Reflections & analysis about innovation, technology, startups, investing, healthcare, and more .... with a focus on Minnesota, Land of 10,000 Lakes. Blogging continuously since 2005.

Category: Startups (Page 10 of 29)

Defrag 2013: On a Search for “What’s Happening Next”

Podium+SignGreetings from the 7th annual Defrag Conference in Denver. Yes, this is my personal seventh, too — I wouldn't miss this event! I've reported on every single one (which actually shows in my category cloud at the right). The first day of the 2013 version of Defrag is history now, and you can read lots about it at my Twitter stream here: @GraemeThickins. If you want the full firehose, the very busy hashtag is #defragcon. If you're into visuals, hit my Flickr set (you can view the visuals shown in this post in full size there).  UPDATE: I also posted a few video interviews on my YouTube channel. (Please subscribe to it. If I reach 100 subscribers, YouTube will let me live stream — woo-hoo!)

So, how would I summarize Day One? Well, you really had to be there, but here's a shot at the high points for me (in order of appearance):

Ray Wang of Constellation Research kicked it off with "The Identity Manifesto: Seven Points on the Future of Identity"… the money slide shown herein.
IdentityManifesto

PaulKedrosky,KauffmanFellow, VC, frequent CNBC commentator, and perennial
speaker at Defrag, did another fascinating talk, this one called "Good
Question"…interspersed with his unique and crazy data/research insights. We got a whole run-down on the history of the "knee slide" in soccer, for example… 🙂 The net-net of his talk: "What makes good questions? Those that create an information gap."
PaulKedrosky

Anjan Srinivas of Nutanix gave a really great talk on "SoftwareisEatingtheData Center"…in which he cited such trends as hypervisors being the new commodity, the rise of server-side flash, and the convergence of compute and storage.

StephenMesser ofCollective[i] delivered an absolutely fascinating Big Data talk on "UnpackingData’sBaggage:LessonsFromAirportSecurity" — a stark contrast between our TSA, which costs $43B and screens everybody vs. the approach of El Al Airlines, which has had zero incidents 1969-present, by focusing on anomolies and asking the right questions.

Jerry Colonna, former VC colleague of Fred Wilson's (now life coach) and Brad Feld, Foundry Group partner, bared it all on stage on "The Emotional Challenges of Enrepreneurship" — which really could have been titled "…the Challenges of Being a VC." Especially a unique one like Brad. Hey, do you think it's freakin' easy being Brad?? 
Brad+Jerry One of Brad's best lines during the talk:" "The machines are all laughing at us on some level." (Thanks to Robbie Jack for reminding me about that one.)

 • Klint Finley (@kintron), a writer for Wired and TechCrunch, did a talk on "Quantified Work: Tracking Efficiency Without Crushing Souls"… in which he asked, "What if you had an 'employabilty' score like a credit score?" We sure aren't there yet, as influence rankings are made for marketers, not employers, he said. He has some good links on this topic here.

Tim Falls, Director-Developer Relations, SendGrid, gave a talk about how developer marketing is best done by building relationships. He paid tribute to John Sheehan and Twilio, whom he said "were huge in helping his company us build our developer community."

Oren Teich, COO, Heroku/Salesforce, gave perhaps my favorite talk of the day. He called it "Great, Software Ate My World. Now what?" — but it was really about design, and its growing importance in our
Heroku-boothhugely techy world. Interestingly, I had earlier tweeted a photo of Heroku's booth, saying it was the best looking one here because of what? .. design, of course. His money quote: "Design creates delight… it's the thought that goes into the deep experience." Yes indeed, that's what matters today! Oren admitted he wasn't a designer himself, but that he had a really good one at Heroku. Yep!

Chris DeVore of Founders Co-Op gave a fascinating talk called "Industrial Entropy and the Future of Work" and asked, "what happens when work is decoupled from the enterprise?" I swear I heard him say that productivity advances are already no longer driven by enterprises. There's that theme of the free agent economy coming on strong again.

