• Teens In Tech Conference this Saturday!

    Guest blog by Brett Laffel

    Teens in Tech Comes to LA!

    Microsoft proud to be hosting

    As part of Microsoft’s commitment to the startup community, we partner with a large range of startup incubators, accelerators and other companies. A number of these groups focus on helping specific types of founders, including female founders, black and Hispanic founders and others. The Teens in Tech incubator provides tools and resources to young entrepreneurs in order to help encourage entrepreneurship at an early age. In our commitment to increasing the diversity of entrepreneurs, getting more youth into the technology and startup space, and to helping as many founders as we can, Microsoft sponsors and partners with Teens In Tech.

    Daniel Brusilovsky (@danielbru on Twitter), the wunderkind Founder and CEO put together Teens in Tech in order to help kids and teens start and/or grow their own companies. Teens in Tech has their own startup incubator, which helps companies launch their product or service and educates founders about entrepreneurship and business. In addition to the incubator, Teens in Tech also hosts a number of conferences. These conferences bring together young entrepreneurs for a day of learning from one another and from the highly-esteemed speakers who present.

    For the first time ever, the Teens in Tech conference is going to be hosted in LA. The LA startup ecosystem is one to keep an eye on and is growing at a rapid pace. I’m personally fascinated by all of the activity taking place in LA, both in terms of the number of new startup incubators that have been popping up in the region and in terms of the growth of high-quality startups based in the area and dedicated investors and larger companies starting to take interest in the SoCal startup ecosystem. As a result of this, Microsoft is more than thrilled to help grow and contribute to this vibrant environment by playing hosts for the day.

    There are a great set of speakers lined up, including Paige Craig (CEO and co-founder of BetterWorks, and angel investor), internet entrepreneur Sean Percival (founder of lalawag, and a current company in stealth mode) and our very own Microsoft All-Star Startup Developer Evangelist Aaron Stannard. In addition to having key faces of LA’s startup community come present, the conference will also have a distinctly LA-vibe with an emphasis on media and entertainment, and with speakers from Walt Disney and Jimmy Kimmel LIVE there to talk to eager entrepreneurs.

    For more info on the event, check out: http://conference.teensintech.com/la/.

    Tickets for the event are SOLD OUT. (We’re thrilled there’s so much interest!) However, if you are interested in attending, please contact me directly: @BrettLaffel on Twitter or Brett.Laffel@Microsoft.com. I would love to help eager entrepreneurs or entrepreneurial-minded folks have the opportunity to attend such a great event.

    By the way, I’ll be at the conference all day. If you’re going to be there, please come find me! I’d love to talk to you and learn about your startup and how I can help you.

    See you tomorrow!

  • Apply to Seedcamp London 31st January 2012

    Having just completed the final Seedcamp of 2011 in Paris, we’re stoked for next year.

    We’re super excited to open applications for the first Seedcamp of 2012 in London.

    Call us biased, but we think there’s no better way to kick off the year than to spend a day being mentored by Europe’s top investors, serial entrepreneurs and product experts. Furthermore the winners of London will be invited to join us on our infamous annual three week trip to the US, a whirlwind start to 2012 for sure!

    Details of the US tour will be announced very soon.

    In the meantime, get started on your application now! Make sure to tell us what makes you unique, and why you’re the next big thing. We receive hundreds of great applications for each Seedcamp, so ensure you spend time articulating your vision, and your progress so far. Standing out from the crowd is key!

    Applications are open until the 12th January 2012, we look forward to seeing you next year.

    Apply now

  • LeWeb – It’s a Wrap

    Day Three at LeWeb began with rain and the usual transport chaos, even for newly-initiated Uber cab enthusiasts in Paris, and some legendary hangovers courtesy of the Deezer party with the Ting Tings on the Thursday night. Record long queues for the complementary Nespresso aside, the morning was full of great content – one of the first speakers Yossi Vardi, Pioneer, Investor & Entrepreneur – talking about business models, and full of wit and wisdom.

    Who thinks we’re in a bubble right now? Worth a watch:

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NhwrGH74anE&feature=youtu.be&a

    The day also featured the Startup Competition Finals

    Congrats to @Beintoo, based in San Francisco, who have developed a mobile gamification layer, “incentivizing competition and collaboration across the social graph”. You can watch their pitch here, plus an interview with the CEO. Second place went to iPhone app @HeyCrowd, allowing users poll the crowd in real time. Designed for those “who are curious about what people think” they enable you ask the question on HeyCrowd. They’ve collected 8,000 questions and so far have a community of users in US, France and Brazil. They’re addressing “the problem of opinion polls” and claim that their users find it “more addictive than cocaine”. Whoosh. What do you think? Is it better than SurveyMonkey? Watch their pitch on day one to a panel of judges including Sherry Coutu, our very own Dan’l Lewin, with Rodrigo Sepulveda.

