• English: The original Piggly Wiggly Store, Mem...Image via Wikipedia

    Talk about thinking inside the box….and check out Dekalb Marketplace in Brooklyn to see stores in shipping containers…

    According to Xconomy's Curt Woodward, you might not think of a grocery store inside a recycled shipping container as a technology-centric startup. But without some cheap, powerful devices and software, Web-enabled crowdfunding, and tech startup methods, Stockbox Grocers probably wouldn’t be where it is today.

    The Stockbox team, which recently wrapped up the run of its first prototype store, is trying to fill a niche in grocery shopping by putting its mini stores in “food deserts,” areas of a city where good-quality staples are hard to find or too far away. The experimental store, in the parking lot of an apartment complex, attracted 20-35 customers on an average day—a performance good enough that Stockbox is already planning for a more permanent store in the spring.

    So what’s that got to do with technology? Plenty. “In the end, they’re just selling fruit and vegetables and dry goods. And yet, there is this huge amount of technology underlying it that makes it possible,” says tech entrepreneur Michael “Luni” Libes, who’s serving as a volunteer adviser to Stockbox.

    “The overall trend we see in the software industry is the price to start a company is trending toward zero. And it’s interesting to compare that with starting an actual brick-and-mortar retail business,” Libes says. “And for some of the same reasons why software’s going to zero, the costs of starting a brick-and-mortar businesses is getting less. It’s not going to zero, but it’s getting less.”

    First of all, back when they were still working on the project as students at Bainbridge Graduate Institute, co-founders Carrie Ferrence and Jacqueline Gjurgevich were able to use Google’s SketchUp application to rough in their crucial first schematics.

    “It’s what we used in all of our contract designs and our presentations and our business plan. Especially when you have a new idea and it is a different take, it was really hard for people to visualize it,” Ferrence says. “It enabled us to come up with a somewhat professional- looking image before we invested in professional architects and designers.”

    That business plan, by the way, won Ferrence and Gjurgevich second place in this year’s University of Washington business plan competition. With prize money in hand, the pair next turned to Kickstarter to seek more money to get their prototype Stockbox Grocers store installed. They exceeded their goal, raising more than $20,000 from 195 backers—and nearly a third of those people were introduced to the little startup by the Kickstarter campaign, making it a useful marketing tool as well.

    “This launch plan of Stockbox could not have been done 10 years ago,” Libes says. “It would have been a friends and family plan that would have raised money from, literally, friends and family, or gone back to their school and gone begging to the other students to do it.”

    Once the prototype store was becoming a reality, Stockbox needed a way to process electronic payments. An obvious choice was Square, the mobile card-swipe startup from Twitter co-founder Jack Dorsey, which allowed Stockbox to process payments on an iPad with no upfront cost.

    Square also has some inventory-tracking capabilities, which were a nice additional feature for the prototype store. Stockbox might move to a more robust system to track the goods in its permanent stores, but the Square device and payment processing service was a perfect tool for getting the concept operating quickly and inexpensively.

    “It’s been interesting to see customers come into the store and people get excited about the iPad and the Square,” Ferrence says. “And we explain to them that, really, it was just cheaper and easier to do the iPad and the Square than something more traditional like a big clunky cash register.”

    Even the signs on the outside of the store to dress up its workmanlike exterior were done with cheap printing services that might have required hiring a signmaker a few years back.

    “That was all done on a PC and printed out to vinyl, and done in what looks like an incredibly professional manner for almost no money,” Libes says. “It’s probably safe to say that we overlook 90 percent of the technology that’s avail to all businesses that make businesses look more professional, make everything look more polished.”

    At a higher level, Stockbox is operating on some concepts that have gained a huge amount of popularity in the tech field, particularly the “Lean Startup” principles of entrepreneur and author Eric Ries—using cheap and powerful tools to distill a product very quickly, and continually tweak your path based on customer feedback.

    “Startups are startups. It doesn’t matter if you’re a tech startup or a green startup or a retail startup. We should all be learning the same lesson, which is the Lean Startup method—get something out there, learn from it, measure from it, and expand upon it,” Libes says. “And there’s just this huge amount of tools, free and cheap and easily accessible, that make that possible now. It just wasn’t possible 10 years ago, 20 years ago.”

