Sunday, April 1, 2018

Blockchain Breakthrough Report: Are ICO's The "People's IPO?"


PANEL REPORT and PITCHING RESULTS


TALES FROM THE CRYPTO: BLOCKCHAIN PANEL

BLOCKCHAINPALOOZA: STARTUP PITCHING

             

REPORT: TALES FROM THE CRYPTO
Note: This event took place in NY on March 28. The next Blockchain Breakthrough event is in San Francisco at Twitter on April 9th. Details Here.

PANELISTS
Greg Obenshain on how hedge funds invest in ICO's • Paul Goodman on launching ICO's  Sweta Patel on marketing ICO's • Vlad Golub on trading ICO’s. • Dean Karakitsos on smart contracts • Sachin Narode on getting on the Blockchain • MODERATED by Alan Brody, Startupalooza

ICO’s and the Shifting SEC Rules are Focus at Blockchain Breakthoughs
Are ICOs a Kind of Crowdfunded Mini-IPO?

The first Conference and Startup pitching event in this new series produced by the long-running Startupalooza team played to an overflowing house last Thursday at Coalition Space Flatiron.

The main interest was ICO’s (Initial Coin Offerings), how they have succeeded and how the growing intervention of SEC has raised the bar and brought uncertainty to the crypto community.

What emerged was a story that showed how foreign counties may have taken the lead in ICOs because they had few other ways of raising capital. Certain Hedge Funds and Institutional Investors have backed initial offerings from the pick of the crop due to early discounts, SAFT notes etc. followed by rapid selling as these went to market. Cryptotraders have played a part in driving up values through momentum tradING – even though many offering are little more than a white paper and a website.

In the span of a year, unregulated ICOs appeared that were cheap to launch, underwritten by these big Investors and then dumped on a hungry world market that was willing to essentially crowdfund these startups.

But that was then. Today, the SEC is forcing ICO’s selling to US citizens to get registered and many are taking the Reg A Plus route (see the To ICO or Not To ICO Decision Tree offered below by software attorney, Paul Goodman of TechNY).

The first ICOs were cheap to launch and promote. Today, the legal fees can run anywhere from $25,000 to $500,000 and the marketing has gone from that website-and-a-whitepaper – the ICO’s version of an IPO prospectus – to a full-blown marketing campaign that can run over $500K. (See CenterPoint’s marketing offer below).

Despite the rising bar, interest seems to be mushrooming and ICOs are likely to proliferate as are new blockchain platforms. While expertise is scarce and trustworthy programming talent expensive, that too will come down as knowledge spreads and smart websites offer code-generating solutions.

As this new industry evolves and the public’s appetite for cryptocurrency grows, it seems that what we are really witnessing is the emergence of true equity crowdfunding.

To ICO or Not To ICO Decision Tree Click here for a copy

Sign up now for your free crypto marketing consultation to see how CenterPoint Media can take your  campaign to the next level. CenterPoint Media operates on a cost per acquisition model, meaning that you only pay for the conversions you get. CenterPoint Media is a New York City full service advertising agency leveraging its extensive influencer network to bring brands directly to their customers. Letstalk@Centerpointmedia.com


Survive And Thrive – Startup Retreat Offer

Thanks so much for entering the Blockchain Breakthrough event contest - each and every submission we received was awesome and it was a really tough decision for our panel!

To say thanks, Survive and Thrive is covering 50% of the cost of winners ticket to Survive and Thrive's 3-day immersive entrepreneur boot camp experience for just $1250 ($2,500 value). 


This includes 3 nights' accommodation, two-way transportation from LAX, food + drink for the weekend as well as direct access to top-tier investors, mastermind workshops and keynote speakers! Click here to view more details.

To confirm your attendance, just go here


BLOCKCHAINPALOOZA

Results from the Blockchainpalooza Pitches

JUDGES  JASON EARLE • PAUL GOODMAN  • BEN JEN • SWATICK MAJUMDAR •
SACHIN NARODE • SWETA PATELGREG OBENSHAIN • JODD READICK •

PRESENTERS

RealBlocks          
Perrin  Quarshie, perrin@realblocks.com     678-234-0447
RealBlocks leverages digital and fiat currencies that allows users to raise and invest capital in real estate from anywhere in the world. We're built on a proprietary hash graph and are launching with several marquee REITs and Brokerages in the US.   
Comment: A well-presented, well thought-out plan with strong industry backing for raising money in the cryptoeconomy for real estate projects.

