Page 120 of 351

car2go Offering Mercedes-Benz Vehicles in Austin

New car2go Mercedes CLA, courtesy photo

car2go, the largest flexible one-way carsharing service in North America, announced this week plans to offer Mercedes-Benz vehicles in Austin and other cities.

The company, which is a wholly-owned subsidiary of Daimler North America Corp, the parent company of Mercedes-Benz, announced that the majority of its 5,500 car fleet in North America will be comprised of Mercedes-Benz vehicles by the end of the year. The new fleet consists of car2go’s 2017 Mercedes-Benz CLA, a 4-door coupe and car2go’s 2017 Mercedes-Benz GLA, a sporty 5-door small SUV with added cargo capacity.

“At Mercedes-Benz we see the four key pillars for future mobility as connectivity, autonomous driving, carsharing, and electrification,” Dieter Zetsche, CEO of Daimler AG and Head of Mercedes-Benz Cars, said in a news release. “Today we take another step toward that future by adding the new Mercedes-Benz CLA and GLA to car2go’s North American fleet. car2go is already the most popular carsharing service in the world. Now it will be even more attractive to small groups of friends and families who want to conveniently travel around cities in style, safety, and comfort.”

car2go, which began with a pilot in Ulm, Germany in 2008, has since become the largest one-way carsharing company in the world with more than 2.2 million members sharing cars on three continents. In 2016, the company saw a 43 percent increase in members.

In addition to Austin, car2go members in Portland, Oregon, Seattle, and the Washington, D.C. area are the first to get the new Mercedes-Benze car2gos. Members in Toronto and Vancouver will get them in February.

YouEarnedIt Gets $6.5 Million in Funding

YouEarnedIt Tuesday announced it has received $6.5 million in funding.

The Austin-based startup plans to use the funds to further product development on its software as a service human resources rewards platform, sales and marketing. Silverton Partners, based in Austin, and IDG Partners, based in San Francisco, led the Series A round. Existing investors include WPP, Social Starts, the Motley Fool and Capital Factory.

“The business of getting work done has changed dramatically, and the need to meet these new models in a way that drives meaningful results is more important than ever,” Alexander Rosen, managing director of IDG Ventures USA. “We have a huge network of enterprise buyers of software, and unique method for employee engagement that the YouEarnedIt platform offers resonated with us. Plus, we are super excited about this management team and its vision to improve work and its outcomes.”

YouEarnedIt, which launched in 2013, has more than 100,000 users on its platform, which provides rewards to employees who meet criteria set by their employers. Its customers include Turner Construction, Anheuser-Busch, NBC Universal, Santander, Conde Nast, J. Walter Thompson and others.

“YouEarnedIt took a strong stance in its commitment to solving the real problem for employee engagement and performance and asked, “What does the employee need, and how is this different than what is being offered through the traditional HR tools that exist today?” By focusing on the employee, YouEarnedIt can deliver better results for businesses and stay committed to driving real change for the employee,” Mike Dodd, partner at Silverton Partners, said in a news release.

Previously, YouEarnedIt raised $1.5 million in seed stage funding in 2014.

“Our primary product focus in 2017 is to enhance the feedback mechanism and increase the level of actionable insights for our users and customers so they can continue to improve their impact and performance individually and across their teams,” Autumn Manning, CEO of YouEarnedIt, said in a news release.

SpareFoot Wins the Sixth Annual Startup Games

SpareFoot Wins the 2017 Austin Startup Games, Photographs by Clayton Sharp.

SpareFoot won the 2017 Austin Startup Games last Saturday afternoon at Fair Market on Austin’s East side.

SpareFoot received gold medals in MarioKart, foosball, shuffle board, pop-a-shot, and flip cup. It received bronze medals in Ping Pong and Trivia. The company won by 11 points overall.

SpareFoot is a veteran of the startup games and has previously won the games three times since 2012. It won a $20,000 donation for Kure It, a charity that focuses on curing kidney cancer. Second prize went to Outbound Engine, who will donate $10,000 to the SAFE Alliance, and Modernize took third place to win a $6,500 donation for GirlStart.

“Startup Games offers a chance for homegrown Austin businesses to give back to the community in a way that is truly authentic to startup culture,” Startup Games Executive Director Sara Reeves said in a news release.

More than 1,200 people attended the event, which featured 16 teams. Each team received $1,500 to donate to the charity of their choice.

