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Google Charts, Presentations (Pre-Announcing a’la Microsoft)

Almost a year ago I wrote about a visual comparison of Google and Zoho spreadsheets. At the time, Zoho simply KO’d Google, which had no charting support whatsoever. Of course this was more then just a “beauty-contest”: charting is simply the most effective way of visually conveying a message, and as such a “must have”.

It’s time to update that comparison (I’m using the same spreadsheet, updated to today’s numbers), since Google has announced charting capabilities today, adding 18 types of charts to select from (Zoho has 27, and ThinkFree 32).

Clearly, Google is catching up on the appearance front, the new charts are appealing. (Click on the pics to view the public version of the original spreadsheets).

On the publication side, Zoho still leads: instead of using images, like I did here for the sake of comparison, I could have simply embedded the system-generated script which would keep my Zoho Sheet inside this blog post up-to-date. In fact sometimes it makes sense to publish only the chart, without the underlying spreadsheet, like this:

Feedburner Subscribers in % - http://sheet.zoho.comThe chart to the right is not an image, any changes in the originating spreadsheet will be immediately reflected in the published article.

The addition of charts was announced today in Google’s usual, understated style; in fact the first blog post on the subject was titled How to make a pie. For all I know it could have been Grandma’s Apple Pie recipe. smile_tongue

Contrary to this the other Google announcement came with a lot of hoopla, CEO Eric Schmidt dropping the news of Google’s Presentation software in front of ten thousand Web 2.0 Expo attendees. The only problem is, unlike Zoho and ThinkFree, Google does not have the Presentation creator/manager yet, it won’t be coming for months, and as Google Blogoscoped observes, this preannouncement “Microsoft-style”, instead of just releasing products and let users discover them is “uncool” – and a break away from Google’s good traditions.

Talk about announcement, Zoho, which has made it a tradition to launch a new product at just about any event – and in between – surprised: there was no announcement. Are the sleeping? I think not, in fact as Advisor to Zoho I am quite happy with them announcing no announcements: they plan “not to release any new application until we open up our existing private-beta applications (Notebook, Meeting & Mail)”.

Those who attended the SMB Application Marketplace session at Web 2.0 Expo may have picked up on something more to come though: responding to a moderator question, Zoho Evangelist Raju Vegesna stated they want to “become the IT department of small businesses“… and there is clearly more to SMB IT than just an Office Suite.

Like I’ve stated before, 2007 will be the year when it’s all coming together.

Update (4/18): Note to Google: it’s *not* a very good idea to display my email address on spreadsheets I choose to make public. Sorry, Google, my mistake, I used the wrong URL (not the public one).

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High Profile Startup Launch Opportunities Abound

There’s certainly no shortage of high-profile opportunities for startups nowadays. 

The creme de la creme is no doubt Demo where 70 startup can pitch, get courted by VC’s and enjoy unprecedented publicity. High profile, professional, and (almost) prohibitively expensive.  You essentially have to be already funded or bring in significant revenue to be able to afford it.  Fortunately there is a growing number of affordable alternatives.

Under the Radar is a well-established conference series presented by Dealmaker Media (formerly known as IBDNetwork). After the recent, successful Office 2.0 event, the next UtR is focusing on Entertainment and Media on June 28th.  If this is your field, hurry up there are 4 days left for registration. Clarification: the April 20th deadline is for submitting your company as a presenter, attendee registration is open right till the event itself.

SVASE, the Silicon Valley Association of Startup Entrepreneurs, expanded it’s scope of events last year with the joint Launch: Silicon Valley / Art of the Start mega-event jointly put up with Garage Technology Ventures. Guy Kawasaki calls Launch: Silicon Valley 2007 “the poor man’s Demo” and recommends you get in early. Submission deadline here is May 3rd – see more information in my earlier post

Finally, a “newborn”:  Mike Arrington just announced TechCrunch20, a conference he is co-producing with Jason Calacanis in September, where “twenty of the hottest new startups will announce and demo their products over a two day period. And they don’t pay a cent to do this.”  Submission deadline to this event is May 30th.

Summing up, in the order of occurrence:

  • Launch: Silicon Valley, June 5th, 30 startups, deadline May 3rd.
  • Under the Radar,  June28th, 32 startups, deadline April 20th.
  • TechCrunch20, September 17-18th, 20 startups, deadline May 30th.

Sounds like a “busy” summer to me smile_regular

 

 

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Atlassian is Hiring a VP of Marketing

I don’t typically broadcast job searches, but I’m breaking that tradition now for a few reasons.

1: Cool cartoon smile_wink

2: Atlassian is a great company, that I wrote about quite a few times. Being “great” means not only $ucce$$ful, fast-growing, but also a good team to be part of.

