Marc Lore’s E-Commerce startup Jet scores $140 million more led by Bain Capital

Esther Surden
Publisher & Editor, NJTechWeekly.com



Marc Lore / Jet.com
NJTechWeekly.com has been following Jet.com, the e-commerce startup founded by Marc Lore, of Diapers.com fame. Lore has been busy working towards a launch this spring.

On Feb. 11, he announced on his blog that the company (now in Montclair but soon in Hoboken) had secured an additional $140 million in funding.

 “This new round was led by Bain Capital Ventures, with additional participation from Accel Partners, Coatue, General Catalyst, Goldman Sachs, Google Ventures, MentorTech Ventures, NEA, Norwest Venture Partners, Silicon Valley Bank, Temasek, Thrive Capital and other strategic investors,” Lore wrote.

He said that the money will be used to help the company deliver on its promise of radical price innovation in e-commerce. “We believe that there is big opportunity to deliver meaningful value to mass consumers by optimizing the underlying economics of online shopping and unbundling the embedded retail costs that drive up price.”

Lore went on to explain more about his business model, which is a technology-enabled warehouse price club model. Speaking about the Costcos of the world, Lore said, “Leveraging a membership model, they found ways to take costs out of the system, including placing stores in less desired areas, selling a very limited assortment, focusing on bulk-buying, and leaving products on palettes. In doing so, they unlocked significant savings for members and transformed how people shop.”

Using technology, Lore said Jet will be able to “dynamically adjust prices in real time in response to the unique composition of a shopper’s basket, always maximizing for cost-savings.” Customers will be guided towards orders that are economically more efficient to fulfill.

Jet only profits from the annual membership fee, so the full benefit of that efficiency gets passed back to customers in the form of lower prices. “Best of all, customers save without having to sacrifice service or experience,” he continued.

Lore gave a few hints about how his retail partners will fit into the company. “We see the opportunity to leverage technology and bring price innovation to an unlimited product selection by working collaboratively with our retail partners. We don’t compete with our partners; rather, we empower them with pricing tools that enable them to set different rules based on their business goals and profit targets.”

Many “Jet Insider” customers received their accounts, along with their ranks and perks, via email this week. One such notification gave the customer six months of free membership and unlocked the ability to shop before the public launch. Insiders are being let in on a rolling basis starting in March, the email said.

Readers interested in why Jet is attracting so much money will want to read this interview on Re/Code by Jason DelRay who spoke with Bain Capital's Scott Friend. "Think of it as the team and the market opportunity it is going after," Friend said.

Speaking about the technology Friend said, "But what if you had a blank sheet of paper and could design a system for digital that operated more like real-time bidding for advertising? And, in doing so, build transparency into the market so consumers didn’t pay through the nose for inefficient shipping if they didn’t have to? That’s Marc’s dream."

He also noted that Jet's project requires a lot of capital to achieve its goals, since Jet will be setting up warehouses for consumable goods.


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.




Links 2/23: Malvern's Rajant expands markets for its private wireless network technology; Racial discrimination lawsuit filed against Comcast, Al Sharpton






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Comcast buys pricey Oscars ad in effort to win over regulators (New York Post)

$20 billion racial discrimination lawsuit filed against Comcast, Al Sharpton (Philly.com)

FCC's Pai, FEC's Goodman Blast Title II (Multichannel News)

Google warns FCC plan could help ISPs charge senders of Web traffic (Ars Technica)


Ergen to Lead Dish Again Armed With $50 Billion in Airwaves (Bloomberg)


RDK Management, LLC Announces Expansion of DVB Support for Global Operators (PR Newswire)


SAP CONCUR LETS STARBUCKS BUYERS EXPENSE PURCHASES, RECEIVE REWARDS (PYMNTS.com)

Google buys Softcard, teams up with carriers on mobile payments (Gigaom)


Rajant Expands Markets for Flagship Private Wireless Network Technology (Business Wire)

IBM brings BlueMix platform services in-house (PCWorld)

Facebook quietly built an in-house CRM to deal with advertisers (VentureBeat)


Gartner Advanced Analytics Quadrant 2015: Gainers, Losers (Information Week)

Epicor Acquires Industry Leading Shipping Solutions Business From Insite Software (Marketwire)


Philly Tech People News 2/22/2015: Changes at PJM, PhillyJUG, Publicis Healthcare; PeopleLinx adds new exec








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Former Richardson CEO David DiStefano Joins PeopleLinx Executive Team (PR Web)

DrugDev Signals Plans for Continued Global Expansion with Appointment of Chief Business Officer Nick Watling (DrugDev)

Publicis Healthcare names Alexandra von Plato Group President for North America (PR Newswire)

Archna Sahay is Philly’s new ‘Manager of Entrepreneurial Investment' (Technical.ly Philly)

Ben Franklin Technology Partners of Southeastern Pennsylvania elected the following new board members: Jason Armstrong, senior vice president of investor relations at Comcast Corp.; Ajay Raju, co-chairman and CEO of Dilworth Paxson; and Tucker Twitmyer, senior vice president of corporate development for Franklin Square.


