Category: Ontario

  • John Philip Green joins CommunityLend

    Big news in the Toronto startup community today. John Philip Green, one of the founders of LearnHub.com, has joined CommunityLend.com as CTO. We have covered CommunityLend in the past as they have worked around regulatory hurdles to become the first provider of peer-to-peer financing in Canada. They have raised over $2.5 million to date.

    John has helped to advise CommunityLend from the very beginning, so this seems like a natural fit. I am a bit disappointed that he won’t be working on a new startup of his own, but it is great to see him end up at such a high-potential Toronto startup.

    Savvica, which John founded with his wife Malgosia, has been growing quickly and is back primarily by  Shantanu Prakash, the founder of Educomp Solutions. John and Malgosia have developed significant operations in India, with over 60 employees there at present, and a headquarters in Toronto. Savvica and its sister sites have evolved significantly in the last few years and now includes LearnhubJumboTests, Nuvvo, Studyplaces and EduIgnite.

    CommunityLend, who announced John’s joining today, is the only provider of peer-to-peer financing in Canada.

  • iStopOver and PlanetEye merge raising $3M

    iStopOver, the peer-to-peer accommodation rental marketplace incubated by Brightspark, has merged with PlanetEye, the interactive travel guide spun out from Microsoft Research – in the process raising a round of up to $3M from GrowthWorks and JLA Ventures, PlanetEye’s original backers.

    The merged company is adopting the iStopOver brand and will focus on expanding the rental business. iStopOver is poised to launch in new markets, having recently validated its model by facilitating thousands of bookings (valued at $1.25M) between hosts and guests during the South Africa Soccer World Cup. It is free for hosts to list a property, iStopOver captures a booking fee of 6-15% on each reservation.

    iStopOver’s Anthony Lipschitz will serve as COO and Mark Skapinker as Executive Chairman of the company. PlanetEye’s Jonah Sigel, who will continue on as CEO, shared his thoughts on the value PlanetEye brings to the venture in addition to its development team and portfolio of patents pertaining to interactive maps:

    The unique ability to show a potential customer everything they want to know about a specific area, the restaurants, the events, the attractions, social media happenings and more will help that customer make a more informed booking decision.

    With greater resources to invest in development and marketing, iStopOver is well positioned to compete with AirBnB in this emerging online travel segment.

  • Lessons from C100 Mentoring in Toronto

    We wrapped up another amazing C100 Mentoring (C1M) session the other week with mentors in San Jose talking live and in-person to a group of great companies in Toronto via Telepresense. As with all of these “TP” meetings, the wonder of the technology quickly melts away and the groups on either side of the video wall were able to really get down to business.

    We were fortunate in this last C1M session to have Rick Spence of the National Post sit in on the session and he shared his main take-aways in a recent article headlined:  Startups get face-time with Valley veterans.

    It is always interesting to read what main points a third party to a C1M session zeroes in on. From Spence’s point-of-view (with some of my commentary) the main things that the recent C1M start-ups need to think about are:

    • Keep it quick; or as he put it “sum up the pitch early.” He highlights that companies need to perfect the elevator pitch. Say what you do quickly and simply. Spence says 30 seconds but I would argue that event that is too generous for the real world (we give you some leeway in C1M, so 30 seconds is OK.) Out there, keep it to 15 to 20 seconds and keep it punchy!
    • K.I.S.S me! That’s right, when you’re out there trying to explain what it is you do, keep it short, sure, but please also “keep it simple, supplicant”* If your technology or application or web service or whatever cannot be explained in simple language then what you are doing is either (1) too esoteric for these crude Earthly market or (2) not explaining it right. If the answer is (1), you’ve got bigger problems but more often the answer is (2) and you need to step back, detach yourself from your product/service, and figure out how to articulate your value-proposition in a simple, compelling manner
    • “Focus, Focus, Focus”- I won’t add any commentary here. Just focus on those three words and the point is made
    • Note when I said “K.I.S.S. me!,” specific reference was made to articulating a“value-proposition,” that was on purpose. Sometimes we love to talk tech and how great our little service or gizmo works. If you’re after engineering brownie points, that approach works great. But if you’re after customers, forget the tech and focus on value.
    • Sales is what it is all about. There is only one group of people that can make any business successful, start-up or otherwise. No, it isn’t investors, partners, or event the founders themselves. The only group of people who can make a company a success is customers and securing their support is called selling. Make sure you find someone who knows how to do that.

    These insights are a very good summary of the conversation across all three companies. We touched on each of these points in one way or another with each company we met.

    In addition to the points listed above, the mantra that I was repeating for each company was segment and prioritize.

    I know that a lot of new companies have to throw whatever they can against the wall and see what sticks. That approach has its place, but it can also burn precious resources with little return. I’m a huge fan of looking across your (potential) customer based, segmenting them and then having a laser-focus on the ones that will be most profitable. Too often, I got the sense companies were trying to do everything all at once. Even if a product/service has multiple applications, there needs to be the discipline within a company to figure out which application has the most immediate promise and then going after the relevant customers.

    *I have to admit, I had to look up what “supplicant” means. The Dictionary.com definition was “a person who supplicates”, which wasn’t very helpful.

  • A year in the life

    GuestlistHappy 1st Birthday Guestlist!

    Guestlist has had a couple of weeks. On July 12, 2010 they launched their paid service which finally allows the company to generate fees for the great service they provide. We started using Guestlist for events starting on September 24, 2009 for DemoCamp Toronto # 22 aka An Evening with Yossi Vardi.