     

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  • According to a recent article in Xconomy, customer service is taking on new and exciting forms. Putting together a full customer support team is so expensive that it’s out of reach for most small businesses. Often the choice for small companies and startups is to pile all outreach onto a single individual, who can no longer do his or her core job. Those are the companies TalkDesk is targeting with its customer support tool.

    TalkDesk lets businesses set up a customer support center in minutes, all from a browser. When a call is placed to a customer service number, that person’s information is automatically pulled up in a browser window along with call history and any information that may help resolve their problems. The real genius of TalkDesk is its interoperability with popular customer relationship management services (CRMs) such as Salesforce and Zendesk. With a clever use of their APIs, TalkDesk pulls customer information from Salesforce, Olark and other business tools, so users can quickly see if the caller has outstanding tickets using these other tools.

    “When you have all the information about the customer — a 360 degree view of the customer — you can better take care of his problems,” TalkDesk co-founder Tiago Paiva told VentureBeat. “You don’t even have to ask his name.”

    TalkDesk also pulls in information from sites such as Linkedin and Twitter, which might seem strange at first, until you consider how valuable it might be to know if you’re talking to a customer who is trashing your product on popular social media sites.

    Co-founders Paiva and Cristina Fonseca of Portugal have been working on web applications for a number of years, but their journey to the U.S. came in a flash. They were notified one day before this year’s Twiliocon that they were selected to present, and they were subsequently chosen as the winners. The duo were admitted into the current class of the 500 Startups accelerator and had to return to Portugal to get their visa situation in order before returning to California to get cranking on their company.

    The two have been so busy building their product since arriving in the U.S., that they’ve not even had the chance to buy themselves cell phones. This is especially funny given the fact that their whole product revolves around helping other businesses provide customer support over the phone.

    “When you come to Silicon Valley you have to focus a lot on raising money, and maybe because we are from Europe we really want to build a sustainable business based on customers, and grow from the revenue we make every month,” said Paiva.

    TalkDesk was recently chosen as one of the 10 finalists of the CloudBeat Innovation Showdown and will be presenting at VentureBeat’s CloudBeat conference at the end of the month.

     

  • English: business planImage via Wikipedia

    As noted on Xconomy last month, writing a business plan is no easy task — it can be painstaking. If you’ve ever written one, you’re probably familiar with the many websites that offer those static business plan and projections templates and galleries. They can be a great point of reference, but oftentimes they’re just that. Cynthia McCahon founded Enloop because she wanted to build a better resource for entrepreneurs gritting their teeth over their business plans, and because she’d watched many friends and colleagues sink time and money into business ideas that just weren’t going anywhere.

    Hoping to take a bit of the emotion out of an emotional process, Enloop was founded as a way for entrepreneurs to create business plans from scratch, guide them through the business plan process, and offer a system that provides thorough and intelligent risk analysis to give founders a sense of whether or not they’re off on the right track.

    Enloop’s solution is free and easy to use and automates the business plan process, because many first-time entrepreneurs just aren’t sure what to say to investors or underwriters — or how to say it. The startup’s patented system, created by MBAs, accountants, and software developers, generates the basic text of the business plan, explaining each important section to you as you change your inputs, toy with different scenarios, while Enloop automatically updates the financial data in that text as you go.

    The solution also automatically creates customized financial forecasts for your business, like sales, profit and loss, cash flow, and balance sheets. Entrepreneurs can start with creating a simple plan based on annual inputs, or generate more complex forecasts up to 3 year projections for CPAs and accountants. One simple plan is free, whereas three plans and 36-month projections will cost $10 per month, and unlimited will run $40 a month.

    But the real kicker is Enloop’s Performance Score (EPS), which is a FICO-style score for your business plan, which updates as you change your financial information, rising when it likes how you’re planning your business, and decreasing when you veer off the right path. The score is designed to be your devil’s advocate, your conscience — a safeguard against unstable or unworkable business plans in an attempt to save your business from the deadpool.

    Today, Enloop is also announcing some new functionality to go along with its business plan forecasting and “Klout score” for business plans, as it now allows your friends and colleagues to view and edit your plan(s). With any subscription, users can share the plan with as many people as they’d like (including their their CPA, business adviser or loan officer), and once invited collaborators can edit and print the plan, with the Enloop Performance Score changing in real time.

