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Brain Food Blog
Recent Entries
 
Sep. 22: Where are the Deals? Private Equity and Venture Capital Funds' Best Practices in Deal Origination
Lead Generation 2.0: How Entrepreneurs are Fueling the Next Wave of Innovation in Internet Marketing
Underleveraged talent pool: the unemployed and underemployed
Leveraging the talents of the autistic/creating a new business
Raising Fund X: Trends in Private Equity Fundraising and Fund Evaluation
Visit to SF Bay Area May 5-8: Wharton & Columbia Business School Alumni Clubs
Integrity Research Names Evalueserve Circle of Experts 2008 Top Pick as Asia/ Emerging Market Specialist Expert Network
On Sourcing Deals for Private Equity Funds
 
 Tuesday, December 21, 2004
3 WISE PEOPLE -- Investors & Visionaries Wrap Up the Year For Us
My notes from this morning’s iBreakfast: 3 WISE PEOPLE -- Investors & Visionaries Wrap Up the Year For Us


Tue. Dec. 21, 100 Park Ave., with:
Esther Dyson, Editor, Release 1.0, CNET Networks
Howard Morgan, V. Chairman, Idealab
Stephen Brotman, Silicon Alley Venture Partners

“Every year, we look for direction and understanding from the industry sages. This year, we ask the people who have launched dozens of new companies about the past year -- and their investment outlook at a time when the industry seems to be growing again. “

======================================================

Esther Dyson, Release 1.0 at CNET, has devoted her life to discovering the inevitable and promoting the possible. As an active investor and commentator, she focuses on emerging technologies and business models (peer-to-peer, artificial intelligence, the Internet, wireless applications), emerging markets and emerging companies.

COMMENTS

+ A lot of tech spending will be useless; it’s hygiene (E.G., SarBox) not new services.

+ Social networking is going to morph again
She’s now working on attention.xml, a would-be standard for expressing how many people read your blog, how many people looked at your photo.
Social networking is a functionality that will go into other services

+ Physical world has been very separate from the IT world, but that will change. RFID and other technologies will change that. Our big challenge will be filtering, not collecting (just as we have this problem with email).

+ Huge changes in how healthcare works. We’re thinking about healthcare in an innumerate way. Currently, incentives misaligned, and risks not adjusted properly.

======================================================
Dr. Howard Morgan, Idealab, began working with Idealab in 1997 and began serving as Vice Chairman in early 2000. Howard is also President and Founder of the Arca Group, Inc., a consulting and venture capital investment firm specializing in the areas of computer and communications technologies. He has more than 25 years of experience with more than thirty high-tech entrepreneurial ventures.

COMMENTS

Josh Koppelman (half.com) and Morgan created his new VC
MyPublisher (one of their portfolio companies) lets you convert online content to offline. TurnTide was a recent success for them.

Trends:

Big getting bigger (Oracle/Peoplesoft, etc.)

VOIP is real.
He’s used VOIP for 3 years and only got one complaint about voice quality.
Soon you’ll be able to call someone on a website just by clicking on it.
Next phase : Video over IP
US is last country in the world to get into thumb messaging. This will become bigger, particularly for gaming/dating.


======================================================
Stephen Brotman founded Silicon Alley Venture Partners in 1998. The fund's institutional investors control over $2 billion in venture capital and include TL Ventures, a Safeguard affiliate, TD Capital and the principles of Draper Fisher Jurvetson and Boston Millennium.

COMMENTS

Good news: wisdom is part pattern recognition and part experience. You have to find opportunities that are patently obvious but yet have a contrarian perspective.
When consolidation happens, it’s not a great place to innovate.
The new paradigm is about corporate dropouts, it’s not about university research. Why? Because the tech world has become corporate.
Capital intensity is much lower now.
To start a tech-enabled business, very easy.
Value of R&D is lower (it’s all in Russia, India); the value is in servicing, design.
The older technologies we described start from zero every quarter. IT services have much more recurring revenues.

For all these reasons, Brotman thinks that the tristate area will generate tremendous opportunities.

20% of Fortune 500 is in tristate area.
590,000 tech workers in tristate area: applied technology people. They write scripts, customize, etc. Many use other peoples’ products, as opposed to using new products.
170,000 tech workers in silicon valley—more coders, etc.
The people in the tristate area are the new paradigm.
SAVP’s portfolio are customer-intimate; they know their industry.
Big customers in CA (Intel, etc.) are very different than big customers in NY (JP Morgan)

In general, 62% of venture capital goes to services businesses
In SF bay area/MA, it’s only 16-17%

======================================================
Q&A
======================================================
Rick Bruner, DoubleClick
Where will the growth be? What should a 19-year-old study?



