2/17: Toshiba's big problem was Westinghouse's acquisition; Kraft Heinz after Unilever




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IT Services Giant Accenture Plans U.S. Hiring Spree (Reuters via Fortune)
A majority of its more than 380,000 employees are in India, Reuters reports.

Chaos at Toshiba: $6.3 billion write-down, chairman resigns, bankruptcy looms (Washington Post)


The $6.3 billion hit is related to Westinghouse’s acquisition in December of Stone & Webster, a nuclear construction business, from Chicago Bridge & Iron in December.

The Post reports: "Toshiba, which bought a majority stake in Pennsylvania-based nuclear power company Westinghouse in 2006, earlier said that it had received internal information late last month about irregularities during the acquisition. It had learned that controls at Westinghouse had been “insufficient” and that the company had used “inappropriate pressure” to make the acquisition."

i
Universal Rising: iPhone 8 One of the Ingredients for New $90 Cowen Price Target (Barron's Tech Trader Daily)

Potential Activist Funds Line Up to Take a Salesforce Stake (Bloomberg)

SAP license fees are due even for indirect users, court says (PCWorld)

T-Mo Jumps 4% as Reuters Says SoftBank Looking to Sell Them Sprint (Barron's Tech Trader Daily)

What’s the repair bill for Google Fiber, AT&T damage? (Charlotte
Observer)



2/16: Charter Launches 5G Field Trials; Hamilton Lane sees IPO of 11.9 mln shares to be priced between $15-$17/share




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While Amazon dominates cloud infrastructure, an oligopoly is emerging. Which will buyers bet on? (Diginomica)

BRIEF-Hamilton Lane sees IPO of 11.9 mln shares to be priced between $15-$17/share (Reuters)

Charter Launches 5G Field Trials (Light Reading)

Charter’s Rutledge: 'T-Mobile doesn’t understand our MVNO deal' (FierceCable)


TiVo-Rovi Integration ‘On Track,' CEO Says (Multichannel News)

Arris’ McClelland says warrant deals made Comcast and Charter ‘comfortable with the level of spend' (FierceCable)


Apple Vowed to Revolutionize Television. An Inside Look at Why It Hasn’t (Bloomberg)

Former Obama aide Plouffe fined $90,000 for illegally lobbying Emanuel on Uber's behalf (Chicago Tribune)

New Jersey undisputed king of online gaming compared to Delaware, its lone rival (NorthJersey.com)


IBM links with Indiegogo, Visa, Bosch and more in $3B IoT push (TechCrunch)


Philly Fed manufacturing demolishes expectations, hits its highest level since 1984 (Business Insider)


Radnor-based enterprise software buyout firm PeakEquity Partners closes first fund at $137 million

Tom Paine



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Greg Case / PeakEquity website


Radnor-based PeakEquity Partners, a private equity firm specializing in majority buyouts and minority recapitalizations of enterprise software and solutions businesses, yesterday announced the completion of fundraising for PeakEquity Partners Fund I, L.P. (“PeakEquity I”), which closed on over $137 million of capital commitments, surpassing its $100 million target.


I profiled PeakEquity shortly after its formation, in early 2015.

Greg Case and Paul Winn formed PeakEquity Partners in 2014, and were joined by Ric Andersen in 2015. D.J. Andrzejewski joined PeakEquity Partners in 2014 and was promoted to Principal in 2016.

Case's experience includes Apax Partners and LLR Partners; Winn was previously with IBM and ran software ventures including Princeton Softech, and Anderson was previously a Managing Director at Silver Lake Partners and a Partner at Milestone Partners

To date, PeakEquity I has led three enterprise software and solutions buyouts, deploying $50 million of fund equity, and over $200 million of fund and co-investor equity:


  • G5 is a software as a service (“SaaS”) digital marketing platform for multiple real estate verticals.



  • EnterpriseDB provides enterprise class database solutions based on PostgreSQL, an open source data platform for digital businesses.



  • Valiant Solutions is a leading SaaS provider of human capital management solutions.








Radnor-based PeakEquity Partners closes on 1st fund at $137 million (Press Release)

Radnor, PA, February 15, 2017 – PeakEquity Partners, a private equity firm specializing in majority buyouts and minority recapitalizations of enterprise software and solutions businesses, today announced the successful completion of fundraising for PeakEquity Partners Fund I, L.P. (“PeakEquity I”), which closed on over $137 million of capital commitments, surpassing its $100 million target. PeakEquity I’s limited partners include a diverse base of asset managers, family offices and individuals.

Greg Case and Paul Winn formed PeakEquity Partners in 2014, and were joined by Ric Andersen in 2015. D.J. Andrzejewski joined PeakEquity Partners in 2014 and was promoted to Principal in 2016.

