NJEN Panel Discusses “Where’s the Money?” Alternative Financing for Tech Companies, Part 1



Esther Surden
Publisher & Editor, NJTechWeekly.com


(NJTechWeekly.com is continuing to catch up on pre-Sandy coverage that would have been published in early November but was postponed because of post-storm chaos and the volume of Sandy-related stories. We apologize for the delay.)






The New Jersey tech community knows how difficult it was for companies to get VCs and angels to write checks in 2012. Acknowledging this, the New Jersey Entrepreneurial Network (NJEN) organized a panel discussion on alternative means for entrepreneurs and businesses to obtain financing.

Some 60 attendees at the Oct. 10, 2012, event, held in Princeton, heard about crowdfunding, bank funding, myriad financing tools made available by the state of N.J. and even a vehicle that gives immigrants green cards while providing financing to companies that create jobs.

Part 1 of this post covers the crowdfunding presentations, including an interesting discussion by Savraj Singh Dhanjal, a Princeton entrepreneur who gave a Kickstarter campaign a try.

The first speaker was Freeman White, CEO and cofounder of Launcht (Buckingham, Pa.), a website providing custom crowdfunding platforms and white-label sites for nonprofit social fundraising, online voting and use by universities.

White spoke about the history of crowdfunding, including the difference between the form of it authorized by the Jumpstart Our Business Startups (JOBS) Act and the version of it carried out today via Kickstarter, Indiegogo and other sites. For entrepreneurs, today’s sites are used to build something of interest to the market and then presell it, White said. “However, if you want to invest in the business itself, that is still illegal, unless you are an angel investor or an accredited investor through a Rule 506 offering or a Regulation D offering,” he noted.

When the rules are finally promulgated, the JOBS Act will change things so that ordinary people can invest upwards of 5-10 percent of their income in startups and small private companies, White said. The investment can take many forms, such as revenue sharing, equity, debt and any kind of regulated security, he added.

However, “if you see anyone offering you a crowdfunded security today, they are trying to defraud you of your money,” White told the group. When the rules are finalized, it will be ethical to invest this way, and “you are going to know when that is, because the Securities and Exchange Commission and the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority are going to shout it from the rooftops!”

There is a role for crowdfunding right now. Current sites can be used for product development, for example. They basically let companies that want to design a product’s first run do so, if they have the design and suppliers, White said. Companies are essentially preselling “cool gadgets.” This kind of selling is based on how commerce is already being carried out, as in the case of preselling books.

Another interesting use for today’s crowdfunding sites is tech transfer for universities, White said. Universities are setting up campus crowdfunding portals and offering research projects to be funded, or they present a product ready for commercialization, requesting funding to make a first run at the market. With this model, crowdfunding becomes market research; you learn very early on whether someone will buy the product, he noted.

Dhanjal, CEO of the startup Wattvision, which ran a successful Kickstarter campaign this year, was the next speaker to tell his story. A Princeton graduate, he had an idea in 2008 for a gadget that would record how much energy a home or business was using at any given moment. He made a prototype of his product and tested it in his parents’ house. A neighbor saw it and wanted it, and Dhanjal thought he had a business.

In 2009 he was able to raise money with the help of Y Combinator (Mountain View, Ca.) founder Paul Graham. “I pitched him, and he realized this was a cool energy monitoring system that was really simple and didn’t involve electricians,” explained Dhanjal. Graham liked the idea because it incorporated both hardware and software, “and most people only do one or the other.

“This was after I had spoken to angels in the Princeton area. At that time there were no local accelerators. So I moved to California for three months, refined the prototype a bit and raised more money from angels. … We spent ... time turning a standalone device into a tiny box that connects to the wireless network in the house and a sensor that you put on your meter.

“There are three ways to raise money from VC firms. The first is if you are a cofounder at something like Facebook. If you’ve already achieved a lot of success, you can probably raise money from a VC. Another way is to have something so cool and amazing that everyone will want one. If it’s low-cost enough, you can raise money for that. The third way is to have traction [ongoing revenue generation, users and success in the market].

“Angels have the same three requirements, but they may be personally vested in your product and you can connect with them,” he said.

