Archive for October, 2010
Thursday, October 21st, 2010
ORLANDO, FL – With the increased reliance on IT from business leaders, it’s important for CIOs to understand the concerns of CEOs and the implications they may have on IT, according to Gartner Inc. Gartner analysts have outlined the seven major concerns from CEOs that CIOs should address.
“Business leaders see very uncertain times ahead in 2011, and they must defend growth despite falling business and consumer confidence,” said Mark Raskino, vice president and Gartner Fellow.
For another look at what CIOs are doing to meet their companies needs in tough times, Tech Media’s Internet Summit in Raleigh, NC Nov. 17-18 will be holding a CIO Roundtable.
Gartner analysts examined these CEO concerns during Gartner Symposium/ITxpo, being held here through October 21. The CEO concerns include:
Fading Confidence: Many CEOs will pull back from more bullish investment and expansion bets in 2011 if confidence continues to decline. This is a reality correction following some of the leader exuberance after fending off the crisis of 2008-2009.
In preparation for 2011, most CIOs should assume they will be given very limited increases in resources in line with broader corporate caution and that “making do with what we have” continues to be the right approach. However, some more-bullish business initiatives conceived in mid-2010 will make it through the budgeting cycle, but encounter rising business leader delay and hesitancy in the first half of 2011. CIOs should make business initiative owners aware at the start of the year that they may risk losing IT resources to someone else.
Maintaining Internal Cash Generation: Most CEOs are pleased that their radical cost-cutting programs instituted in 2009 ran ahead of falls in demand, so that their businesses generated the surplus cash they needed to deal with these uncertain times. Now they are faced with the need to invest in growth at the same time as maintaining healthy cash surpluses as a hedge against the bouts of high business volatility the financial crisis aftershocks continue to generate.
“CEOs will be far more interested in IT project business cases that directly drive cash measures,” Mr. Raskino said. “To properly align IT’s contribution to the most pressing of current business concerns, CIOs should ensure that among the projects they are pursuing, the contribution to cash generation and cash flow acceleration is visible. This may require focusing attention on the issue with your management teams and changing the weightings on cash related criteria in portfolio prioritization.”
Investing in New Cost Efficiencies: Some of the high returns CEOs have delivered over the last two years have come from margins created by deep cuts to operating costs. The alternative, of raising prices, is not open to many because pricing power is limited at a time when consumers are being more thrifty in their behavior. In order to keep generating strong gross profits, CEOs know they will need to develop systemic efficiencies by re-engineering rather than simple cutting.
CIOs should target at least one major business process to be revolutionized or obliterated in 2011 or 2012. CIOs proposing larger structural cost saving ideas, such as major end-to-end process changes or automations, will likely receive CEO approval. An example would be eradicating paper statements to customers in favor of online access.
Applying Innovation for Growth: Most businesses have been busy continuing with research and development (R&D) efforts through the recession, but they have often held back initial launches, awaiting better market conditions. As the outlook stabilizes, CEOs will need to accelerate the monetization of the innovation bets they have made.
“CEOs need IT’s help in bringing new product and service innovations to technology-enabled markets,” Mr. Raskino said. “The majority of CIOs should add e-commerce, e-service, social marketing, smartphone or location-based innovations to bolster new product and service launches.”
Engaging the Politicized Economy: CEOs must engage in serious debate with political leaders as they rewrite the rules on how economies operate. As advanced economies struggle to regain solid growth, many business leaders are concerned that the regulatory and tax changes governments make will harm the markets of business leaders. In particular, leading CEOs are concerned that complex taxes levied to recoup bailouts and stimulus packages will raise their costs and dampen demand.
CEOs will need strategic information to win political battles and rapid compliance to avoid penalties. In some cases, business leaders may choose to be active in shaping or rebuffing regulations. CIOs should make sure they have a strong tactical liaison in place with the office of the CEO and the legal department to help with complex data analysis and information inquiries.
Long-Term Sustainability: Many long term concerns are causing CEOs to think harder about business and industry sustainability. Examples include the massive human scale of the developing economies like China, the recent year’s volatility of commodity prices for oil, precious metals and other resources, and the finite nature of newly important mineral resources such as lithium and neodymium.
These factors add to long-term concerns about oil reserves, climate change, waste and the increasing regulations and fiscal interventions governments are gradually placing on perceived negative externalities. These examples show how CEOs are learning to work with a sustainability mind-set and profit from it.
