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Parse grows even faster after Facebook acquisition

I’ve mentioned before that I think Parse is one of Facebook’s best acquisitions yet. So I love seeing articles like this. This was no “OMGPOP acquisition” — Parse has grown even faster at a 25% growth after the acquisition.

Parse’s value to Facebook is clear. They have such a great brand and mindshare with app developers. And that will lead to so many more app developers using Facebook social for their sign-in and eventually, once they get big enough, Facebook’s app install ads. Which is where Facebook is seeing the bulk of their mobile revenue growth. A growth that is crucial in the eyes of public investors.

By the way, can we take a second to appreciate that growth? eMarketer is out with a new forecast today that projects Facebook’s worldwide mobile ad revenue to top $2 billion this year. That’s from a revenue stream that didn’t even exist a few quarters ago. Pretty damn impressive.

    • #parse
    • #facebook
    • #fb
    • #mobile
    • #backend as a service
    • #data
    • #notifications
    • #mobile ads
    • #mobile advertising
    • #growth
    • #b2b
    • #enterprise
    • #tech
    • #startups
    • #b2d
    • #app development
    • #app developers
    • #acquisition
  • 6 days ago
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iheartapple2:

Apple WWDC 2013 Ad - Designed By Apple in California

Love this video.

    • #apple
    • #tech
    • #wwdc
    • #advertising
    • #ads
    • #commercial
    • #tv
  • 1 week ago > iheartapple2
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The Risk Not Taken

If you need a dose of inspiration this weekend look no further. This post by Andy Dunn is a gem. Here’s my favorite part:

Very little is obvious in the research on human decision-making and happiness. Very few things are proven. One thing that is proven is this: the only regrets octogenarians have are for the risks not taken.

Here’s why:

If the risk taken does pan out, it is good. But if it doesn’t — and here’s the key thing — we find a way to justify the risk taken as learning.

Gretzky knew this:

You miss one-hundred percent of the shots you don’t take.

    • #life
    • #lessons
    • #risk
    • #death
    • #motivation
    • #happiness
    • #friends
    • #family
    • #reflection
    • #tech
    • #startups
    • #bonobos
    • #entrepreneurship
  • 1 week ago
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Is a Yahoo-Owned Tumblr More Attractive to Brands?

This is a great look at the deal from an ad agency perspective:

“It would give Tumblr an opportunity to expand their ad packages, and it certainly help them with the sheer organizational needs of ad sales,” said Paul Gunning, CEO of Tribal Worldwide.

This is a great point. Imagine that in 6-12 months, every Yahoo sales rep calling on a top Fortune 500 brand or agency can walk in and pitch Tumblr’s sponsored posts in addition to their regular media mix. The scale there will be immediately impactful. It will probably increase their sales team by a hundredfold. And importantly for users, it will lead to higher quality sponsored posts.

So I think this is a great move for all involved. Congrats to the whole Tumblr team. I really hope that we can believe Mayer when she promises ‘not to screw it up’.

    • #tumblr
    • #yahoo
    • #tech
    • #startups
    • #acquisitions
  • 1 month ago
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Is This The Turning Point For Bitcoin?

Many people have called Bitcoin a bubble. They have compared it to the infamous tulip mania. In our four phases of a bubble chart, they would probably say that last April (when Bitcoin’s price hit over $200) was the “mania” phase and that we’re now in the “blow-off phase.”

image

But while many people are laughing at Bitcoin, others are leaning into it. Bitcoin startups are starting to attract serious investors.

Fred Wilson, who’s got a bit of a track record of investing in companies that seem too silly but later become mainstream, described his thoughts on Bitcoin in a post on the USV blog about their latest investment in Coinbase in this way:

“We believe that Bitcoin represents something fundamental and powerful, an open and distributed Internet peer to peer protocol for transferring purchasing power. It reminds us of SMTP, HTTP, RSS, and BitTorrent in its architecture and openness. Like what happened with those other low level protocols, entrepreneurs and developers are now building technology on top of Bitcoin to make it more useful, more accessible, and more secure.”

This makes a lot of sense to me. The benefits of a truly global, zero transaction fee, digital currency are too powerful to ignore. And the more people develop on top of the network, the more liquid, secure, and stable Bitcoin will become.

Fred is also quick to point out that it’s not just Bitcoin. If other or multiple digital currencies get massive adoption, then these startups will adapt and support them too.

And USV isn’t alone. Andreessen Horowitz, Jeremy Liew, and a lot of other smart people are thinking about Bitcoin, digital currencies, and the startups that will power them. Even Paypal is thinking about ways to work with Bitcoin.