Dhanjal was able to produce and sell the first version of his gadget, which he named Wattvision. When it was time to produce an updated version, however, the company needed to raise more funds. “We saw another Y Combinator company that made watches, Pebble put its [smart] watch up on Kickstarter and be wildly successful,” he said.

With Kickstarter, if you can convey your product as cool or interesting, you can connect with that audience, Dhanjal noted.

“This was a risk for us. We had already taken angel funding, and we already had a product out there. We didn’t know how we would be received on Kickstarter. Also, we were selling our product to homeowners — someone who has a house, not someone in a New York apartment who wants a cool watch.” Dhanjal said the company thought long and hard about how to frame the product in a light that would inspire people to pre-order it.

“We put up our campaign in late August. Our goal was $50,000 for version 2 of Wattvision. We had a local filmmaker make a marketing video.” Dhanjal said being located in the Tigerlabs (Princeton)coworking space was an advantage for the firm, because others working there helped out, lending scenery to make the video “cool.”

We made the video and we waited,” he said.

That’s not all the company did.

“We emailed our existing user base. We had had some great press in 2009. Forbes and Business Week covered us, and we collected the email addresses of users interested in the product.”

In the email it sent them, Wattvision offered existing users a better deal: if they preordered , they would receive the next version of the device at a discounted price. Other Kickstarter users had to contribute a higher amount to preorder. “Thanks to our own email list, we raised $18,000 in 24 hours, which was exciting,” noted Dhanjal. The campaign raised $67,000 in total.

There are some things to note about Kickstarter, Dhanjal said. The site takes 5 percent off what you raise, and 2 percent goes to credit card processing. So people considering using it should do the math. Also, you have to have a physical product. Finally, Kickstarter reviews products, so yours can be rejected.



Esther Surden is Publisher and Editor of NJTechWeekly, and a contributor to Philly Tech News. This article originally appeared in NJTechWeekly, and was reposted here with her approval.



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Events this week: Cloudforce Essentials comes to Philly tomorow (1/15) ; PhillyForce Meetup follows




Tom Paine



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Cloudforce Essentials Philadelphia, a locally oriented version of the Salesforce.com expo, will be held on Tuesday, January 15 at the Hyatt at The Bellevue from 9 am to 2 pm. You can register for the event here.

Its an excellent opportunity to catch up on the latest news from Salesforce.com, meet with local vendors and clients, and see demos from Salesforce.com partners. There will be a keynote on the future of cloud computing and the socially connected enterprise with Salesforce.com leaders, and you will hear how area companies such as Comcast and IMS Health are using Salesforce.com.

Following the event, local Force.com developer group PhillyForce will hold a meetup at 1:30 at McGillin's Olde Ale House on Drury Street in Philadelphia. Salesforce.com Developer Evangelist Reid Carlberg will be there to discuss how developers can use new AppExhange features to monetize their Force.com apps.

"As Salesforce.com continues to expand their platform offerings and ecosystem, this is a great opportunity for our diverse Philadelphia developer community to see the latest Force.com and Heroku technology," said Matthew Botos, Force.com MVP and co-organizer of the PhillyForce group.

Also, tonight (Monday the 14th) from 6 to 8pm cloud technology companies and Salesforce partners Concur and Summa will hold a Cloudforce networking happy hour at Ladder 15 on Sansom Street.

Also worth checking out is a new group that's been getting off the ground, the Philly Enterprise Software Meetup, scheduled for tomorrow evening at 6:30 at Seed Philly. Chris Erb, an attorney with the Erb Law Firm, will discuss the legal environment of Enterprise SaaS solutions.

Another big event this week is the grand opening party for the new, much larger NextFab Studio on Washington Avenue. It will begin 6pm on Thursday the 17th.