Though reducing the power consumed in IT operations remains important, for most organizations the more important and strategic issue is how IT can help the business to operate more sustainably. IT must learn how to engage and add value. CIOs should order high-level, long-term sustainability business systems and information architecture development plans.
Legacy and Succession: The pressures of the recent recession and the attacks on CEO pay made many enjoy the role a lot less in the last couple of years though they are recovering. Gartner analysts said they expect to see a rise in CEO turnover over the next 18 months as boards set out on new, post-recession, strategy directions.
Most CEO appointments are internal, so that means these CEOs probably knew the last two CIOs. If their attitude toward IT is misguided, perhaps an opportunity was lost.
“We all want business leaders who are technology savvy and will work smartly with their CIOs to understand the promise of IT, properly invest in it, and lead the business in its full exploitation. Whose fault is it then, if we continue to see some CEOs who don’t seem to understand, who dislike IT and who treat it more like an unavoidable overhead than a value creating tool,” Mr. Raskino asked.
“The ‘great recovery’ generation of CEOs will be put into position over the next five years. Those people are in CIO peer and peer-network positions right now,” Mr. Raskino said. “As a profession we can only reap what we sow. CIOs should identify the people around them most likely to rise to the top job and take time to help them in the late stages of their professional development. Teach, mentor, advise, persuade, support, nurture and generally cultivate the next business leader you hope to be working for.”
Tags: CEO concerns CIOs should address, FL, Gartner, Internet Summit, Orlando, Raleigh Posted in Carolinas, Events, IT, North Carolina, Studies, surveys, reports | Comments Off
Thursday, October 21st, 2010
 Olympic athlete Dorothy Hamill is featured on the Edge Health web site
CHARLOTTE, NC – Edge Health Initiatives, a health-care marketer, has reaised $900,000 of a $2 million debt and securities offering, according to a regulatory filing.
The company, founded in 2009, used celebrity focused platforms to market companies and brands.
Clients include Merck Oncology, Philosophy Cosmetics, J.C. Penny, and Wachovia.
Edge Health’s multimedia marketing programs include singers Rihanna, Cyndi Lauper, Rascal Flatts, Natalie Cole and Olivia Newton-John, and Olympic athletes Dorothy Hamill, Scott Hamilton, Tanith Belbin, Ben Agosto, and Shannon Miller.
It is a sister company to Edge Entertainment, a marketing and production firm that specializes in entertainment and sports specials for broadcast, and Olympic sport arena tours.
Email TJS editor/writer Allan Maurer: Allan at Techjournalsouth dot com.
Tags: celebrity mareting, Charlotte, Dorothy Hamill, Edge Health, financing, NC Posted in Carolinas, Marketing, North Carolina | Comments Off
Thursday, October 21st, 2010
MARIETTA, GA – Effcon MXR, a company developing a once-a-day version of a drug used to treat glaucoma, has raised $552,000 of a targeted $3 million raise, according to a regulatory filing.
The company, founded a year ago, received the funds from five investors, according to a filing with the US Securities and Exchange Commission.
It is developing a one time a day reformulation of methazolamide, which treats glaucoma and other intraocular pressure disorders.
The company apparently does not have a web site.
Tags: Effcon MXR, financing, GA, glaucoma drug, Marietta, Pharma Posted in Georgia, Money | Comments Off
Wednesday, October 20th, 2010
 Kurt Merriweather, Lee Givens at Digital East
By Allan Maurer
TYSONS CORNER, VA – If you’re trying to capture an Internet browser’s attention with online video, keep them in the sweet spot in length of from 90 seconds to 3 minutes. So said participants during the online video panel at the Digital East event earlier this week.
Kurt Merriweather, director of business development for the Discovery Channel, added, “Think about how to make your video social and compelling.” He also said to make sure it’s front and center in other marketing materials such as in a email subject line. “You need to push people to your video so they can see it,” he said.
Merriweather also said that the Discovery Channel is looking for alternatives to cable delivery of its programming.
One reason for keeping videos short, in addition to the fact that research shows most people watch those shorter ones, is that they are better suited to mobile viewing.
Panelist Lee Givens, principal product lead for mobile applications at AOL, noted, “Mobile is going to be the wave of the future and 60 percent of all web content will be accessed from mobile devices (which include not only smartphones, but also iPads, netbooks and a variety of coming tablet devices).
iPad users watch 5 times more video
He pointed out that iPads have been the fastest selling device “Ever.” He also warned, “Don’t get caught up in technical things. You have to focus on a story.”