The most exciting part of this ecosystem to me is the payment layer. And this is where Coinbase really excels. They are making it very easy for merchants to accept bitcoin payments.

I have no idea about the future price of Bitcoin and where it stands in the four phases of a bubble. But to me, this sure looks like the start of a long-term trend for Bitcoin startups.

I think Howard said it best:

“But, as a risk taker myself, I like to see this type of setup. Not too early for Fred, but way too early for Warren Buffett.

That’s meat.

Game on.”

    • #bitcoin
    • #venture capital
    • #tech
    • #startups
    • #coinbase
    • #bubble
    • #markets
    • #trading
    • #finance
    • #stocks
    • #currency
    • #money
  • 1 month ago
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Bowery Capital's Investment Thesis

Dan Primack on Bowery Capital’s investment thesis:

Bowery’s investment thesis is that “digital natives” are moving higher and higher up the corporate executive stack, particularly into decision-making positions like chief marketing officer and chief technology officer. And those executives are more likely to favor “new” technologies over incumbents, at a time when enterprise technology spend is expected to double over the next decade. … The opportunity for Bowery, therefore, would be to invest in early-stage startups that specifically target the marketing and technology layer within large enterprises.

I really like this thesis. I see this as a trend that is still very much in its infancy.

Another key point here is that it’s not only the CTOs and CMOs driving these decisions. Often it comes up from the rank and file level. A simple example here is an employee that starts using Box or Dropbox, falls in love with it, and then asks why their company isn’t using it.

Primack also lists some great recent examples:

Bowery data suggests that just 5% of enterprise technology spend — both internal and external — was allocated to “next-generation” solutions in 2011, but that the figure will rise to 16% by 2016 and 25% by 2020. Examples would include Jive Software (JIVE) taking market share from Salesforce.com (CRM), or Splunk (SPLK) vs. Comscore (SCOR) or Box vs. IBM (IBM).

Just more data on how the enterprise hasn’t just now gotten sexy, it’s been sexy for a while.

    • #venture capital
    • #bowery
    • #entrepreneur
    • #tech
    • #startup
    • #CMO
    • #CTO
    • #salesforce
    • #splunk
    • #jive
    • #enterprise
    • #b2b
    • #b2d
    • #nyc
    • #ibm
    • #comscore
    • #box
    • #dropbox
  • 1 month ago
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Jawbone Acquires BodyMedia for More Than $100 Million

Quotable from Jawbone CEO Hosain Rahman:

“I think the first phase of this market has been about accelerometers and what those can do,” Jawbone CEO Hosain Rahman said in an interview. “Now it’s about getting even more granular, and also, how we can get all that tech into an efficient form factor.”

Good to see Jawbone stepping their game up. Looks like the wearable tech space is about to get a lot more interesting.

    • #fitbit
    • #nike
    • #nike fuelband
    • #jawbone
    • #jawbone up
    • #fitbit flex
    • #pedometer
    • #tracking
    • #wearable tech
    • #tech
    • #life tracking
  • 1 month ago
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I just contributed to Zach Braff’s new self-funded movie on Kickstarter Wish I Was Here. 

Creatively, this is one of the better Kickstarter pages I’ve seen. I thought the video was very well done: short, compelling, and sincere.

The different pledge amounts were well organized too. Everything from a weekly production diary ($10) up to a speaking role in the film ($10,000).

As a music lover and big fan of Garden State’s soundtrack, I opted for the 2nd level. This gets you access to a new playlist curated by their team each week and a first look at the final soundtrack.

And as a movie lover, it’s just really exciting to see more filmakers going direct to their fans. It gives them so much more room for creative freedom. I hope you join me in contributing to more projects like these in the future.

    • #kickstarter
    • #zach braff
    • #wish i was here
    • #movies
    • #tech
    • #garden state
    • #soundtrack
    • #music
    • #film score
    • #film
  • 1 month ago
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via 200 Million Strong!

Some highlights:

- Pandora streams 200 million songs before 10 a.m. every day
- In March Pandora streamed 1.49+ billion hours of music
- Listeners have personalized their stations with more than 25 billion thumbs
- More than 140 million listeners have tuned in to Pandora on a mobile device

“Can’t Stop. Won’t Stop.”
Pop-upView Separately

via 200 Million Strong!

Some highlights:

- Pandora streams 200 million songs before 10 a.m. every day
- In March Pandora streamed 1.49+ billion hours of music
- Listeners have personalized their stations with more than 25 billion thumbs
- More than 140 million listeners have tuned in to Pandora on a mobile device

“Can’t Stop. Won’t Stop.”

