Monday, September 30, 2013

Reuters: Small Business News: Storage product retailer Container Store files for $200 million IPO

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Storage product retailer Container Store files for $200 million IPO
Sep 30th 2013, 21:37

Mon Sep 30, 2013 5:37pm EDT

(Reuters) - The Container Store Group Inc, a retailer of storage products, filed with U.S. regulators to raise up to $200 million in an initial public offering of its common stock.

The company, which sells a range of storage products from laundry baskets to luggage, said it operates 62 stores in 22 American states and the District of Columbia.

The Container Store's net sales grew 11.5 percent to $706.7 million in the year ended March 2. Net loss narrowed to $130,000 from $30.7 million.

The 35-year-old retail chain said it plans to use the proceeds of the offering to pay a dividend to holders of its senior preferred stock and to repay debt.

The Coppell, Texas-based company intends to list its common stock on the New York Stock Exchange under the symbol "TCS," , it told the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission in a preliminary prospectus. (link.reuters.com/mag53v)

The filing did not reveal how many shares the company planned to sell or their expected price.

J.P. Morgan Securities LLC, Barclays Capital Inc, Credit Suisse Securities (USA) LLC, Morgan Stanley & Co LLC, Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith Inc, Wells Fargo Securities LLC and Jefferies LLC were the lead bookrunners for the IPO.

The amount of money a company says it plans to raise in its first IPO filings is used to calculate registration fees. The final size of the IPO could be different.

(Reporting by Varun Aggarwal in Bangalore; Editing by Joyjeet Das)

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Thursday, September 26, 2013

Reuters: Small Business News: Canada chocolate factory may get new life as marijuana farm

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Canada chocolate factory may get new life as marijuana farm
Sep 27th 2013, 00:02

By Julie Gordon

Thu Sep 26, 2013 8:02pm EDT

(Reuters) - A Canadian start-up wants to turn an empty chocolate factory in eastern Ontario into a production facility for medical marijuana, a possible boost for a local economy that has been hurting since the landmark Hershey plant shut down in 2008.

The old factory, which for decades churned out Hershey chocolate bars, has been conditionally sold to a start-up called Tweed Inc, which plans to use about a third of the 470,000 square foot plant to grow medical marijuana.

"It's an exciting opportunity," said Mark Zekulin, Tweed's vice president of community engagement. "There is a demand and there's good opportunity in this market."

Tweed Inc has applied to Health Canada for a permit to grow medical marijuana at the factory in Smith Falls, Ontario, some 350 km (220 miles) from Toronto. It will distribute its product to patients across Canada who have permission to use the drug.

Canada legalized medical marijuana in 2001, authorizing an initial 500 people to grow and smoke the drug. That number has since ballooned to about 30,000, causing headaches for those who regulate and police marijuana use.

The government earlier this year responded with a plan to take legal production out of private homes and license private companies to produce medical marijuana for authorized patients.

Hence Tweed's efforts to get into the legal growing and distribution game. The company, which expects to hear back from regulators soon, plans to spend about C$1.5 million ($1.45 million) retrofitting the old chocolate factory. Once up and running, the plant will employ about 100 people.

It's a glimmer of hope for the town of Smith Falls, which has so far embraced Tweed's growing plan.

"In the last five or six years, we've lost 1,700 jobs," said Dennis Staples, mayor of the town of 9,000 people. Expressing hope that Tweed's investment could trigger other jobs, he added: "This announcement by Tweed Inc is welcome news for us."

Most of those jobs losses were at the Hershey plant, but the closure of a few other local businesses and a provincial facility also cut jobs.

($1 = 1.0332 Canadian dollars)

(Reporting by Julie Gordon; Editing by Janet Guttsman and Andrew Hay)

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Reuters: Small Business News: New delays hit Obamacare rollout before October 1 launch

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New delays hit Obamacare rollout before October 1 launch
Sep 26th 2013, 22:32

Get Covered America volunteers listen to a training session before canvassing a Chicago, Illinois neighborhood to talk with residents about the Affordable Care Act - also known as Obamacare - September 7, 2013. REUTERS/John Gress

Get Covered America volunteers listen to a training session before canvassing a Chicago, Illinois neighborhood to talk with residents about the Affordable Care Act - also known as Obamacare - September 7, 2013.

