Based in Iasi, Romania, IntelligentBee is holding its own internal “business reality show” similar to Shark Tank in which the winning projects receive up to €20,000 to grow their business ideas.
Based in Iasi, Romania, IntelligentBee is holding its own internal “business reality show” similar to Shark Tank in which the winning projects receive up to €20,000 to grow their business ideas.
Our one-line pitch is…
TouchLay focuses on bringing the latest innovations in interactive presentation and collaboration tools to everyone.
Introduce your team, and tell us one interesting thing about each member.
Daniel and Georg are still going to high school. Both are 17 years old and enjoy working with new and innovative technology and design.
Thomas Andre and Gerhard Schelkshorn both work in the building industry. Gerhard is Georg’s dad and takes care of the company and the legal services as well as sales. Thomas is responsible for the hardware design and manufacturing and always brings in great ideas and feedback.
The TouchLay “drafting table” Photo credit: TouchLayWe received our initial capital through…
Money from our own pockets, family and friends.
The real pain about starting a business in Austria is…
The main issue we have had was that we always had to ask somebody else to fill out the official documents for us since we’re not of legal age yet.
The person that inspires us is…
Mathias Zronek from overclockers.at as he was the first who noticed that there is a real potential in our projects, kept us carrying on and gave us a lot of advice. If we had to choose a world-famous person that inspires us, we would probably choose Linus Torvalds or the Google founders.
The one app/service that we couldn’t live without is…
Buffer because it helps us post to all social networks at the right time.
The one thing we would save from our burning office is…
The coffee machine and our precious backups and sketches 🙂
The worst piece of advice we ever got was…
That website visits show you how well your business is doing.
The one thing that will make us quit is…
Well, in the near future we don’t see anything stopping us, except a zombie apocalypse, maybe. Sadly, as we all know, zombies don’t like technology.
Our inside joke is…
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nn2FB1P_Mn8
You might not believe it, but we…
Really are only 17 years old.
We’ll call ourselves successful when…
We can work full-time on our projects after finishing school and be self-suffiecient with the income. We would also love to have more interested people onboard.
The startup we really want to see on inventures’ Startup Pick is…
troutloud because their idea is a very innovative, new way of advertising.
Visit touchlay.com to get in touch.
You can now print human organs. And NASA is about to print components for space. Although the 3D print technology is still something people expect to see in science fiction movies, the market is booming.
As it gains popularity and potential, copyright protection becomes an issue. Which is exactly where Estonian startup Fabulonia comes into play. Based in Tallinn, the team of 18 members has been developing 3D printing security software and recently launched FabSecure, a cloud platform that allows companies to have a secure 3D printing business model from stores to printers and, at the same time, protect creative copyrights.
“We got interested in 3D printing and in solving the challenge of protecting copyrighted designs after realising its potential,” Finland-native CEO Kimmo Isbjörnssund. Although he knows that people “don’t always appreciate visionaries”, the ex-Nokia employee decided to found Fabulonia in 2012. “3D printing will impact our lives in ways the internet did when it emerged,” he said. “3D printing security and copyrights is an even more narrow focus but it is truly the missing piece of the mass adoption puzzle that will either make business models possible or crumble.”
For now, Fabulonia’s technology (pending patent internationally) is unique in the industry and the team claims to have no competition. “It allows anyone to sell and buy digital designs without distributing and exposing the actual 3D model,” Isbjörnssund said, “making it possible to monetise creative and copyrighted work.”
The price of the FabSecure 3D Streamer is 899 euros and includes integrated cloud access with 2GB of traffic and storage. Upgrade options with more cloud space for larger enterprises are also available. Their customers are mostly creative and printing studios as well as educational institutions. The startup already has several European resellers. “We will be expanding to other areas as soon as we can,” Isbjörnssund said.
“We will be very active in sales development but will also introduce very exciting and new types of innovations in 3D printing,” Isbjörnssund said. “We don’t see any limitations as to 3D printing in life. The change will be massive.”
The guys at Fabulonia seem to be ready for it.
Sitting with Lukas Haraga at Techsquare in Smichov, Prague, he is relaxed, happy and emanates the energy of a really nice guy… and he is. He is unassuming and the only time he gets more passionate than talking tech is when he talks about his latest purchase of a convertible Smartcar.
Haraga’s current project, working alongside his co-founders Jiri Otahal and Michal Pustka, is Aircharts and it is about to start beta testing. According to their site, www.aircharts.co, the team intend to “bring to Google Analytics what Apple has brought to the user experience” – hopefully without the price tag. A good sign of this project is that the developer can explain it simply and succinctly, “Aircharts is a GPS for web analysis, you get to see all the in-page analytics in the context of the actual web page”.
