial entrepreneur Jay Tapper, and Jason Glickman and Bert Navarrete of the newly established TigerLabs incubator. The competition has been heating up over the years and several companies have seen success after the competition. Last year’s winner, uBeam, has been featured in the All Things D conference and one of its founders, Meredith Perry was one of Forbes' 30 under 30 for 2011.

New this year was the automatic placement of two selected teams (Firefly and TouchMe) from the PennApps Hackathon in January to the final round. TouchMe was the winner of the hackathon and Firefly is a screen sharing software that can help companies improve the efficiency of their customer support.


Penn has seen a flurry of entrepreneurial activity as of late. Coursekit (recently renamed Lore), the academic social network started last year by three Penn students, has since received $6 million of funding and now has a team of 12 in New York. One of the co-founders of Family Leaf is a Penn student who has taken the year off to work on his company in Y-Combinator. Warby Parker, started by MBA students a few years ago, has disrupted the eyewear industry through its online collection of glasses.

Previous to the competition Kinecthesia won round three and $50,000 at the newly established Intel Innovator Award competition, which had over 100 applicants nationwide. In October they won Google Zeitgeist, which is an invite only TED style event, and Eric was interviewed by Chelsea Clinton . They have also received support from the Perkins School of the Blind. To top off their victory, they won $3,000 in-kind design services from Design Circle at the PennVention competition.


PennVention is part of the Weiss Tech House at Penn, which puts on other entrepreneurial events throughout the year and houses an in-house fund for startups.



About the author: James Feuereisen is a freshman at the University of
Pennsylvania and was an organizer for the PennVention competition. He can be
reached at jamesfe@sas.upenn.edu





Results Sheet:



1st place-Kinecthesia: $5,000.


2nd place-Invisergy: $2,500.


3rd place-The Campus Rep: $1,000.


Nursing Innovation Prize-BodyWars: $500.


Social Innovation Prize-The Global Latrine : $250.


Dr. Chris Mader Award for Information Technology-Firefly: $1,000.


Design Circle Inc Award-Kinecthesia : $3,000 in-kind.


RJ Metrics Business Software Award-SizeSeeker : $6,000 in-kind
services.





The
Finalists:


Graphene Frontiers-Production technology to make advanced graphene
manufacturing cost effective. Richard Liu.


StudyHeist-A forum where students can exchange class materials
with fellow students. Samuel Stern.


SizeSeeker-Uses Kinnect technology to make clothing measurements
in one’s home in order to facilitate online fashion purchases. Mona
Safabakhsh, Ian Campbell.


Ledao-Online marketplace to buy professional services
intended for Chinese students. Yuanjiao Shen, Haoda Li, Yang Wei, Yanwei Lu, Qi Zhang.


Body Wars!-Board game to teach youth about healthy habits.
Antonette Shaw, Mackenzie Mapes, Kristen van der Veen.

Urban Herb Garden-Home hydroponic system that uses less water and energy
than current models. Gabrielle Pettinelli.


SmallSmall & The Global Latrine Project-A communal toilet design
that can improve sanitation in impoverished regions across the world.


Kinecthesia-A belt to help the visually impaired navigate that uses
vibrations and senses to alter a wearer of objects in their pathway. Jeffrey
Kiske, Eric Berdinis.


Inivsergy-Treatment to make solar powered windows that are
transparent and can be implemented existing infrastructure. Ryan Marschang,
John Foye, Rishabh Jain, Steven Shimizu.


The Campus Rep-Site that connects startups and brands with potential
campus reps on college’s across the country. Elizabeth Wessel, Andrew
Harrington, Jason Mow, JJ Fliegelman, Kendall Haupt.


FireFly-Screen sharing software to help customer support agents
save time that is all in-browser and HIPAA compliant. Patrick Leahy, Dan
Shipper, Justin Meltzer.


TouchMe-Uses sound vibrations to make any surface into a
dynamic device. David Wang, Thomas Ly, Bezhou Feng, Eric O’Brien.





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Daily Links 4/26/2012: QlikTech reports revenue of $79.2 million, up 26% compared to Q1 2011

Qlik Slips: Q1 Beats, Q2 View Light; Year View Tops Estimates (Barron's: Tech Trader Daily)
QlikTech earnings press release.

Safeguard Scientifics Announces First Quarter 2012 Financial Results
Steady Partner Company Growth Validates Safeguard's Strategic Focus
(Business Wire)

InterDigital Announces First Quarter 2012 Financial Results
Company Signs Five New or Expanded License Agreements Year-to-Date, all Covering LTE Technologies
(Business Wire)

SAP's cloud business won't profit in 2012: report (MarketWatch)

AMETEK to Acquire Dunkermotoren (PR Newswire)

AMETEK Announces Record Results (PR Newswire)
Increases earnings guidance for year.

TE Connectivity profit tops Wall Street forecast (Reuters)

Could DuckDuckGo Be The Biggest Long-Term Threat To Google? (Search Engine Land)

SnipSnap Wins Tech Trifecta (Philadelphia Daily
News)

Providence Said Selling Hulu Stake at $2 Billion Value (Bloomberg)
Comcast, an existing (though hands-off) investor, reported to be acquiring part of stake.

Comcast opens state's first Xfinity retail store in Middletown (phillyBurbs.com)

SpectrumCo to FCC: T-Mobile Can't Have It Both Ways
MSOs Ask Agency to Dismiss T-Mobile's Opposition to Proposed Sale of Spectrum to Verizon
(Multichannel News)

Time Warner Cable Profit Climbs 18% As Broadband Grows (Dow Jones Newswires via Fox Business)


New York Times R&D Group Launches First Commercial Product (and It's for Brands) (Ad Age)
SAP is first advertiser to use it.

NetSuite Q1 Edges Estimates; But Shares Sag In Late Trading (Forbes)




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