Links 317: Comcast Business joins rest of free world in connecting to Amazon Web Services; Amazon puzzled by leak claiming Apple is moving to Google Cloud




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Comcast Business Connects to Amazon Web Services (Multichannel News)

Amazon puzzled by leak claiming Apple is moving to Google Cloud Platform (Geekwire)

Report: Amazon considers acquisition of Office Depot’s corporate business unit (Geekwire)

SAP wants to tap India’s booming start-up culture: Bill McDermott (Livemint)

Vodafone, SAP Team on IoT (Light Reading)


Fidelity using eMoney to create custodial competitor's nightmare (Investment News)


Links 3/16: Report - Apple moving some business from AWS to Google Cloud; Oracle trying to bypass sales reps on public cloud orders




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Report: Apple spending up to $600M on Google Cloud Platform, moving away from Amazon Web Services (GeekWire)

Here's the email Larry Ellison just sent to employees about a big change at Oracle (Business Insider)

Comcast now touts unlimited gigabit service (that you can't get) (The Register)

Dish Network sues NBC claiming breach of contract (NY Post)

McKesson Plans Big Job Cuts To Trim Costs (Fortune)

Ring’s new Video Doorbell Pro ditches the battery for more smarts in a smaller package (TechCrunch)
Also raised cool $61 million.

Veeva OpenData Now Available in 35 Countries – Adds 12 New Western European Countries and Canada (Business Wire)




Wayne's LiquidHub a launch partner for Salesforce's Financial Services Cloud; eMoney Advisor evaluating


Tom Paine



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Salesforce formally launched a new vertical solution last week, the Salesforce Financial Services Cloud (FSC), aimed at wealth management advisors and end users. Originally announced in August, it has now gone into general availability. FSC runs on Salesforce's new Lightning platform.

Salesforce is not simply throwing something out there with a Financial Services label on it. A considerable amount of vertical customization has gone into it.

But its still only a CRM,  Salesforce's "first [proprietary] industry-specific relationship management (CRM) product," according to local Salesforce expert and digital integrator LiquidHub. There are existing industry-specific solutions built on top of Salesforce's CRM by others. And its a long way from being a total information management solution for wealth advisors, such as Fidelity Investments' Radnor-based eMoney Advisor.

And in the CRM market among wealth management advisors, Salesforce has been a laggard, having only 12.8% of advisors before FSC's introduction, way behind Redtail CRM with 40.5% of users, according to a survey conducted by Investment News.
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Wayne-based LiquidHub, a Salesforce platinum partner, is one of Salesforce's launch partners on FSC,  and brings additional functionality to the solution.





LiquidHub announced last week it was offering prebuilt conversion packages to "seamlessly transition wealth management customers, their data and their integrations into the Financial Services Cloud" from other CRMs.

LiquidHub had already introduced Salesforce for Asset Managers, (a certified Salesforce Fullforce solution, but not on the Salesforce Financial Services Cloud), last Spring. "It is based on our experience implementing Salesforce for leading Asset Managers for more than 10 years,” said Brennan Burkhart, Partner and Global Salesforce Practice Lead at LiquidHub, at that time.

It is hard to overlook the fact that Vanguard Group has been one of LiquidHub's largest customers, and presumably LiquidHub has shared or gained considerable domain expertise from that relationship.

But this is LiquidHub's product, and "the offering will be marketed to our general wealth management clients," Burkhart told Philly Tech News by email.

As for eMoney Advisor, Salesforce's basic CRM has not been supported by eMoney, an eMoney spokesperson told me. But it is in the process of seriously evaluating the new Financial Services Cloud offering for inclusion among CRMs it integrates with. eMoney Advisor does not offer its own CRM, but is open to integratng with CRMs that meet its own criteria and have considerable demand from its wealth management advisor customers, I was told.



Links 3/15: Oracle's shrinkage continues; WSJ: Wheeler 'Likely' Soon Circulating Charter/TWC Approval

Oracle made slightly less money last quarter, and America is to blame (The Register)

For Oracle It Still Boils Down to the Database (Fortune)

WSJ: Wheeler 'Likely' Soon Circulating Charter/TWC Approval
(Multichannel News)



SNL Kagan Releases 4th-Quarter U.S. Multichannel Subscriber Report (PR Newswire)


Independence Blue Cross to offer members MDLive, also reimburse remote visits with their own PCPs (Mobile Heslth News)


Trump on Women (Our Principles PAC)



Wilmington-based Swift Capital reports gains, has impressive backers including First Round Capital


Tom Paine



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In a recent announcement, Wilmington-based Swift Capital reported some impressive numbers.

The small business lender said it had 87% year-over-year revenue growth in 2015, while total
Ed Harycki / LinkedIn
funding passed $500 million. Swift says it now has extended working capital credit to over 10,000 unique businesses. Founded in 2007, it is headed by Ed Harycki, founder and CEO, who's prior roles include being chief executive of MBNA's business-lending division. And he's surrounded by what appears to be a talented management team.

