Clinical Ink, developer of eSource technology for clinical trials with Philly-area office, raises $4.3 million



Tom Paine




 Subscribe in a reader
Subscribe to Philadelphia Tech News by Email


Clinical Ink, a pioneer in the development of eSource technology for use in clinical trials with offices in Winston Salem and Philadelphia, has landed a $4.3M Series B Investment Round led by FCA Venture Partners.

Clinical Ink's platform mimics the look, feel and usability of a paper chart on a tablet device (including use of a stylus for input) and enables data entry during patient visits rather than afterwords. Clinical Ink says it has been recognized by the Society of Clinical Data Management, Microsoft, and Gartner Research as having "significant disruptive potential" to transform the current clinical trial business model.


FCA Venture Partners, the venture capital manager of Clayton Associates, was founded in 1996 by R. Clayton McWhorter, founder of HealthTrust, Inc. and former chairman of Hospital Corporation of America. Founded in 2007, Clinical Ink's Philadelphia office appears to be
located in Horsham.


Philly Tech People News 10/20/2013










Subscribe to Philly Tech People News by Email



NBCUniversal & Comcast Appoint Maggie McLean Suniewick To Senior Vice President, Strategic Integration (PR Newswire)

Luka Mucic Promoted to SAP CFO (GovConWire)

BioTelemetry, Inc. Appoints Joseph A. Frick to Its Board of Directors (Globe Newswire)

AmeriHealth Caritas Appoints Information Technology Visionary Fred Dickson to Lead IT Team (Globe Newswire)

Drexel Looks To Boost Online Offerings With New Executive Hire (CBS Philly)

President Theobald Outlines Vision For Temple University At Inaugural (PR Newswire)



Comcast's thePlatform Adds An Exec, Promotes Another (Multichannel
News)


Sunday Highlights10/20/2013: NBC using Football to start massive pre-Olympic campaign



SAP Cutting Back on Development of Business ByDesign (All Things D)

NBC Uses Football to Jump-Start Massive Olympic Blitz
(Ad Age)

Set-Top Box Showdown: A graphical guide to your options (GeekWire)


University City Science Center going strong at 50 (Philadelphia Inquirer)

Ailing Obamacare site to get a "tech surge" (PC World)






Saturday Highlights 10/19/2013: Fiberlink may be benefitting from BlackBerry woes; Report - SAP may be softly killing Business By Design



BlackBerry faces dogfight as firm returns to its corporate roots (Globe & Mail)
Example of how Blue Bell-based Fiberlink Communications may be benefitting from BlackBerry's problems.

SAP to wind down software product for small businesses: magazine (Reuters)
A slow death for Business By Design?

What happened to the SAP I knew? (Vinnie Mirchandani/Enterprise Irregulars)

Science Center Celebrates 50th Anniversary - Launches Innovators Walk of Fame (Business Wire)


Glitches keep Obamacare NJ enrollment low (Asbury Park Press)





On heels of Veeva Systems' mega IPO, a look at its Philly ties and vision for life sciences IT


Tom Paine




 Subscribe in a reader
Subscribe to Philadelphia Tech News by Email




Veeva opening on NYSE / courtesy Veeva Systems



Pleasanton, CA-based Veeva Systems, a cloud computing company serving the life sciences industry, went public Wednesday at $20 per share, raising its offering price twice since its initial S-1 filing. As a result, the company raised $194 million, and after trading opened shares nearly doubled on the first day. On Thursday, Veeva (NYSE: VEEV) closed at $41.60, giving the company a $5 billion market capitalization.

Though based in Silicon Valley, Veeva has many roots and a major portion of its life sciences client base here. Veeva now has about 100 employees in the Philadelphia area, between its Eastern US office in Radnor and also from acquiring AdvantageMS in Fort Washington in June. And Matt Wallach, Veeva co-founder who is a native of Wallingford, is based out of Radnor. Wallach was recently named Veeva's President, reporting to CEO Peter Gassner. He issued the following statement on Wednesday:

“Today marks a very exciting day for Veeva employees, customers and partners. We founded the company to help life sciences companies solve their most strategic business challenges with our industry cloud solutions. Multitenant cloud technology has enabled Veeva to efficiently craft industry-specific solutions to help pharma companies educate physicians on new therapies, bring drugs to market more quickly and maintain compliance with government regulations. These are billion-dollar business challenges, and the IPO validates their importance.”


