Category: Startups

  • How Startups will save Venture Capital in Canada

    Last night I pitched the audience for the second time on How Startups Will Save Venture Capital in Canada. I first gave this talk in Moncton at Third Tuesday NB and the response was great.

    The title is “Why Startups Will Save Canadian Venture Capital”, and it doesn’t let anyone off the hook. It isn’t a criticism, but instead it is an analysis and a call to action for both Angels, VCs and Entrepreneurs. Things are pretty busted up right now and it is time to start talking about what we need to do to make a difference.

    My thesis is simple: Startups just aren’t getting started in Canada nearly as often as they should. This isn’t about education levels, creativity or even for a lack of cash floating around this country. This is about ambition.

    This is about hustle.

    Most entrepreneurs have heard that things aren’t great for VCs right now. LPs are shaky, some funds are crashing, others are just throwing their hands up, and for a lot of startups it seems like no matter how many people you pitch, you aren’t getting anywhere. I tried to put some hard number behind that, and they paint a scary picture.

    This goes two ways, and nobody wants to sit around while we all whine and moan that nobody can get funded. It’s time to build companies that are worth something.

    We need to focus on building our local startup communities more than ever. Local communities are important because they are far easier for local Angels and Entrepreneurs to connect to, and they also act as a great filter to help find people who need national and international exposure.

    Smart funders are going to see these communities as huge opportunities. There ROI for VCs getting connected to the startup community is not only obvious, but well documented. In the US we see VCs hustling in a way that you just don’t see much of here in Canada. Every time I hear a VC rant on about how Canadian entrepreneurs aren’t aggressive enough, it drives me nuts, because they are no different.

    It is great to see Third Tuesday’s taking off on the east coast, and events like DemoCampEdmonton really starting to get going (there are 90 signups for their next one!), but we also need to focus on making sure that there are Startup-focused events where people need to answer to questions about their market, operations and sales.

    If we can get early stage companies off the ground, then the outlook for VC in Canada starts to look a lot different. Canadian funds will have to compete against American money, but they will start to get to see great ideas and entrepreneurs at the early stage. There are a few missing pieces to this plan, but the point is that it is time for us all to stop fretting and just get on with it.

    If we can build amazing startups, the money will find its way.

    This is my manifesto for saving Venture Capital. It isn’t sexy, but it just might work.

    *because someone inevitably does not “get it” — the comic strip at the top is a JOKE meant to characture what some would say is the VC impression of entrepreneurs, and the entrepreneurs impression of VCs.

  • Canada does YCombinator – An Interview with Christopher Golda and Michael Montano

    The Y Combinator session that is currently underway has two different groups of Canadians participating.   Previously I interviewed Michael Parkatti & Michael Marrone a team from Calgary attending Y Combinator.   This interview is with Christopher Golda and Michael Montano, another team of Canadians working on a Y Combinator backed startup.

    I met Christopher & Michael at Mesh 08 where they impressed me with a discussion about their previous startup iPartee and their plans having been accepted at Y Combinator.

    I’m very excited to see them launch their product later this fall.


    Chris & Mike Y Combinator

    1) Mike & Chris, tell us about each of your startup & educational backgrounds before you applied to Y Combinator.

    Chris: We?re both electrical engineering graduates from the University of Toronto. We?ve known each other since the beginning of high school and we roomed together in university. Our first startup, IPartee, was based on an idea we had in second year which we didn?t end up working on until two years later. I?ve been building websites from a young age, but IPartee was the first serious web application I?d ever been involved with. Before IPartee, I started a design and development company called, UrbanTwelve, but I don?t consider that to be a start-up.

    Mike: When we started IPartee, I was doing a co-op at RIM in Waterloo between my third and fourth years. Chris continued at UofT and when he finished, we started working on it in Waterloo and then in Toronto when I returned for fourth year.

    2) What did you guys learn from your previous startup experience?