Cryptonomy
Roy Hermann, roy@cryptonomynow.com                
Cryptonomy is a community-based ecosystem that provides crypto-enthusiasts an easy, more insightful way to discover and invest in Blockchain projects. Fake news, scams, and the overall complexity of investing in ICOs result in a loss of trust and capital for many crypto-enthusiasts. Cryptonomy helps solve this by providing multiple layers of crowd-sourced content on a designated crypto-focused app used by tens of thousands of crypto-enthusiasts. The app is currently live on iOS & Android.
Comment: A kind of Reddit of the cryptoeconomy that eanables players to communicate with each other and even validate credibility.

Kimera Systems           
Mounir Shita,  Founder and CEO  mounir@kimerasystems.com
Based on over 13 years of research, Kimera have made several breakthroughs in the field of Artificial GENERAL Intelligence (AGI). With a business strategy co-developed with the telecom industry, the company intends to combine AGI and Blockchain to disrupt how the global network operates, drive the next trillion devices to bring us to a future; where AGI is moving humanity forward. The solution focuses on a decentralized AGI solution, and a token utility that is a micro-version of a future economic model – one which Kimera believes will serve humans in a future where most jobs are automated.       
Comment: An ambitious if hard to comprehend plan to improve communications and using and ICO to fund it.
MG Miller is a modern intellectual property boutique located in Manhattan’s Financial District. Working primarily with startups and entrepreneurs, they create intellectual property portfolios that facilitate rapid growth for our clients.

Sunday, February 25, 2018

Is Helping Entrepreneurs Divine? Let's Consider the Jesus Boat Case……


........and How I Brought a Little Prosperity to the Middle East

People know me for helping startups shape their stories and find investors. They often ask and what else do you do? I always reply that is what I do, it is just a little more than you realize.

How much more, they ask and I am always tempted to answer that it is somehow, well, divine.

How much so, depends what you make of this story…….

It begins in my wandering youth days when I felt the need to experience kibbutz life. So I hitchhiked through Europe and decamped to Tel Aviv where I headed over to the kibbutz office to sign up as a volunteer. When they asked which kibbutz I wanted I looked at the map and, since I hate the desert, found one in the greenest area –– and near a nice big lake.

That turned out to be a well-known kibbutz called Ginosar and that lake it faced was the Galilee.

I found the life there so idyllic that I soon settled into a cushy job which included my own tractor. Once set up, I decided stay for a lot longer than I originally expected.

Over time, I befriend the two brothers who ran the fishing boat on the lake. I never saw them catch many fish but they were always taking their friends and especially, the young female volunteers on boatrides. Eventually, I was invited for a ride with them. If I recall correctly, it required a little horsetrading on my end.....

Once on the boat in the lazy haze of the Galilee, we got to talking about the real life on the kibbutz. They gave me a litany of complaints. Problems were everywhere. Most of the farm divisions - the chickens, the cows, the bananas, the grapefruit and so on were barely profitable. The one area that made the kibbutz money, was its slightly rundown lakeside guest house.

But even that wasnt making enough because friends and family of the kibbutz were always trying to come for free or at deep discounts and the Israelis generally, treated it as a local vacation spot that
happened to be on a lake.

I thought about it a bit and said you know, you are not seeing this place properly. To Israelis its just a cheap getaway but to Christians, this is hallowed ground facing the Galilee where Jesus performed miracles with fishes and bread, walking on water while frequenting the nearby towns of Tiberias and Capernaum.

"Why dont you go after the Christian pilgrim market," I said. "They will pay full price for everything. Quibbling would be a kind of sacrilege. They celebrate Sundays while you only come for Shabat. Youll be here for Passover but theyll come flooding in for Easter and Christmas and so on.

My host shrugged and said something along the lines of What! No. We are a Jewish kibbutz. This is not a place for Christians. They dont want to be here.

I said, no, youre wrong, you want them there. And theyll want to come.

Nothing happened and I forgot all about it.

Years later, my family visited Israel. We rented a car and of course I wanted to take everyone up to see this idyllic kibbutz of my adventurous youth.

As we pulled up to the kibbutz I couldnt believe my eyes. It looked nothing like the slightly ramshackle place I left behind. Our rustic bungalows had been replaced by mediterannean-style townhouses and the entire kibbutz resembled a gated California community. Then, we drove over to the Guest House, and what once looked like a tired old Econolodge was a now a gleaming edifice. As we drove to the front we saw a sign and nearby, a large wooden boat with the inscription: The Jesus Boat.
A Replica of the Jesus Boat

It turns out that several years after I left the kibbutz, there had been a drought and the water level in the Galilee fell dramatically, revealing acres of mud. In the mush, the 2 brothers stumbled upon the remains of an ancient boat. They summoned paleontologists, of which Israel has many, who tested the boat and declared it to be about 2,000 years old. Just the kind of boat that Jesus must have sailed upon - and so a new era was born.