Ian Glazer of Gartner gave an amazing overview of the state of privacy, "Big P Privacy in the Era of Smaller Things." He said that for "liitle p" privacy play nice with "big P" privacy, preferences must travel with the data — a concept he calls "relationship context metadata." It's a really big deal, and Ian is the guy to follow if you want to stay on top of it.

• FInally, I call out Lorinda Brandon of Mashery for a very passionate talk on "The Geek Girl Imperative." She asked "why are we separating women out to learn about technology when we don't in other disciplines?"
LorindaBrandon Young girls should not be segregated like they can't handle tech unless they're coddled and shielded, like tech is some exclusively boys world. She also panned women-only adult networking as being not helpful, noting she's always avoided such things — and "I've had a pretty amazing career." Hats off to @lindybrandon for standing up and shouting, "Why aren't there more girls here?!?"

AdWords Is Too Complex, Says Original Google Team Member – Here’s His Better Solution: ‘Adagogo’

(Note: This post first appeared yesterday at Minnov8.com.)

Adagogo-logoWhat if you could post an ad in three minutes and geo-target it to
mobile users in a given radius around you — or across an entire network
of 45 to 50 million of them — then start seeing results minutes after
that? Well, you can — I know, I did it, with a new self-serve ad
service called Adagogo, soft-launched in recent days by mobile app platform company DoApp Inc. (www.doapps.com), based right here in Minnesota (Rochester and Minneapolis).

DoApp founder Joe Sriver began working at Google in early 2001 and
knows a thing
JoeSriver-headshot or two about online advertising. "After joining Google, I
found out that I'd been about the 20th advertiser to sign up for
Adwords. Also, I learned that Adwords was the reason my hire date was
pushed a few months, as they were so heads-down developing it."  As
Google's first UI designer, he soon became steeped in AdWords himself.
"It's a great product, and I'm proud to have been part of its history,"
he said. However, it's become complex, really complex. It's gotten so
new users either need to spend days trying to understand all the options
it now offers, or hire a professional to manage their ad campaigns." He
doesn't think that's right.

Screenshot-1"What's
been missing in all this," says Sriver, "is an easy method to just get
your web site, business, blog, or app in front a lot of people quickly."
(Hello, startups!)

"I think we've developed the simplest way to quickly place your ad within
Screenshot-3
thousands of local and national apps, on all the major mobile app
platforms," said Sriver, "Our network of users today is substantial,
between 45 and 50 million people, and it will continue to grow rapidly."

Because
you can target locally or advertise across the entire network, DoApp
says Adagogo is "great for everything from getting
traffic to local
garage sales to building
national brand awareness."
Screenshot-2How's that for a bold addressable market?

Sriver
recounted how he experimented with a lot of new ideas since he launched
DoApp in early 2008. The company's main app platform business (both Mobile Local News and Real Estate) continues to grow rapidly. (See my previous coverage of the company here, here, here, and here.)
But, of all the new side-project ideas he's played with over the years,
Joe says Adagogo is the one he realized had the most potential to get
traction.

How to Post an Ad with Adagogo:

> Choose geographically where you want your ad displayed
> Enter your ad copy and add a picture
> Select the amount of ad impressions you want to display
> Add a web site URL, phone number, and/or location
> Enter your credit card info
> DONE!

I Did My Own Self-Serve Ad Test
I set up an ad on Adagogo the other day just to experiment with it
myself. And I must say, it was quite easy. Nice, intuitive UI — really
simple and clean. My ad is the shown here with the headline, "Learn About
Graeme_ad_BigData Big Data." The goal was to drive traffic to a Flipboard magazine
— which I had launched a while back on a lark — just to see how many
people I could get to subscribe with a mobile ad. Joe told me that 1000
ad impressions, the option I chose (price: $25) would go quickly on the
DoApp network — in about 2-3 minutes. He was right. I watched as my
subscriber count went up 20%+ almost before my eyes. Once my ad
impressions were used up, my click-through rate was 1.2%. Not bad, as
the ad was just promoting a web site — to get people to subscribe to a
free mag — not some giveaway, coupon offer, or contest.