    Mike: Almost immediately after our launch, we knew we needed to iterate, focus on distribution and differentiate. Basically, our first release wasn?t something people wanted. After three major iterations of our product?two of which were featured on TechCrunch?we ended up being more of a widget provider than a social-network for events. We learned how important it is to build something that people want and that building something that?s useful right away is a huge advantage. We were trying to solve a problem in a very complex and convoluted way that would have only really worked at scale. After the many changes we made after launch, it became more and more difficult to explain our product?that?s what happens when you release a complicated, feature heavy product to begin with. I think that?s why we?ve developed such a strong appreciation for products like Twitter. We?re still learning and we plan on applying all of the lessons from IPartee; I think we?ve been very fortunate to have some great mentors and peers help us along the way.

    3) What are the big differences you are finding between your experience doing IPartee and YCombinator so far?

    Mike: YC is an incredible experience; it?s a network of hundreds of entrepreneurs. It opens a lot of doors and the name lends you a lot of credibility. At the end of the summer, we get the opportunity to meet and present to literally every active venture capitalist investing in consumer Internet. YC is a huge opportunity for us and we?re very excited to be a part of it. As far as working on our start-up, we?ve received incredibly helpful feedback from the partners, founders and speakers at YC. Aside from that, I think it?s very much the same experience we had with IPartee. We?re working just as hard, if not harder. It?s difficult not to work when everyone you know is a plane ride away.

    4) How big did your previous startup experience (although failed) play in getting your spot at YCombinator and making it through the screening & interview process?

    Chris: I believe it played a huge role in our acceptance. If you?re able to get an interview in person, you only have ten minutes to sell yourself. I don?t think we really made a lasting impression until we showed them what we spent the last year working on. Y Combinator sees thousands of ideas a year. The best way to set yourself apart from other applicants is to show that you can and will execute.

    Mike: During the screening process, we spoke with some YC alumni about our idea. That turned out to be really helpful, both for our interview preparations and especially for our idea and pitch in general.

    5) Your new company (I know you can?t disclose the details) ? how has it benefited in its focus & ideation from your previous startup experience. What do you feel is the difference in your idea & approach this time.

    Chris: We?re trying to release a simple product that will create value almost immediately. After IPartee, we became very conscious of the fact that you have to build something that?s innovative, not incremental. Our new start-up lets people do something that hasn?t been possible before?we think it?s a big opportunity and we?re excited to see how people will react.

    6) Have you noticed any big differences between your experience in Toronto and your YCombinator experience.

    Chris: Toronto has an active community of entrepreneurs, but you have to put forth a lot of effort to really become a part of it. Nevertheless, attending events like StartupCamp, DemoCamp and especially Founders & Funders gives you the opportunity to interact with very successful Canadian entrepreneurs that you can learn a lot from. We?ve had great conversations with Leila Boujnane, Albert Lai and yourself. The biggest difference is that at Y Combinator, you?re lucky enough to meet successful entrepreneurs on a very frequent and regular basis.

    7) The YCombinator funding is not a lot of money when you look at other startup funding. ($5k + $5k per founder) ? do you find it hard to ship a product for under $15k?

    Mike: Some people criticize YC for amount they invest, but like any good investor they aren?t just giving you money. They?re advisors to your company at a very early stage?their experience and feedback is invaluable. On top of that, you gain the credibility and network of YC. In any case, I think $15k is more than enough to ship a web-based product. We spent a fraction of that on IPartee.

    8) In my own experience I?ve seen a lack of startup culture in our Universities and engineering/ComputerScience programs. As two recent grads who did a startup while in school and are pursuing startups out of school what has your experience with this been. How does it compare to what you are seeing among the other YCombinator teams?

    Chris: There are some initiatives by the University of Waterloo that I read about on Startup North that sound great?we definitely need more of that at Canadian universities. The University of Toronto doesn?t foster or promote entrepreneurship at all really. They have clubs that occasionally bring in speakers and they have a couple of entrepreneurship classes, but teaching you how to write a business plan isn?t really relevant. Engineers and Computer Scientists should be building things.

