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entrepreneurship

Ottawa Web Weekend, May 9th and 10th (1)

Thursday, May 1st, 2008 · by Heri · entrepreneurship, startups

ottawa For those who came to Blitzweekend (view reports about the event), you might be interested in the Ottawa Web Weekend event, which is due in 10 days. The goal is to gather a group of entrepreneurs and developers to create a startup in one weekend, much alike the original startupweekend format.

Unfortunately, we hadn’t anyone from Ottawa coming to Blitzweekend, but I was in touch with Marc-André Plouffe for a while to get them to send a team to Blitzweekend. He’s been helpful in spreading the word there, and so I want now to publicize this.

So get there for one weekend if you want to know what’s a startup like, and have the thrill of creating a product in just 2-3 days. Who knows, maybe that’s what you were born for; and it might just be the starting point for bigger plans.

Thinking about startupping? Please share your thoughts about the local startup scene! (1)

Saturday, April 26th, 2008 · by Heri · entrepreneurship, startups

blitzweekend
The Montreal startup scene, Blitzweekend, 2nd March 2008

There is a great thread at Hacker news about the best place to startup now, outside of the U.S.

Hacker news is a social news website designed for the “ycombinator community”, and has been hailed by many (Michael Arrington among others) as a leading source of news for programming, hacking, and entrepreneurship.

I know many readers of this blog are either involved in startups, or are interested into starting or joining one. If you are part of the latter category, one of the questions you should ask yourself then what would be the best location for a startup.

Inevitably, Silicon Valley, and also Boston are shown as the reference, with its obsessive entrepreneurship culture, the abundance of investors, smart people and early adopters, which are all key ingredients of success.

There are some good news though as comments on the thread highlights many Canadian cities (Toronto, Montreal, Vancouver, Waterloo, Ottawa, Winnipeg, etc.) as great cities for a technology startup. Some positive points mentionned for Canadian cities:

  • community events and growing ecosystem,
  • cheap rent and cost of living for many cities,
  • accessible and friendly VCs,
  • not much bureaucracy, it’s easy to register a company,
  • great healthcare system compared to the U.S., plus healthier people than in the U.S.

Cons mentionned by the commenters:

  • apparently, many shy away from Montréal and from Québec because they “fear” French
  • might be a problem for those who want sunshin all year long

There are certainly many other reasons why it’s a great place to launch a technoloy startup in Montreal, in Québec or in other cities. I’ve got many in my mind, but I fear I’ll repeat myself. So I’ll leave it up to you, if you think of other reasons, please share them, either here or on the discussion thread.

Web 2.0 Expo: Exploring ideas old and new (0)

Thursday, April 24th, 2008 · by louiseric · Events, entrepreneurship, web2.0

There were a half-dozen keynote speeches yesterday, sandwiched between the day’s seminars, exhibits, and the sideshows of the unconference, and the evening’s libations and mixers around the offices of San Francisco notables.

Tim O’Reilly went on stage to repeat what Bob Metcalfe and others were saying over 12 years ago, that the network is really the computer. Tacked on were two side concepts. The first idea is an invitation to tackle large common-good projects so that even failing is contributive. The second is an interesting take on the market’s valuation of centralization (Facebook, Google, etc.) even as Web 2.0 is pulling the web towards decentralization (Open APIs, shared contexts, etc.). The end-result is that market-valued centralization will happen through interoperability. The unstated conclusions are interesting though; we can’t value or buy a share in inter-operating companies, unless through a mutual fund (assuming the companies are public) or a Yahoo-style consolidation (if not). Is centralization dressed in new clothes still the same old successful maid of yore ?

The most expected talk of the day was the announcement of Microsoft Live Mesh, a long-haul project built and hyped under the supervision of Chief Software Architect Ray Ozzie. Once you take all of the buzzwords about collaboration and data synchronization out, you essentially get, as far as I can tell, a RSS-enabled shared folder with a public changelog and a programmable API. The first application of Live Mesh is one in which multiple devices can share preference and settings files (bookmarks, contacts, personal Windows settings, the kind of thing you get for a decreasing premium on certain USB keys) so that they are all using the same basic data (as long as they run Windows, although Microsoft promised wider support to a snickering audience). They claim over a hundred developers were assigned to work on this for two years. Taking into account the complexity of building shared-storage systems (instead of, say, collaborating with Amazon or acquiring the likes of Nirvanix), I wonder what the other 90 were doing.