Adagogo-ad-RedOval-225wSo,
across what geography do users see the ads? "Many of our apps are local
or regional news apps," says Sriver, "but we do have a number of
national and international news apps as well. You can either choose to
advertise locally within a 5, 10, or 50-mile radius around a location
specified by you. Or you can have your ad displayed 'Everywhere,' which
means wherever our apps are used around the world."  One of DoApp's
widely distributed news apps, with a worldwide footprint, is called Headlines.

"Across iOS, Android, Windows Mobile, and mobile web, we currently have more than 1500 apps," says Sriver.
Adagogo-ad-action"That
number will be going up significantly, as all our real estate apps will
soon have access to the Adagogo network. So our total number of
available apps where Adagogo ads appear will grow a ton – stay tuned!"

Seriously,
I can see Adagogo used for garage sales, fundraisers, local mom &
pop stores, online businesses — even big brick-and-mortar retailers
and, heck, ecommerce giants, for that matter.  A Best Buy, for example,
could advertise individual store deals using local-radius targeting, but
could also do general brand advertising across the entire 50-million
user base – say, to hype a Super Bowl commercial, or a contest or
sweepstakes. No special expertise required — really anyone can use the
simple Adagogo interface.

"From our start, DoApp's mission has
been to help in the growth and success of communities and local
businesses through new technology," says Sriver. "Adagogo builds on that
mission."

A Special Offer This Month
In announcing the Adagogo
soft-launch, Joe offered up a special promotion. 
With any ad package you purchase, the company will double your number of
impressions. For example, buy the 1000 ad impressions package, get an
addition 1000 for free (2000 total). Buy 5000, get a total of 10,000.
This "buy one get one deal" is available only until October 31, 2013,
and is for ads that are specified to run "everywhere," as opposed to a
specific location. Just place your ad before midnight Central time on
October 31 and you'll automatically get double ad impressions.

—————-

Postscript: See DoApp at MobCon
Wade Beavers, CEO of DoApp, will be speaking at a mobile technology conference coming up in Minneapolis, Nov 7-8: MobCon. (Online registration still open.)  His session and description: "It's all about your latitude and longitude. How location is changing mobile."
"Location
and mobile are a perfect match. Learn more about how device latitude
and longitude are changing the mobile game for advertising, social,
commerce, personal data, and content distribution. A recent study showed
that 43% of users were willing to provide their location to companies
compared to less than 11% willing to share their browsing history. Has
location information become the new cookie? You will learn: Location
Data Trends, Effective Location App Offerings, Location Data Use,
Consumer Behaviors, and Location Best Practices."

Minnov8 will be reporting from the MobCon event, so look for us there!

—————–

Disclosure:
DoApp is one of the companies in my client equity portfolio. I helped
launch the firm in 2008, serving as its VP Marketing.

While You Weren’t Looking, DoApp Inc. Has Been Quietly Building a Powerhouse Mobile Business

DoApp-logo-198wDoApp Inc., a Minnesota-based mobile app development firm (www.DoApps.com), has come a long way since its founding five years ago. I had a chance to sit down with the management team last week in the company's offices in Rochester, Minnesota, where most of its employees are based. (Disclosure: I have a small equity position in the company, as I helped it launch in 2008. So, go ahead, call me biased!) It was the first chance I'd had in a while to catch the management team together in one place (left to right in the photo below): Wade Beavers, CEO: Joe Sriver, Founder; and Dave Borrillo, COO. Wade and Dave call Rochester
DoApp-HomePage_cliphome, while Joe is based in the Twin Cities. (They met when they all worked for IBM-Rochester, before Joe moved West to join Google in early 2001.) DoApp now boasts 19 employees, with a handful located virtually, one as far away as Vancouver. A core group of employees has been with the firm since 2008. This company has had amazingly little turnover, which says a lot in today's environment. See more about DoApp's talented team here.