The teams competed for gold, silver and bronze medals in a variety of games including ping pong, foosball, beer pong, flip cup, trivia, MarioKart, Pop-A-Shot, darts, shuffleboard, giant Connect 4, and a mystery event.

Last year, uShip won the games. This year the games featured newcomers AffiniPay, Academic Works, Aceable, and ShippingEasy.

The competitors included:

Academic Works – Nonprofit: SafePlace
Aceable – Nonprofit: Breakthrough Austin
AffiniPay – Nonprofit: Volunteer Legal Services of Central Texas
Boundless – Nonprofit: Meals on Wheels
Capital Factory – Nonprofit: RideAustin
Headspring – Nonprofit: DO IT FOR THE LOVE FOUNDATION
LawnStarter – Nonprofit: The National Alliance on Mental Illness
Modernize – Nonprofit: GirlStart
OneSpot – Nonprofit: Without Regrets
OutboundEngine – Nonprofit: SAFE Alliance
OwnLocal – Nonprofit: Austin Bat Cave
ShippingEasy – Nonprofit: Caritas of Austin
SpareFoot – Nonprofit: Kure It
theCHIVE – Nonprofit: CHIVE Charities
Trendkite – Nonprofit: JDRF
uShip – Nonprofit: Communities in Schools

Capital Factory, a Google for Entrepreneurs Partner, Continues to Expand in Austin

Capital Factory has come a long way since it launched its collaborative coworking space on the 16th floor of the Austin Centre downtown in May of 2012.

The technology accelerator, which bills itself as Austin’s center of gravity for entrepreneurs, has grown to become one of the largest tech entrepreneurial hubs in the country.

This year, Capital Factory expanded to the first floor, added a virtual reality lab on the fifth floor and continues to occupy the 16th floor. It is also focusing on expanding its portfolio of accelerator companies in the health and military areas this year, according to a blog post.

And in 2014, Google named Capital Factory as an official Google Tech Hub.

Just last week, Google for Entrepreneurs Partner Network released an impact report for Capital Factory. “In Austin, Capital Factory benefits from GFE’s high-quality programming and financial resources to help grow faster,” according to the report.

Some interesting stats from the 2016 report:

*Jobs created by the startups that Capital Factory supports: 120
*Number of startups who have raised funding: 49
*Funding raised: $30.5 million
*Number of events hosted: 837+

RealCo, a Startup Accelerator, Plans to Launch at Geekdom in San Antonio

RealCo, a startup accelerator, plans to launch in San Antonio at Geekdom next month.

The new program is aimed at business to business startups. The 15-month long program focuses on providing networking, capital, mentors and other resources to early stage startups. The program expects to have up to ten startups with rolling admissions on a quarterly cycle. It is currently accepting applications.

Startups in the program have the ability to receive up to $125,000 in funding, co-working space at Geekdom, access to investors, mentorship and other training.

Michael Girdley, co-founder of Codeup and co-founder of Geekdom Fund, is heading up the RealCo team along with Teresa Evans, co-founder of San Antonio Science and associate director of the San Antonio Angel Network and Chris Saum, co-founder and director of business development of MUD Geochemical.

“RealCo will work immediately to support entrepreneurs and collaborate with community leaders,” Saum said in a news release. “We’re looking for early stage Internet- and tech-related seed startups with high growth business models, large target markets, and business-to-business direct sales models.”

The accelerator is also seeking business or community leaders interested in mentoring in the program. The accelerator is set to launch with a party on February 20, at the Geekdom Event Centre.

Talking Australia and Texas Technology Collaboration on Australia Day

Nicola Watkinson, head of Austrade North America, Graham Weston, cofounder of Rackspace, Bob Metcalfe, inventor of Ethernet and Professor of Innovation at UT Austin and Steve Goldsmith, general manager of HipChat software for Atlassian in Austin.

By LAURA LOREK
Reporter with Silicon Hills News

Steven Ciobo, the minister for trade, tourism and investment for Australia, spent Australia Day, the day Australians celebrate the founding of its nation, in Austin promoting trade with Texas.

“There is a strong focus in continuing to diversify the Texas economy and therein lays the opportunity as I see it,” Ciobo said.

Australia and Austin have strong ties in the technology industry, Ciobo said. Australia needs to continue to look at opportunities for collaboration with Austin and Texas, he said. In Australia, the country has a strong agenda around innovation, he said. Capital, labor and commerce are global today and countries must be able to engage with one another to build successful modern businesses, Ciobo said.

