Egnyte’s Vineet Jain Interview

Posted by Tom Blue on July 28, 2009 under Companies, Funding, Profiles | Be the First to Comment

VineetWe just did an “eInterview” with Vineet Jain who is the CEO of Egnyte. Egnyte provides on-demand file servers for small businesses.  They just received $6M in funding from Polaris/Maples yesterday…

What does Egnyte do?

Egnyte provides an On-Demand File Server for small and mid-sized businesses to store all corporate data, securely share files within and outside the company and backup employee computers in the cloud.

In March 2009, the company unveiled a complementary solution to its existing On-Demand File Server – Egnyte “Local Cloud”. Egnyte’s Local Cloud blends a hosted online solution with an on-premise solution, providing the benefits of unlimited storage, secure access anywhere, easy file collaboration, built in disaster recovery, fast access, off-line access and the ability to run client server applications locally.

Who are your competitors?

Within larger businesses we see Microsoft Sharepoint, some smaller consumer solutions such as Mozy address small components of our solutions such as backup.

What makes you different than them?

Egnyte allows small and mid-sized businesses to store all of their coproate data, securely share files within and outside the company and automatically backup employee computers. We are unique in that we allow businesses to move to cloud computing and replace their file servers but also have maximum flexibility and control through what we’ve termed the “local cloud.” Businesses can hold their data locally on off the shelf hardware or on their computer hard drive. This mitigates concerns some companies have over storing their data in the cloud on the internet. We also have mobile capabilities with the iPhone devices and have a strong following within the Mac community.

What are your biggest challenges as CEO?

Even though cloud based services are being accepted and adopted by businesses, there is still a high percentage of businesses that are uncomfortable with having their data in someone else’s servers. Based on a recent survey where we profiled our customer base, 99% of small business respondents validated that Internet outages can be detrimental to business. In fact, the survey showed that if the Internet was down for only one hour, over half (51%) would be moderately impacted and nearly a quarter of respondents (20%) severely impacted. Given the variety of bandwidth connections and lack of internet access in different scenarios, the challenge is to address THIS issue successfully for a group (and not just one individual).

From the operation perspective, a hosted solution like Egnyte successfully transforms the customer’s cap-ex problem into a simpler monthly op-ex charge. However, it is critical for the provider (Egnyte) not to inherit the cap-ex burden. This is addressed by a smart combination of right architecture and right hardware, which is a non-trivial problem.

Which marketing tactic/strategy has produced the most leads/revenue for your company?

Egnyte, right from its founding, was aware of limitations of pure cloud based solutions which can be germane for certain businesses. Local copy of data, team off-line access, latency challenges editing large files (25MB size) online are some of the limitations that a pure cloud based service can not address adequately. The Egnyte Local Cloud, released in March 2009 has been key to our strategy for larger class of customers. All sales data so far indicates that this has been a very successful product.

How long have you been in business?

Founded in 2006 and launched in 2008

How many employees do you have?

15

What are your revenue estimates for 2009? Is that an increase from 2008?

Growth is project to be 15% month over month—also average number of seats per customer is on the rise. We are optimistic that our growth will remain strong as our solution becomes mainstream for small businesses.

Bootstrappers are the Real Entrepreneurs

Posted by Tom Blue on June 15, 2009 under Companies, Funding, Investing | Be the First to Comment

I have gone to a lot of conferences and seminars over the years that were focused on startups, business plans, venture capital, etc. Not only that, but I graduated from USC with a degree in Entrepreneurship. Every single day we would have an entrepreneur or a venture capitalist present to the class.

Many times these speakers talked about how an entrepreneur is a unique breed, self reliant risk taker that goes through an enormous struggle when starting a company. This message almost always seemed to come from a VC and/or a so called chronic entrepreneur that received venture funding. I find this sort of ironic considering I believe the real entrepreneurs are the bootstrappers.

An entrepreneur is someone that assumes the risk of a company and owns all aspects of a business. First of all, almost all founders of vc funded companies get a 6 figure salary. You call yourself a risk taker? When I started my company I had nothing. If I didn’t make a profit that month I was seriously hurting. In my late twenties I was couch surfing to save money and when I did have enough for an apartment it was a literally a box with no kitchen. My car got repossessed! I am not trying to say my life has been tough(it hasn’t), but I am bit tired of the violin playing CEO of a company that got $5M in funding…

Second, once you get financing you are not in control of a company regardless of what you might think. Bootstrappers completely control their destiny… Even if you try to blame your failure on an employee you have to look at yourself. You are the one that hired them. If you fail it is because of you. You make the final decisions.

No offense to anyone that has received venture capital… I am sure I will raise money for other ventures in the future. I am just asking if we could make the struggle a little less sensational…

B2B Options Administrator SaaS provider OptionEase gets Funding

Posted by Tom Blue on May 15, 2009 under Companies, Funding, Investing, Uncategorized | Be the First to Comment

optionease_web_02

OptionEase received Series A venture financing from GADS Option Fund this week.  OptionEase provides equity and stock option administration online.  The site is built for public companies as well as private.  They have more than 310 clients and were founded in 2006.  The two co-founders were a previous CFO and a Managing Director of an Enterprise Software Company.

Search your browser history with infoaxe.

Posted by Tom Blue on November 17, 2008 under Companies, Funding, Technology | Be the First to Comment

Techcrunch wrote a post about infoaxe today. They have a plugin that tracks all of the sites you have been to and then allows you to search those pages like a normal search engine at a later date. I think this is a great idea because I constantly am digging through my history searching for a page I went to before. Sometimes I am able to find it, but many times I am not. In addition, the reason why it has so much more value than a normal bookmarking service is that you deep search it more. I don’t have time to bookmark every single site I go to, but I might remember some text that I want to search for later. I am looking forward to infoaxe’s success so that they will later build a Google Chrome plugin…

Flipswap (Great idea) gets funding!

Posted by Tom Blue on November 12, 2008 under Companies, Funding, Technology | Be the First to Comment

I noticed on TechCrunch that Flipswap just got $14M in funding. The company’s model stood out for me because I just saw a special on 60 Minutes on electronic waste coined “eWaste.” Apparently 100 million cell phones are thrown out every year. The problem is that our electronics like cellphones, laptops, and monitors are shipped to other countries to be decomposed and melted down and the regulations in these countries can be extremely poor. Meaning when these products are broken down they are just releasing this pollution in the sky and many of the workers can get sick from this process.

It looks like Flipswap can not only help the environment but also help your pocketbook.