    “What began as a dare between three friends to actually finish a software product has turned into full-fledged web service that has helped hundreds of event organizers sell tickets online and keep tabs on their cash flow. Over that period we’ve collected half a million dollars on behalf of our users, a near-majority of which was delivered directly to charities. All powered by word of mouth.” – Ben Vinegar, Guestlistapp

    It’s been a great year for Guestlist enabling over $500,000 in transaction revenue. This is great traction for the small team. Sure it’s only $10,000 using the 2% paid service fee. But this is fantastic traction given that this is a part time project with all 3 team members working other jobs. The demonstrated traction helped the team realize the potential of Guestlist as a business.

    “That’s the story of what our team put together, part time, over one year. We can’t say it was easy; building and maintaining a quality application part-time requires a lot of dedication and free time. That’s why we’re excited to announce that 2/3s of our team has opted to work full-time on Guestlist going forward.”

    If you’re planning an event and you want a great event application, I can highly recommend Guestlist.

  • Dayforce secures an additional $10million

    VentureBeat is reporting that Dayforce has secured an additional $10million in financing, bringing their total pool of raise capital to $20million.

    This isn’t a major surprise for anyone who has been watching David Ossip over the last 3 years. After selling Workbrain for $227million in 2007, David only seemed to get more ambitious. Perhaps the acquisition left him with just enough of a taste to want more, or perhaps he felt like he didn’t get the job done with Workbrain. Either way, after sitting around waiting for his non-compete to expire, he got back in the game with Dayforce. So here we are.

    David is the entrepreneur’s entrepreneur, and I am happy to see that he is able to get the resource together to build Dayforce in Canada. His desire to contribute back to the startup community has set him apart in recent years. We have previously published a profile of Workbrain spinoff companies. This also represents a significant additional step for Bridgescale Partners, and represents their first deal in Canada since their merger with Edgestone in May. Edgestone was one of the original investors in Workbrain up until it went public in 2003.

    We will add more details as we get them.

  • Sysomos acquired

    News has leaked out today that Toronto-based Sysomos, a social media monitoring firm, has been acquired by MarketWire.

    As usual, the terms of the deal are not being disclosed, but we do know that, like BumpTop, Sysomos was funded out of the Growthworks Commercialization fund. That would put this deal at well north of $25million, likely landing in at around $35million.  Sysomos was also funded by Ontario Centres of Excellence, who were also instrumental in supporting BumpTop. In fact, like Bumptop, Sysomos also originated at the University of  Toronto and does retain some useful and unique IP.

    This is the second exit for Scott Pelton, who only took over managing the Growthwork’s comm fund in 2008. By Canadian VC standards (or any for that matter), he is on fire and, by my estimate, is chalking up one of the best IRRs that the business has seen yet in this country. Who says VC is dead?

    Sysomos has made rapid progress since taking investment and has managed to consistently raise the bar of social media monitoring standards. No doubt that MarketWire is looking for ways to develop beyond their more traditional media monitoring solution to something that offers more social media coverage. Sysomos’ strong analytics capability will no doubt be useful to MarketWire customers as well.

  • StartupDrinks – YYZ, YUL, YYT, YQM, YYC, YHZ, YFC, YSJ

    StartupDrinks LogoFriendly neighbourhood reminder that tomorrow, June 30, 2010, is StartupDrinks (well tonight in Saskatoon & Regina). On June 30, 2010 you can join entrepretreneurs in:

    Jevon is going to be hanging out in Halifax. Ray is going to be in Montreal. Jonas, Bryan and I are planning on being at Grace O’Malleys (aka Granuaile), 14 Duncan St, Toronto, ON.

    It’s a great opportunity to get out of the office. To be social. To connect with others that are struggling building companies like you. What will we be talking about? We’ll be talking about “How to grow your traffic from 1k to 35k on $0” and other things. What do you want to talk about?

    Here’s

  • Mentoring Virtually in Toronto

    C100 is hitting the road (virtually) and will be bringing the next C100 mentoring session to Toronto. We’re working with our partners Extreme Venture Partners and are looking for three companies to participate.

    Interested? Please apply via our application process.

    Finalists will be notified week of July 12.

  • Connect with Wired.com's Evan Hansen

    Interested in attending next Monday’s session with Wired.com’s Evan Hansen? StartupNorth has secured 20 seats, which would otherwise cost $85 each. Register for a free pass through StartupNorth while tickets are available: http://guestlistapp.com/events/24501

    Gone are the days when we scrambled to the set to catch our favourite shows in their scheduled timeslot. Today’s viewers want personalized, on-demand access and a host of high-tech innovators are giving them exactly that. Join Wired.com’s Editor in Chief, Evan Hansen for a discussion on the new realities of entertainment and all things digital.

    Date – Monday, June 21, 2010
    Location
    – Events On The Park, 1095 Leslie Street, Toronto, ON
    Breakfast
    – 7:30am
    Session – 8:00am to 9:00am

  • Open Coffee Ottawa – May 26

    Next Wednesday (May 26) StartupNorth is organizing an Open Coffee in Ottawa. It is an opportunity for entrepreneurs, developers, and investors to connect at an informal meetup. We’ll be heading to Bridgehead Coffeehouse (109 Bank Street, Ottawa) from 10am to 1pm.

    Open Coffee Ottawa
    Bridgehead Coffeehouse
    109 Bank Street, Ottawa
    10am to 1pm