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	<title>Barney Pell&#039;s Weblog &#187; Venture Capital</title>
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		<title>First Round Capital Holiday video</title>
		<link>http://www.barneypell.com/2008/12/first-round-capital-holiday-video/</link>
		<comments>http://www.barneypell.com/2008/12/first-round-capital-holiday-video/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 17 Dec 2008 19:52:13 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Barney</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Fun]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Powerset]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Venture Capital]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://174.120.172.92/~barneype/?p=123</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[First Round Capital, one of Powerset&#8217;s investors, had a really innovative idea for a holiday card. The partners in the fund visited all their portfolio companies around the world and danced with them. In this video, you can see Barney Pell and Lorenzo Thione dancing with Josh Kopelman in the lobby at Powerset. I found [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>First Round Capital, one of Powerset&#8217;s investors, had a really <a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EU_5P3GLWv4&#038;eurl=http://www.kopelman.com/holiday/holiday/ie.html&#038;feature=player_embedded">innovative idea for a holiday card</a>.<br />
The partners in the fund visited all their portfolio companies around the world and danced with them.  In this video, you can see Barney Pell and Lorenzo Thione dancing with Josh Kopelman in the lobby at Powerset.<br />
I found it really touching to watch the joyful spirit in all these startup companies even in the tough economy that is making life difficult for startups.<br />
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]]></content:encoded>
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		<item>
		<title>Happy New Year: Powerset in the New York Times</title>
		<link>http://www.barneypell.com/2007/01/happy-new-year-powerset-in-the-new-york-times/</link>
		<comments>http://www.barneypell.com/2007/01/happy-new-year-powerset-in-the-new-york-times/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 01 Jan 2007 16:34:48 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Barney</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Powerset]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Search]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Venture Capital]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://174.120.172.92/~barneype/?p=82</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Powerset was featured in the New York Times today in an article by Miguel Helft entitled: &#8220;In Silicon Valley, the Race Is On to Trump Google&#8220;. The article talks about the wave of startups going after aspects of the search market. I originally thought the article was going to be titled: &#8220;What are they thinking?&#8221;, [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><a href="http://www.powerset.com">Powerset</a> was featured in the New York Times today in an article by Miguel Helft entitled: &#8220;<a href="http://www.nytimes.com/2007/01/01/technology/01search.html?ex=1325307600&#038;en=5fb9c9a36e8ccb8d&#038;ei=5088">In Silicon Valley, the Race Is On to Trump Google</a>&#8220;.  The article talks about the wave of startups going after aspects of the search market.  I originally thought the article was going to be titled: &#8220;What are they thinking?&#8221;, as the emphasis is on the mindset of the entrepreneurs and the investors going after a large market in the presence of such formidable players.<br />
The article begins and ends with a discussion of Powerset.<br />
In between, the search startups discussed in the article include <a href="http://www.powerset.com">Powerset</a>, <a href="http://www.hakia.com">Hakia</a>, <a href="http://www.Snap.com">Snap</a>, <a href="http://www.A9.com">A9</a>, <a href="http://www.ChaCha.com">ChaCha</a>, and <a href="http://www.Wikia.com">Wikia</a>.</p>
<p><span id="more-82"></span><br />
Charles Moldow, our lead VC and board member from Foundation Capital, had several good quotes explaining his investment philosophy:</p>
<blockquote><p>â€œThereâ€™s definitely a segment of the market that thinks we are crazy,â€ said Charles Moldow, a partner at Foundation Capital, a venture capital firm that is Powersetâ€™s principal financial backer. â€œIn 2000, some people thought Google was crazy.â€
</p></blockquote>
<blockquote><p>â€œThe more Google starts to think about taking on Microsoft, the less it is a pure search play, and the more it opens the door for new innovations,â€ said Mr. Moldow, the Foundation Capital partner. â€œThatâ€™s great for us.â€
</p></blockquote>
<p>Here&#8217;s my quote:</p>
<blockquote><p>&#8230; Many of todayâ€™s search start-ups are putting themselves squarely in the path of the Google steamroller. Most explain that decision in similar ways.<br />
They say that Googleâ€™s dominance today is different from Microsoftâ€™s in the late 90s when its operating system was a virtual monopoly and nearly impossible to break. In the Internet search industry, â€œyou earn your right to be in business every day, page view after page view, click after click,â€ said Barney Pell, a founder and the chief executive of Powerset, whose search service is not yet available. </p></blockquote>
<p>Here&#8217;s the quote from my cofounder, Steve Newcomb:</p>
<blockquote><p>
Steve Newcomb, a Powerset founder and veteran of several successful start-ups, said his company could become the next Google. Or, he said, if Google or someone else perfected natural-language search before Powerset, then his company would make a great acquisition for one of the other search companies. â€œWe are a huge story no matter what,â€ he said.
</p></blockquote>
<p>Esther Dyson (a Powerset angel investor and technology writer), followed up with the following quote:</p>
<blockquote><p>
Ms. Dyson, the technology commentator and Powerset investor, captured the optimism more concisely and with less swagger. â€œI love Google,â€ she said, â€œbut I love the march of history.â€</p></blockquote>
<p>And here&#8217;s a quote from Allen Morgan, my previous partner and mentor at Mayfield:</p>
<blockquote><p>
You donâ€™t need to be No. 1 to be worth billions of dollars,â€ said Allen Morgan, a partner at Mayfield Fund, a venture capital firm that invested $10 million in Snap.</p></blockquote>
<p>It is really exciting to start the New Year for 2007 with such a great   article. For me personally, this is my first time having my photo in the New York Times. With a great start like this, it&#8217;s going to be an amazing year!</p>
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		<slash:comments>0</slash:comments>
		</item>
		<item>
		<title>Entrepreneur Ex Residence: Powerset</title>
		<link>http://www.barneypell.com/2005/12/entrepreneur-ex-residence-powerset/</link>
		<comments>http://www.barneypell.com/2005/12/entrepreneur-ex-residence-powerset/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 09 Dec 2005 23:30:02 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Barney</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Venture Capital]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://174.120.172.92/~barneype/?p=58</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[My blogging infrastructure was broken for about 2 months, so this update is by now rather old. But better late than never&#8230; After spending much of this year having a great time as an Entrepreneur in Residence at Mayfield, I have left and started a new company! The company, called Powerset, is going to be [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>My blogging infrastructure was broken for about 2 months, so this update is by now rather old. But better late than never&#8230;<br />
After spending much of this year having a great time as an Entrepreneur in Residence at <a href="http://www.mayfield.com">Mayfield</a>, I have left and started a new company! The company, called <strong>Powerset</strong>, is going to be in &#8220;semi stealth mode&#8221; for a while.  I call it &#8220;semi stealth&#8221; because I don&#8217;t want potential competitors to know what we&#8217;re doing too early. That&#8217;s the &#8220;stealth&#8221; part. But at the same time, I want to let my friends (and more generally, my extended network) know at a high level what I&#8217;m up to, so everyone can help. I find it continually amazing what kind of help you get when people know what you&#8217;re trying to do.<br />
So here&#8217;s the high-level story, which should come as no surprise to folks who know me:<br />
<blockquote><em>Powerset will be developing advanced AI technology to make significant improvements in search.<br />
</em></p></blockquote>
<p>In case you&#8217;re wondering about the company name, &#8220;powerset&#8221; is a concept from mathematical set theory. The powerset P(S) of a set S is the set of all subsets of S.  So if you have a set {a,b,c}, the powerset is: {{a},{b},{c},{a,b},{a,c},{b,c},{a,b,c}}.<br />
If there are N elements of the set S, there are 2^N elements of P(S).<br />
That&#8217;s a very large number.<br />
I plan to write more about how I came up with the vision for Powerset , the transition from EIR to Entrepreneur on the street, and ongoing steps in the adventure so far.  For now I&#8217;ll just say that I&#8217;m totally excited, incredibly busy, and having the time of my life.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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		<slash:comments>6</slash:comments>
		</item>
		<item>
		<title>VC Taskforce on Next-Gen Tools in Global Software Development</title>
		<link>http://www.barneypell.com/2005/08/vc-taskforce-on-next-gen-tools-in-global-software-development/</link>
		<comments>http://www.barneypell.com/2005/08/vc-taskforce-on-next-gen-tools-in-global-software-development/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 04 Aug 2005 14:41:11 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Barney</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Software]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Venture Capital]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Web/Tech]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://174.120.172.92/~barneype/?p=48</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Emerging Technology Forum Global Software Development: Why next-gen tools matter July 28, 2005 Abstract: Software complexity has been steadily on the rise. Some persistent problems have dogged programmers for 60 years, and still need solutions. New problems arise as the landscape changes. What are the opportunities and maintenance challenges ahead as teams work faster and [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Emerging Technology Forum</p>
<p><a class="reference" href="http://www.vctaskforce.com/vcevent/vcevent_2005_06_27.html">Global Software Development: Why next-gen tools matter</a></p>
<p>July 28, 2005</p>
<p>Abstract:</p>
<pre class="literal-block">
Software complexity has been steadily on the rise. Some persistent problems
have dogged programmers for 60 years, and still need solutions. New problems
arise as the landscape changes. What are the opportunities and maintenance
challenges ahead as teams work faster and collaborate across different time
zones, languages, and countries? What areas might be investable? This panel
of experts will explore these questions and new developments in a spirited
discussion on the state of software development.