Mr. Case (Co-Founder and Partner), previously a Senior Partner and Shareholder at Apax Partners as well as a Partner at LLR Partners, leverages over 25 years of private equity investing experience and has dedicated the last 15 years to investing in, and providing strategic guidance to, enterprise software and solutions businesses.

Mr. Winn (Co-Founder and Partner), having served in executive leadership positions at large and middle market enterprise technology companies from product development, site management and general management at IBM to President/CEO roles at Genicom, PowerQuest and Princeton Softech, has been building sustainable growth enterprise software and solutions businesses for over 25 years.

Mr. Andersen (Partner), previously a Managing Director at Silver Lake Partners and a Partner at Milestone Partners, as well as a senior partner at Price Waterhouse, PwC Consulting, and IBM, leverages over 30 years of business leadership, value creation, and investing in industry, management consulting and private equity.

Mr. Andrzejewski (Principal), previously with Stripes Group, Milestone Partners and Venrock, brings over eight years of private equity experience sourcing and executing investments across a variety of software and technology sectors.

PeakEquity Partners invests in enterprise software and solutions companies that have large addressable markets, proven technology, products and offerings, and demonstrated traction with a meaningful base of referenceable customers. To date, PeakEquity I has led three enterprise software and solutions buyouts, deploying $50 million of fund equity, and over $200 million of fund and co-investor equity.

G5 is a software as a service (“SaaS”) digital marketing platform for multiple real estate verticals. G5 simplifies the complexity of digital marketing with a cloud-based platform that creates, measures, and optimizes the entire customer experience – from awareness to advocacy – for a fraction of the cost of traditional marketing approaches.

EnterpriseDB provides enterprise class database solutions based on PostgreSQL, an open source data platform for digital businesses.

EnterpriseDB is the leading worldwide provider of Postgres software and services that enable enterprises to reduce their reliance on costly proprietary solutions and slash their database spend.

Valiant Solutions is a leading provider of human capital management solutions. Valiant’s solutions are delivered in a SaaS platform which powers a suite of integrated payroll, time and labor management and human resources products.

Stanwich Advisors LLC and CV Brokerage Inc. served as placement agents for PeakEquity I and Weil, Gotshal & Manges LLP served as legal counsel.

About PeakEquity
PeakEquity Partners (www.peakequity.com) is a private equity firm focused on investments in Enterprise Software and Solutions companies. The principals of PeakEquity Partners have extensive experience as investors and operating executives in multiple market sectors. The firm invests in businesses that have large addressable markets, proven technology, products and offerings, and demonstrated traction with a meaningful base of reference-able customers. PeakEquity invests in companies with revenues of $15 to $50 million that have the potential for annual revenue growth in excess of 30%. PeakEquity can invest $20 to $50 million or more per portfolio company and will take minority or majority positions. The firm leverages and provides access to extensive operating resources to provide companies an edge in capturing market segment leadership and achieving revenue growth and margin objectives.


Bridgewater-based Synchronoss Regroups for Enterprise Market Assault


Esther Surden
Publisher & Editor, NJTechWeekly.com

Stephen Waldis is now executive chairman of the board of Synchronoss. | Courtesy Synchronoss



New CEO appointed; Waldis now executive chairman of the board



Usually, you think of startups as the companies that pivot, but Bridgewater-based Synchronoss, a public company, came to a crossroads a couple of years ago, and decided that in order to stay in business and grow, it needed to rethink its business model.

In the past, Synchronoss had been the telecom-activation software company. In fact, its software was behind the systems many carriers including AT&T utilized to activate your phone when you bought it. This was a great business for a while, but Synchronoss ran into a problem many companies face: the growth of its legacy business was slowing down.

Synchronoss shifted to a broader source of revenue with an emphasis on the personal cloud business, and that became a resounding success. Carriers were able to offer their customers their own cloud. Then the company allied with Goldman Sachs to create “mobile phone software that creates a whole new layer for mobile security,” addressing security concerns brought on by the bring your own device trend for enterprises. Synchronoss also made many acquisitions that enabled it to move it towards its goal of attacking the enterprise market.

On January 19, Sychronoss announced that it had completed its tender offer to acquire all the outstanding shares of Intralinks Holdings (New York) for $821 million. According to the press release announcing the acquisition, Intralinks has been used by more than 3 million professionals at 99 percent of Fortune 1,000 companies, which have depended on the company’s experience in enabling high-stakes transactions and business collaborations around the globe.

To date, $31.3 trillion worth of financial transactions have been executed on Intralinks’ secure, cloud-based platform, making Intralinks the preferred provider of collaborative enterprise technology, the press release said.

At the same time it acquired Intralinks, Synchronoss agreed to sell a portion of its activation business to Sequential Technology International (Warren) for $146 million.

