Ottawa Mayor Addresses Carleton’s Lead To Win Program

Mayor Larry O’Brien will join Carleton President Roseann O’Reilly Runte and 56 participants in the next Lead to Win (LTW) program on Thursday, where he will speak about Ottawa’s entrepreneurial success.

“The Lead to Win program dovetails with the mayor’s plan to brand Ottawa as Canada?s Creative Class Capital,” says Carleton Professor Tony Bailetti. “Lead to Win helps entrepreneurs launch and grow technology companies. The provision of incubation services designed to support massive innovation in the region is an important element in moving forward in the new economy.”

The gathering will also include 24 external reviewers who will assess 41 ventures addressing niche markets in such areas as software applications and content.

When:
11:45 a.m. to 12:15 p.m., Thursday, Nov. 5, 2009

Where:
Confederation Square, 350 Albert Street, Suite 200, Ottawa.

Background:
The Lead to Win program mentors business startups, generates jobs and provides investment for the cash-strapped technology sector. The program was founded by Prof. Bailetti in 2002. The last round of mentorship brought in eight jobs and $920,000 worth of investment in just two months of operation for the startups.

The program has been so successful that it is now into its third session, and there are plans to expand the idea to other cities in Ontario.

LTW is offered on various locations and receives financial support from the City of Ottawa, the Ottawa Centre for Research and Innovation (OCRI), the Ottawa Chamber of Commerce and the Ontario Talent First Network, among others.

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For more information:
Tony Bailetti
[email protected]

Lin Moody
Media Relations
Carleton University
613-520-2600, ext. 8705

Lead to Win Session#4 Over-Subscribed (AGAIN!)

Lead to Win session#4 starts this Tuesday. This session was over-subscribed (as have been all Lead to Win sessions!). It was painful to have to defer many well-qualified candidates to our next session in February 2010.

Session#4 includes 55 highly motivated, highly skilled and highly creative entrepreneurs who will establish and grow 41 businesses in Canada’s Capital Region. The goal is for each business to create a minimum of six technology jobs over the next three years.

This session is being held at the Queen’s Executive MBA facility in Constitution Square in downtown Ottawa.

Congratulations to the 55 entrepreneuers who were accepted into this session!

Growing creative companies in strong ecosystems

this article was previously published by the Ottawa Business Journal on October 30

The use of two phrases has increased significantly recently: “creative company” and “healthy business ecosystem.”

But what do these two phrases mean? A creative company harnesses creative individuals and organizations worldwide to develop and sell market offers for which their customers are willing to pay. Creative companies are small, innovative, flexible and deliver value to customers, partners, themselves and their communities. They also rely on business ecosystems to grow. Creative companies will do well in the new economy.

Take the example of Zeebu Mobile, an Ottawa-based startup.

Zeebu’s two founders, Dan Gagliardi and Anthony Rizk, are out to create a new market niche using the Lead to Win ecosystem. Zeebu Mobile’s application, named BabyGO!, entertains children taking an object that often distances parents from their young children: the BlackBerry.

The company wants to turn your BlackBerry from a business tool into an educational and entertaining device you can share with your children.

The application, which was developed in consultation with early childhood education (ECE) experts, intercepts all key presses including incoming phone calls and e-mails and displays colorful images of the letters while announcing their names and sounds.

As parents of young children themselves, the two founders experienced firsthand the need for entertaining diversions at times. By observing their own children’s fascination with their parents’ BlackBerry devices, Anthony and Dan realized the potential for a completely new family of mobile applications.

Extensive discussions with other users, parents and caregivers confirmed the concept.

“It’s only natural that young children want to mimic mommy and daddy and that includes exploring the BlackBerry device,” Zeebu Mobile CEO Dan Gagliardi said. “But in our search we noticed that there were no suitable applications available for very young children and parents were worried about the potential for valuable data to be compromised or for spurious phone calls to be generated by their inquisitive minds and active fingers.”

And just last week, RIM selected Zeebu’s application as a featured app at their App World store. This is significant, given that innovation is the most important factor for the selection of featured apps.

But what about “business ecosystems”? They’re comprised of companies and individuals that use an out-of-the-box platform to create and deliver value to their customers. In a healthy ecosystem, companies and individuals concurrently collaborate in the production of common assets and use these assets to develop market offers they use to compete in the marketplace.

The organization responsible for providing the out-of-the-box platform is referred to as a keystone. A keystone organization attracts talented volunteers to collaborate in the production of the assets and delivery of services required by the creative companies, provides ecosystem governance, and maintains the health of the ecosystem.

But an ecosystem, like any organism, is nothing without its health ? and a healthy ecosystem must have a large number of diverse participants, attract investment, be stable, and create new niche markets. Keystones of healthy ecosystems are lean and effective.

