Category Archives: Uncategorized

Community of Entrepreneurs Featured in Capital Business

Friday is usually when we tell you what’s worth reading, but today we’re making an exception. Take a look at the members of the Dingman Center’s community of entrepreneurs are featured in the Washington Post’s Capital Business this week.

  • Entrepreneur-in-Residence, Liz Sara, gives selling advice to a local entrepreneur attempting to simplify managing personal finances.
  • Dingman Center Angels portfolio company, Spinnakr, debuted their new software that analyzes large volumes of data to find the most useful information for website operators. The company has raised almost $1M in seed funding from local venture capitalists and Dingman Center angel investors.
  • Brazen Careerist, Dingman Center Angels portfolio company led by Entrepreneur-in-Residence, Ed Barrientos, is making news for it’s cloud based virtual career fair platform.
  • DC-based startup, Uberoffices whose Co-Founder is Dingman Center entrepreneur-in-residence, Jason Shrensky, is opening another shared office space. Dingman Center Angels portfolio  company, Veenome, is among their many clients.

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Worth Reading 6/7/13

Working on your business this summer? Don’t miss our annual end of summer entrepreneurship boot camp, Dingman Jumpstart. Today is the final day to take advantage of our $100 registration discount. Stay current this summer and read through this week’s collection of articles we consider worth reading.

Entrepreneurs come up with great ideas every day; execution is the hard part. Inc. Magazine’s 6 Steps to a Smarter Start-Up will show you how to keep spirit needed to drive your company to success.

As most of you may have heard, popular social media blogging platform, Tumblr, was acquired by Yahoo! for $1.1 billion. How will the acquisition affect the entrepreneurial ecosystem in America? New York Times small business blogger, Cliff Oxford, tells us Why the Tumblr Deal is a Disaster for Entrepreneurs.

Are you a small tiger or an aging dinosaur? With entrepreneurial activity in the U.S. at its highest ever, the community is a jungle! Learn the Laws of the Jungle for Business Startups from Forbes magazine.

The entrepreneurial ecosystem is crowded these days and startups are having a hard time differentiating themselves. Trying to increase your presence? Here are 7 Marketing Tips for Bootstrapped Startups.

We’ll leave you with one of the most popular articles buzzing on our social media pages this week. Check this out before your next trip to the supermarket: Strategic Eating: Two Meals Entrepreneurs Should Never Skip. Happy eating!

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Worth Reading 5/31/13

The Dingman Center team came back to work this week rejuvenated after the Memorial Day holiday weekend. We’re sure some of you weren’t keeping up with the news while on vacation – here’s what’s worth reading this week.

Wondering if you’ll be a successful entrepreneur? Your genes might tell you. Founder Institute CEO, Adeo Ressi developed a personality test that leads him to believe that certain critical traits that make entrepreneurs successful are in fact genetic.

In The Accelerators, a Wall Street Journal blog, co-founder of ZenPayroll Joshua Reeves discusses the importance of his entrepreneurial support system.

David McClure and 500 Startups are expanding to southeast Asia. Similar to 500 Luchadores in Mexico and 500 StartupWallah in India, the $10 million microfund named 500 Durian LP will invest in startups in the area.

Considering traveling to a music festival this summer? Local startup RidePost provides an online platform where users  can sell seats in their car for long road trips. RidePost is partnering with music festival organizers to establish a network of transportation for concert-goers up and down the east coast.

In a traditionally male-dominated industry, women are making a splash on the tech scene. Get inspired by this all female team of high school juniors from the state of Maryland known as the “Fabulous Five” who were named winners of the Verizon Innovative App Challenge. The group won $10,000 for their high school with their winning app called Study Buddy.

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Worth Reading 5/31/13

The Dingman Center team came back to work this week rejuvenated after the Memorial Day holiday weekend. We’re sure some of you weren’t keeping up with the news while on vacation – here’s what’s worth reading this week.

Wondering if you’ll be a successful entrepreneur? Your genes might tell you. Founder Institute CEO, Adeo Ressi developed a personality test that leads him to believe that certain critical traits that make entrepreneurs successful are in fact genetic.

In The Accelerators, a Wall Street Journal blog, co-founder of ZenPayroll Joshua Reeves discusses the importance of his entrepreneurial support system.

David McClure and 500 Startups are expanding to southeast Asia. Similar to 500 Luchadores in Mexico and 500 StartupWallah in India, the $10 million microfund named 500 Durian LP will invest in startups in the area.

Considering traveling to a music festival this summer? Local startup RidePost provides an online platform where users  can sell seats in their car for long road trips. RidePost is partnering with music festival organizers to establish a network of transportation for concert-goers up and down the east coast.

