Tag: WSJ

  • WSJ: Oak Investment Partners’ 22 $100M+ Revenue Companies

    The WSJ had another article
    about venture capital, this time focusing just on Oak Investment Partners, the place I work during
    the day (and at night and on weekends…). The whole article, “The
    $100M Revenue Club: Oak Investment Stocks Up
    ,” is well worth reading. Here
    are a couple of highlights:

     

    “Companies with annual revenue exceeding $100
    million rarely used to show up within venture capital firms’ portfolios.”

    “But few if any firms have as many of them in their
    portfolios as Oak Investment Partners,
    which has 22 private companies that generated more than $100 million in revenue
    in 2009, according to information gathered and confirmed by Dow Jones
    VentureWire.”

     “Thad Gray,
    who is a managing director with fund-of-funds Abbott Capital Management and
    sits on Oak’s Valuation Committee, has become a strong believer in the venture
    growth equity investing model … Gray said Oak has found success thanks, in
    part, to having partners who are recognized as sector experts in complex areas
    including health care information technology, financial technology, digital
    media and energy technology.”

    I have already posted about a
    couple of the companies in the list of 22, including Kayak.com, iCrossing and
    Demand Media.

    In the quote above, Thad
    talked about Oak’s “venture growth equity” investing model. This is a
    relatively new model of venture investing, and Oak is demonstrating what it is
    and how to do it. It combines important aspects of traditional venture capital
    with some aspects of private equity. Since it’s relatively new, it’s worth
    explaining.

    The popular image of venture
    capital is early stage investing. You might think that the internet would favor
    early stage companies, because it is so relatively easy and inexpensive to get
    a web site and make it not only viewable, but findable (as I discussed
    previously) to anyone in the world. The bar is low, so the start-up
    entrepreneur with his genius idea can get it going with a little seed money
    from a savvy early-stage investor and watch it rocket to success. It’s all
    about having the break-through idea; you need hardly any capital to make it a
    reality. Right?

    Let’s take that idea and
    apply it to baseball. Suppose we find a couple of guys who have a terrific new
    approach to pitching and catching. They’ve got it working in the “lab.” Now
    they’re ready to go for it, and they look for a savvy VC who recognizes their
    potential. If they get funded, the money will come from a traditional
    early-stage VC. A VGE investor like Oak will pass; the opportunity is too early
    stage. We don’t invest in individual players, regardless how good they are; we
    only invest in teams that have found a way as teams to compete
    and win in their league.

    The way we see it, when the
    VC invests in the pitcher-and-catcher novelty act, they’re going out and
    competing in a playing field (called the internet) against full teams. Like it
    or not, those two will be “taking the field” against teams that field nine players
    and have a deep bench. The pitcher-catcher combo may be unbelievable, but they
    are sure going to have to be, given that they have no one playing first base,
    no one in right field, etc. Then of course when it’s their turn up at bat, their
    batting order consists of two players – perhaps not so good…

    Demand Media, for example, is
    a full baseball team – they are literally “covering all the bases.” And they
    have a deep bench and value-adding back office. It’s hard to figure out how a
    couple of individual players, regardless
    of how talented and hard working those individual players might be
    , could
    possibly compete against a whole baseball team, particularly when so many of
    Demand Media’s players are all-stars.

    Let’s just take a quick romp
    through the Demand Media “player roster” to illustrate all the different roles there
    are in a fully-staffed team:

    • A design team to
      make their web sites look good.
    • A sales team to
      craft the kinds of advertising deals that fit their content.
    • Separate teams
      for each individual property (golflink.com, ehow, Livestrong, Cracked, etc.)
    • Strong
      non-consumer technology-centric efforts (Pluck.com, enom).
    • A creative,
      numbers-driven and results-focused research effort.
    • Strong technology
      driving a leading-edge business model (Demand Studios).
    • Major value-adding
      data center operation.
    • A group that can analyze
      huge traffic (many tens of millions of uniques a month) and optimize.
    • Unique technology
      derived from the huge volumes that increases effectiveness (this is
      purposefully vague).
    • A sharp finance
      operation to help keep cost focus.
    • Strong,
      charismatic business leadership.

    When the baseball team is a
    bunch of has-beens, you can imagine being just a couple of stand-outs and
    competing against them. But on the internet, you end up competing against teams
    of the best. The scale is so large, like it or not, it takes a team to compete
    and win. That’s why the Venture Growth Equity approach makes sense, even on the
    internet (actually, once you understand the issues, it’s particularly on the internet).

    Like with any venture, there
    are also intangibles, the kind of thing you feel when you’re on site with the
    people, as I was last week with Demand in Santa Monica, along with my buddy
    Ranjan Chak. I seem to feel good every time I visit, whether we’re celebrating
    the good things that have happened or we’re grappling with challenging issues. Or
    both. The attitudes, levels of engagement, and sophistication of approach are
    just outstanding. Above all, they are a nerd-fueled enterprise (a subject I’ll
    go into sometime soon), which by itself puts them at a different level than most
    companies.


  • Oak Investment Partners in the WSJ’s Top 50 Venture Companies

    Oak Investment Partners has
    backed more than 10% of the WSJ
    list
    of the Top 50 Venture-Backed Companies! 6 out of 50! What’s even
    cooler is that we’ve got quite a number of exciting, substantial, profitable
    companies that didn’t make the list.

    If you click on any company
    in the list, you get a photo of the CEO and a nice summary of the company.

    Here are the 6 Oak companies
    in the list of 50:

    #10: nGenera. Many people are familiar with Don Tapscott and his
    forward-thinking books like Wikinomics. I just discovered that he has
    over 13,000 followers on Twitter!
    But Don is just the tip of the iceberg at nGenera, which is at the forefront of
    helping our major organizations transform themselves into more effective, collaborative
    enterprises.

    #14: Ventana. Oak backed Athena Health, a company that is revolutionizing
    the automation of medical offices. Athena is now public and doing very well.
    When Todd Park, who co-founded Athena (along with Jonathan Bush) was ready to
    try something new, he ended up starting what is now Ventana, which promises to transform
    the relationship between consumers and health care providers. And then Todd got
    called to serve as the CTO of the US Dept of HHS! But the company is in good
    hands with their capable and dynamic CEO, Gio Colella.

    UPDATE: Ventana has a new name: Castlight Health.

    #22: Huffington Post. This is a completely
    amazing company. I’ve written about
    them
    a bit in the context of the media-i-zation of the world. People seem
    to think of Huffington Post in terms of old media companies, or left-wing
    politics, or some other verbally-oriented perspective. But my
    blog post
    about nerds and yakkity-yaks gives the most relevant perspective –
    they have an amazingly powerful tech team who keeps pushing the edge of what’s
    possible in on-line media. When you see how Paul Berry and his team do it on
    the inside, it’s even more impressive. They’re nicely integrated with
    editorial, just like they should be, and like similarly powerful tech teams so
    rarely are. And we can't forget (who could?) Arianna, who as of this moment has over 394,000 Twitter followers.

    #29: Boston Power. The WSJ explained why
    this company is hot, and I don’t think I could say it better. “
    It's in
    the competitive Lithium-ion battery space, but backer Oak Investment Partners
    has deep pockets and its board member, Bandel Carano, has a strong track
    record.
    ” Boston Power is on the road to making,
    for example, all-electric cars truly practical.

    #46: iCrossing. I’ve already blogged about this
    company over
    and over
    again. They are the clear leaders in their fields – yes, more than one!

    #47: SmartDrive. SmartDrive is a classic
    innovative, industry-transforming venture. It makes our roads safer for
    everyone, protects good drivers when they get in bad situations, detects bad
    drivers before really bad things happen, and on top of everything else helps
    reduce the amount of fuel consumed. It’s very satisfying to have a company that
    delivers such a clear range of benefits, leveraging the latest technology and
    an effective service model.

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