“People with iPads watch five times more video,” Givens said research shows.”I personally do 20 to 40 percent of my video watching on my iPad.
Moderator Jeff Parsons, director of video operations for the Associated Press, added, “Make sure the video does match the vision of your site. If they don’t like what they see, they probably won’t come back for a while.”
Jeff Rule, managing director of product development & innovation at Hanley Wood, said his firm often “Gets as many views of a tool test video on YouTube as everywhere else combined.”
The panelists agreed that if YouTube suits a video maker’s purposes, it is a good outlet for attracting traffic and can be easily embedded on sites.
Givens said, “We still use YouTube. It’s amazing how flexible it is. If you just want a big audience, use it.”
Parsons added, “There isn’t any negative to having YouTube’s player on your site.” He also noted that video is notoriously hard to monetize right now.
Merriweather said, “The next big wave in video is convergence. Connected TVs are going to become pervasive.”
Tech Media’s next event brings more than 100 top Internet gurus, executives, entrepreneurs and venture capitalists to Raleigh, NC Nov. 17-18 for the Internet Summit.
To contact TJS editor/writer Allan Maurer: Allan at TechJournalSouth dot com.
Tags: AOL, Associated Press, Digital East, Discovery Channel, Hanley Wood, Jeff Parsons, Jeff Rule, Kurt Merriweather, Lee Givens, online video, YouTube Posted in Events, Internet/New Media, IT | Comments Off
Wednesday, October 20th, 2010
SAN DIEGO, CA – The majority of people responding to a survey by Anonymizer Inc. are relying on methods that may not be adequate to protect their privacy and security online, the company said.
Seventy-five percent of respondents believed a firewall and another 62% believed anti-virus software both offered protection for their identity online. While firewalls and anti-virus software are important for protecting a computer, these tools do not provide a complete solution for protecting a user’s privacy and identity while online.
“Online identity theft is much more common than we think and consumers are inundated with conflicting information about what they need to do to protect themselves as they surf the Web,” said Bill Unrue, president of Anonymizer. “Consumers need to realize that the steps they take to protect their computer system are not the same measures they need to safeguard their privacy and identity when they’re online. Firewalls and anti-virus software simply aren’t enough.”
We’re online continually, so we have had a few security breaches, but we follow much of the advice offered in the tips following the survey findings below.
Other findings from the survey include:
- Identity theft (45%), privacy (41%) and computer viruses (45%) made respondents the most nervous about being online.
- According to Consumer Reports, one in five people have been a victim of cybercrime(1). Despite this sobering statistic, 36% of respondents still believed their identity was secure online.
- Consumers are increasingly aware that their mobile devices are also vulnerable to malicious cyber activity. Only 28% believed their identity was secure on a mobile device.
- Who’s watching me: 85% of respondents were aware that they were being profiled by advertisers as they surfed the Internet, and 85% were aware that cybercriminals were stalking them without their knowledge.
Despite heightened consumer awareness of potential online risks, every three seconds an identity is stolen online(2).
During National Cybersecurity Awareness Month, Anonymizer encourages consumers to rethink their approach to online safety with these tips:
- Have a Plan: Complete Internet security requires a thorough, four-prong approach that must include: privacy and identity protection, computer system protection, browser protection, and a fraud alert service.
- Hide Your IP Address: An IP address reveals seemingly harmless information – such as your city, state, Zip code, and browser type – which can be exploited by prying eyes. Install software that hides your IP address, and thus your identity and online activities, from criminals, search engines, and advertisers. (That’s what Annonymizer sells).
- Use Wi-Fi Protection: Virus and malware protection do not protect you from cybercriminals who might be lurking on unsecure connections. When accessing the Internet through a Wi-Fi hotspot – whether through a computer or mobile device – use an online anonymity product that shields your identity by passing all of your searches and information through an encrypted VPN tunnel.
- (For more information on Wifi security see: www.timeatlas.com/reviews/reviews/wireless_hotspot_security
- Think Twice Before You Type: Social networking sites are prime areas for cybercriminals to mine for personal information so beware of what you post. And never post personal information on any site that you wouldn’t want just anyone to know. Even if you delete this information later, nothing ever truly disappears on the Web.
- More online safety tips and information, including a detailed Internet security checklist, can be found in the Anonymizer Learning Center, www.anonymizer.com/learningcenter.