    This is great, because you really don’t want business plan writing to be a solitary process, but at the same time, features like this are best offered for free. With Enloop generating a professionally formatted PDF document that’s ready to download, print, and share with any number of people that are critical to the process — it takes a lot of the pain out of having to string together the right words to describe the thrust of your business for investors and beyond.

     

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  • Image representing BetaEasy as depicted in Cru...Image via CrunchBase

    According to Xconomy, one major issue constantly plaguing startups is finding willing beta testers that can help get a service or site in shape before a public launch. BetaBait, which launched publicly today, wants to help solve this problem by better connecting startups and eager testers.

    One of the company’s co-founders is long-time VentureBeat contributor Cody Barbierri. He said he started the company because he saw a clear opening in the market, with so many start ups in Silicon Valley and Silicon Alley, but not enough tools to help get testers lined up. BetaBait members receive a single email every day that lists several beta web, mobile and social applications.

    Membership is free for start ups and potential beta users. The company plans to make money from advertisers that “sponsor” a daily e-mail. “At the top of the email, there will be a place for a company to spotlight their product or service,” Barbierri said. “We only allow one ad per day per email.”

    Barbierri said there are several companies already out there that help startups launch and manage their beta tests, such as LaunchRock or BetaEasy. But BetaBait isn’t competing with them; instead it’s focused on actually bringing users into a beta test. ”If anything, a start up would want to use us all at the same time,” Barbierri said. “We aren’t providing a tool to connect, we are connecting [testers] to the tools.”

    The Bridgeport, Conn.-based company is self-funded at present. Barbierri said the company is working on a small scale presently, but it hopes to attract outside funding in the “near future

     

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  • Image representing Microventure Marketplace as...Image via CrunchBase

    According to Xconomy, just a decade ago, if you wanted to invest in a start up you had to know someone. A lawyer, an accountant or a friend of friend would give you a referral to a company looking to raise money, or they’d invite you to invest with them. That’s how you got in the door. You had to have a lot of money to play – often $50,000 or more. And the startups you’d see were from your geographical region. That traditional scenario left a lot of interested angel investors sitting on the sidelines.

    Today, it’s a lot easier to become an angel investor, due to crowd funding, micro lending and investment sites like Microventures Marketplace Inc., which is opening doors to those looking to invest $1,000 to $20,000 or more. The way to win at angel investing, of course, is to invest in the right start ups. To get there, you need: 1) Good deal flow from which to spot potential winners. 2) The ability to invest in multiple deals so you gain experience. 3) A knack for spotting companies, and more importantly people, who will succeed. Getting good deal flow is often the stumbling block for the average person looking to get started in angel investing.

    And it’s one of the reasons Bill Clark founded MicroVentures. He wanted to begin investing, but didn’t have access to good deals. Like many others thinking about making angel investments, Clark wanted to invest smaller sums in more companies, allowing him to spread out his risk and also increase his changes of picking a winner. And he wanted access to great companies outside of the Austin area, which is his hometown. More than a thousand investors have joined MicroVentures since Clark launched the investment service a year ago. The service matches companies seeking money with investors looking to invest anywhere from $1,000 to $20,000 or more. MicroVenture helps investors learn about companies they may never have heard of, and to invest smaller sums, which is virtually unheard of with traditional investing. MicroVentures also helps with the initial due diligence process by filtering start-ups and then providing documents to help investors conduct their own due diligence to help them make a final decision. 

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  • English: RedImage via Wikipedia

    When Malcolm McLean, trucking executive guru and the "godfather" of the ubiquitous global shipping container needed to solve the problem of how to stack the containers, he turned to Keith Tantlinger, an engineer at a truck trailer manufacturer in Washington to design a way to solve the problem. Keith developed a lock that connected the containers at the corners and allowed the crane operators to release or close the lock without leaving their cabs.

    The lock, patented and introduced in the mid 1950's, presaged the birth of the container revolution over the next two decades. Instead of manually unloading pallets or boxes of cargo from ships and reloading them into rail cars or trucks, a container could be easily lifted off the vessel and placed on a truck chassis for transport to the final destination.  Not only were cost efficiencies realized with the new technology, but security was enhanced and valuable cargo could now be sealed incognito inside look-alike containers.

