Barron's takes dour view of Radnor-based Qlik Technologies


Tom Paine



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This week's Barron's has an article by Dow Jones columnist Vito J Racanelli, Qlik’s Waning Value (paywall, but you might get a view).

The subtitle reads "The market thinks (Radnor-based) software developer Qlik Technologies is growing fast. We don’t buy it. Eventually, investors won’t either."

The column focuses almost totally on financial metrics, not the important nuances of product strategy, and it can be faulted on those terms. But having followed the company since it went public, I generally concur with Racanelli's findings on the financial side. And that, of course, is the ultimate metric.

Racanelli focuses on the (usual) lack of profits and stalling growth, while recognizing the recent drag from the stronger dollar on its results.

My simple conclusion: Tableau ate its lunch, in the US anyway. Although increased competition from others (including a stronger Microsoft offering) may have been factors.
Tableau (Google Flnance)


Qlik (Google Finance)
Qlik (NASDAQ: QLIK) had a head start on advanced, in-memory enhanced BI tools. But its initial product required some skill and familiarity in setting up a model. Tableau (NYSE: DATA) came along with tool a junior marketing analyst could use, and it painted some pretty pictures too (visualization).

It probably produced some awful output, because the rigorous models and data governance required in Qlik weren't required in Tableau,  at least to the same extent. But people could do what they wanted with it and they liked it. By last year's third quarter, Tableau'e revenue was $171 million versus Qlik's $141 million, despite a head start of several years for Qlik.


Qlik responded with a semi-bifurcated product strategy, introducing Qlik Sense as its visualization play in late 2014, and keeping QlikView as its more structured product. The jury is still out on Qlik Sense's market acceptance.

Qlik's market value is $2.54 billion, and its year end earnings report is scheduled for February 11.





Sunday Highlights: Linode cloud security response draws praise, raises concerns; Landmark At Broad And Callowhill Is Home To The Internet






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Linode cloud security response draws praise, raises concerns (TechTarget)


AWS price-cut patterns reflect cloud growth, maturation (TechTarget)

Fab Co-Founder’s Shopping Site, Bezar, Is Running Out of Money (Re/code)

Landmark At Broad And Callowhill Is Home To The Internet (CBSPhilly)


phillytechnews bytes 1/17






Saturday Highlights: CableLabs Cuts 30-Plus Staff Amid Restructuring: SAP Hopes For ‘Fun’ and Friendly Vibe of Cloud for Analytics






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CableLabs Cuts 30-Plus Staff Amid Restructuring (Multichannel News)

FX Networks Chief Worried About Deep-Pocketed Competitors (Wall Street Journal)



SAP Hopes to Woo Business Users with ‘Fun’ and Friendly Vibe of Cloud for Analytics (ASUG NEWS)

Brooks Brothers Chooses SAP Fashion Management Solution (RIS)



Harry Deitz: Time will tell if move will save journalism in Philadelphia
(Reading Eagle)


An early hint that GE might move to Boston?


Tom Paine



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Perhaps this announcement by GE, as described by NJ.com on June 2, 2014, was a precursor for GE's announcement this week that it was picking up its toys and moving its headquarters from Fairfield, CT to Boston. Perhaps the move was already in the early planning stages. Major corporate moves of that size usually require a five year planning horizon.

GE subsidiary to move jobs from Princeton, Piscataway


"GE Healthcare Life Sciences confirmed today its plan to consolidate operations near Boston, which will impact many of its 400 New Jersey employees — including job loss for some.
The facilities that will be closed next year are in Princeton and Piscataway. Operations in Livingston and South Plainfield will be unaffected by the plan, according to a company spokesman.
Of the Princeton and Piscataway employees, some will be invited to relocate to the Massachusetts facility, some may end up working remotely, while the third category would be laid off."

Though I feel little sympathy for Connecticut, whose inflexibility helped lose GE according to reports, knowing a bit about how the power structure works in that state. However, Connecticut apparently offered considerable incentives to Comcast in order for NBC Sports to relocate there three years ago.

Coincidentally, GE's move will bring it closer to PTC, headquartered in Needham, which is GE's primary IoT partner, with a significant contribution from its Exton-based ThingWorx unit. The geographical proximity doesn't mean anything in particular, but GE could snap up PTC in a minute if it wanted to.