</pre>
<p>Moderator:</p>
<ul class="simple">
<li><strong>John Mashey</strong>, <a class="reference" href="http://www.techviser.com">Techviser</a>, briefly reviews the history of software<br />
development tools, environments, and productivity aids, emphasizing<br />
especially those environmental changes that create new opportunities.</li>
</ul>
<p>Panel:</p>
<ul class="simple">
<li><strong>David Hartford</strong>, CEO of <a class="reference" href="http://www.n8systems.com">N8 Systems</a>, and previously a<br />
VC, will discuss his company&#8217;s solutions to getting requirements right,<br />
a difficult, expensive old problem whose solution is even more critical<br />
when doing distributed development.</li>
<li><strong>Steve Mezak</strong>, CEO, <a class="reference" href="http://www.accelerance.com">Accelerance</a>, will discuss<br />
experience with his company&#8217;s global outsourcing methodologies and<br />
tools, with teams in 14 different countries, and a wide variety of<br />
clients.</li>
<li><strong>Sam Jadallah</strong>, Partner, <a class="reference" href="http://www.mdv.com">Mohr Davidow Ventures</a>, previously VP at<br />
Microsoft will discuss the current investment landscape for software.</li>
</ul>
<div class="contents topic" id="contents">
<p class="topic-title first"><a name="contents">Contents</a></p>
<ul class="simple">
<li><a class="reference" href="#notes-and-comments-by-barney-pell" id="id1" name="id1">Notes and Comments by Barney Pell</a></li>
<li><a class="reference" href="#john-mashley-history-of-software-development-and-opportunities" id="id2" name="id2">John Mashley: History of Software Development and Opportunities</a></li>
<li><a class="reference" href="#david-hartford-detecting-requirements-errors" id="id3" name="id3">David Hartford: Detecting Requirements Errors</a></li>
<li><a class="reference" href="#steve-mezak-new-software-tools-for-outsourcing-your-software-development" id="id4" name="id4">Steve Mezak,  New software tools for outsourcing your software development</a></li>
<li><a class="reference" href="#sam-jadallah-investing-in-software" id="id5" name="id5">Sam Jadallah: Investing in Software</a></li>
<li><a class="reference" href="#questions" id="id6" name="id6">questions</a></li>
</ul>
</div>
<div class="section" id="notes-and-comments-by-barney-pell">
<h1><a class="toc-backref" href="#id1" name="notes-and-comments-by-barney-pell">Notes and Comments by Barney Pell</a></h1>
<p>This document contains my notes taken as an audience member attending this<br />
panel discussion. While it might look like a transcript, and I attempt to<br />
capture everything in real-time, I do also interpret, paraphrase and<br />
summarize as I type.</p>
<p>Personally, I thought this was a great discussion, and one that should be<br />
shared with entrepreneurs, investors, vendors and customers in the software<br />
development community.  I worked hard to make this article readable so that<br />
others can benefit.</p>
<p>Highlights and take-aways:</p>
<ul>
<li>
<p class="first">John Mashley pointed out that, independent of all the improvements in<br />
software development tools, <strong>individual programmer productivity is always<br />
nonuniform</strong>. Some programmers are 10 or even 100 times as productive as<br />
others.</p>
</li>
<li>
<p class="first">This has negative and positive <strong>implications for outsourcing</strong>. On the<br />
negative side, if you can assemble a crack team of programmers locally who<br />
are 10x more productive than you can find offshore, then you actually<br />
<em>lose</em> economic value by outsourcing. On the positive side, some of the<br />
best developers are not local.  So despite the hassle, and even if the<br />
labor rates are not much different, you can gain economic productivity by<br />
taking advantage of these fine programmers wherever they live (whether in<br />
India or on a boat in the Carribean).</p>
</li>
<li>
<p class="first">While outsourcing is increasingly becoming an imperative for businesses,<br />
the <strong>results of outsourcing are often disappointing</strong>. Steve Mezak discussed 7 major<br />
categories of mistakes in outsourcing and listed potential solutions<br />
(including methodologies and tools) for each.</p>
</li>
<li>
<p class="first">A recurring theme in the panel was the difficulty and importance of<br />
<strong>getting software requirements right</strong>. Despite all the improvements in tools<br />
and processees for developers, there have been limited improvements in the<br />
way people create and validate the requirements in the first place. Errors<br />
in requirements ripple through the downstream flow and get more expensive<br />
to fix the later they are caught. N8&#8242;s David Hartford brought up the<br />
statistic that requirements errors cost US companies <em>$100 Billion per<br />
year</em> in rework and cancelled projects alone. Steve Mezak listed a new<br />
generation of companies (including N8) that address different aspects of the<br />
requirements problem in different ways. I am very familiar with N8&#8242;s<br />
Scenario product that David discussed and demonstrated at the meeting. I<br />
think it has the potential to address the requirements engineering problem<br />
in a substantial way for the first time.  (I intend to write more about<br />
this in a separate post).</p>
</li>
<li>
<p class="first">There was consensus that <strong>distributed development is now working</strong>. This has<br />
been one of the biggest problems with outsourcing, telecommuting, and<br />
large scale projects. There was discussion that open source tools have<br />
matured substantially and are now being integrated into cost-effective<br />
suites. In addition, VoIP (e.g. Skype) has enabled people to maintain open<br />
voice channels all day long at low cost. As Sam Jadallah said:</p>
<blockquote>
<p>I have a company with 2 people, on in Silicon Valley, one in<br />
Dublin. Skype sits open all day long, just like two people sitting in<br />
room together all day long talking whenever they want.  The tools,<br />
workflow, process, and experience level is now working.</p>
</blockquote>
</li>
<li>
<p class="first">Sam Jadallah&#8217;s discussion of <strong>VC investment in software development tools</strong><br />
is great reading. His fundamental point is that <strong>the internet has changed<br />
the economics of the enterprise software business</strong>, and that this changes<br />
the success factors for companies. Big enterprise software companies are<br />
suffering, and most of the large software industry revenues are coming<br />
from maintenance. Sam covers several major trends in software development<br />
and in software business models and provides concrete suggestions for what<br />
software startup companies should do differently. He lists interesting<br />
investment areas for software tools, including: developer productivity,<br />
quality and security, application management, and process improvement.</p>
</li>
</ul>
</div>
<p><span id="more-48"></span></p>
<div class="section" id="john-mashley-history-of-software-development-and-opportunities">
<h1><a class="toc-backref" href="#id2" name="john-mashley-history-of-software-development-and-opportunities">John Mashley: History of Software Development and Opportunities</a></h1>
<ul class="simple">
<li>Each major new computer generation:
<ul>
<li>physically smaller</li>
<li>less expensive</li>
<li>&#8230;</li>
<li>networked</li>
</ul>
</li>
<li>Each major new software generation:
<ul>
<li>physically bigger (code size)</li>
<li>less epxensive cycles -&gt; use more</li>
<li>larger numbers of apps and programmers</li>
<li>adds radically diferent apps (successful things don&#8217;t go away)</li>
<li>adds new markets, problems, and tools</li>
<li>networked -&gt; more distributed dev</li>
</ul>
</li>
<li>History of software dev
<ul>
<li>batch jobs</li>
<li>share mini</li>
<li>share lan</li>
<li>own pc</li>
<li>own clients</li>
<li>share WAN</li>
</ul>
</li>
<li>constants, cycles, changes
<ul>
<li>small is beautiful 1977 -&gt; 2004 deja vu (agile software dev)
<ul>
<li>we haven&#8217;t improved human management issues much</li>
</ul>
</li>
<li>programmer producitvity: 10:1 or more differences between people
<ul>
<li>sometimes finding really good programmers is the best single thing you can<br />
do. that&#8217;s an impetus of distributing development across the world is to take advantage<br />
of really fine programmers, and differences are huge.</li>
<li>some people are 100:1 better, write 3000 lines of code in a few hours and<br />
have it right first time.</li>
</ul>
</li>
<li>requirements always hard to get right
<ul>
<li>error cost and impacts escalate</li>
</ul>
</li>
<li>problems -&gt; tools -&gt; enable bigger problems &#8230; and cycle
<ul>
<li>some things a handful of people build today we couldn&#8217;t have done with<br />
100s 30 years ago</li>
</ul>
</li>
<li>one person -&gt; several -&gt; many contributing to a software project
<ul>
<li>at Bell Labs, a memo said this project plans on 300 people working on<br />
something, and in my experience only 250 people can work together</li>
</ul>
</li>
<li>same room -&gt; same building -&gt; &#8230; -&gt; worldwide</li>
</ul>
</li>
</ul>
<p>Following are several talks with different aspects of problems and solutions for<br />
distributed development and investing in software.</p>
<p>Going first: David Hartford is an old software guy, then lawyer, vc, now back home<br />
as CEO of a software company.</p>
</div>
<div class="section" id="david-hartford-detecting-requirements-errors">
<h1><a class="toc-backref" href="#id3" name="david-hartford-detecting-requirements-errors">David Hartford: Detecting Requirements Errors</a></h1>
<ul>
<li>
<p class="first">Detecting requirements errors</p>
<ul class="simple">
<li>$Billions spent on tools to support millions of developers every year</li>
<li>$100B flushed every year in US alone. Not fault of programmers or<br />
developers. But the requirements they are given aren&#8217;t right.</li>
</ul>
</li>
<li>
<p class="first">Do your business people and IT people understand each other?</p>
<ul class="simple">
<li>Answer to this is usually &quot;no&quot;.</li>
<li>Dilbert cartoon: Pointy haired boss says &quot;we&#8217;re outsourcing half of our programming to elbonia to<br />
take advantage of the time diference.&quot;  Elbonians says: &quot;I have no idea what they<br />
want. Let&#8217;s pretend we died.&quot;</li>
<li>With distance, it gets increasingly difficult to fill in the gaps.</li>
<li>The problem: Missing, ambiguous and contradictory requirements.</li>
</ul>
</li>
<li>
<p class="first">Where does the money go?</p>
<ul class="simple">
<li>60-80% of project failures can be attributed to requirements errors.<br />
at the very front of the process. not the arch, dev, or testers!</li>
<li>The biz people say you didn&#8217;t understand, the IT guys say you didn&#8217;t<br />
explain.</li>
<li>Scope creep and rework usually mean you didn&#8217;t find the errors it the beginning</li>
<li>Good requirements are hard.
