Archive for August, 2009

Where Have You Gone Bell Labs?

August 29, 2009

Management consultant Adrian Slywotzky wrote an incredible think piece and call to action in this week’s BusinessWeek. This is a must-read story about the future of America.

I couldn’t agree more with his conclusion that America needs another Manhattan Project or DARPA to inspire and stimulate the next blockbuster industry or two that will keep our nation prosperous and secure.

President Obama clearly appreciates the importance of science. Now he needs to take things to another level and launch the equivalent of our generation’s space race. And this story provides a blueprint to do that.

Where Have You Gone, Bell Labs?
How basic research can repair the broken U.S. business model

By Adrian Slywotzky
Name an industry that can produce 1 million new, high-paying jobs over the next three years. You can’t, because there isn’t one. And that’s the problem.

America needs good jobs, soon. We need 6.7 million just to replace losses from the current recession, then another 10 million to spark demand over the next decade. That’s 15 million to 17 million new jobs. In the 1990s, the U.S. economy created a net 22 million jobs (a rate of 2.2 million per year), so we know it can be done. Between 2000 and the end of 2007 (the beginning of the current recession), however, the economy created new jobs at a rate of 900,000 a year, so we know it isn’t doing it now. The pipeline is dry because the U.S. business model is broken. Our growth engine has run out of a key source of fuel—critical mass, basic scientific research.

The U.S. scientific innovation infrastructure has historically consisted of a loose public-private partnership that included legendary institutions such as Bell Labs, RCA Labs, Xerox PARC XRX, the research operations of IBM IBM, DARPA, NASA, and others. In each of these organizations, programs with clear commercial potential were supported alongside efforts at “pure” research, with the two streams often feeding one another. With abundant corporate and venture-capital funding for eventual commercialization, these research labs have made enormous contributions to science, technology, and the economy, including the creation of millions of high-paying jobs. Consider a few of the crown jewels from Bell Labs alone:
• The first public demonstration of fax transmission (1925)
• First long-distance TV transmission (1927)
• Invention of the transistor (1947)
• Invention of photovoltaic cell (1954)
• Creation of the UNIX operating system (1969)
• Technology for cellular telephony (1978)

DECLINE IN LAB FUNDING
In the decades after these initial discoveries, vibrant industries and companies were born. The transistor alone is the building block for the modern computer and consumer-electronics industries. Likewise, DARPA’s creation of the Internet (as ARPAnet) in 1969 and Xerox PARC’s development of the Ethernet and the graphic user interface (GUI) further developed the transformative computer and Internet industries. The basic research breakthroughs unleashed subsequent cycles of applied innovation that created entirely new sectors of our economy.

But since the 1990s, labs dedicated to pure research—to the pursuit of scientific discovery—have seen funding slowly decline and their mission shift from open-ended problem solving to short-term commercial targets, from pure discovery to applied research. Bell Labs had 30,000 employees as recently as 2001; today (owned by Alcatel-Lucent ALU) it has 1,000. That’s symbolic and symptomatic of the broken link in the U.S. business model. With upstream invention and discovery drying up, downstream, industry-creating innovation is being reduced to a trickle.

Click here to read the rest of the story.

Summer Bummer: U.S. DealMaking Hits 15-year Low–IPOs Back from the Dead

August 28, 2009

The latest August 2009 deal figures are out by Thomson Reuters and they ain’t pretty.

U.S. monthly M&A activity has hit a 15-year low, with just $13bn in deals for the month. Bankers who hit the Hamptons this month didn’t miss much.

Good news is that debt and IPO markets are strengthening.

High-yield issues, meanwhile, have been met with continued investor appetite, with global high-yield bond volume seeing a 5-year weekly high of $8.9bn the week of August 9. Financial issuers are also returning to the debt markets without government guarantees, accounting for 50% of all new issues in August. Meanwhile, the robust IPO market has seen five consecutive months of multi-billion dollar offerings on global exchanges, including Everbright Securities in China and and National Hydro Electric Power in India.

Click here for the full release on M&A with pretty charts and graphs.

Doriot Quote of the Day

August 27, 2009

“A real courageous man is a man who does something courageous when no one is watching him.”

Facebook Reaps Recruits at High Levels

August 24, 2009

Facebook Reaps Recruits at High Levels
Boosting hiring amid a job slump, Facebook snares Yahoo!’s security chief, an open-source guru from Six Apart, and talent from Genentech and Google

By Spencer E. Ante

So much for cutting back during the downturn.

As Facebook ramps up hiring from about 1,000 employees today to as many as 1,200 by the end of the year, the social networking giant is recruiting technical and business leaders from some of the best-known firms in Silicon Valley to help accelerate its financial performance.