By far the most interesting talk of the evening was a live stage interview with Max Levchin (PayPal, Slide). If you are running low on smart, well-articulated, incisive content, you can always count on Levchin to deliver. Max covered his early attempts at start-ups (4 of them until he found success with PayPal), but focused especially on the social entertainment software that is the core of Slide’s applet business. He went at length exploring the relationship between social actions and advertisers as a non-abrasive promotional vehicle; witness, for example, the addition of a wildly popular pregnancy test to be thrown at others in SuperPoke to coincide with the release of the movie Juno. He covered new ways to segment the market based on behavioral commonalities rather than demographics, an idea that the market analysts at an earlier Consumer 2.0 panel hinted at. Levchin then offered an interesting distinction between applets and traditional software: that applets draw on users’ wish to participate through one destination, made valuable through its character and popularity, unlike traditional applications which are meant to be chosen not for their intrinsic identity but rather for the predominance of certain features and qualities differentiating them from the feature lists of others; that this is what makes widget companies so valuable. Interspersed in the talk was a fourth idea on the lifecycle-prolonging value of widgets as the novelty of social networks erode. Good stuff.

Web 2.0 Expo: The First Day (0)

Wednesday, April 23rd, 2008 · by louiseric · Events, entrepreneurship, web2.0

Greetings from very chilly San Francisco where the 2nd edition of the SF Web 2.0 Expo, organized by O’Reilly and Techweb, is going strong. Yesterday was the kick-off to the geeky celebration of all things surrounding social computing, with a full-day of seminars and demos for those willing to shell out a few extra bucks. Attendees could choose from a whopping 14 3-hour workshops during the day. The most promising of the morning track was a presentation by Vanessa Fox (the lady who organized and promoted Google Webmaster Central) and Nathan Buggia (Program Manager for Microsoft Live Search Webmaster Center) on “SEO-friendly web application design”: tons of tips and techniques to help search engines crawl, understand and index web applications and applets, as well as a list of dangerous pitfalls to avoid. There are pages and pages of great ideas taken out of this workshop, and you can get it all for free off of the private website janeandrobot.com (an already very valuable resource to be further enriched in the near future based on workshop participant questions).

The afternoon seminar was a promising one on making innovation happen on time. The fact that it was presented by an ex-Microsoftie is somewhat ironic (as it would be if the topic had covered bug-free code or open-source), but Scott Berkun has clearly learned from the depths of the trenches and came up with a toolbox of ideas and concepts useful for firing up innovative thought processes in teams larger than an entrepreneur and a few dedicated buddies (if you lead Facebook or a corporate MIS dev team, this one was for you; for startups the material beyond idea generation was academic). The “on time” part was a trifle thin on details (it was delivered in the last 20 minutes) and basically summed up to three ideas: account for weekends and natural downtimes when planning schedules, cut features before you get late on delivery instead of after, and build in a scheduling/design/experimentation dry-run stage before the start of any project to see how your expectations about tasks and times gel together.

The evening entertainment was an eye-opener. Held in Jamie Zawinski’s technodive-ish DNA Lounge, Ignite SF was a fast-paced Demo-like presentation platform where selected speakers could come and entertain the audience for 5 minutes on a topic of their choice; they were awarded 20 slides of presentation and usually not enough time to cover them all. Topics ranged from startups’ relationships to user commentary (metblogs.com), one lady’s particular love for giant Cloverdale-like monsters, Salim Ismail’s experiment with explaining startup growth through Pirsig-like metaphysics, Christian Crumlish’s hilarious take on social anti-patterns (the bit on how to send automated friend-plea rejection notices from social networks was priceless), an exploration of the open SMS-accessible digital signage around DNA lounge, and a few oddball speeches on successful interviews, the leveraging of your user base, and search engine optimization. The event was a bit like StartUpCamp but with more presenters and no experts, a lot less presentation time than at BarCamp, and a whole lot of hecklers droned out by the chatty crowd whose discussions were lighted up by the variety of topics at hand. This is great way to get to know local techies and entrepreneurs through a wide variety of quirky angles. It is also very fun — we should have this back home.