“We view the Intralinks deal, which officially closed on January 19, as a defining move into the enterprise market. The acquisition of Intralinks is a major step forward in our enterprise strategy that gives us the immediate enterprise pedigree and experience upon which to leverage the Synchronoss product portfolio, go-to-market strategy and diversified customer footprint,” said Stephen G. Waldis, now executive chairman of the board, during the company’s Feb. 8 earnings call, according to a transcript provided by Seeking Alpha.

Waldis moved to executive chairman as part of the deal to acquire Intralinks. He was an example of that rare entity, a startup founder who brought it to IPO and remained as CEO as it grew.

Waldis told analysts, “I look forward to my new role at Synchronoss as executive chairman of the board, focused on expanding our unique cloud and enterprise market opportunities around the globe starting at Mobile World Congress next month in which I already have a number of strategic customer meetings set up and will be giving one of the keynote speeches, while at the same time helping Ron [Hovsepian] and ensuring his success in his new role.”

Waldis founded Synchronoss in 2000, and took the company public in 2007. He had served in startup and senior-executive-management positions in both high-technology and telecommunications companies. He started his career at AT&T in various technical, product-management and sales-and-marketing positions before moving to executive-level roles at technology startups.

Karen L. Rosenberger, the Synchronoss CFO, who has been moving up through the ranks of the company since 2000, will be leaving the company after shepherding it through the hiring of and transition to a new CFO. She has served as CFO, executive vice president and treasurer since April 1, 2014, overseeing all of the company’s financial and business operations.

Intralinks’ president and CEO, Ronald W. Hovsepian, is now the new CEO of Synchronoss. Hovsepian has a substantial background in leading and growing tech companies. From 2005 to 2011, he was the president and CEO of Novell (Provo, Utah), which was acquired by Attachmate (Houston, Texas); and he was president and CEO of Intralinks since 2011.

Waldis noted that the company’s focus on the cloud has paid off, including its expanded partnership with Verizon in 2016 on the heels of its personal cloud success. “And overall, we had a strong quarter in cloud, which gives the company healthy momentum to gain adoption into 2017 as a testament to our innovative product development, solid customer relationships and strategic partnerships.”

He added that the combination of Synchronoss with Intralinks will create a company capable of enhanced growth. “Together with Synchronoss and Intralinks as one company, we believe we can deploy enhanced enterprise and mobile solutions to our customers, while opening up new enterprise distribution channels across the world.

“With the Intralinks acquisition, enterprise will now represent over a third of our total revenues, thus helping us further diversify our business model over the coming years. On our carrier business, messaging has proved to be a key linchpin of cloud adoption, engagement and monetization with our existing customers,” he said.



Esther Surden is Publisher and Editor of NJTechWeekly, and a contributor to Philly Tech News. This article originally appeared in NJTechWeekly, and is republished here with her permission.


Phorum 2017: Digitizing the Enterprise

Phorum 2017: Digitizing the Enterprise

Thursday, April 27 | 8:30 AM–6:00 PM
SugarHouse Event Center
1001 N. Delaware Avenue
Philadelphia, PA 19125




Written by Peter Coffee, VP for Strategic Research, Salesforce

Join us on April 27, 2017 for our annual technology conference that will focus on digitizing the enterprise.

An overall label like "digital transformation" can mean too much, or not enough. It can be such a broad term that it gives no useful checklist for the essential components of a strategy; it can be so vague that anyone can claim to be running the race, when perhaps they are merely getting to the point of being able to take their mark and get set to start.

We're proposing a four-pillar framework, all of whose parts are necessary to any future-enabled organization.

CONNECTED: the domain of engineers. This is the nuts-and-bolts of bringing in the bits, whether they represent customers' intentional communications or connected devices' event-driven data, with consideration of volume and latency and accuracy -- and probably, a stratified architecture that has enough knowledge at the edge to know what's worth telling the center. Are you connected? How, to whom, with what data points and streams being archived in what ways?

AWARE: the domain of business units. This is the everyday, increasingly 24×7 hard work of proving to served communities that the data they're contributing inspires prompt and effective attention to their needs. This is making sure that the Facebook posts get answered, that the Tweets yield quick replies, that the telemetry gets reliably classified as to normal operations versus anomalies needing urgent response. Are you aware? How are you demonstrating that in ways that your audience will value?

SMART: the domain of data scientists and algorithm developers. This is the necessary application of technology to leverage the hard work of awareness, in the face of the huge data volumes from connectedness, to enable personalized enlightened proactive interactions with your customers. Is your awareness making your actions smarter, or just busier? Are your connections yielding value in prediction and recommendation, or just improving your bookkeeping of the less enlightened things you've been doing too long?

TRUSTED: the domain of business leaders, or (if they don't take this seriously enough) of regulators and legislators. This is the creation and sustainment of a culture that says "We will collect data with respect, use it with consideration, and manage it with discipline." Are you treating the data that originates with your customers as if it were just another business record? Or are you recognizing that today's customer is increasingly prepared to pay someone else a higher price, if part of what they're buying is greater confidence in that vendor's or service provider's data stewardship?



