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Archive for the ‘venture capital’ Category

FarmVille Maker Zynga Has Now Raised A Whopping $366 Million

Tuesday, June 15th, 2010

Zynga, the creators of the blockbuster social game FarmVille, has raised another round of funding: $147 million, seemingly all from Japanese telecommunications and media conglomerate Softbank.

According to Bloomberg Businessweek and Nikkei English News, Zynga and Softbank have joined forces to spread Zynga’s wildly successful suite of social games throughout Asia. The company will focus on mobile devices — a smart move, considering that many Japanese consumers use their mobile phones as their primary access point to the web.

Just six months ago, Zynga raised an impressive $180 million from Russia’s Digital Sky Technologies, the same firm that invested $200 million in Facebook. Since then, Zynga has been rapidly rising in value; its most recently valuation placed it at over $4 billion. Zynga has raised a total of around $366 million in an angel and four subsequent rounds of funding.

Softbank has been making some high-profile investments into U.S. companies over the last year. In November 2008, Softbank invested millions in RockYou, another social application developer. More recently, live video platform Ustream raised $75 million in a round led by Softbank in order to expand its Asia operations.

Zynga will likely use the funds to accelerate its hiring spree and make acquisitions as it moves into Asia. Two weeks ago, the company acquired Challenge Games and its 35 employees for around $20 million.

Tech Coast Angels Orange County Fast Pitch May 25th, 2010

Monday, May 3rd, 2010

The 10th Annual Tech Coast Angels Fast Pitch Competition in Orange County is a “must attend” event for all entrepreneurs who are looking to jump-start their entrepreneurial dreams, and for investors seeking to hear about the latest in innovation in Southern California.

Each of the 12 carefully selected competitors will give a 90-second pitch to a panel of distinguished judges. The judges will then quiz them for an additional 2 minutes. The four winners — for Best of the Best, Best Presentation, Best Investment Opportunity, and the Audience Pick — will be automatically invited to make presentations at Tech Coast Angels deal-review screening sessions.

The event begins with a walk-around gourmet buffet dinner where the entrepreneurs who are going to pitch will have individual table displays for you to meet and greet. Tech Coast Angels members and other guests will be there to visit with you.

Here at Ethos 360 we’ve had many of our clients pitch the Tech Coast Angels and the experience has been overwhelmingly positive. If you’re in the area take advantage of this wonderful opportunity. Learn more here- www.pitchtheangels.com

10th Annual OC Fast Pitch Competition @ UC Irvine
May 25, 2010
5:30pm – 9:15pm

Ethos 360 Sponsors The Ritz Group. Investors Unite To Support Entrepreneurs

Wednesday, November 4th, 2009

Ethos 360 will sponsor The Ritz Group’s November 5th event at the Ritz Carlton in Buckhead, Georgia, an event that brings together entrepreneurs and investors from all over the country.

The Ritz Group, which has worked in the business industry for 25 years serving investors and entrepreneurs, has gained increased exposure and interest among new investors and entrepreneurs in recent days.  The invitees will include angel investors, private equity firms, investment banking, and merchant banking firms with individuals focused on acquisitions, start-ups, and refinancing. The upcoming event is by invite only.

Last month Georgia Secretary of State Karen Handel spoke on the need to attract capital for entrepreneurial businesses and stimulate increased entrepreneurship. In 2009, ten companies who presented at The Ritz Group, www.theritzgroupatl.com, received investments ranging from $250,000 to $50,000,000.

“We recognize the importance and need for business owners and other executives to connect with investors, so we are excited to partner with The Ritz Group in their efforts to inspire entrepreneurship,” said Christian Brenneman of Ethos 360.

With more and more reports of gloom in the business world, firms that are committed to the success of entrepreneurs are essential.  Ethos 360’s Christian Brenneman states, “Our goal is to help establish partnerships where both parties profit, so supporting businesses like The Ritz Group in their endeavors to keep the entrepreneurial spirit alive, are key in this economy.”

Ethos 360’s support of The Ritz Group stemmed from its extensive work and consultations with entrepreneurs of all kinds seeking a platform to align themselves with investors.  The tools that Ethos 360 and The Ritz Group have to offer to business professionals are ones that are important in securing growth in a highly competitive, ever-changing business landscape.

Click to see photos of the conference

Click above to see photos of the conference

Need Funding? Get Creative. Like An Entrepreneur Should.

Tuesday, November 3rd, 2009

Entrepreneur Sean Conway needed to raise funds for his start-up, www.Notehall.com, an online marketplace for college students to buy and sell class notes. But a year into the venture he was broke and investors weren’t willing to infuse the company with a capital boost.

Mr. Conway’s grandfather contributed $17,000 for marketing and operations, which allowed the company to hit nearly 8,000 users at Mr. Conway’s alma mater, the University of Arizona, by January 2009. But the angels and venture capitalists remained skeptical.

“I had invested my life savings and I knew there was no turning back,” says Mr. Conway, a 2007 graduate.

So last March he submitted his idea to DreamIt Ventures, a sort of entrepreneurial boot camp in Philadelphia—funded by four economic development organizations—that provides office space and mentoring to fledgling business owners, and helps set them up with potential investors. Notehall.com, one of 10 ventures chosen to participate in the three-month summer program, walked away with about $500,000 in investments.

