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

Tag: Minnesota (Page 6 of 11)

Minnedemo – Hot Damn!

Oh, was the joint a-jumpin’ Thursday night, gang. For those of you who weren’t there, that joint was O’Gara’s Garage in St. Paul. For those of you who were — lucky you (especially if you were smart enough to get there early). The crowd had to be 350 or 400 — it was basically shoulder-to-shoulder at its peak. Minnedemoogarasmichaellehmkuhl
The schmoozin’ was in high gear, the kegs were flowing (7 kinds!), and there wasn’t even any entertainment!  Well, I guess we were our own entertainment — and six of our community’s latest, hot startups got up on stage halfway into the evening to pitch their wares. [Photo of O’Gara’s courtesy of Minnedemo attendee Michael Lehmkuhl.]

Don’t let anyone tell you the Minnesota tech community isn’t hotter than a pistol! You could feel the energy, the entrepreneurial juices flowing.  You know we have something special going on here in Minnesota when you experience one of these BarCamp events (which we call Minnebar and Minnedemo) — and when you see how we keep attracting more and more of the important players from the community with every meeting.Minnedemocrowdstefanhartwig
And it’s not just the Twin Cities — we had people there from Sioux Falls, Fargo, St. Cloud, Wisconsin, and more.  [Photo of the crowd early-on courtesy of Minnedemo attendee Stefan Hartwig, of sponsor Electric Pulp — one of those dudes from Sioux Falls! Yes, this is the outfit Guy Kawasaki has made famous.]

What was the coolest thing I heard at the event? That was from Robert Stephens, the illustrious founder of Minnesota’s own Geek Squad (acquired by Best Buy in 2002). See my recent coverage of Robert being named MN Entrepreneur of the Year. And, yes, he was just interviewed on 60 Minutes, too! I had a great chat with Robert, during which I mentioned that I’d heard Best Buy was hosting an event that very day in Silicon Valley, just for VCs.  He said, yeah, that he was supposed to be speaking there. I asked why he wasn’t. "Because I’d rather be here. I really believe in the Minnesota tech community."  Now, is that freaking cool, or what?  Screw the Valley, he’s more interested in the action here! Robert is a major supporter of our state’s entrepreneurs — a hero in our midst, for sure.

What else really impressed me?  Well, besides the great startups that pitched and just the huge energy of our collective developer/entrepreneur/interactive/marketing community, I have to say that I continue to be really pumped about the quality of new players we keep drawing to these events. We had partners from at least two major VCs firms (and three more I knew really wanted to be there but had schedule conflicts), another from the largest "network of angel networks" in the country, an investment banker whom I know is currently raising a large chunk for a local startup, and more major, local angel investors than I’ve seen at any of our previous meetings. Yes, that’s right, the guy (or lady) you were standing next to could be one — so, don’t spill beer on ’em!  🙂  Seriously, they were there to catch the buzz on what’s new, who’s starting up what, and to schmooze with their colleagues about the latest deals circulating. [Unfortunately, some of the newer ones didn’t realize how noisy these gatherings get, and how hard it can be to hear the presenters, unless you move right up near the stage. But, hopefully they’ll follow up with individual entrepreneurs for one-on-ones — that’s really the intended outcome, anyway, for the startups pitching at these events.] And there were major dudes present as well from some of our state’s largest Internet-related businesses — trust me, I know these people! And I brokered at least two key introductions of local startups to some of these guys. They definitely wanted to know more about some of the technologies pitched. And, there’s more — we even had an NBA player, formerly of the Timberwolves (and a serious geek), in our midst! Not to forget our local media people — I know the Business Journal was present. Not sure if the Trib or the Pioneer Press made it (I was just too busy to see everyone I wanted to).  And, you just know that Minnesota’s best and brightest tech bloggers were there — Steve Borsch, Ed Kohler, Ben Higginbotham, and….well, you know. And so many of the developer attendees have great blogs of their own as well!  (See the links in the list of attendees on the Minnedemo site for those.)