In a traditionally male-dominated industry, women are making a splash on the tech scene. Get inspired by this all female team of high school juniors from the state of Maryland known as the “Fabulous Five” who were named winners of the Verizon Innovative App Challenge. The group won $10,000 for their high school with their winning app called Study Buddy.

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Business Rx Live Chat with Elana Fine and Kevin Lenane

In the Washington Post’s latest Business Rx Chat, Elana Fine was joined by special guest Kevin Lenane from video indexing company Veenome. Together, they gave real-time advice on all things entrepreneurship.  A few of the questions from the chat are featured below.

Q: Veenome exists solely to be acquired, having never made a profit. What do you think of the practice today of creating companies knowing full well you have a three year window to be bought out or shuttered?

Kevin Lenane: Nice aggressive opening statement!  However your information is inaccurate as Veenome is a b2b company – and our KPI (key performance indicator), so to speak, is revenue.  We do not exist solely to be acquired and in fact have been turning revenue for almost 9 months. At some point this summer we will turn profitable and be well into the 6 figure revenue range per month.

But on to your actual question. I think the practice of building a company solely to be acquired is tough because an acquisition is based on a moment. Yahoo bought Tumblr, but it’s not as if the founder of Tumblr had this 5 year plan and Yahoo was at the end of it. I would say that if you are keeping a specific acquisition in mind as you create a company and raise money, you drastically raise your odds of running out of money because you haven’t built a business that can last. It’s basically been built to end in a single point and a million things happen outside of your control in between the point of start and that point perceived that make this outcome super-unlikely.

Elana Fine: I’m going to go with Kevin on this one — I think the “watched pot doesn’t boil” cliché applies here.  If you spend all your time thinking about the acquisition, you won’t ever grow a customer base or create value for the acquirer.  That being said, there are some technology companies where once the technology is built, it doesn’t make sense to scale a larger manufacturing and sales organization and the founders might look to exit before they even start to build a business.

Q: I am considering crowdfunding my new startup. Any risks?

Elana Fine: I’d be interested to hear Kevin’s thoughts on this; crowdfunding comes up a lot on these chats.  It has pros: great access to larger pool of capital, visibility for your startup, etc.  However, it will be interesting to see how the baton passes when startups go to raise follow on capital.  It often gets hard to chase down investors, etc. and companies might end up with complex cap tables that are less appealing to VC investors.  You could also end up with unsophisticated investors who don’t understand the inherent risks of early stage investors.

Kevin Lenane: I think crowdfunding works really well for hardware startups right now. If you want to demonstrate traction on product sales before a product is built, there is no better way to do it than Kickstarter. I think generally crowdfunding like Crowdfunder.com is really exciting too, but those platforms aren’t fully laid out yet. If I were a software entrepreneur and wanted to use crowdfunding, I’d consider using it as soon as the first platforms launch before the bad actors get on there. The risks are basically uneducated investors feeling like they’ve been “burned” and not understanding the incredible riskiness of the startup investment market.

Q: As someone who is so connected to the startup scene, you must have insight into recently launched startups. What are some of your favorite up and coming startups? What do you look for?

Kevin Lenane: There are a few new ones that I love:

Atlas Wristband – it’s like Fitbit for every other exercise besides walking. The prototype is pretty incredible and can tell you how many pushups you are doing or how you swing a golf club. A group of recent Hopkins engineers built it and are raising seed now. TrackMaven – Allen Gannett’s new company that helps track competitors. Both are answering such a clear need.

Q: I met an investor who was interested in my product. We’ve had three meetings since my initial pitch, but I can’t seem to get him to commit. What are some tactics I can use for “closing the deal” with investors?

Elana Fine: Sometimes investors feel bad about saying “no.” I can’t really explain this phenomenon, must be how they get the “angel” title. Think of this like a sales process — at some point you need to ask for an answer. If there is hesitation, find out what information the investor still needs to know or if they want to wait for additional milestones. Don’t spend too much time unless they give you some specific metrics for follow up. It is like that movie “He’s Just Not That Into You.” If they don’t call, e-mail, tweet back then the timing/fit is probably not right.

Kevin Lenane: I’d also say if you think you will probably get a no — don’t pursue the discussion any further. An investor is more likely to come back after six months of waiting then reverse their no. Use your intuition and if you think it’s a no after five unanswered e-mails, wait it out and swing back when you have more traction.

In an added twist, Elana Fine turned to Kevin Lenane asking some questions about being an entrepreneur and running a startup. Here are a few of the questions Elana asked Kevin.

Q: Kevin, what has been most surprising about running your own startup? What was harder than you expected? – Elana Fine

Kevin Lenane: I’m surprised at the impact that being a founder has had on my energy and attention. If you are really in it for the long haul, you can’t put your business away when you get home, go on vacation, go on a bike ride, etc. It’s always in a lobe somewhere – and this effect on your energy is pretty major. If you believe in what you are doing, though, it is tolerable. I honestly can’t imagine pursuing a startup that I didn’t believe in – I think the psychological impact of that would be very severe.

