Is Recyclebank worth it?



Tom Paine



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I continually see stories such as this (Oak Ridge, TN) and this (Alcoa, TN) and this (Lambeth Borough, London) and this (Knoxville, TN) about Recyclebank, the recycling rewards program that offers consumers reedemable reward points based on how much they recycle. In spite of the glitzy corporate PR Recyclebank generates, its economic benefits to many municipalities seem to be marginal at best. Of courses, participation rates and benefits tend to vary from one area to another based on demographics, housing mix and other factors.

Many South Jersey communities that were early adopters have since dropped the program.

Recyclebank was founded in Philadelphia and later moved its headquarters to New York, although it still has staff in Philadelphia. Upon Philadelphia winning $1 million from the Bloomberg Philanthropies Mayors challenge last month, Mayor Nutter cited Recyclebank as an example as the type of program the Bloomberg Challenge might help create.

The company has raised upwards of $100 million in venture capital funds. You can see part of a recent presentation by Jonathan K. Hsu, CEO of Recyclebank, at a Wall Street Journal conference below:





No one questions the value of increasing recycling rates and influencing consumer behavior to help accomplish this. But what I've consistently heard from many communities is that participation in the rewards program is too low and the cost of supporting it is too high for many municipalities.


Allen Stern, influential tech blogger and entrepreneur, passes away



Tom Paine



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Allen Stern passed away last week, his sister reported on his Facebook page. There are few details at this time.

Since I didn't know much about his personal history, I'll leave that to others to describe. What I do know was that he was a pioneer in tech blogging through his website, CenterNetworks. Although based in New York, and very involved in the tech scene there before it really exploded, he was by no means provincial and totally New York focused. In fact, I remember he was very aware of the Philly tech scene and would write about major developments there and would come down for big events. I assume many in Philly met him or communicated with him at some point.

As an observer and evangelist, he served as one of the catalysts for the emerging tech ecosystem in New York City, as it began to become swamped with startups, entrepreneurs, technologists, and tech VCs. CenterNetworks also served as a model for many aspiring, creative tech bloggers.

CenterNetworks was sold at some point a few years ago and Stern apparently moved to Austin, Texas, reportedly making considerable progress attacking a longtime weight issue (see the before and after photos he posted on Facebook), and running a website on which he shared weight management and recipe advice with others. He also had other entrepreneurial ventures, such as one aimed at capturing business card information in the Cloud.

CenterNetworks was influential, but it never had the financial success of websites that emerged later on such as TechCrunch or Gigaom. The site now appears to be largely dormant now.



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Philly Tech People News 4/7/2013







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ShopRunner Appoints Scott Simmons as COO and CFO (PR Newswire)

RES Software Announces VP of Business Development to Fuel Enterprise Adoption and Accelerate Company (Business Wire)

My return to The Wharton School as an Entrepreneur-in-Residence (Brett Hurt, Wharton MBA 1999; Vice Chairman and Co-founder, Bazaarvoice/Wharton Entrepreneurship Blog)

Four Industry Veterans Join Rosetta's Technology and Telecommunications Vertical
New Additions to Leadership Team Enhance Personalized Marketing Expertise in Rosetta's Fastest Growing Vertical
(PR Newswire)

Supply Chain Solution Provider Elemica Adds Chief Information Officer & Head of Global Customer Support to Executive Team (Marketwire)

PEI-Genesis Names David Jones New Director of Global Sales (PR Web)




Legal battle with RCN is not over for Comcast (Philadelphia Inquirer)

Disruptions: The Logic (or Lack of It) in Appraising Start-Ups (New York Times: Bits)



This Austin TV station thinks its got Google Fiber story confirmed







Tableau’s IPO ‘book’ is tech’s next bestseller (Inorganic Growth)
Radnor-based QlikTech's total revenue for the full year 2012 was $388.5 million, an increase of 21% from the full year 2011 and 26% on a constant currency basis. GAAP Net Income was $3.8 million.
Upstart competitor Tableau doubled its revenue in 2012 to $127.7 million, and the company has been profitable on a GAAP basis since 2010.