    • #pandora
    • #tech
    • #growth
    • #mobile
    • #mobile apps
    • #mobile advertising
    • #music
    • #internet radio
    • #radio
    • #reach
    • #audience
    • #scale
  • 2 months ago
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The Four Phases Of A Bubble

image

Interesting chart showing the four psychological phases of a bubble via Prof Jean-Paul Rodrigue.

To become a good investor, you have to be very prescient. If you can be in the “Stealth” or “Awareness” phases above then you are leagues ahead of everyone else. Of course the tricky part is that being too early is often the same as being too late.

But to become a great investor, you also have to master the psychology of bubbles and business cycles. So it’s important for investors to study these four phases and view each of their investments through this lens.

Here’s how Prof. Rodrique describes the four phases:

Bubbles (financial manias) unfold in several stages, an observation which backed up by 500 years of economic history. Each mania is obviously different, but there are always similarities; simplistically four phases can be identified:

Stealth. Those who understand the new fundamentals realize an emerging opportunity for substantial future appreciation, but at a risk since their assumptions are so far unproven. So the “smart money” gets invested in the asset class, often quietly and cautiously. This category of investor tends to have better access to information and a higher capacity to understand the wider economic context that would trigger asset inflation. Prices gradually increase, but often completely unnoticed by the general population. Larger and larger positions are established as the smart money start to better understand that the fundamentals are well grounded and that this asset class is likely to experience significant future valuations.

Awareness. Many investors start to notice the momentum, bringing additional money in and pushing prices higher. There can be a short-lived sell off phase taking place as a few investors cash in their first profits (there could also be several sell off phases, each beginning at an higher level than the previous one). The smart money takes this opportunity to reinforce its existing positions. In the later stages of this phase the media starts to notice with positive reports about how this new boom benefits the economy by “creating” wealth; those getting in becoming increasingly “unsophisticated”.

Mania. Everyone is noticing that prices are going up and the public jumps in for this “investment opportunity of a lifetime”. The expectations about future appreciation becomes a “no brainer” and a linear inference mentality sets in; future prices are an extrapolation of past price appreciation, which of course goes against any conventional wisdom. This phase is however not about logic, but a lot about psychology. Floods of money come in creating even greater expectations and pushing prices to stratospheric levels. The higher the price, the more investments pour in. Fairly unnoticed from the general public caught in this new frenzy, the smart money as well as many institutional investors are quietly pulling out and selling their assets. Unbiased opinion about the fundamentals becomes increasingly difficult to find as many players are heavily invested and have every interest to keep asset inflation going. The market gradually becomes more exuberant as “paper fortunes” are made from regular “investors” and greed sets in. Everyone tries to jump in and new intrants have absolutely no understanding of the market, its dynamic and fundamentals. Prices are simply bid up with all financial means possible, particularly leverage and debt. If the bubble is linked with lax sources of credit, then it will endure far longer than many observers would expect, therefore discrediting many rational assessments that the situation is unsustainable. At some point statements are made about entirely new fundamentals implying that a “permanent high plateau” has been reached to justify future price increases; the bubble is about to collapse.

Blow-off. A moment of epiphany (a trigger) arrives and everyone roughly at the same time realize that the situation has changed. Confidence and expectations encounter a paradigm shift, not without a phase of denial where many try to reassure the public that this is just a temporary setback. Some are fooled, but not for long. Many try to unload their assets, but takers are few; everyone is expecting further price declines. The house of cards collapses under its own weight and late comers (commonly the general public) are left holding depreciating assets while the smart money has pulled out a long time ago. Prices plummet at a rate much faster than the one that inflated the bubble. Many over-leveraged asset owners go bankrupt, triggering additional waves of sales. There is even the possibility that the valuation undershoots the long term mean, implying a significant buying opportunity. However, the general public at this point considers this sector as “the worst possible investment one can make”. This is the time when the smart money starts acquiring assets at low prices.

Bubbles can be very damaging, especially for those who arrived late with the hope of getting something for nothing. Even if they are inflationary events, the outcome of a bubble’s blow off is very deflationary as large quantities of capital vanish in the wave of bankruptcies and financial defaults they trigger. Historically, they tended to be far in-between, but between 1995 and 2008 three bubbles took place back-to-back; the stock market (deflated in 2000), real estate (deflated in 2006) and commodities (deflated in 2008).

    • #bubble
    • #mania
    • #economy
    • #jobs
    • #bitcoin
    • #investing
    • #tech
    • #business
    • #trading
    • #finance
    • #wall street
    • #stocks
    • #markets
  • 2 months ago
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About

Gordon Bowman is in mobile monetization at Pandora and a momentum/swing investor. I write here to think about and find ideas and trends. More »

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