<ul>
<li>requirements definition and validation cycle: informal primarily text<br />
requirements -&gt; spec -&gt; formal spec documents -&gt;<br />
validation -&gt; visual inspection and review of spec for errors -&gt; elicitation</li>
<li>This is a laborious process, with error detection that&#8217;s bad.</li>
</ul>
</li>
</ul>
</li>
<li>
<p class="first">State of the art in requirements is Use Cases.</p>
<ul class="simple">
<li>Engineering Change Order use case example.</li>
<li>Do you see the errors?</li>
<li>Given time, you might find some of the errors.<br />
Many of them you don&#8217;t find until 6 months later.</li>
<li>What if you could turn that text into a visualization of what it really<br />
communicates?  That&#8217;s what N8 software does, it takes the text, structure of<br />
what was said, turns it into a mathematical model and gives a visualization<br />
of what was there.</li>
<li>Breaks, actors that don&#8217;t do much, inconsistencies, improper requirements language.
<ul>
<li>If you develop something from this, you won&#8217;t be successful.</li>
<li>But if you can take it iteratively, fix it, through it back to your user,<br />
you can do elicitation easier.  Work with english, and throw pictures, not<br />
words, back at your stakeholders.</li>
<li>After 30 mins with stakeholders, you fix the text, get real diagram showing<br />
what they want.</li>
<li>We use this methodology writing our own software.</li>
</ul>
</li>
</ul>
</li>
<li>
<p class="first">N8 is getting platinum customers so far.</p>
<ul class="simple">
<li>We&#8217;re just starting to look at outsourcing.</li>
<li>Is there a way to get your stakeholder to stay involved in the process.</li>
<li>Maybe that wouldn&#8217;t be such crazy talk anymore.</li>
<li>&quot;mind the gap&quot; between business and IT.</li>
</ul>
</li>
<li>
<p class="first">Live N8 Scenario example: take use case written in a book.</p>
<ul class="simple">
<li>First thing our software does it figure out actor, object, function, modifier.<br />
who is doing what to whom, in what sequence and under what conditions.</li>
<li>Also get a use case diagram (good for estimation).</li>
<li>Activity diagram: users, swimlanes across the top. System is on the right<br />
hand side.<br />
See flow of activity from applicant, and see flow of info across the swimlanes.</li>
<li>When you shrink it down, you can&#8217;t see words anymore.  But you can see<br />
issues. We&#8217;re looking for happy days scenario: start at one end, get all the way<br />
through.</li>
<li>First thing we find out is something is passed to the system, and someone<br />
else does something totally disconnected. We teach our users they want<br />
to find out who is actually doing things.</li>
<li>Using &quot;presentation view&quot;, we see customer signs loan agreement. In the<br />
rest of this, the person that starts out is called &quot;applicant&quot;.  Ask experts in<br />
the room, is applicant the same as customer, or are they different people?<br />
They say ah, we&#8217;re using different terms.</li>
<li>So we search and replace the term, and then remodel.<br />
Now we see one less swim lane, as everyone is stacked up under applicant.<br />
But we have a break. If the loan officer approves the loan agreement .. once<br />
the applicant finally signs the loan agreement.<br />
But missing info: how did the applicant get the loan agreement.<br />
So we insert sentence: &quot;the system then sends the loan agreement to the applicant&quot;.<br />
And remodel to find out if that really works.<br />
Now we have a happy days scenario.<br />
(Sam: <em>that&#8217;s cool!</em>)</li>
<li>Once you get some requirements done, this is what the loan process looks like<br />
<em>(shows complete loan business proc created using N8 Scenario, very cool)</em></li>
</ul>
</li>
<li>
<p class="first">Think about being in a room with stickies all over the place. 3 hours to 3<br />
weeks later you say &quot;oops&quot; have to ask them about this.<br />
Now you can do this in a jam session. Or save to pdf and send it around.<br />
And instead of just connecting the dots, you can accelerate the elicitation<br />
of the real requirements.</p>
</li>
<li>
<p class="first">Case study: a real story, a BPR activity. We had 1 computer system, 4 people. It had a<br />
happy days scenario.  But we then took the diagram and text and sent it to<br />
other stakeholders and ask is that what&#8217;s really happening?<br />
1 week later we had 6 computer systems and 9 people inside and outside the<br />
company!<br />
Think about what this means about the scope of the system!!</p>
</li>
<li>
<p class="first">Demo of N8 on VC process</p>
<p>David types in the following, a bit at a time. N8 Scenario shows the model<br />
after each sentence.</p>
<ul class="simple">
<li>Version 1 (the real happy day scenario)
<ul>
<li>The entrepreneur gives a presentation to the VC.</li>
<li>The VC likes the presentation and gives a check to the entrepreneur.</li>
<li>The entrepeneur then gives its stock to the VC.</li>
<li>The VC then sells the stock in an IPO.</li>
<li>The VC gets lots of money from the public market.</li>
</ul>
</li>
<li>This elicits feedback, more steps.</li>
<li>David show smuch longer more complex process, developed using N8 Scenario.<br />
(we took this from a website of a particular VC firm)</li>
</ul>
</li>
<li>
<p class="first">Conclusion:</p>
<ul class="simple">
<li>We&#8217;re getting requirements in the way they want to express them, implicit,<br />
informal representations, and converting it into explicit, formal<br />
representations.</li>
<li>We think this will be great for the guys not just next door, but across the<br />
world.</li>
</ul>
</li>
<li>
<p class="first">q: Does it take care of the grammar?</p>
<ul class="simple">
<li>It doesn&#8217;t check your grammar as you have a grammar checker behind it.<br />
But it will show you how it is being communicated to others. It will reflect your<br />
own ambiguity back to you so you can fix it.</li>
</ul>
</li>
</ul>
</div>
<div class="section" id="steve-mezak-new-software-tools-for-outsourcing-your-software-development">
<h1><a class="toc-backref" href="#id4" name="steve-mezak-new-software-tools-for-outsourcing-your-software-development">Steve Mezak,  New software tools for outsourcing your software development</a></h1>
<p>Had gluttony for punishment of doing 7 startups.<br />
Author of upcoming book: risk-free outsourcing: how to use global talent to<br />
create great software</p>
<p>My company helps companies with outsourcing.</p>
<ul class="simple">
<li>the promise of outsourcing
<ul>
<li>what if you could:
<ul>
<li>have a team of the best eng in the world?</li>
<li>direct their work to get reliable on-time results?</li>
<li>hire them at a third the cost you are paying now?</li>
</ul>
</li>
<li>That&#8217;s the holy grail. From my experience, it is not a choice, but you had to make<br />
it work.  Tonight I&#8217;ll talk about tools that are out there to help with the<br />
process.</li>
</ul>
</li>
<li>Outsourcing challenges</li>
</ul>
<p>The boss and/or board says: thou shalt outsource! now how to do it?</p>
<p>7 deadly dangers of outsourcing software development (paper available from steve)</p>
<ol class="arabic simple">
<li>ignoring outsourcing</li>
<li>hiring the wrong team</li>
<li>being promiscuous with your IP</li>
<li>not knowing what your software should do</li>
<li>meager engingeering management</li>
<li>mediocre methodology</li>
</ol>
<ul class="simple">
<li>#3: protecting your IP
<ul>
<li>fortressware (stealth software co): system allows you to prtect source code IP and<br />
data from internal compromise. increases control and visbility of remote team activities.<br />
(doesn&#8217;t leave that machine)</li>
<li>palamida: detects, manages, and reports on the third party, commercial and<br />
open source components that may exist in your software&#8217;s code base</li>
<li>black duck: software compliance management solutions.<br />
govern how software assets are created, managed and licensed.<br />
they maintain a database always updated so you can constantly evaluate your<br />
source code.</li>
</ul>
</li>
<li>#4 create clear requirements
<ul>
<li>N8 Scenario: would be an excellent product for this.</li>
<li>TRUEreq:     web-based issues and requirements mgmt tool for PLM</li>
<li>iRise: lets you sketch the screens of your software, link them together so you can<br />
simulate the actiivty of what the software is supposed to do.
<ul>
<li>get biz people online and get their inputs.</li>
<li>studio product.</li>
<li>simulation platform.</li>
</ul>
</li>
<li>macromedia: use dreamweaver to create and link HTML mock-ups of your screens
<ul>
<li>demo functionality and illustrate &quot;use cases&quot; and &quot;user stories&quot;</li>
<li>can get templates to make it look decent, add buttons and text</li>
<li>fantastic for doing demos to your VC before you have software running</li>
<li>when you&#8217;ve gone through those iterations, then you can use screen shots to<br />
illustrate your requirements for software or other artifacts you want to create.</li>
</ul>
</li>
<li>Breeze: does video and voice over web so you can do collab in real-time across internet.</li>
<li>Another approach, many startups and CEOs can&#8217;t write anything down.<br />
For one CEO, I asked the Use Cases, he said it&#8217;s too big for that.<br />
he found a development team in US, did vulcan mind meld to transmit his requirements. they<br />
came up with a prototype, but that&#8217;s inefficient and unworkable process if<br />
you&#8217;re going to use outsourcing.</li>
</ul>
</li>
<li>#5: Effective engineering management
<ul>
<li>Artifact ($500/month): pay as you go, on demand service. requirements mgmt, doc mgmt, issue<br />
tracking.  low cost way to do this mgmt.</li>
<li>role-based dashboards and project mgmt tools.<br />
normally teams cobble together open-source tools, cvs, wikis.<br />
Some people said &quot;gotomeeting&quot;, basecamp, cvsdude, skype, and yahoo doodle<br />
give us a rough and ready collab platform for under $100 a month.</li>
<li>collabnet: put those tools in a hosted environment you can use</li>
<li>datainfocom: more BPO moving offshore.