Credit: Reuters/John Gress

By David Morgan

WASHINGTON | Thu Sep 26, 2013 4:22pm EDT

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S. government announced new delays in rolling out President Barack Obama's healthcare reform, saying small business and Spanish-language health insurance enrollment services would not begin on October 1 as planned.

Five days before enrollment is set to begin for millions of uninsured Americans, the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) said employers with 50 or fewer workers will not be able to sign their staff up for private insurance in federally operated exchanges until a month later, November 1, because of technical problems.

The White House also said a Spanish-language service for Latinos, who make up about one-third of the 47 million uninsured in the country, will also not be available until "sometime in October."

Administration officials did not explain the nature of the technical problems, but they emphasized that full online enrollment for other individuals will be available on October 1 under the Affordable Care Act, commonly known as Obamacare.

The news stirred new doubts about how successful Obamacare will prove to be after months of delays and technical glitches following three years of legal and political challenges from Republicans and other critics.

Obama and fellow Democrats are trying to stave off Republican attempts to delay the entire healthcare reform launch with the threat of shutting down the federal government or risking a U.S. default on its credit.

"Obama was literally praising Obamacare when another delay was announced," tweeted Republican Rep. Lynn Westmoreland of Georgia.

The administration sought to play down the delays, saying that new benefits for the uninsured would still begin on January 1. Small businesses would be able to shop for coverage next week, fill out paper insurance applications or discuss their options with call center staff.

"As promised, people will be able to see what's in the marketplace, how to look at coverage, ask questions about whether or not this is good for their employees, find out about the tax credit then beginning November 1st, do the online enrollment," Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius said in an interview with cable-TV channel MSNBC.

A release by the HHS focused on a ramp-up in government education and outreach efforts toward small businesses, mentioning the enrollment delay only in passing in the 8th paragraph for the Small Business Health Options Program.

SHORT-TERM GLITCH?

Word on the delays surfaced just after Obama wrapped up a speech in which he lashed out at his Republican opponents for predicting the law's failure, declaring: "The Affordable Care Act is here to stay.

One Republican, Senator John Barrasso of Wyoming, said in response that "this is just the latest example of his rhetoric about the law not matching reality. It's clear that the exchanges aren't ready for prime time."

But some members of the business community sounded a more supportive note.

"This is a huge undertaking and October 1 is not the only opportunity for small businesses to enroll. The glitches will come and we hope they will be speedily resolved. But in the meantime I don't have the sense that small businesses were lined up at the gates waiting to get in," said Neil Trautwein, healthcare lobbyist for the National Retail Federation.

John Arensmeyer, chief executive of the Small Business Majority, said Obamacare would bring major change to the U.S. healthcare system "so having a month delay is not a huge issue in the greater scheme of things."

(Additional reporting by Roberta Rampton in Washington and Lewis Krauskopf in New York; Editing by Michele Gershberg and Grant McCool)

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Reuters: Small Business News: Ford buys small software startup to bolster 'connected car' offerings

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Ford buys small software startup to bolster 'connected car' offerings
Sep 26th 2013, 16:10

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The sign at a Ford dealer is pictured in Lakewood, Colorado September 4, 2013. REUTERS/Rick Wilking

The sign at a Ford dealer is pictured in Lakewood, Colorado September 4, 2013.

Credit: Reuters/Rick Wilking

By Deepa Seetharaman

DETROIT | Thu Sep 26, 2013 12:10pm EDT

DETROIT (Reuters) - Ford Motor Co has bought a five-year-old software company for less than $10 million in a move the No. 2 U.S. automaker hopes will beef up its in-car connectivity that is critical to winning over younger, more affluent buyers.

The acquisition of Ferndale, Michigan-based Livio will also help promote the automaker's method of connecting smartphones with the vehicle as an industry standard, which will help speed the pace of app development, Ford said on Thursday.

"With the acquisition, Livio now has the ability to advocate Ford's contribution of SmartDevice Link as a standard," Paul Mascarenas, Ford's chief technology officer, told reporters. "That, I think, is a big opportunity."