    Cute Kittens

    We heard from the ‘over-caffeinated’ Ben Parr talking about entrepreneurship and changing the world, making an impact (rather than making money) and building something that lasts: “Don’t plant a flower. Plant a sequoia”. Ben reckons “most ideas suck” and less than 15% of what he sees “will turn into successful startups”. Ben also emphasized that “the space is getting crowded” and there’s “only so many ways to go about solving the problem” – so don’t bother inventing another photo sharing app or a daily deals service. Rather, better concentrate on something “that might change the world by incrementally improving on something”. Lesson #2 – Be adaptable. Lastly, Ben said –

    “Don’t build a company; build a cause. Don’t chase the money; but build something that matters”.

    The World Is A Startup

    Much of this ethos was echoed in the comments by Shrevin during the interview by Alexia from TechCrunch: watch her interviewing Sean Parker (Spotify) and Shrevin Pishevar (Menlo Ventures) which of course drew a big crowd. Loic commented in the early hours on the quality of the Tequila that Sean gave him to drink the night before. Wonder if that aided the interview? Sean thinks that “right now, there’s too much capital chasing too few great ideas” and talked about Gowalla’s recent acquisition. Shrevin is always an inspiration, and I love listening to him:

    “The most successful entrepreneurs build value for people, not extract value from people”.. and

    “Fear is finite. Hope is infinite”.

    If you missed Chris Capposela from Microsoft on day two, take a look at his comments on Xbox and Windows 8. This morning I found Carlos from Seedcamp’s observations (in brief) published in VentureBeat, and another good round-up from Bill Gross who published “The Best of LeWeb” always insightful.

    So until next time, au revoir. That’s us back at base in Silicon Valley.

  • Xbox Live // Hasta La Muerte

    Guest post: French Academic team

    Hi everyone !

    Last night, Microsoft Game Studios published Hasta La Muerte, by Pohlm Studios

    Pohlm is a Bizspark startup, created by Frédéric Pedro :

    - worldwide Game Design finalist during the 2008 edition of Imagine Cup (project Ecological Tycoon).

    - Microsoft Student Partner from January 2009 to September 2010.

    - mentor to the team Geekologics (Brainergy) – 1st place WW in Game Design (the team is currently working with Pohlm in order to publish their game).

    Hasta La Muerte was first announced by Xbox during the E3 2011. And since yesterday is now available on the WP Marketplace !

    Play now!

    Hope you enjoy it

    The French Academic team

    For French speakers, full story available here.

  • Day Two at LeWeb

    Day Two at LeWeb got off to a flying start with the “money panel” – investors including Jeff Clavier and Dave “Pirate” McClure. They discussed, among other things, the performance and underperformance of IPO companies.

    Check in to see all the action on the LeWeb YouTube channel and a great roundup on Simply Zesty.

    By all accounts Bill Gross (founder of IdeaLab) appears to win the informal vote for best speaker of LeWeb, with his “12 Lessons” inspiration and wisdom. Bill is a passionate creature and regularly captures great photos, some during his stay in Paris.

    He’s right: the weather hasn’t been fantastic, but we didn’t get the sub-zero temps and snow storms like last year. The taxi situation is another popular whine. One thing that is greeted with joy is the arrival of the Uber cabs on the streets. Countless people used them during LeWeb.

    My colleague Mark Voermans liked the passion from Italian Carmine Gallo who said “you need both vision and passion to succeed in business, and to realize that they are separate qualities”.

    Another great speaker, JP Rangaswami, Chief Scientist at Salesforce, might be competing with Bill Gross for the Most Enlightened badge:

    "The purpose of business is to create a customer. People make shoes, not money". I spoke to him afterwards: he’s so jolly and clever; I wish I could put him in my suitcase and take him home with me. JP and Bill joined the rest of the esteemed speakers, including our very own Dan’l Lewin, at a special reception at the Elysée Palace last night. AKA, Drinks with the President. Loic and Geraldine know how to organize a conference!

    Talking of badges, Denis told us that Foursquare now has 15m users+ and 600,000 merchants with offers (or ‘specials’), his view that “technology aids serendipity” and that they’re really in the recommendation business: “Every time you tell us about that sushi place you like, we can recommend more”.