What surprised me was Swift's sources of funding. It is an impressive list, including Sutter Hill Ventures, Khosla Ventures, SV Angel and First Round Capital. I could instantly verify the first - a long-standing relationship - but had trouble fact-checking the last three. First Round didn't have it on its website portfolio page, which I've generally found comprehensive except for a few stealthy early stage ventures it wants to keep under wraps for a while. I couldn't find it in SEC filings, CrunchBase, or any other of the usual places. An inquiry to First Round produced crickets. General searches on First Round Capital and Swift produced only results for Swift Navigation, a GPS technology company First Round recently invested in.

I knew Swift to be a very credible company, so I didn't doubt the accuracy of the information, but was just trying to cross-verify or find other sources as I typically do from habit.

But sure enough, a Swift spokesperson confirmed that First Round had invested $2.5 million in Swift Capital in 2015. The amount surprised me; I know of only one larger initial investment it has made in a single company.






Its not the first time First Round had invested in this type of small business lender.

It was an early investor in OnDeck Capital, which went on to a successful IPO in late 2014. But both OnDeck and LendingClub, which went public around the same time, have run into headwinds in the stock market and are way below their highs. I'm not clear yet on how Swift Capital's model differs from those, and hope to have more on that later, although it does emphasize a human connection with its customers and prospects rather than a complete reliance on automation.


These small business lenders have taken off primarily due to the tightened guidelines imposed upon the regulated banks due to the 'great recession', and the use of sophisticated algorithms to evaluate large numbers of credit risks more efficiently. First Round has also invested in two other roughly similar ventures, Better Finance and Fundera, as well as other alternative lending models.

The other thing about Swift Capital is that though it is based in Wilmington, it is locating more and more of its headquarters level personnel in Conshohocken, and continues to recruit for some key positions there. Often that signals a headquarters relocation in the future. Its recent press release was datelined Philadelphia.

In another item, today Swift announced that Richard Vague , the Philadelphia-based serial entrepreneur and investor (Gabriel Investments), has been added to its board.


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Links 3/14: Lutron booming at age 55; Modular Data Center Firm IO Raises $505M




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Oracle Earnings Ahead: Can Rising Cloud Make Up For Legacy Fall? (Investor's Business Daily)

Cadent Technology Targets Addressable Linear TV
Ad-Tech Company Touts Progress From BlackArrow Merger
(Multichannel News)





Lutron, which is based in Coopersburg up Rte 309 from Quakertown, is becoming a key player in the consumer IoT market. 



Can Philadelphia transform itself into a national center for Health IT innovation? (Government Health IT)




One IO data center is in a former New York Times printing plant in Edison, New Jersey. 



Redbox and Coinstar parent Outerwall to ‘explore strategic and financial alternatives,’ hinting at possible sale (GeekWire)








Sunday Highlights: Dreamit CEO - Accelerators are filling startup capital gap; First Round Review and the vindication of long-form content




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Dreamit CEO: Accelerators are filling startup capital gap (Austin Business Journal)

Top Start-Up Investors Are Betting on Growth, Not Waiting for It (NY Times)

The app inventor’s guide to unlocking investment funds (Howard Morgan / First Round Cspitsl/VentureBeat)

First Round Review and the vindication of long-form content (Diginomica)


HP Enterprise hope to woo developers with new cloud service (Marketwatch)

Anchorage hires former IBM executive as SAP project manager (Alaska Dispatch News)


Philly Tech Peoplenews 3/12/2016: Comcast hires privacy chief; Dorm Room Fund's Platform Team




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Noopur Davis Joins Comcast Cable as Senior Vice President, Product Security and Privacy for the Technology and Product Team (Business Wire)

Introducing the Dorm Room Fund Platform Team (Rei Wang / Medium)


Montgomery McCracken picks transactional lawyer as new chairman (Philadelphia Business Journal)

Greenphire Appoints Wayne Baker as Chief Commercial Officer (Greenphire)

Clinical Ink Appoints Stephen Boccardo as Chief Commerical Officer (Marketwire)

NECN cuts business editor amid changes at Comcast-owned station (Boston Business Journal)

Chief Operations Officer To Leave PJM (PRNewswire)



QVC in the news: Comcast lives; the real Trump connection


Tom Paine



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The Inquirer ran an excellent article by Suzette Parmley on QVC Friday, but notice the words on the sign at the very bottom of the photo (you may have to click on photo to enlarge to see the bottom) :






Comcast exited from its ownership position in QVC in 2003. Nothing wrong with using an old file photo (credited to Bloomberg), but in this day and age it may be hard to justify a stringer, if the reporter can't make the trek to West Chester and shoot the photo. On the other hand, I think its inclusion may have been purposeful. There's s slide show with some other photos attached to the article as well.

And then there's Bloomberg's very funny spot portraying Donald Trump (from an actual post-primary appearance last week) as a QVC host, of which for some reason the embed code won't work, but you can link to it here.


But the real Trump /QVC connection came from his current wife Melania, who had jewelry and cosmetic lines on QVC, though that relationship has apparently ended, as the Daily Beast recounts.






Pennsylvania school pension system lost money in 2015 (Philadelphia
Inquirer)