The deal comes ahead of an expected boom in cars that can connect with drivers' smartphones. Ford expects sales of such cars to grow to 21 million by 2018, up from 2 million in 2012.

Ford will keep the Livio name and the 11-person firm will operate as a wholly owned Ford subsidiary. Livio will report to Ford's electrical and electronics systems engineering division.

Livio, founded by now 31-year-old Jake Sigal, will continue to assist its existing customers, which include other automakers, suppliers and third-party software developers.

The deal with Livio marks Ford's first acquisition of a technology company in about 13 years, Mascarenas said.

In October 2000, Ford entered a joint venture with Qualcomm Inc dubbed Wingcast that allowed drivers to issue voice commands to operate the car radio or phones. That venture shut down almost two years later.

(Editing by Matthew Lewis)

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We welcome comments that advance the story through relevant opinion, anecdotes, links and data. If you see a comment that you believe is irrelevant or inappropriate, you can flag it to our editors by using the report abuse links. Views expressed in the comments do not represent those of Reuters. For more information on our comment policy, see http://blogs.reuters.com/fulldisclosure/2010/09/27/toward-a-more-thoughtful-conversation-on-stories/

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Reuters: Small Business News: U.S. delays online enrollment for small-business healthcare exchanges

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U.S. delays online enrollment for small-business healthcare exchanges
Sep 26th 2013, 16:48

Get Covered America volunteers listen to a training session before canvassing a Chicago, Illinois neighborhood to talk with residents about the Affordable Care Act - also known as Obamacare - September 7, 2013.

Credit: Reuters/John Gress

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Wednesday, September 25, 2013

Reuters: Small Business News: Shackles drop off fundraising for startups. Should we worry?

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Shackles drop off fundraising for startups. Should we worry?
Sep 26th 2013, 00:19

The seal of the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) hangs on the wall at their headquarters in Washington, in this June 24, 2011 file photo. REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst/Files

The seal of the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) hangs on the wall at their headquarters in Washington, in this June 24, 2011 file photo.

Credit: Reuters/Jonathan Ernst/Files

By Sarah McBride

SAN FRANCISCO | Wed Sep 25, 2013 8:19pm EDT

SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - Entrepreneur Nicole O'Rourke has a novel idea for raising cash that would have been illegal until this week: smacking a "fund me" sticker on every bottle or can of hair products from her start-up business, Rock Your Hair.

O'Rourke is among the first to take advantage of the lifting of a years-long ban, mandated by the 1933 Securities Act, on using advertising to find investors in private companies. Intended originally to prevent opportunists from targeting the gullible, it has long been considered a bedrock protection against scams. Lifting it, with some protections, should help startups and thus boost the overall economy, proponents say.

Scores of websites have sprung up to connect budding financiers with struggling entrepreneurs who are eager to tap new sources of cash and close funding rounds far more speedily than under the traditional venture model. There are now dozens of sites with all sorts of business models, ranging from charging companies to create listings to taking a cut of an investor's eventual profits.

While many have been around for months, in some cases years, they could not highlight details about the deals on their sites until Monday. Before then, potential investors had to be registered on the site as accredited investors -- those with net worth, not including their homes, of $1 million or more-- to learn about the start-ups seeking funding.

"Public Fundraising. It's here. Tell the world you're raising money," trumpets the AngelList web site. On Monday, it took the wraps off a new type of investment vehicle, a syndicate, where one angel investor - typically an affluent person who provides capital for a startup - leads a group of accredited investors to back a company in a type of minifund.

"General solicitation has arrived!" reads the text at the top of the Rockthepost home page, which lower down features an endorsement from Barbara Corcoran, an investor who is also a regular guest on the start-up show Shark Tank.

The relaxation of the ban, however, may not work out so well for thousands of investors who could be drawn into companies without understanding the hazards.

"It's an area that has a lot of potential for misuse and fraud," warned Daniel Carlson, a San Diego-based securities-fraud lawyer.

Securities and Exchange Commission lawyer David Blass said officials are watching the area carefully.

