Xtranormal launched a private beta.
Size matters… for follow on rounds.
Mark added 5 DOs when raising capital, to compliment the 7 DON’Ts.
We get emails just about everyday asking for a calendar of startup events across Canada. And it is a damn shame for entrepreneurs to miss a chance to meet up just because there is no event calendar. So without further ado, head on over and check it out. Right now, we just have Toronto events listed, but we’ll be adding Calendars for all the other great regions across Canada as soon as possible.
We are using Google Calendar so people across the country can collaborate on this project. If you already use Google Calendar and would like to occasionally contribute by posting events, contact us and we?ll provide you with this super power.
Updates: Edmonton is now onboard (thanks to Cam)! Montreal coming soon (thanks to Heri)! And Waterloo too (thanks to Thom)! Note: If you also live in these cities and are interested in contributing, please contact us as well!
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Mea Culpa. I pulled the image that originally accompanied this post. Why? Well first off, I wasn’t particularly satisfied with it to begin with. While this Calendar Project is something we?ve been thinking about for a while now, the image to accompany the announcement was just something I rushed out this morning. Yes, of course it was just a joke. No, this was not my finest work with Photoshop. For those of you curious what all the hoopla is about, you can find the image posted here.
My hope is for this Calendar Project to help get more people (men AND women) out to events and as a result working together building great companies. I?d hate for anyone to feel left out. Two of the many things I love about Canada are its inclusiveness and that people call things how they see them. I wouldn?t change either of these things for the world.
I hope you find the calendar useful. See you at an upcoming event.
Jonas
Mark McQueen, the guy behind Wellington Financial is quickly becoming a blog rockstar, and his latest post is no exception.
Mark deals in the Venture Debt business, a similar product to that of Silicon Valley Bank and a few others. He is the kind of guy you might end up talking to down the road when you need some growth capital. Who knows. All I know is that when I have asked Private Equity guys about Mark and Wellington, they have always gotten a little scrappy, so I take it as a good sign.
Here is his post, 7 avoidable capital raising mistakes. It is worthwhile advice for anyone pitching to VCs, angels or potential business partners.
In this first attempt to stick to the script, we?ll address seven of the more obvious mistakes that entrepreneurs make when trying to raise capital (this is not to sound patronizing, but to help make the capital-raising process a success):
1. False Sense of Urgency
Imagine the excitement when the email comes in: ?Can I see you tomorrow to discuss a new deal?? As a firm that prides itself in operating in real time, the natural desire is to say ?yes?. Drop everything and see what the fuss is about. Our natural request is for a corporate overview or something similar – gives us a chance to learn about the business prior to the session. Unfortunately, not everyone is as prepared for the request. If you don?t have the powerpoint / business plan ready to share, you shouldn?t be booking meetings for the next day.
Worse, if you aren?t currently looking to raise capital, there?s no need to try to get on a VC?s dance card for 24 hours from now.
2. Hurry Up and Wait
The ugly sister of #1 above. When you book a meeting with a capital provider, you have to assume that they?ll like the story as much as you do. Why else are you pitching the story? Which means they will invariably ask for detailed financial information. Like the financial model that formed the backbone of the powerpoint presentation. Far too often, the response is: it?ll be a couple of weeks. Why the rush for the 1st meeting if the financials weren?t ready?
We always wonder about that. What will take a couple of weeks? Did you not have a forecast when you presented the business plan? Or are the forecasts not yet sexy enough for sharing?
The other mistake is the: let?s get the NDA signed up right now. But 10 days sometimes goes by before the first volley of information is sent. Any hint of disorganization is a bad first impression.
3. ?Not Board Approved?
Then there are the financial models that ?haven?t yet been approved by the Board?. Having had the meeting, and received the financial forecasts, VCs are often told that the budget they?ve been given hasn?t yet received the sign off of the company?s Board of Directors. But you should still value/analyze the business on the basis that this is the working forecast.
Which begs the question: if the financial budget that is being shared with would-be capital providers isn?t Board-approved, what is it? Management-approved? Does the Board even know you are talking to potential outside investors? And how does this budget compare to the one that is currently ?Board approved?? Is it better or worse?
4. The Five Alarm Fire
Unlike #1 above, this meeting truly is incredibly urgent. The problem is, no one comes clean about just how urgent it is until the meeting is underway.
Imagine the scenario. Company (or Agent) requests a meeting. It goes well. Good story and strong management. The problem is, they ?need to close? the financing in less than two weeks. Huh? Whatever it is, acquisition, deposit, customer order fulfillment, etc. The timeline is critical. Assuming it is a new story to the firm, and not a follow-on, I can?t think of any institutional firm in the country that can do the primary due diligence, negotiate the deal, draft legals, and cut a cheque in 8 or 10 business days.
