Florian's Blog

Father of 5, entrepreneur, traveler, geek, curious about so many things.

Archive for the ‘Entrepreneur’ Category

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Facebook Privacy. You don’t need to quit.

Tuesday, May 18th, 2010

Half of my feeds is about Facebook and their privacy policy. A complete case of propaganda built up by the blogo-journalistic cartel. Few thousands of top self proclaimed internet right activists are trying to convince 300 Million users that their life is ‘exposed’ by Facebook voluntary exploitation of public data.

Facebook offers a wide selection of options to protect your info and we will go through those steps a bit later. But let’s not be hypocrite here, if you want to keep your life private you need to stay away from social networks. Permanently.

Those attacks are becoming more targeted against Mark Zuckerberg like an attempt to stop the ascension of a giant. The worst is to come after I read the upcoming release of a movie describing Facebook’s founder as a drunk billionaire geek who is a sex-mad “borderline-autistic” conniver.

Mike Arrington wrote an excellent note on the subject but personally I think Zuck will have to face the same hatred Jobs and Gates faced decades ago. Hopefully genius will prevail.

Now here is how you can simply protect some level of privacy on Facebook.

Simply login to your account and head to ‘Privacy Settings’

Facebook Privacy -1


Once you get there click on ‘Personal Information and Posts’

Facebook Privacy Settings-6

This will give you access to a set of customizable features. For best protection chose ’only friends’ to all options.

Facebook Privacy -2-1


I personally do not accept wall posts. If a friend has something to say he can:

-       send me a message or – comment one of my entries.

Facebook | Privacy Settings-3-1


Finally you can opt-out from public searches meaning search engines will not display your Facebook profile


Facebook | Privacy Settings-4-1


One last recommendation – be sure to set privacy settings on applications and games. You surely don’t want to share your recent activity across the board:

Facebook | Privacy Settings-5-1


Be curious and explore those pages. You will find lots of useful information.

The only valid reproach we can aim at Facebook is the lack of universal control of privacy [windows way for security] where user can set level of data sharing from None to Public in one click.



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Posted in Entrepreneur, Social Media, TechCrunch, Technology, facebook | 3 Comments »

Twitter K.O. system

Sunday, April 11th, 2010

It all started with a blog post by Fred Wilson about 3rd party apps temporarily filling holes for Twitter followed by a series of announcement that sparked the Twitt-o-sphere on fire. The young growing social network officially released their first mobile application for Blackberry and announced the acquisition of Tweetie (leading iPhone client).

What does it mean for other 3rd party applications offering competing products on BlackBerry and iPhone? Well it doesn’t look too good to be honest- terrible news for Socialscope, Ubertwitter and Seesmic who devoted thousand of hours building a Twitter client for Blackberry and ultimately hoped to be acquired by Twitter…

The official application uses non-public APIs, offers no request limitation (recently Twitter raised their limitation to 150 requests per hour) and can be easily promoted virally by Twitter as a featured application. So many reasons for developers to spoof a revolt and to call for a broken Twitter eco-system…I call it bullsh*t.

Twitter : Is a revolt brewing

Because frankly – this is what they were all looking for. To beat the watch and build a good enough client so Twitter will buy them out. It didn’t happen although Twitter had initiated contact with those companies. Obviously the price range to acquire a Blackberry client didn’t make any sense to Twitter’s investors (Fred Wilson at least) so they decided to go build their own. If one of the apps had been bought out – the feedback would have been very different.

When I hear stories about Twitter eco-system it reminds me of a quote from Louis C.K. “it’s funny how quickly the world owes him something he knew existed only ten seconds ago”.

About 15 months ago I wrote this post discussing about Twitter’s options to drive revenue. The main threat to revenue stream was obviously the existence of 3rd party applications making money on the back of the social network. Not many developers were too concerned about it and kept raising money to bite the hand that feeds them.

This is why Ev Williams promptly announced the acquisition of Tweetie, confusing everyone on Twitter’s real intentions for future growth. Will they buy or will they develop?