The Original Jesus Boat

Today, Ginosar not only thrives as a destination for Christian pilgrims from all over the world but Israel has actually declared a pathway of cities from Jerusalem to the Galilee as The Jesus Trail.

So..can I take credit for this?

On the one hand, regardless of my advice, none of this would have happened without this boat miraculously appearing. On the other hand, was this a case of someone actualy listening? As in, from my lips to Gods ear? Or maybe, the Sons ear....

There is no question that I have made a lot of people very rich and almost always, in ways that seem to require no special thank you. Like the millionaire who became a billionaire thanks to me getting him a keynote spot at the Broadcasters convention, the virtual beauty salon that picked up a million from my investors, or the delivery service that snagged $400K on a quiet night of pitching in Philadelphia. The list goes on.

So if your idea is right it appears that someone is always listening……

The real question is do you have a Jesus Boat story? Something that you have asked for but that appears at a time least expected, out of nowhere and even in an unfamiliar form?

And this thing changes everything.

I think that most entrepreneurs – the real ones, those who dedicate themselves and remain open and flexible – will have this experience. The only question is whether they can stay the course and be resilient enough to embrace it when it appears.

If you have had an experience like this, please share it with us. Wed like to hear.
 











Wednesday, December 13, 2017

Grateful Deed: Lessons from the Startupalooza Tour Out West

--> Startupalooza arrived in L.A. with quite a following. People traveled miles to participate. The winner came from the Philippines and some even followed us up the next day to Menlo Park for our Silicon Valley debut.
Great Landing in Silicon Valley

If it felt a little like a rock tour, it was kind of deserved. A little New York attitude and access to our capital is much appreciated and Startups relished the chance to win an appearance at the National Business Investor Forum in NY worth $3500.

The point of our tour is that entrepreneurship may now be everywhere but not so with financing. Startups need all kinds of help and while there ideas that certain areas favor there may not be funding. More commonly, the ideas are better appreciated elsewhere. New York doesn't love deep tech as much as Silicon Valley or Boston and they don’t care that much for media or ecommerce platforms either. No one likes government plays as much as DC does, and so on…..

The winner in L.A. was a LoyalCoin, a cryptocurrency supporting a loyalty marketing program. The founders and company are from the Philippines where it has gained traction, already raising $2 million.
Most dapper pitcher in L.A.

It was only in L.A. that they could launch big time.

In Silicon Valley the winner was Orion Span, a company that could only have been taken seriously in Silicon Valley because it was raising $14 million to launch - Space Hotels. Yet it turned out to be a very credible pitch by a company laden with former NASA engineers. Turns out everyone is talking about rockets for space tourists but not about a comfortable place to stay once they get there! Enter Orion Span.

These guest rooms don’t come cheap – about a half million a day - but that didn’t stop our investors from wanting to help find just the right billionaires to fund this….

As for DC, the winner was TruGenomix which has a genomic blood test that that
DC Winners: TruGenomix
predict PTSD in soldiers. Since the execs have strong ties to the military, getting some type of sale is a shoo-in. But, as skeptical New Yorkers we still have to ask, does the military really want to know? After all it would limit their pool of potential soldiers.

What a cliffhanger!

Yet, it all illustrates what makes Startupalooza so interesting as we go about finding the terroire in startups. What make certain startups come from certain regions and how does that map to the inefficiencies in funding? Our biggest deals like Nomi Beauty and Alyce were form investors outside of their home towns.

To paraphrase an old saying, profits (OK, prophets) are not always honored in their home towns.

As a national funding network, we are out to solve that problem!

Thanks to all our partners, Brian MacMahon and ExpertDojo in L.A., Maryanne Morrow and Spaces Menlo Park and The Yard in DC for making this all possible!
  
DC Judges at work
L.A. Pitching


Silicon Valley


Silicon Valley Judges at Work
Sachin Narode of Xeniapp

Winners:

L.A.  LoyalCoin
Franco Dagelet,   franco@appsolutely.ph

LoyalCoin is the cryptocurrency that redefines customer loyalty programs by replacing traditional rewards points with a dynamic digital currency that can be used to redeem rewards, trade for other currencies, and more. LoyalCoin is the token that serves as the official virtual currency of the new “Loyalty Economy” Appsolutely is building. The goal is for consumers to be able to earn and spend LoyalCoin whenever and wherever they prefer to buy goods and services, from merchants who participate in Appsolutely’s loyalty ecosystem. This creates an open loyalty ecosystem where the consumer decides where and how they’d like to redeem the rewards they’ve earned. 