Note: PTC announced another acquistion today to support ThingWorx and its IoT strategy.


Links 1/16: PTC buys Kepware to support ThingWorx IoT strategy; Anexinet Acquires ListenLogic






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PTC to Acquire Kepware (Desk Engineering)
Acquired for fit with Exton-based IoT Platform company ThingWorx, a PTC subsidiary.

Anexinet Acquires ListenLogic to Expand Digital Solutions Portfolio (Anexinet)
Anexinet was backed in the deal by its lead investor, Marlin Equity Partners.

Comcast's NBC: Ad sales for Rio Olympics could set records (Philadelphia Inquirer)

Sling TV to Reach 2M Subs This Year: Analyst (Multichannel News)

Wal-Mart merges tech teams in online push (Reuters)


Links 1/14; Will TV war between Comcast and YES Network last until Opening Day? The expected ripple effect of GE’s move to Boston









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Comcast Expands Their Commercial CDN Offering With Live Linear Streaming Platform (Dan Rayburn / Streaming Media Blog )

Yankees 2016: Will TV war between Comcast and YES Network last until Opening Day? (NJ.COM)

SAP CEO's Lesson From Losing Eye: `How Could I Get This Lucky? (Bloomberg)'

The expected ripple effect of GE’s move to Boston (Boston Globe)


Amazon’s next AWS data center region will be in Canada (VentureBeat)


Anaplan just raised £62 million and became the North of England’s first true tech unicorn (Business Insider)


Links 1/13: NBC reveals Netflix usage stats, raises questions; Cherry Hill's AmeriQuest sets terms for IPO








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Why NBC Says Netflix Does Not Yet Pose a 'Consistent' Threat to Broadcasters Network reveals ratings data for streaming service (AD Week)

Comcast bugs BYO modem user with browser pop-ups suggesting an upgrade (PCWorld)


Its IPO game is on fleet: AmeriQuest sets terms for $74 million IPO (Renaissance Capital)
AmeriQuest is based in Cherry Hill.

RIP Threadflip (TechCrunch)
First Round Capital was one of the investors in this used apparel website.
I'm guessing First Round's portfolio in the online apparel sector isn't looking too good right now, but as usual its exposure is probably limited.

Picwell raises $7M, will hire 22 for health plan software (Philly.com: Philly Deals)


Links 1/12: How real are SAP and Oracle’s cloud numbers? Safeguard Scientifics invests again in Syapse







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How real are SAP and Oracle’s cloud numbers? (Phil Wainewright / Diginomica)

Renewals and 'cloud' sales boost SAP, but outlook cautious (Reuters)


NetSuite Adds Employee Data Partner (Fortune)

Bewkes nixes HBO spinoff but open to Time Warner sale (NY Post)

2 TV giants are plotting to bypass Netflix (Business Insider)

Precision medicine software maker Syapse raises $25M (Med City News)
Safeguard Scientifics participated again in this round for Syapse, as it had done in its prior round. Based in San Francisco, Syapse also has a Philadelphia office.


Links 1/11: SAP Sales Top Estimates; Osage Unversity Partners joins $62 Million round in Kymeta Led by Bill Gates







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SAP Sales Top Estimates as New Software Cycle Takes Hold (Bloomberg)
Certainly appears impressive.

An Open Letter to Our Customers: SAP Brands Come Together as One ( Maggie Chan Jones, SAP)

digibyte – SAP blows out Q4 2015 in pre-announcement (Diginomica)

If data’s so important, why is IBM selling Salary.com? (Diginomica)
Salary.com had been acquired by Kenexa, back when Rudy Karsan ran it, prior to its acquistion by IBM.

Kymeta Raises $62 Million in Investment Led by Bill Gates (NY Times: DealBook)
Bala Cynwyd's Osage Unversity Partners is a return investor.

How Oracle Is Helping Retailers Sell More Stuff (Q&A) (Re/code)

Comcast's NBC unit launches comedy channel. No Joke (Philadelphia Inquirer)

Carl Icahn Is Buying up Time Warner Shares (Reuters via Fortune)


phillytechnews bytes 1/10/16