<ul>
<li>mathematical models that monitor and predict when things are going to go wrong.</li>
<li>identifies root causes of the problems using proprietary algs</li>
<li>recommends optimum corrective actions</li>
<li>working with Dell and GE.</li>
</ul>
</li>
</ul>
</li>
<li>#6: use agile-aware methods
<ul>
<li>agile development methodology
<ul>
<li>takes your dev, splits into short iterations.</li>
<li>take list of  features, how many can we get done in the next 3 weeks, then work only on<br />
those high priority features and functions in the next 3 weeks.</li>
<li>involve the biz people in the development process directly.</li>
<li>a little debate as one of the principles is eng and biz people working<br />
closely together. how can you do that with offshore outsourcing?<br />
we need to find a way as there is too much of a cost advantage of<br />
offshore. webex type tools and breeze will help with that.</li>
</ul>
</li>
<li>optimalJ: accelerates j2ee dev
<ul>
<li>generates apps from visual models</li>
<li>implements model-driven architecture (MDA)</li>
</ul>
</li>
<li>rally dev:   on-demand, software lifecycle management. accelerates agile software development.</li>
<li>versionOne</li>
</ul>
</li>
<li>conclusion
<ul>
<li>accelerance: outsourcing advice and services</li>
<li>full spectrum of outsourcing strategies</li>
<li>17 proven teams in 14 countries around the globe.</li>
<li>Practical (and free) info about outsourcing from accelerance</li>
<li>writing a book</li>
<li><a href="http://accelerance.typepad.com/">Steve&#8217;s blog</a> discusses the above tools in more detail.
</ul>
</li>
</ul>
</div>
<div class="section" id="sam-jadallah-investing-in-software">
<h1><a class="toc-backref" href="#id5" name="sam-jadallah-investing-in-software">Sam Jadallah: Investing in Software</a></h1>
<p>The internet has changed everything</p>
<p>I was an eng and dev, ended up at msft in 1987. It was exciting to see birth<br />
of that industry, watch how things have changed.  There were inflection<br />
points along the way: the pc, client server, and now the internet.</p>
<p>The internet has brought profound changes, both to software industry.</p>
<ul class="simple">
<li>summary
<ul>
<li>enterprise software is broken
<ul>
<li>many challenges have come together to create mature, slow growth industry<br />
dominated by a few companies.</li>
<li>msft announced in earnings report today that in entire IT industry, Microsoft<br />
garnered 24% of all the profits!   so not all that healthy an industry&#8230;</li>
</ul>
</li>
<li>new business models drove changes
<ul>
<li>open source
<ul>
<li>impacts investing strategy. not necessarily an investible theme</li>
</ul>
</li>
<li>SAAS, advertising are key forces
<ul>
<li>changing the way enterprises consume software</li>
<li>also, 3rd party payer model gives users powerful service for free</li>
</ul>
</li>
</ul>
</li>
<li>distribution channels are completely different
<ul>
<li>in the past it was standardized. resellers, 2-3 tiered channels. SI&#8217;s did<br />
a lot of the integration work.</li>
<li>now, the channels have flattened.</li>
<li>E.g. for findbugs software, sourceforge is now the major distribution channel.<br />
Two guys working on a project now have the same distribution as a large business.</li>
</ul>
</li>
<li>web services matters.
<ul>
<li>vision of object oriented, capabilities between people who don&#8217;t know each<br />
other, is now here</li>
<li>rapid intergration</li>
<li>lightweight toolkits</li>
<li>transformation of SAP and Amazon to Platform services<br />
by tapping into existing legacy infrastructure that you have</li>
<li>someone wrote an app (delicio.us library) to catalog all the books in his house.<br />
bar code scan the book, do a lookup to amazon api, then just stick into his<br />
catalog.  powerful stuff happens in a way nobody would have predicted.</li>
</ul>
</li>
<li>customer controls the sales cycle
<ul>
<li>completely flipped the buying cycle. you can&#8217;t push stuff to customers<br />
anymore, they simply buy at their own pace, way and method. if they don&#8217;t want to buy, they won&#8217;t.</li>
<li>they were burnt through the bubble, Y2K panic cycles, and internet<br />
cycle. Now they&#8217;re in charge and we have to recognize this.</li>
</ul>
</li>
</ul>
</li>
<li>Maturing software industry
<ul>
<li>Software is now the maintenance industry.
<ul>
<li>Largest percentage of their profits come from maint, not new licenses.</li>
</ul>
</li>
<li>deal size shrinks
<ul>
<li>when Microsoft bought siebel, I signed off a $24M order (services, software,<br />
everything). No longer will that happen at Microsoft.  (That was my last<br />
mistake.)</li>
</ul>
</li>
<li>80% of sales force focused on 20% of revenues
<ul>
<li>So cost and effectiveness per sales rep has declined to point it is not profitable</li>
</ul>
</li>
<li>customers have become integration oriented, not replacement oriented
<ul>
<li>A CIO says I have no new initiatives. I bought stuff over 5 years, now have<br />
it working together. I&#8217;m building things on top, using WS. But not buying<br />
anything in the core as it has to all inteegrate, if not I am not buying it.</li>
</ul>
</li>
</ul>
</li>
<li>Only the REALLY BIG matter
<ul>
<li>Software industry should probably have 20-25% of the number of companies it has<br />
today. too many companies of all sizes.</li>
<li>Because of shift to maintenance and they don&#8217;t get growth, it&#8217;s become hard to get<br />
profitable.</li>
<li>In order to get a 33% margin, you have to be &gt;$5B software company!
<ul>
<li>The companies between 1-5B still struggle to be interesting businesses: 18%<br />
margins.  Below that not even profitable.</li>
<li>My friend at Morgan Stanley said his biz is going gangbusters as every<br />
company is trying to buy others and sell themselves to get sustainable on<br />
their own.</li>
</ul>
</li>
</ul>
</li>
<li>Scale AND Margins: tough to do
<ul>
<li>Difficult to be of scale and maintain growth.<br />
This biz was exciting for many years as it was incredibly fast<br />
growing. people paid for growth.<br />
Microsoft produced enormous profits. Now its stock hasn&#8217;t moved in 5 years as not<br />
enough perceived growth.</li>
<li>Many scale players are challenged for growth</li>
<li>software conslidation targets have generally been subscale or challenged by growth</li>
<li><em>Ron Weissman</em>: Notice that software tools vendors are in the bottom left. Borland, rational.<br />
Subscale margins and low growth.</li>
<li>Companies haven&#8217;t gone public lately. There has been M&amp;A, but massive transformation in the industry.</li>
</ul>
</li>
<li>Old to new order of business
<ul>
<li>Old:
<ol class="loweralpha">
<li>Get a few large marquee customers</li>
<li>meat-eater sales reps</li>
<li>ave sales price &gt; $1m</li>
<li>replace existing software
<ul>
<li>what you have today is really bad, let me show you what you can do now!</li>
<li>customer sees order of magnitude improvements, rip out the old stuff</li>
</ul>
</li>
</ol>
</li>
<li>New:
<ol class="loweralpha">
<li>bottoms up and SMB focus
<ul>
<li>e.g.:  N8 selling to a group, not a top-down sale where they standardize.<br />
that&#8217;s the way we sold in the early days of the software business.<br />
Microsoft originally always went aroud the CIO, who never had priority to improve<br />
productivity of the users.  Did end run around CIOs.</li>
</ul>
</li>
<li>telesales and marketing driven
<ul>
<li>just can&#8217;t afford the same sort of sales and marketing as in the past.</li>
</ul>
</li>
<li>ASP &lt; $250K (for initial orders)
<ul>
<li>you keep getting that with intention of getting distribution</li>
</ul>
</li>
<li>Integrate quickly or not at all
<ul>
<li>more interesting is the latter. come in as a point and don&#8217;t try to<br />
integrate&#8230;</li>
</ul>
</li>
</ol>
</li>
</ul>
</li>
<li>Software tools investing
<ul>
<li>Lots of areas VCs invest. this has traditionally been a tough area for VCs<br />
to invest.</li>
<li>development managers think they can build software on their own.
<ul>
<li>At Microsoft,  Bill Gates would always say I can build that over a weekend, why<br />
are you spending $1M to buy that software?</li>
</ul>
</li>
<li>Interesting areas:
<ul>
<li>developer productivity
<ul>
<li>innerworkings (mdv portfolio co): hosted, integrated training</li>
</ul>
</li>
<li>quality and security
<ul>
<li>finding bugs, improve quality right from the start.</li>
</ul>
</li>
<li>app management
<ul>
<li>n8 fits into that</li>
</ul>
</li>
<li>process improvement</li>
<li>&quot;tools&quot;: a tough term for VCs.