Serious case of lunch bag letdown. Having spent two hours on an interesting meeting, it turns out there is no way to do the deal.
5. Cell Phone Conference Call Pitch (aka persons of no fixed address)
This is a personal favourite. The virtual powerpoint presentation. They usually come via a known referral, who is less concerned about you wasting your time than you might be.
The scheduled one hour pitch comes from someone you?ve never met, and they sound as though they are lying down the entire time. They are relaxed alright, almost too calm. It can be disconcerting.
As the pitch continues, your mind wanders and you ask yourself – do they even have an office? How do they oversee the staff if they?re always elsewhere? What city are they calling us from right now? And why are they looking for money from us, residents of a foreign country? How do we due dili the deal if there?s no office? Etc.
just think of how it looks in a police report on television: the assailant had no fixed address (i.e., no job, can?t cover the rent, parents kicked them out of the basement long ago). Has a certain aura to it.
6. Thanks For Nothing
It may strike you as hard to believe, but this happens from time to time. A meeting is booked. The story is told. It goes well. Due diligence is done, and a term sheet is issued for a potential financing. Then, radio silence from the person who was looking for the capital. Perhaps they found the money elsewhere. Perhaps they changed their mind. Perhaps an existing investor did the deal instead.
That is generally just fine by us, as we look at 500 opportunities a year and understand that just as we can?t give every company money, not every company utilize our services.
But to have gone through the process to size up an opportunity and issue a term sheet, just think of how easy it would be to pen a two sentence email saying: ?thanks, but we are going a different direction?. The VC market is small, and while folks keep confidential business information to themselves, a reputation for rudeness is worth avoiding. It is so easy to say ?thanks but no thanks?.
7. ?These Forecasts Are Ultra Conservative?
I?m sure you are surprised that people would use the phrase ?conservative?, particularly at a time when 80% of private companies are missing their forecasts. But, you?d be wrong if you didn?t think it happened every week. At some point during the pitch, someone from the company says ?these forecasts are conservative?. Sometimes you?ll get the ?ultra? modifier as well.
This is certainly the ?#1 guaranteed to generate a laugh? line in the business. It is almost as good as the follow-up ?I know everyone says their forecasts are conservative, but these really are.? Just like you would never say ?I?m really good in bed? on a first date, just hide the conservative nature of the forecasts for the due diligence period. Some VCs won?t take a second meeting if they hear that line in the first go ?round; they assume, fairly or not, that you?re wet behind the ears.
If the entire pipleine is already contracted, have the VC figure that out during due dili and say ?wow, are these ever conservative forecasts!? You?ll catch a lot more fish that way.
The summer is usually a time when things go a little slower, a little less gets done and people are hard to get in touch with. I’m not sure what is in the water this year, but it seems like nothing has slowed down for the sunny weather. People are still scheming, startups are launching and I am still hearing a dozen new ideas a day. Love it.
September is the January of the Startup world. If there was ever a time to restart, give it one last shot, or to set new goals, September is that time.
Take some time and look back at what you’ve accomplished since this time last year. Did you get a failure under your belt? Did you start something, but didn’t take it all the way? Did you raise your first round? Did you get your first exit?
A lot of people seemed to spend the last year just finding out about the Startup community in Canada. Connecting, learning and sharing. Now is the time to start to create something of your own. We’re all here, waiting to hear about it, and we want to help.
With September about to swing in and kick our butts, there are a handful of great events already lined up.
DemoCamp Edmonton 3 is on September 17th. There were over 100 people at the last DemoCamp in Edmonton. That is some of the best news this year. Cam Linke has been doing a great job organizing and promoting DC Edmonton. I can’t wait to get out to one.
Launch Party Vancouver is the first one, taking place on September 18th. Launch Party is such a great name, and there are always incedible startups on the lineup.
StartupCamp Waterloo is happening on October 8th at the Accelerator Center. I have said it before: This is the orignial and most community-focused StartupCamp.
And then there is StartupCamp Montreal, on November 27th. Patrick Lor will be coming down from Calgary to talk about what he is up to and share about his experience at iStockPhoto. The guys at Embrase always run a fantastic event. Thanks again Phillipe and Vincent.
What about Toronto you say? Oh, we have some great things planned. Founders and Funders, StartupCamp, DemoCamps, and even something a little bit secret. I say we kick it off with some beer, a patio and some big ideas. I’ll post details soon.
