BSI Innovation blogs about Innovation, Money, Venture Capital, Grants, Exports and Research and Development (R&D)
Alliance Partners
Thursday, December 29, 2016
Innovation in Australia: Welcome to 2030 - I own nothing, have no privacy a...
Wednesday, December 21, 2016
Atlassian to open office in Sydney CBD!
Atlassian plans to open a new 400-person office in Sydney’s CBD – just a few metres down from its existing headquarters.
The company has a second smaller office currently in Clarence Street which will close in the new year, and selected staff from there and the main building will move to the new 5000-square-metre site at 363 George Street when it opens in February or March.
The 30-storey building is part of a precinct that also includes 345 George Street and 24 York Street that is about to undergo a major redevelopment, which will now be known as George Place.
The office will be state-of-the-art, with every meeting room fully decked out with video communications, ample quiet space and will defy the current trend towards hot-desking.
“We’re trying to hand control of space back to the end user, which is the opposite to what facility managers do [currently],” Atlassian’s global head of real estate, Brent Harman, told Business Insider.
“The workspace is like a workshop where tradesmen and tradeswomen ply their trade and it should be their space to configure how they see fit.”
Atlassian now has almost 2,000 employees globally in San Francisco, Austin, Manila, Amsterdam and Sydney, where around half of them are based. The headcount has grown considerably in twelve months — it was at 1,200 employees last December at the time of its IPO.
Harman said that most professions — other than technology — have a precinct in Sydney and tech’s lack of such a physical presence is a problem for an industry facing skills shortages.
Saturday, December 17, 2016
2016 Aussie Businessmen of the Year
Monday, December 12, 2016
GO1 raises $4m from Australian VC
GO1 co-founders Chris Eigeland, Andrew Barnes and Vu Tran.- Tertius Pickard
GO1 , Queensland Tech Startup raises $4m from Australian VCS at a $15m valuation
GO1 is designed to make it easier for businesses to find and book appropriate training courses in a diverse range of fields, varying from first aid to anti-money laundering and management.
It has pulled together over 100,000 courses from training providers ranging from St John Ambulance to Richard Branson.
Investors include Queensland government's Business Development Fund , Black Sheep Capital, Full Circle Venture Capital, Amasia and Wotif chief financial officer Sam Friend,
Tbe moneys raised will help build offices in the US and Europe by taking on an additional 30 sales people.
The business was founded three years ago and accepted into Y Combinator, which has also backed businesses like Dropbox and Airbnb, in 2015.
It was one of about 100 companies accepted into the program, representing the top 1-2 per cent of applicants.
Other Australian start-ups to have gone through the accelerator include AirPair and failed business 99dresses.
GO1 joins a growing list of marketplace businesses to receive venture capital funding in Australia. In October carer's marketplace Better Caring raised $3 million from Ellerston Ventures, and earlier this year job outsourcing marketplace Airtasker banked $22 million from Seven West Media and online car parts marketplace SparesBox raised $3.5 million.
"GO1 is poised to grow rapidly all over the world into a leading provider of learning and management platforms,"
Sunday, December 04, 2016
8 Steps to. Crowdfunding
Decide on either a rewards-based campaign where in exchange for donations you provide gifts, or equity-based where people become shareholders in your business.
Rewards Crowdfunding
Kickstarter and Indiegogo come first to mind, but specialty platforms on specific types of projects may be preferable. All platforms are structured differently. Kickstarter is an “all-or-none” fundraiser so if you don’t raise 100% of your funding goal, you get zip. With Indiegogo, if you choose to pay up to 9% of funds raised, you keep all funds pledged.
Equity Crowdfunding
Crowdfunder or Circle Up is where people become shareholders in your company.
Circle Up takes 7 – 10 percent of funds raised. Crowdfunder has a relatively low monthly fee.
The second step is to capture attention…