Under Monday's rule change, private companies can now ask for dollars from accredited investors through moves such as sending out tweets or Facebook updates, advertising on websites, or, in the case of O'Rourke, attaching stickers to products. Previously, such private companies largely would have been limited to investments from friends, family, and venture firms.

Currently, the change in law on advertising for dollars affects only accredited investors. Startups who take money under the new rules will have to go through some extra steps to verify that their investors are accredited, such as collecting tax forms and bank statements.

Eventually, more investors will be allowed to make small investments in private companies under certain circumstances, perhaps next year, lawyers say. That is the so-called crowdfunding provision of last year's Jumpstart Our Business Startups, or JOBS, Act.

FLYING CARS, ARTISANAL PICKLES

The shift allows retirees, doctors, lawyers and the like to get a piece of investments with a little more razzledazzle than they are used to-- say Terrafugia, the flying car company using Wefunder to find investors, or Rick's Picks, "artisanal pickles crafted with nuance and wit," working with CircleUp.

Both Wefunder and CircleUp are among the relatively new sites that put young companies in front of potential investors.

Of course, to entrepreneurs, the lifting of the ban on advertising serves as a tremendous boon.

"Considering that startups sometimes take months to raise seed and Series A rounds, this offers a glimpse into an option magnitudes of order faster," says author and entrepreneur Tim Ferriss. On Monday, he helped logistics startup Shyp raise $250,000 in little under an hour, coming from an AngelList syndicate in Shyp that he led himself.

Previously, "everything was hush hush," says O'Rourke, chief operating officer at Rock Your Hair, who believes it would be very difficult to raise the $2 million she is seeking under the old rules. Now, she is working through venture-capital backed site CircleUp, which specializes in helping consumer-product businesses find investors.

CircleUp, whose compensation is tied to the performance of its portfolio companies, says it admits only businesses that it believes have a real shot at success. It provides services far beyond investor matchmaking, including introducing portfolio companies to potential partners. It recently hosted officials from consumer giant Procter & Gamble to an "incubator day" featuring presentations from CircleUp companies.

Other sites provide different filters. In AngelList's "Syndicates" and "Invest Online" categories of potential investments, the company raising money must have a well-known lead investor committed on the same terms as the new investors, says AngelList co-founder Naval Ravikant.

And those investors must prove their worth as well.

"When an investor invests in an online deal, we vet them not just for accreditation but also sophistication," Ravikant says. "If they aren't very sophisticated, we're going to run them through a required education component or drop them."

CASINO MONEY

Not all the programs available to potential private-company investors are so rigorous.

Some 50 matchmaker sites exist, estimates Jonathan Sandlund, who runs crowdfunding research site TheCrowdCafe.com.

Many of the sites admit all comers. Some of the sites conduct background checks on companies and investors; some do not. Some are registered broker-dealers with the Securities & Exchange Commission; some are not. It is in this range of services where some critics see trouble, because some investors may assume all sites operate in essentially the same way.

"An investor who sees a company listed on a website, they may logically assume that it's not a scam," said Barbara Roper, director of investor protection at the Consumer Federation of America. "It gives the companies an air of legitimacy they may not deserve."

And the fact the investors are accredited does not guarantee sophistication.

"I don't think in my experience I've seen any evidence that accredited investors are any smarter than non accredited investors," said Brian Korn, a securities lawyer at Pepper Hamilton in New York.

Many, he said, don't understand well the distinction between fraud and failure, and may want to sue if their private-company investments foldรข€"which in itself is not a violation of securities law.

The matchmakers emphasize the chances that things might turn sour.

"Startups are speculative, and this is gambling," wrote Ferriss on his blog post about Shyp. "You shouldn't invest anything you're not comfortable kissing goodbye. Treat it as casino money."

Still, says Korn, unlucky investors could sue anywayรข€"and he expects them to. Even if a case is without merit, litigants still could win settlements. Whether a failing company can afford to pay them is another matter.

The upshot: lifting advertising rules is sure to be a windfall for lawyers, he and other lawyers say. Whether it is a windfall for anyone else remains to be seen.