Q: I noticed from your background that you have worked with startups before. What did you learn from your previous startups that applied to launching Veenome? – Elana Fine

Kevin Lenane: The biggest takeaway from the last startup was on the business development side. At PointAbout we were constantly the smaller company/vendor working with the very large company. The sales cycle is pretty long for larger organizations and I’ve trained myself to keep a seemingly overwhelming amount of prospects on the burner since we never know when one is going to hook. At any one time you really only have to truly focus on a few and just keep others warm. It seems obvious, but I think startups get overly focused on one or a few big dollar clients and this can spell doom if you are b2b with a long sales cycle. You simply run out of whatever cash you’ve raised.

Q: You mentioned that you were surprised how much mental bandwidth your startup takes. How have you found early employees that are equally passionate about the business? How do you get them to be thinking about it all the time? – Elana Fine 

Kevin Lenane: I’m not sure you can find anyone that thinks about it quite as much as the founder, but I think you basically interview carefully and make it worth their while in the long term by giving them plenty (whole number integers) of equity and be successful. Grow the value of those options you give to your employees over time and they will have extreme interest in long term success.

ElanaFine

Elana Fine (@elanafine) was appointed Managing Director of the Dingman Center in July 2012, after joining the team in 2010 as Director of Venture Investments. As Managing Director, Elana’s primary focus is leading the Dingman Center in support of its mission of fostering a community of entrepreneurs. Key responsibilities include oversight of our student venture incubator, Dingman Center Angels investor network, business competitions, and technology commercialization efforts as well developing key partnerships on campus and throughout the DC region. Elana earned an MBA in Finance and Accounting from the University of Chicago’s Booth School of Business in 2002, and earned a BS in Finance, from the University of Maryland, College Park, in 1997.

lenane

Kevin Lenane (@kevinlenane) is the CEO of Veenome and has helped lead the video indexing company to over 50M video views indexed/month. The company won the Paley Center’s “Next Big Thing,” BB&T Entrepreneur Invitational 2012, and was named one of the three hottest startups of SXSW2012 by CNET. Veenome raised 1.4M in seed capital with investors from Google, Tesla, Chegg, and EcosystemVC. VA. Lenane’s previous experience includes product management and business development at Socialize/Appmakr/PointAbout, NAVTEQ and Nokia. He is a veteran of three acquisitions and was legal key in 2011 PointAbout acquisition.

Worth Reading 5/24/13

The Dingman Center is ending a great week full of summer planning and celebrating. To start the week we cheered on  Smith School graduates including our own Alla Corey, MBA ‘13. Later in the week we held our  final meeting of the Board of Advisors and Entrepreneurs-in-Residence. We closed the week at DC Upfront, a partner event with InTheCapital. Now that our week of celebrations is closing, let’s take a look at what’s worth reading from the startup community.

Local startup FlagTap, who you might remember seeing at this year’s Cupid’s Cup Business & Innovation Showcase, is a universal online rewards program that lets website owners reward users for interacting with their websites. In this week’s edition of the Washington Post’s Business Rx column, Elana Fine gives advice to Co-Founder Aaron Dinin on the fundraising process, particularly with Angel Investors.

Historically, entrepreneurship was for risk-takers; people who didn’t want a “real job” and decided to go at it on their own. According to Entrepreneur.com, times are changing. In 2012, almost 13% of American adults were in the process of starting a new business, up from 8% in 1999. The face of entrepreneurship is also changing with an increase in female and immigrant entrepreneurs. Check out this cool infographic on WHO the entrepreneurs are in the U.S.

This week, AOL Co-Founder, Chairman of Startup America and Former Cupid’s Cup Keynote Speak Steve Case announced that Startup America Partnership will join forces with Startup Weekend (based in Seattle) to found UP Global in an effort boost startup activity in regions all around the world, outside of traditional technology hubs like San Francisco and New York. Check out this article in the Wall Street Journal for more details on the upcoming partnership.

Finally, the Dingman Center has decided to pivot on its mission to now focus on building on a community that discovers, equips, connects and celebrates entrepreneurs. You can find this announcement plus highlights from the semester in our latest newsletter.

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Dingman Center Leverages Angel Network to Create Smith MBA Course

Through its strong connections to the local startup community, largely through the Dingman Center Angels, the Dingman Center rolled out a new MBA course this year called Venture Practicum. Coupled with a Venture Internship Program, this new experience is unique among universities nationwide. Venture Practicum is part of the Smith School of Business’ experiential learning program called the Smith Experience. These courses/projects are intended to give students real-world, hands-on experience. In addition to Venture Practicum, the Dingman Center offers Technology Commercialization and the China Business Plan Competition through Smith Experience.