    Mike: I get the impression that other universities are much more accommodating. For example, there are some YC founders who are taking time off school to work on their start-up?UofT wouldn?t make that easy.

    9) Any words of advice for other entrepreneurs in Canada looking to do startups?

    Mike: Find out what?s wrong with the industries that interest you and start working on a solution. Don?t focus on business models until you?ve successfully created something people want. The best thing an entrepreneur can do is solve a big problem and get a lot of traction. There are benefits to starting a company in Canada (government programs, etc) and some active investors, but I still think it?s better for entrepreneurs to move to the valley. They love risk takers and they embrace failure?there are countless reasons why it?s an advantage to be there.

    Thanks to Mike & Chistopher for taking the time to respond to these questions.   We’ll be doing a follow up with them after their launch.

    Austin Hill is the CEO of Akoha and a guest contributor to Startup North.

  • AideRSS – postrank.com and a slew of updates

    AideRSS was one of the first companies I really got excited about. I had (and have) done a lot of thinking about RSS as a market and how you would need to build a technology and a product in that space. When Ilya sent me an email about AideRSS, I loved it.

    That glowing review was the first posts on StartupNorth that really generated significant feedback for me. Comments, email and phone calls from VCs and companies who wanted to know more about them. It was fun, and Ilya didn’t disappoint. He continued to build the company back then with Kevin Thomason and they pushed product out the door.

    In the intervening year they have secured funding, Kevin has moved on and they are starting to make updates regularly. I have given Ilya a hard time in the last year about focusing on the product, but I did it knowing he could deliver. With a great team behind him now AideRSS has been doing partnerships.

    Today they are launching PostRank.com, which is a promotional site for their PostRank system, and they are also introducing Thematic Postrank, their Google Reader Extension and a set of APIs that produce PostRank calculations to developers. This change means that PostRank is no longer just a component of the AideRSS website, but it is now an independent service that other applications will be able to use.

    Thematic Postrank is a new service that helps cluster topic-specific blog posts together. I will be interested to see how good this service is. It could potentially be the start of a better Techmeme (my words, not theirs).

    They are also expanding the list of sources that they draw from to calculate a PostRank score, adding clicks, views, Ma.gnolia, and Pownce.

  • IT LAUNCHED! PlanetEye finally goes live

    After my first post about PlanetEye and the teddy-bear response it garnered from their VC and co-founder Rick, I am not really predisposed to writing much about PlanetEye.

    Well, that was back in September and their new CEO, Butch Langlois, was just getting settled in. Without speculating about how much money PlanetEye has gone through getting off the ground or how long it has taken, I’ll just say congratulations. The progress under Butch has been impressive to everyone, and the product looks great.

    When I asked Scott Pelton why he joined Rick in funding PlanetEye, he was candid. He said “do you think that cameras will someday come embedded with GPS location and that it will be a big deal?”.

    I think that day is coming. It might be a little ways off, but with GPS chips the size of your fingernail out there, it won’t be too long. And yes, I do think it is going to be a big deal.

    The fact is, two Canadian VCs took a big bet on the future and did more than most Canadian VCs do: they followed a vision.

    Sites like Panaramio (which integrates with Google Earth) offer a similar pictures-on-a-map experience, but do not have the travel focus that will either make, or break, PlanetEye.

    So, a tip of the hat to Scott and Rick and their firms, Growthworks and JLA. I hope this one goes all the way.

  • praized.com – Local, niche, reviews and communities

    Lets say that you run a highly successful online community of blond vegans who have a penchant for Prosciutto. You would like to manage local reviews for that community, but you do not have the technical ability or the data you need to get it kick started.

    Montreal based Praized is an innovative solution in the heavily contested local listings and review space. Praized is designed a white-label platform that integrates seamlessly with editorial content by using either an API or plug-ins that are compatible with SixApart?s MovableType and WordPress. Bloggers and site editors can embed snippets of merchant information within posts or news articles to drive traffic to their Praized-powered local section. Praized also designed its platform to be available to Facebook application developers and others through an API.