3: Transparency. I just wrote about this recently, and Atlassian President Jeffrey Walker proves it again, by sharing his thoughts on the hiring process. I agree with almost all his points, except #8, the backup plan: Executive Recruiters. I think Atlassian is still at a size where they are better off finding the right candidate through their personal network – or they may face situations like this.

So while it looks like they are well on their way finding the right person, if you, or somebody you know are the candidate they’ve been waiting for, contact Jeffrey NOW. Somehow I think the beer-test might be relaxed this time.

But be warned: great company as it is, it’s also a dangerous bunch! smile_shades

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Launch: Silicon Valley 2007 – Call for Startups

Startup Entrepreneurs who did not make it to the recent Under the Radar event, here’s your second chance: join us at Launch: Silicon Valley 2007, co-presented by SVASE and Garage Technology Ventures.

In fact it will be more than a second chance: while the UtR event focused specifically on the Office 2.0 space, Launch 2007 is designed to uncover and showcase products and services from the most exciting of the newest startups in information technology, mobility, security, digital media next generation internet, life sciences and clean energy.   The inaugural Launch event was in 2006, combined with Guy Kawasaki’s Art of the Start conference. 

Are these events worth attending?  The startup CEO’s who got their “breakthrough” at last year’s Launch certainly think so:

Faraz Hoodbhoy, CEO, PixSense, Inc:

”Since L:SV (November 8, 2006) we closed series A with Innovacom and ATA and have gone on to win large customer deals across the Telco and mobile social networking world. We’re growing significantly and are now looking at closing a new round of funding as well that we will announce sometime early next month.

On the team side, we’re up to well over 50 people and are looking to be over 120 by end of this year across the globe. We currently have people on the ground in Santa Clara, Beijing, Karachi, Tokyo and soon to expand to Hong Kong, Paris, London, Dubai and Bombay.

So things are going quite well so far. Thanks much for giving us the opportunity to present at L:SV; it was indeed a very good show for us.

Sincerely, Faraz”

Vajid Jafri, Founder & CEO, cFares:

“Launch: Silicon Valley was an extremely valuable event for cFares, as it was there that we met the firm that subsequently became the lead investor in our latest round of finance. We would not have achieved as much progress as we have without Launch: Silicon Valley.”

So if you are building the Next Great Business in the areas mentioned above, are (almost) ready for launch, meaning that by June 5, 2007 you will have a product or service available, but have not been out in the marketplace for more than a few months, then by all means send an Executive Summary of no more than 2 pages to Launchsv@svase.org. Submission deadline: May 3, 2007.  Last year over 150 companies from New York, Colorado, Finland, New Zealand, Australia, Spain, and the UK, as well as from the West Coast of the USA applied, so clearly the presentation spots are in high demand. (Garage Technology offers a useful Writing a Compelling Executive Summary guide)

Every Executive Summary will be evaluated by at least 2 members of the Advisory Board, composed of leading members of the Silicon Valley investment community. Following these evaluations, up to 30 companies will be invited to present at the Launch: Silicon Valley 2007 event on June 5 at the Microsoft Campus in Mountain View, California.  Presentations slots are 10 minutes, running in 6 sessions of 5 companies each.  Each presenting team will also be assigned a cocktail table in the Networking Room where they can meet with interested audience members one-on-one to answer questions and explore possibilities.

CEOs of the companies voted “most promising new company” in each of the six sessions at the event will also receive invitations (for two) to attend the prestigious Ernst & Young “Entrepreneur of the Year” Gala Dinner on June 29 at the Fairmont Hotel in San Francisco.

On the evening on June 4, the presenting companies, registered audience and selected bloggers and media will be invited to a Pre-Event Party at a prestigious location in Palo Alto, providing a further opportunity for networking with Silicon Valley’s movers and shakers.

Guy Kawasaki calls Launch: Silicon Valley “the poor man’s Demo” and recommends you get in. SVASE proudly wears that badge, since we’re bringing this event at a price that won’t keep any startup away.  It’s your turn now: send in the Executive Summary and launch with us in June.

Update (4/12): AlwaysOn: If you launch your product and no-one notices… 

 

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Are Philanthropy and Entrepreneurship Compatible?

  • “Odd thing for an office ’style’ company to go into – cartoons”

  • “Brilliant strategic move or jumping the shark? I can’t decide.”

  • “At least all their eggs arent in online software; office”

  • I understand doing these things because you get people creating content that you can then monetize…”

The reactions to TechCrunch announcing ToonDoo, a comic strip creator were rather mixed – just as I expected. Not so much because of tool itself, but because of it’s relationship to Zoho, the Granddaddy of the Office 2.0 market. Here’s the CEO’s explanation:

unproductivity 2.0

Joke apart, ToonDoo certainly isn’t part of the Zoho Suite, and to dispel some of the myth, it’s not about keeping eggs in different baskets, and there are no evil monetization plans either.