So, who were the startup founders that pitched?  Well, it was an awesome combination of really smart developers, serial entrepreneurs, a major ad-agency producer, a female entrepreneur with a company just coming out of stealth, even a former Silicon Valley researcher that holds a patent on the technology he was pitching.  Minnedemoadaptiveave
People, you would be amazed if you drilled into the backgrounds of these folks — I can say that because I know many of them. There was a huge amount of experience and expertise represented on that stage on Thursday night — a proud moment for Minnesota entrepreneurship. Here’s a quick rundown on who got 10 minutes each to pitch to this raucous crowd:

•CrashPlan (Matthew Dornquast) – a virtual appliance for automatic, off-site backup
•FanChatter (Marty Wetherall) – mobile sports fan chat, photos, more (see news release)
•SOTAcomm (Gary Doan) – plug-and-play appliances integrating best-of-breed open-source "unified communications" apps for running a small business
•Wonderfile (David Carnes) – tag-based file management and collaboration
•Pokeware (Maryse Thomas) – monetizing video streams by giving consumers extensive access to products and information within them (see news release)
•Adaptive Avenue (David Quimby) – distributed commerce, "site within a banner," enabling a whole new category of clicks ("engagement" clicks)

[Photo of David Quimby presenting courtesy of Ben Wallace.]

But did you think we only have six startups here in Minnesota worthy of presenting?  Wrong, bucko! There were sixteen more — count ’em, 16!! — who were stacked up on the waiting list in case someone dropped out. They’re definitely worth a look, too….and they’re all listed here on the Minnedemo site, with links so you can learn more.

Remember to say thank you! (My daddy taught me that!) What an awesome event — and we owe it all to the event co-organizers, who donate a huge amount of their time to these things: developers Dan Grigsby, a successful entrepreneur who really knows how to give back to the community, and Luke Francl, a developer at local hot shop Slantwise Design. And the sponsors who pay the freight to make these events happen. We love ’em!  Read about ’em and support ’em. They keep coming back, too — all are repeat sponsors:
•Kinetic Data
•Split Rock Partners
•New Counsel
•ipHouse
•Electric Pulp

What’s the takeaway? Minnesota’s startup and Internet community is a one exciting place to be! You like it here, and I know the vast majority of you want to stay here. I’m proud to be a part of the community, and each and every one of you out there should be, too. It’s great to know that if you can work hard, think big, and make good stuff that improves people’s lives or work, or just helps them have more fun online — whatever! — that you can make a real contribution to our economy, and advance your own lot in life as well.

I can’t wait for our next Minnedemo or Minnebar event.  Meantime, keep building on the energy…and keep on networking!  🙂

Compellent: Three Guys in a Basement to an IPO

Ever wonder how a tech startup gets from a standing start to an IPO in just five years?  Well, it doesn’t often happen that quickly — or easily(!).  But we actually have quite a strong history here in Minnesota of tech firms that start as just an idea and go on to become big industry players in a relatively short period of time. Going back a ways, my former employers Control Data and Medtronic certainly come to mind. A more recent example would be e-commerce industry infrastructure leader Digital River, now heading for a billion dollars in annual revenue.

Compellenthomepage
Compellent is another Minnesota technology firm that now appears to have an exciting future ahead of it — as a public company, starting yesterday. The founding team is certainly not new to this game — well, the fast-growth part of it, anyway, if not the going-public part.  Compellent is also just the latest in a long string of data storage companies in Minnesota — going back to Control Data in the ’60s, and Seagate, which has had a presence here almost as long as well. (Seagate still employs more than 3000 in the state, and builds its thin-film heads just a few miles from where I sit). IBM’s Rochester, MN facility has long been a center of disk-drive innovation (though Hitachi acquired that business from IBM in recent years). In addition, there are several other storage-industry players of significant size that had their beginnings in these parts: VTC Inc. in disk-drive chips (acquired in ’99 by Lucent/Agere, and now part of LSI Logic)…Hutchinson Technology in disk-drive suspension assemblies (still here, and a public company)….OnTrack Data in data recovery (now part of Kroll, but still here)…Qlogic in SAN switches, which acquired MN firm Ancor Communications (still here)….Imation in optical and tape media….and Veritas (acquired by Symantec) in backup software, still with an office of 500+ people in Roseville, MN.  And that’s just to name a few — I’ll cover another one, Xiotech, below.

We like storage here in Minnesota! It’s like the Energizer bunny…it just keeps going and going, growing and growing!

The Path of Minnesota’s Newest Up-and-Coming Storage Startup
I’ve known many people who are now at Compellent going back several years, and I had an opportunity to meet Phil Soran, the CEO and one the three cofounders, in about 2003, a year after Compellent opened shop — to develop a new, simpler kind of storage networking harware and software system. One of my colleagues at a company where I was serving in an interim role as VP Marketing at that time (which was also a storage-related startup) had worked with Phil at IBM earlier in their careers.  I also know the VC firm that co-led the original round of funding for Compellent in 2002, Crescendo Ventures (with offices in Palo Alto, Minneapolis, and London). So, with that background, I’m going to tell you what I know about the story of how these guys — the three serial-entrepreneur founders of Compellent, who were just working in a basement in 2002 — got to where they are today, a public company with a market cap now hovering somewhere around $1 billion. I think you’ll find it interesting.