Bankers out: More turnover at Janney (Philly.com: Philly Deals)







Obama names Clancy Secret Service director
(CNN)
Clancy, who has been serving as interim director, is a Philly native who returned to the USSS after a stint as Comcast's Director of Security.


Phillies Promote Michael Stiles To Executive Vice President, Chief Operating Officer (CBS Local)

PJM CEO Terry Boston To Retire At Year-End (PR Newswire)

Axalta Coating Systems Appoints Aaron Weis Vice President and Chief Information Officer (Business Wire)



Wall Street Journal's billion dollar startup club; no Philly companies, but several with connections here



Tom Paine



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The Wall Street Journal on Thursday published its list of so-called "unicorns", privately held startups that have established reported valuations of $1 billion or greater.

Seventy-three companies made the cut and the number of billion dollar startups has almost doubled over the past year. None were from the Philadelphia area, though I counted several with ties to Philadelphia investors.

Four are in First Round Capital's portfolio: Uber ($41.2 billion), Square ($6 billion), AppNexus ($1.2 billion) and Fab ($1.2 billion). Most of FRC's stakes in these companies are relatively small, though some reports I saw a few month ago when Uber was valued at $17 billion suggested that its stake might worth upwards of $1 billion at the time. Fab, according to founder Jason Goldberg, was never actually valued over $1 billion ($875 million was tops, according to him), although it was widely reported to be. Fab is expected to be sold off soon at a fraction of that value. AppNexus is said to be looking toward an IPO, though the market for adtech IPOs is shaky right now. No one seems quite sure of what to make of Square's prospects at the moment. There has been IPO talk but also speculation that it was seeking buyers.

Also making the billion dollar club is Fanatics, the Jacksonville-based ecommerce retailer of sports apparel ($3.1 billion) that Michael Rubin spun out from GSI Commerce into his Kynetic Group when GSI was acquired by Ebay. It achieved that valuation through a $170 million round led by Alibaba and Temasek Holdings in 2013, and would probably be worth more today. Fanatics still has some staff in King of Prussia. Another GSI Commerce spinout to Kynetic, ShopRunner, reached a $600 million valuation through Alibaba's $200 million investment in 2013, but it has moved its headquarters to Silicon Valley though it still has people here.


Comcast Ventures had three investments in startups valued at $1 billion or more: Houzz ($2.3 billion), Instacart ($2 billion) and DocuSign ($1.6 billion). Sapphire Ventures (the renamed SAP Ventures) is also in DocuSign in addition to Nutanix ($2 billion). Susquehanna Growth Equity (Bala Cynwyd) has a stake in Credit Karma ($1 billion).

Fortune published a similar list last month, and Fortune's Dan Primack points out a few of the contrasts between the two. Fortune's list is really quite different near the bottom, and it includes MediaMath, a New York adtech firm in which Safeguard Scientifics was an early investor.

As for the Philadelphia area, the top three candidates I can think of now are iPipeline, SevOne, and Monetate, but I wouldn't harbor a guess as to how close to billion dollar valuations they could be. Of course, there may be others on the Life Sciences side; for example, CHOP-developed Spark Therapeutics busted past the $1 billion mark after its IPO late last month, though it did not achieve that valuation as a private company. An article in Insurance Journal from November, discussing possible iPipeline IPO plans, cited sources as saying that iPipeline could be valued at $500 million.

Update 3/4: Add Nextdoor to Comcast Ventures' Unicorn list, according to a new round announced today.



Links 2/20: InterDigital loses patent appeal; Rosetta's healthcare business folded in with Razorfish Health



NHL, SAP announce multi-year partnership; unveil new statistics platform that launches today (NHL.com)

InterDigital Loses Appeal in ITC Case Against ZTE, Microsoft (Bloomberg)

Publicis Healthcare Communications Group Adds Rosetta's Healthcare Business (PR Newswire)
Now under newly renamed Razorfish Health, which is what it used to be called before it became Razorfish Healthware.

What now for Publicis with Sapient safely in the fold? (The Drum)


Judges Question FCC’s Need for Contracts in Comcast-Time Warner Cable Deal (Re/code)

Calculating the Odds of a Comcast-Time Warner Cable Deal (New York Times: DealBook)



Philly Fed business index lowest in a year in February (Reuters)

Philly Fed chief slams audit bill as 'political interference' (The Hill)

Rovi Wraps Fan TV Integration
(Multichannel News)
Rovi has significant operations in Wayne.