    We all know the rest of the story–global trade exploded as did the standard of living in many third world countries where goods were made to satisfy developed nations demands. One could say that a simple lock, hardly hi-tech or attractive, is partly responsible for the comfortable lifestyles we now enjoy.

    Rest in Peace, Keith Tantlinger (1919-2011), and thank you for being in the right place at the right time with the right idea.

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  • Curt Woodward on Xconomy reports that EquaShip, the Seattle startup that’s aiming to wrangle dramatically cheaper shipping costs for small and medium-sized businesses, has added another $600,000 in financing from undisclosed investors. That pushes the startup’s total funding to $1.5 million, following the announcement of a $900,000 investment in June.

    EquaShip rolled out its service in October, targeting the small sellers—many of them doing business on eBay and Amazon—who don’t get big-account treatment fro FedEx and UPS. Founder and CEO Ron Wiener says there are millions of those businesses around the country, and EquaShip says it can offer them rates that are “typically 28 percent to 79 percent below UPS and FedEx residential ground rates.”

    EquaShip does that by partnering with smaller carriers, who funnel packages through the U.S. Postal Service for final delivery—what’s known as a consolidator service. EquaShip also offers package tracking and insurance. The company plans to use the new investment to add software features and drop-off locations.

    As fascinating as the idea continues to sound, please remember that shipping is a scale economics business and that UPS and FedEx are the winners on cost. Unless EquaShip can somehow amass the scale to go after them, it will remain a niche business that serves a niche clientele.

  • Steve & Apple Inc.Image by marcopako  via Flickr

    An amazing take by an anonymous user on Quora on why Apple products sometimes seem so superior. Because they are. Because they get them before anyone else.

     

    We'll just quote it because it's great as it is:

    When new component technologies (touchscreens, chips, LED displays) first come out, they are very expensive to produce, and building a factory that can produce them in mass quantities is even more expensive. Oftentimes, the upfront capital expenditure can be so huge and the margins are small enough (and shrink over time as the component is rapidly commoditized) that the companies who would build these factories cannot raise sufficient investment capital to cover the costs.

    What Apple does is use its cash hoard to pay for the construction cost (or a significant fraction of it) of the factory in exchange for exclusive rights to the output production of the factory for a set period of time (maybe 6 – 36 months), and then for a discounted rate afterwards. This yields two advantages:

    1. Apple has access to new component technology months or years before its rivals. This allows it to release groundbreaking products that are actuallyimpossible to duplicate. Remember how for up to a year or so after the introduction of the iPhone, none of the would-be iPhone clones could even get a capacitive touchscreen to work as well as the iPhone's? It wasn't just the software – Apple simply has access to new components earlier, before anyone else in the world can gain access to it in mass quantities to make a consumer device. One extraordinary example of this is the aluminum machining technology used to make Apple's laptops – this remains a trade secret that Apple continues to have exclusive access to and allows them to make laptops with (for now) unsurpassed strength and lightness.
    2. Eventually its competitors catch up in component production technology, but by then Apple has their arrangement in place whereby it can source those parts at a lower cost due to the discounted rate they have negotiated with the (now) most-experienced and skilled provider of those parts – who has probably also brought his production costs down too. This discount is also potentiallysubsidized by its competitors buying those same parts from that provider – the part is now commoditized so the factory is allowed to produce them for all buyers, but Apple gets special pricing.

    Apple is not just crushing its rivals through superiority in design, Steve Jobs's deep experience in hardware mass production (early Apple, NeXT) has been brought to bear in creating an unrivaled exclusive supply chain of advanced technology literally years ahead of anyone else on the planet. If it feels like new Apple products appear futuristic, it is because Apple really is sending back technology from the future.

    Once those technologies (or more accurately, their mass production techniques) become sufficiently commoditized, Apple is then able to compete effectively on cost and undercut rivals. It's a myth that Apple only makes premium products – it makes them all right, but that is because they are literally more advanced than anything else (i.e. the price premium is not just for design), and once the product line is no longer premium, they are produced more cheaply than competitor equivalents, yielding higher margins, more cash, which results in more ability to continue the cycle.