Comment: This is a good example of a preferred player in a hot new area. However, this is an experienced team with an Initial Coin Offering that has laready taken hold in the Philippines an in this case looks like it could fly in the US.

Silicon Valley


Orion Span, Inc.  
Frank Bunger, Founder & CEO        frank@orionspan.com 415-430-5154           
Orion Span's mission is to build & sustain human communities in space. We're building a low cost, turnkey, modular, and scalable space station in low earth orbit (LEO) for astronauts, space tourists, and space research.

Comment: If things work out,, we can help get you past the space race – and into a nice place in space. For an extended vacation, that is. This was credible, slightly awesome pitch to finance the space Marriott in outer space. Cool!


Washington, DC

TruGenomix
Yusuf Henriques, Chief Executive Officer yusuf.henriques@trugenomix.com  3019156472
Trugenomix Health is developing the first genomic blood test to accurately diagnose PTSD. This objective genomic blood test for PTSD will result in early diagnosis, early intervention, improved clinical decisions, and improved patient outcomes.

Comment: This is a breakthrough idea – predicting PTSD vulnerability though genomic test. The big plus is that the founders are insiders with deep contacts in the first customers – government and the military. The big questions are whether the money is really there for these tests and can they can scale their prediction model for other kinds of behavioural issues.

Runners Up
L.A.
6 Ft Tall Men
Comment: This defines a targeted audience. What sold it is they don’t just sell longer clothing to longer people but apparel like shirts are actually structurally different - and so they make their own structurally different shirt.


Silicon Valley

SmartFit   
Esther Elkouss, CMO             e.elkouss@gmail.com             917-588-7420

Comment: In the ever-searching quest to shop without going into a store or even trying anything on this is the solution for precisely measuring your body. Ideal for lingerie and swimwear, it requires the one time use of a low-cost tracking garment. The question is whether the public will adopt it and who will pay for it?                                                                                                                                                               


Washington, DC

Namedrop
Joseph Terpstra, Cofounder jterpstra@namedrop.co 703-408-3236
Namedrop: The word of mouth market. An app for independent professionals and gig workers to turn their friends and clients into personal booking agents for their business and side hustle.

Thursday, November 9, 2017

Startupalooza Makes a Porno? Results from the September Startupalooza



Startupalooza Makes a Porno? Not exactly but we had some fun!
Thanks to pointed questions from our panel of Angles, what started out as a presentation for nice-looking, if pricey laptop chair, turned into a risqué romp
 This spring-loaded recliner is more that a stationary rocking chair that lets you work in added comfort, it is a piece of furniture that, shall we say, takes your laptop to another level.
Make that two laptops.
Just to be sure, one of our panelists, Investor, Sandy Wollman from Westchester Angels,  put it to the test with a little help from the co-founder, Lisa Kaczmarek.
Guess – who turned out to be a winner?



 Winner of the National Business Investment Forum Prize worth $3,500
Archer Bowchair
Lisa Kaczmarekladykaz@bowchair.com412-944-6555Leveraging over 30 years of custom "one off" fabrication experience, Kaczmarek Composites was formed in late 2016.  Our passion is the combining of dissimilar materials into cohesive works of functional art.  Whether joining carbon fiber with aluminum or wood with steel, each component brings unique strengths and weaknesses which must be respected in order to create a lasting piece of luxury furniture.  We are a small, rapidly growing custom furniture maker located in Pittsburgh, PA.  
All of our products are American made from environmentally responsible, locally sourced raw materials whenever possible.   
Comment: A show stopping demo that turned this profitable custom furniture maker with a pricey chair into a potential mass market darling.

Runner Up – Winner of the Nessa Group Consulting Prize worth $1,000
Medsender
Zain Qayyum, zain@medsender.com            
Medsender enables Doctors to digitally send and receive health records from ANY EMR system. Individual practitioners can have Medsender setup within 2 minutes and instantly begin HIPAA compliant communications.        
Comment: This simple solution to a big problem is making inroads. It seems almost too good to be true and given the highly regulated space just needs a little more buy-in to tip the investor balance.    
                                                                                                             
Special Mentions
Gooroo 
Scott Lee scott@gooroo.com 917-868-2947 
Gooroo is the Airbnb for tutors where students can easily look through 1000+ certified tutor profiles and book instantly. Check the tutor╒s schedule, read a blurb about their educational background, look through student reviews, and view their hourly rate. It's personalized education for the masses - done digitally.
Comment: A well executed delivery about a company with revenues. The competitive environment and the customer churn gave some investors pause.

Vtry Inc. 
Comment: Very interesting technology for virtual tryout in 3D. The competitive environment, concern over the business model and need for additional applications were the concerns. 

