We like to report good news, not just because it makes us all feel good, but because when a company is doing something positive during a downturn, it indicates something pretty interesting about that company. That is why Jobwire reports on new hires when all the other news is about layoffs. In that same spirit, The A-Team will be a monthly wrap-up of all the Series A VC financing rounds in web technology. To close a Series A VC round these days, you have to be pretty special.
We believe that entrepreneurs are the heroes, but we also really want to celebrate their partners, the VC guys who have the guts to go against the trend and back them during tough times. All VCs talk the talk, which is that this is a great time for investing. We want to report on the ones who actually walk the walk as well. There is only one way to get into this list: close a Series A round and wire the money.
We want to use this to learn about changes in the VC business and so that entrepreneurs can see who is actually doing deals today.
October 2008 was a unique month for anybody in the business world. The word that kept dropping from the lips of even the most experienced been-there, done-that kind of person was "unprecedented." These are not normal times. And October was certainly not a normal month.
So, the October list was pretty short. We have heard plenty of stories from entrepreneurs about deals that were agreed on and in the final legal phase but that got pulled in September and October. We did not track September because the worst and final phase of the crash kicked in mid-September, and deals were still being done in the early days of September. So, October was the first full month of the new reality.
We count from the date when the deal was announced. But we recognize that the contract may have been signed some weeks before then.
Oops! Using our strict criteria, only one deal was done in October. We saw some that came close. We saw a seed round of $225,000 for a game company called Kirkland North from a venture fund called Harrison Meta Capital. We saw a Series B for $4.5 million coming from RRE Ventures to our good friends at Adaptive Blue. We saw an Israeli company called CogniSafe getting an undisclosed seed round from 21 VCs.
The one deal that squeaked into October was Zimbio with a $6.8 million Series A from DFJ and Menlo Ventures. The deal was announced on September 30th. So it is entirely possible (indeed probable) that this contract was signed before our official Meltdown Day. But the deal got done, and that is what matters.
Zimbio has very few facts on its "About Us" page. TradeVibes at least has a CEO listed; so we tracked down Anthony Mamone, and the data was sparse, not even a LinkedIn profile. All we found was a sketchy profile on Link Silicon Valley.
The deal that kicked off the A-Team series and gave us the idea for it was the one with Syncplicity with its $2.35 million Series A funding from True Ventures. So we went to meet Leonard Chung, CEO, at True Venture's offices in San Francisco. True Venture's open-plan offices on Pier 38 do not look like classic VC, and that is probably the point. Phil Black of True Ventures made the point that ever-increasing fund sizes were taking VC away from its entrepreneurial start-up roots.
Then we noticed that our friends at GigaOm have their offices right next door. No coincidence as it happens, True Ventures was the lead investor in their Series A funding. So, True Ventures is a founding member of our A-Team. Take your best venture to them!
We have not had time to fully review Syncplicity yet. We promise to do so soon. So, in the meantime, we will fall back on the journalistic standby, quoting from its site:
"Everyday sync, backup, and sharing as simple as can be. The only all-in-one service that makes sure your files are everywhere you need them."
That is a crowded space. But so was search when Google entered the market. Getting an A round done in today's market makes one think they must have done something right, so we will check them out and urge you to do the same.
Here is the good news. Taking a sneak peek at November, around the middle of the month, we already see quite a few Series A deals that meet all of our criteria. We will tell all in our A-Team report in early December.
Who did we miss in October? (No spam please; look at the qualifying rules above.)
Comments
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RWW is tracking A-round VC deals. Good idea.
Posted by: Robert Scoble
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November 19, 2008 10:41 AM
VentureBeat is too as well as this RWW series?
Posted by: Marshall Kirkpatrick
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November 19, 2008 10:41 AM
Marshall: sorry, I screwed up. I don't know where I got VentureBeat in my head from. :-) I fixed my comment.
Posted by: Robert Scoble
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November 19, 2008 10:42 AM
hey no worries! we're all buds here. maybe VB will link to all our A-team posts :)
Posted by: Marshall Kirkpatrick
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November 19, 2008 10:45 AM
Hey you guys forgot about Siri -- you reported on them, meet criteria, announced in October;)
http://www.readwriteweb.com/archives/semantic_stealth_startup_siric.php
Posted by: Josh Dilworth | November 19, 2008 10:53 AM
Thanks Josh, good catch, we need all we can get in the A Team in Oct! Actually, we really do love to hear of any we have missed, so we can start compiling this properly.
Posted by: Bernard Lunn
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November 19, 2008 5:27 PM
But we recognize that the contract may have been signed some weeks before then.
Posted by: mirc dosya | November 24, 2008 4:18 AM
VC is no longer appropriate for our culture.
Posted by: Please dont encourage this | November 24, 2008 8:08 PM