2/15: Universal Takes a Stake in Steven Spielberg’s Amblin Partners; Welcome to the era of Data Center Consolidation




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BuzzFeed, Wilshire Studios Developing Series on Murder of Mississippi Teen (Variety)

Universal Takes a Stake in Steven Spielberg’s Amblin Partners (Fortune)

Comcast Business Plans Metro Fiber Expansion in Boston (Telecom Ramblings)

Comcast Accounting Chief to Retire (Multichannel News)

Alphabet Taps McCray to Lead Access Unit, Including Fiber (Bloomberg)


With $15M in funding, Caavo aims to unify all your streaming TV boxes and services (TechCrunch)





Welcome to the Era of Great Data Center Consolidation (Fortune)
"And, Salesforce is not leaving its own data centers behind. 'Our infrastructure remains our primary focus as public cloud is still too expensive for many of the primary markets we are in,' Benioff tells Fortune via email.


You Can Now Plug Directly Into Salesforce Servers at Equinix Data Centers (Data Center Knowledge)

South Jersey startup secures $400K in follow-on funding after $600K seed round (Philadelphia Business Journal)


TheBlindGuide acquires UPenn startup ThirdEye, bringing computer vision to the visually impaired (TechCrunch)








2/14: NBC News names Oppenheim president, returns Deborah Turness to Europe; Closing the digital gap in pharma




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Foxconn group to see iPhone 8 windfall in the second half of 2017 (South China Morning Post)

Apple’s Eddy Cue says the future of TV is much more interactive (The Verge)

Here’s What an Apple Exec Says About a Big Media Acquisition (Fortune)

NBC News Names Noah Oppenheim President, Deborah Turness Moves to International Role (Hollywood Reporter)
NBC takes a 25 percent stake in the European network Euronews.

Comcast to Launch ‘Xfinity Stream’ App on Feb. 28
(Multichannel News)

SAP: Hidden Figures (Vinnie Mirchandani / Enterprise Irregulars)

Amazon Is Quietly Becoming a Major Player in Enterprise Software (The Street)


Closing the digital gap in pharma (McKinsey & Co.)

Untapped Opportunity Lies in Pharma’s Supply Chain
(Supply Chain Executive)

Linode challenges DigitalOcean with its new $5 instances (TechCrunch)
Linode's been mostly quite for a while. Meanwhile, no word on when it might complete its previously announced move to Philadelphia.





2/13: Samsung reportedly signs deal with Apple to make more OLED panels for iPhone 8; Ivanka Trump clothing no longer shows up on Burlington’s website




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Comcast Comes To Roku (but it’s not the app you wanted) (Zatz Not Funny!)

The top 5 execs leading cable (very quietly) into wireless (FierceCable)

AT&T lights up gigabit fiber in five new metro areas (Ars Technica)



Samsung reportedly signs deal with Apple to make 160 million OLED panels for iPhone 8 9 to 5 Mac)

Ivanka Trump Clothing No Longer Shows Up on Burlington’s Website
(Fortune)

Oracle Fleshes Out Cloud Data Strategy (EnterpriseTech)

The rocky road to digital transformation – CEO Infosys under fire (Diginomica)


The Equestrians of North Philly (The Atlantic)
Didn't know about this - remarkable.





Philly Tech People News 2/13: Siemens proposes former SAP boss Snabe as next chairman; Entercom Names McCann to Lead New Content Group




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Jim Snabe 2013 / Wikipedia

Pai to Be FCC Chair (Multichannel News)

Siemens proposes former SAP boss Snabe as next chairman (Reuters)








Scott O'Neil: CEO for the NJ Devils, Philadelphia 76ers and Prudential Center (Podcast: Fortune Unfiltered)

Scott McAllister joins Comcast as SVP of Digital Transformation (Philly Tech News)

Entercom Names McCann to Lead New Content Group (RadioWorld)

Dell Boomi Names VP of Business Development to Expand Global Partner Channel

NFI Adds James S. Shafer to Engineering Leadership

Lee takes principal role at Osage (Global University Venturing)

Jerry Leimkuhler Joins Ben Franklin as Entrepreneur-in-Residence

Bioclinica Medical Imaging & Biomarkers Announces Pivotal Hires

Greenphire Appoints Dave Espenshade as Vice President, Contract Research Organization Partnerships




Previous: Philly Tech People News 1/19: Local guy Patterson making good at PTC ThingWorx

Philly Tech People News 12/26: RevZilla co-founder Bucci to depart; New leadership joins Ben Franklin Tech's board

Philly Tech People News 12/11: QVC promotes new blood; Comcast, Verizon name key strategy execs




BVP Partner Sees Big Year for Cloud IPOs (Bloomberg Video)