SALESFORCE AND ORACLE SQUARE OFF ON ANALYTICS (Computer Business Review)


Links 2/19/2015: Philly unveils new 311 service with blueprint for innovation; NewSpring Holdings to acquire Seattle-based X5 Solutions








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Arris Faces Market Headwinds (Multichannel News)

Discovery CEO "Hopeful" on Comcast Carriage Talks, Plans U.S. Direct-to-Consumer Service Launch (Hollywood Reporter)



NewSpring Holdings to Acquire Seattle-Based X5 Solutions (Business Wire)

Salesforce brings more analytics power to mobile business users (PCWorld)

Philly Unveils New 311 Service with Blueprint for Innovation (Government Technology)


FinancialForce.com Gains Momentum In The Cloud (Talkin' Cloud)


New Corporate Headquarters Fortifies Elemica's Position as Market Leader (Marketwire)
Supply chain software firm for chemical & process industries moving from Exton to East Swedesford Road in Wayne.

Cisco CEO Says Company Will Be Aggressive Acquirer Over Time (Bloomberg)


Links 2/18: Uber tacks on another billion for the road; Comcast partners with Boulder's Boomtown on IoT lab







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Message Systems lands $27 million in funding (Washington Business Journal)
Hercules Technology Growth Capital joins return investors LLR Partners and NewSpring Capital in $27 million round.

Uber Expands Funding Round by $1 Billion (New York Times: DealBook)

Comcast partners with Boulder-based Boomtown on IoT lab (CED Magazine)

Rival cable analyst refutes Moffett report, says sector is just fine (FierceCable)

Cablevision Freewheel review: A Wi-Fi-only smartphone from a cable company (Gigaom).


SAP's 10-year HANA gamble: A life without the big boys (The Register)

New SAP cloud app targets finance professionals (PC World)

Unisys Joins City of Philadelphia for Public Launch of Enhanced 311 System (PR Newswire)

What to make of Fidelity Investments paying $250 million out of the blue for eMoney (RIABiz)


FanDuel rising, with some local investment ties


Tom Paine



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Dan Primack of Fortune reports that FanDuel, the New York-based real money fantasy sports site, may be on its way to the Unicorn club (billion dollar private valuation) based on a round it is considering seeking.

Five months ago, FanDuel raised $70 million from an investor group that included Shamrock Capital Group and Kohlberg Kravis Roberts & Co. at a $400 million pre-money valuation, according to a Fortune source.

It has some local connections in terms of investors: Comcast Ventures, Doylestown resident Paul Martino's (he's bicoastal) Bullpen Capital, and Kenexa founder Rudy Karsan's Karlani Capital.


Safeguard Scientifics moving corporate headquarters to Radnor, leaving behind memorable history


Tom Paine



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Safeguard Scientifics announced this morning that it is moving its headquarters from Devon Park Drive in Wayne to Radnor Financial Center on Radnor Chester Road in Radnor. The move will occur during the fourth quarter of 2015 following the expiration of its current lease, the company says.



Although geographically the two locations are not that far apart (though its rarely a simple drive on suburban roads), the key to the move, aside from the company's changing real estate needs, would appear to be the new location's proximity to the Blue Route (476), as well as the regional SEPTA line.

“The Greater Philadelphia area is experiencing robust growth—evidenced by the fact that entrepreneurs and venture capital firms alike are establishing and maintaining their roots here,” said Stephen T. Zarrilli, President and CEO of Safeguard in a statement. “We believe that our new headquarters provides us better access to early- and growth-stage healthcare and technology companies and will more closely align with our vision to support innovation and entrepreneurship in the 21st century.”

Safeguard Scientifics website

The legacy of Safeguard's longtime Wayne headquarters, and associated firms that used to surround it, is a significant one, both for positive and negative reasons. Safeguard indeed has played a unique role in developing the region's and nation's technology sector.

This 1996 article from the Inquirer describes Safeguard near the height of its influence:

"But this is Philadelphia in the '90s, and to see what is really shaping the future you have to leave Center City, navigate the construction-plagued spaghetti bowl around Valley Forge, and turn into the relatively nondescript office park that houses Safeguard Scientifics Inc."

This was before the tech bubble crash of 2000-2001, and the overreaching and perhaps hubris (not that Safeguard was alone in this) that nearly destroyed the company. What happened to Verticalnet was the most extreme example of the times.

Now slimmed down, focused and efficient, Safeguard came back from its near-death experience. But I'm sure many dramatic memories will be left behind on Devon Park Drive.