Dyson:
The only place with less growth than the US will be Western Europe
To get rich, go to another country.

Howard Morgan:
“History doesn’t repeat itself, but it rhymes"
The rhyme for next 20 years will be biotech/bioinformatics.
PartSearch now outsources for Best Buy, Radio Shack, 13 major chains. $50M revenues next year.
“Rap is universal because you have to have music that annoys your parents."



Teten: How will social neworking becoming a functionality?
Dyson: People doing other things will incorporate this functionality. For example, she likes Flickr (in which she’s an investor) which allows you to see who else likes the same topics to photograph that you do. She likes Visible Path (in which she’s an investor), which uses social networks for a clear purpose, as opposed to simply doing it for its own sake.

Brotman: open source is end-of-lifecycle for core technologies.
Dyson: It’s also leading edge of pricing shift.
As an investor, focus on the person not the model.

Brotman: they just invested in Critical Mention, which analyzes TV content

Another trend: make customer serve himself
IBM was losing $200M/year on its PC business; it was a good deal for them to sell.

Dyson: ‘online music’ is like ‘electricity-based lighting’—it’s not a separate category.

Morgan: There are 70M cities in China with >1 million people. Those are natural places for social network software.
Author: David Teten
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 Monday, December 20, 2004
The Keys to Building Trust
The Keys to Building Trust

Trust can be hard to gain and easy to lose. In all matters of trust, actions always speak louder than words, says Stever Robbins.

http://hbswk.hbs.edu/item.jhtml?id=4553&t=srobbins

Author: David Teten
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 Sunday, December 19, 2004
How to Maximize the Value of your Time in Business School
I gave a talk to NYU's Stern Scholars on Dec. 9 on "How to Maximize the Value of Your Time in Business School". (Thank you to Ken Wee for coordinating the event!) Among the topics I covered: career planning, time optimization, and selective short-term learning programs and scholarships. I based this speech on interviews I conducted of recent graduates from leading business schools, asking them, "What would you have done differently? What is your advice for someone just starting your program".

You can download the slides here in PDF: How to Squeeze Maximum Value from Your Education. This speech is also available as a 22-page white paper for $5.00.

Of course, I would welcome feedback on this presentation!
Author: David Teten
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 Wednesday, December 15, 2004
EBF: An uncertain future for management consulting
An uncertain future for management consulting by Gill Ringland and Azfar Shaukat
Find out what the world of management consultancy will look like in 2020.

European Business Forum (EBF) is a quarterly business publication (www.ebfonline.com) targeted at business executives worldwide. EBF aims to stimulate the international management debate by bringing together business practitioners, academics and advisers.

via Knowledge@Emory Partners
Author: David Teten
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 Tuesday, December 14, 2004
Career Transitions Guide from Execunet (no cost)
via Richard Taylor,

"I have just reviewed a Career Transitions guide put out by Execunet. The Guide provides advice on planning and implementing an effective plan to land a new executive job. It is very well done and worth requesting if you or someone you know is in career transition. Normally, they charge for these guides; they are quite comprehensive. If you would like a no cost copy of this guide simply use the link below."

http://www.execunet.com/sengcareers
Author: David Teten
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 Sunday, December 12, 2004
Flex Power:A Capital Way to Gain Clout, Inside and Out (washingtonpost.com)
This is a fascinating article on the social networks of some individuals in the current US administration. It also gives a feeling for how the NGO, private sector, and government power networks all inter-relate.

Flex Power: A Capital Way to Gain Clout, Inside and Out (washingtonpost.com)

- via Valdis Krebs
Author: David Teten
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 Wednesday, December 08, 2004
Pricenoia - Get the best prices on books, the international way!
There are six international Amazon stores. You may think that ordering from the nearest Amazon would be cheaper, but it isn't in many cases.

This is what you get when you search on Pricenoia:

" * We search for the price of a single book in every store in its local currency
* We show you all the prices in the same currency, daily updated (Euro for europeans, USDollar for the rest of the world), to catch the differences in a easy way,
* We add the shipping fares (the cheapest shipping available to your country from each store)
* We show the total amount
* We redirect you to book in the site you select. "

Even if there is a local Amazon store in your country, it can be cheaper to order abroad.

What I'd love to learn more about is the note on their site that says, "in association with Amazon." The site doesn't explain exactly what their relationship is. If Pricenoia reduces the tax revenue for some European countries, or the publishing revenues for some US academic publishers, Bezos will likely get some angry phone calls. However, a freer market is definitely better for the consumer!
Author: David Teten
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sample contracts/other legal documents (at no charge)
At no cost, Onecle provides a large number of sample contracts and similar legal documents, from consulting agreements to trusts and many other forms of agreements. (courtesy of
Thomas P. Campbell ).
Author: David Teten
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