<ul>
<li>When I look at tools, they&#8217;re tightly integrate with a platform. Platforms<br />
are hard for software startups to sell.  Platform vendors like to give away<br />
tools. So Microsoft, Sun like to give away tools to protect the platform where<br />
make all their money.  Microsoft willing to make tools a $0B business if it<br />
made the OS business twice as large</li>
</ul>
</li>
</ul>
</li>
</ul>
</li>
<li>Software development trends
<ul>
<li>modular architectures
<ul>
<li>java, .net, python (emerging as interesting platform), PHP</li>
</ul>
</li>
<li>distributed development is working
<ul>
<li>in the past VCs didn&#8217;t want to see this.<br />
I have a company with 2 people, on in SV, one in Dublin. Skype sits open<br />
all day long, just like two people sitting in room together all day long<br />
talking whenever they want.  The tools, workflow, process, experience<br />
level is now working.</li>
</ul>
</li>
<li>open source leverage
<ul>
<li>need black duck etc to avoid contamination, but it&#8217;s great to bootstrap<br />
we used to find a bunch of our investment money goes out the backdoor to<br />
pay for licenses. now we see a lot of these cos write none or small<br />
checks, leveraging in a very smart way. preserving capital.</li>
</ul>
</li>
<li>services: live and constant builds
<ul>
<li>expertise says you have a live process.<br />
we have one company doing hourly builds on a live production system. sounds<br />
kind of nuts (I think it was nuts) but they got it to work. sign of what<br />
we&#8217;re going to see.</li>
</ul>
</li>
</ul>
</li>
<li>Example of interesting new apps we see in Venture world
<ul>
<li>RedFin: startup in Seattle
<ul>
<li>pulled together interesting dynamic HTML, rich client. Can grab<br />
satellite view, find houses. Integrate to MLS, Google Maps,<br />
advertising network through diferent APIs. Tie together in a quick and<br />
rich way.  This was their demo. But also the application, which wasn&#8217;t<br />
that far off.  In 2 months they will have the system to a scalable<br />
way.  They can build rich and deep apps very quickly because of web<br />
services infrastructure.</li>
</ul>
</li>
</ul>
</li>
<li>Software models
<ul>
<li>From software as a product, to:
<ul>
<li>software product downloads</li>
<li>software appliance
<ul>
<li>eliminate the cost of config, hassle of installation support</li>
</ul>
</li>
<li>software as a service (SaaS): hosted way, buyer can consume it quickly</li>
</ul>
</li>
</ul>
</li>
<li>Implications
<ul>
<li>software economics have changed
<ul>
<li>for better and worse.</li>
<li>important to grasp those changes in startups.</li>
</ul>
</li>
<li>product must be great
<ul>
<li>in an era where sales people can&#8217;t sell, your product must sell itself</li>
<li>15 minute test: easy to evaluate and use appliance-like</li>
<li>live for feedback/upsell/upgrade</li>
</ul>
</li>
<li>sales and marketing costs must be managed
<ul>
<li>can&#8217;t afford to spend the way you have in the past</li>
<li>open source models are promising but unproven</li>
</ul>
</li>
<li>customers control the sales cycle
<ul>
<li>learn to make the best of it</li>
<li>fire expensive sales reps</li>
<li>if you are an expensive sales rep,  you should be changing jobs&#8230;</li>
</ul>
</li>
<li>we are at the dawn of a new era of software industry
<ul>
<li>embrace it, it will be exciting</li>
<li>It will leverage all the investments of the last few years.</li>
<li>radically different, and far more exciting.</li>
<li>that&#8217;s why I decided to stay in this business.</li>
</ul>
</li>
</ul>
</li>
</ul>
</div>
<div class="section" id="questions">
<h1><a class="toc-backref" href="#id6" name="questions">questions</a></h1>
<ol class="arabic simple">
<li>Talking about integration, do you find greater interest in providing<br />
tools like business process engineering (BPEL)?<br />
integrating various systems, orcl back end, siebel front end.<br />
help user improve process flows.  beyond data integration?</li>
</ol>
<p><em>sam</em>: all the CIOs are saying that&#8217;s where their focus is today. they made<br />
investments, now focused on building customer facing apps that tie together<br />
the various IT investments they made.<br />
Its&#8217; still very hard, and while N8 and others will do well it is still a hard and<br />
long process for them to do this right.<br />
The CIO who said he has no new initiatives then told me they were building a<br />
new customer application that could only be made because of the previous<br />
investments and he can tie them together.</p>
<p><em>david</em>: I concur. People are trying to figure out what they bought. A lot of<br />
functionality  still isn&#8217;t being used.  And tying into initiatives with SOX,<br />
to see how these can be more properly managed in the compliance process.</p>
<p><em>John</em>: At AT&amp;T, my wife was in the department called &quot;common language&quot;.<br />
she found 400 systems in all the different operating companies, needed to<br />
build systems that did nothing but integrate and talk with other systems.</p>
<ol class="arabic simple" start="2">
<li>It seems there&#8217;s a shift to more business innovation.<br />
Open Source is a technical capability but ultimately relates to the business<br />
model. So how will business innovation be a major thrust?</li>
</ol>
<p><em>sam</em>: I think the tech innovation is actually increasing because of this<br />
whole infrastructure.  Just gotten easier to do many things.<br />
In the past we had disruptions that flushed all the old investments. New<br />
apps did half of what the old mainframe apps did.  Just trying to catch up.<br />
But now we have all these incredible investments to leverage. I believe we<br />
still have a lot of technical innovation happening. And it&#8217;s software.</p>
<p>There is a lot of innovation that&#8217;s not interesting. how much better does<br />
your spreadsheet, word processor, email have to be for you to use it?<br />
I&#8217;d argue a lot better, as I&#8217;m just overwhelmed.</p>
<p>The other part is tech innovation in new platforms like this TREO. This costs more<br />
than the last 2 PCs we bought, and is just as powerful as PCs were a couple<br />
years ago, and really hard to program.  These sell at 4X the rates.  150M<br />
PCs, vs. 600M cellphones sold over the last year.</p>
<p>Layered on top of that innovation we have biz models challenging the<br />
industry. the biggest thing we need to do is things that matter to the<br />
customers. many biz plans are still incremental feature improvements, and<br />
that won&#8217;t make the difference to somebody that will buy them.</p>
<ol class="arabic simple" start="3">
<li>I agree integration is a big thing, WS and XML driving a lot of this.<br />
But other trends, like VoIP. And wireless phone was part of cellular<br />
networks. These 3 technologies are growing in parallel and are causing a change in the biz process,<br />
which may be different from pure simple integration.  Do you agree?</li>
</ol>
<p><em>sam</em>: I think we&#8217;ve become global. It is just as easy to work distant as<br />
with people in the next office. VoIP, Skype, IM collab. Literally I have<br />
told my kids to go to bed using IM in the next room (It&#8217;s just wrong, I<br />
know!).  I&#8217;ve done the same on a trip to London.  (PIR means &quot;parent in<br />
room&quot;).  These have changed our workflow. We need to embrace that.</p>
<p><em>steve</em>: Responding to the previous quetion, offshore outsourcing is another<br />
business model innovation. Creating a product for $50K that you can sell is<br />
a boon for a company.  The new browser apps are also great. Suddenly we&#8217;re<br />
calling it SaaS, we&#8217;ve been doing it for 10 years but it is now becoming<br />
widely accepted as the way to go.</p>
<p><em>sam</em>: outsourcing not just the lowest cost labor, but to find the best<br />
talent. keep an employee on a boat in bermuda.<br />
If you call Jet Blue to make a travel reservation, you&#8217;re speaking to a<br />
housewife on DSL in Utah or anywhere, routing using VoIP PBX.<br />
Tap into a workforce, bring the job to the employee, who can make decision<br />
about where they want to live.  Reach talent pools anywhere.</p>
<p><em>john</em>: there easily factors of 10X or more productivity difference in<br />
software development. So if you&#8217;re a below avg programmer you better find<br />
some differentiation. If you&#8217;re a superstar programmer, you can live<br />
wherever you want.</p>
<p><em>ron weissman</em>: I think things are worse than Sam says they are.<br />
To David, Steve: what are you doing differently to counteract the reality<br />
Sam talks about for 90% of the venture-backed, IT focused companies?</p>
<p><em>david</em>: we&#8217;re going after department level, vs crack a 7-figure sale. And the<br />
problems we&#8217;re targeting are recognized at a department level. We can do this with<br />
telesales, web sales, and then move to a quasi-traditional model for<br />
enterprise.  Our product also supports 2-legged vs 4-legged sales call, as<br />
it&#8217;s so simple we don&#8217;t require a technical sales engineer (SE) along with the sales guy.<br />
It&#8217;s also an incremental sale.  We get a sale in Q1, Q2, and Q3. Not waiting for the<br />
big one to hit, we can get them to see the value, and go back in where it<br />
makes sense to make the onsite call, otherwise we just call them up.<br />
As for viral spread, we&#8217;ve gotten 5 of our customers in a viral nature. 2 from<br />
consultants using our software doing a project and their customer asked for how<br />
they did that.  We got 2 customers when people left to new companies and<br />
brought us in.  More recently, a manager went to a new company and said:<br />
&quot;we&#8217;re going to standardize on this as we saved $100K in the previous customer.&quot;</p>
<p>We are trying to take our most vociferous champions and get them to move to<br />
a new company to bring us in <img src='http://www.barneypell.com/wp-includes/images/smilies/icon_smile.gif' alt=':)' class='wp-smiley' /> </p>
<p><em>steve</em>: offshore companies find it hard to market to US companies. and US<br />
companies struggle to provide value.</p>
<ol class="arabic simple" start="4">
<li>I was at Bell Labs long ago. Lately I&#8217;m doing bizdevelopment for<br />
offshoring. Finding that the level of dissatisfaction of companies with some<br />
offshore experience is high, like 35% of companies I&#8217;m talking to. Some of<br />
our clients used other services and are now talking to us. What&#8217;s your<br />
experience of customer dissatisfaction?</li>
</ol>
<p><em>david</em>: In our (limited) experience, everyone we&#8217;ve talked to who did<br />
outsourcing, for development or BPO, had some level of dissatisfaction. One customer<br />
said I&#8217;ve decreaesed my cost of failure, not increased my odds of success.<br />
People tend to throw problems to someone else. You can&#8217;t throw an undefined<br />
process at someone else, especially lacking cultural context you have here,<br />
and hope it&#8217;s going to work well.  Hopefully this is a learning process, so<br />
the next round we&#8217;ll know what we&#8217;re doing.  You always have to have the<br />
company store before you put the franchise out.</p>
<p><em>steve</em>: you can take advantage of outsourcing team to avoid the dangers. Like<br />
my 7 deadly sins.  In doing outsourcing, you can now adopt a process.</p>
<p><em>sam</em>: biggest problem with outsourcing it is got hyped very quickly. I<br />
started outsourcing in Microsoft in 1992, for tech support. An indian employee<br />
left, set up operation to do it. Our expectations were very low, and it<br />
worked. We started doing more and more.  People got into a big process<br />
change, didn&#8217;t know how to measure and commnicate it, overestimated the<br />
return they would get.  It makes sense, but not in every case, and we<br />
haven&#8217;t gottent to a point to define that and that&#8217;s part of the<br />
dissatisfaction.</p>
<p><em>John</em>: Something comes out, good idea, gets overhyped. works well for some<br />
folks, not others, and you sort it out.  there are plenty of bigger<br />
companies who established outsource development teams a long time ago, sorted<br />
through that, it works pretty well.<br />
with smaller cos, interesting thing about Steve&#8217;s efforts, it is often<br />
pretty random. sometimes great, sometimes atrocious.</p>
<p><em>steve</em>: I outsourced from sunnyvale to palo alto and still struggled.</p>
<p><em>sam</em>: I outsource all the time. My associate and I prototype stuff, then he<br />
goes to rent-a-coder, puts up a job. the most we ever paid was $350 for a<br />
job. people work for 2 weeks. One guy fell behidn schedule, he offered $50<br />
more and the guy had it done the next day.<br />
Just describe in a paragraph or two and it works.<br />
It&#8217;s so cheap we can submit it to 3 peopel and hope one works. But there is<br />
mgmt overhead you have to deal with.</p>
<ol class="arabic simple" start="5">
<li>The big players are going after small and midsize customers. does that<br />