    Here's the whole thread →

    An interesting part is that the seemingly well-sourced Quora responder credits Steve Jobs with this strategy, even though "the operations guy", "supply chain genius" at Apple is usually thought to be COO Tim Cook. It goes to show just how deep Jobs' expertise and execution goes, and how different Apple will probably be without him. 

    Read more: http://www.businessinsider.com/apple-supply-chain-2011-7?utm_source=Triggermail&utm_medium=email&utm_term=SAI%20Select&utm_campaign=SAI_Select_070511#ixzz1TVMpv2TV

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  • According to TechCrunch, Vivino helps you identify and locate your favorite antidote for future consumption. Use the Vivino app to take a photograph of any wine label. Vivino uses image recognition to match the label against its database of 450,000 wines and return you all the information available about the wine including, hopefully, where you can buy it locally. The app saves the details of all wines you have matched and you can also record whether you liked a particular wine or not.

    The business model is based on a revenue share with wine distributors. “We’re the bridge between tasting a great wine and buying it” says Vivino co-founder Theis Sondergaard. Songergaard and co-founder Heini Zachariassen claim to reflect their target audience quite accurately. “We really like wine, but we don’t know that much about it. We know what we like, when we taste it, but we don’t have a wine-cellar, just a row of bottles in the kitchen.” continues Sondergaard. “We use the Vivino app to educate ourselves a bit about the wines we drink, remember what wines we’ve enjoyed and want to try again, and the ones to avoid. “

    Swiss company Kooaba provides the image recognition technology. Kooaba can match against an image-set of 2 million labels in less than a second. Wine labels shot from different angles or in different lighting conditions can be matched; an important feature when dealing with images taken in restaurants or low-lit rooms. Currently Vivino can automatically match 60 percent of wine labels and the company aims to get up to 80 or 90 percent. When a label can’t be matched Vivino’s data team goes into Sherlock Holmes mode and tracks down the details within 24 hours to make a manual match. The most common matching error (2-4 percent of matches) is the vintage since this is often in small font on the labels. The data team also checks every automatic match to correct such errors. Vivino plans to combine object character recognition, basically a form of text recognition, with Kooaba’s image recognition to improve matching further.

    Copenhagen-based Vivino isn’t alone in this space. Social wine review site Snooth launched its own wine recognition app in September, 2010. Snooth has a larger database of wines than Vivino and has a complementary and well-established review web site. However, it is very focused on the U.S. market. Snooth’s app is also only available for the iPhone whereas Vivino also supports Android, Blackberry and Windows 7. For an Android-owner who lives in Amsterdam, where Vivino lists several locations to buy the wines it identifies, there isn’t much contest. “Nobody has really claimed the top spot for being THE wine app.” says Sondergaard. Being the top global wine app is Vivino’s goal. Vivino’s most comprehensive coverage of wine outlets is currently in its home market of Denmark. Sondergaard told me that the Danish market is relatively complex, with many small players and exclusivity deals, making it a good test market. I asked Sondergaard about Vivino’s global ambitions. “This is a global concept but we need to roll out the business market by market like Groupon. Unlike Groupon we acquire customers via our free app. We start by creating the order and then figure out how to fulfill it (via local wine distributors)”.

    Vivino is already a global company in that the development and data teams are located in Ukraine, Macedonia and India. According to Sondergaard “Being based in Europe gives us a certain advantage in European markets”. Every European country has a different language, taxes, shipping options and even currency. European developers have to internationalize from day one. However, Vivino’s next big target is the U.S. where it plans to roll out the “buy” feature in the next few months. The angel investment it recently received from Skype co-founder Janus Friis will help. “In 2002, Heini and I, along with Morten Lund, founded BullGuard, a consumer internet security company. Back then, we partnered with Kazaa, and even though Janus was no longer involved in Kazaa at that time, we got to know him. So when it was time to get an angel investor for Vivino, we knew who our first choice was.” Cracking the U.S. market is the company’s biggest goal for the next year. New features like special or group buying offers, based on which wines are popular in particular markets, are also on the agenda. But it won’t be all work and no play. “We want to drink some amazing wine and have a blast while we do it” concludes Sondergaard.