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Archive for June, 2008

New, Super-Powered Comic Book Web Series

kpposter01a24x36-vi.jpgProblems in your personal life?  Frustrated at work?  Suspect that you might have a mutant power?  Fear not as all of these issues, and so many more, will be addressed by the latest web series executive produced by For Your Imagination, “Kyle Piccolo: Comic Shop Therapist.”  

The brainchild of writer/director Neil Turitz, For Your Imagination’s Chief Creative Officer Alec Pollak, actor/writer Eric Zuckerman (starring in the title role) and superstar artist John Cassaday (Astonishing X-Men with Joss Whedon), the show has generated a significant amount of buzz and has already attracted significant sponsors – Warner Bros. Pictures’ “The Dark Knight” and New York City based Midtown Comics, true believers in the series with each episode being shot at one of Midtown Comics’ two Manhattan locations.

"The world of the comic shop we know well and it's one that easily lends itself to our brand of humor,” says John Cassaday, co-producer of Kyle Piccolo. “We're having an embarrassing amount of fun."

The first five episodes of the show, which focuses on comic book store “therapist” Kyle Piccolo and his ability to find the answer to your personal problem in the pages of a comic book, are exclusively sponsored by Warner Bros. Pictures’ “The Dark Knight,” the next installment of the re-imagined Batman series.  Starring Christian Bale, Michael Caine and the late Heath Ledger, the film opens nationwide on July 18th.

“This is one of the best test cases for developing a unique web series,” said For Your Imagination’s CEO Paul Kontonis.  “From the initial concept to casting, from writing and development to major sponsorships, we’re thrilled to have been able to launch this new show.”

For Your Imagination will manage the development, production, marketing and advertising sales of the Kyle Piccolo web series and the www.kylepiccolo.com destination site. The series will be distributed on video sharing platforms including Blip, DailyMotion, MySpace, Revver, Viddler and as a podcast on iTunes.

Drop.io shows off new office

Drop.io last Thursday hosted a party at their new Dumbo office with Allen Stern (CenterNetworks) and RRE Ventures. Founder Sam Lessin explains.

Outalot is For Those Who Go Outside a Lot

outalotAt the CN/Drop.io party last week I met Jesse Boyes. Jesse is the co-founder of a relatively new startup in NYC named Outalot. Outalot is a local search engine that's quick in and quick out. There are four content areas within Outalot: food, bars, movies and shops. Outalot is currently available in NYC and in San Francisco.

I did some tests on the food section and it found the locations I was thinking of - I tested in Brooklyn, Queens and the Bronx. I found the movie listings to be easy as well. There's a mobile version for finding places while you are on-the-go. You can save places you like as bookmarks within the Outalot service and also see your friend's bookmarks. There is also a new mapplet which you can add to the normal Google Maps which adds an Outalot layer for additional functionality when browsing a local map.

This month they added Twitter functionality. If you find a location you plan on visiting, you can send a message to your Twitter friends letting them know where you will be heading to.

I guess what I don't get is why they didn't tie into Yelp or another reviews site for the locations? Also, what about showing the menus for the food establishments? It's great to find a restaurant but without reviews and/or menus, it's only halfway there. If they integrated more content, the site would feel more robust and not just a fancy yellow pages. The usability does seem a bit better than Menupages. What about directions? They are using Google Maps for integration but there's no link to get directions.

I want to like the service but there's just so much missing that I don't get why I'd use this over Yelp?

Other NY-based local directories include UpNext and Wikipages.

iPhone Application Developers Get Help From Pinch Media

Pinch MediaNYC-based Pinch Media presented at an event I attended earlier this week. I captured the presentation and have embedded it below. Greg Yardley, Pinch Media Co-Founder & CEO, explained that the services they offer help iPhone application developers with monetization, usability and analytics.

The video is worth watching if you are into mobile devices, mobile app development or mobile monetization.  In fact the only sales pitch is about 2 seconds at the end. Yardley begins by explaining that the iPhone isn't a phone, it's a computer that makes calls. He shows a variety of stats, discusses Android and speaks in detail about how the iPhone SDK will change mobile data usage.

The company raised a round of funding in late May from Union Square Ventures and First Round Capital.