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Princeton GPS company (ALK Technolgies) bought by Trimble (Times of Trenton)

Recalling the tech scene back when you were in diapers (Peter Key/Philadelphia Business Journal)


Philly Tech People News 1/13/2013







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Waz Returns to Full-Time Comcast Public Policy Post
Will be based in Los Angeles and Washington
(Broadcasting & Cable)

QlikTech Appoints Mark From-Poulsen as Senior Vice President of Global Services
Former EMEA Head of Field Services at SAP to help customers derive speediest route to maximum value from their QlikView investment
(Business Wire)

Janney Capital Markets Appoints Gregory Voetsch as Head of Equities (Business Wire)

SciStrategy Communications Launches 2013 with New Vice President, Strategic Growth and Development (Business Wire)

TMG Health Names Deanna Forte Lahey Vice President of Professional Services (PR Newswire)




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Updating & expanding Philly Tech News "Young Companies to Watch"; Seeking input






Tom Paine



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Young

Companies

To Watch


On an ongoing basis, I track promising, privately owned information technology oriented startups in the Philly area, and using a combination of subjective judgement and whatever bits of objective data I can dig up, I maintain a list of the top thirty ("Philly Tech News Young Companies To Watch") in terms of their estimated market value. Unlike other rankings, "Young Companies To Watch" is not driven primarily by revenue, since the quality and value of revenue streams vary greatly from one company to another. These rankings are only intended as rough indicators, since as I said the data on most privately held companies is sparse and perceptions of value can differ widely. Generally, though, I've found the top thirty to be a fairly good indicator, based on what some companies are eventually acquired for or valued at in a financing transaction (or in a few cases what they are valued at in a public offering although there haven't been many tech IPOS out of the Philly area lately.)

But given what appears to be a deepening talent pool in the Philadelphia area, I plan to expand "Young Companies to Watch" to at least 35 and probably to 40 companies. And I'm looking for input from the Philly Tech community.

The general qualifications are:


  • The company must be officially headquartered or co-headquartered in the Philly area (including surrounding PA, NJ, and Delaware suburbs), and privately owned or not majority owned by a publicly traded coporation. 
  • Information technology must be the driving force behind its offerings. It doesn't have to be a software company, but proprietary information technology must be essential to how the product is delivered.
  • Companies offering products are generally favored for inclusion over consulting firms or agencies (but not absolutely)
  • I'm usually looking for firms started within the last decade, although that's also not an absolute rule. For example, some companies may have been around for some time in one form but reconstitute themselves in another higher-growth  form.
You can submit the name of your startup or someone elses' and any supporting metrics you might be willing to share to phillytechnews@gmail.com (confidentially is assured). I may get back to you if I have any more questions. No metrics are required and obviously whatever you share is up to you, but information on customers, headcount, invested capital, revenue, profitability and growth are useful, as well as any major partnerships/joint ventures, or examples of industry recognition. I'll include your company on a published list of all companies that are nominated, even if it doesn't make the "Young Companies To Watch" primary rankings. By nominating your company, you'll also get it on my radar for possible future coverage if I'm not already familiar with it.

If your company is already on "Young Companies To Watch", feel free to provide more information indicating why it could be ranked higher.

I'll leave the submission process open for three weeks, or until February 2.

Thanks for your help.




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Daily Links 1/11/2013: Comcast launches Xfinity X1 platform in Philadelphia region




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SAP on HANA: where SAP wins and how it has missed the real goal (Dennis Howlett/Irregular Enterprise via ZDNet)

A Promise Delivered – SAP Business Suite Is Now Powered by HANA ( Vishal Sikka/SAP HANA Blog)

Forrester: IT spending facing challenges in 2013
Particularly in Europe, and in servers and storage
(The Register)

RAND: Health IT No Bargain Yet (Information Week)

History of Electronic Health Records (EHR) (Software Advice)

Comcast launches Xfinity X1 platform in Philadelphia, New Jersey (FierceCable)


Comcast, Time Warner Cable take lower profile at CES 2013 (FierceCable)

NBC has no qualms about using news unit as a marketing tool (LA Times: Company Town)

New student startup combats textbook price
Textbook Friend was found by freshman roommates
(Daily Pennsylvanian)

Ben Franklin funds technology startups
Five Lehigh Valley high-tech companies get financing.
(Allentown Morning Call)




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Daily Links 1/10/2013: SAP unveils Business Suite ERP to HANA in-memory database




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SAP Challenges Oracle With Speed Increase to Mainstay Software (Bloomberg)

SAP Ports its Business Suite Software to the HANA In-memory Database
The capability will become generally available later this year
(CIO.com)

SAP co-founder responds to 'drugs' gibe from Oracle's Larry Ellison (LA Times)

Billtrust Announces Merger With Best Practice Systems
Combination of Two eBilling Market Leaders To Shape Future Market Direction
(PR Newswire)
Billtrust is based in Hamilton, NJ.