work with these biz dynamics you outlined?</li>
</ol>
<p><em>sam</em>: the big challenge is the cost of integration is really hard. hard for<br />
msft to mange 40K developers and ship an integrated product suite.<br />
GE is a conglomerate, don&#8217;t need to coordinate.  when you get into software, if<br />
you&#8217;re selling to the same customer base they expect it all to work<br />
together.<br />
that&#8217;s a really complex problem at scale of development we&#8217;ve never seen.<br />
I don&#8217;t know how Microsoft builds the next big product that works with the last<br />
big product. How does xbox connect with my pc, phone, server. Just<br />
incredibly hard to do, different internal formats, optimized around<br />
different things.</p>
<p>Oracle buys Peoplesoft, what do they do?  Keep the codebase or destroy it?<br />
Just before, Peoplesoft bought JD Edwards.<br />
Microsoft has 4 such systems, which they are now trying to integrate.</p>
<p>Scale breaks. Economically they have to integrate. but for having a product<br />
strategy, we haven&#8217;t hit the problem and seen the solution yet.</p>
<ol class="arabic simple" start="6">
<li>Do you really believe the slide that shows only the 5B companies will be<br />
profitable, if the value will be cut 10x?</li>
</ol>
<p><em>sam</em>: the big companies will survive for a long time. The cashflows on ORCL<br />
and Microsoft are huge. THe question is how do they get growth?<br />
the only way they know how to do it right now is by acquisition. When you&#8217;re<br />
a 10B, 40B business like Microsoft, they grew larger then all their competitors<br />
combined as a business.  I don&#8217;t know how they get growth.  Spin out<br />
businesses. Conslidate.<br />
But their cashflows will allow them to survive for a long time.</p>
<ol class="arabic simple" start="6">
<li>With commodity hw and systems level platforms, now we can grow downmarket<br />
and new geographies. do you agree?</li>
</ol>
<p><em>sam</em>: growth from a pc standpoint: 150M pcs sold. China is the #2 or #3 PC<br />
consumer in the world. interesting market, but real challenges how to price<br />
in these markets to prevent piracy if you&#8217;re a software company.<br />
if we can get the price of a pc down to $100, things change, more people can<br />
afford them.<br />
these $600 cellphones with $100/month services are going the wrong way. In<br />
India, I met with Nokia. they&#8217;re designing a phone you can buy for $10, be<br />
profitable on $8/month rent.  That $8 phone is far more powerful than my<br />
TREO, with video etc. Why doesn&#8217;t that phone come into our market and take<br />
our busienss down even further?<br />
I don&#8217;t know how to get growth other than lowering prices so more and more<br />
people use it.</p>
<ol class="arabic simple" start="7">
<li>If you&#8217;re saying we need another quantum price drop, then we need a<br />
similar drop with software price&#8230;</li>
</ol>
<p><em>sam</em>: yes, I think we&#8217;re in need of another overhaul in software industyr. it&#8217;s<br />
stressing out. that&#8217;s why you&#8217;re seeing advertising model emerge.<br />
I talked to CEO of GM, trying to get media inside the car.  He said: &quot;at $250/month of<br />
ads or services, I can actually give you a car&quot;.  That&#8217;s believable!<br />
These devices, phones, cars, are just vehicles for delivering advertising.</p>
<p><em>john</em>: Microsoft always thought the hardware should be free. Intel always thought the software<br />
should be free&#8230;</p>
<ol class="arabic simple" start="8">
<li><em>barney pell</em>: Doesn&#8217;t the belief that software must come down in price reflect a belief<br />
that (a) there is no more major value attainable by software, or (b) the providers<br />
can&#8217;t capture a good share of that value?</li>
</ol>
<p><em>sam</em>: It is true that if you can truly generate value then you can make<br />
money. The challenge, as investors, is to show you have a must-have for that<br />
customer to be competitive, therefore they can attract value.  customers<br />
are willing to pay for stuff that grows and improves their business.<br />
many companies are struggling to show this.<br />
It is tough to integrate to let them realize that value.<br />
Many companies come in with a TCO or ROI pitch, e.g. saving a customer $2M per year.<br />
They say all these people are doing this, we chop the process and eliminate<br />
guys.<br />
You walk into the customer, give them the list of the 40 names of employees<br />
they can fire because they bought your software.<br />
It&#8217;s mythical, there aren&#8217;t the 40 employees you can eliminate.</p>
<ol class="arabic simple" start="9">
<li>We tried outsourcing, first in ireland, then india. now in malaysia we<br />
own our own development team, use our own software and sell that to customers.<br />
some of the things like skype and glbal platforms, we see lots of<br />
opportunity there. we have strong global demand.<br />
so stop looking at US markets, turn on its side, and go for a slither and<br />
use global resources and people and selling.</li>
</ol>
<p><em>steve</em>: One startup I&#8217;m advising has a line in a specification saying &quot;yes, we&#8217;ll<br />
support internationalization&quot;.  I&#8217;m saying do that quickly. Ebay lost out in<br />
international markets as they didn&#8217;t address it quickly enough.</p>
</div>
</div>
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		<title>Snap.com raises $10M in VC Funding, led by Mayfield</title>
		<link>http://www.barneypell.com/2005/07/snap-com-raises-10m-in-vc-funding-led-by-mayfield/</link>
		<comments>http://www.barneypell.com/2005/07/snap-com-raises-10m-in-vc-funding-led-by-mayfield/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 20 Jul 2005 21:18:43 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Barney</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Ecommerce]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Search]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Venture Capital]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://174.120.172.92/~barneype/?p=46</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Mayfield and Snap announced this week that Mayfield led a $10M venture capital investment round in Snap.com. I am proud to report that I helped to make this deal happen. My partner at Mayfield, Allen Morgan, will go on the Snap board of directors. It might seem puzzling why you would invest in a general [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Mayfield and Snap <a href="http://www.snap.com/wordpress/index.php?m=200507">announced</a> this week that <a href="http://www.mayfield.com">Mayfield</a> led a $10M venture<br />
capital investment round in Snap.com.  I am proud to report that I helped to make this<br />
deal happen.  My partner at Mayfield, <a href="http://allensblog.typepad.com">Allen Morgan</a>, will go on the Snap board of directors.</p>
<p>It might seem puzzling why you would invest in a general<br />
search company (perhaps as opposed to<br />
vertical search companies that might have more specific focus and could be<br />
acquired and merged into offerings by the incumbents), in the presence of so many giants. The <a<br />
href="http://www.usatoday.com/tech/news/techinnovations/2005-07-19-snapgoogle_x.htm">article about Snap in USA Today</a> suggests that Snap only wins if they can unseat Google.  However, I think Snap<br />
represents an good investment, without any need that they become the new #1 or #2 general search engine.  Below are my thoughts about the general search landscape and some major themes that Snap addresses.  (Disclaimer: I<br />
am currently an Entrepreur in Residence at Mayfield and have a personal<br />
interest in Snap; the thoughts below are my own and should not be taken to<br />
represent the thoughts of Mayfield or Snap).</p>
<p>Online advertising is today a massive market that continues to grow<br />
rapidly. The U.S. paid search component of this market was $4B in 2004 and<br />
is predicted to grow to $6B by &#8217;06, with a worldwide paid search market<br />
growing to $23B by 2010. The paid search market comprises both search<br />
portals (e.g. Google Adwords), where users go specifically to search, and<br />
contextual advertising, where users are exposed to ads in the context of<br />
viewing publisher&#8217;s websites (e.g. Google Adsense ads on NYT.com).  The<br />
contextual advertising market is growing even faster than search portals (a<br />
desktop client advertising market is also growing quickly, but represents a<br />
much smaller portion of the market).</p>
<p><span id="more-46"></span></p>
<p>While the business (in both these categories) is dominated by GOOG and YHOO,<br />
there is room in the market for new entrants. Users, Advertisers, and<br />
Publishers are willing to try multiple solutions. Users regularly use<br />
multiple search engines &#8211; both broad and focused. For searches with<br />
commercial intent (40-60% of all searches), search engine marketing tricks<br />
are making organic result rankings increasingly less effective. In addition,<br />
users still have to do a lot of searching among today&#8217;s unstructured results<br />
to make purchasing decisions, which is leading to an emphasis on focused<br />
search with new UIs and added structure for different verticals (e.g. jobs,<br />
shopping).  Advertisers are frustrated with lack of transparency and control<br />
and the difficulty of budgeting and managing pay-per-click campaigns.<br />
Publishers want the greatest revenue per page and transparency into their<br />
advertiser and user behavior, and they routinely experiment with different<br />
advertising networks.</p>
<p>While current leaders are innovative and aware of these issues, there are a<br />
variety of &#8220;innovator&#8217;s dilemmas&#8221; they face in responding to new entrants<br />
and resulting market shifts. New payment models, such as a shift to<br />
cost-per-action (CPA), along with increased transparency, will be hard to<br />
address initially without losing revenue. This pattern was observed in<br />
previous shifts from cost-per-impression to cost-per-click, where rates hit<br />
a new floor and gradually built up as the market matured.  New user<br />
interfaces and emphasis on market segments with commercial intent pose<br />
similar challenges for incumbents. While a new player can offer a different<br />
interface and attract users that value it, an incumbent must conduct careful<br />
experiments off the home page and only adopt changes that suit their<br />
existing broad user base.</p>
<p>This combination of (1) major industry shift to CPA, (2) opportunity for UI<br />
innovation, (3) focus on searches with commercial intent, (4) ease of<br />
switching, (5) PR and word-of-mouth momentum for standout products, and (6)<br />
innovators dilemmas for incumbents to address these issues has opened up a<br />
significant white space of opportunity for new search entrants to find a<br />
path to rapid growth.  Even a small share of this profitable market, in the<br />
presence of fierce competition among incumbents, promises high exit<br />
valuations.</p>
<p>Snap plays to all of these themes with a team who has done it<br />
before, a promising initial product, encouraging user adoption and<br />
testimonials, and an attractive valuation. While it is certainly high risk<br />
to enter a place with such strong competitors, the rewards are equally high.</p>
<p>The discussion above is not even comprehensive of the innovations visible<br />
already today in Snap (with more to come, of course!). I encourage everyone<br />
to try out Snap with at least the following:</p>
<ul>
<li>search for &#8220;digital camera&#8221;. Note you get both query completion, and then<br />
are taken to a nice vertical search results page.</p>
<li>search for &#8220;tools&#8221;.  Check out the result for Craftsman Tools, that lets you<br />
select from pull-down list of the type of tools you want to browse, then<br />
takes you directly to that section of the site.</p>
<li>search for &#8220;ebay&#8221;.  Note the results page includes most popular links within<br />
ebay; a screen shot of the homepage; a company snapshot (including stock<br />
chart); news headlines; popular searches related to ebay; ebay-specific<br />
offers like downloads and discounts; and even a summary of important<br />
auctions on ebay right now.  This looks nothing like what you find on<br />
existing search engines and points to how much room there is for<br />
innovation in search user experience.</p>
<li>search for &#8220;hybrid cars&#8221;.  Note the logos in the listings, which helps you<br />
figure out which ones are real and which are spam. Note that none of them<br />
are spam&#8230;</p>
<li>search the news (click on the link at the top right corner of the snap<br />
homepage).  Try out the refine-as-fast-as-you-type search (similar to X1 for<br />
desktop search). You can search for articles with a word, and then search<br />
within those articles restricting by date/time, headline, and source.