What do I mean by "come a long way"? Well, ever since the company launched its first apps right when Apple opened the App Store in early 2008 (I was there — it was a wild time!), it has been one amazing run for these guys. Here's how DoApp describes itself on its web site: "Great design and enterprise-level code
DoApp-Wade_Joe_Davecomprise the core of DoApp. We've built over 1500 apps for all major mobile platforms. After millions upon millions of downloads, our mobile strength has been tested. We are a pioneer in mobile app development. We are a leader in mobile app experience." (
Note: about 400 of those 1500 apps are iPad apps.) "We are obsessed with mobile: continually developing new ideas, user experiences, and methods of engagement. This is what we love to do." That is about the most you'll ever hear DoApp brag. There isn't even much detail on its web site. These guys don't talk a lot about themselves; they just keep executing, signing customers, and building their business. That's why I had to make my trip to Rochester, to find out more… 🙂

So, what did I learn?  Well, these guys have way too much fun together — but I seriously believe a sense of humor is mandatory for any startup. And I'm sure that has something to do with how tight-knit the team is. I also gleaned some pretty impressive stats (below). And I learned the company has been profitable for some time, and that applies to both its major businesses: publishing and real estate. The company has had no outside investment, by the way — it was self-funded initially by founder Joe Sriver, and started booking revenues immediately after launch. So, DoApp has been quite a home-grown Minnesota startup success story — even if it has been a bit more low-profile than many. So, about some of those stats…


DoApp's Publishing and Advertising Business:


DoApp-TVstationlogosThe company has customers in 110 local markets across 34 states, and those include 176 TV stations, 58 radio stations, and 110 newspapers. Just search "DoApp Inc." on the iTunes App Store or on Google Play to see the huge number of apps it has developed for these broadcasters and publishers.


DoApp's Real Estate Business:

The company also has been building its real estate app business for several years. Recently, it formed a partnership with CoreLogic, a leader in the real-estate market that has an estimated 70% of the Multiple Listing Service (MLS) market in the U.S. DoApp powers all of CoreLogic's "GoMLS" app offering. The GoMLS app (see the iOS version here) can only be used by real estate agents, brokers, or other affiliated professionals that already
GoMLS-App_Iconhave an active MLS subscription for this service. It gives agents a time saving, easy-to-use, data-rich mobile app for access to listing data and more, directly from Apple or Android devices. It integrates with other systems and CoreLogic products to allow professionals to access saved searches and contacts, and edit key fields on-the-go. CoreLogic is a publicly traded firm (NYSE: CLGX) headquartered in California that provides property information, analytics, and services in seven countries.

Separately, DoApp serves as the mobile provider for the MLS organizations in Chicago, San Diego, Tulsa, Georgia, Birmingham, and more. These relationships, along with the CoreLogic partnership, make DoApp the largest provider in the U.S. of mobile real estate solutions for MLS organizations.

In addition, DoApp has 17 of its own branded apps covering sports, weather, news, and tech, which together now boast more than 8 million unique users.  Some of these include:


DoApp-myWeatherIconmyWeather app
(iOS, Android)

 

 

DoApp-HeadlinesIconHeadlines app (iOS, Android)

 

 


DoApp-SportsTap-iconSports Tap App
(iOS, Android)

 

 

Congratulations to the DoApp team for all they've accomplished to date! I'll make sure to follow along and keep you up to date on their fortunes.

(Note: This post also appeared on Minnov8.com.)

 

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I’m at #Gluecon 2013 – Preparing for My Brain to Explode :-)

Gluecon2013-bigroomSitting in the big room — largest Gluecon ever, and I'm back for my fifth!  As you can see from the agenda, it's packed with hot topics… even six-across breakout sessions this year, as event organizer Eric Norlin told me in a brief interview just before the kickoff of Day One. Watch for more from me as the event unfolds today and tomorrow…

UPDATE 5/23: Haven't been able to post a lot here yet — but, in case you didn't know, I've been tweeting my brains out about happenings at #gluecon here.

 

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