Steven Ciobo, Australian Minister for Trade, Tourism and Investment

Ciobo spoke at a G’Day USA hosted luncheon Thursday afternoon at the South Congress Hotel. The event featured a panel of technology leaders including Graham Weston, co-founder of Rackspace, Bob Metcalfe, inventor of Ethernet and Professor of Innovation at the University of Texas at Austin and Steve Goldsmith, general manager of HipChat software development at Atlassian in Austin.

About a year ago, the Australian government opened an Australia Consulate-General office in Houston. The office also plans to host several events around South by Southwest.

On Wednesday night, the Australian government met with Gov. Greg Abbott for a barbecue at the Governor’s Mansion to honor “Australia Day.” The Australian Counsel-General to Texas Alastair Walton also attended the event and the luncheon.

At the luncheon, Nicola Watkinson, head of Austrade North America, the Australian government trade commission, moderated the panel discussion. She asked Goldsmith about his experience with growing Atlassian’s business in Austin.

Texans and Australians turn out to be quite similar on how they approach things, but it takes a little while to figure that out, said Goldsmith. The company’s customer support, marketing and sales is based in the U.S. and the company’s research and development operations used to be exclusively based in Sydney, but in the last few years it has become more globally distributed, he said.

Rackspace, with 4,000 employees in San Antonio and 600 employees in Austin, opened an office in Australia a few years ago, said Weston. The company has 6,000 employees altogether and $2 billion in revenue and it just recently went private, Weston said. The company also has an office in London with 1,200 employees.

If a company is thinking about expanding to another country, the U.K. is an easy one but Australia should be on very high on the list, Weston said.

“The culture between Texas and Australia is very similar,” he said. “Among the countries in the world to expand to it is certainly one of the easiest to do. And I wish we had done it years and years earlier.”

Rackspace had a very significant customer base in Australia long before the company arrived there, Weston said.

The panelists also talked about the San Antonio and Austin region and how it is developing as a powerhouse technology region in the country.

“I think of Austin as being the hotbed of innovation,” Graham said. “And I think of San Antonio as being the hotbed of execution.”

There are a handful of Austin companies that have opened offices in San Antonio when they look to scale their operations, Weston said.

Metcalfe said it’s good that all the big cities in Texas want to be innovation hubs. Creating an ecosystem for startups is a mystery and no one really knows how to do it but a research university is at the core of tech ecosystems, Metcalfe said. He not only jokes that San Antonio is a suburb of Austin, but he also jokes that Dallas-Fort Worth and Houston are suburbs.

“One element is getting critical mass,” Metcalfe said. Companies like IBM, Apple, Intel, AMD, Dell and others create a technology culture and critical mass in Austin that feeds the startup ecosystem, he said.

San Antonio is building its tech startup ecosystem through Geekdom, Metcalfe said.

Weston, who co-founded Geekdom, said the purpose of the technology focused co-working space and technology incubator, is to help spawn the next big technology company in San Antonio.

“I think it’s very important that every city create fertile soil for new companies to grow in,” Weston said.

A successful tech startup ecosystem has a research university with professors and students starting ventures, venture capital, entrepreneurs, strategic partners, early adopting customers and a vibrant tech media, Metcalfe said.

Watkinson with Austrade asked the panelists if there was an opportunity to create an even larger global virtual technology ecosystem using technology tools.
Weston said there was.

“I think there really is an opportunity for Texas to be the most Australia friendly state where we can be the launching off point,” Weston said. “I think there is an opportunity for Texas and Australia to be special partners.”

Already, Austin has a daily nonstop flight on British Airways from Austin to London, Metcalfe said. There is an opportunity to have a daily nonstop flight on Quantas Airlines from Austin to Sydney, Australia, he said.

There is already a direct flight from Dallas to Sydney, Watkinson said. Goldsmith said he takes that flight a lot.

Atlassian’s HipChat solves the problem of global communication, Goldsmith said. Its product works to break down communication barriers between geography and make it feel like a conversation even if you’re not in the same room, he said.

“Location, culture and geography are a distant second to the ability to communicate and network effectively,” Goldsmith said.

Well Beyond Care Wins Rice Alliance Austin-CTAN Pitch Competition

Jeffrey Fry, co-founder of Well Beyond Care, pitching at the Rice Alliance Austin-CTAN Pitch Competition

By LAURA LOREK
Reporter with Silicon Hills News

Well Beyond Care, an online caregiving matchmaker service, won the first Rice Alliance-Austin Chapter and Central Texas Angel Network pitch competition on Wednesday night at the Alamo Drafthouse on South Lamar.