Aircharts.co – making web analysts obsolete?
Utilising Google Analytics and a clean dashboard design that literally sits on top of a website, the software aims to significantly reduce the time and processes required for website optimisation. Haraga hopes that over time his team will add other unique functionality not offered by Google to help create a more unique and useful experience.
Web analysts beware, Aircharts seeks to make it simple to measure, collect, analyse and report the usage data of a website through a simple graphical interface. Product managers will gain access to traffic and trend data by simply holding the pointer over a section of the page. This will allow them to track how users interact with a website providing real time market research data and optimisation opportunities without having to go through the full analytics cycle of the company or outsourcing the task.
The key is that the software is able to present a wide array of data simply. By holding the pointer over any part of a site a graphical representation of usage is displayed, the product manager doesn’t have to learn any new skills. A big bubble on a link means more people are clicking on it than if it has a small bubble. Easy. Haraga comments, “Web analysts can still exist to interpret the data but Aircharts makes it so obvious that now everyone can do it”.
The entrepreneurial journey: realising when something’s good but not great
Born, raised and educated in the Czech Republic, Haraga began his startup journey working on howdoitutorials, a site that set out to help its users create interactive tutorials for their own apps and websites. On paper, it’s a simple and creative idea, and one that Haraga and his team spent thousands of hours creating and developing until that one moment many startups ultimately reach – it’s a good idea, but it isn’t great.
Haraga is critical of howdoitutorials very succinctly, “Ultimately we realised that users want website design so good that they don’t need tutorials.” He says this with a wry smile, suggesting that this critique seems so obvious now. Like most developers he is pragmatic about the time spent on abandoned projects, knowing that what he got out of the experience was more important than pursuing it with dogged determination. So how did he know it was time to move on?
According to Haraga, talking to people and sharing his idea was the quickest way to determine its value. That’s what he now does continually, a kind of beta testing of your idea as a process of its development.
It was talking to mentors that helped him gain focus and perspective, ultimately pointing him away from howdoitutorials and towards his idea for Aircharts. The type of mentorship is also important, feedback and opinions need to be garnered from multiple sources with multiple experiences. “Originally it was puzzling to get so many conflicting opinions until I looked at the backgrounds of who was giving it.” It isn’t constructive to take on advice without looking critically at who is providing it.
“It is much easier to be disappointed in the first month than the second year”
And he should know, after two years, he and his team turned their backs on howdoitutorials (though no founder ever says they have abandoned a project, instead they merely shelve it for the time being). Changing projects is difficult, seeing hours of work without achieving a saleable product is frustrating but it has to be seen pragmatically as a part of the creative side of the startup process.
“You have to look long term”, staying with howdoitutorials wouldn’t have bought the financial security and ability to only work a few hours a week that he craves. He couldn’t sell that, Aircharts he can. Haraga reminds me that it is easy for someone to say something is a great idea, but it is a whole different ball game to get them to pay for it.
One of the most significant parts of the development of Aircharts is that, unlike previous projects, Haraga is focussing on the business part simultaneously; an aspect he admits was lacking in his previous startup. “Technical people are so passionate about technology and ideas but they need to be just as passionate about the business – you need to care about how you are going to survive.”
To do this effectively he took the brave move and quit the security of his full time job as the head of the development department at StorageCraft Europe. He admits it was a tough decision but he knew that the only way to focus on making money from Aircharts was to make it an absolute necessity.
Haraga’s mantra is “How do I make money now?” This never used to be his thinking but now it is essential for success. His answer has been to go for a subscription model for a slick piece of working software on the market as soon as possible. Haraga knows that not only does he need to be a tech head but a salesperson, he needed to change the way he thought about what he did.
Currently Aircharts is at a fork in the road as to which demographic will prove to be the best customer – smaller corporates with small sites that don’t have the resources or access to web analysts, or the big corporates who can streamline their web analytical processes significantly. Time to call the mentors!
Haraga loves prophetic little sayings as he smiles out several of them throughout our conversation, another one he espouses as he gets philosophical of his tech career: “Change your thought process from ‘I think, to I know’.” I asked how he felt about leaving one project for another and in his typically positive style he likens it to going from a screwdriver to an electric screwdriver, going from one idea to a better one.
Read more on the Czech startup scene:
Pioneers Unplugged goes international – first stop: Prague!
Up-and-coming startups? Czech!
For Funds’ Sake – How Do I Get Money? Insights on funding by Jan Sedivy
Seznam.cz invests in StartupYard
StartupYard selects 6 startups from 5 countries
Tereza Jurečková: City walks with the homeless
Lukáš Hudeček: Failure and the boiling frog syndrome