Top 40 Web Video Producers

tubemogultop40.pngTubeMogul, the leading web video distribution and analytics platform has released their list of the most viewed web video producers. Out of 30,000 producers, TubeMogul's list ranks the top 40 producers and online media company For Your Imagination places fourth in great company with producers and friends like Chris Pirillo (#2),  Tornante's Vuguru (#5), Viral Video Genius Nalts (#8), MyDamnChannel (#9),  CBS Interactive (#11) and HBO (#12). Thank you to our key distributional and promotional partners Blip.tv, DailyMotion, iTunes, Metacafe, Revver, Veoh, Viddler, Yahoo! Video and of course, YouTube. And finally thank you to our industry leading video networks, DadLabs and The Green House, and hit web series Break a Leg, xgobobeanx, IFC Lunchbox and the newest series, Kyle Piccolo. And most of all thank you to TubeMogul!

David Karp Provides Tumblr Business Update (video)

TUmblrIn the video below, NY-based Tumblr founder David Karp provides an update on the micro-blog business. He explains that Tumblr is the easiest way to share anything online. He also describes how important the "reblog" concept is for Tumblr. Reblogging is where you share what someone else has posted on Tumblr to help it gain viral growth.

For some stats, David noted that Tumblr has 310,000 users (no word on active), 120,000 posts per day and they host 15,000 custom domains. The user number is up from 75,000 last October.

MediaMerx to Distribute For Your Imagination Videos

MediaMerx%20Logo.pngFollowing in the produce once and distribute everywhere model, For Your Imagination has just announced an online distribution and licensing revenue share partnership with the New York City based international distribution platform MediaMerx. The partnership will assist in the distribution and monetization of the original high-quality web video content executive produced and managed by For Your Imagination worldwide.

“For Your Imagination is creating the next wave of entertainment and MediaMerx is proud to be a part of the distribution process,” said Tejpaul Bhatia, the Chief Executive Officer of MediaMerx.  “We believe that For Your Imagination’s content has great potential for audiences in Latin America, Asia, Middle East, Africa and Europe.”

”MediaMerx offers an amazing conduit for us to distribute our video to consumers who wouldn’t normally be able to see it,” said For Your Imagination’s CEO, Paul Kontonis.  “That, coupled with their monetization plan, made this partnership an important part of our ongoing super syndication strategy.”

MediaMerx offers a unique opportunity to get online content into Latin America, Eastern Europe, Africa, Asia and the Middle East through international web portals serving more than 105 million users eager to consume online video.  With shows like DadLabs – Taking Back Paternity, the online sitcom Break a Leg and the eco-friendly Green House already certified hits among U.S. audiences, MediaMerx will begin distributing For Your Imagination’s broad slate of high-quality video content immediately.

Mad Ave outcasts gather for sordid affair

Independent ad agency Woods Witt Dealy & Sons invited the ‘outcasts, exiles and undesirables’ of the New York ad world to Cha-Cha’s on Coney Island for a Wrath of Cannes party. VirtualDrinkingBuddy took home the Grand Coney.

NY-based Simparel Takes $4 Million Series A Funding

SimparelNY-based Simparel has announced that it's taken $4 million in a Series A round of venture capital today. The funding has been provided by Israeli VC firm L Capital Partners. Simparel notes that the funds will accelerate the continued product development of both the core platform and the new Software as a Service (SaaS) offering. The funds will also be used for sales and marketing.

Simparel is a b2b play focusing on the apparel, footwear, accessories, costume jewelry, as well as home furnishings and toys industries.  The software is offered as a service (SaaS) and will be marketed towards companies who typically can't afford larger ERP systems. 

Funny note - if you go to the Simparel site, you get to select whatever beta you'd like. Currently there are three listed and you can pick one and follow that path.

BricaBox: Goodbye World!

“Was she being supremely Machiavellian? Or had she simply lost her mind?”
John Hielemann, on Hillary Clinton’s final weeks campaigning

Today, I’m announcing my plans to close BricaBox, LLC.

This decision, which has taken place over the last few weeks, was as complicated as are my feelings about it. Nonetheless, I can tell you most of this decision revolved around issues of money, traction, team, and vision: the four essentials of a successful startup.

I think it’s fair to say that a startup deserves to live if it has good quantities of at least three of those four things, and BricaBox is now out of all but one of them.

Perhaps, even, it was out of them sometime ago — this is where that quote about Hillary Clinton comes in — and we’ve just been in denial.