Louis-Eric Simard is a local tech entrepreneur and an occasional contributor to Montreal Tech Watch who will cover the Web 2.0 Expo in San Francisco as well as follow-up articles on the Montreal companies presenting at the National Association of Broadcasters show held in Las Vegas last week. He is an International Business graduate of the John Molson School of Business.

Austin Hill and the vision behind Akoha (2)

Sunday, April 20th, 2008 · by Heri · entrepreneurship, startups

Here is a video of Austin Hill explaining his vision and motivation behind akoha.org, a startup to launch later this year.

The akoha website already gives a glimpse of what they are trying to achieve, but I found this video much more meaningful and more powerful than all the logos and colors. A beautiful project for sure, that I found echoed in one of Paul Graham’s recent essay; the question left unanswered now is if they can change people’s behaviour.

A Tara Hunt interview.

Note: this was published a few weeks ago, but I missed it as it was published when I declared a black-outhiatus for everything related to MTW.

Lavablast wins local round of 10th annual Québec Entrepreneurship contest (4)

Monday, April 14th, 2008 · by Heri · entrepreneurship, startups

Lavablast, which was featured recently on MontrealTechWatch, has won last week the local round of the Québec Entrepreneurship contest, a yearly competition organized by the Chamber of Commerce and other organizations like school boards.

Lavablast won in the Technology & Innovation category, with a cash prize and a one-year membership to the Chamber of Commerce.

It’s great to see a truly innovative company and its founders recognized by the whole business community, although it occured to me that they have already closed their first year of operations and were able to present a business model which was already field-tested, unlike other competitors who were still in the business plan phase. Nevertheless, I hope Lavablast gets more exposure from what they’ve done, especially in regards to students in high school and in universities, showing the new generation in Québec that it’s possible to start a successful software company.

Congratulations to Etienne Tremblay & Jason Kealey!

LavaBlast’s story, or how two students created a successful software company from scratch (4)

Wednesday, March 26th, 2008 · by Heri · entrepreneurship

LavaBlast, which was started one year ago, markets a series of tools for franchise owners, letting them to centralize operations with franchisees, taking care of sales, accounting and stock management.

lavablast

The “microISV”, as the founders like to call it, follows Joel Spolsky’s philosophy, which is 1 - build a profitable company from day 1, and 2 - eat your own dog food. They also chose from the company’s beginnings not to seek any VC or angel funding.

Jason Kealey and Etienne Tremblay, the two founders who come from the software engineering program from University of Ottawa, knew that they just had to start a company dedicated on making great software. One year after the launch, it seems their business is doing great, and they are now giving back advice to anyone wanting to start a software company (part 1 - part 2 - part 3)

If you have some time today, read those posts. Some interesting excerpts:

…[the long tail] if you build and promote something worth buying, they will buy it.

The most important part of the company is not the idea but the people. A small and closely knit team of people who’ve worked together in the past is a recipe for success, regardless of the idea.

If you’re not happy in your own company, doing what you want to do, you have a problem.

because we’re self-funded, I feel we have a competitive advantage over our VC-funded competition. Our competitors want to skip the flat part of the growth phase and jump directly into the areas of highest ROI. Generally, this means developing one-size fits all software with (if you’re lucky) tons of configuration option

technology doesn’t solve conflicts

Business Plan: Before launching our company, we worked on a short business case and participated in a Technology Venture Challenge. We didn’t win, but it was a very beneficial experience because sitting down and thinking about what the hell you’re trying to accomplish is a very rewarding process.

They also explain in detail what tools they use internally to get the job done (Skype, SupportBlast, Microsoft Groove, Twiki, Lotus Unyte, MS Sharedview). They also advise Station C for any future web entrepreneur :-)

I like to see once in a while a web company that does things differently. They didn’t take any outside funding, they didn’t spend any time on financial projections or market studies, they didn’t chose the fashionable technology of the day (LavaBlast use .NET instead of your typical Ruby on Rails or Python framework), they didn’t spend time coming to our hyped camps, breakfasts and conferences, and actually shipped a product (and got solid revenues) within a year…

Maybe there is a lesson to be taken here.

VC Roundtable by Rick Segal, April 16th (1)

Saturday, March 22nd, 2008 · by Heri · Events, entrepreneurship, startups

Rick Segal, partner at JLA Ventures, a fund investing in emerging tech companies, is touring Canadian cities in a series of “VC Roundtables” to meet entrepreneurs and local startup community. The goal is to present and explain what really is a technology investor; and also present documents and information about the investment process.