Tags: Anonymizer, online security, privacy, tips for protecting privacy, Wifi security Posted in Internet/New Media, Security, Studies, surveys, reports | Comments Off
Wednesday, October 20th, 2010
 Laura Marriott
ATLANTA -NeoMedia Technologies Inc. (OTCBB: NEOM.OB), which sells mobile barcode scanning solutions, has named Laura Marriott acting CEO and chair. Marriott takes over from previous CEO Iain McCready who has stepped down to pursue other interests.
Marriott moves into the CEO position from her existing role as board member and acting Chief Marketing Officer. She will work closely with the board on the overall management of the Company as well as to progress a number of new and ongoing business opportunities.
Marriott previously held leadership positions at Intrado, Cyneta Networks and Cell-Loc Inc./TimesThree. She was president of the Mobile Marketing Association for three years.
The company’s technology platform transforms mobile devices with cameras into barcode scanners, enabling a range of practical and engaging applications including consumer oriented advertising, mobile ticketing and couponing, and business-to-business commercial track and trace solutions.
Tags: Laura Marriott, mobile bar code scanning, NeoMedia Technologies Posted in Georgia, IT, People, Telecommunications | Comments Off
Wednesday, October 20th, 2010
ATLANTA – Southeast BIO (SEBIO), a regional nonprofit organization dedicated to fostering the growth of the Southeast’s life sciences industry, has named the best life sciences deals in the Southeast, as determined by a Selection Committee comprised of regional and national venture capitalists. These companies, both early- and later-stage, will participate in the upcoming SEBIO Investor Forum being held on November 3-4, 2010 at the Ritz-Carlton, Buckhead in Atlanta, Georgia.
Those companies chosen for the EARLY/Stage event are seeking their first rounds of venture capital and/or angel investment. During the Investor Forum, the companies will participate in an advisory session led by active early-stage investors. The MAIN/Stage presenting companies have generally completed at least one round of institutional financing and will each have the opportunity to make a ten minute pitch to the full conference audience.
Since 1999, companies that have participated in the SEBIO Investor Forum have raised over $2.5 billion in public and private offerings.
SEBIO has also selected four finalists for its Fourth Annual BIO/Plan Competition, a program developed to promote the creation of new, fundable life science companies based in the Southeast. Working closely with technology transfer offices and entrepreneurs throughout the region, the competition brings forward opportunities from leading Southeastern research universities and research centers. The BIO/Plan Competition received forty applications earlier this year from all across the Southeast.
SEBIO 2010 MAIN/Stage Companies
Avancen MOD Corporation (Mt. Pleasant, SC)
EGEN, Inc. (Huntsville, AL)
Intelliject, Inc. (Richmond, VA)
InVasc Therapeutics, Inc. (Tucker, GA)
RFS Pharma, LLC (Tucker, GA)
Visioneering Technologies, Inc. (Alpharetta, GA)
SEBIO 2010 EARLY/Stage Companies
Ariste Medical, LLC (Memphis, TN)
Atlanta Catheter Therapies, Inc. (Atlanta, GA)
AXOXY Laboratories, LLC (Gainesville, FL)
Bioshape Solutions, Inc. (Research Triangle Park, NC)
CvergenX, Inc. (Tampa, FL)
Endomimetics, LLC (Birmingham, AL)
GeneCapture, Inc. (Huntsville, AL)
Grace Innovative Technologies, Inc. (Mobile, AL)
HemoSonics, LLC (Charlottesville, VA)
NeurOp, Inc. (Atlanta, GA)
Physcient, Inc. (Durham, NC)
Restorative Physiology Group, LLC (North Charleston, SC)
Scytel Research (Chapel Hill, NC)
Vascular Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (Cary, NC)
Vivo Biosciences, Inc. (Birmingham, AL)
SEBIO 2010 BIO/Plan Finalists:
FibroTherapeutics, Inc. (Medical University of South Carolina)
NRG Biotechnology (Morehouse School of Medicine)
Reactive Diagnostics, Inc. (Georgia Institute of Technology)
SPECTROPATH Medical (Emory University)
Tags: Atlanta, Emory, GA, GA Tech, Investor Forum, life sciences, Medical University of SC, Morehouse School of Medicine, NC, Pharma, presenting companies, SC, SEBIO, VA Posted in Alabama, Carolinas, Events, Georgia, North Carolina, Other SE, Potomac, South Carolina, Virginia | Comments Off
Wednesday, October 20th, 2010
GAITHERSBURG, MD – Cytomedix Inc., a company selling regenerative therapies for wound and tissue repair, has received the first $146,853 from a $10 million funding agreement with Chicago-based Lincoln Park Capital, according to a regulatory filing.