(Edited by Jonathan Weber, Edwin Chan and Andrew Hay)

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Monday, September 23, 2013

Reuters: Small Business News: China's small firms see profit growth easing, costs rising: ministry

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China's small firms see profit growth easing, costs rising: ministry
Sep 23rd 2013, 10:51

BEIJING | Mon Sep 23, 2013 6:51am EDT

BEIJING (Reuters) - Most of China's small and medium companies have seen profit growth slowing this year as costs rise and financing remains tight, the official Xinhua news agency said on Monday, citing a survey by the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology.

Some of the firms in the survey of over 2,000 were also finding it hard to get enough workers, the report said, adding that more than half complained of rising labor, raw material and financing costs.

"As the backbone of the country's economy, such firms are in urgent need of having their tax burdens cut to alleviate their operating difficulties," Xinhua quoted Zhu Hongren, the ministry's chief engineer, as saying.

The ministry will establish a long-term mechanism to reduce small firms' burdens, though the government has already taken measures to help small companies, Zhu said.

Those measures have included scrapping some taxes, moving to set up specialist financial institutions to lend to small firms and easing restrictions on small firms issuing bonds.

Small- and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) account for 60 percent of China's gross domestic product and some 75 percent of new jobs created in the country, but they are struggling to cope with weaker global demand and tight credit.

A preliminary survey showed on Monday that China's factory sector grew at its fastest pace in six months in September, adding momentum to a tentative turnaround in the world's second-largest economy since the middle of the year.

(Reporting By Xiaoyi Shao and Jonathan Standing; Editing by Kim Coghill)

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Tuesday, September 17, 2013

Reuters: Small Business News: Ecotality, an electric car charger maker, files for bankruptcy

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Ecotality, an electric car charger maker, files for bankruptcy
Sep 17th 2013, 23:23

By Jonathan Stempel

Tue Sep 17, 2013 7:23pm EDT

(Reuters) - Ecotality Inc (ECTY.O), a maker of charging stations for electric cars that won a $99.8 million grant from the U.S. Department of Energy four years ago, has filed for bankruptcy protection and said it plans to auction its assets next month.

The San Francisco-based company is among a growing number of U.S. alternative-energy companies that have struggled or succumbed amid consumer resistance to the high cost and restricted driving range associated with electric vehicles.

Ecotality and five affiliates filed for Chapter 11 protection on Monday night with the U.S. bankruptcy court in Phoenix.

The company said eight parties have expressed interest in bidding on its assets and that it wants to hold an auction on October 9, with a closing to occur within two days.

Citing "significant liquidity constraints and the difficulty of obtaining long-term financing," Ecotality said an auction is necessary to maximize value for creditors and avoid a "fire-sale liquidation."

Ecotality makes systems for electric vehicles under the Blink and Minit Charger brands. It had warned on August 12 that a bankruptcy filing was possible, amid disappointing sales and a suspension of payments from the federal government.

Among other U.S. alternative energy companies, green car startup Coda Holdings Inc filed for bankruptcy protection in May after selling just 100 all-electric sedans.

Meanwhile, the Energy Department on Tuesday said it will in October sell a non-performing loan made to another green car startup, Fisker Automotive.

Ecotality's $99.8 million grant was awarded in August 2009 to help develop the EV Project, a network of charging stations for vehicles such as the Chevrolet Volt and Nissan Leaf in major U.S. metropolitan areas.

The company said Nissan North America Inc agreed to provide up to $1.25 million of financing to keep it operating during the bankruptcy. Court approval is required for that loan.

According to a court filing, the Energy Department is owed $6.5 million as the largest unsecured creditor of Ecotality affiliate Electric Transportation Engineering Corp.

A hearing on Ecotality's "first-day motions," including that it be allowed to pay employees and vendors, is scheduled for Thursday morning.

Shares of Ecotality closed on Tuesday down 7.2 cents, or 31.1 percent, at 15.9 cents on the Nasdaq. They closed at $1.46 on August 9, the last trading day before Ecotality warned of a possible Chapter 11 filing.

The case is In re: Ecotality Inc, U.S. Bankruptcy Court, District of Arizona, No. 13-16127.