Comments on blog posts have always been the forgotten son of web content. When you make a comment, you never know how it will be read, where it will end up, and because of spam issues, they rarely show up in search engines. Also, because of NoFollow, your links don’t matter either.
BackType, a YCombinator funded company started by Toronto’s Christopher Golda and Mike Montano is the first tool that just may solve these problems. Some have gone in this direction before, but have had technically top-heavy models.
Instead of creating a new standard, or trying to convince blog authors to make changes to their site, BackType scours the web just like other search engines and it scrapes the comments, or they pick up the comments RSS feeds, which tools like WordPress output on request.
The moment I used BackType for the first time, I had a total “aha!” moment and I knew exactly when and why I would use the service.
Chris and Mike’s first startup was iPartee, a beautiful but underused (at least in Canada) event tool. Austin Hill also interviewed them here on StartupNorth just over a month ago.
YourTeleDoctor is a Montreal based startup that wants to transform how we think about a visit to the doctor.
I have no doubt, absolutely zero, about the role that telemedicine will play in healthcare delivery in the future. You can search for data from Gartner, Forrester or anyone, they all predict that TeleMedicine is going to be a big deal.
YourTeleDoctor is trying to be one of the first providers to come to market with a consumer-ready system to allow for video-based visits to a doctor. Quebec is a good example of a province/state with a huge rural population and a government that needs to stretch every dollar in health care delivery.
If Mehdi can be the one to bring a new level of efficiency to governments, HMOs and clinics, then there is a lot of money to be made. The flip side, however, is that this is medicine. Medicine, for all the research and great thinking that goes in to it, changes very little. It is incredibly bureaucratic, even in the private sector, and care-delivery, the component that startups like YourTeleDoctor will attempt to shake up, sees even fewer changes than other parts of the sector.
It seems likely that the first market for a tool like this would be private clinics who are relatively autonomous and well heeled. Just a few great case studies and a decent sales team might be all you need to start breaking in to an early market.
Devshop.com, which was one of the first profiles we ever did, recently launched a new version of their project management application for development teams.
The most unique aspect of Devshop is its focus on using historical data to estimate future performance. By monitoring past timelines, milestones and other aspect of a project, Devshop will estimate the risk associated with current time estimates.
Devshop also focuses on tying project requirements to the development schedule, so things don’t get out of sync.
Craig has methodically gone from a private beta through launch, a 1.0 and now Devshop 2.0 looks like a powerful tool for development teams of any size. I also took a look at the team that has come together in the last year and I was even more impressed. It’s not hard to tell that Craig is aiming to build a company that will scale when the opportunity comes.
For everyone who didn’t get in on our rounds of TinEye invitations, suffer no more! The service is now in open beta and you can get a free account.
The launch is getting a lot of coverage including Ars Technica, Information Week, and PC Pro.
Serve-yourself class websites aren’t entirely new. ChalkSite has come and gone, Engrade is a long-time option and there have been a mish mash of others. Toronto’s own Savvica had Nuvvo.com for a while as well, which was not quite the same, but close. They have since closed Nuvvo and have created LearnHub.com. One of the biggest new entrants in this market is Google. They have been marketing their Google Sites product heavily to educators.
Classtell is the latest offering in this space by Kasra Kyanzadeh from Toronto. Kasra is 15 years old (and doesn’t mind advertising it) and he has a decent set of sites under his belt.
This is a crowded space, but Kasra has built a fantastic vertical-specific CMS tool. There is a lot of room for micro-CMSs like this in all sorts of markets. Paul Graham identified sites like this in his “Startup Ideas we’d like to fund” post.
Classtell is 20$ CAD per year, and you get a 90 day (wow!) free trial to test out and get comfortable with the site.
The thing I love the most? Kasra has built the product on his own, established an early business model (rather than just giving it away), and to be honest: the product is fantastic. I played around with the demo, and it did everything other LMSs do and more.
Toronto based PoolExpert, one of Canada’s leading fantasy sports providers, announced their acquisition by Rogers Media earlier this week. While financial details were not released, this has to be a nice little exit for co-owners Ron Watson and Steve Hulford. Ron and Steve acquired PoolExpert in 2005 (the site was founded back in 1999) and grew the company over the last three years to hundreds of thousands of registered active players.
The duo are already onto their next venture, Filemobile, an on-demand social media platform company. Word is that Filemobile is growing fast and already profitable with clients such as: CTV, TSN, CBC, MTV, MuchMusic, and Molson. Starting a company is a tremendous amount of work and exiting PoolExpert should allow these two to focus their full attention on growing FileMobile as fast as possible.
Congrats on the exit guys! We’re looking forward to posting about the next win soon!