    Check out their latest blog: Web sites are clients, too! Making our website run off our API. I also really liked their article on Foursquare: “This is Foursquare’s biggest opportunity to date, and as the data game is on, they could emerge as an unlikely winner, though the future may not be as different as they originally intended”.

    Next up, Brian Chesky, Airbnb. We stayed in one of their properties while in town, Brian revealing that Paris is their #2 market. Interviewed by Sarah Lane, Brian hyped up their investment and growth in 2011 – while downplaying “the incident” during the Summer.

    Phil Libin, CEO of Evernote, delivered a great update (with humor and humility), announcing two new products as well as the growth in their user base. They’ve just been named Inc Magazine Company Of The Year.

    Phil said they’re “more about the free part of freemium more than the –imium”. The head of Orange FR announced on stage with Phil the deal appearing in Spring 2012 where their customers get access to Evernote Premium free of charge for one year. Loic also noted they launched a Windows Phone 7 Mango app last week. [When I met Phil at the Seedcamp mentoring meet-up the day before he said he’s really glad to be part of BizSpark One and excited to see the Evernote Win 8 app coming soon]. Sweet.

    The perfect segway to an update from Microsoft’s Chris Capossela.

    Chris began his time on stage showing the Kinect Effect video and referring to the news from the Xbox group. He said it was all about “applications and exploration” this year and praised the myriad things developers have been doing with Xbox 360 around the globe: ”Imagining how the classroom experience might be different; in the medical field, allowing folks peruse through data without touching anything”.

    Xbox has been on a 10 year journey. Chris revealed some impressive numbers:

    • · 57m units sold, connected to TVs
    • · 960k units sold in four days over Thanksgiving
    • · 35m Xbox Live subscribers

    Don’t forget applications are now open for the TechStars Kinect Accelerator.

    No better time to be a developer

    The release of the Xbox Kinect SDK enables a whole segment of developers interested in a scenario that “lets your body be the controller”. Chris acknowledged that it looks like we’re “moving into media and entertainment” and Loic was keen to know “is Google TV the main competition?”.

    Chris’ response: there are other game console providers. “We have a huge asset out there [57m]” and pointed to the new Xbox Live app on WP7, and on IOS.

    Loic then moved our attention to the phone – “Nokia just released this new Lumia phone? It’s beautiful.”

    Yes it is. One thing that really struck me today is the great curiosity around the new phone. From the buzz on the Microsoft stand (and one phone to be won every day on our booth) to the VC guy in the cab with me who made “ooh” and “aah” sounds when I let him play with my new gizmo.

    Chris confirmed it – “On the Phone we’re working hard to get back in the game. Developers are very excited about the opportunity. Even the hardcore press – say it’s the best user experience”.

    “Tell me about Windows 8. You just announced the Windows Store?”…

    Chris: “Yesterday back in San Fran we took the wraps off the store. The app store is built into every Win 8 machine”. Chris was challenged on whether developers are going to respond: “Generally people start with IOS, Android, then WP7. That’s a lot of devices and form factors; is it perhaps too much? If you design an app for tablet is there a danger that the desktop experience won’t be good? Why would they start investing heavily in the tablet app dev?”

    Chris: “You want to target the user base – it’s a massive audience. So if I build an app for Win 8, I am immiediately addressing those 500m copies of Windows 7. A massive installed base. All of those machines can run 8, optimized for touch, but also for mouse and keyboard. OK, so disregard this – and concentrate on the 350-400m PC’s sold into the market every year. This represents a huge run rate, customers ready for applications in the store”.

    Show Me the Money

    Chris also revealed some numbers:

    “We think the economics are far better than our competitors. You make more money. For instance, you get to keep 80 per cent of the revenue when you hit 25k revenue for your app in Windows Store. Also, we don’t force you to use one particular ad network or payment system. Use ours or a third parties, use PayPal for in-app transactions, use Amazon. If you need a subscription service to your content you can do it through the store. This is flexibility for monetizing.

    Tell Me About Social……..?

    Loic meant: what about Skype?

    Chris said “There’s 170m users of Skype frequently using the service. Skype is social, so is Xbox Live”. When we think about social, it’s hard not to talk about Facebook: “Bing search to see what your friends like. Most think social is Facebook and Twitter, but there’s lots of other social networks. It’s about a broader social experience. Loic was keen to show off “the other thing on the phone: the Facebook feed”. Chris said they’re “not thinking about apps in silos, and it’s the design device experience with people at the center”.

    “We’ll have far more devices for developers. We’re Super Excited!”

    “The Metro UI across all devices, it’s a good story”. More on Engadget.