    Praized communities enable users to search, discover and discuss places with like-minded people. Users benefit from discovering the ?long tail? of places via discussions on lesser known local merchants that struggle to be found through Web search. End-users also get real value from social tools that allow them to tag, comment, bookmark, share and vote on places that matter to them.

    Praized is bringing a really novel and sensible approach to local listings. Realizing that you can bridge the gap between the hype-local and centralized business models can bring opportunities in a lot of markets, and that is what Praized is doing here.

    The first Praized-Powered community is now active at Mocolocal and they also recently announced distribution agreements with Yellowbook in the US and Yellow Pages Group Co. in Canada.

    Other Canadian local-search and review companies include iBegin, who have moved in to the data wholesale business, and ZipLocal (TSX:ZIP) who recently launched ZipDating. Praized does go beyond just reviews and listings, they also have a recommendation system that allows users to suggest places and things to friends in their social network, including Facebook.

  • VenturesWest shuttering offices, several people gone

    After a day of posting great news from three startups, I hate to end things on a sad note.

    The Canadian VC community is getting hit hard again, this time it looks like VenturesWest is on its heels. The Ottawa office has been shuttered several key folks have left.

    Departures appear to include Chris Laird, David Mcintyre, Maha Katabi as well as Robin Axon, who has been a supporter of the startup community here in Toronto.

    There is no official word yet as to what is going on and whether this is a reshuffling or whether the fund is being wound down. There have been persistent rumors lately indicating the latter. We will try to get some word tomorrow when someone is picking up the phone.

    The Canadian VC industry in general seems to be paying the price for poor returns in the last few years with more and more of the talk on the street focusing on funds being unable to raise new rounds from LPs and the mood was decidedly bleak at the recent CVCA National Convention. Is this the beginning of a trend, or just a bad blip in the Canadian VC story?

  • LearnHub.com Launches World's Largest Free SAT and GMAT Question Banks

    Toronto based Learnhub.com, who we have profiled before, is making a big announcement today.

    LearnHub, who are doing deals all over the place these days, is quickly becoming a huge destination site for international students. Being able to practice SAT and GMAT questions online will be a fantastic addition for their audience.

    Along with the availability of the new SAT & GMAT question banks, today’s announcement includes a significant update to LearnHub’s community platform. Over 1,500 members use this innovative social interface to practice for exams, which includes tools to allow members to time themselves, debate solutions and strategy with each other, and to track their improvement over time. The question banks grow daily as members and staff add new questions. As one of the only alternatives to expensive books and courses, LearnHub’s free SAT and GMAT communities are catching on quickly, averaging 50 new members every day since their launch.

    Learnhub gives wannabe international students an online social network and learning site that North American schools then tap in to via recruiters in order to attract top-tier talent. The model delivers new value to all of their audiences, and while I am not in any of their target markets, I think the value of the site huge.

    I even started startups.learnhub.com a while ago, and will start populating it more soon. Jump in and help out!

    LearnHub, who took a large financing round from India-based EduComp Solutions, was recently in our Top 10 Startups to Watch list for Canada.

  • ChickAdvisor launches new show, does deal with Rogers Media

    Toronto based ChickAdvisor.com has gone from fledgling community startup to a deal-making media machine overnight!

    The deal kicks off production of ChickAdvisor’s second video series, called ChickChatTV. The series, which is made up of 20 episodes at 90 seconds each will feature commentary that is based on the conversations that site members are having in the Chick Advisor forums. The host, site co-founder Ali de Bold then poses questions to people on the street.

    “ChickChat TV” is based on the juicy discussions that take place on ChickAdvisor’s popular forums, ChickChat. Questions posed to unsuspecting strangers include: ‘Would you take back a cheater?’ ‘”Who should pay for the first date?’ ‘Can Dudes be Fashionistas too?’ The series will air in Fall 2008 on ChickAdvisor.com and Rogers Media properties including their Pizza Pizza network, which have a combined reach of over 685,000 viewers per week.