Where Social, BPM and Event Technologies Must Go (Brian Sommer/Enterprise Irregulars)

Digital First Media CEO John Paton discusses future of media after JRC bankruptcy (Lansdale Reporter)


Microsoft to open Specialty Store at King of Prussia Mall on April 13

Tom Paine



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Microsoft said in a post today on the Official Microsoft Blog that it is opening five new Microsoft Specialty Stores, including one at King of Prussia Mall on April 13. Microsoft said its Specialty Stores, the first of which opened last Fall, "sell an array of Microsoft products, including Microsoft Surface Pro with Windows 8 Pro, Microsoft Surface RT, Windows Phone 8 and Xbox/Kinect." Microsoft lists about 75 stores (rough count), some of which are considered Specialty Stores and some not, in North America, including the five new locations.

Microsoft has three stores in New Jersey (Bridgewater Commons is the closest to Philly) and one at Christiana Mall in Delaware, which is not a Specialty Store.

Microsoft Specialty Store in Aventura, Fla./
Microsoft Blog




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Daily Links 4/5/2013: Unisys' split personality; mass layoffs at Fisker





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Unisys must mend its split personality and develop a consistent global focus (Ovum)


EMC, VMware Love Child Pivotal Poses Challenge to AWS (Eweek)

SAP Grants Channel Partners Sales Exclusivity For 'General Business' Customers (CRN)

SAP's effort to get startups on HANA bandwagon chugging along (PC World)

Chernin, Comcast Investing in YouTube Tools Startup Fullscreen (All Things D)

Peter Chernin Wants Hulu, Too (All Things D)

Markell's office notified of Fisker's plans for layoffs (Wilmington News Journal)

Google Plans to Announce Something in Austin Next Week (All Things D)
Hard to believe it would be Google Fiber.

Milestone Announces Final Closing of Milestone IV and Senior Level Promotions (Milestone Website)
Radnor-based PE firm closes new fund at $300 million.



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Daily Links 4/4/2013: Variety on Intel's OTT TV service plans; Morgan Stanley challenges HANA sales inflation claims





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The Big Bet at Intel Corp. That Could Change TV (Variety)

Intel inside & out: trademark filings point towards Intel Media plans (Gigaom)

‘Tonight’ Switch Exposes Broadcasters’ Losses to New Media (Bloomberg)

New firm works to reduce hospital readmissions of elderly patients (Philadelphia Inquirer)

New incubator DreamIt Health launches first class (mobihealthnews)

This Guy's Startup Is So Hot, He Convinced Archrivals SAP AND Salesforce.com To Invest (SAI: Enterprise)

Morgan Stanley Defends SAP Against Sales Inflation Accusations (All Things D)

How Oracle Must Reclaim Its Cool (Fritz Nelson/Information Week)

Major League Baseball Turns to Qualcomm to Improve In-Stadium Coverage (All Things D)

After the Newspaper Building
Struggling dailies are abandoning their grand old buildings. Why that's not a bad thing.
(Ingra Saffron/The New Republic)

T-Mobile USA gains subscribers (AP via News12 Connecticut)



Monetate's new CFO David Stetson


Tom Paine



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David Stetson


Conshohocken-based Monetate's newly appointed Chief Financial Officer, David Stetson, received an MBA from Wharton, but he is not, as he told me in a phone interview, a native of the Philadelphia area. Rather, he says he is an "eighth generation Vermonter." In fact, his most recent position, for three years, was as CFO of Vermont-based Dealer.com, which is similar to Monetate in that it is not a brand name that most consumers see, but provides auto dealers with the tools needed to run their websites and manage inventory and customer relationship management (CRM). Privately-held Dealer.com, which the Burlington Free Press calls "everybody’s favorite poster child for Vermont’s new digital economy," is a sizable operation, with some 700 employees and anticipated 2013 revenue in excess of $200 milion, according to its CEO. It has receive venture backing from prestigious VCs including a reported $30 million from Accel Partners in 2011. Dealer.com says it has 7,000 dealers as customers in the US out of some 18,000 dealers nationwide.