The planned date for Montréal is Aril 16th, from 4.30 to 6.40pm.

This was the proposed format for the Roundtable:

The format will be something like this - and I’m open to suggestions:

  • Evening, about 3 hours in length
  • Informal/Free (super important!)
  • Small Groups (super important!)
  • Information on VC/Angels and the process.
  • Sample Term sheets, documents, business plans, PowerPoints
  • Example Pitch or Pitches to show what’s interesting/good/bad
  • Open questions for a good chunk of time.

What it will not be:

  • Demo/Startup/FooBar/Camp/Conference/MESH/MASH
  • Me trashing your ideas
  • You trashing somebody else’s ideas
  • Three hours of me showing you PowerPoint slides

The hope is that at the end of the get together you will have:

  • An understanding of my world
  • A good set of reference documents/examples/materials
  • Some of your top of mind questions answered
  • A better feel for my industry and if raising third party capital is right for you.
  • A good place to start

Here are some reasons why you might want to attend:
- it’s free and informal
- Rick Segal is one of the rare VCs who participate actively in the startup scene in Canada, he is an active blogger, sponsors and goes regularly to demoCamps, and is committed to support Canadia-based startups,
- you are planning to launch a startup, and looking to raise third-party capital,
- you might be an engineer/a tech guy, and clueless about term sheets and due diligence processes,
- you want to know how to approach angels and VCs and what kind of relationship to have with them,
- you want to know the business criterias (and other) that investors are looking for when investing

Registration is here. It is limited to 25 seats for each session.

There are also sessions in Ottawa on April 16th, and in Toronto the following day, if you can’t make it.

A small step for Branchez-Vous, a big symbol for local entrepreneurs (7)

Tuesday, March 18th, 2008 · by Heri · entrepreneurship, web2.0

Yesterday, Branchez-vous reported that it acquired 2 niche successful websites in Québec, fanatique.ca and humourquebec.com.

I didn’t write about it, as I knew Branchez-Vous’s overall strategy is to become the #1 media destination in Québec, and their tactic is to acquire regularly new web destinations, on a bi-monthly basis, and launch new advertising partnerships. One of the websites’s price tag was $65.000, and well, for me… that was it, it closed the story.

And I moved on. It’s hard to report such a story when you hear about Bebo’s acquisition price or Meebo’s valuation.

I just read however a post that brings a new perspective about this. Jean-François Dubé thanks Émile Girard, who was behind both websites.

J’aimerais le féliciter pour cette belle réussite mais j’aimerais surtout le remercier. Pourquoi? Parce que sans même me connaitre, Émile m’a donné un solide coup de pied dans le derrière en me faisant réaliser qu’il est possible pour un jeune entrepreneur du Québec de réussir dans ce domaine de fou.

Tout comme Émile, j’aurai bientôt 24 ans et j’ai la tête (et le laptop) pleine de projets. Sans le vouloir, il vient d’envoyer un gros “FUCK YOU” à tout ceux qui n’ont pas cru en moi jusqu’à maintenant et qui m’ont dit que je devrais entrer dans une grosse boîte avant de tenter de voler de mes propres ailes.

And there I understood that this is really a meaningful symbol for new entrepreneurs. Émile Girard started both websites in his early twenties, was a solo-entrepreneur, gathered an audience, and through passion, hard, relenteless work, he made a substantial amount of money from it. The fact that we are not talking about digg or reddit.com might be even more meaningful for new entrepreneurs: it’s easier for a Montreal/Quebec/Canadian-based entrepreneur to see him/herself in Émile Girard’s shoes than say, in Kevin Rose’s, of Digg.com fame.

And I agree with Jean-François Dubé. Stories like Émile Girard’s needs to be heard more often. Yes, it’s possible to start something in Québec. Be it a “small”, dedicated website like fanatique.ca, or something big, like standoutjobs.

And I am now starting now a new section on Montreal Tech Watch, called it Technology Entrepreneurs Stars, and it will be dedicated to local entrepreneurs who succeeded, be it from a successful IPO or an acquisition. If you know anyone who fits there, feel free to comment and email at news@montrealtechwatch.com

Capital Innovation 2008 connects angel investors and tech entrepreneurs (2)

Wednesday, March 12th, 2008 · by Heri · entrepreneurship

The InterLogiq Network is holding a conference and networking event entitled Capital Innovation 2008 this afternoon and evening at the St-James Club, a “prestigious” club for “business leaders”.

