Links 9/3/2013: Nokia sells handset business to Microsoft







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Nokia to sell handset business to Microsoft for $7.2 billion
(Reuters)

Finns Mourn Loss of Icon Nokia as Microsoft Takes Over
(Bloomberg)


Comcast vision paying off $7,000 in '72 IPO would now be $6.2M. (Philadelphia Inquirer)


Maker of software for online MD talks raises $10m more (Boston Globe)
Safeguard Scientifics leads with $7.5 million.

CBS Wins Carriage Battle With Time Warner Cable (Analysis) (Hollywood Reporter)

Cord-cutting reality: Pay-TV industry loses 217,000 subscribers (LA Times: Company Town)


Facebook Forges Ahead With Mobile Rich Media Ads Via PointRoll Agreement (MediaPost News)

Lithium Technologies extends pre-IPO life (Fortune Tech)
Raises another $50 million. SAP Ventures was a participant in Lithium's $53 million round
last year.



New Phiily Tech News feed on cloud computing news



I've created a new feed for readers who want to follow all the cloud computing news on
Philly Tech News. You can sign up for email or RSS delivery of the Philly Tech News Cloud News feed here.


Links 9/2/2013: Verizon's wireless buyout set: PA Cyber Charter School charged with fraud









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Amazon Web Services, IBM battle over high-profile CIA cloud contract (Washington Post)

Verizon poised for historic $130 billion Vodafone deal (Reuters)

Verizon Doubles Down on U.S. as AT&T Seeks a Hedge in Europe (Bloomberg)


PA Cyber Charter School founder Trombetta pleads not guilty to fraud, tax charges (Pittsburgh Post-Gazette)

CBS Reaches Accord to End Blackout on Time Warner Cable
(Bloomberg)

TV Market Tough to Crack for OLED Makers (Wall Street Journal: Digits)

Vending Machines Get Smart to Accommodate the Cashless
(Bloomberg)
Mentions Malvern-based USA Technologies as a competitor.

Bucks CEO has a winning touch (Philadelphia Inquirer)
Joe DiStefano on TE Connectivity CEO Thomas Lynch.



Philly Tech People News 9/1/2013









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William Levering Appointed Chief Financial Officer of NextDocs
(OpenView Venture Partners News)

QVC Promotes Alex Miller to Senior Vice President Digital Commerce (PR Newswire)

QVC Promotes Dave Caputo to Senior Vice President TV Production and Operations (PR Newswire)

Echo Therapeutics Announces Management Changes
Robert Doman to Assume Role of Executive Chairman and Interim Chief Executive Officer

(PR Newswire)

Andy Roane Joins Yoh as Vice President of Recruitment Process Outsourcing (Business Wire)

Michael Carroll Named President of Metter Interactive (PR Web)

Penn.-Based PMA Companies Appoints Chief Information Officer (Insurance Journal)







Verizon board to vote Monday on Vodafone deal: sources (Reuters)


Two VC firms, Bessemer & OpenView, offer up analyses of public cloud companies and their valuations




Tom Paine



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Two interesting items from about a month ago which I have meant to mention:




First, VC firm Bessemer Venture Partners released the BVP Cloud Computing Index, and a downloadable chart it says is updated weekly showing the key metrics of 30 leading public cloud computing companies as defined by Bessemer (there is certainly often room for debate about what is or isn't a cloud computing company). No Philly companies are included, although clinical trial software company Medidata Solutions has a fairly large presence dating mostly from its 2008 acquisition of Conshohocken-based Fast Track Systems. Kenexa presumably would have been on it had it not been acquired by IBM, and Radnor-based QlikTech really isn't a cloud computing company at this time; its products are offered primarily through on-premise software. Legacy companies such as SAP AG and Unisys are a long way from being considered pure cloud plays.

One data point in the metrics is the Enterprise Value/Revenue ratio for the 30 companies, which has a median of 6.7x and a mean of 7.9x. So when you hear about SaaS companies doing IPOs with EV/Revenue ratios of 10x or considerably more in some cases, it shouldn't be surprising.