(Reporting by Jonathan Stempel in New York; Editing by Carol Bishopric)

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Reuters: Small Business News: Entrepreneur starts his version of Harvard, tuition-free

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Entrepreneur starts his version of Harvard, tuition-free
Sep 17th 2013, 08:06

Minerva founder Ben Nelson is pictured at the Minerva Project headquarters in San Francisco in this August 2013 handout photo released to Reuters on September 16, 2013. Minerva Schools of KGI doesn't yet have accreditation, a campus or even a full faculty roster, but it is offering something even Harvard can't - four years of free tuition for its first matriculating class. The San Francisco-based Minerva Project, an ambitious effort to remake the higher education model, announced its tuition plan in hopes of attracting some of the world's most talented and academically competitive students for the class that will enroll in the fall of 2014. REUTERS/Minerva Project/Handout via Reuters

1 of 2. Minerva founder Ben Nelson is pictured at the Minerva Project headquarters in San Francisco in this August 2013 handout photo released to Reuters on September 16, 2013. Minerva Schools of KGI doesn't yet have accreditation, a campus or even a full faculty roster, but it is offering something even Harvard can't - four years of free tuition for its first matriculating class. The San Francisco-based Minerva Project, an ambitious effort to remake the higher education model, announced its tuition plan in hopes of attracting some of the world's most talented and academically competitive students for the class that will enroll in the fall of 2014.

Credit: Reuters/Minerva Project/Handout via Reuters

By Sarah McBride

SAN FRANCISCO | Tue Sep 17, 2013 4:06am EDT

SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - Minerva Schools of KGI doesn't yet have accreditation, a campus or even a full faculty roster, but it is offering something even Harvard can't - four years of free tuition for its first matriculating class.

The San Francisco-based Minerva Project, an ambitious effort to remake the higher education model, announced its tuition plan on Tuesday in hopes of attracting some of the world's most talented and academically competitive students for the class that will enroll in the fall of 2014.

Although many details of the new school are still to be ironed out, students in subsequent years will pay tuition of $10,000 a year along with about $19,000 annually for room and board - still well below the cost of many other top U.S. universities that can run upwards of $50,000 and $60,000 a year.

"Not only are we looking at students who are intellectually brilliant, we are looking for students who have a deep intellectual thought, deep integrative thought, worldliness, excitement about seeing the world, and maturity," said Minerva founder Ben Nelson, who ran photo service Snapfish until he sold it to Hewlett Packard in 2005.

"We're asking a lot of them," he said about the first class of students. "We're asking them not only to be the first students at Minerva, but to help us shape it."

That will include providing constant feedback, he said in an interview, adding the first class would have between 15 and 19 students.

To recruit them, Minerva is working with guidance counselors and high school principals around the world, Nelson said, and several thousand inquiries have come in via its website from 99 countries.

Courses at Minerva, named for the Roman goddess of wisdom, will be seminar-oriented, focusing on higher level skills such as logic, reasoning, rhetoric and empirical analysis, Nelson said.

Students who need introductory classes such as Economics 101 will be encouraged to find free online lectures.

"Anything that can be delivered in a lecture, we don't think it's particularly moral of us to charge money for," he said.

In a further departure from the traditional educational model, the school's faculty, projected to be experts in their fields from around the world, will not be offered tenure. They will hold classes with the Minerva students online.

Students will spend their first year in San Francisco and then rotate to other cities in subsequent years, although the locations have not yet been determined.

Minerva is seeking academic accreditation in association with the Keck Graduate Institute, a member of the Claremont University Consortium, according to the school's website, and Nelson said he hoped to have that in hand before the first class is enrolled.

To get off the ground, Minerva raised $25 million from Benchmark, a top Silicon Valley venture-capital firm, last year. But eventually, Minerva hopes tuition plus fees for room and board will move the for-profit institution into the black.

Larry Summers, a former Treasury Secretary and former president of Harvard University, is an adviser to Minerva; former U.S. Senator Bob Kerrey is its executive chairman.

Stephen Kosslyn, an academic who headed Stanford University's Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences and previously served as dean of social sciences at Harvard University, is in charge of recruiting faculty.

Minerva is one of several efforts to upend traditional education, largely by using the Internet. Many universities have started offering courses online, often for free. Other groups have adopted the venture-backed model, including Udacity, a service teaching courses in areas such as artificial intelligence and cryptography that was started by a trio of roboticists.

