Welcome

Early stage investments in creative and well executed ventures.

What a week for Seattle companies…

I suppose the most notable announcement was Microsoft’s $240 million dollar purchase of 1.6% of Facebook. It was only a month ago that Steve Ballmer was trying to figure out if this was all a fad or not.
What he said:

There can’t be any more deep technology in Facebook than what dozens of people could write in a couple of years. That’s for sure,” Mr Ballmer also noted that sites such as Geocities, an online community that was bought for $3 billion by Yahoo! in 1999, at the height of the dot-com boom, “had most of what Facebook has.”

Hmm. Well, make of this what you will.

The other notable announcement was the closing of Judy’s Book. I understand start-ups not working out sometimes. What I don’t understand is why it took $10.5 million to get here. I don’t necessarily know that Judy’s Book was a bad idea…I just think that it should have only taken about $2-$2.5 million to get to this conclusion.

Today I read with great interest that Nick Hanauer over at Second Avenue has joined the Board of Marchex. I’ve long believed that a huge frontier is that of small businesses slowly moving their ad dollars online. ReachLocal’s recent $55 million dollar round certainly underscores that point. But, Marchex’s recent acquisition of VoiceStar suggests very clearly that they intend to sell phone leads to small businesses. How do you track a phone lead from a website? Why, using an IVR system like Voicestar of course!

Last but not least is the ongoing saga of Isilon’s public life on the New York Stock Exchange. The stock currently trades at $5.65 (down from its 52 week high of nearly $29 per share) after the company failed to missed sales targets that analysts were expecting. Fellow RealNetworks alumn and Sujal Patel, who founded the digital storage company seven years ago and served as its chief technology officer, has assumed the CEO role. The appointed CEO and CFO were let go this week after several disappointing quarters. Actually, three disappointing quarters in a row. Knowing Sujal, I wouldn’t be surprised to see this stock rebound nicely over the coming year. He doesn’t have experience running a public company but he does have a very big brain and that’s half the battle. He won’t make promises he can’t keep.

I might just buy both Isilon and Marchex stock this week.

comments

Leave a Reply




  • Pressplane

    Pressplane is our latest internally developed concept. We raised our $1.7 million seed round on September 22 and are backed by Second Avenue Partners and a variety of tremendous angel investors. We aren't saying too much right now because we still have a lot of work to do but we thank Techcrunch, VentureBeat, Seattle Times and others for mentioning our latest effort!

  • CafePress

    Cafepress acquired Imagekind in July 2008. CafePress.com is an online marketplace that offers sellers complete e-commerce services to independently create and sell a wide variety of products, and offers buyers unique merchandise across virtually every topic.

  • Imagekind

    Curious Office started Imagekind in 2006 and it is the world's fastest-growing art site offering over 750,000 high-quality fine art images for sale. Imagekind gives consumers limitless options to purchase museum-quality framed and poster art from over 50,000 domestic and international emerging and established artists.

  • Shelfari

    Amazon.com acquired Shelfari in September 2008. Based in Seattle, Shelfari introduces readers to our global community of book lovers and encourages them to share their literary inclinations and passions with peers, friends, and total strangers

  • Fanzter

    Fanzter was founded in 2007 by veterans of leading media, technology, and consumer products companies and is headquartered in Collinsville, Connecticut. Their first product, Coolspotters.com, launched in May 2008.

  • Wishpot

    Wishpot is a free social shopping service that makes it easy to save and share interesting things you find in stores and online. Items are easily collected online or from stores and organized using simple online lists. Lists and items can be kept private or shared with others. You can collect and discover products you like, recommend your favorite stuff, share and explore gift suggestions or ask for opinions and advice.

  • FeedDigest

    FeedDigest is a parser, regenerator, and syndicator for, and of, RSS and Atom feeds originally built by Peter Cooper. In August 2007, Feed Digest was sold to its new owners, Informer Technologies, Inc., and in 2008 rebranded to Feed Informer.