The other item is an article in the Wall Street Journal about Adam Marcus, Managing Director of Boston-based OpenView Venture Partners, the VC firm that has made significant investments in Philly area startups Monetate, NextDocs and Xtium. Marcus compiled a list of 96 public SaaS companies and noted that two-thirds of them are located outside of Silicon Valley.

Marcus finds the Bay Area tech ecosystem expensive, unstable in terms of employee retention and having valuations too high in comparison to other regions, according to the Journal. He said OpenView doesn't invest in San Francisco companies. Perhaps more attractive valuations and less hypercompetition among investors explain in part why OpenView made its trio of investments in the Philadelphia area. Others disagree with Marcus' assessment, pointing out that the most of the more valuable SaaS companies remained clustered in the Bay Area, the article points out.






Update to Philly Tech News Young Companies to Watch coming





Tom Paine



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I'm going to be working on an update to Philly Tech News Young Companies to Watch over the next few weeks. There is a great deal of new information to add and I think the results will be very interesting.

If anyone has any information they wish to pass along to me that might provide more enlightenment about their own company or someone else's, please email me. Confidence will always be maintained if requested (as long as the NSA isn't reading my emails).

Thanks.


King of Prussia-based Greenphire builds alliances to reach large global clinical trial payments market, as Sunshine Act takes effect
Ranked #191 on Inc. 500



Tom Paine



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King of Prussia-based Greenphire is rapidly building key strategic alliances to expand its reach and capabilities in the global clinical trials payment market. Founded in 2008, Greenphire has built what appears to be a talented and balanced team of payment technology and clinical research professionals to create what it believes is a superior, cloud-based solution to expedite payments, and perhaps more importantly, to fulfill the increasingly detailed and complex regulatory reporting requirements on clinical trial-related expenditures.

The clinical trials market is huge; estimates vary, but expenditures are certainly in the tens of billions and perhaps more than $100 billion. Over the past few decades the regulatory process for gaining approval for a drug or device has become more rigorous, and the need to recruit and also provide appropriate compensation for trial participants has intensified. This is the case not only in the US, but globally.

The need for a better technology solution to track clinical spending was heightened by the Physician Payments Sunshine Act, which became effective August 1. The Sunshine Act requires extensive, detailed reporting on almost all payments or gifts given to physicians, patients and trial participants. While this is US legislation, it is expected to rapidly become the model for a standard in much of the world, Greenphire co-founder and CEO Sam Whitaker told me in a phone interview.

Sam Whitaker
Whitaker, who majored in Philosophy at Penn, got a taste of the healthcare profession by working at different jobs within the Penn Medicine system while a student there. After an investment banking stint, he got his experience in payment technology by joining Conshohocken-based startup eCount after it was acquired by Citi (and later rebranded as Citi Prepaid). There he met and worked with Greenphire co-founder and CFO John Samar. After leaving Citi, Whitaker, along with his wife, co-founder and Chief Experience Officer Jennifer Peters and Samar looked for venture opportunities that they could apply their skills to. They found the idea of combining their payment technology skills with information technology needs in the clinical trial space compelling. Prior to Greenphire, Peters worked closely with pharmaceutical industry clients as an executive for a communications firm.
John Samar
As CFO, Samar (a Lehigh graduate) plays a broader role in the company's product offering than that title sometimes implies. His responsibilities include designing the back-end functionality to support Greenphire's commercial technologies, and managing its relationships with its major financial partners.

Dr. Neil Rotherham, who serves as Executive Director of Greenphire's board, founded ClinPhone, the pioneer in Interactive Voice Response Systems (IVRS) for use in clinical trials, later acquired by Parexel for $182 million in 2008.

Greenphire currently has two product offerings: ClinCard, the payment platform, and eClinicalGPS, which facilitates accurate payment calculation, manages complex payment approval processes, and automates payment execution in local currencies.

Greenphire was just named to the 2013 Inc. 500, ranked #191 nationally and 4th in the Philadelphia metro area, with 2012 revenue of $5.4 million and a growth rate over three years in excess of 2000%. Whitaker said Greenphire had tripled its revenue in each year since 2009. It has over 300 customers and some 50 employees. Greenphire is establishing a beachhead in Europe, with one employee in the UK and another coming onboard shortly there.