I had an opportunity to speak with Wallach the morning after the IPO by phone. He said a large part of what Veeva was trying to achieve through its IPO was to firmly establish itself as a life sciences cloud solutions company, as opposed to simply being a life sciences CRM vendor (its original offering). Secondly, although Veeva is already expanding into other sectors of the life sciences space and intends to do so further, Wallach wanted to emphasize that it doesn't intend to go head to head against everyone. Rather, when Veeva can partner with companies who are doing an excellent job of meeting customers needs to provide an integrated, enhanced offering that adds value, it will do so. However, there is a list of areas where Veeva feels customer needs are not being well served and it will consider developing solutions for these from scratch. Beyond products already launched or announced, however (Veeva Vault, Veeva Network), Wallach declined to name any of these.

We discussed areas such as regulatory documentation & submission (where it partners with companies including Accenture and its Wayne-based Octagon Research Solutions unit); clinical trial management systems (CTMS), where its partnering with Medidata Solutions which has a unit in Conshohocken; prescription data and related research, where Veeva is working with Horsham-based Symphony Health Solutions; and quality management, where Veeva recently announced a partnership with Hamilton, NJ-based Sparta Systems. As for ERP and HCM, Wallach said those were fairly generic applications that Veeva would not try to replicate, but that some type of partnership with a major cloud ERP player could be a possibility.

A key tenet of Veeva's strategy is to "crowdsource" (with appropriate permissions) data flowing through its CRM platform from contacts with physicians and other providers to provide feeds that update and improve the quality of other databases, Wallach says. This could have a scale effect if (as Veeva hopes) it continues to increase its share of the life sciences CRM market.

For Veeva Network, Veeva's newest offering built partly around its AdvantantageMS acquisition and running on top of its Network platform, Veeva also opened an office in Toronto for technical development to support ongoing work on the product in Fort Washington. Veeva Network, which seeks to provide an improved provider database and already has some active users, is expected to be formally released before the end of the year.

I also had a chance to speak with J. Bruce Daley, VP and Principal Analyst at Constellation Research, a CRM veteran who has followed Veeva for a while. He compared Veeva's rise (in particular, versus Oracle) to that of Workday, though in a niche rather than a vertical. Of course, principal founders of both firms came from companies Oracle acquired. Daley commented: “The founders of Veeva and Workday are becoming like the Old Masters. Each new success in technology only inspires them to think of the next one.”

There are other details I could cover (and will do so later), but for now I'm just trying to give the broad picture, while also mentioning Veeva's rapid rise since being founded in 2007 and its tremendous capital efficiency and profitable status (unlike many cloud companies).

Veeva's vision for life sciences seems to be to achieve data integration across the enterprise at perhaps a higher level than has has been achieved in the past. Their ability to achieve this vision will depend partly on customers' ability to change and adopt. The cloud is only an enabler, but the functionality that Veeva is aiming for goes beyond a mere change in how you access your data.




Links 10/18/2013: Philly VC Investment declines



Venture capital investment declines (Philadelphia Business Journal)

InterDigital Announces Formation of Signal Trust (Globe Newswire)

Suit alleges illegal cartel on TV, Internet sports
(Philadelphia Inquirer)



CSN Houston ‘will not’ survive without bankruptcy, Comcast says (Houston Chronicle: Ultimate Astros)

Aereo comes to Detroit on October 28. Can it really hit 22 cities by the end of 2013? (Gigaom)
Original plans called for it to launch in Philly this year.

Hong Kong tycoon likely winner of U.S. loan to Fisker Auto-sources
(Reuters)

SAP’s Plattner Calls for Privacy Rules as Big Data Takes Off
(Bloomberg)




Links 10/17/2013: Verizon/Cable product joint venture has been dead for awhile










 Subscribe in a reader
Subscribe to Philadelphia Tech News by Email


Veeva stock skyrockets, Emergence and Salesforce bask in the glow (San Francisco Business Times)

Veeva a better VC deal than Twitter? (Fortune Term Sheet)


Philadelphia 100 Announces 2013 Winners; Celebrates 25th Anniversary (PR Web)
See the full Philadelphia 100.

