Tag Archives: olya lapina

Economy: now what?

A few VCs shared their views on why the economic crash happened and what entrepreneurs and investors plan to do about it.

We all suffer from deregulated banking.

Credit was not properly regulated / priced. Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac were buying any notes originated, much of which was subprime. Street did not care feeding the beast, as James Anderson, President of SVB Analytics said.

Promod Haque, Norwest Ventures, believes that it is not all banks deregulation – it takes two to tango. We have become a culture of debt. Casinos, instant gratification, “have it now pay later” attitude, behavior of banks – all contributed to developing a consumer expectation that they can have whatever they want.

Storm Duncan, Credit Suisse, believes that traditionally America stands for innovation and growth and to cultivate that we need leverage. Somewhere along the way, we turned into a culture of consumption – that vs investment is what broke America. China is a vendor in US: they provide vendor financing!

The Book “Limits to growth” talks about various predictions on how the world and specifically its natural resources will be. It was predicted at the beginning of the last century that oil resources are exhausted by 2005.

Innovation and technology proved the prediction of the book wrong. They allow us to consume less. On the other hand, innovation is what allowed humanity to expand beyond our natural capacity. Population grew from 2 billion in early 1900s to 7 billion now.

For now, it is too early with what is going on to see effect in VC market.

Venture business model will change going forward. Using cash wisely seems to be a most common and natural word of advice.

Post .com companies are more capital efficient than in a before .com boom. Many companies are multinational from the way they start.

Many tech companies ie in social networking are not that capital intensive to start with.

James Anderson, SVB Analytics, and Storm Duncan, Credit Suisse

James Anderson, SVB Analytics, and Storm Duncan, Credit Suisse

VC is puzzled now about how to solve liquidity problems in a timely manner. Moving forward, things will be funded differently. If it were a two party start up scenario before – including a tech partner and a business partner, now it will need to include a financial partner to solve all the funding issues and challenges.

In the 2nd quarter there were zero venture backed IPOs. The average venture partner has lost money. VCs expect now to get 10-12% return on their investments instead of 25-30%. Valuations have dropped.

What do you advise companies in Silicon Valley?

James Anderson advices companies to remain liquid as long as possible. Liquidity will help your company last while your competition dies.
Storm Duncan advises companies to consume less and innovate more.

Promod is hopeful about what VC and entrepreneurs can do together. Anything will get demonetized. He advises entrepreneurs to focus on innovation, rather than about product or service ideas that are not innovative and are simply an efficiency improvement of about 20% more of an already existing product or service.

A possible venture scenario will be something like this: a VC will take a start-up, group of entrepreneurs, and buy out an existing similar process or service applying the entrepreneurs’ innovation. Existing business will bring the necessary infrastructure. Entrepreneurs + existing business = current business model.

Advice to small companies: you cannot go public, you have 20M – let’s go buy something that is 10M, grow a larger company and then go public.

The word is “Caution”.

Obama-nation! Obamanate now!

“I can see Russia from my house” is not a foreign policy doctrine.

Palin is paranoid, cannot exist peacefully because of what she sees. Either move and calm down, or better else, change yourself, so you are not bothered by what you see. This is higher level of intelligence and human capacity though and there is a journey to get there, that starts with awareness. Palin is not there.

She puts women one step back. To be a leader, providing leadership that is received and followed is a requirement. Hillary could have showed more leadership if took a high road and not attack Obama as personally as her campaign did. Palin is a joke, a waste of time.

Arianna Huffington is a fantastic woman who does a pretty good job covering politics. Subscribe to Huffington Post Twitter for a sufficient education in politics.

Obamanation!

Obamanation!

Given, I am concerned about democrat’s socialistic tendencies on certain issues. I think Warren Buffet is more qualified than anyone to be a president, but he does not want a job.

Join MoveOn.org!

Social networkers – add Obama Facebook app.

Nation, given the situaion, we have no option, the choice is clear – the country needs a leader. Obamanate now!

Russian search engine Yandex

Russia is an increasingly important market for Internet search engines which generate an estimated $40 billion a year from advertising worldwide. Internet user numbers are booming in Russia, which has a population of 142 million.

Google Inc dominates Internet searches across the world with a major exception of Russia. Local Internet company and search engine Yandex receives about twice as many searches a day. Yandex has over 8 million daily visitors and employs over 1,000 people in Russia and Ukraine. Yandex opened a data analysis school with free of charge lectures and seminars.

Google has better search engine technology and Yandex holds the market by building relations with community, partnerships and affiliations. It is going to be a tough competition for Google in Russia.

Almost any segment of Russian tech space has plenty of opportunities and there is little competition for web crawlers service providers. This presents a fantastic business development opportunity and global expansion for US tech companies – such as Spinn3r, a blogosphere crawler that also has a language identification component.