Venture Practicum combines site based practical work experience at a local startup company with coursework exploring strategic growth and financing of early stage companies. Participating startups are sourced through the Dingman Center Angels investor network and other regional partners. The course content exposes students to the opportunities and challenges of starting and growing a new venture.

“Venture Practicum extends our network of local startups to the MBA classroom,” said Elana Fine, Managing Director of the Dingman Center. “Our local entrepreneurs can now come to us for resources beyond funding.”

To begin the process, interested startups submit a potential project and are then matched with students based on skill set and shared interest. Projects vary from market research, competitor analysis and customer acquisition strategy. Students begin the course with a daylong bootcamp introducing them to a set of key concepts and organizational processes that are associated with venture emergence. Students spend a majority of their “class” time in their host firms and will identify specific problem areas to help the startup address and define the nature of the solution. Students complete a workplan and deliver a final presentation of deliverables at the end of the Spring semester.

Through Venture Practicum students are exposed to other early stage companies and the angel capital fundraising process through required participation in one Dingman Center Angels Review Day. Following the completion of the course, students receiving internship offers may apply for matching salary funding through the Dingman Center and the Smith Office of Career Services’ Venture Internship Program.

Listed below are the local startups that participated in Venture Practicum. Read here about one MBA student’s experience.

A Year in Photos

It’s been another successful year at the Dingman Center full of fun events, meaningful programs and lots of memories. Take a look at the pictures below for a recap of our year.

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Worth Reading 11/2/2012

What a crazy week!  With Hurricane/Superstorm Sandy putting the area out of commission for 2 days, we hope all of you were able to stay dry and safe!  Things are moving along here at the Dingman Center, with several events and programs in the pipeline for November including the UMD Startup Career and Internship Fair (Friday 11/9 at The Stamp), Terp Marketplace (Saturday 11/17 at the Terps vs. FSU fooball game), and an action-packed Global Entrepreneurship Week (Monday 11/12 – Friday 11/16!)  Keep updated on all Dingman Center events by following our twitter and liking our Facebook Page.

Now here’s some interesting reads from the week!

This week’s Business Rx column features social enterprise Food Recovery Networks receiving revenue model advice from Melissa Carrier of the Center for Social value Creation.

Important news for all entrepreneurs,  DC Mayor Vincent Gray signed a bill yesterday expanding incentives for the tech sector. The district has been very active in making DC more attractive to emerging tech startups.   Read more about the Technology Sector Enhancement Act of 2012 here!

Speaking of startups and DC, today marks the kickoff of Digital Capital Week in DC!  Having trouble naigating the myriad of events on the schedule?  In the Capital makes it easier for you by breaking down the 10 “must-see” events of DC week!

And lastly, have you noticed that many tech savvy small business owners are making use of their tablets and mobile devices to do business?  App developers all around the world have been hard at work creating programs to make mobile devices way more than just entertainment machines.  This article from Entrepreneur.com highlights 5 lesser known iPhone/iPad apps for small business owners.

Worth Reading 10/26/2012

It’s another busy week at the Dingman Center for Entrepreneurship and the Smith School of Business in general as Term B began this week for MBA students, beginning the countdown to winter break! The Dingman Center was working overtime this week with the China Business Plan class meeting for the second time last night, and both Pitch Dingman and Dingman Center Angels Review Day happening simultaneously today! But there’s no rest for the weary, next week is a HUGE week for the Dingman Center. If you’re not following us already on Facebook or Twitter, you’re going to want to like and follow us ASAP as next week we’ll be dropping some very important information about the upcoming 2013 Cupid’s Cup. You’re not going to want to miss it!

In the meantime here are a few things worth reading to tide you over. Shorter list this week as the Dingman Center blogger (me) is tied up volunteering at the Net Impact MBA Conference in Baltimore!

One of the most important lessons an entrepreneur can learn from other entrepreneurs is how to learn from failure. This feature from Fast Company shows how the CEO of YouSendIt deals with it in 30 seconds!

NASA is more than just a space program, it is a creator of amazing and engaging talent.  This article, also from Fast Company, examines the lessons about harnessing social media that you can learn from NASA.

Dingman Center Board Member Glen Hellman warns against poser angel investors and advises entrepreneurs on how to spot an investor who may not be 100% on the level.  Remember to follow Glen’s blog and his twitter feed for more of his insights!

Finally, something the Dingman Center believes strongly in is the benefits of sharing ideas and allowing others to add value and perspective. That’s why we have programs such as Pitch Dingman (every Friday from 11am – 1pm) and Dingman Center Angels Review Day (Every last Friday of the month, 10am – 1pm). Don’t believe us? This article from the New York Times offers several reasons why holding onto your idea may not be the best strategy!