Posts tagged Founder
Top 10 Cloud Computing Venture Capital Firms To Help Build Your Business
Jul 29th
For more than 30 years, NEA has been helping to build great companies. Our committed capital has grown to $11 billion and we’ve funded more than 650 companies in the Information Technology, Energy Technology and Healthcare sectors.

For more than 49 years, Norwest Venture Partners (NVP) has actively partnered with entrepreneurs to build and grow successful businesses. The firm manages more than $3.7 billion in capital, has funded over 450 companies since inception and has demonstrated an exemplary track record producing premier investment returns during differing capital market environments
U.S. Venture Partners
Ignition Partners
Ignition is a venture capital firm dedicated to helping the best entrepreneurs seize opportunity.
From turning their early idea into a business, to hiring the right team, providing the right industry and functional insight and connections, to growing the business strategically, globally, financially, to realizing the best ultimate outcome, Ignition is ready to go the distance.
Ignition invests in emerging and future leaders in communications, internet, software, and services across business and consumer targets.
Sequoia
Sequoia Capital in the U.S. caters to the founders and management who have selected us as their business partners. We have learned that the only way to help develop a fabulous company is one step at a time. This only happens if the company makes wonderful products or delivers a service that thrills large numbers of customers. If that occurs then founders, management, and employees of these companies prosper. It is only then that the investor deserves to be rewarded. It has to happen in that order. There are no shortcuts.
First Round Capital
First Round Capital is an early-stage venture capital firm. As seed-stage investors, we often provide a company’s first outside capital – and typically invest alongside angel investors. Our typical initial investment in a company is around $500,000 – but we’ve gone both higher and lower.
We’re not afraid of investing in pre-revenue companies, and we understand the challenges of launching a new product. That’s why we like to take an active role in the companies we invest in.
Mission Ventures
Mission Ventures helps build successful enterprises in Southern California and creates superior returns on investment for its investors. This is accomplished by investing in the most promising early-stage companies in high growth, emerging markets, and providing significant assistance to those companies as they develop.
DAG Ventures
- Is a venture capital partnership investing in and helping outstanding entrepreneurs create leading, long-term companies across a range of markets. With roots from the 1980’s in cable TV, infrastructure, media, and wireless industries, the partnership today is privileged to work with world-class entrepreneurs as they build tomorrow’s leaders in the information technology, energy, and life science sectors. DAG Ventures invests in companies with proven technology, from the prototype stage onward. For more information on current investments,
Hummer Windblad Venture Partners
Hummer Winblad Venture Partners was founded in 1989 as the first venture capital fund to invest exclusively in software companies. Through our history, we’ve had the opportunity to invest in the pioneers and leaders of several generations of software applications, architectures, delivery methods and business models. We’ve helped entrepreneurs build companies in desktop software, embedded systems, client-server, distributed network computing, internet, software as a service and cloud computing.
Shasta Ventures
Was formed expressly to help entrepreneurs build great companies, our primary objective is to provide outstanding service to the companies in our portfolio. It means we have the time to work with early-stage companies because we serve on a limited number of boards. And it means we care about the companies we invest in—not only the businesses, but the people as well.
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Cloud Computing Boosts Virtual Companies – Cloud Technology
Apr 9th
Cloud computing is no longer a fluffy abstraction. Consider California-based Rimon Law Group, which calls itself a Web 2.0 legal firm. Rimon employs 28 senior lawyers in seven U.S. states but has no offices, thanks to cloud computing services that are helping to change the face of businesses across the globe.
Rimon and many other professional services companies such as Innovations International, a 25-year-old U.S. consulting firm, are using cloud computing to slash costs, put on a professional face for clients, and transform themselves into virtual organizations.
What exactly is cloud computing? By one definition, it means shifting computing tasks and storage from local desktop PCs and company servers to remote systems across the Internet. And in the case of communications services, it means replacing local electronic switches known as private branch exchanges—which can range in price from several thousand up to hundreds of thousands of dollars—with software that can be easily controlled by any company employee over the Internet, without any training.
Both Rimon Law Group and Innovations International are among thousands of companies now using technology from RingCentral, a seven-year-old company based in San Mateo, Calif. RingCentral was named a 2010 Technology Pioneer by the World Economic Forum and has raised $25 million in funding from the likes of venerable Silicon Valley venture capital firms Sequoia Capital and Khosla Ventures. The company’s software is lowering the cost structure for business phone systems to as little as $10 a month and delivering those services in the U.S., Canada, and the U.K.
RingCentral’s pitch is resonating with clients who are eager to save money and ensure they don’t lose business when executives are on the move. The company’s cloud-based technology “is a great equalizer that allows very small companies to come across as a fully professional entity to their customers,” says chief executive Vlad Shmunis, a native of Ukraine who now lives in the U.S. “Similarly, companies of any size can just be more accessible to their customers anywhere in the world.”