</ul>
<p>Lastly, go download Snap Ultrasearch (promoted on the homepage), and try it<br />
out. You won&#8217;t be sorry!  I&#8217;ll write more tomorrow about what I like about<br />
this new Ultrasearch product. But needless to say, it definitely shows Snap is thinking outside the search box.</p>
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		<title>Marc Cuban at AlwaysOn05</title>
		<link>http://www.barneypell.com/2005/07/marc-cuban-at-alwayson05/</link>
		<comments>http://www.barneypell.com/2005/07/marc-cuban-at-alwayson05/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 20 Jul 2005 19:44:38 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Barney</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Digital Media]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Search]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Venture Capital]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Weblogs]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://174.120.172.92/~barneype/?p=45</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Fireside Chat with Marc Cuban, interviewed by Allen Delattre At Always On 2005 July 20, 2005 I thought it was an interesting discussion. Here are the points I found most noteworthy: blog search: I agree with Marc&#8217;s comments about the growing importance of Blog Search, and his view that the aggregators will capture the market [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong>
<p>Fireside Chat with Marc Cuban, interviewed by Allen Delattre</p>
<p>At Always On 2005</p>
<p>July 20, 2005<br />
</strong></p>
<p>I thought it was an interesting<br />
discussion. Here are the points I found most noteworthy:</p>
<ul>
<li>blog search: I agree with Marc&#8217;s comments about the growing importance of<br />
Blog Search, and his view that the aggregators will capture the market<br />
value from the long tail of blog search.  I personally like<br />
www.blogpulse.com the best. Cuban&#8217;s new IceRocket seems to be direct<br />
knockoff. Blogpulse gets my vote for best blog search engine not just<br />
because my friends from Whizbang days were the founders of this service,<br />
but because it has the best analytics and, unlike Technorati, it hasn&#8217;t<br />
yet hit a scaling barrier.</p>
<li> Releasing movies simultaneously in all channels: I think that&#8217;s a great<br />
idea, and it is exciting to see Marc Cuban in a position to lead the way<br />
here.</p>
<li>Interactive TV and accountable TV advertising models: I agree with him that models for TV advertising are going to change, and that this will be enabled by interactive TV (and time shifting services like Tivo). The 30 second<br />
spot is dying (George Gilder made a comment about this in a preceding<br />
session at Always On), and new measurable forms of advertising are being<br />
developed to take its place.  I don&#8217;t expect it will be as simple as<br />
pay-for-placement, but I do think internet and tv advertising models will<br />
come together in some interesting blend over the next few years.</p>
<li> Dennis Rodman and Paris Hilton&#8217;s intuitive sense for media<br />
manipulation: indeed! (I hope that previous reference doesn&#8217;t cause my blog<br />
to become misclassified&#8230;).
</ul>
<p>Below are my (mostly raw) notes from this session.</p>
<p><span id="more-45"></span></p>
<p>Notes by Barney Pell</p>
<p><a href="http://www.blogmaverick.com/">Marc Cuban</a>: Government can&#8217;t do innovation.  Hollywood is even worse<br />
NBA general manager&#8217;s #1 job is not to win championships, but to keep his<br />
job.  Similarly, Hollywood managers #1 job is to keep their job, and meet<br />
all the starlets you can.  That friction helps.</p>
<p>No matter what DRM you do on content, it will still get cracked, and<br />
they&#8217;ll say it&#8217;s not strong enough. For getting content out, the most<br />
important issues are really about control.</p>
<p>For control on content: our NBA team tried to push out own branded<br />
merchandise with own online store, whereas other teams were supposed to sell<br />
through NBA store only. We sold on our own and did better than them.  They<br />
tried to wheel us back in.</p>
<p><em>q:</em> There was a survey for average consumers, on &#8220;what is holding you back?&#8221; They said<br />
the solutions being offered in the market are way too complex for the aavg<br />
consumer to want to buy or figure it out and get value from it.</p>
<p><em>Cuban:</em> I don&#8217;t agree.  How many use vchip, PIP, etc?  Tech is alwasy too slow,<br />
too expnsive, and too ahrd to use. but then prices gets to the point where<br />
as long as it does one thing it doesn&#8217;t matter.  We used to look at someone<br />
with cellphone as gauche.</p>
<p>Also, surveying people: it&#8217;s not the job of the consumer to think what best<br />
solutions are to the potential needs in the future. People don&#8217;t think about<br />
ultimate tech solutions. Consumers follow the path of least resistance. To<br />
talk to yhour friends and family, the path is the cellphone and becoming<br />
cheap enough to use it.  Overall use complexity doesn&#8217;t matter as long as<br />
you can do the one thing you want to do.  So focus groups are always<br />
misleading&#8230;</p>
<p>That brings us to <a href="http://blogs.icerocket.com">blogs.icerocket.com</a>.  At this point in time in the<br />
blogosphere, there&#8217;s all this discussion about ability to searchblogs, tag<br />
blogs. technorati has been self-proclaimed for tag searches. we&#8217;re changing<br />
icerocket name to blogscour.  and there&#8217;s blogpulse and others.  they allow<br />
you to search for references in blogs. So I can search for myself,<br />
mavericks, to see what consuemrs are saying as representative of consumer<br />
consensus.</p>
<p>This is different from search, as the&#8217;re a real-time nature to blogs, and a<br />
passion to blogs. I did a search on &#8220;Marc Cuban Pittsburgh pirates&#8221;. Or<br />
track our movie about Enron, tracking consumer sentiment. When I search for<br />
these on Google or Yahoo I see the same results every time.  Icerock enables<br />
me to know everyday what&#8217;s being added to the blog consciousness. That&#8217;s a<br />
unique differentiating point going on in search right now. Depending on<br />
where blogs go, how much traction and usage they get from readers, will be<br />
interesing to see the balance between people searching for relevant info vs<br />
timely info. Google has been able to handle one but not the other, so that&#8217;s<br />
why we got into blog search.</p>
<p><em>q:</em> blogging is growing virally, exponentially.  do you see that becoming the<br />
defacto way people communicate about breaking issues.  how will my mother<br />
become a blogger?</p>
<p><em>Cuban:</em> people will still go to outlets they trust and relate to. Fox, CNN are<br />
brands, trusted outlets. But there&#8217;s also a fragmentation or long tail<br />
issue. More people watch cable than broadcast tv, as there are more<br />
channels.  For bloggers it&#8217;s more difficult to stand out as there are so<br />
many choices.  For bloggers to standout and become branded, you have to go<br />
outside the medium, outside blogging, and promote yourself just like<br />
everyone else.  It&#8217;s easier right now, as it&#8217;s new and different. But soon<br />
it will just be another medium where people have to compete and work to<br />
stand out.  This also really leads to aggregators. The individuals won&#8217;t<br />
have a marketing budget, but on an aggregated basis they&#8217;ll have the<br />
marketing muscle. The aggregated blogs will be marketed as a group. That&#8217;s<br />
where I see a lot of value.</p>
<p><em>q:</em> What&#8217;s your position on podcasting?</p>
<p><em>Cuban:</em> I have 2 articles about podcasting on my blog.  The economics are<br />
analogous to streaming for individual podcasters. It&#8217;s different because<br />
with streaming you&#8217;re tied to a device, vs podcasting you&#8217;re<br />
mobile. Regardless, it&#8217;s a long tail phenomena. Podcasting for individuals<br />
will be a labor of love and fun, but your revenue per hour won&#8217;t be minimum<br />
wage.  With that said, it&#8217;s a viable distribution medium for existing media,<br />
like Howard Stern, etc who already have name and demand.  We&#8217;ll take HDNet<br />
world report and make a podcast, it&#8217;s a great brand extender.  But for an<br />
individual to make a business out of it, podcasting is hot, easy, cheap to<br />
distribute, but you&#8217;ll be long tail so it&#8217;s difficult to make money out of it.</p>
<p>Marc Canter: This man is fighting the fight for us to change hollywood. talk<br />
about releasing a movie on movies, theatres, and dvd at the same time!</p>
<p><em>Cuban:</em> My partner Todd Wagner and I own several movie theatres, like Landmark,<br />
geared toward more adult audiences (not disney films). And HdNet, multiple million<br />
subscribers. And HDNet films, where our first move was &#8220;Enron: the smartest guys in<br />
the room&#8221;, which was a real success.</p>
<p>Traditionally the gates are defined by hollywood.  Most money made in the<br />
first week. Studios then make a separate push when go to dvd window. Our<br />
feeling was, why not just release in all forms at the same time and let<br />
consumers decide how they want to receive it. HdNet movies, HdNet<br />
subscribers, theatres, embarcadero, or on dvd on the same date. We&#8217;ll make<br />
you pay a premium for the dvd as prefer theatre initially for costs, but<br />
we&#8217;ll give you the choice.  I don&#8217;t care if you buy a movie on a keychain,<br />
flashdrive, etc: I want to provide it to you in whatever format you want.<br />
Hollywood thinks they have the right formats for you, but we think consumers<br />
want to choose.  Some theatres say they won&#8217;t carry out movies as they<br />
believe in day and date.  I say: look at the Mavericks, every game is sold<br />
out yet they&#8217;re on TV at the same time.  People want to get out of the<br />
house. Good things will happen.</p>
<p><em>q:</em> IPTV, how fast to have it in my house?</p>
<p><em>Cuban:</em> If you have direct tv or dish, you have it now. Not a question of will<br />
you have it, but question of when. Over next 12 months will start to take<br />
off, as Fox will really push it in direct tv. And you can experience it in<br />
video on demand (VOD). Pay per click, cost per action, will translate to<br />