    This is a great leap forward for ChickAdvisor, who were featured on Fortune Hunters earlier this year and were very candid about how well, and not well, things were going.

    Co-founder Alex de Bold says this will bring them a lot of new exposure and that they are “hoping that this announcement will bring us more top of mind with brand managers too as they do their 2009 planning”

  • Distinctly Canadian Web Habits

    This is a guest post by CommunityLend.com CEO Michael Garrity. We have profiled CommunityLend in the past.


     

    There was a great piece in Saturday?s Globe and Mail outlining the contrast in the opinions of Canadians and Americans on who got the short end of the stick on the Free Trade Agreement. Predictably, both sides think the other is making out better (which in my own political experience is usually a good sign that things are about equal).

    Reading the story did get me to thinking about other contrasts between ourselves and our American brethren, here on the week of both of our national patriotic celebrations. Further, as the CEO of a web company focused on the Canadian market, the story specifically got me thinking about the differences between our two nations? general usage patterns on the web.

    To get some informational guidance on the issue, I went to Alexa and pulled the Top 100 most visited US sites and compared them to the Top 100 most visited Canadian sites. The net result of this imperfectly empirical study is what I?ll call ?Michael?s 5 Observations on National Web Behaviour? (just to give it a flashy and important title). I share these unique and clearly very important observations with you here in joint celebration of our National Holiday.

    Observations on National Web Behaviour:

    1. Plus ca change… : The clearest observation from the two lists is that we share most of the same online pastimes as our American web surfing neighbours, especially on the top end of the list. The majority of the top sites on both lists are predictably all the big names in Search, Social Networks, Auctions, File ?sharing?, Online Gaming and of course, Porn. Two notable Canadian distinctions; we tend to use the .ca extensions of the big names (e.g. google.ca) and our number one social network by a LONG SHOT is Facebook, coming in at the number 2 spot overall after the big G. MySpace, picks up the 11th spot, just beating …
       
    2. Peace, Order and Good Government: The biggest surprise to me on the Canadian list is that the 13th spot is the Government of Canada website. Yes, you heard that correctly, the spot right after MySpace and eBay. My only explanation I have for this distinctly Canadian behaviour is that there are just so many departments and agencies and forms and services provided by the Canadian government that these sites have become an easier way to navigate it all. By comparison, the only US government service on the US Alexa list is USPS at number 72, presumably folks trying to locate their lost mail.
       
    3. Mosaic Nation: They are the ?melting pot? and we are the ?mosaic?, or at least that?s the story we have been taught in school. The question is does it hold up online? The answer seems to be ?yes?. While 100% of sites on the US Alexa list are unilingual English, about 10% of Canadian Alexa 100 are sites that are specifically non-English (not to mention all of the sites that offer two languages as an option). Top on the list at number 56 is the French site Meteomedia.com and next is number 64, Sina.com, all in Chinese.
       
    4. Minding the Books: Canadians top the world in usage statistics for online banking and it bears itself out at Alexa. The first Canadian bank comes in at the 21st spot (TD Bank) then they pepper the list until the end. Contrast this to the US list where the first bank comes in at the 38th spot (Bank of America). Yes, it seems we are a nation of book-keepers, bouncing actively between our Facebook profile updates and our bill payment screens. An exciting lot, us Canadians. Good news is that this should bode especially well if one had, say, an internet start up focused on the Canadian financial services space … say.
       
    5. And Speaking of Start-Up?s: How do Canadian start-ups fare on the list? Well, not exceptionally well. There are three I can see. At 59 comes plentyoffish out of Vancouver, then at 91 it`s Toronto?s own redflagdeals.com, followed by Edmonton?s nexopia.com at 92. It should be noted here that there is certainly no shortage of criticism related to Alexa as an accurate measure of web usage so I?m sure other start ups will have at it for not being on the list. In the meantime, the list shows that there is still a lot to strive for in our community in getting the numbers up for our respective services.