Can Meg Whitman Reverse Hewlett-Packard's Free Fall? (Business Week)

NetSuite Acquires Point-of-Sale Company Retail Anywhere (All Things D)

Cognizant beefs up in Europe via C1 Group acquisitions (ZDNet)

Urban Outfitters Posts Record Holiday Sales (Fox Business)
Direct to consumer (essentially ecommerce) increases 38%.



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Daily Links 1/9/2013: Dish bids for Clearwire; Goldman to establish small biz program in Philly




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Dish Network Makes Bid for Clearwire, Topping Sprint Offer (New York Times: DealBook)

Verizon looks to LTE completion, Gigabit FiOS (Network World)

FCC's Genachowski: Gov't will open up radio spectrum to improve Wi-Fi
Commission Chairman says move is needed to avoid "Wi-Fi traffic jam."
(Ars Technica)

Goldman Sachs expected to help small businesses here
(Philadelphia Inquirer)

Who Made That Universal Product Code? (New York Times)
How bar code invented at Drexel ultimately came to market.

History of MRP Software
(Derek Singleton/Software Advice)
Key element behind SAP's rise to prominence.

Q&A: NetSuite CEO Zach Nelson talks growth, strategy and life with Oracle
NetSuite has tripled its number of developers in recent years, according to Nelson
(Computerworld)


Workday's Co-CEO Looks Ahead to 2013 (Forbes)

SAP CIO: BlackBerry 10 looking good
The company plans to offer and support BlackBerry 10 devices within the first quarter of 2013
(Infoworld)

SOFTWARE AG SELLS SAP-SERVICE OPERATIONS IN NORTH AMERICA TO ITELLIGENCE (Software AG Press Release)




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Highlights last week on Philly Tech News (12/31/2012 to 1/6/2013)





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On Philly Tech News:

Wayne-based Cloud Communications provider Evolve IP closed another strong year, GM & COO Guy Fardone told me. The company appeared on the 2012 Inc.500 at #321.

Johnson & Johnson is among several area companies installing Worday's SaaS Human Capital Management solution, several job listings indicate.

Massachusetts-based Parexel International acquired Horsham-based clinical trial software maker Liquent for $72 million.

And I looked back on two events in Philly Tech history, Motorola's 2000 acquisition of General Instrument, and Comcast's rebranding of Versus as The NBC Sports Network one year ago.

From other sources:

Wilmington-based InterDigital had a noisy week, extending its licensing agreement with RIM, filing patent infringement complaints against four other device makers, including Samsung, and launching a machine-to-machine focused joint venture with Sony, which also included a patent licensing agreement.

Plymouth Meeting-based supply chain software vendor WAM Systems was acquired by Connecticut-based Triple Point Technology.



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Daily Links 1/8/2013: SAP's North American President departs; Aereo coming to Philly




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Verizon Says Buying Out Wireless Venture ‘Feasible’ (Wall Street Journal: Digits)

“The telephone network is obsolete”: Get ready for the all-IP telco
AT&T wants to get rid of obsolete PSTN equipment, and those pesky FCC rules.

(Ars Technica)

Aereo will take its TV distruption to 22 new cities this spring (Gigaom)
Philadelphia is one of them.

Google Brings Free Wi-Fi to Its Section of Manhattan (All Things D)

SAP Adds North America to Cardenuto’s Remit as Predecessor Quits (Bloomberg)

Lehigh Valley-based Cloud Services provider INetU Set to Expand After Private Equity Investment (Data Center Knowledge)
Will open new data center in Seattle.

Quintiq expands its North American headquarters (Quintiq
Press Release)
Expansion in Radnor triples Quintiq's US office space.

LLR Partners Invests in Alsbridge
Investment to fuel substantial growth for IT and telecom sourcing advisory leader

(PR Newswire)

Dish’s $5B Clearwire bid may throw a monkey wrench into Sprint’s plans (VentureBeat)

Amazon, Frontier expanding in Trenton, N.J. (AP via USA Today)



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