Deepak Agarwal dagarwal@desiclik.com516-495-3374 
A vertical e-commerce marketplace meet the demand of 3m Indians in the US and others with unique products of India. 
Comment: Well executive business in a niche market. It needs to point to a bigger universe in order to be fundable past the strategic players and stakeholders in this community.

Wednesday, November 8, 2017

Startupalooza Startup, Kubient gets $250,000

AdTech startup Kubient's Paul Roberts stops by our booth to show off his $250,000 check from our Startupalooza judge Ben Jen of Ben Jen Holdings.

Startupalooza opens in L.A. at Expert Dojo in Santa Monica, Dec. 4th and Silicon Valley, Dec. 5th.


Monday, October 16, 2017

Grit or Gold? How to Make Your Startup Shine


From The Book: Are You Fundable? To find out more about the way Investors think you can get our book Are You Fundable? on Amazon Amazon, Kindle or directly from our site areyoufundable.com.


Like minerals or metals, no two business sectors have the same inherent value. Some are gold and some are gravel but if you understand how Investors rank these companies you could turn this around.

While the crowd will always be attracted to the next shiny thing, most money is made on reliable, boring and often unappealing businesses.

Remember that mining gold can be prohibitively expensive while digging up gravel is cheap and is used every day and everywhere.

Although gold will always get more attention than grit, there are many ways to make your gravel look like gold to Investors.
So if you don’t have gold learn how to make your gravel look like it - usually by showing that you can make profits with much lower risk and startup costs.

Here are some ways to do this:

1. Is Your Industry Offering Support or Sales?
The no. 1 attraction to investors is growth - dramatic growth. So no matter how ugly the industry, if your business increases sales or any kind of business activity - especially if it enables business growth that would not otherwise occur - you may have gold.

Gold: Examples of Sales Enablers or Boosters:

 Door Opener - If your business enables companies to enter markets they previously couldn’t reach.

 Sales Booster - When companies that were local can now go global or that could only sell in one category can now sell in more. This is especially good if these are high-growth low-competition categories.

 Sales Platform - Investors are most interested in platforms that allow others to bring the value and then you get to take a cut (think: stock market, auctions etc.)

2. Sizzle or Snooze: Businesses that Will Put Investors to Sleep - or not.

You may love what you are doing and think it's the most important thing in the world. Investors will almost always see it differently. The good news is that if you understand this and think creatively, you may be able to turn that around.

Grit - Examples of businesses Investors don’t love - but which you can still turn around. 

If your business plan is based around the following, be aware that they may sleep-inducing triggers for investors:

 HR, customer or corporate support. These are expenses and not sales growth inducers. They are hard to measure and often managed by gatekeepers with limited budgets and murky agendas.

- Possible solutions: if you can show these really make a difference or have happy returning customers, then say so up front - it could make a difference! Otherwise, you always want to frame a new paradigm in the industry and claim to have a platform that other players will have to use to enable overall growth.

• Government agencies of any kind
Possible solutions:  If you have special access of some kind. Contracts or something along those lines, you have a chance. Otherwise only investors who know that specific branch of government will be interested. They are just too many gatekeepers with murky agenda to interest Investors.

• FDA Trials
- Anything that requires money for trials is a no-no for general Investors. Specialized Investors might be interested but only if they have experience in the area.
Possible solutions: Find areas to prove the idea that don’t face these upfront barriers. Sometimes it is a game or an overseas market. Find it.

• Education
Possible solutions:  There are some known areas of value here - such as SAT and GRE’s and so on. Anything that “cuts the fat belly” of the industry by more than 70% might be of interest to investors but they generally have to be specialized or experienced in Education. For most investors there are just too many gatekeepers with murky agenda to interest them.

• Ad supported Media
- If your business plan just assumes it will be supported by advertising - and you have never been in the business of selling ads - then you may be in trouble. Ad networks don’t pay that well, and ads generally don’t sell by themselves. You need a sales force to handle customers who are generally hard and fickle. The only want to get around this is to show that you can sell or that for some compelling reason you have partners that deliver sales. Better yet, your idea is so good that at least 10% of your users are willing to pay a subscription fee.

• Value is in the Data
- In an era when hackers can steal credit card info from Equifax of download the CIA’s list of most active spies, your amazing data just doesn’t seem so valuable any more. However, if your tool or platform enables others to extract data - which you also get to keep - then you might have something. Real-time actionable data is different though. That is like fresh fish - and people will always prize that. You just have to show the investors who your fish buyer is.
           

From: Are You Fundable?
Order the Book Are You Fundable?