Author: Jonas Brandon

  • Startup Weekend Toronto starts tonight

    Startup Weekend Toronto get’s underway tonight at 6pm. They are completely sold out, and even if half of those who signed up actually show up then there will be more than enough people to get a fun, and real, startup off the ground.

    A lot of interesting people have been introducing themselves on the forums.

    It’s hard to know what to expect from something like Startup Weekend. Like any startup, everything has to start with a good idea. Instead of starting with a business idea however, StartupWeekend is starting with an event and a group of people. That doesn’t have to be a negative thing, in fact, it can probably be a positive thing.

    I will be dropping by StartupWeekend tonight and again near the end of the weekend and I will be reporting back all of the non-confidential bits that I can find out about what is coming together.

    Experienced Startup founders that I have talked to have all had similar feelings about StartupWeekend. It is something we really want to encourage because it builds a startup culture and exposes a lot of new people to the world of starting a business, but at the same time we feel practically paralyzed with fear at the idea of have our business partners all chosen for us and having to negotiate simply to settle on the ‘what’ that is being built.

    StartupWeekend is, however, anything but a joke. A real company will be incorporated, shares will be divided up and various equity incentives will be distributed to those who perform better or contribute more.

    Update: Jonas and I came for the opening of StartupWeekend. There were at least 30 participants in the room and there was a lot of energy. It was a mix of people across all disciplines. The only concern I had was that someone mentioned that 7 developers didn’t show up, which would l leave them short I think.
    (more…)

  • What happens when it all goes wrong?

    I have been meeting with a decent number of startups in and around Toronto lately. I have been doing this for a few reasons. The most obvious is that I want to find interesting startups to profile here on StartupNorth, I want to encourage people to keep at it, and more selfishly, I find startups, whether they are my own or someone else’s, fascinating.

    When I came across this chronicle of the ArsDigita story, I was fascinated. Philip Greenspun went through it all. An incredible ramp up of his business, strong response from customers and a solid development team that was producing really great products.

    If you remember Ars back then, they were a big deal. The Ars Community System was the top notch social media platform of it’s day, and a lot of companies are just now starting to replicate it, including a few Candian startups. (Whether or not they know they are simply replicating Ars is another story).

    You will have to read the story for yourself. Take what lessons you can from it, it is the story of what happens when investors don’t play nicely. ArsDigita was a strong company, profitable and reasonably well run, but it only took a few petty VCs to tank the whole thing.

    If that can happen to Ars, what could happen to your little startup if you took money from the wrong source?

    Read On »

  • DemoCampToronto 14

    We are going to try to do a better job of covering the various *camp events in Canada. For now, a reminder: DemocampToronto14 is coming up on Monday, September 17th at the Toronto Board of Trade.

    Come out, we’d love to see you!

  • Break time is over. What are you planning for the fall?

    Ok. So the summer has been nice. Drinks with friends, long evenings with few worries and beautiful places to see.

    The bad news is: that is all over. September is rumbling towards us and if you have been slacking a little on your startups ideas, it’s time to get a plan ready.

    You’ve probably promised yourself that you will get out to more events, you’ve also probably committed to waste less time with that Xbox or whatever it is that is distracting you, and you most likely have 3 or 4 decent ideas swimming around in your head.

    How are you going to change from relaxing to action?

    Don’t promise, DO
    Instead of waiting until September to start getting back into the work groove, start now. The extra week might not seem like much, but you’ll prove to yourself that you have the personal control to get busy when you need to, and the last week of August is a slow one for everyone else, so you will have less distractions while you work.

    Start talking now
    Don’t just promise yourself that you will get out to more *camp and other events “this fall”. Start calling people who you think can help and take them for a beer or lunch NOW. If they aren’t on vacation, chances are that they aren’t doing much at work either. You’ll get their full attention and, hopefully, you’ll have a solid relationship before the September rush.

    Set goals
    Set some decent personal goals that you want to achieve in the next year. September is the Entrepreneur’s New Year. At least it always has been for me. Do you want to be selling a product this time next year? Have funding? A lot of people will tell you that goals set a year in advance are useless, but they are a compliment to your more immediate goals, and when you hit them, they are even sweeter.

    Focus on one idea
    It is torture walking around with a couple of decent or good ideas in your head, and when they both start to become excellent ideas, then you are screwed. Pick one early and stick with it. The other ideas will have to be “might have been”‘s for the rest of your life, or the next year at least.