Stetson's responsibilities as Monetate's new CFO include finance, human resources and operations. Operations, he tells me, includes building the administrative and enterprise systems needed to manage Montetate's rapid growth. Stetson says just as the company is committed to using cloud technologies in developing its products and serving its customers (for example, Monetate delivers its product as a SaasS offering and uses Salesforce.com as its CRM), he is comitted to using the Cloud for Monetate's enterprise systems. It is currently implementing a cloud-based Human Resources Management System (he won't name the vendor right now) as it seeks to manage headcount growth from its current 155 to a projected 230 or so by year end, and will be looking next at Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) solutions, which help manage and integrate several functions across the business. While SAP is probably a bit of overkill for a company of that size (though SAP might argue otherwise), Stetson did say Monetate will consider Tier II vendors such as NetSuite, Infor, and Microsoft Dynamics which may be better suited to Monetate's current scale.

Monetate's specialty is in "personalizing" an end user's experience when visiting a website. Once a snippet of code is added to the website of a Monetate customer, the company says, non-technical marketing people can then make the enhancements to websites to achieve the desired functionality without further coder intervention. Monetate's software also enables rapid prototyping and A/B testing. Although until recently Monetate has been focused almost completely on retailers, it is now seeking to expand into markets such as consumer products, travel and financial services.

Most of Stetson's career prior to Dealer.com was spent as a tech investment banker, including a stint as Head of Equity Capital Markets for Lehman Brothers' Global Technology Group. So he certainly has the needed experience in terms of understanding financial markets and raising equity. A company with Monetate's growth potential must be considered a possible future IPO candidate, although I doubt that it would be ready for that step for some time. And of course, its always possible that a major ecommerce player or Amazon competitor (think eBay, Google, perhaps Facebook) could look at it as an acquisition candidate. But Stetson emphasized he joined Monetate not for any anticipated exit, but rather for the journey, and the chance to work with co-founder and CEO David Brussin and a very talented team. "Nobody at Monetate is working here for a paycheck," he said, but rather for the opportunity to build something special.

Stetson says he hopes to have slightly better digs than what he had while attending Wharton, and will probably relocate his family somewhere out in the western suburbs. His favorite participatory sports are Freeskiing (a bit more difficult to do in southeastern Pennsylvania than in Vermont) and golf.

Moentate also announced last month the addition of John Healy as chief operating officer, along with Stetson. Healy came from GSI Commerce. Neither position existed previously, but were added to help manage Monetate's growth. The company said in an SEC filing in late February that it had raised another $15.2 million in venture capital. Its last big raise was $15 million in 2011, led by OpenView Venture Partners. First Round Capital was a seed investor, and Josh Kopelman is on Monetate's board. The company said it more than doubled revenue, customers and employees in 2012.



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Daily Links 4/3/2013: Leno out, Fallon in next year





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Leno Blesses ‘Tonight Show’ Succession Plan (New York Times)
Changeover to take place next year.

Readying For An IPO, Enterprise SaaS Integration Platform Mulesoft Raises $37M From NEA, Salesforce And Others (TechCrunch)
Although different in some aspects, a principal competitor to Dell Boomi.

Tableau Software Files to Raise as Much as $150 Million (Bloomberg)

A Tableau IPO could validate the big data visualization push — or not (Gigaom)

SAP Accused of Inflating HANA Hardware Numbers (All Things D)

Oracle: ‘CloudWorld’ Positive, but Pricing a Mystery, Says CLSA (Barron's: Tech Trader Daily)

Verizon, New York City to Test Way to Spread Fiber Network (Bloomberg)

Comcast unit wants to run Pa. Convention Center (Philly.com: Philly Deals)

Credit Karma raises $30M in funding (Silicon Valley Business Journal)
Round co-led by Bala Cynwyd-based Susquehanna Growth Equity.

Using Visual Story Telling To Build Stronger Relationships With Consumers (Adotas)
Contributed by Curalate CEO Apu Gupta.



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