Archive for the ‘New York’ category

StartupAtWork Spring Speaker Series: 24/7 Real Media

January 30th, 2010

StartupAtWork is an initiative that I began helping out with last fall through my internship with Canaan Partners (Canaan is a sponsor, and the moderator Warren Lee is a partner at the firm). The organization hosts a series of events that feature prominent guests such as Ron Conway, one of the most prolific angel investors of all time (Google, Facebook, Zappos, Paypal), and Steve Hafner, co-founder of Orbitz and Kayak.com. The first session of the spring 2010 speaker series features two stellar speakers from 24/7 Real Media: David Moore, Chairman/Founder/Former CEO, and Mark Moran, Former EVP/General Counsel.  It is sure to be a fascinating story hearing how 24/7 Real Media raised funding, went public, nearly went bankrupt then ultimately sold to WPP Group for $650 million dollars.  The 24/7 Real Media session will be held Wednesday February 10th (5:45pm registration, 6:00pm pizza & beer, 7:00pm interview) at the New World Stages.

The StartupAtWork speaker series is intended to help foster entrepreneurship in the NYC tech community by bringing in successful entrepreneurs and investors who can share their experiences and impart tangible learnings on the attendees. While the event is invite-only, the vast majority of attendees are entrepreneurs, people working at start-ups, and students interested in the startup/tech space.  It’s a bootstrapped event (though there is free beer and pizza) where a lot of great contacts can be made and ideas can be shared.  In case you missed the fall series, you can view some great video clips of the sessions.

If you’re interested in attending this invite-only event, more details are here, and please contact me (form at the bottom of the page) to request an invite.

Groupon Is My New Obsession

January 21st, 2010

Groupon LogoI think it’s safe to say that Groupon is my new obsession.  Today I bought a Groupon for $50 worth of tapas and drinks at Poco for just $25, and have bought other Groupons such as $10 for a $20 gift card at Energy Kitchen.  The Groupons range anywhere from meal deals like the previous examples, all the way to experiences such as wine tasting events and even sky diving.

The way it works is that they feature one or two daily Groupons, or ‘deal of the day’ offers, in each city that they operate in (currently 26 cities including New York, San Francisco, Dallas and more).  The deals are local and are usually at steep discounts to regular prices.  In order for each deal to go through, it must reach a ‘tipping point’ in terms of number of purchasers.  For example, the Poco deal that I bought this morning needed at least 200 purchasers to be ‘tipped,’ in which case everyone who orders the deal gets it (at the time of writing, more than 1,500 had been sold).  If the Groupon doesn’t reach it’s tipping point, then no one gets the deal. This pulls in a unique social aspect in which people are incentivized to be viral and spead the word in order to make sure the deal gets tipped.  Groupon does a nice job integrating Facebook, Twitter, and email notifications to let you easily spread the word for each deal.  And if reaching the tipping point isn’t enough incentive, if you refer someone who buys a Groupon, your account is credited with $10 toward your next Groupon purchase.  Super smart.

This model truly creates a win-win for both consumers and local businesses.  Groupon has a great overview of the value they bring to businesses, but as a high-level summary, local businesses get the benefit of great online exposure to hyper-targeted local audiences, guaranteed volume sales (at or above the offer’s tipping point), and a new base of customers that they probably wouldn’t have otherwise reached.  Groupon cites some interesting stats such as 9 out of 10 featured businesses notice Groupon customers coming back as repeat customers, and 97% of Groupon’s featured businesses want to be featured on the site again.

For consumers, Groupon presents some compelling deals which are definitely appreciated [especially when you're a starving student like myself ;-) ].  Groupon also acts very much like a city guide and presents a lot of cool things to do.  As someone who is new to NYC, I really like all the ideas it gives me on restaurants to eat at and events to take advantage of.  Lastly, the social aspect creates a great way to organize groups of friends to take advantage of the same offers. Few new sites have me checking back almost daily, but Groupon is one that definitely gets my thumbs up.

Groupon is a startup to watch with some big name backers (New Enterprise Associates, Accel Partners and angel investor Eric Lefkofsky) that have put $35.8M into Groupon’s coffers so far.