    Keep your calendar open in November
    Because we are planning an extra cool event. StartupCongress. End of November, best entrepreneurs in the country, best money people and advisors in the country, all in one place. Open format and focused on giving your startup a leg-up. More info to come.

  • Blognation Canada is here

    I had heard rumors it was coming, and now it’s here, Tris Hussey is now writing Blognation Canada for the London, UK based Blognation conglomorate.

    All the new national and regional blogs that are popping up in Canada are, we think, reflective of how quickly the Canadian tech scene is gaining pace, and there are going to be some exciting announcements really soon as well.

    Let’s hope that as the US Economy starts to grind to a halt, we can pick up the slack here.

  • Canada's greatest startup city?

    We are looking for writers who are in love with their hometown, or adopted hometown.

    You are running a startup or heavily involved in your local tech and startup community and you are convinced that your town is the best place in Canada to be starting a company.

    We want profiles of the best cities, towns and communities based on criteria such as

    • Cost of Living
    • Existing community of startups
    • Previously successful individuals
    • Availability of talent
    • Angel investment activity
    • Government assistance availability

    But hey, you know why your hometown is the best place in Canada to get off your butt and start a tech company, so get in touch and we’ll send you a quick email with some criteria for your post.

    Just think of the fame of being a guest writer on StartupNorth!

  • aideRSS.com – What's next in RSS

    If you are like me, your blog aggregator is getting a little out of hand. Once you start climbing over 150 feeds, and well in to the 200s, you are starting to get overloaded. I have, on a few occasions, deleted all the feeds from my feedreader and have started from scratch.

    So far in it’s life, RSS has been kept pretty simple, and that has been a big reason for it’s success. Things are changing however. Every major browser now incorporates RSS in some way, and it is becoming more and more of a mainstream tool.

    Why did you start AideRSS?
    “On one level, to scratch a personal itch, and on the other, to help everyone else with the same problem of overloaded feed-readers ? we knew we were not the only ones, and someone had to step up to the plate! The daily number of posts most people receive makes it impossible to stay on top of the news, frequently resulting in the ?mark-all-as-read? syndrome. In this process, important stories, and at times, true information gems are lost. AideRSS tries to address this by allowing the user to filter incoming feeds based on social engagement metrics: comments, bookmarks, trackbacks, etc. We collect this meta-data for every feed, find the posts that have created a buzz, and deliver them into your inbox ? much like a newspaper editor picks relevant stories out of the newswire. Our goal is to make RSS manageable and relevant for every reader. “

    It is time for RSS to come of age, and to do that we have to get smarter about how we manage feeds. Right now, early adopters are up to having 200, 300, 400 or more feeds and the design of the aggregator hasn’t changed much in 3-4 years. when I ran Blogtrack.com almost 6 years ago, we were trying to create the aggregator. AideRSS is now reinventing how we use RSS feeds.

    picture-1.pngTo help cut down on the noise coming in through your aggregator, the AideRSS guys have come up with what they are calling PostRank.

    Postrank is a combination of how many links, mentions and conversations there are about a particular post. If you look at the screengrab you can see that AideRSS gets information about each post from places like Bloglines, Technorati, the blog itself (number of comments), and del.icio.us amongst others.

    “PostRank? is a scoring system that we have developed to rank each article on relevance and reaction. It is a core part of the AideRSS engine that works to ensure that this digital assistant is helping you to tame the RSS beast and keep your news stream manageable.” – FAQ

    The issue of currency vs. relevancy
    The biggest tradeoff in moving from a normal all-you-can-eat feedreader to something like AideRSS that filters posts based on their popularity is that you are now relying on other people to participate to help you filter your posts. That is ok, and it works, but it also means that you aren’t going to be on to the latest meme right away. My solution is to put many of the less frequently updated and less interesting blogs in AideRSS while keeping a lot of my daily favorites in my regular RSS reader. Because you can import your AideRSS feeds into your aggregator, this is really easy. Cut down on the noisy junk and still get all your Valleywag and Scobleizer up to the second.

    Will it Grow?(tm)
    It’s easy to misunderstand RSS plays. Very few people really understand the RSS market, or the vision for how RSS will grow in the future. Even those who “get” and use RSS day to day have very little understanding of the business opportunity. I was not alone in wondering about Union Square’s investment in Feedburner until I started using Feedburner. Feedburner saw a real pain for publishers (understanding the use and reach of their RSS feed) and they delivered solutions for it incredibly well. AideRSS is doing the same, but they are bringing the same sort of value to both the publisher and the reader. We have added the AideRSS sidebar to Startupnorth, you can see it in the right-hand column.

