I spent the much of last week
attending the annual venture conference sponsored by the Colorado Venture
Capital Association. The purpose of the
event is to attract out of state VCs to take a look at Colorado venture deals that are in the
market (click here for a link to the companies that presented this year). I’ll talk about Colorado’s venture capital
market in a separate post, but suffice it to say, it’s important to the local
VC community to have financial support (at least on some deals) broader than the
local community can provide. While each
of us has relationships with firms out of state that we syndicate deals with,
as a group this is our one annual chance to put our best foot forward to out of
state investors.
The conference has been going
on for over 20 years, but a few years ago the CVCA figured out that they would
attract more people (particularly out of state VCs) by holding the conference
up in the mountains rather than down in Denver (there was always a ski day
after the conference, but since most people were staying down in Denver the
skiing wasn’t really a big draw). As a
result, the conference has been held up in Beaver Creek for the past 3 years,
to great success. This year was no
exception – the conference drew a record number of attendees (over 270); a
record number of venture capitalists (81) and a record number of out of state
venture capitalists (31).
The conference is a mix of
social activities (there are a number of cocktail parties and an astonishing
number of ‘private’ dinners hosted by various service providers over the 2 ½
day conference), company presentations (the conference had both a life sciences
track and an software track) and topic specific presentations (one panel
presentation in the morning and a lunch keynote). Here are my observations/notes from the
conference:
Company Presentations: I caught
about a dozen company presentations and overall walked away impressed with the
quality of the deals that presented at the conference (see this Denver Post
article for some other people’s thoughts on the presentations). I was on the selection committee that chose
the presenters for this year’s conference and I can tell you that my impression
of the deal flow in Colorado having gone through the process of looking at a
majority of the local companies that are currently in the market is that, while
the deal quality at the top is high (which was reflected in my positive
reaction to the presentations at VCIR) the depth is pretty shallow. I remember being a little nervous about
filling out the speaking slots at the beginning of the process – there was a
very clear inflection point in deal quality. As the selection process wore on and we received additional business
plans we were able to fill out all of the available slots, but the process
definitely left me with the impression above – there are a number of great Colorado deals in the
market, but below the top 25 or so deals, the quality really drops off.
Companies of note included
Rally Software and Oxlo (both Mobius portfolio companies); Umbria
Communications (I blogged about this company last week – they could have taken
up a full hour just with the q&a interest their presentation garnered);
Webroot (who just announced a $108m raise – the CFO Mike Irwin spoke and while
I can tell you that the company is experiencing remarkable revenue growth, he
didn’t offer up any details of their recent round); New Global Telecom (these
guys were a wholesale provider of carrier services that went bankrupt a couple
of years ago, somehow avoided liquidation, recapitalized with only a couple of
million dollars (less?) and are now transitioning into the VOIP space; and
Tendril (Zigbee middleware platform founded by local entrepreneur Tim Enwall).
Keynote Address: This year’s keynote was given by Seth
Godin. Other than having a great first
name, Seth is an incredibly engaging speaker. The gist of his presentation was that marketing has changed – companies
don’t create a product and then somehow get the message out to people that they
should buy it but rather that product itself is the new marketing – creating
something extraordinary that people want and will tell their friends about is
the way to create ‘buzz’ around products. Clearly he’s slanted to the consumer space (he sold his last business to
Yahoo), but there’s lessons for the enterprise space as well. I’d put the presentation in the category of
‘brain candy’ – it was interesting, well put together, engaging, Seth is a
great speaker who had some interesting ideas that were clearly designed to be
presented in a way that were both thought provoking and entertaining. My sense is that I’ve now effectively read a
couple of his books having sat through his presentation.
Panel Presentation – the state of technology m&a
and the IPO market: I almost skipped this panel but am glad I
didn’t. There was a lot of good info
conveyed here – I’m going to write a separate post to really cover it well. The panel consisted of two bankers (one
m&a banker and one corporate finance) and an institutional investor talking
about the state of the markets, what they look for in deals, etc. The highlight of the panel was when the institutional
investor, in response to a question, said that the bank that takes you public
really doesn’t matter from his perspective (the two bankers visibly grimaced on
that one). Key themes from the panel
were that dual track processes are becoming more in vogue (using the red
herring or the threat of one as a way of driving m&a) and the general
easing of the markets (both IPO and m&a).
So – there you have it. Two and a half days of schmoozing and company
pitches into a couple of paragraphs. We’ll
do this again next year – please join us.
Posted in: Venture Capital