If you want to know how to raise money and speak the language of investors, David Coallier is the guy to listen to.
Coallier, a self-made tech entrepreneur, is from Canada but now lives in Cork. He was the guest speaker at Startup Grind in Dublin on July 21, hosted by Google.
At the event, Coallier spoke openly and honestly about his entrepreneurial career to date, his many failures and his few significant successes. He also spoke frankly about how he talks to investors and why he is never afraid to turn an investor down if he doesn’t feel they are the right fit.
Speak the language of investors
As an angel investor himself (he invested in two successful Irish tech startups, Intercom and Trustev) he knows how to “speak the language of investors”.
He launched his latest company, Barricade.io, in October 2014 and within a few weeks had managed to raise €1.2 million from angels and venture capital funds.
Barricade.io, based in Cork where Coallier lives with his wife and daughter, is an early warning system that can tell businesses their platforms are about to be hacked. The product is aimed at SMEs around the globe. “The goal is to allow SMEs have online security at an affordable price. Barricade.io detects attacks and then tells users how to defend themselves.”
The company has the potential to become a significant global player as we move into the age of the Internet of Things.
‘Without passion you will fail’
The most important thing a founder should have is passion. “Without passion, you will struggle and ultimately fail,” says Coallier. “If I don’t see the passion in the founder and the team, I won’t invest,” he says.
Coallier also spoke openly about the mental strains founders and entrepreneurs experience when they launch new products and companies. “Sports stars have psychologists and mental strength coaches on
The Global Startup Gathering 2016
The Global Entrepreneurship Network (GEN), Startup Nations Summit, is coming to Cork later this year as part of the Global Startup Gathering 2016.
Cork is the first location in Europe to host the Startup Nations Summit (November 19). The idea is to bring together policymakers and leaders in the startup space.
Taking place over three days in November, the event aims to attract hundreds of international and national business people.
One of the competitions announced is the Global Investor Challenge. The competition is for entrepreneurs who need investment and are investor ready.
Judges will look for the business that has the highest investment potential. Regional finals held across Ireland in the week leading up to the summit with the grand final held in Cork on Saturday, November 19.
The winning business will receive a €30k+ prize fund, including cash and services.
ConnectIreland assumes control
ConnectIreland, a government initiative that’s responsible for attracting small businesses to Ireland and rewarding people for introducing new connections, is to assume control of Startup Ireland.
ConnectIreland says it has seen a “significant” rise in international companies looking to start in, or expand in Ireland.
“Given the skillset that currently exists in ConnectIreland, this union will integrate into what we do while also offering new areas for growth,” says Joanna Murphy, CEO of ConnectIreland.
“We thank Eoin Costello (co-founder of Startup Ireland) for his vision, leadership, and passion to date, and wish him well in his new role with Digital Dun Laoghaire.”
A full schedule of events planned for November is listed on the website www.startupgathering.ie.
READ MORE: If you are starting a business in Ireland, start here.
The best young inventors in Ireland
The CoderDojo Coolest Projects Awards show that Irish children are amongst the best in the world when it comes to dreaming big and inventing brilliant things.
A Rubik’s Cube-solving robot built by 11-year-old Katie Reilly was one of the top winners at the CoderDojo Coolest Projects Awards, 2016.
Over 10,000 people attended the event to watch in awe as children of all ages demonstrated their inventions and their coding skills.
A sample of the projects includes witness flood warning systems, robotic dog feeding apps, and mobile phones that don’t require a network
These were just some of the great inventions revealed by 800 young innovators aged between 5-17.
Genius in action
Katie Reilly (pictured above) built and programmed a Lego robot that completes the Rubik’s Cube automatically. She also developed the Rubik’s Mania website, a platform devoted to the coloured cube.
Katie, from Kimmage, has been coding for three years and programmed her site in HTML
“I wanted to create a site that detailed the full history and different types of the cube, along with instructional videos on how to solve the puzzle.
“I built the robot from Lego and coded it in Lego’s Mindstories language,” said the schoolgirl from Bishop Galvin, Templeogue.
A low-cost phone for developing countries
12-year-old Jasper Brezina Coniffe from Dublin’s Warehouse Dojo was a winner in the Future Makers category with Everyfone, a low-cost phone for developing countries that does not require a network.
Not to be outdone, Jasper’s brother Harvey (14) took the Innovator’s Special Prize for his invention startups.coderdojo.xyz – a website that allows kids in CoderDojo to get a website up and running in minutes.
Flooding with ideas
A flood gauge warning system invented by 11-year-old Shay Fahy from Athenry designed to alert whole communities and surrounding areas by email or tweet when flooding is imminent was a winner in the Best Hardware category.
The next generation
Popertee – the Airbnb of pop-ups
Lucinda Kelly’s company Popertee was started in November 2015. Its aim is to “change how people think of pop-ups” and connect big brands with interesting physical spaces.
Having spent over four years working with Paddy Power, Lucinda Kelly took the leap into entrepreneurship with Popertee, a company that aims to re-invent the pop-up shop for brands and consumers.
Watching in admiration as Airbnb spread across the globe, Kelly was determined to see what other opportunities lay in the shared economy.
“My dad’s background is in retail (FX Kelly’s on Grafton Street) and commercial property, so I’m familiar with both sectors. The idea for Popertee was inspired by Airbnb, but has developed since we started validating the concept in the market. We connect marketing agencies and brands with vacant retail spaces and properties.”
Not one but three accelerators
In what was a probably a first in Ireland, Popertee and Kelly were accepted onto three of Ireland’s most high-profile accelerators, including the prestigious NDRC Launchpad.
“It was hectic, a very busy period for us, but it proved invaluable,” says Kelly. “NDRC, in particular, was very useful; it pushed us to validate our product in the market before we put any money into development.”
Popertee is already working with some big brand names on innovative projects. “We work with marketing agencies and their brands and give them access to high footfall spaces in unique locations. For example, we recently worked with the beer brand Peroni and Dame Lane on The House of Peroni project.” (Pictured left and above).
Kelly says Ireland is the test bed to further develop Popertee’s business model.
“Out ambition is to go international and we are already in talks with agencies and brands in the UK. The US is also a big target market for us; they do things on a different scale over there and it’s where we want
Three Irish firms on starting and growing
Three Irish firms chart their journey from the early stages to the moments they realised their businesses had become successful.
Starting a new business is exciting, but alarmingly very few companies manage to survive the first three years.
ThinkBusiness spoke to three firms from Cork and Kerry that started small but managed to scale.
Supports for new businesses
Loughbeg Farm began selling homemade jams, chutneys, and ice cream at farmers’ markets before starting to make gluten free bread in 2014. Within a year, it was selling its gluten-free bread and tea bracks in over 100 SuperValus across Ireland, and subsequently appeared on RTÉs Dragon’s Den where it secured investments from Alison Cowzer and Eamon Quinn.
Company founder Walter Ryan-Purcell had previously worked in the industrial composting and renewable energy industries before finding himself unemployed. “There is so much help available to start-ups in Ireland,” he says. “I was able to get on the Back to Work Scheme, which allows you to keep your unemployment benefit while you are getting yourself off the ground, as well as grant aid for yourself and your employees.
“SuperValu’s Food Academy programme was also an incredible leg-up. Not only did we get excellent tuition from the retail experts, but it was wonderful to meet up with like-minded entrepreneurs.”
Overcoming challenges
Cork’s INTEGREAT was founded by Gerry O’Connor in 2011, providing joinery design and interior fit-outs to high-end contractors and designers. Having worked in the UK for eight years, Gerry went to work as a production manager in his native Cork with a joinery manufacturer, before the economic downturn cost him his job. Like Walter at Loughbeg Farm, Gerry decided to turn his unemployment into an opportunity to start a business.
Today his client list boasts some powerful UK brands including Selfridges and Sheraton Park Lane. However, it hasn’t always been easy for the budding entrepreneur. “Our business is service based and operating remotely, and we found the lack of adequate broadband to be a real threat to our success,” he explains.
“Following two frustrating years of slow speed broadband, a new provider to our area improved the service to a manageable level. Faster speed broadband is essential to our future development.”
Sub-standard IT infrastructure wasn’t the only barrier for the start-up, however; the economic climate at the time also presented challenges. “The decimation of the construction industry and the economic recession created its challenges. Potential clients were scarce. We had no marketing experience and often found it difficult to get our message across.”
Knowing you’ve made it
The transition from being a start-up to a successful business is a gradual process, but Gerry can pinpoint one moment in particular that was significant for INTEGREAT. “The key moment for us was in September 2013 when we were asked to head up the contractor’s design team on a high-end retail fit-out on Regent’s Street in London. It involved more time spent in the UK but had the added benefit of our brand being more visible and spreading our network of contacts. It resulted in more business.”
For Walter and Loughbeg Farm, the critical moment for his company came with a deal from SuperValu. “We suddenly went from supplying a handful of shops to providing every SuperValu in Cork and Kerry. Our turnover grew to over €5,000 per week. It all happened very quickly.”
Steady growth
For the founders of Cahersiveen’s K&T Bakery, there was no single crucial moment in the story of their business, but rather a constant trend of growth.
Owners Katarzyna and Tomasz Gwis emigrated from Poland to Ireland in 2006 and worked a variety of jobs until they found themselves out of work in 2014.
The couple had come from a rich tradition of bakery in Poland, and with time on their hands, they decided to start selling bread and cakes at car boot sales and country markets.
Sales were so good that they decided to open the K&T Bakery in Cahirsiveen and subsequently opened a restaurant and café in the town. “It’s hard to specify a particular moment when we realised the business had become a success,” says Katie, the former childcare assistant who now employs 15 people. “It was just a gradual process where we started to get a steady group of customers and were supplying our goods to shops in surrounding towns and villages. We just found ourselves getting busier and busier, and customers were coming back for more.”
What’s next?
The three businesses say they will stay focused on what opportunities come next.
For Loughbeg Farms, the future holds more sales and potential exports. “We plan to continue to build up sales steadily in all SuperValus here in Ireland and very shortly we intend to slice and freeze our bread for sale in the UK and elsewhere.”
For INTEGREAT, Gerry will keep his eye on new technology and how it can help grow his business. “3D modelling for drawings is something we are still skirting around the edges with. However, if we apply ourselves to build up the necessary skills, it would be an asset to how we produce drawings and allow us to offer this service for special projects at a premium rate.”
Finally for the K&T Bakery, Katie too hopes she can take her products to a wider market. “For now, we would like to stabilise the café and spread our delivery route wider,” she says. “We are taking each day as it comes.”
The three companies featured are 2016 regional winners of The Irish Local Development Network Enterprise Awards. Pictured above are: Katarzyna Gwis of K & T Bakery, (Kerry); Walter Ryan-Purcell of LoughBeg Farm (West Cork);and Gerry O’Connor of Intergreat (East Cork).
Article by Peter Flanagan.
This post was originally published here - https://www.thinkbusiness.ie/articles/grow-your-business/ on