Earlier in October, Cytomedix said that it had secured approximately $13 million in current and future funding via a registered direct offering and commitments under two separate equity purchase agreements with Lincoln Park Capital. The first is for $10 million and the second is for $1.5 million using the existing shelf registration.
Cytomedix develops, sells and licenses regenerative biological therapies primarily for wound care, inflammation and angiogenesis.
The company says it is pursuing a multi-faceted strategy to penetrate the chronic wound market with its products, as well as opportunities for the application of AutoloGel and PRP technology into other markets such as hair transplantation and orthopedics while actively seeking complementary products for the wound care market.
The AutoloGel System harnesses the patient’s natural healing processes with the delivery of a platelet releasate gel containing growth factors, cytokines and chemokines required for cell growth and formation of new tissue. Restoring the balance in the wound environment can transform a non healing wound to a wound that heals naturally.
The company said net proceeds will be used to continue product development, sales and marketing and general corporate purposes.
The company disclosed receiving the tranche from the funding in a filing with the US Securities and Exchange Commission.
Posted in Maryland, Money, Potomac | Comments Off
Wednesday, October 20th, 2010
DURHAM, NC – New York-based ReverbNation, which sells a marketing platform to musicians, managers, record labels and venues, has acquired Durham, NC-based Sound Around, a mobile application development company focused on creating custom mobile applications for bands and musicians. Terms of the transaction were not disclosed.
ReverbNation says acquisition lets it extend its set of tools for bands and musicians to include the creation of mobile apps for its user base.
“Sound Around has built a great platform for Artists to easily create custom mobile applications for their fans,” said Jed Carlson, co-founder and chief operating officer of ReverbNation.
“In starting Sound Around, Scott and I set out to bring compelling and affordable mobile solutions to DIY Artists. This acquisition represents a significant leap in our ability to positively affect the music industry by allowing Artists to both acquire new fans and engage existing fans on a deeper level,” said Steve Klein, CEO of Sound Around.
ReverbNation also has offices in Durham, NC.
Tags: bands, Durham, marketing platform, musicians, NC, New York, ReverbNation, Sound Around Posted in Acquisitions, Carolinas, Internet/New Media, IT, North Carolina | Comments Off
Wednesday, October 20th, 2010
 TerreStar's GENUS phone
RESTON, VA – TerreStar Networks, a majority-owned subsidiary of TerreStar Corp. (Nasdaq:TSTR), has filed for reorganization under chapter 11 bankruptcy and has entered into an agreement with EchoStar Corp., its largest secured creditor, to provide the Company with a $75 million debtor-in-possession financing facility.
TerreStar Networks will use the debtor-in-possession financing to maintain business-as-usual operations during the restructuring process. The Company believes its current and anticipated cash resources will be suitable to pay its expenses and maintain its business operations during chapter 11.
In addition to the debtor-in-possession financing facility, TerreStar Networks has also entered into a Restructuring Support Agreement with EchoStar Corporation, under which EchoStar has agreed to support a restructuring premised on a debt for equity conversion by the Debtors’ secured noteholders, and backstop a $100 million rights offering that will provide the funding for TerreStar Networks’ exit from chapter 11.
The company sells wholesale satellite services and an integrated satellite-cell smartphone, the GENUS.
Tags: $75M debt facility, Chapter 11 bankruptcy, EchoStar, GENUS phone, Reston, TerreStar Networks, VA, wholesale satellite services Posted in Internet/New Media, Money, Potomac, Telecommunications, Virginia | Comments Off
Wednesday, October 20th, 2010
ALPHARETTA, GA – EcoSMART TEchnologies Inc. has closed a $2 million equity investment from Greenmont Capital Partners and received an additional $2 million from its credit facility from Western Technology Investment.
The company said will use the funds to provide additional growth capital and to support its working capital requirements as it continues to rapidly grow the sales of its complete line of safe and effective pesticide products.
“Greenmont looks for companies in the Natural Products categories with proven customer traction and natural products that are unique and compete effectively with their non-natural alternatives,” said David Haynes of Greenmont Capital Partners. “EcoSMART’s impressive growth through leading home centers, grocery chains and natural retailers validate the consumer demand for a safe and effective alternative to synthetic pesticides.”