Back in the mid-’90s, Phil co-founded Xiotech with John Guider and Larry Aszmann. John and Larry had both previously been executives at Tricord Systems — John was the co-founder and CTO, and Larry was the Director of Intelligent I/O Subsystems at Tricord.  The folks at Crescendo Ventures knew John and Larry from Tricord — where Investment Advisers Inc. (IAI), Crescendo’s former parent company, was the largest shareholder. When they moved on from Tricord, Guider and Aszmann teamed up with Phil Soran to found Xiotech, which developed a storage hub product to alleviate many of the I/O bottlenecks that kept disk-drive performance from keeping up with advances being made in CPU speeds and disk capacity. Xiotech pioneered the concept of virtualization in server utilization, which was very, very forward thinking at the time. The company enjoyed early commercial success before agreeing to be acquired by Seagate Technologies in late 1999 for $360 million. Based on the forward-looking vision and hard work of the Xiotech team, its investors did very well. I know that Crescendo Ventures achieved a return of nearly 11x its investment in less than three years. And the success of Xiotech really helped to re-establish the Twin Cities as one of the country’s leading storage technology centers.

After Phil and his team left Seagate, they wanted to start another company and approached Crescendo about providing first-round funding. Not surprisingly, Crescendo found it very easy to reach a decision to invest in the team again. They had seen Larry, John, and Phil in action before and knew that they had both an exciting vision for the new company, as well as the experience and operational chops to turn the vision for Compellent into a reality.  Over the years, Crescendo Ventures has worked with a number of entrepreneurs who have started multiple companies. Such serial entrepreneurs benefit from a unique blend of start-up experience, grassroots pragmatism, and ambition to do something bigger and better than what they have done before. For all these reasons, as Crescendo tells the story, they were eager to work with Phil, Larry, and John again as they embarked on their second Minnesota storage startup.

What’s Compellent’s unique approach to storage? Here’s how investor site The Motley Fool recently put it:

Compellent develops storage solutions targeted for
small-to-medium-sized enterprises (SMEs). To attack this prickly
market, the company has focused on affordability, ease of use, and
minimal maintenance.

So far, the formula is working nicely. As of the first half of 2007,
revenue doubled to $20.9 million and there are more than 600 customers,
which include Munder Capital Management, Rivals.com, and even the FBI….

…Compellent does have one compelling aspect to its technology: a simple point-and-click interface. In the age of Amazon.com and Facebook, this may seem like a no-brainer, but it’s hardly common
in the complex world of storage. That gives Compellent one important
differentiation…

So, what role did Compellent’s lead VC firm play in the company’s early years? Crescendo Ventures not only enabled the firm to grow quickly and build a strong market presence, by providing the company with its initial funding (they co-lead the Series A with El Dorado Ventures). It has also been active at the board level since the beginning, and, as good VC firms always do, has engaged its entire team to add value for Compellent. Over the five years since the founding, at least three different Crescendo Partners have been actively involved as directors. Jeff Hinck (now with Vesbridge Partners) led Crescendo’s investment in Compellent (with Charles Beeler of El Dorado ventures), and provided valuable support in the company’s early days. More recently, Crescendo’s Jeff Tollefson (Minneapolis based) and David Spreng (Palo Alto based) have also served as Compellent directors.

Is an IPO an End or a Beginning?
So, now, we have a new public tech company in Minnesota — something our technology community can and should be very proud of (specially how it performed on opening day!).  I suspect, however, that both the founders and their VC backers are not stopping long to pat themselves on the back.  The real work, the real growth starts now.  But, what’s next for Crescendo Ventures, the Minneapolis-born VC firm that still has close ties to its hometown. They tell me they remain very interested in Minnesota and are actively seeking new early-stage investments here. Though most of the firm’s people are based in Palo  Alto, two of its five partners are Minnesotans, along with other professional staff who are from the state.  And I know for a fact that the firm always says it has a soft spot for exciting projects in the Twin Cities!

Stay tuned for more about Compellent, as its growth story plays out this year and beyond, and also for more about how Crescendo Ventures intends to continue to help build growth companies in our state. [Note: I’m proud to say that Crescendo has been a client of mine from time to time, even going back some 17 or 18 years if you count when I first worked with their original parent firm, IAI.]

UPDATE (10/14): To add some clarification.