The market for these types of cloud-based unified communications services is projected to be worth $1.6 billion by 2016 in Europe alone, says Dorota Oviedo, a research analyst in the Warsaw office of Frost & Sullivan. It’s no surprise, then, that a number of newcomers are targeting the same space, including Poland’s Edge Solutions. Edge has a cloud-based offering called IntraOut which provides mobile phone synchronization, email, business grade instant messaging, high definition VoIP, groupware, teleconferencing, and videoconferencing.
Unified communications are only one of a number of software services being delivered via the cloud. Other services include email, customer relationship management, human resources and executive search, application development, storage, and security. Innovations International, for example, says it is using RingCentral instead of a private branch exchange, plus Google apps for e-mail and calendar functions, and technology from Mountain View (Calif.)-based Egnyte for cloud-based data management. Combined, cloud based services are projected to grow globally from $14 billion in 2009 to $33 billion in 2013, according to research firm IDC.
A 2009 IDC survey of 75 British companies with 250 or more full-time employees found that 47% of companies are already using some cloud services in two or more areas and 16% are using them in seven or more areas. Expect that number to mushroom as more and more services move to the cloud, says David Bradshaw, IDC’s research manager for European cloud services.
Both small businesses and large enterprises are interested in unified communications being delivered as a cloud service, since it represents a cost savings and eliminates the headache of managing and integrating multiple applications and vendors, says Frost & Sullivan’s Oviedo.
For law firm Rimon, the choice to go virtual was easy. The average price per office per associate in downtown San Francisco is $10,000 annually, a waste of money since most of lawyers never see clients in their offices anyway, says Yaacov Silberman, the firm’s co-founder. What’s more, it’s easier to attract the best people if employers can promise better quality of life, such as by letting people work from home or easily move from place to place without fear of losing their jobs, if, for instance, their spouses are transferred, he says.
Since its creation in 2008, the virtual law firm has successfully lured high-profile talent such as Dov Grunschlag, a 30-year legal veteran specializing in labor and employment who worked as a professor of law at the University of California’s Davis campus and served as law clerk to then-Chief Justice Roger Traynor of the California Supreme Court before entering law practice. Other Rimon Law attorneys include seasoned Silicon Valley attorney Fred Tsien and Martin Goodman, a lawyer with 40 years experience specializing in creditor’s rights, who has worked for credit unions and banks such as Citibank.
RingCentral’s services include multi-extension business phone systems with an auto-receptionist that professionally answers, greets, and directs callers to the right department or person. Each employee can define how they want to automatically route calls to their home office or mobile phones, based on the time of day and availability. Users also can make calls from their iPhones while on vacation and make it look as if the call was placed from their office. And, Internet fax capabilities convert incoming faxes to PDFs, making them immediately available to distribute to team members to view, forward, and file electronically.
Phone companies see such services as a compliment, rather than competition. That’s why AT&T and ClearWire have both partnered with RingCentral to distribute the service in the U.S., says Shmunis. In Britain, RingCentral worked with BT Group in 2008 to offer services to BT’s small business customers with cloud based phone systems. RingCentral says the partnership was disbanded due to strategic and other changes at BT. In a written reply to a question from Informilo BT confirms it had a commercial partnership with RingCentral. “However, however, after a performance review, we decided to discontinue the relationship,” BT says. RingCentral is now directly servicing the U.K. small business market via its own local Web site.
Shmunis, a seasoned entrepreneur who sold a telecommunications company he co-founded called RingZero Systems to Motorola in the late 1990s, remains optimistic about RingCentral’s international expansion and says he also sees huge growth opportunities for the company in the U.S. Since one-half of the work force in the U.S. is employed at businesses with 100 people or less, Shmunis believes there are well over 10 million potential businesses that could be customers of such services in the U.S. alone. Source: BusinessWeek
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GoGrid Announces Version 2.0 – Cloud Computing Service
Aug 11th
GoGrid Announces Version 2.0
Today GoGrid, the Cloud Computing service from ServePath, released version 2.0 of its award-winning Cloud Computing Infrastructure solution. With this release, GoGrid users now have the ability to create personal server images, known as MyGSIs. MyGSI stands for “personal GoGrid Server Image,” a “Golden Master” server image that can be customized, saved and stored for future deployments. Users are now able to create new servers from stored MyGSIs via the GoGrid web portal or API quickly and easily.
We are extremely excited about this innovative new GoGrid release
This is an important development in the Cloud Computing marketplace, and further demonstrates our visionary approach to providing Cloud Computing functionality and features that our customers desire.
“We are extremely excited about this innovative new GoGrid release,” said John Keagy, CEO and Co-Founder of GoGrid and ServePath. “This is an important development in the Cloud Computing marketplace, and further demonstrates our visionary approach to providing Cloud Computing functionality and features that our customers desire.”
The creation of a MyGSI is an extremely simple 3-step process. First add an Image Sandbox, second, configure and prepare the Image Sandbox and third, save the Image Sandbox as a MyGSI. When a user needs to create a new Windows or Linux server based on the pre-configured MyGSI, they simply choose the saved image, fill in a few details, and instantiate the server in minutes within the GoGrid cloud.
There are several benefits and advantages of using a MyGSI to deploy servers within the GoGrid cloud:











