Facebook Gets on the Books at $2b

Marketing Vox reports an investment in Facebook By Interpublic (via Inside Facebook).

Interpublic Group
is in final negotiations with social networking site Facebook for a 0.5
percent stake in the site in return for spending up to $10 million for
the agency’s clients on Facebook, reports MediaWeek.

Obviously, the implication is a $2b valuation, validating the earlier rumors that Facebook had pushed for such a number when they turned down a $750m Viacom offer.

However, looking at the size of the deal, I think the equity part of the deal is a bit of a farce.  IPG is not a holding company of marketing services providers.  I don’t think they look at this as an equity investment, but rather an experimental media buy, or a biz dev deal.  However, by attaching an equity stake in the deal, at their own terms, Facebook puts itself in the books at a $2b valuation.

To me it looks like a prophecy they hope that will be self-fulfilling.

Kleiner Perkins’s 7 Rules for Software Start-ups

Don Dodge is relaying some wisdom from KP’s Ajit Nazare, based on a panel discussion. 

Kleiner Perkins‘s 7 rules for start-up are:

  • Instant Value to customers – solve a problem or create value with the first use
  • Viral adoption – Pull, not push. No direct sales force required
  • Minimum IT footprint, preferably none. Hosted SaaS is best.
  • Simple, intuitive user experience – no training required.
  • Personalized user experience – customizable
  • Easy configuration based on application or usage templates
  • Context aware – adjust to location, groups, preferences, devices, etc.

Nothing revolutionary, but it’s a succinct list, and one to think about for a minute of two, if you have a software venture.

 

UPDATE: Paul Kedrosky has added his own 8th rule to this list.

Correlations

Today I read two pieces on a topic that has been on my mind lately, especially after reading "When Genius Failed", a book about Long Term Capital Management.  How correlated are hedge-funds and proprietary trading arms of investment banks?

The first piece is a Bloomberg article (via Paul Kedrosky).  Paul has highlighted the eye opening section:

They’re all backing the same trades, behaving like index-
tracking mutual funds. Instead of convincing investors that the
only way to make 50 percent in a year is to be willing to lose 20
percent in a quarter, they eke out profits by retiring winning
trades almost as soon as they are in the black. Instead of
scouring the globe for unidentified gems, they spend their time
bandwagon-hopping.         
      

"The correlation of hedge-fund returns is very worrying,”
said Donald Sussman, chairman and founder of Greenwich,
Connecticut-based Paloma Partners Management Co., who spoke at a
panel discussion in a tent at the festival. "Everyone does well
in a bull market, and badly in a bear market."

Not exactly surprising.  I have previously wondered about the sustainability (and validity) of high returns in the hedge fund field, but the level of correlation poses an additional concern.

The second piece is a blog post by Steve Richmond, my close friend and former business partner.  He’s looking at the trading profits at investment banks:

…the Ibanks have placed themselves at the nexus of information and
human capital.  I have no doubt, that within a fairly limited spectrum,
they do recruit a higher percentage of the "best and brightest" than
most industries.  But they also have their "ears to the ground" like no
other organization — they understand they can make high quality trades
with great information, and they have modeled their businesses to
attract this information.

They see everyone’s trades.  They get leads from their hedge fund
clients, private equity clients.  I would guess a good deal of
information drifts across the Chinese Wall from their M&A group.
(Even though they would be loath to admit it.)  They have high level
contacts in governments where they do privatizations and other floats.
They have research analysts scouring the "channel" and piecing together
investment theses.  They have proprietary data models that help them
see opportunities.  They are truly at an "information delta" and  use
their proprietary trading desks to farm the soil.

Then, he goes on to pose what I think is the critical question:

Secondly, if competitive pressures within the industry are so strong,
are they being forced to put increasingly larger portions of their
balance sheets at risk, and therefore increasingly vulnerable to a
melt-down that could drastically effect the global economy?  It would
be interested to know how correlated Wall Street’s proprietary trading
desks are.   My bet is that they are more correlated than most would
care to admit.

Seeing the signs of shrinking liquidity in the global markets, with emerging markets leading the field, and knowing that much of the aforementioned trading profits in those emerging markets, this potential for a high level of correlation in institutional trading is scary.  All you’d need is a few negative factors aligning and you’d get one enormous meltdown.

Ooops! Have Things Started Sliding at Your Start-up?

Another list is up from Guy Kawasaki, this time dealing with scenarios of what typically goes wrong at venture-backed start-ups.  (Thanks, Tahir.) The take-away, for me, is:

I have never seen a company fail because it couldn’t expand fast
enough. I have seen many companies die because they “invested in the
future” and “spent ahead” to avoid missing an opportunity.

Generalists

Fred Wilson has a post about hiring the "best available athlete".  I’d like to offer a variation: hiring talented versatile generalists.

I had written about superstars a few weeks ago.  Superstars are wonderful, but there’s a scarcity problem there.  In the absence of superstars, I believe in talented generalists, who also tend to be "natural, all-around athletes", to continue Fred’s analogy.

In a start-up, the challenges vary with time.  In an organization with defined roles and resposnibilities, you can succeed with specialists, but when you’re lean, people will need to pull for each other and play various roles.  That’s why you need as many generalists as possible.

The Elitist Web v. The Populist Web

Umair has a thoughtful post on the clash of the collaboratve web with the editorialists. He summarizes:

There’s a new bourgeoisie in town, and they are just a wee bit elitist when it comes to connected consumption. You know the meme they’re pushing by now; but if you don’t, Jaron Lanier sums it up nicely for us:

“…But the hive mind is for the most part stupid and boring.”

Of course, Jaron here echoes folks like Nick Carr, Esther Dyson, etc.

I find this absolutely fascinating. Why? Because all of these folks are very intelligent, very sharp, very well-read, and very intellectual – but in this case, their arguments aren’t just elitist, lame, and reminiscent of corporatethink. Their arguments are deeply intellectually bankrupt: they’re not making real arguments at all.

You should read the entire post. I think he’s right. However, Umair does miss one point in his argument: How efficient are the collaborative “thought markets”?

What I mean by “collaborative thought markets” is the connected discussion taking place online. Examples are wikipedia, digg, ebay and amazon reviews. It’s hard to dispute the price of a transaction on eBay, especially if it’s a popular item. eBay is fairly liquid and efficient. The same may not be true for Amazon reveiws, or Digg…. yet! As collaborative markets get more liquid and efficient, and effective filtering tools get put into place, the argument Umair is fighting will disappear. You won’t be able to discern the difference between NYT and Digg. It only needs to get more liquid.

Web 2.0 Portals – Top-down or Grassroots?

Fred Wilson has a post today on the rumored Web 2.0 portal initiative from Netscape, as well as his suggestion for Yahoo pulling together some of the services they have recently acquired:

I’ve suggested to a number of people at Yahoo! that they ought to create a web 2.0 portal with the excellent web services they’ve purchased in the past 18 months; Flickr, Delicious, Upcoming, and several that they haven’t but have been rumored to be interested in like Digg and Technorati. They could combine their excellent web search service, their social search product myweb, and even stuff like Yahoo! Answers and possibly 360.

His call is asking for a top-down move, which, I find, in itself, somewhat un-web 2.0. To satisfy similar needs, I find that there are independent tools that pull together, or mash-up these Web 2.0 services, such as GROU.PS, where you can effectively create a “group portal”.

Having said that, as a loyal MyYahoo user, I would still love to see Yahoo taking Fred’s advice.

Murdoch Foresight?

Every time I log in, MySpace reminds me more and more of US broadcast TV.  It’s loud, lacks a consistent aesthetic, and as Nick Carr, inspired by Ivor Tossell, says, it’s mirroring the US society.

The need for self-expression is evident.  Just look at the number of ring-tone downloads, at $2+ (more expensive than full track songs) a pop.  What may help is a bit editorial help. Have we seen professional services for designing people’s MySpace pages?  We let designers into our living rooms, why not our online spaces?

If this is already happening, I bet it’s happening at CyWorld.

Vonage Customer Service

Today, there’s a NY Times article on Vonage’s dismal IPO.  The stock is down 32% in its first week.  As a customer, I am not surprised.

Vonage’s customer service is awful.  It will take you 2 seconds to get connected to a sales person. However, trying to cancel your account is torture. They will keep you on hold for hours. I have been trying to cancel my service for two days, I have spent over 2-hours on the phone, but still have not been able to do it.  I owe them more of my time, I guess.

Jeffrey Citron, Vonage’s CEO and founder, has a checkered past fror his days at Datek.  It seems that the company he’s founded has adapted some of his business ethic.

Should MySpace Worry?

I am getting more and more convinced that nobody really understands the nature, source, and drivers of MySpace’s traffic.  There have been earlier discussions on the topic.  Now, Scott Karp’s offering some statistics supporting an apparent peak in April in MySpace traffic.
Myspace_alexa_may_23_2006
There’s also been anecdotal talk of teen’s stated exodus to new sites like Bebo.com, in the press, as well as the blogsphere.  Nick Carr has effectively called the beginning of the end.

I’m not ready to write my "The death of MySpace" post quite yet, but I’m keeping the poison pen warm.

I think critics are forgetting one huge factor: the fact that MySpace was born with the music community as its back bone.  Music is a unique and enormous connector among people (another one is sports).  Think about why people wear band t-shirts, and not movie star t-shirts. As long as the music community, especially local bands, continues to use MySpace to connect with their fan base, I think MySpace is safe.