In the meantime, many Twitter clients will disappear from the radar until developers can focus on producing genuine ideas and not just filling holes.

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Posted in Blackberry, Entrepreneur, Geek, Social Media, Technology, Twitter, android, iPhone | 1 Comment »

Labotec Closes An Important Round of Funding

Tuesday, March 16th, 2010

Or the story of a side project turning into a big adventure.

At the beginning 2 friends with a lot of ideas, Pierre-Olivier Carles and myself, decided to launch a mobile application incubator. Few weeks later we are working on a website, legal paperasserie, blog, recruiting…and since then it has been an amazing experience. We are not really the young and reckless entrepreneurs but this project brought all the good vibes from day 1. 8 months later I am particularly proud to welcome Xavier Niel and Jeremie Berrebi on board of Labotec Inc.

Jeremie Berrebi is also a long time friend with a hyper-creativity syndrome :) We always wanted to work together and lately we were discussing of some crazy project that will maybe see the light one day.

Xavier Niel [for our fellow non-french readers who haven't got a clue who he is please check here] is a role model for entrepreneurs and his investment in Labotec means a lot to me. We will live up to his expectations. That’s a promise.

Before you get the boring press release, here is the moral of Labotec: business opportunities are not a miracle, they are the fruit of collaborative work and mutual respect.

We also want to fund your project and this is just a click away – click here to become the next Inspirer.

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Miami, FL (March 15, 2010) Labotec announced today that it has secured a round of funding from major strategic partner Kima Ventures, founded by Jeremie Berrebi (Zlio, Net2One) and Xavier Niel (Free,Iliad). Europe-based fund Kima Ventures joins Kipost and FS Ventures as an investor in Labotec. The company plans to use the funds to accelerate growth in all areas of its business and to support its plans for massive scale in 2010.

Labotec is pioneering a new form of mobile applications publishing based on crowd-sourced ideas. Since its recent inception, Labotec has received hundreds of new project ideas from 27 countries. 3 applications have already launched (iSOS for Android, iMove2Music for iPhone, FakeSMS for iPhone) and 20 are slated for release by the end of the year. Labotec engages with innovators that have always dreamed to see their ideas commercialized and be given the right tools to succeed in the marketplace.

“Mobile applications are becoming a must-have for subscribers and carriers, Labotec has the potential to turn an idea into a great business” said Jeremie Berrebi, partner in Kima Ventures.

“Our goal is to produce a user-oriented portfolio of applications on mobile devices such as iPhone/iPad/iPod, Android or BlackBerry” explains Florian Seroussi, Labotec co-founder.

“Kima Ventures and its founders bring another layer of opportunities we couldn’t approach until now” says Pierre-Olivier Carles, CEO of Kipost.

According to research analyst Research2guidance, the surge in applications will be driven by a fast-growing number of smartphone users, estimated to increase from about 100 million in 2009 to nearly 1 billion by 2013. Yearly application revenues will rise from US$1.94 billion (2009) to US$15.65 billion in only four years, according to most recent research findings.

About Labotec Inc
Labotec’s mission is to select great application ideas for iPhone, iPod, iPad, Android or Blackberry, finance them, and gather the required resources together to go to market with a finished application on any Application Store.
For that purpose, Labotec has established a selection and approval process that is both simple and swift. Labotec Inc HQ is based in Miami, Florida, with an office in Toulouse, France.

About Kima Ventures
Kima Ventures fund launched in 2010 by entrepreneurs for entrepreneurs. Our goal is to support and finance innovative companies with seed capital all over the world and to promotes the growth of startups, supporting them in the fastest and most effective ways.
Kima Ventures partners with the best business angels and venture, funds, and invests primarily in projects that meet a simple need and have a simple business model.

Labotec Inc
Miami, Florida, USA
Twitter: @Labotec
info@labotec.com

PR Contacts:
Stephane Menoret
stephane@labotec.com
+33 6 77 55 01 41

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Posted in Apple, Blackberry, Entrepreneur, Friends, Labotec, Technology, Uncategorized, android, iPhone | No Comments »

Is Square a sham or the next big thing?