The event starts at 2pm with 3 keynotes, by Dan Mothershill, president of the National Angel Organization, Austin Hill, Mario Limoges, who will talk about investment opportunities in technology.

6 projects/startups will also get to present to the audience, and a cocktail presented as a networking opportunity will close the event.

Found

  • Identi.ca

     

    To the consternation of Twitter users, the site often falters amid the demands of processing millions of tweets a day. One possible solution to this problem is on display at Identi.ca, the site that looks most identical to Twitter. What's different is under the hood: Nearly 100 different sites are sharing the load. "Instead of a single service, we're part of a federated network of microblogging sites running open-source software," says Evan Prodromou, who launched Identi.ca this past summer. He expects the service to mushroom from its current base of 30,000 to 500,000 within a year, and thinks it will surpass Twitter in users by 2010.

  •  

    capitalinnovation 2009

    Local investors are gearing up for Capital Innovation 2009, an event organized for March next year by Amiral Partenaires. The event will gather private investors such as VC funds, angel investors and fund managers; and is aimed at showcasing high-potential ventures needing from $100k to $1M.

    For the event, BDR Capital, ID Capital, iNovia Capital, JLA, MSU and Propulsion Ventures will be selecting 12 ideas which will be presented to investors during the event. Deadline on Nov. 28th for applications:

  • Weblocal is different though from their previous projects since it allows users to sign up, review + recommend businesses, tag them, as well as upload pictures and photos. It also has a mobile version.  Lots of user-generated content then, which puts weblocal in the same category as other websites such asmonavis.ca or praized.

    weblocal

  •  

    New standoutjobs Standoutjobs whichfirst launched at DEMO last year has announced last week they have launched “version two”of their product.

    They stay true to the original vision, which is to provide companies a full array of tools highlighting the company’s best traits, making thus the company more appealing to prospective candidate

  • he Main will become a wireless Internet playground by year's end, thanks to the merchants' association of the world-famous boulevard. The Société de développement du boulevard Saint-Laurent will provide free Internet access from Sherbrooke St. to Mount Royal Ave. to attract and retain more visitors and to push promotions onto tourists.

  • Flow Ventures invests in and accelerates startups. Our unique model combines financing, strategy and hands-on operational services designed to grow new ventures quickly and efficiently. Flow can accelerate your startup by operating key areas of your startup including finance, software development, HR, business development and administration. This allows entrepreneurs to focus on their products and their customers rather than building infrastructure and capacity.

  • Standout Jobs, a leading provider of Web-based tools to power companies’ online recruiting efforts, today announced the general availability of version two of its web-based Recruitment Communication Platform. Previously dubbed “Reception” while in beta, Standout Jobs’ Recruitment Communication Platform boasts many new features and updated functionality proven successful with more than 200 beta customers since the company’s launch at DEMO in January 2008.

  • La rive-sud de Montréal c’est bien évidemment PRATT & WHITNEY, HÉROUX-DEVTEK, 3M , BOMBARDIER, ou encore DANONE . Mais il existe en Montérégie, bien d’autres PME de domaines aussi diversifiés que les télécommunications, la chimie, la pharmaceutique, l’informatique, l’environnement, l’agriculture, l’agro-alimentaire, l’électronique etc.

  • My research shows that more than a third of the region's workforce comes from the creative class - scientists, technology workers, entertainers, artists and designers, as well as managers and financial types - putting it in the top 10 per cent of all regions in North America, and a global leader as well. Nearly a fifth of the Montreal region's workforce forms a super-creative core made up of the techies plus cultural and entertainment types.

  • If you're busy running your company, you're in the trenches most of the time. The key word there is "in". In Michael Gerber's excellent book"E-Myth Revisited" he talks about the need for entrepreneurs to both work in the business as well as "on" it. "In" is the day to day nuts and bolts. "On" involves stepping back and looking down at your business as a set of priorities, systems, people capabilities, etc.

    Sometimes getting the perspective to work "on" the business (and work on yourself for that matter) is as simple as business travel. Some of my best thoughts come when I'm stuck in an airplane for a few hours. I also work from home at least one day per month. I use that time to think. I keep an ongoing list of issues and opportunities and use these times of isolation to go through them.

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