    Overnight hits such as mybloglog have shows that if you provide a few tools that are just interesting enough to both publishers and readers, then you can really hit a home-run.

    One of my favorite things about using AideRSS so far is how snappy it is. My only complaint is that it creates some uncertainty about how often the feeds are being updated. I’d like to know the last time each feed was updated somehow, and have the ability to manually request that it be updated.

    The core AideRSS services will always be free, with optional premium services available later on at a cost. I could see a service such as a customized newsletter for busy individuals (ie: “send me the top PostRank posts about the Real Estate industry once a day”). AideRSS will be the authority on what the most relevant content in the blogosphere is, and there will be many ways to capitalize on that.

    AideRSS is a Waterloo, Ontario company, and they have taken a small amount of funding so far, but they are on the lookout for investors who understand their space, and what they want to accomplish.

    For me, it’s an obvious one. Without trying to sound like too much of a cheerleader, I love AideRSS and I want them to succeed only so that I can keep using their service.

    If you want an invitation to their beta, I suggest you ask in the comments below, I am sure they will let as many in as possible, and perhaps Rob can relax a bit now, help is on the way it seems.

    Update: AideRSS has launched for public consumption, and Read/Write Web has a great rundown as well.

    Contact Ilya Grigorik

  • NowPublic gets kudos from Time.com

    NowPublic, the website concept we all thought about in 1999 but didn’t do anything about, has been named one of the Top 50 websites by Time.com

    The Vancouver, BC company has almost 100,000 different contributors and can often be found at the top of a google search about recent events.

    The list is actually a lot better than the contrived Time.com editorial-list you’d normally expect from summer intern-journalism. Etsy, Prosper and others are all good company.

  • 10 Small Canadian Tech Companies to Watch

    For the low low price of $3,500 you can read about 10 up and coming Canadian tech companies.

    “This IDC study profiles 10 relatively small, emerging software companies that IDC believes are worthy of highlighting to the broader industry and have the potential to make an impact in the ICT market. The analysis in this study provides valuable input to ICT vendors, large and small, to identify success factors employed by top emerging Canadian software vendors.”

    Among those companies that are profiled is Idee Inc., which is run by Leila, one of Toronto’s most beloved entrepreneurs.

    The other companies featured in the report are Apparent Networks, Casero (white-label social networks for marketing), Coveo (Enterprise Search), Halogen (HR Software), Loki, M-Tech (Identity Management), Objectworld (PBX Hosting), Osellus, and Privasoft.

    Who on earth would spend $3,500 on 10 profiles, I have no idea. Especially with all our wonderful profiles here on Startupnorth!

  • Freshbooks opens up

    Freshbooks announced today that they are releasing a mature API. From what I understand, this is a direct result of their hiring of Ben Vinegar some time ago.

    Why does this matter?
    Freshbooks is demonstrating a very mature approach to growing their available market by opening an API as mature as they have. Typical approaches, often forced under the gun of results-hungry investors (ok, that’s a broad assumption), is to ramp up marketing and to put time, money and energy in to branding in order to develop a wider appeal.

    Offering an API says 2 things:
    We trust our users
    Some of the best application builders for APIs are the users themselves. Allowing users, application developers and others to build applications that use your platform might seem bold to some, but for a healthy company with as many users as Freshbooks boasts, it is a critical first step towards longer term relevance and sustainability.

    How does it do this? Too many startups spend their time trying to either see, create or define the future. This is fine early on, but it is almost impossible in the long run (believe me, I know!). By taking a validated and accepted product like Freshbooks and opening it up to whatever the future is going to be, you are mixing solid current economics with the opportunity for risk-less future innovation.

    We can’t partner with everyone, so we will partner with everyone
    When your startup is successful and stable, partnering offers are a dime a dozen. Most end up in a graveyard of blog posts and press releases but amount to very little. By having a solid API, Freshbooks can tell potential partners to “come back and show us what you can do” and they can also attach their own app to other partner-ready platforms such as Salesforce.

    Now the test. Will people build the apps that will make Freshbooks the center of the online invoicing world? We’ll be watching.

    More analysis here by one of my co-writers on FastForward.