Among the new hires at Facebook are Arturo Bejar, who will soon join as a director of engineering from Yahoo! (YHOO), and David Recordon, an open-source software expert from blogging software maker Six Apart, BusinessWeek.com has learned.

Bejar led Yahoo’s security team, and Recordon was one of the developers of the OpenID authentication software, according to Facebook. Other new hires include former Genentech (DNA) chief financial officer David Ebersman, now doing the same job at Facebook, and Greg Badros, a senior engineer from Google (GOOG) and now an engineering director at Facebook.

Read the rest of my BusinessWeek story here.

Doriot Quotes of the Day

August 21, 2009

Since I skipped a blog post or two this week I am serving up TWO choice Doriotisms:

“A creative man merely has ideas; a resourceful man makes them practical.”

“If any information is to be exchanged over whiskey, let us get it rather than give it.”

IBM Bets on Brazilian Innovation

August 19, 2009

IBM Bets on Brazilian Innovation
Big Blue’s new initiative to stimulate development of Brazil’s nascent tech industry is the latest sign of the country’s rising power

By Spencer E. Ante

Over the last few years, China and India have emerged as the twin hot spots of emerging tech innovation. Now IBM (IBM) is betting that one of the next big technology stars will be Brazil.

In the latest sign of Brazil’s rising power, Big Blue is announcing on Aug. 18 a new initiative to stimulate the development of the country’s technology sector. To kick off the effort, IBM is hosting its first-ever forum for venture capitalists and entrepreneurs in São Paulo along with FINEP, the Brazilian government agency that finances technology development. The daylong event will bring together more than 100 investors and dozens of new companies looking for investment and business advice.

IBM is also launching a Portuguese version of its developerWorks Web site, which provides free programs and online teaching guides that help programmers build skills in the Java programming language, the Linux operating system, and IBM products such as Lotus. To host the event, IBM has dispatched Claudia Fan Munce, managing director of IBM Venture Capital Group, and Steve Mills, senior vice-president and group executive of IBM’s $20 billion Software Group, a clear sign of the growing importance of Brazil to the IBM portfolio.

“We have been watching Brazil for a while,” says Munce, who grew up in Brazil. “The time is right.”

Check out the rest of my BusinessWeek story here.

Doriot Quote of the Day

August 17, 2009

Over the next week or so, I am reviving a great idea that venture capitalist Fred Wilson came up with last year: The Doriot Quote of the Day.

One of the fun and surprising things I discovered while researching my book is that Georges Doriot had a knack for coming up with pithy, humorous and Nietzschian aphorisms.

Here’s one of my favorites:

“You will get nowhere if you do not inspire people.”

Station Break Is Over, Back from Vacation

August 15, 2009

Apologies for the radio silence over the last week (as you can see from my irregular and food-inspired Twitter posts). I’ve been on a much-needed vacation, recharging my batteries.

But I am back now and will return to our regularly scheduled programming.

Non-Manic Monday: Creative Capital Featured in WSJ Column

August 10, 2009

L. Gordon Crovitz, former publisher of the Wall Street Journal, featured my book Creative Capital in his “Information Age” column in today’s Wall Street Journal (p. A9)-calling it a “fascinating biography.”

It’s gratifying when your work gets recognized in such a respected publication. And it’s even more rewarding when readers and reviewers understand some of the big ideas that you were trying to get across in the book.

On that measure, Crovitz, totally got it. Crovitz focused his column on the government’s effort to more tightly regulate venture capital. The U.S. Treasury wants VC firms declared as systemic risks and put under tight restrictions as part of the broader re-regulation of financial firms, notes Crovitz.

In his column, Crovitz wrote that the history of American Research & Development, the venture capital firm that I profiled in the book, “is a reminder that our regulatory system, by its nature focused on avoiding risk, has a hard time dealing with investment firms whose mission is to take risks.”

To bolster his argument, he summarizes ARD’s history of run-ins with federal regulators, and quotes some of my favorite parts of the witty and wise personal memos of Georges Doriot, the visionary Harvard Business School professor who pioneered the venture capital industry as president of ARD in the 25 years after World War II.

The dangers of over-regulation is one of the primary discoveries and lessons of my research. Thanks to Crovitz for bringing that point to the attention of a much wider public.

My Interview with Blog Talk Radio

August 7, 2009

Yesterday, Bill Brazell from Blog Talk Radio interviewed me about my book and the history and future of venture capital. Blog Talk Radio is a new Web service that broadcasts live radio programming. They are interviewing a lot of bigwigs in entertainment, politics, media, publishing, music and other industries. Martin Bregman, Gloria Borger and Seth Green were interviewed just this week.

Check out the interview here.

Listen to The Wit Network on Blog Talk Radio


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