Amid a stark climate for venture capital, small-business owners are finding more creative ways to get funding. Some are turning to boot-camp-style programs like DreamIt Ventures, Y Combinator in Mountain View, Calif., or TechStars in Boulder, Colo. Others have found success appealing for funds via television, or even hitting up friends and relatives for cash.

Venture capital deals have been steadily declining since 2007 and are hovering at levels not seen since the mid-1990s, according to data from PricewaterhouseCoopers and the National Venture Capital Association. The amount of funding in the second quarter dropped more than 50% from the year earlier period, landing at 612 investments worth $3.7 billion.

Yet entrepreneurial activity can remain vibrant even in downturns. A June study by the Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation, a Kansas City group that promotes entrepreneurship, found that periods of unemployment trigger individuals to launch their own ventures instead of applying to corporate jobs. These days, like Mr. Conway, they are needing to find alternative paths to reach investors.

After his success with DreamIt Ventures, Mr. Conway applied to be a contestant on ABC’s Shark Tank, a television show that gives entrepreneurs a chance to pitch to investors and vie for their money. Through the show, which aired Notehall.com’s episode last week, Mr. Conway landed the company an additional $90,000 after agreeing to give up a 25% equity stake. “The last two weeks have been crazy,” says Mr. Conway, who says he hopes for the company to reach 30 colleges by the end of the year.”Everyone is emailing, wanting to partner with us.”

Marc Fienberg, head of Story Films Inc., a production company in Los Angeles, also found his enterprise wasn’t garnering much respect from the venture capital community. So he tapped some acquaintances from his days at Northwestern’s Kellogg School of Management and proceeded to network for about three years.

“I quickly realized that to do this, I’d have to reach outside my comfort zone,” he says. “There was no room to be shy or humble.”

In total, Mr. Fienberg says he pitched to hundreds of contacts, many of whom scoffed at the idea and told him he was wasting his time. But eventually he found 17 people—made up primarily of Kellogg alumni—who were interested. He flew to meet each in person.

From 2007 to 2009, Mr. Fienberg says he secured between $1 million and $5 million. His company’s first film, “Play the Game,” recently landed in theaters and has grossed about $500,000 in box office sales.

In this economy, entrepreneurs need to work even harder and put more effort into thinking outside the box, says Bo Fishback, vice president of entrepreneurship at the Kauffman Foundation.”Smarter entrepreneurs are looking to put more sweat equity into the company, not magic $100 bills.”

Mr. Fishback is seeing a trend of more innovators competing online at www.NineSigma.com and InnoCentive.com. Large companies post challenges on these sites and award money to the winning inventor or problem solver.

Small projects from large companies can be lucrative. That’s what William Volk found out after he joined a start-up called MyNuMo LLC, a company that produces games for smart phones. In 2008, he reached out to a venture capital firm that had invested in a company where Mr. Volk had previously worked. “I thought for sure we would get it because I had a track record,” says Mr. Volk. But he wound up losing to a competitor seeking capital from the same firm.

Given his background in programming, an undeterred Mr. Volk contacted several companies to see if they’d be interested in a custom smart-phone program. “We were using those smaller projects to keep us going,” he said. The projects financed the research and development for MyNuMo’s game applications, which are now available online and as mobile-phone applications.

Revenue is expected to hit $1.5 million this year. “We managed to create a higher number of titles than our well-funded competitors,” Mr. Volk says.

-Written by Emily Maltby. Originally posted in The Wall Street Journal Oct. 15th, 2009.

Sprowtt.com Has Arrived To The Benefit Of Cleantech Entrepreneurs

Thursday, September 24th, 2009

Every day, I keep hearing people asking, “where do I go next for funding?”  I’ve talked about how to seek funding, how to seek investors, how to get money, etc.  No matter how you slice it, trying to seek funding is almost like going door to door and asking people if they have five minutes to hear an idea.  Obviously, it’s more professional than that, but the feeling of apprehension is still there as you try to scale the metaphorical walls of potential investors.

With all of the innovations in social networking and business tools, how has a solution to this ordeal not been developed?  As soon as I asked this question to myself, a colleague showed me a website called, www.Sprowtt.com and then I considered wondering aloud if I could have a free Mercedes.

To put it simply, by using Sprowtt, anyone can participate in the funding of companies. Potential investors are able to log on to the site and create a profile with detailed financial and bank account information. Then they are given a list of companies they can invest in based on their financial capabilities.  The start-ups have their own information posted such as informational presentation videos, the amount of money the start-up has already raised, and their products and detailed business plans, on which the investors can share their comments.

So what happens if the investor likes the company?  Once they’re interested they can sign the stock subscription agreement and then enter the number of shares they wish to purchase.  At this point, the funds are held in escrow until the offering is complete (which happens when the minimum amount for an offering is accumulated). Sprowtt then helps to transfer the funds from an investor’s account to the start-up.

The entire process is done in a very comfortable and familiar format that is like almost any social networking set-up that we as a Web 2.0 familiar community are used to. Personally, I think that if this site can get its proper ducks in a row that this will make the investor process very accessible to the sudden influx of start-ups that are currently out there and ready to make the leap to capital raising.