The Austin-based winner received a prize package worth more than $100,000 including “in kind” prizes from Andrews Kurth, Capital Factory and other companies.

Yip Yap, an Austin-based mobile communications company for kids, and Shower Stream, a water saving device maker based in Austin, tied for audience favorite.

Rice Alliance and CTAN picked ten Texas-based seed stage companies to present at the event from more than 60 applicants.

Jeffrey Fry, CEO and Co-Founder, came up with the idea for Well Beyond Care after caring for his ailing mom, who lived in Alexandria, Virginia for seven years.

Today, more than seven and half million people are getting in home care, Fry said. The market is $120 billion for in home care, but by the end of the decade it’s going to be $180 billion, he said.

And 95 percent of all the people who get in-home or private duty care use an agency, Fry said. The two biggest problems with those agencies are truancy and turnover of workers, he said.

“So, you get unreliable care,” Fry said.

As an engineer, Fry wanted to create something better than what’s out there. He created an online service that connects caregivers directly with families who need them. That saves the families money and they get a reliable caregiver that shows up because they are making more money, Fry said.

Well Beyond Care, founded in 2014, has raised $310,000 in seed stage capital so far, Fry said. The company is raising additional funds to build new features into its mobile app, Fry said.

One of the audience’s favorite’s Yip Yap, a mobile communications company for kids, has created a $99 kid-friendly mobile device called Pipsqueak. Angela Smith, co-founder and mother of four, created the device as an alternative to handing her kids her $600 smart phone.

Yip Yap makes money on the hardware, sells premium features and has in-app content purchases to make money, Smith said.

Yip Yap has already made 1,300 Pipsqueak devices manufactured in Shenzhen, China. The company has raised a little under $700,000 to date from friends, family and angel investors.

Another audience favorite, Shower Stream, created a motion activated shower head adapter which helps customers eliminate water waste, save energy and ultimately save money on their electric bills, said Greg Floyd, founder. People waste water when they turn on the shower to warm up the water and leave it unattended, he said.

The typical shower is ten minutes long and two minutes is wasted while people wait for the shower to warm up, Floyd said.

The company is targeting hotels and estimates it can save a typical 300 room hotel $30,000 annually, Floyd said. The company also provides a data and analytics dashboard that shows the savings from each shower device. The device costs $100. The company has created a prototype and is in talks with hotel operators about doing a pilot program, Floyd said.

The other finalists included:

Anderson Remplex: This Flower Mound-based startup created a product called ProROX to eliminate pathogens from food products for commercial kitchens and consumers.

HipPocket: This Dallas-based startup created a better search and marketing product for real estate listings using machine learning, data and analytics. The company says it transforms how buyer and sales agents connect and consumers buy homes.

Renovate Simply: This Austin-based startup created a home renovation platform for banks, credit unions and other lending institutions to automate the home renovation process and provide increased transparency and reduce risk.

Cingo: This Austin-based startup provides the technology for companies to embed real time in app customer support in their mobile apps.

Homads: This Austin-based startup created a marketplace for month to month rentals of 30 or more days.

Sandbox Commerce: This Austin-based startup created a simply to use system that allows retailers to create a mobile app easily without any knowledge of coding.

SigTrak – This Austin-based startup created technology for data extraction and analytics for microchip design.

Samba TV’s Austin Engineers Create Interactive Television

Samba TV Office in Austin on South Congress

By LAURA LOREK
Reporter with Silicon Hills News

Samba TV, a San Francisco-based company which provides real-time television data and analytics, opened an office in Austin two years ago.

Omar Zennadi, co-founder of Samba TV and director of engineering, heads up the local office with ten employees. It’s primarily engineering focused, he said.

Zennadi is a 2003 graduate of the University of Texas at Austin in electrical engineering. After graduation, he moved to San Francisco and started working at BitTorrent, a peer to peer file sharing company that lets people download large files quickly and easily. Zennadi and the other founders of Samba TV are ex-BitTorrent employees.

“Deep in my heart I always wanted to get back to Austin,” Zennadi said. “I saw this burgeoning startup scene starting to grow. It really fostered that desire. As we were looking at emerging tech talent pools, Austin was one that I would always bring up.”

Founded in 2008, formerly as Flingo, Samba TV develops software for televisions, set-top boxes, smart phones and tablets to enable interactive television and data tracking. Its technology is installed directly into the TV or set-top box to track onscreen content. Its applications are available on more than 30 million screens in 118 countries.