The company’s proprietary pesticide products derived from natural plant oils. The active ingredients in EcoSMART’s products are unique, synergistic blends of essential oils, many of which are classified GRAS (generally recognized as safe) by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration and approved as direct food additives.
Tags: Alpharetta, EcoSMART, financing, GA, Greenmont Capital Partners, safe pesticides, Western Technology Investment Posted in Georgia, Money | Comments Off
Tuesday, October 19th, 2010
 Scott Silverman, Gio Hunt, David Moldavsky, and David Horgan on the Digital East ecommerce panel.
By Allan Maurer
TYSONS CORNER, VA – How do professionals go about increasing their ecommerce conversion rate? They test variations of everything from their message to their web design to their images.
That was one takeaway from the Ecommerce panel at yesterday’s Digital East event in Tysons Corner, VA, which included David Horgan, Smithsonian Folkways online marketing specialist; Gio Hunt, CEO of Koofers.com; David Moldavsky, VP, of web strategy and operations, Graduate Management Admissions Council; and Scott Silverman, cofounder and VP of marketing at Ifeelgoods.com.
Moldavsky, who previously worked for language learning firm Rosetta Stone, said Rosetta Stone looked at ecommerce as a sales funnel and how things flow through it. They look at where traffic is coming from (search, email, offline & online marketing) and follow it as it goes through the funnel to conversions.
Look for leakages
“We looked for leakages,” says Moldavsky, “figuring out what worked and what wasn’t working.”
They would also run tests of different site versions once a month. “We would try shorter descriptions vs. longer ones, exchange one set of images for another, and track which ones make you the most money. We used a tracking tool.”
Moldavsky said that they did a multiple variant test of their product listing page, testing four very different versions, and after two weeks got a 15 percent lift in conversions by using the one that produced the best results.
Silverman, moderating the panel, noted that there are many tools available to help test and track sites, including the free Google optimizer. He also noted that many times, a firm is too close to its own ecommerce site to see things that might trouble potential buyers. Several studies show that if an online buyer is stymied by anything in the purchasing process, they tend to just leave. Usually, they do not come back.
Silverman said, “Go to a Starbucks and give people $10 to use your site. Get them to talk out loud and it’s amazing what you’ll learn. Problems arise you never see because you are too close to it.”
Doing that helped one company discover that there was no “buy now” button on its page anywhere.
Don’t overlook email
Gio Hunt of Koofers, a site that provides professor ratings, study guides and other services to college students, said, “Email is often overlooked as a prospecting tool in web publishing. “It’s rocking awesome,” he said. “It’s one of our greatest performing channels and really inexpensive compared to anything else. So never overlook email. Start with it.”
He also said Facebook in an increasingly important channel in acquiring new users. “It’s not for the faint of heart,” he added. “You have to test your way into it. What I see over and over is that a lot of people try it one time and put in one type of creative that almost inevitably performs poorly. They say ‘This Facebook thing doesn’t work, no one is converting.’ You have to be patient and methodical in your testing.”
He added, “It will perform well when you dial in different creative and targeting mechanisms at different parts of the day. It may take four weeks, but you’ll see a significant improvement in lift.”
Add a surprise
Horgan noted that his 15-employee company can make use of tools previously only available to large organizations so that even small non-profits can compete. “Without Facebook and Twitter, we would not have had the success we’ve had,” he said. Posting reviews and ratings on the Folkways site has also been effective, he said.
“That sort of transparency has had a very positive effect on our conversions.”
He also said Folkways always includes a little extra gift when its customers buy digital tracks, including an extra as a “surprise.”
That way, he said, “You’ll not only be doing things well, but also doing them better than a customer expected.”
Around 700 people attended the Digital East event. Next up for Tech Media is the Internet Summit in Raleigh Nov.17-18, which over two days, includes more than 100 Internet and digital experts.
Tags: David Horgan, David Moldavsky, Digital East, ecommerce, Events, Gio Hunt, Internet Summit, Koofers, Marketing, Rosetta Stone, Scott Silverman Posted in Carolinas, Internet/New Media, IT, Marketing, North Carolina, Potomac, Virginia | Comments Off
Tuesday, October 19th, 2010
RALEIGH, NC – Saertex USA, which makes high tech composite materials for the green energy sector, is investing $6.5 million to expand its facility in Huntersville, NC. It plans to create 178 new jobs over the next three years.