Of course, the glean of the Internet does not guarantee success. Many long-standing online colleges mimic the structure, and sometimes approach the cost, of traditional universities. But some have high dropout and low graduation rates, and employers do not always value their degrees.

(Reporting by Sarah McBride; Editing by Ken Wills)

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Thursday, September 12, 2013

Reuters: Small Business News: Insight: In Silicon Valley start-up world, pedigree counts

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Insight: In Silicon Valley start-up world, pedigree counts
Sep 12th 2013, 21:02

Christian Gheorghe, founder and chief executive of Tidemark, poses for a portrait at the company's headquarters in Redwood City, California in this file photo taken July 23, 2013. REUTERS/Stephen Lam/Files

Christian Gheorghe, founder and chief executive of Tidemark, poses for a portrait at the company's headquarters in Redwood City, California in this file photo taken July 23, 2013.

Credit: Reuters/Stephen Lam/Files

By Sarah McBride

SAN FRANCISCO | Thu Sep 12, 2013 5:02pm EDT

SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - When asked to name the most notable rags-to-riches entrepreneur that his firm has funded, venture capitalist Ben Horowitz doesn't hesitate: Christian Gheorghe, a Romanian immigrant who came to the United States without speaking English, and rose from limo driver to founder of a business-analytics company, Tidemark.

It's an impressive tale that encapsulates the way Silicon Valley likes to think of itself: a pure meritocracy; a place where talent rises to the top regardless of social class, educational pedigree, race, nationality or anything else.

Indeed, the notion that anyone with smarts, drive and a great idea can raise money and start a company is a central tenet of the Valley's ethos.

Yet on close inspection, the evidence suggests that the keys to success in the start-up world are not much different than those of many other elite professions. A prestigious degree, a proven track record and personal connections to power-brokers are at least as important as a great idea. Scrappy unknowns with a suitcase and a dream are the exceptions, not the rule.

A Reuters analysis of the 88 Silicon Valley companies that received "Series A" funding from one of the five top Valley venture firms in 2011, 2012, or the first half of 2013 shows that 70 were founded by people who hailed from what could be described as the traditional Silicon Valley cohort.

That means the founders had held a senior position at a big technology firm, worked at a well-connected smaller one, started a successful company already, or attended one of just three universities - Stanford, Harvard and Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

The analysis, which looked only at Northern California companies funded by Accel Partners, Andreessen Horowitz, Benchmark Capital, Greylock Partners and Sequoia Capital, generally supports academic research showing that tech entrepreneurs are substantially wealthier and better educated than the population at large.

It also echoes the perception of even successful entrepreneurs who come from outside the preferred cohort.

Michal Wroczynski, founder of Fido Labs, believes coming from Poland cost him many extra months when he was fundraising in late 2012 and early this year.

"It would be great value to be from one of the big universities with a big strong network," he says.

There are, of course, plenty of stories of outsiders who climb to the top in Silicon Valley. Oracle Corp co-founder Larry Ellison grew up in middle-class surroundings in Chicago, and started Oracle with $2,000, mostly his savings. Apple co-founder Steve Jobs grew up in Silicon Valley, but came from a working-class background.

In recent years, a new wave of start-up incubators - led by Y Combinator - have given entrepreneurs from varied backgrounds a helping hand, including advice, introductions and seed money. The incubators seem to find a broad range of founders.

"We connect a lot of previously unconnected startups," said Y Combinator co-founder Paul Graham. "But a lot of the startups we fund are from Silicon Valley and are already well connected."

Of course, well-connected people often merit every penny of their funding รข€" after all, even connected people typically also need smarts and drive to get a prestigious degree or land a good job at a respected company.

But venture capitalists emphatically reject the notion that connections count in the start-up economy, and dispute Reuters' methodology in categorizing their investments.

"I don't really think that a kid coming out of Harvard or MIT is actually well connected," Horowitz said by email, citing examples such as Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg. Though he attended Harvard, Zuckerberg was unconnected until entrepreneur Sean Parker sought him out and made Silicon Valley introductions for him, Horowitz said.