Wednesday, December 2nd, 2009

Seems everyone is falling for this but me. I had to look at the TechCrunch video presentation of Square few times and I still do not understand what Square is up to.

Is it a clearing house, a merchant provider, payment gateway, a mobile POS – read Point Of Sale :) , a technology platform or all the above? I don’t have the answer and my guess is Square is exploring all possibilities.

Whatever is shown on that short video presentation is not an easy form of payment process. It took a couple of minutes to pay for a coffee as it takes less than 10 seconds Square signature screento do the same at any Starbucks. What happens during rush hour when 60 people need to pay for coffee? Expect a 120 minute wait to process payment!

What’s the point of a $200 iPhone PoS (Point of Sale – don’t want any confusion here) when you can process credit/debit payment on a virtual terminal at $0 additional cost?

I read somewhere it’s a huge opportunity for pop and mom kind of business, eBay sellers, Craigslists transactions, farmers and so on.

First I believe they could all accept credit cards today if they wanted to. There is a gazillion solution out there for them.

Second do you think those really want to be exposed to chargeback, fraud, IRS, sales tax and potential liability for identity theft?

Third – credit/debit card sales is not CASH in da pocket. Often I shop at Coconut Grove Organic Farmers Market and let me tell you – they don’t like/want your plastic.  Cash allow them to live. They already struggle, take it away from them and they die.

So what am I missing? Should I buy the concept because Jack Dorsey – Twitter co-founder- is behind it? Enlighten me.

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Posted in Apple, Economy, Entrepreneur, Geek, Telecom, USA, iPhone | 10 Comments »

TechCrunch50 Flickr Set

Thursday, September 17th, 2009

Few pics taken during TechCrunch50 2009.

Starting is Easy TechCrunch Stage TechCrunch Stage TechCrunch Stage TechCrunch Stage After Party After Party After Party After Party After Party After Party Streets of San Francisco Streets of San Francisco iPhone IPhone Apple TechCrunch50 Exclusive news: @1938media and milky cow merger :) lol TechCrunch50 Lunch Panel Good people @scobleizer and @1938media Rackup Marc Rochman getting ready to be on stage.

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Posted in Apple, Entrepreneur, Social Media, TechCrunch | No Comments »

Goodbye Web 2.0, Welcome back ROI

Wednesday, September 16th, 2009

TechCrunch50 just ended last night in San Francisco. What is it all about? Mostly a good chance to monitor the industry pulse. To meet new people, to share experience and learn to listen.

First edition of TechCrunch50 (actually it was 40) gathered a lot of attention. Too much for an unprepared team of bloggers/entrepeneurs but certainly not event planner. We were all bitching about the lack of internet, mobile network, seats, drinks, audio, timing. Everything was bad or wrong, but the audience was there, internet rock stars came and talentuous Mike Arrington and Jason Calacanis saved the show. Most terrible choice was certainly on the selection of potential candidates to go on stage. Even though looking at it a couple of years later we see they didn’t miss by selecting Mint.com as the winner.

Second edition of the most hyped Web 2.0 event was better organized – not hard to do so- selection was obviously more professional and panelists still sharp on their analysis. We were at the early stage of the recession, full of hope but extremely careful on the outcome. I felt this second edition as a global euphoria in a great time of uncertainty.  Last year winner was also a good but safe choice : yammer.com. Nothing could go wrong with a company surfing on Twitter vibes.