“When it comes down to it we’re a data company, but we have consumer products as well,” Zennadi said. “We build cool interactions with television. We build an environment where applications can be aware of the content you’re watching.”

Samba TV provides TV viewership data across millions of TVs, Zennadi said. The company disrupted the industry which previously involved consumer surveys via snail mail.

Samba TV is backed by $8 million in venture capital with investors including Mark Cuban. Co-Founder Ashwin Navin is the CEO and a former co-founder of BitTorrent. Other co-founders include David Harrison, Alvir Navin and Todd Johnson. Samba TV also has an office in Los Angeles and an engineering office in Warsaw, Poland, a team in Taipei, Taiwan and an office in Lake Tahoe. Altogether, the company has 150 employees and it allows them to do office rotation programs to work out of any of the other locations for a month at a time, Zennadi said.

Other perks include $5,000 educational grants, Tahoe Friday ski weekends, free lunch Wednesdays, gaming room with a HTC Vive Virtual Reality set and more.
Samba TV also gives every employee the ability to early exercise their equity in the startup. The company is profitable and has experienced 600 percent year over year growth, according to a news release.

Austin has been a great fit for Samba TV, Zennadi said. Samba TV continues to hire, primarily engineers, he said.

“We tend to be very choosy in picking our engineers,” he said. “We look for the best and brightest. There are some great engineers here in Austin. We’re working on a lot of cool problems for an engineer. The TV domain is fun. It’s not another enterprise software. There is a lot of data. A lot of big data problems. We’re working with a large number of TVs and advertisers.”

Samba TV has a lot of data. That allows engineers to solve problems at scale by processing that data, Zennadi said.

“We’re doing a lot of cool and innovative stuff,” he said. “It’s made recruiting a breeze.”

Austin’s Venture Capital Investment Deals Drop 7 Percent in 2016

Money Tree photo licensed from iStockPhoto.com

By LAURA LOREK
Reporter with Silicon Hills News

Venture capital investments in Austin dropped 7 percent in deal flow to 112 deals and $834 million invested in 2016, down 3 percent, compared to the previous year, according to the MoneyTree Report from PricewaterhouseCoopers.

Still, Austin outperformed the U.S. market which saw a drop of 16 percent in deals to 4,520 with $58.6 billion invested, down 20 percent, in 2016, compared to 2015.

The fourth quarter saw an even steeper decline in Austin with $11 million invested, down 26 percent, in 26 deals, down 10 percent, compared to the same quarter a year ago, according to the MoneyTree report.

The uncertainty around the presidential election may have contributed to the decrease in investment in 2016 compared to 2015 both nationally and locally, said Larry Westall, partner with PricewaterhouseCoopers, based in Austin.

“When I look at the Austin data and the types of companies that got funded this quarter, we, in Austin, remain in a good place,” Westall said. “We have good companies and quality deals that continue to get funded.”

Overall, 2017 was a solid year, Westall said.

“It was relatively flat in total dollars and deals,” he said. “The way I look at where we are at, 2017 should be another solid year. We expect the IPO market to rebound from where it was.”

Only 40 or so venture backed companies went public last year and only 15 of those were tech, Westall said.

“We’ll have more of a normalized year in 2017,” he said.

In Austin, the Internet industry captured the most investment for the fourth quarter and year with $51 million invested in 10 deals during the fourth quarter and $450 million invested in 59 deals during 2016, according to the MoneyTree Report. TrendKite landed $16.3 million in investment, making it the largest Internet deal in the fourth quarter.

Overall, the biggest deal in the fourth quarter was a $22 million investment in Phunware in the mobile and telecommunications industry. Phunware offers application development platforms.

In the fourth quarter of 2016, investors put $11.7 billion in U.S. venture capital-backed startup companies across 982 deals, down 17 percent in dollars and 14 percent in deals from the same quarter a year ago, according to the MoneyTree Report. This is the first time since the fourth quarter of 2011, that deal activity fell below 1,000 deals.

“Despite continued deceleration in venture capital investment activity, the startup ecosystem remains flush with quality deals,” Tom Ciccolella, US Venture Capital Leader at PwC said in a news release. “As industries continue to be disrupted by technology and Internet capabilities, new opportunities are emerging. It’s these opportunities, despite the decline, that continue to drive venture capital momentum.”

