Posts Tagged ‘European startups’

All posts tagged European startups.

Posted: by chrisshipley on March 31st, 2011 | 2 Comments »

Categorized: Deals, Europe, Innovate!Europe

Who says European startups can’t raise serious venture capital?

Word came from ividence CEO Eric Didier this morning that 2-year old startup, ividence, closed a $4.2 million Series A financing with A Plus Finance, a Paris-based private equity firm.  ividence is a SaaS email ad network that generates traffic to advertisers’ Web sites by using targeted email campaigns.

The company’s proprietary algorithms and innovative email ad server belie the current thinking that email marketing is no longer effective. When we first met ividence in late 2009, the company was already generating revenues of about $100,000 per month. Since that time, Didier has guided the company’s expansion across Europe and into the U.S.  The new capital will allow him to move more aggressively to capture the market.

So why was ividence successful raising venture capital when so many European entrepreneurs (or for that matter, U.S. startups) struggle to do the same? See the previous paragraph.  ividence has focused on revenue from Day One.  The site now manages some 3,000 email campaigns a month generating thousands of leads for clients including Groupon, Citreon, and Dish Network.

ividence intends to use its new cash position to aggressively grow its team. The company expects to add 20 jobs to the business this year.

Posted: by chrisshipley on June 5th, 2009 | 4 Comments »

Categorized: Uncategorized

Sometimes, I don’t exactly know what I think until I read what I’ve said or written in someone else’s media.  Such is the case with this interview with TheNextWomen, the London-based media startup that bills itself as the “business magazine for female Internet heroes.”

The site describes itself as. . .

the first Women’s Internet Business Magazine, with a focus on startups and growing businesses, led, founded or invested in by women. We bring news on business, events, funding and tech from a female angle and interview and profile Female Business Heroes, make them notable and quotable.

We are the female Business Week, the female Techcrunch and the business Red.

We [are] compiling a database on female founders, CxO’s and VC’s of internet companies.

Among the site’s heroes (thank, you, God, that they haven’t reclaimed that horrific feminist label “sheroes”) are women as diverse as Esther Dyson, Catherine Fake, Arianna Huffington, and Queen Elizabeth.

But enough about them. . . this was an interview with me.  Site founder Simone Brummelhuis’s questions were wide ranging, but the one that jumped out, asked what European women entrepreneurs can learn from their U.S. counterparts.

My simple-to-say-but-apparently-complex-to-do answer:

There are still far too few women who take the path of technology entrepreneur. No doubt there are many subtle and obvious reasons for that path.

I think at base, though, the best thing women entrepreneurs can do for each other is to challenge them to perform at exceptionally high standards, to create businesses with meaning and impact.

If women drive women to be the best entrepreneurs they can be, supporting their unique talents and limitations, then I do think we’ll see more women choose the path of startup CEO.

The fact is that women entrepreneurs do support other women entrepreneurs.  And we need to because frankly we often don’t get the kind of support we need from women who are outside the startup world and don’t understand the life choices that entrepreneurship requires.

Building a business is hard work (for women and men) and there is really no “balancing” of work and personal life in the earliest days of a company.  We need strong support systems: of other entrepreneurs, of family members, of our friends, and of communities both inside and outside the startup world.

Which reminds me: Thank you, Nancy, Mom, and all those friends I don’t see often enough.  You all, as much as my colleagues inside the company, allow me to do what I do.

Posted: by carlacthompson on December 23rd, 2008 | 2 Comments »

Categorized: Europe, Innovate!Europe

We’re back from an incredible kickoff to our Going Global workshops in Zaragoza, Spain for Innovate!Europe. When we initially announced Innovate, we knew we’d see some good entrants from entreprenuers in Europe but weren’t prepared for the overwhelming response. We had a packed day in Zaragoza last week, with 24 participating startups, and applications for upcoming cities are pouring in. We’ve added new cities to keep up with demand, so take a look at the calendar and be sure to get your company in soon if you’d like to participate in the other workshops.

Before everyone heads off for the holidays, I thought I’d post a quick round-up of the startups we saw in Zaragoza. We’ll add color commentary on them soon but in the meantime, take a look at the innovation coming out of Spain.

Iris Experience – online widget creation for websites, desktops and mobile phones.

Safe Creative – free online copyright registration for the digital era

Spainsoft – inventory and management of knowledge assets

Cierzo Development – helping brands track customer feedback across the Web

Fasenet – tools for e-learning and enterprise internal training

Bitext -  natural language capabilities for any application

Mapalia – local social network for, ultimately, every city in the world

SevenClick – mobile push communication platform, allowing encryption in multi-device environments

Unkasoft – mobile “advergaming” – place any type of ad inside any type of mobile app

Litebi – business intelligence delivered via software as a service

Ta with you – text and image translation for the mobile phone

Elondra – salesforce applications for mobile phones

aquaMobile – making printed material interactive

SinAlergia – preventive healthcare consumer resources for common diseases

eBox – administration of corporate networks, specifically focused on SMBs

Trourist – travel social network to create and collaborate on trips

Open City Technology – e-government platform for developed and developing local governments

Ideas4All – global community of ideas to build the global brain

mmChannel – multichannel digital entertainment and community enablement solutions

Alphasip – nanotech diagnostic medical systems

MobilCash – global, easy to implement mobile payment systems

Groupvision Consulting – group collaboration tools for every type of team

Brio Can Play – applying artificial intelligence to video game creation

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