Last 2 days were definitely better than past editions. Lesson learned for Arrington and Calacanis. Everything was perfect. I must give them huge credit for providing top notch internet service, excellent real-time video streaming and perfect timing during the event. When food was insufficient Calacanis ordered 60 pizzas – I can only imagine the happiness of pizzaiolo receiving a 60 pizzas order…

I was first surprised by the low number of attendees. From a non scientific count my guess is 35% less then last year. But it was quality people. It made untouchable people reachable. I was able to chat with Marissa Mayer, Marc Andreessen, Ron Conway, Don Dodge and Reid Hoffman in a very open way. There was a true community around entrepreneurship with no voyeurs or curious peeps. Upsetting glitch when Paul Carr wrote a stupid post about the American flag being on stage. If you have no talent you must hide it with something. Carr found provocation to be the solution. Anyway too much ink on this low life douchbag journalist. Back to TechCrunch50 and the 2009 list of nominees. There was a shift from 2007 smoke and mirrors start-ups to 2009 small businesses with a valid model. All competitors had a plan to make money not just to bring traction and wait for a strategy. Economy is certainly the real reason behind the change of mentality. RedBeacon – the big winner- aims to help consumers find local service providers such as plumbers, bakers, and contractors. A basic service to fill basic needs. I want to give a thumb-up to Rackup launched by my friend Marc Rochman. Marc did a great job on stage. 5 min to describe 18 months of research and hard work is not an easy task. Kudos to the Rackup team.

Arrington called a surprise panelist to comment presentations – Chamillionaire. Not the everyday geek you see at tech conventions…but I must recognize the guy had a good analysis on most start-ups. For future editions Arrington should have more street-smart experts – it does make a difference.

In conclusion TechCrunch50 minus the hype and plus the maturity was a great show. Looking forward attending 2010 edition.

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Posted in Economy, Entrepreneur, Social Media, TechCrunch, Technology | 5 Comments »

Even in bad times, good ideas get funding

Thursday, February 19th, 2009

I was cleaning my bookmarks and came across this article posted on February 9th 2001. 8 years ago!! What can I say? It’s so actual it is frightening. You can change few dates, add couple of words such as Web 2.0 and social networking, mention FaceBook and TechCrunch and you have a very good post for today.
Bottom line it gives me hope this whole recession can be behind us soon. People have short memory. We forget!
Please take 5 minutes and read text below.

A year ago, big-time venture capitalists were such revered individuals that you expected some enterprising entrepreneur would put their faces and track records on trading cards. People like Ann Winblad of Hummer Winblad Venture Partners and John Doerr of Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers were on their way to achieving rock star status. Then the technology bust of 2000 occurred and suddenly the watchwords became not “hot IPO” but “irrational exuberance.” The VCs were suddenly not so VIP.

Yet at a recent Wharton conference entitled “Private Equity in the New Millennium,” venture capitalists generally agreed that while things got a bit wild in the last year or two, the present and future can still be profitable. “Yes, times are different than they were three years ago, but they are also different than they were three months and even three days ago,” said Jesse Reyes, managing director of Venture Economics, who reports on private equity performance in his company’s Benchmark Reports. “The brand-new technology is not going to go away. Things will go in cycles.”

Reyes said that he compares current conditions to those in the middle 1980s. In the early 1980s, a big wave of tech companies went public–Microsoft, Apple Computer, Compaq Computer, Lotus–with great fanfare and great gains.

“Then four or five years later, there was a giant hole,” he said. “There were single-digit returns instead of the double-digits promised to investors in many companies, and the well of venture capital dried up considerably.”

Reyes’ statistics show that while the emphasis in the press seems to be on the slowdown in initial public offerings, of more significance is the fact that the median company received $27 million in venture capital in the fourth quarter of 2000; in the first quarter of 2001, it is getting only $15 million to $20 million.

Getting real
“The days of $25 million first-round funding are indeed gone,” said Dan Roach, managing director of Garage.com, the Silicon Valley-based venture firm. “But the opportunities are still there. Good ideas continue to be funded and valuations will just be more realistic.”

The theme of “We’re still here for good ideas” was repeated over and over by the venture capitalists at the conference. “It certainly was an interesting time two years ago, quite heady,” said Steve DesJardin, a partner in Encore Venture Partners. “But often good ideas came around, and there weren’t enough good people to run them. Now we think it’s a time of great opportunity if, and only if, you have a long-term, at least three-to-seven-year time line…You should be a builder, not a trader. Traders have cloaked themselves as VCs. But true VCs look to build companies. As a good VC, you are as much a part of the companies as the entrepreneurs.”