TV. To fulfill that you need some form of interactive tv.</p>
<p>IPTV is just a diferent way of fulfilling demand. However you design your<br />
network, as streaming, broadcast, or internet&#8230; Distribution over internet<br />
won&#8217;t be as big as it could have been, as it fell apart with the failure of<br />
the multicast initiative, which was far more bandwidth efficient. They all just<br />
thought it wouldn&#8217;t be a big deal for a while. Now that while is here, and<br />
having to deliver everything on unicast or p2p bittorrent type basis will<br />
slow that down.</p>
<p><em>q:</em> how many of your potforlio companies are showing up in asia?</p>
<p><em>Cuban:</em> Zero. Complexity rises as travel rises. It&#8217;s easier to do deals closer to home<br />
even though there are some cost savings working it remotely.</p>
<p><em>q:</em> When will you make hdnet and hdmovies available on cable?</p>
<p><em>Cuban:</em> They are available now. but not on comcast&#8230; so call comcast and ask them<br />
to carry these! HDNet will also have the NHL in high def.</p>
<p><em>q:</em> How was Dennis Rodman as a houseguest?</p>
<p><em>Cuban:</em> He just lied around and watched cartoon network. The two people I<br />
learned the most about marketing from were Bill Gates, Michael Dell, Dennis<br />
Rodman, and Paris Hilton.  Dennis didn&#8217;t always know why what he did with<br />
the media was the right thing, but when you listen to him you see he was<br />
right. And Paris too. They played the media like a fiddle and know just what<br />
do to.</p>
<p>[Tag: <a href="http://technorati.com/tag/AlwaysOn2005" rel="tag">AlwaysOn2005</a>]</p>
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		<title>Allen Morgan&#8217;s Blog in Time Magazine&#8217;s 50 Coolest Websites</title>
		<link>http://www.barneypell.com/2005/06/allen-morgans-blog-in-time-magazines-50-coolest-websites/</link>
		<comments>http://www.barneypell.com/2005/06/allen-morgans-blog-in-time-magazines-50-coolest-websites/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 26 Jun 2005 20:49:17 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Barney</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Venture Capital]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Weblogs]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://174.120.172.92/~barneype/?p=38</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Time Magazine published a list of 50 Coolest Websites for 2005. Recognizing the growing importance of blogs, they broke out blogs as a separate segment within that list (50 Coolest Websites 2005: Blogs). My Mayfield colleague Allen Morgan&#8217;s Blog was listed as the coolest blog/website for entrepreneurs: Allen Morgan, managing director at Mayfieldâ€”a venture capital [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Time Magazine published a list of <a href="http://www.time.com/time/2005/websites/">50 Coolest Websites for 2005</a>. Recognizing the growing importance of blogs, they broke out blogs as a separate segment within that list (<a href="http://www.time.com/time/business/article/0,8599,1072872,00.html?promoid=rss_business">50 Coolest Websites 2005: Blogs</a>).<br />
My Mayfield colleague <a href="www.allensblog.typepad.com">Allen Morgan&#8217;s Blog</a> was listed as the coolest blog/website for entrepreneurs:</p>
<blockquote><p>Allen Morgan, managing director at Mayfieldâ€”a venture capital firm in Menlo Park, Californiaâ€”backer of Beatnik, PlanetOut, Tribe and Pluck â€”guides entrepreneurs on how to pitch ideas and get financing. The recent &#8220;10 Commandments&#8221; series on how to handle those critical meetings with VCs is a must-read. </p></blockquote>
<p>I agree with Time&#8217;s endorsement &#8212; Allen&#8217;s 10 commandments series is great. I also agree with Dave Panos, CEO of <a href="http://www.pluck.com">Pluck</a>, who commented to Allen, &#8220;I am particularly impressed that you pulled off such a feat with a mean-time-between posts of five weeks.&#8221; It shows that focus and quality can matter more than freshness even in the blogosphere; at least this true for media critics.<br />
Allen was actually an inspiration for me to start blogging, right around the time he convinced me to join Mayfield. I imagined that I would have lots of content about insights from an Entrepreneur in Residence, kind of like an entrepreneurial undercover agent sharing how things really happen on the other side of the funding table. When I later brainstormed with Allen about how to achieve both substance and discretion in such a blog, Allen summarized along the following lines: &#8220;As long as you don&#8217;t specifically identify any of the companies, entrepreneurs, or Mayfield partners, and you only say good things about Mayfield, you should feel free to blog about anything you like!&#8221;</p>
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		<title>Searching for VC Investments: Multiple strategic dimensions</title>
		<link>http://www.barneypell.com/2005/06/searching-for-vc-investments-multiple-strategic-dimensions/</link>
		<comments>http://www.barneypell.com/2005/06/searching-for-vc-investments-multiple-strategic-dimensions/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 06 Jun 2005 20:28:43 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Barney</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Venture Capital]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://174.120.172.92/~barneype/?p=33</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Bill Burnham has a post on &#8220;Deal Flow Is Dead, Long Live Thesis Driven Investing. He argues that the amount of VC money chasing companies today means that the traditional strategy of relying on deal flow is no longer successful except for the few firms with the very highest reputation or a lock on local [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Bill Burnham has a post on &#8220;<a title="Burnham's Beat: Deal Flow Is Dead, Long Live Thesis Driven Investing" href="http://billburnham.blogs.com/burnhamsbeat/2005/05/deal_flow_is_de.html">Deal Flow Is Dead, Long Live Thesis Driven Investing</a>. He argues that the amount of VC money chasing companies today means that the traditional strategy of relying on deal flow is no longer successful except for the few firms with the very highest reputation or a lock on local markets. He summarizes the old strategy with an analogy:</p>
<blockquote><p>Itâ€™s as if Venture Capitalists were Grizzly Bears: Just stake out a good position in the middle of the best salmon run, watch the fish go by, and occasionally swat the best looking fish out of the air.  In this model VCs are cast as true renaissance men, capable of doing a communications equipment deal one day and an alternative energy deal the next.  They have no need to be experts in specific industries but instead pass judgment on the quality and pedigree of start-up teams with the belief that their connections and experience can help get any company off the ground.</p></blockquote>
<p>I agree with his observation that successful VCs will not be able to simply rely on broad deal flow but will have to be more focused, thesis driven, and proactive. However, I think this evolution it not so much a shift from one approach (deal flow) to another (investment thesis) as it is an increase in the amount of work VC&#8217;s have to do. The discussion actually points at a framework for investment strategy.</p>
<p><span id="more-33"></span><br />
Here are some elements of such a framework:</p>
<ol>
<li> push: low (don&#8217;t do any work to get good deal flow) to high (invest heavily in marketing, relationships, and pipelines to get great deal flow)
<li> pull: low (only evaluate deals that come in the door) to high (only evaluate deals that you go out and find)
<li> scope: general (e.g. any possible investment, from real estate to nanotech) to specialized (e.g. nanomaterials for construction)
<li> theory vs. data driven: theory driven (decide on the kinds of deals you are looking for before looking) to data driven (decide on the kind of deals you like based on each deal as it comes)
<li> comparison: limited (consider one likely company) to comprehensive (consider all available options related to a potential investment)
</ol>
<p>Each element is a different dimension of a search strategy.  I&#8217;ve listed endpoints of each dimension. There are many intermediate points.  For example, you can work hard to set up a great deal flow around a moderately scoped area (e.g. internet).  Then take deals that come in, and evaluate each deal. When you see a deal that you like, you then develop a thesis about why you like it, and go out and find more options to compare against. The suggested approach argued in the article is extreme on my 5 dimensions: no push, all pull, very specialized, fully theory driven, and comprehensive comparison.<br />
That certainly represents one point in the strategy space. Reducing effort to obtain good deal-flow is not without its limitations, however. Most importantly, that highly deliberative pull approach can be too slow to find deals in a dynamic competitive environment. While you might find some good companies when you have your thesis ready, some of the best companies that embody that thesis may already have gone to investors with better deal flow. In my Mayfield colleague <a href="http://allensblog.typepad.com/">Allen Morgan</a>&#8216;s words, such an approach is &#8220;a good way to find what would have been great deals if only you had been there in time.&#8221;<br />
Thus, I think there is room for considerable variation in search strategy based on the assets and capabilties a VC or firm brings to the table.  If you can get great deal flow, get it.  If you have the time to evaluate a space of options before choosing a deal that looks promising, use that time wisely. And if there are enough good opportunities within narrow space to get the returns you seek, and you have or can obtain the relevant expertise, then specialize as much as possible within those limits.<br />
<a href="http://blog.softtechvc.com/2005/05/bill_burnham_on.html">Jeff Clavier&#8217;s comments</a> on Bill&#8217;s article addresses some good points on how to set up deal-flow with universities and research centers, and on the Entrepreneur In Residence strategy as a means to obtain knowledge, focus and dealflow within important areas consistent with an investment thesis. As an EIR myself, I agree with Jeff&#8217;s observations on this topic.</p>
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