Trenton Area Called Unexpected Tech Hub

Esther Surden
Publisher & Editor, NJTechWeekly.com

In a blog post called America’s Off-The-Radar Tech Hubs on Economicmodeling.com, the author, Christian Leithhart, said his organization looked at EMSI's (Economic Modeling Specialists International) extensive data base, eliminating both big cities and cities with a very small number of tech workers.

They highlighted MSAs (Metropolitan Statistical Areas) that have 1,000 to 50,000 jobs in the industry, have grown more than 0% since 2012 and have promising concentrations. Also, the industry needed to have grown during the recession.

The Trenton-Ewing area made the list. It's population is about 369,000 and it has 17,573 tech jobs. "Trenton's highlighted tech occupation is software developers," spread out over several different industries.

The post said the five most prevalent industries were custom computer programming, state government, computer systems design services, investment banking, and software publishing. "Software publishers take the cake with an increase of zero to 160 since 2001," the blog post said.

"Tech workers have increased 11 percent since 2001 and grew 3 percent during the recession, and workers earn a median wage of $41.23/hr," the blog post said.




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


News from The Cable Show 6/12/2013: Would cable operators give incentives to content producers to forego OTT opportunities? (Yes)



Time Warner Cable Content Incentives Thwart New Web TV
(Bloomberg)

Here’s Comcast’s Version of Apple TV (All Things D)

Comcast's New X2 Platform Brings 3 Key Innovations (Videonuze)

Will Time Warner Cable buy Cablevision? Comcast co-founder Brodsky predicts more consolidation (Steve Donohue/FierceCable)


Cable Show 2013: Comcast: We'll Be Ready for Ultra HD (Multichannel
News)

Malone May Play Role of Spoiler in Cable Deal (New York Times: DealBook)


Daily Links 6/12/2013: SAP gets favorable results from hearing on Versata case





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SAP Becomes First To Test New Patent Rules In The America Invents Act, Gets Window Of Hope In $345M Versata Case (TechCrunch)

HANA puts SAP at risk of being a modern tech vendor with aging business apps (Computerworld UK)

Wringing administrative costs from health care (Philly.com)
On Philly-based InstaMed.

GE Healthcare to spend $2 billion on software development (ZDNet)

MeetMe Completes Rollout of Native Advertising to MeetMe Mobile Feed
Larger In-Stream Advertising Units Commanding 150 Percent Higher CPMs Than Traditional Mobile Banners
(Business Wire)

NJ Transit to vote on Wi-Fi plan from Cablevision (AP via News 12 Long Island)

If Amazon Beats IBM For CIA Cloud Deal, It Could Shake Up A Whole New Market (Business Insider)

Reports: Clearwire Set to Back Dish Bid (Fox Business)


Rosetta Leverages IBM Business Partner Programs, Publicis Network to Drive Global Commerce Innovation (PR Newswire)

Kenandy raises $33M for cloud-based management (Silicon Valley Business Journal)
Runs on Force.com platform; Salesforce an investor.



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Daily Links 6/10/2013: UnitedHealth to cover CardioNet cardiac monitoring devices; BEAT shares leap



SAP Looks for Acquisitions in China to Pick Up Software Talent (Bloomberg)

Daimler to cut IT spending by 150 million euros each year: report (Reuters via Fox Business)
Will take IT systems outsourced to SAP inhouse.

CardioNet, Inc. Enters Into Agreement with UnitedHealthcare Insurance Company (Business Wire)

UnitedHealth in Deal to Cover CardioNet's Cardiac Monitoring Devices (Dow Jones via Nasdaq.com)


Deltek to Pay Out $242 Mln Dividend to Investors, Including Thoma Bravo (PE Hub)
The Weather Co. (formerly The Weather Channel) also pays out a $600 million dividend to investors including NBCU. Would not be surprised to see Comcast buy out its partners at
some point, as that has been the pattern with properties it wants to keep.