Safeguard Scientifics, a publicly traded technology incubator and fund investor, has lost about 90 percent of its market value in recent months. But Garrett Melby, Safeguard’s vice president of e-services, said the company was doing business much the same as it has in other business cycles. “We have prospered when the markets were favorable and built companies when they were not,” said Melby. “While the opportunities for entrepreneurs and careers in venture capital are obviously not as strong as in the last two or three years, tech investing is still a great place to be.

“There may be fewer opportunities, but they will be attractive ones,” he added. “The rates of return may not be as rapid, but the ideas that are being funded now have better long-term business plans, so in the long run, that is what will work.”

Carter Sednaoui, CFO of Accel Partners, said his firm has of late avoided health care ventures, but, ironically, its health-care portfolio has contributed more than $26 million to Accel’s bottom line, more than its tech portfolio. The company’s success comes because “we are development drillers, not wildcatters,” said Sednaoui. “It’s been one hell of a party the last five years, but essentially, we haven’t done anything different from the previous 15; it’s just that everyone was more successful. Venture capital is an interesting business, but what the recent times prove is that you should not be attracted merely by the financial gratifications, but by the idea of building companies.”

Robert Walsh, a general partner at Summit Partners, a late-stage growth investment firm, suggested that valuations across all industries won’t be rising rapidly for a while and thus anyone thinking about becoming a venture capitalist had better be creative and do his or her research. “Everyone now has to think about being on the leading edge in ideas. IT (information technology) services, for instance, was big for us in 1997 through 1999, but not now. You have to be looking for the next thing, or someone will beat you to it…On the other hand, there is no short-term path, though it seemed that way to those who jumped in during the last couple of years. Your job is to help entrepreneurs build their dreams and so to build yours.”

Some venture capitalists contend that now is actually a better time for the venture capitalist industry than two years ago. “The risk is out,” said Fred Wilson, managing partner at Flatiron Partners, a New York venture firm. “Too many companies were being formed in one industry or another and values were too high. Now more bad companies, or at least bad valuations, are unlikely to occur. There may be fewer deals, but more will be good ones.”

Intensive care
Venture capitalists should not be afraid to sunset companies that aren’t going to make it in the long run, added Accel Partners’ Sednaoui. “We actually have an intensive care unit at Accel. On Mondays, we discuss those companies in the ICU and see whether we can help them succeed…The point is to make money. Sometimes that means getting out.”

But the real question is when to get in. And the venture capitalists at the conference agreed that there is no magic formula for that.

“How do you value a company? To tell you the truth, I have no idea,” said Jason Sanders, general partner at Crosslink Capital. “I don’t mean that to sound stupid. But it is more an art than a science. The problem is that if you are wrong, your investment can go down to zero, and if you are right, you can make a lot of money. It is an art not everyone can do.”

Sam Baker, managing director of the private equity group at Pilgrim Baxter & Associates, agreed with the art versus science notion.

Pricing a venture deal is an art because “you are forecasting cash flow way out,” he said. “You can jerk yourself around with an Excel spreadsheet, but (it’s important) to keep in mind that you want to invest in companies and managements that will grow over time. This is not just about the next quarter.”

Roach attributed much of his company’s success to Garage.com’s dynamic founder, Guy Kawasaki. “Guy is a shameless promoter of our portfolio companies,” said Roach. “It’s a California thing. You have to do that to make your money the best and the smartest. To be a successful venture capitalist, you have to be proactive. You hear the word ‘network’ a lot, but that is what it is all about.

“You have to build it into your psyche that you are always looking,” Roach added. “The people who are most successful are extremely networked. They meet people at conferences, they send Christmas cards, they make notes. When it comes time to make that important phone call, that other person will say, ‘Yes, I had lunch with that guy in June,’ and that may seal the deal.”

Most importantly, the venture capitalists told the audience, it is vital to know that you are doing business and not being sentimental. “You can be friendly and nice, but you want most to be commercially successful,” said Mitchell J. Blutt, executive partner at J.P. Morgan Partners. “If you are commercially focused, the company you are funding will appreciate you because you have made your objectives clear. Then your friendliness isn’t a mask.”

And lifting that mask can be very important when you have something negative to say. “It’s great to have everyone in the room feel good (about a deal),” said Baker, of Pilgrim Baxter.” But the important thing is to have everything go right. Every good firm needs a bastard who sees through this feel-good thing and says, ‘Wait a minute. We have only $5 million left, and there are some things we have to do’. That is the difference between a feel-good bad deal and one that works.”

Actual link: http://tinyurl.com/anz7ms

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Posted in Economy, Entrepreneur, Recession, World | No Comments »

Twitter – wanna a few bucks

Saturday, January 17th, 2009

THIS ARTICLE WAS POSTED ORIGINALLY ON PAT PHELAN‘S BLOG AS A GUEST POST.


The web is full of articles based on how Twitter can make some monies.
Of course I don’t intent to give Twitter managers a lesson. They proved
it all already. Success is no luck.

Kevin Thau – Twitter new biz dev guy must be brainstorming day and night looking on how to generate revenue for our favorite social media network.

My analysis is mostly based on observation. Don’t blame me if some of
the figures are distorted. If you have them please come forward and
I’ll rectify.


They are about 100 Twitter clients, 200 Twitter services and certainly
a thousand of 3rd party apps or web apps posting to Twitter.

I cannot imagine one is launching a Twitter service for philanthropic
inspiration only. It’s all about the money. Money around a community of
users – or potentiality of revenues to be generated around this
community.

Twitter founders and managers must be frustrated to see everyone else
around raising money based on sending feeds or posts to their social
media network.

Who provides the vital information? Twitter!!

Latest example of TweetDeck raising half a million dollar delivering messages to a FREE online service left me to think.

How Twitter can monetize their business and still maintain a free service for end-user?

Ok – I admit I have been a bit busy this week so it took me a few minutes to figure it out…but here are my thoughts.

Twitter is a carrier i.e. identical to any broadcast media. We were all
thinking broadcast media = TV…here is the mistake. I’m thinking
Broadcast media as THE network. Twitter IS the network. TVs are the
clients – each one around a different service.

If you look at it this way you suppress direct revenue from advertising
- which is certainly not very sexy today -AND you may charge for
SERVICE per usage. Like a hosting company – basically Twitter hosts our
Tweets and make them available to Clients.

So now imagine a business model based on:

- Bandwidth aka Twitter API Usage 80req/hour or 100req/hour or 200req/hour

- Number or Tweets posted

Twitter should SELL API usage to all of those who want to access their
network. This is THE immediate revenue-generating model. Price should
be based on consumption, queries, awareness, and even revenue sharing
in some cases.

Give each APP the full XMPP feed from Twitter, everyone now has the exact same access.

Twitterrific is selling its application on Apple Store, generating revenue based on usage of a free API. It doesn’t sound right.

First this is taking traffic away from Twitter mobile web app [meaning no possible revenue from advertising if ever]

2nd it requires more constraint on API and therefore induce a cost for Twitter.

In this case Twitter would be much more a service provider with revenue generated by thousand of companies.

Leave others monetize their value added service. If one thinks
Twitterrific, Twhirl or TweetDeck bring a different user experience it
might justify the cost. Even help those application developers to sell
their apps.

Of course it will certainly lower number of Twitter apps available. But
we know some are ridiculously useless or repetitive and will not
survive. In any case API could remain FREE for usage <50req/hr.

There is one downside in all that – which I believe could become a great benefit…

What if the community of developers around Twitter decides to give up on Twitter?

Well I still think Twitter is strong thanks to its 2.7 million users
and NOTHING else. People will use more services directly offered by
Twitter: Web, mobile portal and text message…and maybe even their own
Twitter desktop application if they really wanted to!!

So here it is. It certainly needs to be tuned and brainstormed but general idea is set above.

@Twitter @EV What do you think? Deal or no deal?

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Posted in Economy, Entrepreneur, Twitter, World | 1 Comment »

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