Whatever it is, I’m going to take a tremendous amount of experience, lessons, wisdom, etc with me. And, over the next few weeks, I intend on blogging diligently about every aspect of this failure. I’ve taken extensive mental notes on these lessons, and I look forward to sharing them with you. I think this process will help me institutionalize these lessons for myself, and of course I hope you can learn something from them as well.

For now, I’ll give you a table of contents for what’s to come. Subscribe to my RSS feed to be alerted to when I post and see below for some teasers.

As for what I intend on doing next, you can be sure that it will be something entrepreneurial. A few weeks ago, I spoke to a few of the companies I admire most in New York (about joining their ranks), but realized quickly that I was not ready to take my hand off the entrepreneur’s tiller.

So, I plan on doing a mix of things: consulting for media and technology companies, launching some exciting small projects with my friends (soon to be announced), and exploring new startup opportunities.

Of course, with all these things, I now have the perspective of building and launching BricaBox — and I’m excited to put those lessons to work. Also, I bring with me my entire life experience, dating back to my first company (Westheimer Family Plants and Produce), building and running Brandeis Television, directing new media operations at National Public Media, and working with political organizations like David Pepper’s campaign for Mayor and now TruthThroughAction.org’s project.

I’ve realized that I’m a “new media mechanic” — one part technical, one part zen — so, if I can help you tune-up your online media operations, please let me know.

As for what I intend on doing with BricaBox itself, time will also tell. We’ll keep the site live for now. However, if there’s a media company in need of a proprietary platform to scale thousands of user-generated content websites, I think BricaBox could be of great use for them. Of course Open Sourcing is another option, though that would also require a certain level of interest from the community.

Last of all, I want to thank several people who made the experience with BricaBox wonderful (though there were countless who had a great effect on the experience): Thanks to the nextNY community for free business school and for the friendships; thanks to Evan Bartlett, Michael Galpert, Charlie O’Donnell (my biggest — always constructive — critic), Alex Lines, and to David S. Rose, for his mentorship. A big thanks goes to my dad for his watchful eye. Many thanks go to Gary Vaynerchuk for his commitment to my success. To Allen Stern of CenterNetworks, the great guys at Silicon Alley Insider and Caroline McCarthy of CNET, thanks for promoting New York Tech companies!

Thanks to Mike Hostetler for stepping into the technical lead when we were most in need.

And lastly, thanks to everyone who loved BricaBox like I did. We had some awesome users and fans, like Nichelle Stephens, Andrew Watson, Ari Greenberg, and more. Asking them to say goodbye to BricaBox hurts the most!

As I write the final words of this post, my mind is still coming up with reasons and ways not to do this; alas, it must be done — it is that time. Now, I get to look onwards and upwards. As I look at the table of contents (below) to my startup’s postmortem, I get excited about working on what’s next. The opportunities I have coming are incredibly exciting, and applying all that I’ve learned to the next Big Thing will make it all worth it. That’s for sure.


Postmortem Table of Contents (complete posts to come)

Companies should tackle Market Problems, not Technical Problems.
BricaBox was a solution to a technical problem I had. While it’s good to scratch itches, it’s best to scratch those you share with the greater market. If you want to solve a technical problem, get a group together and do it as open source.

Start with a real team.
There are a million things a startup needs to do and a dozen skill sets. If you get more people involved from the get-go, you can better distribute responsibility, and grow on the cheap.

Lightweight or heavyweight? Choose one. It matters how you spend.
Does your startup have a burn-rate? If it’s above $0, think about concentrating it and speeding up development. BricaBox was fed-but-anemic and and slowly roasting its cash. Do it again and I’ll concentrate those costs at the beginning. We would have had twice the product in 2/3 of the time.

When in doubt, build off Open Source.
One of the first questions I had to deal with, while building BricaBox, was why we weren’t modifying an existing Open Source solution, like Wordpress MU. We were a CMS at heart, after all. Next time, I’ll give more consideration to building off and participating in existing Open Source project.

Go vest yourself.
When a co-founder walks out of a company — as was the case for me — you’ve already been dealt a heavy blow. Don’t exacerbate the issue by needing to figure out how to deal with a large equity deadweight on your hands (investors won’t like that the #2 stakeholder is absent, even estranged, from your company). So, the best way of dealing with this issue is to take a long, long vesting period for all major sweat equity founders.

More to come…