The company sells materials used in aerospace, auto and ship manufacturing, and wind energy equipment.
The company, which has had an operation in Huntersville since 2000, currently employs 126 people there.
The company says the new jobs pay an average of $41,506 plus benefits. The state will provide the company with a $110,000 One North Carolina Grant to support the expansion.
Tags: Economic Development, Huntersville, jobs, NC, Saertex Posted in Carolinas, Economic Development, North Carolina, TechJobs | 1 Comment »
Tuesday, October 19th, 2010
BOCA RATON, FL – Vicor Technologies Inc. (OTCBB: VCRT) has raised $2.72 million of its $2.95 million debt offering, according to a regulatory filing. The company disclosed the financing in a filing with the US Securities and Exchange Commission, which says the the total offering is targeted at $2.95 million.
The Boca Raton-based biotechnology company creates innovative, non-invasive diagnostics based on its patented PD2i nonlinear algorithm, a new vital sign that accurately predicts pathological events in specific populations.
It currently is in the process of commercializing diagnostics for such events as congestive heart failure patients for cardiac death resulting from arrhythmia or pump failure, diabetics for diabetic autonomic neuropathy, and trauma victims. Vicor is collaborating on one such project dealing with combat and civilian trauma victims with the U.S. Army Institute for Surgical Research at Fort Sam Houston in San Antonio, Texas.
Tags: Biotech, Boca Raton, debt raise, diagnostics, FL, Vicor Technologies Posted in Florida, Money | Comments Off
Tuesday, October 19th, 2010
GERMANTOWN, MD – INVeSHARE Inc., a turnkey provider of shareholder communications focused on next generation delivery and processing of proxy materials, has named Ted Stein chairman and CEO.
Prior to joining INVeSHARE, Stein served as President and CEO of several private equity-funded start-ups and turnarounds. He served as President and CEO of Financial Marketing, Inc. and American Payroll Centers Inc.; the companies were eventually sold to ADP and Zurich Ventures, respectively. Previously, Stein was President of Technology Specialist, Inc., which was sold to Collegis, now a subsidiary of SunGard.
INVeSHARE solutions, supporting both digital proxy (e-proxy) and paper distribution, are designed to facilitate the industry’s transition from a paper-based system to e-proxy voting and digital shareholder communication.
Tags: chair, Germantown, Inveshare, MD, Ted Stein named CEO Posted in Internet/New Media, IT, Maryland, Potomac | Comments Off
Tuesday, October 19th, 2010
 Tim O'Shaughnessy, CEO, LivingSocial
WASHINGTON, DC – Local social shopping site LivingSocial has acquired Urban Escapes, a social adventure company. Terms of the deal were not disclosed.
LivingSocial will now be able to exclusively offer its 10 million subscribers-strong worldwide community a host of diverse, fun and unique adventures and experiences, produced by a team of on-the-ground experts.
Tim O’Shaughnessy, CEO and co-founder of LivingSocial said, “With the acquisition of Urban Escapes, we will now have the ability to help curate some amazing experiences and adventures exclusively for our members.”
Urban Escapes staff will work directly with LivingSocial representatives in five introductory markets designing and creating one-of-a-kind experiences and adventures for LivingSocial customers.
“People who use LivingSocial are already looking for fun, new things to do in the area they live or where they’re visiting,” said Maia Josebachvili, founder and president of Urban Escapes. “We’re passionate about organizing experiences you could never arrange on your own and this acquisition is the perfect opportunity for us to expand these completely unique, guided experiences around the globe.”
LivingSocial lets anyone find restaurants, shops, activities and services popular in their area at a savings of 50 percent to 70 percent.
LivingSocial has expanded its social local shopping service rapidly this year, adding markets at a blistering pace after raising more than $50 million in venture backing.
Its competitors in the space include the venture-backed Groupon, the 180-pound gorilla in the market. Chicago-based Groupon raised a round of more than $100 million this year.
The company started out offering the “Pick Five” app on Facebook.
Previously on TJS:
Local deals growing because they provide merchants with customers
Tags: acquistions, DC, Goupon, LIvingSocial, Tim O'Shaughnessy, Urban Escapes Posted in Acquisitions, Georgia, Internet/New Media, Potomac, Washington, DC | Comments Off
Tuesday, October 19th, 2010
DULUTH, GA – Duluth-based NCR Corp. has acquried Mobiqa, a Scotland-based company that sells optimized mobile content and provides tickets, boarding passes, and downloadable coupons and applications. Terms of the deal were not disclosed.