Compellent IPO Pops Huge on Opening Day

Late yesterday, Reuters reported that the IPO of Eden Prairie, MN-based Compellent Technologies Inc. (NYSE symbol: CML), a maker of storage networking systems, priced at $13.50 per share — higher than the $10-12 price range expected.  Compellentlogowhite
The offering, led by Morgan Stanley, thus raised $81 million, "as investors continue to pile into a new
offerings from technology companies," the article said.

An excerpt:

Compellent’s offering was multiple times oversubscribed to
both retail and institutional buyers, said Scott Sweet,
managing director of IPOboutique.com, who had expected the IPO
to price high. At its $13.50 share price, Compellent has an initial market
capitalization exceeding $400 million.

Well, fast forward to market close today (Wednesday), and that market cap was a whole lot higher!  Try  $1.45 billion, as Compellent closed its first day of trading at $24.19 per share.  No wonder CEO and cofounder Phil Soran looks so happy in this photo taken today on the floor of the NEw York Stock Exchange. (Photo courtesy of BusinessWire.)

Philsoranatnyse
Here’s how MarketWatch reported the story this afternoon: Compellent Technologies IPO 3rd best opener so far in ’07. That story was published before market close, however, when the stock was trading at $23.05.  It kept going up, and I calculate that it closed up 79% from its open — making it, in fact, the second best opening so far in 2007. That would put it ahead of even mega-darling VMware, which rose 76% on its first day earlier in 2007 — and also ahead of fellow storage company Isilon, which closed up 78% in its first trading day back in December 2006.

Here are three more links to news coverage regarding Compellent’s first day as a public company:

• Compellent Technologies IPO Prices Above Expectations at $13.50 Per Share (AP via Yahoo)

• Compellent Shares Jump in Market Debut Climb More Than 70 Percent After Pricing Above Expectations (AP via Yahoo)

• NYSE Arca Welcomes IPO of Compellent Technologies, Inc. (BusinessWire)

Watch for more from me tomorrow on Compellent, a company that went from startup to IPO in five short years. (Note: I own no Compellent stock.)

UPDATE (10/11):  Well, I guess I figured right — The Journal reported the same thing this morning: Compellent Rises 79% Above IPO Price. Wow, CML is the second-largest first-day IPO pop so far in 2007! And it beats Isilon by a nose as well. My calculator worked… 🙂

Big Week for Tech in Minnesota

UPDATE (10/11, 10:00 am): To add links to news about two of the companies pitching at Minnedemo tonight. Be there or be square, dudes! (and dudettes, of course). Here’s some lowdown on FanChatter and Pokeware….and four other startups are presenting as well, as you can see at the Minnedemo web page.

——

Lots of things happening here in the Twin Cities technology community this second week in October. The IPO of local tech darling Compellent Technologies is expected to price tomorrow and start trading on Wednesday. I caught the news as soon as the Wall Street Journal hit my front step at 6 a.m. this morning (page C7): Offerings Rejuvenate IPO Market – Compellent Technologies, Virgin Mobile Will Debut; Heavy Buzz, But Any Pop? (subscription required, but soon Rupert Murdoch may change all that!). Compellentlogo
For those who can’t click through to the story, here are a couple of excerpts:

A computer-network-storage company and a provider of
cellular-phone service will be the focus of the market for initial
public offerings this week.

The market for such deals still is coming back to life
after its late-summer break, with six offerings that together could
raise as much as $1.39 billion scheduled to debut over the next five
days. If all actually make it that far, they will top the
companies that went public in all of September. ….

Compellent Technologies Inc., an unprofitable but
fast-growing computer-network-storage company, is getting much of the
buzz. It is scheduled to begin trading Wednesday on the NYSE Arca under
the symbol CML. Research firm Gartner Inc. named Compellent the world’s
fastest-growing disk-storage company last year, just four years after
it was formed …. Compellent…revenue
doubled in the first six months to $20.9 million, compared with a year
earlier. The company is selling 12 million shares between $10 and $12.

That’s a big IPO, folks — but 12 million shares is a typo. [I love it when I can catch typos in the venerable Wall Street Journal 🙂 ] An accompanying chart (not in the online version) says 6.9 million, which sounds more like it. That will still put the amount raised somewhere in the range of $69-83 million, which makes it the largest tech IPO in this town in quite some time.  Compellent has raised more than $50 million in venture capital, beginning in 2002 with investments by Crescendo Ventures and El Dorado Ventures, both Silicon Valley firms populated by former Minneapolitans I know. [Watch for more from me on Compellent on Wednesday.]