I’ve always been fascinated with what really drives entrepreneurs. As Advisor to Zoho I got to know some of the team, and have been planning to share some of my thoughts for a while. Zoho is just one, albeit the most fashionable brand of a larger company, Adventnet. Adventnet is not a “hot name” like Zoho – even their website looks boring. But their product list is over a hundred items long. “Boring”, reliable, solid cash-cows. smile_wink

They are not a startup by any means: they have been in business for ten years, organically growing to 600+ employees and millions of dollars in revenue (without outside investment). Yet working with them feels like working with a startup: in the US they have a team of about 20, the key feature in the office is a pool table, although they are hardly ever in, often working remotely.

The solid position, and being self-funded allows them to do a few things that don’t directly fit business their strategy – they just like “doing good”.

One of these non-business projects funded entirely by Adventnet is Jambav, a site offering games and educational tools for children, ranging from toddlers to preschoolers, as well as resources for kids with special needs, (Update: read Scoble for some background) and community, forum, blogs for parents. Everything at Jambav is free, and so is their latest creation, ToonDoo. The Jambav team realized that us, “grown-up kids” can also use it, so they ended up releasing it under a separate brand.

Education is another subject CEO Sridhar Vembu frequently thinks and writes about:

He has a personal interest in the subject, having “wasted” 4 years getting his PhD in Princeton: “I actually had to unlearn a lot, to be in business. And I didn’t particularly enjoy the PhD experience either. If I were to go through life again, I wouldn’t repeat that PhD, that’s for sure.

He puts his money where his mouth is: he launched “Adventnet University” in India, bringing in disadvantaged teenage kids and putting them through 2 years of education, with a strong engineering / software focus. Is this all altruism? Probably not. Adventnet is hiring a lot of engineers and some will likely come from their own training program. One does not have to be entirely altruistic to do philanthropy. For these kids, who otherwise would have no hope of ever going to college, “Adventnet University” is a life-changing event. See fellow Enterprise Irregular Vinnie Mirchandani’s thoughts here.

But I am trying to make a bigger point here, so let me move on to another company now – one that I have absolutely no business relationship with.

A good year or so ago Atlassian was not a widely talked-about name, although they were already the market leader in the Enterprise Wiki space, and prior to that had achieved phenomenal success with their first product, Jira. Without the luxury of spending VC money, they had their priorities straight: first get the products right, let them sell on their own strengths, then start spending on marketing and PR. After financial success came recognition: they keep on winning awards, the Founders became Entrepreneur of the Year and are now featured on the cover of Business Week.

Mike Cannon-Brookes, Co-Founder and CEO is an avid blogger who openly talks about “life at Atlassian”. It’s through his blog that I found out about their commitment to philanthropy. Every employee can spend 6 workdays a year on their favorite non-profit or charity. Is that a big deal? Well, considering an average of 220 workdays a year, it translates to 2.75% of their productivity. Salesforce.com is known to devote 1% of revenues to charity. I am not underestimating that 1%, but it’s spent with a stroke of a pen… whereas in Atlassian every employee is personally involved. (Compare that to my experience in a very Big, very Blue company, where management kept on publishing reports on employee contribution to United Way (the only choice) until the desired quotas were achieved… ) Update: I stand corrected, Salesforce.com employees can also donate 1% of their work-time.

On a personal side Mike issued a Kiva Challenge. Technically speaking, Kiva is not charity, handing out micro-loans to small businesses – but these are interest-free, high-risk (?) loans. One could say it’s a very “inefficient” process: the loan amounts can be as little as $25, and typically not more than a few hundred dollars. Managing it, and – like Mike does – soliciting other lenders, matching their contributions is time-consuming, but I’m sure as a true Entrepreneur, Mike actually enjoys it. Now, the money could just be given to a large charity, and disappear in the labyrinth of bureaucracy, but helping small businesses take off does more good in the long run. “Give a man a fish and he will eat for a day. Teach a man to fish and he will eat for a lifetime.”

I could cite more examples, but this story has to conclude at some point.smile_embaressed

I admit I am biased, I do like these companies, and probably write about them more often than others.

There are business reasons: they both are leaders in their market, not only have best-in-class products but also provide excellent, personal support and are very transparent about business, strengths, weaknesses, even bug reports. But other than the business criteria, they are also just a bunch of “likeable” people, and I think their non-business, charitable activities play an important role in that. I’d venture to say that everything else being equal, as a small business I’d probably prefer buying from such a “likeable” vs. one with a great product, but with aggressive sales, arrogant support, and generally “unpleasant” people.

What do you think? Is “doing good” a luxury, does it just serve personal satisfaction, or does it have a place in business, especially in startups / emerging businesses? On the other hand, if there is indirect business “payoff”, is it just an investment, or still a philanthropic act?

Update (4/8): Talk about the importance of buying from a “likeable” company, check out: I Canceled My Basecamp Account Today.