The acquisition enables NCR to establish a global mobile center of excellence, which will initially focus on the travel industry, where NCR and Mobiqa expect to realize synergies from their existing solutions.
Located in Edinburgh, Scotland, the mobile center of excellence will complement NCR’s existing R&D facility in Dundee and enable NCR to extend existing mobile offerings across multiple industry sectors.
Mobiqa is a leader in the delivery of optimized mobile boarding passes to the airline industry. The company is able to deliver content to smartphones and legacy handsets via over 600 mobile networks in over 150 countries worldwide.
Mobiqa uses SMS, MMS, web link and email technologies for barcode delivery to mobile phones and offers fully optimized mobile website content for m-commerce transactions and downloadable applications in the airline, cinema, live events, rail and retail sectors.
Tags: Acquisitions, Duluth, GA, Mobiqa, NCR Posted in Acquisitions, Georgia, Internet/New Media, IT | Comments Off
Tuesday, October 19th, 2010
ROCKVILLE, MD – GateKeeper USA, a company developing a security monitoring systems to protect shipping containers, has raised $1.4 million of a targeted $10 million equity raise, according to a regulatory filing.
The company successfully completed a proof-of-concept test of its Container Automated Monitoring System (CAMS) in August. It is intended to protect shipping containers from Terrorists who might use them to deliver any number of threats.
The company has employed proprietary detection and identification technologies. The technologies to being utilized by the Company provide rapid, automatic and specific real-time analysis, identification and quantification of the chemical, biological and radio active compounds whether in liquid, solid or gaseous states.
The company disclosed the funding in a filing with the US Securities and Exchange Commission.
To contact TJS writer/editor Allan Maurer: Allan at TechJournalSouth dot com.
Tags: financing, GateKeeperUSA, MD, Rockville, shipping container security Posted in Government/Defense, Maryland, Money, Potomac, Security | Comments Off
Monday, October 18th, 2010
ATLANTA – Nexidia, a provider of audio search and speech analytics solutions, has received over $23 million in new equity funding to extend business growth and technology leadership in its key markets.
The funding will be used to further develop and protect original research in its core technology and intellectual property, and to increase the company’s operational capacity in the contact center and other markets worldwide.
New investors in this round are BlueCross BlueShield Venture Partners, Sandbox Industries and HarbourVest Partners. They join existing investors HIG Ventures, Paladin Capital Group, Boston Millennia Partners, Morgan Stanley and Cordova Ventures, all of whom added to their equity stake in the company.
“We’ve seen a significant increase in demand for our products and services across all of our markets,” said John Willcutts, president and chief executive officer of Nexidia. “This new investment will allow Nexidia to leverage our leadership position in these markets to further accelerate our company’s growth.”
Tags: Atlanta, financing, Nexidia Posted in Georgia, IT, Money | Comments Off
Monday, October 18th, 2010
 John Kosner, ESPN, Digital East luncheon speaker
TYSONS CORNER, VA – You see them tapping in their Twitter messages on Blackberries, iPhones, laptops, iPads, netbooks at Digital East, ongoing at the McLean/Tysons Corner Hilton (see #digitaleast on Twitter).
Their fingers are busy because the speakers and panelist are delivering a steady stream of actionable information, bullet points and useful takeaways.
Here are a few things those in attendance find worth noting in their Twitter comments:
Most sites would benefit form getting rid of one-quarter of their content. More is not more.
Online users don’t want to be Google bombed, they want relevance.
The number one weapon in online advertising is a marketers own customer data. Get close to your data.
The best companies are born in the hardest times.
Always visit tech incubators when looking for tomorrow’s best ideas.
The last mile in broadband, especially 4G, is going to spur a ton of new innovation.
The brand is always more important than the medium, no matter how great the medium.
Forget uniques, engagement is where it is at.
We all compete with everyone online and the only way to win is to have the best product.
ESPN’s mantra: Live, local and social…
If you don’t fail once in a while, you’re probably not pushing hard enough.
Don’t invest in research and analytic tools unless you intend to use them.
You can follow these and other comments at #DigitalEast on Twitter.
Tags: Digital East, ESPN, John Kosner, Kelley McDonald, online advertising, social media, twitter Posted in Events, Internet/New Media | Comments Off
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