The MN Startup Schmoozin’ Event of the Season
The day after watching the big IPO pop or not, we switch our emphasis to the new, upcoming success stories in the MN startup community! The long-awaited periodic gathering of our local tech entrepreneurs and developers, playfully called Minnedemo, fires up at 6:30 pm on Thursday. Minnedemo
It’s a free event, and is at St.Paul’s legendary Irish bar and restaurant, O’Gara’s (actually, we’ll be in the large, attached venue called O’Gara’s Garage.) This organization is part of the very popular grass-roots BarCamp phenomenon, which is international in scope. The last event we had for our local group, an all-day Saturday event in the spring (see my coverage), was the largest Barcamp event to that date ever in the U.S., with close to 400 in attendance! So, don’t let anyone tell you the Twin Cities isn’t a hot tech market!!  I’m betting this event will pull close to 300, and the first 200 to show up get two free beers or sodas — can you beat that?  That’s courtesy of our illustrious sponsors (see site).  And I’m betting there’ll be some good munchies, too. After an hour of networking, six local startups will demo their offerings [note: no Powerpoint allowed — yeah!]:  Adaptive Avenue, FanChatter, Pokeware, PROserver Virtual Appliance, SOTAcomm, and Wonderfile. (See Minnedemo site for more info and links to those demoing companies.)

The Company That Started It All
I owe a lot to Control Data. I may have been only a mere neophyte when I worked there, but, wow, did they put a lot of trust in me, and did I ever learn a lot.  They actually gave me some rope to do stuff, and they just kept promoting me!  How cool is that?  And I kept stepping up to the challenge. It was a fun, fun ride, and I will forever be grateful to this technology pioneer, this unbelievable cauldron of innovation and entrepreneurship to which our entire state’s IT community owes a huge debt of gratitude — if not its very existence. Cdc50yrceleb_2
Do you realize how many thousands of companies were spawned by Control Data?
I cannot miss this event on Friday, and I invite anyone who’s involved in the local information technology to attend. You’ll be in some very great company! It’s the Control Data 50 Year Celebration at the Minneapolis Convention Center on Friday afternoon, and it’s even free. One of my favorite all-time entrepreneurs will be speaking, a guy I admire tremendously: Larry Jodsaas.  He was a Control Data executive who later risked it all to lead VTC Inc., a Control Data semiconductor spinout, which was a huge success and became a 15-year client relationship for me before it was acquired by Lucent (Agere) in 1999. It’s a great story.  There’s a cocktail reception following this event and, for those who sign up separately, a dinner after that, with U.S. Senator Norm Coleman speaking. I’m really excited about this event, and I hope you’ll join me!

PagePow Launches Widgets with Advanced Reporting

PagePow Inc., a new web technology startup based in Minneapolis, today announced the launch of a private beta at PagePow.com. PagePow enables bloggers and web content owners to easily copy and paste web-based widgets into their blogs, web sites, auctions, social networking sites, and more. PagePow.com is immediately avalable as a private beta.

The startup is debuting with seven widgets:
– 5-Star Rating
– Poll
– Quiz
– Page Counter
– Google Map
– Contact Us
– Send Page to Friend

Pagepowhomepage

More widgets are planned. A key differentiator with PagePow is that bloggers and content owners will also have access to comprehensive reports generated by all the widgets they use. PagePow members will easily be able to monitor all the data their widgets produce through one simple interface at PagePow.com.

“Web site ease-of-use is a major focus for us, ” said PagePow founder Joe Sriver, an experienced UI designer whio worked in Silicon Valley for several years. “We spent a lot of time creating a simple, intuitive user interface to make sure people can come to the site, easily find what they need, and copy the code to their site within a couple minutes.”

Pagepow5starwidget

PagePow allows webmasters and bloggers to concentrate on generating content without having to worry about programming to have the cool features they want on their web sites, said Sriver.

PagePow offers comprehensive reports detailing statistics from PagePow widgets. “We wanted to offer widgets that any site could potentially use. We won’t have widgets that have a very narrow user base. For example, our poll widget can be used for any question,” said Sriver.

Users of PagePow widgets will be able to track all the data they generate while using the widgets, by logging in to PagePow and seeing their ratings, comments, poll/quiz answers, etc. all in one place. “This is something I haven’t seen on similar widget sites,” said Sriver. Otherpagepowwidgets “We let everyone take advantage of our widgets — not just webmasters or bloggers who put the code on their pages, but any user of the widgets.” Users will receive a one-time only pop-up dialog when they confirm their vote, comment, etc., and PagePow will prompt them to log in and will briefly explain the benefits of tracking their data.

Those interested in participating in the PagePow private beta can submit their name and email address at PagePow.com. Private beta testers are invited to comment on the functionality and UI and anything else they wish, said Sriver. A stage-one Public Beta is planned for the near future.

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