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TechFold, Who Are You?

Two-day-old blog TechFold appears to be focusing on technology, but it’s (anonymous) author knows a thing or two about marketing, too: write a good quality post about a company headed by a well-read A-list blogger, expect him to respond,  sit back and wait for the readers. smile_wink

So far it worked, I’m sure hundreds of readers follow Jeff Nolan’s response and his link to TechFold’s  inaugural post, 5 Suggestions to make Teqlo a Survivor.  Hats off to Jeff for the transparency in his response – he basically admits early strategic mistakes and outlines the course of correction:

“I’ll be very candid in saying I think we made a strategic error in trying to make the Builder an “everyman” platform that doesn’t have enough meat on the bone to appeal to the more technical audience who actually does care about it. In other words, we built the Builder for an audience that is largely not interested in using it, per the previous point, so now we’re in a position where we need to add more complex feature sets in order to make the Builder more appealing to the techie crowd, but in reality what this comes down to is exposing more of the complexity that we tried hard to cover up.”

It’s a good conversation, and if the inaugural post is any indication of the quality of the blog, it may very well be one worth subscribing to.  Except … I really, really don’t understand the anonymity. I’ve previously stated that Respect Must be Earned Even in the Blogosphere – but that was about a cowardly attack-blog.  TechFold appears to be decent, critical, but positively so.  Please, please, dear TechFold author, whoever you are, “come out” and continue writing your blog with your “shields up”.  Your About section is a decent mission statement. It just needs a name. ( a photo, perhaps?smile_shades )

 

 

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FuckedCrunch to Launch … Not a Good Sign

 “FuckedCompany first went live in 2000, chronicling failing and troubled companies in its unique and abrasive style after the dot com bust. Within a year it had a massive audience and was getting serious mainstream press attention. As the startup economy became better in 2004, much of the attention the site received went away.”

The attention did not quite disappear: it just shifted to TechCrunch as the boom picked up.  Now they all come together: TechCrunch acquired FuckedCompany.   Seemingly logical: Editor Mike Arrington has for some time maintained a DeadPool.  While some considered it a cynical move, I always thought it was part of providing a full picture of startup-land. I suppose the DeadPool will soon be merged into FuckedCrunch.

The transaction itself, and Mike’s explanation are not exactly bullish signs for the startup world.  In fact it very much looks like Mike hedges the bets.

There’s another notable point “hidden” in today’s announcement: it was a 100% stock transaction.  Meaning: TechCrunch has *stocks*.  The only other reference I’ve noticed before was a few days ago, when Mike hinted he would offer stock options to bloggers-for-hire.  Add to this the recent hiring of M&A hotshot Heather Harde as CEO and it’s not that difficult to see that bubble or not, Mike Arrington is setting the stage for at least one more lucrative exit…smile_tongue

Update (3/31): Of course all if this may just be an April Fools’ joke, whether FC was actually acquired or not.   As a matter of fact, it may have started as a joke that will materialize anyway…

 

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Contextual Advertising Blunders

Here’s another case of contextual advertising producing really, really inappropriate results:

I was watching the CNN video about Iran kidnapping British Navy personnel from their boats, when the ad in the bottom slid in: “Life is better with a boat.  Discover Boating”.  Yeah, right.  I’m sure the 15 British hostages agree right now.

A previous case of unfortunate ad placement also includes boats. Yahoo Headlines talk about the Katrina Catastrophy, Navy ships and rescue teams rushing to the region, while the associated ad reads: “Down the Shore… Enjoy the last days of summer.”

By far not as tasteless as this one from Southern Comfort:  “Born in New Orleans (where anything can happen)” – right after Katrina.

(credit to Jeff Clavier)

This last one actually goes beyond just a “blunder”: as proven by a job ad, it was not a case of unfortunate timing, but intentionally tasteless, exploitative advertising.

Related posts:

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Sell Software – Ship T-Shirts

That’s a line stolen from Atlassian’s CEO:

“When you’re selling virtual goods, having something concrete to tie it to is a good idea. That’s why we ship t-shirts all around the planet on a monthly basis. If you buy any top-tier Atlassian product, we ship a t-shirt to your desk.

If you’re going to make a corporate t-shirt, make it fun like Tangosol’s “Coherence – Don’t get fluster clucked”, our “JIRA – Because You’ve Got Issues” etc. If it’s boring, people are that much less likely to wear it.”

Atlassian just issued T-shirt 2.0, and indeed, they are funsmile_teeth (see all of them here.)

P.S. They won yet another award – but hey, that’s not even news anymore smile_wink

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"Personalized" Mass Email

It’s always nicer to receive a personal email than mass PR-releases.  Like the letter below:

“Hi Zoli,

 I wanted to make sure you saw this today…”

Damn mail-merge, the color gives him away… smile_party