TOP 10 Austin VC Deals in the 2016 Fourth Quarter

Company Industry Venture Capital
Phunware Mobile & Telecommunications $22 million
Trendkite Internet $16.3 million
Twyla Internet $14 million
Hangar Technology Software $6.5 million
Isocline Engineering Corp. Software $6.3 million
M87 Mobile & Telecommunications $5 million
Chiron Health Internet $4.79 million
Factom Internet $4.19 million
Illumitex Electronics $4 million
Xeris Pharmaceuticals Healthcare $4 million

Austin-based Tiger Pistol Makes a Big Noise for Small Businesses

Steve Hibberd, co-founder of Tiger Pistol , based in Austin.

By LAURA LOREK
Reporter with Silicon Hills News

A tiger pistol shrimp is the planet’s loudest creature. With one claw larger than the other, when it snaps that claw, the sound can reach 218 decibels -louder than a gunshot.

And that’s why Steve Hibberd and his co-founder Troy Townsend named their startup, Tiger Pistol, when they founded it in 2011 in Melbourne, Australia. They were focused on helping small businesses have a big impact with customers in social media.

They had a global vision for the social advertising tech company from the start.

“Our focus is on delivering amazing outcomes for small business,” Hibberd said. “We’ve been small business operators ourselves. When small businesses are spending a dollar, they want something tangible in return.”

And Tiger Pistol is succeeding. “Tiger Pistol is the largest publisher of Facebook ads for small and medium-sized business globally,” Hibberd said. “No one publishes more SMB ads than Facebook itself,” he said. It became a Facebook small business marketing partner in early 2013, and then expanded to the U.S. in 2015.

Last year, Tiger Pistol relocated its headquarters from Los Angeles to Austin and it has been growing dramatically since, Hibberd said. They hired 20 people in the last three months in Austin, he said.

“We are super excited about how it’s worked out and the people we’ve been able to attract,” Hibberd said.

The company, with 30 employees in a 6,000-square foot space at Sixth and Brazos, is continuing to hire to accommodate its growth, he said. Tiger Pistol also has 60 employees altogether with offices in Los Angeles and Melbourne, Australia.

Tiger Pistol is a software as a service company that sells its software to small and medium sized business resellers to create, deploy, manage and optimize Facebook and Instagram ads at scale. Tiger Pistol’s platform delivers campaign automation, creative testing, and real-time machine-learning to maximize performance, Hibberd said. The platform saves ad campaign managers a lot of time and allows them to get a better performing campaign, he said.

“Our software platform is focused on scale and how to make it possible for every small business to get more value from social ads,’’ Hibberd said.

Small businesses in 423 different industries use Tiger Pistol’s software. Some of the biggest categories are lawyers and real estate agents, health and wellbeing businesses and party planners. Newspapers also use Tiger Pistol’s software to serve small businesses and help them drive sales from Instagram and Facebook ads.

“It’s a really exciting time because of the number of organizations providing Facebook and Instagram ads is in huge demand,” Hibberd said.

Tiger Pistol, which bootstrapped until a few years ago, has taken on two rounds of capital for a total investment of $5 million. Its investors are high net worth individuals in Australia and the U.S., Hibberd said.

Last year, Tiger Pistol grew 300 percent over 2015, Hibberd said. And this year, the company is expected to grow up to another 300 percent, he said.

“Facebook is continuing to experience incredible growth and the ad spend by small businesses represents 80 percent of the growth,” Hibberd said. And Instagram advertising is growing, he said.

“Small businesses are getting value from social today,” Hibberd said. “We’re only in business if the florist or the plumber gets value for the money they are spending.”

Tiger Pistol is one of a handful of tech companies to move to Austin recently with ties to Australia. Eddie Machalaani and Mitch Harper founded BigCommerce in 2009 in Sydney, Australia and opened an Austin office that same year. It is now based in Austin with two locations and 285 employees. Mike Cannon-Brookes and Scott Farquhar founded Atlassian in 2002 in Sydney, Australia. They have a 75,000-square foot office in downtown Austin and more than 300 employees. And Katie May, Austin native and serial entrepreneur, relocated ShippingEasy from Sydney, Australia to Austin in 2012. Last year, Stamps.com bought the company for $55 million.

Tiger Pistol knows it made the right move relocating its headquarters to Austin, Hibberd said.

“The people in Austin are so genuine and nice and helpful,” Hibberd said. “For a company moving into Austin, you could have that competitive wariness, but the welcoming nature of the people is striking. That’s an important factor. That’s something for Austin to be extremely proud about.”

« Older posts Newer posts »

© 2025 SiliconHills

Theme by Anders NorenUp ↑