News from The Cable Show 6/10/2013: Comcast unleashes "neighborhood Wi-Fi" initiative





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Comcast expands Wi-Fi network with new 'neighborhood' initiative (CNET News)

Cable Convenes in D.C. Under a Cloud of Uncertainty (Analysis) (Hollywood Reporter)

Lower Broadcast Price Hikes Could Send a Signal to Cable
With less upfront volume, media buyers try to hold the line
(Broadcasting & Cable)

Cable Show: Comcast launches Xfinity Home Control (CED Magazine)

Cable Show 2013: Comcast Picks Arris CCAP, Video Gateway Gear (Multichannel News)

Akamai director cites fragmentation, bottlenecking as challenges for connected devices (FierceCable)





Comcast brings its style to 30 Rock (Philly.com)

Cable operators buff up guides for Internet age (AP via Miami Herald)



Philly Tech People News 6/9/2013







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San Fran law firm continues Philly expansion (Philadelphia Business Journal)

NBCUniversal hires former Disney executive Russell Hampton (LA Times: Company Town)

UNIT4 appoints former SAP exec as its new CEO (Information Age)

QVC Appoints Ted Jastrzebski As Chief Financial Officer
Former Hershey Executive Succeeds Retiring CFO Dan O'Connell
(PR Newswire)

Arraya Solutions Welcomes Christian Gingras as Director of Sales
Technology sales veteran well positioned to grow the company's core business and managed services offerings
(PR Newswire)

Fiber-Line Strengthens Corporate Staff to Drive Growth and Operational Excellence
(Business Wire)




Looking at Kynetic LLC, with new Fanatics Inc. valuation





Tom Paine



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If I included all the holdings of Michael Rubin's Conshohocken-based Kynetic LLC as one Philly-based company, it would easily top Philly Tech News' Young Companies to Watch based on Fanatics Inc.'s remarkable new valuation of $3.1 billion ( as reported by the Wall Street Journal) alone. The Journal, citing Rubin and other sources, said that Fanatics had just raised another $170 million at that valuation, doubling the valuation at its last capital infusion one year ago. The new funding came from Singapore's state-owned investment company Temasek Holdings Pte. Ltd., and Alibaba Group Holding Ltd, Rubin said. He expected the online giant of licensed sports merchandise to achieve revenue of about $1 billion in 2013, up from $800 million last year.

However, Fanatics is based in Jacksonville, FL, though it may have a few people in Kynetic's Consohocken headquarters (actually, almost 80, a Fanatics spokesperson tells me). The Journal's article initially mistakenly said Fanatics was based in Conshohocken.

Rue La La, the flash sales shopping site, is based in Boston, and was on track for about $400 million in annual sales in 2012, Rubin told the Business Insider last year. However, early this year the Boston Business Journal reported that Rue La La had laid off about 11% of its 550 employees, perhaps indicating some issues there.

ShopRunner, the third unit of Kynetic, is based in Conshohocken, and also has offices in California and New York. ShopRunner offers a competitive option to Amazon Prime for other retailers, providing two day delivery with free shipping for an annual membership fee. Its CEO is Scott Thommpson, who's brief reign as CEO of Yahoo ended over controversy about an inaccuracy on his resume. Of course, Thompson had previously served as President of eBay's PayPal unit. Thompson still makes California his primary residence so commutes to Conshohocken; in fact, the company had a helipad built next to the Schyulkill to speed Thompson's commute from the airport, though the publication More than the Curve recently reported that the borough's council was still debating operating hours for the helipad.

So for my purposes, I considered ShopRunner the only Philly-based startup of Kynetics' holdings, and am not sure how high to rank it on Young Companies to Watch (though it is #30 for now) because of the lack of much definitive data. Kynetic is basically a holding company who's two largest units are based elsewhere

So how is ShopRunner doing? Hard to say, exactly. The company did issue a release earlier in the year that said that orders across the network increased 2.5 times over 2011 in 2012, but no mention of what that 2011 base was. Nor have they publicly disclosed (to my knowledge) its membership numbers, which would be a meaningful benchmark. Amazon Prime has over 10 million members, according to reports. My guess is that ShopRunner has had to compete to match the constant promotional pricing of Amazon Prime. There have also been reports that Google is readying an Amazon Prime competitor.

Kynetic LLC grew out of Rubin's $2.4 billion (cash and debt) sale of GSI Commerce to eBay in 2011. ebay spun off 70% of GSI properties ShopRunner and Rue La La to Rubin's ownership group,and all of the sports licensing business (Fanatics). Prior to this most recent transaction, Rubin had sold 10% of Fanatics to Insight Venture Partners, with participation from Andreessen Horowitz a year ago for a $150 million investment. This latest investment presumably involved the sale of slightly more than a 5% stake in Fanatics.




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