Greenphire recieved early funding from angels and Ben Franklin Technology Partners. In September 2011, Greenphire closed a Series A financing of $1.5 million in growth capital led by FirstMark Capital. FirstMark also participated in a $4.3 million Series B round for Greenphire in October of last year, according to data from the PWC Moneytree report. FirstMark is the New York VC firm that backed Boomi and again backed Bob Moul at Artisan Mobile. Its portfolio also includes Aereo, Pinterest and Shopify.

Perhaps Greenphire's closest competitor in terms of technology is Raleigh-based Clinverse.
New York-based Payoneer is also a competitor in some ways, though it is not entirely focused on clinical trials.
Audubon-based CFS Clinical, which also was on Inc. 5000 (#2110), provides a combination of consulting, services and
technology to the clinical payments industry.

The clinical trials technology sector is composed of many firms (including several in the Philadelphia area) who specialize in specific parts of the process and others who integrate various pieces to different extents. Examples of integrators are Parexel, Greenphire partner Oracle Health Sciences, Medidata Solutions (which has a presence in Conshohocken), and Accenture. Last year, Accenture acquired Wayne-based Octagon Research Solutions, and last month it announced the formation of Accenture Accelerated R&D Services, which includes Octagon, and "will leverage capabilities of the cloud, mobility and analytics to deliver integrated functions across clinical development, regulatory submissions, pharmacovigilance and market launch," the company said in its release.

An open question is what role these integrators will ultimately play in the clinical payments tracking & reporting market; will they partner, buy, or build their own solutions?

Another approach is that of Veeva Systems, the Silicon Valley-based life sciences software company with a significant presence in the Philly area.

Veeva, which has indicated it is planning to file for an IPO, is launching a new product, Veeva Network, later this year. Built in part around its acquisition of Fort Washington-based AdvantageMS announced in July in combination with Veeva's proprietary software, Veeva Network will provide an extensive database of providers and use Master Data Management (MDM) to enhance data quality and match detailed expenditure reports to the correct master records, Dan Goldsmith, general manager of Veeva Network, told Philly Tech News. Veeva will use data supplied from its own CRM clients and other partners to supply aggregate spend data to help meet Sunshine Act requirements.



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Links 8/29/2013: Verizon reported close to deal to buy out Vodafone's Verizon Wireless stake




Tom Paine



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Verizon Said Near $130 Billion Buyout of Vodafone Venture (Bloomberg via San Francisco Chronicle)

Vodafone Confirms Talks With Verizon on Joint Venture (New York Times: DealBook)

Comcast to Light Up 250-Meg Broadband Service in Provo (Multichannel
News)

Salesforce Q2 Results Beat Expectations (All Things D)

Cloud adoption questions – financials & beyond (Jon Reed/Diginomica)

SAP [Americas] CIO Still Sticking with BlackBerry (CIO.com)


Links 8/28/2013: Unisys going on offense; Connectify featured in Bloomberg











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Workday’s Q2 shows continued controlled growth (Den Howlett/Diginomica)

Unisys going on offense in server and security markets
Forget firewalls. Set your endpoints to go dark.
(Computerworld)
In-depth interview with Unisys CEO Ed Coleman. Requires free registration and filling out one of those silly forms.

Marc Andreessen, Pat Gelsinger in verbal VMworld brawl (The Register)

Ellison to talk in-memory database, Oracle PaaS at OpenWorld
(Computerworld)

Blind Comcast exec developing a talking TV channel guide (Philadelphia Inquirer)

Comcast's Fandango ticket service buys Quantum promotion firm
(Reuters)

Comcast Tests EA-Powered Game Service for X1 Platform (Multichannel News)

Kickstarter Lures Startups Seeking Guinea Pigs Over Cash
(Bloomberg)
Article highlights Philly-based Connectify's use of Kickstarter.

SAS takes aim at SAP with in-memory analytics (IT World)

Will acquisitions pay off for Salesforce.com?
Commentary: Cloud-software firm’s stock should move on forecast
(MarketWatch)

Hammerer Aluminium Industries Extends SAP Investment with More Rapid Analysis in QlikView (Business Wire)

TicketLeap Launches New Mobile Box Office for iOS
(PR Newswire)