Michael Dubin, Main Line native & Haverford School grad, sells his Dollar Shave Club to Unilever for $1 billion



Tom Paine



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Michael Dubin is a wealthy man.

Dubin's Dollar Shave Club has agreed to be acquired by Unilever for about $1 billion in cash.

Dubin grew up on the Main Line and graduated from the Haverford School. He graduated from Emory University before heading west to LA.

He founded DSC in 2011 with a boost from a viral video ad in which Dubin, who had taken an occasional shot at improv, was the star.



The valuation was a bit surprising, but not so much relative to competitor Harry's, which was co-founded by a Warby Parker co-founder. Harry's was valued at $700 million in its latest round.

Unilever said that Dollar Shave Club had sales of $152 million in sales last year, and expected more than $200 million in revenue this year. Its sale represents a big win for the subscription business model, which has been under pressure recently in some cases.

Here's a profile of DSC I wrote in 2014, in which I wondered why First Round Capital hadn't invested in the subscription razor model. Comcast Ventures was an investor in DSC, however.

Unilever Buys Dollar Shave Club for $1 Billion (Fortune)





Links 7/20: Dreamit accelerator ditches demo days; This former eBay Executive (Penn's Abraham) helps stores track return shoppers





Bill McDermott on SAP Quarterly Results (Bloomberg TV)





SAP profit tops estimates, as new software license revenue increases 10%





Ars Technica: Exton firm's buggy piece of code could put telecom nets at risk



Tom Paine



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Code developed by an Exton firm and widely distributed throughout the mobile telecom infrastructure is deemed at risk for major intrusion, security experts say.

A bug resides in a code library developed by Objective Systems of Exton, which is present in a "wide range of telecommunication products, including radios in cell towers, routers, and switches, as well as the baseband chips in individual phones," according to an Ars Technica article. Although it would take considerable skill, the bug could be exploited to take control of entire networks.

The code library is used to implement a telephony standard known as ASN.1, or Abstract Syntax Notation One. Objective Systems has released a patch, but it would be difficult to get the patch to all the nodes and devices in which it resides. That's a problem which will only multiply with the growth of the Internet of Things.

The Ars Technica article quotes HD Moore, principal at a firm called Special Circumstances, describing the flaw as a "big deal" because of the breadth of gear that are at risk of complete takeover.

Founded in 1997, Objective Systems appears to be a small, though influential, firm. LinkedIn only shows 10 employee for it, although that's not always a completely accurate indicator. Its a bit hard to find out who's behind the company, but its CEO is Ed Day, an engineering grad from Penn State who gained his early experience with MCI.



Links 7/19: Comcast leans Into Wireless a bit; Chesco tech firm Archer plans hiring push following acquisition





Philly Tech People News 7/19: Inquirer editor is chosen to lead WHYY's news division; Several in healthcare tech roles





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Comcast Leans Into Wireless
Names Greg Butz to helm new mobile division in executive reorg (Multichannel News)

Inquirer editor is chosen to lead WHYY's news division (Philly.com)

The Wistar Institute Names Jeff Fahnoe Chief Information Officer (Newswise)


Tandigm Health Names Patrick Adams President and Chief Operating Officer


Local entrepreneur leads health care technology firm (Philadelphia Tribune)


Jill Smart Joins EPAM’s Board of Directors

CMO Talks: Consumer Healthcare Marketing Trends From Medecision’s Ellen Donahue-Dalton (Agency Spotter)


Hulu Hires Microsoft Xbox One Exec Richard Irving (Variety)


Business Wire Announces 2 New Regional Managers: Aaron Nye for the Philadelphia Area and Jon Olson for the Boston Area



Links 7/18: Comcast joins top mobile carriers in spectrum auction; Netflix missed its Q2 subscriber numbers





Philly Tech Venture Roundup: WeWork sues ex-employee over story; Zenefits, Evariant, roundCorner, CenTrak



Tom Paine



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WeWork Northern Liberties


WeWork sued a former employee who apparently was the primary source for a Bloomberg article suggesting that the coworking giant was well off the mark on some key performance metrics.

After raising more than $400 million at a $16 billion valuation in March, WeWork in late April generated an internal forecast that reduced a 2016 profit forecast by 78 percent, cut its revenue estimate by 14 percent and disclosed a 63 percent surge in projected negative cash flow, Bloomberg reported.

WeWork accused Joanna Strange, who was fired June 10, of unlawful access to its computers and of stealing confidential and proprietary information.

In Philadelphia, New York-based WeWork has opened one space in Northern Liberties and another opening is planned in Center City (Walnut Street) later this summer.







In an article on Theranos in the Wall Street Journal, another Unicorn meltdown at HR benefits software firm Zenefits (devalued from $4.5 billion to $2 billion) is also discussed. In a rather pointed barb at (SAP) SuccessFactors founder Lars Dalgaard, now with Andreessen Horowitz, the Journal wrote:

"Health-benefits broker Zenefits had a single outside board member, Lars Dalgaard of Andreessen Horowitz, until five months ago. He had no experience in the regulated-insurance business and encouraged the company to grow quickly and to secure the highest possible valuation in its last round of financing, say people familiar with the matter."

I wonder what people that came from.




Farmington, Connecticut-based Evariant, which offers healthcare providers a platform to analyze data, execute marketing campaigns, and improve patient engagement, has received an undisclosed investment from McKesson Ventures (McKesson has since announced moves to largely exit healthcare tech) and Salesforce Ventures. The additional investment completes the $42.3 million Series C round the company announced in November.

Evariant also brought on a CFO who has led three companies through IPOs.

Evariant is another niche vertical startup within the Salesforce ecosystem. But unlike Veeva Systems, which helps companies market to physicians and healthcare organizations, Evariant turns that model on its head and builds upon Salesforce CRM to help healthhcare practices and large health systems market to and manage relationships with groups and end users.

By comparison, Veeva required only $7 million in capital to reach a $4 billion market value.

I assume, but can't confirm, that Evariant has the same type of market protection from Salesforce for its vertical that Veeva has for CRM within Life Sciences. But I can't but help wonder if the interests of the two companies might collide at some point, particularly in the area of clinical data that both are keen on collecting.




Villanova-based roundCorner, which provides fundraising software for non-profits, altered its relationship with Salesforce. It will no longer directly rely on being promoted and sold by Salesforce's sales organization. roundCorner will take on full responsibility for sales and suppport.

While this may sound like a negative, it will actually reduce channel confusion and put roundCorner more in control of customer experience. roundCorner competes with a much larger Blackbaud in enterprise-level fundraising systems for non-profits (NGO Connect) and educational institutions.



In a deal I missed in February, Newtown-based CenTrak was acquired by a UK health tech firm, Halma, for about $140 million.

CenTrak is a kind of IoT play - its base technology is RFID - for tracking assets and items in a hospital environment. CenTrak has a well-established install base, and KLAS recently rated CenTrak to be the most scalable RTLS (real-time locating systems) vendor based on the number of use-cases deployed per customer.

Co-founders Ari Naim (Drexel), Israel Amir (Drexel) and Gideon Naim needed less than a million dollars of VC funding, at least according to CrunchBase.


Links 7/17: Comcast Brings Internet to Public Housing; American Water Works to Relocate HQ to Camden Waterfront





WeWork sues ex-employee for disclosing information to reporters (Reuters)

Comcast Restores Service After Outages Across Northeast (NBC Connecticut)