Archive for the ‘REPcloud’ Category

abInventio’s Founder and CEO appointed to Caltech’s Information Sciences & Technology Advisory Board

Sunday, October 26th, 2008

Alex Backer was appointed by Caltech President Jean-Lou Chameau, and joins a distinguished set of colleagues at the California Institute of Technology’s IST Board.

Investor sextuples investment in abInventio

Wednesday, September 17th, 2008

One of our early investors was happy enough with what we are doing that he sextupled his investment in the abInventio fund. Thanks!

abInventio operations weather the earthquake

Tuesday, July 29th, 2008

As Yahoo’s Santa Monica offices dealt with an hour-long power outage and cell phones turned useless all day across Southern California, abInventio’s websites remained fully operational through the 5.4-magnitude earthquake. None of our data centers serving Whozat, HoundWire, REPcloud and QLess in Altadena, Santa Monica or Texas were affected. Indeed, HoundWire was among the first news organizations to report the earthquake, within a half hour of the event.

–Alex

REPcloud invited to demo at Platform conference

Thursday, October 4th, 2007

Come see the demo of REPcloud’s Who Am I? Facebook application at the Platform Conference October 5th (10:30 AM, plenary session) at the Plug and Play Tech Center in Sunnyvale, CA!

–Alex

The next billion-dollar markets

Wednesday, July 25th, 2007

David Thomson, an intense former technology executive and management consultant, has spent the past three years figuring out exactly what it takes for a startup company to reach that magic revenue threshold of a billion dollars. He lays out his findings in a new book called Blueprint to a Billion (for more information, see blueprinttoabillion.com).

After interviewing dozens of executives at billion-dollar firms, Thomson boiled down their management practices to what he calls the Seven Essentials.

The key: Each Blueprint company operated in a market big enough and fast growing enough to support at least one billion-dollar firm. Thomson doesn’t tell you how to find that killer idea, although he does suggest where the next set of billion-dollar opportunities in the U.S. might lie. Among his answers: Our increasingly harried society is likely to embrace any time-saving product or service. A bet on QLess, perhaps? On 1ofthese’s ability to save buyers and sellers time matching with each other? Or on the faster search experience provided by Whozat or REPcloud? Or on the faster marketing answers provided by PREPROVE?

Some of the essentials identified by Thomson are strategic: Create a killer value proposition. Some are operational: Manage for positive cash flow from the start. And some involve leadership: Hire a second-in-command who can take care of the day-to-day while you think big picture. (ab inventio is hiring! COO candidates invited to apply.)

It has long been a business school staple that successful companies sell emotional benefits, not just products. (QLess can extend your productive life by 2-3 years) Yet few entrepreneurs can explain why their business proposition is any better than the competition’s. Not so with our Blueprint companies.

Most Blueprint companies operate in markets large enough to accommodate several new billion-dollar businesses.

In their early days Blueprint companies attracted what Thomson calls a “marquee customer,” whose high profile and reputation opened doors to new markets. Landing that whale requires more than just salesmanship, however: The trick is to find one who effectively takes you on as a partner to help transform your organization. Says Thomson: “You need to find a client who is willing to take risks and innovate with you on your journey.” A customer like Fox or Korn Ferry?

Thomson found that Blueprint companies tend to finance their early growth from operations (the classic example is eBay, which was profitable from nearly its first day in business). There are exceptions, notably in industries such as biotech and telecommunications that require large upfront capital investments to get a business off the ground. But most Blueprint companies are the exact opposite of all those tech startups that flamed out back in the bubble days. “The customers finance the business,” says VC McNamee. “There are just too many people who believe that the path to success is, Get a pile of press, then get a pile of venture capital money, and then get a pile of customers. That’s exactly backwards.

Corollary: Blueprint companies get extraordinary value from their boards. Most startups populate their boards with insiders or with investors who want to keep an eye on their money. But because Blueprint companies tend to finance their own growth, they are able to stack their boards with successful CEOs and industry experts who offer deep experience and contacts, help bring in business, and give shrewd advice.

Summarized from an article on CNN Money by Richard McGill Murphy.

REPcloud Beta released; Whozat Beta major new release; QLess giving out free iPhones

Saturday, July 21st, 2007
  • REPcloud, The Reputation Engine, has been released in Beta, initially as a Facebook application. REPcloud allows you to tag people you know with any descriptor. REPcloud then builds a REPcloud (for reputation tagcloud) for them, in which the size of each tag depends on how many people rated them with it and how high the rater’s reputation is for that tag. For example, if you get tagged ’smart’ by a person who has been rated ’smart’ herself, REPcloud will consider you smarter than if you were tagged by any random nitwit. You can click on any tag to find the people with the highest reputation for that tag. Click on smart and you’ll find the people the community considers smartest; click on hot and you’ll find those the community considers hottest. Click on cool…you get the point. We believe REPcloud will help us all benefit a little from the wisdom of the crowds, giving particular credence to those who know what they’re talking about…both to know who we are dealing with and to find the best of anything. It’s not just the best way to find out someone’s reputation, it’s also the future of search –and search marketing. You can install it on your Facebook profile at http://www.facebook.com/apps/application.php?id=2405025904 . More features and algorithm tweaks to follow. Introducing Jon Malmaud, co-founder of REPcloud:

Jon is best known as misterious

awesome blossom cool chocolate vanilla replicative coal bart helicopter broken for the lulz cubic quartic xxx funny smart contacts not italian misterious

Best, befriend him at http://caltech.facebook.com/profile.php?id=637712159 and play with the interactive version of his REPcloud.

  • Marzia released an all-new and much-improved version of Whozat and launched its first public sign-up page at www.whozat.com . The new version benefits from new interactive features, as well as a logo by Karl Toerge and an improved UI due in part to Gitta Salomon.
  • Tim completed the first alpha version of the QLess Merchant Web UI, to be unveiled soon.
  • We are giving out an iPhone per sign-up plus a commission of 20% of the first year’s revenues from that client to anyone who introduces us to a prospective QLess client (limited time offer). Target markets at www.waitinginlinesucks.com .

Hiring Ruby on Rails and C++ software developer

Sunday, July 15th, 2007

Looking for an entrepreneurial, hard-working and smart software developer to lead development of a new technology that will change the future of search and reputation. Technical requirements: Ruby on Rails and C++ programmer well-versed in Web 2.0 techniques needed. Candidate must be thoroughly comfortable with Ruby on Rails and MySQL 5 running in a Linux command-line environment. Candidate must also have knowledge of the basic usage and administration of Subversion, Apache, and SSH. Candidate should also be familiar HTML, Javascript, and CSS. Knowledge of screen-scraping techniques and automatic chart-rendering (such as the JFreeCharts library) preferred. Experience with the Facebook API a plus. ab inventio, the invention factory (www.abinventio.com), is an equal-opportunity employer.