
The Technology News Beat
Troy Media periodically sends out content of interest to journalists. Redwood Technologies' software momentem documents and itemizes all calls made with a mobile phone. The company's search for funding led it to a group of angel investors who normally invest in the oil and gas industry but which has agreed to initiate a funding round of $1 million.
Please feel free to use. If you prefer to do your own story, we have supplied a list of sources at the bottom of the article.
November 2007
Calgary’s Redwood Technologies gaining momentem
CALGARY, November 19
/Troy Media Corporation/ What began as a simple conversation almost four years
ago is now a million-dollar investment.
“Their BlackBerry bills were out of
hand,” Gaskarth said, “and their IT people said there was no way to track them.”
Though he had built software
solutions before, Gaskarth wasn’t sure how to tackle this particular problem.
The law firm had only asked him if he was aware of an existing program (he
wasn’t), but that led to “tossing around some ideas for developing something. I
just had an idea that this was something I could perhaps look at,” he said.
Today, Redwood is the developer and
provider of momentem, a software solution that allows handset users to
tag and allocate calls to designated cost centres in real time with a few
keystrokes. With the software, companies and individuals can track expenses and
costs on their mobile phone bills. But the steps from idea to marketable product
were anything but easy.
Initially, Gaskarth and friend Igor
Visser spent some spare time writing and designing a partial solution, just to
see if the idea was workable. “If we could make one or two core functions work,
then a bigger solution was plausible,” he said.
It took two weeks, but he and his
friend both arrived at the same conclusion: this might just work.
Unfortunately, designing a solution is merely the first, and often easiest,
step. Finding the money to create a saleable product is the second, and more
difficult.
The original concept involved
developing and selling momentem to the legal industry where the demand
first originated. After some initial testing of momentem’s potential with
a law firm in Calgary, Redwood began searching for early-stage financing but
found raising money for technology in southern Alberta to be difficult.
“We had one investor at $10,000,”
Gaskarth said. “Everyone else (who invested) contributed $500 or $1,000.”
Investors were hesitant to invest
because of the company’s focus on such a small market, and with an undeveloped
product to boot. It didn’t take Gaskarth and his team long to realize they
needed help.
Calgary Technologies Inc. (CTI)
introduced Gaskarth to
The first problem, according to
Hughes, now Redwood’s CEO, was the intended market.
“I knew that the sales cycle for the
legal vertical market was long and dull, and was never really going to make
money for Redwood,” Hughes said. He wanted to expand the market to . . . well .
. . everyone.
But that meant a new distribution
strategy. How would Redwood connect with its new, and much larger, market? The
answer seemed self-evident: working with the mobile phone carriers.
But that would take money.
“We needed serious, large money (to
proceed further),” Gaskarth recalled.
So Hughes started pitching
momentem everywhere he could: Rogers Pitch for Profit, the BC Angel Forum,
the Banff Venture Forum, as well as groups and individual investors.
One of the investors wanted them to
move to BC but Redwood opted to stay in Alberta and keep searching. They were
eventually successful at convincing one group of angel investors to take the
leap into the tech sector.
Mark Behrman and Bone Creek Capital
immediately understood the product and the opportunity it offered. They agreed
to initiate a funding round of $1 million.
“We typically invest in oil and gas
products,” Behrman said. “We had seen some tech proposals, but we don’t really
understand that market. We’re more efficient investors if we stay in our comfort
zone. We (aren’t usually) prepared to allocate the time and resources to
understand (other sectors).”
But Hughes’ pitch, he said,
presented them with a “clear description of what the market needed, and how the
product fills that need. We all understood that we’d quickly subscribe (to
momentem) as customers, not just investors.”
Redwood is now moving ahead with its
plans to roll momentem out to the general public through selected phone carriers
and as an Alliance Member with Research in Motion (RIM), the makers of
BlackBerry.
You might say that the momentem
is building.
http://troymedia.com/News_Services/The_Technology_News_Beat/SOURCES/SOURCES_momentum.htm
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