Archive for December 29th, 2009

Rise of Angels in Consumer Internet Space

December 29, 2009

This is a must read post related from Bill Burnham discussing the heightened role that angel investors are playing in the consumer internet startup world.

Here’s what he sees happening.  VCs are concluding that its very difficult (very, very difficult) to identify early winners.  Therefore, it makes sense to wait to see and watch for the next Twitter, Facebook, etc. to emerge.  At the same time, VCs are becoming larger.  They need to make larger investments and are, therefore, happy to wait for the winners to emerge (even though that means investing at higher valuations).  VC partners are personally content with this situation because they are sitting on more funds under management (i.e., collecting more management fees).

At the same time, technology has become cheap (really, really cheap).  Very small teams of entrepreneurs can build version 1.0 products for little more than sweat.  Given this, there are a lot more “projects” happening.  Some of these projects might become businesses.  This situation makes the VC’s “wait and watch” approach appear even more rational.  High tech is becoming cheap tech (question: if tech is this “easy” is it really “tech” at this point?).  Angel investment is far better suited for backing early stage efforts that will either succeed or fail fast.

At first glance, this would seem to be a good development for markets like Portland, where there are relatively few established VCs.  However, it may be more of a negative given that Portland lacks an established community of successful entrepreneurs in the consumer internet space (relative to Silicon Valley, LA, NY).  It’s my impression that it’s relatively more important for angels to be located close to their investments.

Consumer groups challenge Google-AdMob deal

December 29, 2009

Two consumer advocacy groups (Consumer Watchdog and Center for Digital Democracy) sent a letter to the FTC Chairman yesterday asking the agency to block the proposed Google-AdMob deal. The letter is here.

The letter asserts the deal would be anti-competitive given AdMob’s leading position in the mobile advertising space.  The letter also raises privacy concerns given that the combined company would potentially be able to combine mobile and traditional web usage behavioral data.  Finally, questions are raised about Google’s ability to use AdMob data to assist in the launch of its rumored smartphone.

It will be interesting to see if the FTC takes an active role here.  I’m guessing not given that the mobile advertising industry is so young.  AdMob is certainly not in the position that Doubleclick was in related to online display advertising.

Update January 5, 2010: Apple is acquiring Quattro.  See announcement here.  At first glance, this development would seem to make the Google-AdMob deal more likely.

Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.