Attending a top school, or performing well at a hyper-competitive company such as Google, can serve as a marker that the person can compete globally, Horowitz said, but it isn't necessary to succeed. Venture investors are backing people as much as ideas, he added, and thus have no choice but to insist that the entrepreneur have a certain level of qualification or reputation.

"When Andreessen came out of the University of Illinois, he didn't know anybody, but people knew his work," Horowitz said, referring to partner Marc Andreessen, who co-founded Internet pioneer Netscape Communications.

"Silicon Valley has this way of finding greatness and supporting it," says Greylock's Joseph Ansanelli. "It values meritocracy more than any place else."

Still, unknowns from modest backgrounds, like Andreessen and Jobs, are relatively rare among today's Valley start-ups. Much more typical are entrepreneurs such as Instagram co-founder Kevin Systrom, who followed a well-trod path from Stanford to Google to start-up glory.

Ross Levine, a professor at the Haas School of Business at the University of California, Berkeley, said entrepreneurs are more likely than salaried workers to come from high-earning, well-educated families.

As children, entrepreneurs lived in households where the average income in 1979 was $88,711, compared with $67,548 for the population as a whole, according to Levine's study of the National Longitudinal Survey of Youth.

"Who's going to be an entrepreneur?" he asks. "It's going to be a rich person, to a much higher degree."

Venture capitalists often say they look for companies via people they know; Sequoia partner Mike Moritz described that process in July when talking about the firm's investment in grocery-delivery company Instacart.

"Like a lot of the investments that have come our way, a friend of a friend talked to us about it, and told us about it, and encouraged the founder and the CEO to come and chat with us," he said. "One thing led to another."

Those who successfully break into Silicon Valley say networking their way to that one introduction is critical.

Suhail Doshi, co-founder of analytics company Mixpanel, shows how it can be done. While a student at Arizona State University, he engaged an engineer at the start-up company Slide in a series of conversations on Internet Relay Chat, a message service favored by serious techies.

He parlayed that into an internship at Slide, which is run by angel investor and PayPal co-founder Max Levchin. After a stint at Y Combinator, he was able to raise over $10 million from top-tier VCs. The relationship with Levchin, who also invested, was crucial.

"He's a super awesome mentor to me," says Doshi. "He's been instrumental in every fundraising round."

Levchin himself broke into Silicon Valley as a recent graduate of the University of Illinois in large part due to an encounter with entrepreneur and investor Peter Thiel. They went on to found PayPal.

"The founders, they just figure it out," says Greylock's Ansanelli about unconnected entrepreneurs. "They hustle, they network."

Yet not everyone has to hustle in quite the same way. Brit Morin raised $1.25 million for her craft-oriented Web site, Brit & Co., months after its 2011 launch, and another $6.3 million earlier this year.

Investors included Founders Fund, which was co-founded by Thiel, an early backer of Facebook, where Brit Morin's husband Dave was an early employee. He later launched the social-networking site Path.

When asked whether her connections got her the cash, Morin said: "I don't think any VC is going to invest in a company that doesn't have a clear business strategy."

The case of Gheorge, the Romanian immigrant, is also instructive. He immigrated to the United States in 1989. By the time Horowitz met him, he had built a database-marketing firm and a predictive-analytics firm, both later acquired; worked as chief technology officer at software company SAP; and served as an entrepreneur in residence at white-shoe venture firm Greylock.

In other words, he was very much a known quantity.

The son of a Bucharest lathe operator, Gheorge believes his first big break came from far outside Silicon Valley. While working as a limousine driver in New York in 1991, he told a client, Andrew Saxe, that he liked to code.

Saxe, who ran a marketing company, invited Gheorghe to come for a formal interview and hired him. Eventually, the two built software-marketing business Saxe Inc. Saxe died in 1999.

"The first venture investment was Andrew investing in me," he said, adding he is not sure that would have happened so quickly in the Bay Area.

"I feel this expectation, that you have a certain background," he said about Silicon Valley. It's an expectation he did not feel in New York.

(Reporting By Sarah McBride; Editing by Jonathan Weber, Frank McGurty and Leslie Gevirtz)

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