Verizon posts $2.23B profit, adds 1.1M wireless connections (CNET News)

Verizon gains 135K FiOS TV and 173K FiOS Internet subs in Q3 2013 (FierceCable)



Comcast and Verizon Decide They Don’t Need to Compete With Apple, Google and Everyone Else, After All
(All Things D)

Failure of Verizon’s cable partnership kills secretive Nuon content-sharing project (Gigaom)


SAP Appoints Björn Goerke Chief Information Officer and Head of Global Cloud Delivery (SAP Newsbyte)



Security firm releases tool to audit SAP's HANA (PC World)

Salesforce, Google, Amazon Cloud Winners, Says Piper; Microsoft Straddles the Line (Barron's: Tech Trader Daily)

eBay Inc. Reports Strong Third Quarter 2013 Results (Business Wire)
KoP-based EBay Enterprise reports 5% revenue growth.


Inquirer owners to Guild: Expect a long battle (Philadelphia Inquirer)




Links 10/16/2013: Veeva Systems worth $4.5 billion following first day close after IPO









 Subscribe in a reader
Subscribe to Philadelphia Tech News by Email



Pleasanton software firm Veeva Systems rakes in $261 million in IPO (San Jose Mercury News)
Veeva, with significant presence and customer base in Philly area, initially valued at $2.4 billion pre-trading.

Shares of Veeva Systems soar in IPO (MarketWatch)


Veeva’s IPO Isn’t Twitter-Hot, but It Should Make One Investor Very Rich (Bloomberg)

Gordon Ritter: Veeva Systems is the next Salesforce (VentureBeat)


Veeva CEO: We were never going to delay IPO (Fortune Term Sheet)


Verizon Testing Same-Day Delivery for Phones Ordered Online (AllThingsD)
Testing it in Philadelphia.

Comcast and NBCU Tap Exec to Lead Cross-Company Promo Efforts (Variety)



Consumer interest in cable shifts
Subscribers seek customized bundles
(Philadelphia Inquirer)

Dominion Business Solutions Merges with Integrated Business Consulting (Business Wire)
Combined company's portfolio includes Philly-based EigenX.





This week in Phily Tech History: University City Science Center celebrates 50th


Tom Paine




 Subscribe in a reader
Subscribe to Philadelphia Tech News by Email




Philadelphia's University City Science Center, founded in 1963, has been remembering its 50th anniversary throughout 2013.


It will be holding a celebration of its anniversary this coming Thursday evening (October 17) at the Hotel Monaco. It appears to be sold out, according to its Eventbrite page. The event will feature a formal program highlighting the Science Center’s history and successes, and the announcement of the inaugural inductees into the Innovators Walk of Fame.


Based on information the Science Center shared with me, the nearest thing to an official
founding date may be October 28,1963:




  • January 1963, Gaylord P. Harnwell, President of both the University of Pennsylvania and the West Philadelphia Corporation, appointed a committee chaired by E.B. Shils, Professor of Industry in the Wharton School, to advise a course of action for the University to take on the possible development of a science center in University City.


  • 28 October 1963, Penn joined with Drexel, the Philadelphia College of Pharmacy and Science, Presbyterian Hospital, and Temple University to submit articles of incorporation for the University City Science Center (UCSC) and the University City Science Institute (UCSI) to the Philadelphia County Court of Common Pleas.


The University of Pennsylvania archives contains this excellent,in-depth history of the UCSC written by MacKenzie S. Carlson.


"Building 1" at 3401 Market /
Courtesy University City Science Center

The Science Center was the first, and remains the largest, urban research park in the United States. Since it was founded in 1963, graduate organizations and current residents of the Port business incubator have created more than 15,000 jobs that remain in the Greater Philadelphia region today and contribute more than $9 billion to the regional economy annually, the organization says.

Stephen S. Tang PhD has served as President & CEO since 2008.

Update: Science Center Celebrates 50th Anniversary - Launches Innovators Walk of Fame





Links 10/14/2013: New York Times on Philly newspaper war








 Subscribe in a reader
Subscribe to Philadelphia Tech News by Email



Philadelphia Newspaper’s Owners at War (New York Times)

Oracle’s hardware business may be worse than we thought (Gigaom)

Red Hat Loves SAP, It's Official (Dr Dobbs)

Unisys launches mobile security solution for enterprises (Computerworld)



Comcast to Offer Netflix on Set-Tops? Three Reasons It Makes Sense (Variety)

How Alibaba Could Underprice Amazon, and Other Things You Should Know (Bloomberg)


Waywire, Cory Booker’s Attempt to Build a Web Video Startup, Sells to Magnify (All Things D)
Just in time before the election.

Yahoo Acquires Bread, Will Shut Down The URL Shortener That Earned You Money (TechCrunch)
Bread was a portfolio company of Wayne Kimmel's SeventySix Capital.


Penn Engineering Intro Class Gets a Power Boost (Penn News)