A business ecosystem provides various benefits to small creative companies: access to deal flows and opportunity fulfillment; customer pull for rapid innovation; lower sales and development costs; fast and favorable access to sophisticated capabilities worldwide; no lock-in by powerful companies or investors; lower cost of entering new markets; and high quality mentoring.

Finally, an ecosystem is successful when companies and individuals can generate greater profitable revenue with it than without it.

Canada’s capital region benefits from the high paying jobs, investment and talent retention made possible by creative companies and the ecosystems of which they are a part.

The freely available BabyGO! application will soon be complemented by a premium version offering extended functionality, customization and personalization options for a modest licensing fee. The company will continue to offer free basic functionality and licensed premium editions as it releases other activities and applications, extending the product family across the full 0-9 age group.

Zeebu Mobile and 70 other local technology companies are part of Lead to Win, an ecosystem designed to launch and growth creative companies in Canada’s Capital Region.

BabyGO! Featured RIM Application

Zeebu Mobile is a Lead to Win alumnus company. Zeebu Mobile’s first product - BabyGO! - is now a Featured application on RIM’s AppWorld. Congratulations to the Zeebu Mobile team!

Featured Applications on AppWorld are chosen by RIM based on many factors including innovation and popularity.

To download Zeebu Mobile’s application, you can visit Appworld from your computer at http://appworld.blackberyy.com/webstore
You can download AppWorld to your device by clicking the following link from your BlackBerry: http://www.blackberry.com/appworld/download

NRC-IRAP invests in Coral CEA to accelerate the implementation of a unique commercialization model that assists Canadian companies to compete globally

Ottawa, Monday, September 14, 2009.

Peter Carbone, Chair of the Board of Coral CEA announced that the National Research Council Canada Industrial Research Assistance Program (NRC-IRAP) has provided a financial contribution to further Coral CEA?s ecosystem model of commercialization.

The announcement was made at the reception for Lead to Win companies organized by the Ottawa Chamber of Commerce at the Algonquin College campus. In attendance were 66 founders of 49 technology startup companies that anchor Phase III of the Lead to Win program, representatives of 50 Ottawa companies that are members of the Ottawa Chamber of Commerce, academics and members of the ecosystem that is driving massive innovation in Canada?s Capital Region.

Coral CEA?s commercialization model involves qualifying and developing emerging businesses, providing them with commercialization support and technology building blocks to differentiate their offers in the marketplace. It also brings customers and investors to the table and provides the opportunity for investment in lead projects to fill gaps in the commercialization process. Coral CEA is focussing its technology building blocks on Communication Enabled Applications, the next generation of ICT. These can be used by member companies to significantly enhance their commercial offers into health, finance, education, or virtually any business vertical.

Coral CEA has a unique commercialization model with potential for massive innovation and creation of knowledge jobs. NRC-IRAP?s financial support to Coral CEA will help accelerate its implementation and investment in qualified companies that graduate from the Lead to Win program. NRC-IRAP?s collaboration with Coral CEA is expected to help create more new companies.
?We have a common goal with NRC-IRAP, said Peter Carbone, ?We wish to drive massive innovation and commercialization in Canada. We are delighted that NRC-IRAP has decided to collaborate with us and help us to help build profitable companies in Canada. Their investment at this early stage allows us to ramp capability more quickly.?

Momentum is building, and Coral CEA is expanding beyond National Capital region to provide other communities with the same leverage companies in Ottawa have acquired. The team has been demonstrating some of the sandbox applications to companies in Canada and the US, which is resulting in even more partners and assets for companies to leverage being added to the ecosystem. To harness this momentum, Coral CEA is planning to host a code competition in which companies can use building blocks from Coral CEA?s sandbox to build new CEAs.

?Coral CEA and Lead to Win are providing significant support to small and medium size companies already,? says Tony Bailetti, Director of the Talent First Network. ?Ten of the 49 companies in Phase III of the Lead to Win program have raised 3/4 of a million dollars in the last two months from private investors and government programs such as NRC-IRAP. The Coral CEA sandbox provides these companies with the ability to further differentiate their offers and compete more effectively in the global marketplace.?

Stay tuned for more information on the competition and some more positive announcements at www.coralcea.ca

For more information:
www.coralcea.ca

Peter Carbone
[email protected]

Tony Bailetti
[email protected]

Coral CEA is a business ecosystem designed to assist companies of all sizes with the commercialization of what is considered the next generation of information and communications technology: communications-enabled applications (CEA). These applications marry the network capabilities and intelligence found in today?s networks with the rich world of IT applications to create entirely new user experiences. The company implements the keystone of a business ecosystem, which provides; ?out-of the box? technology, enhanced partnering processes and brokers deal flow to the advantage of its members. The Coral CEA ecosystem is anchored around a non-profit organization with five founding members, (IBM, Nortel, Carleton University, Eclipse Foundation and The IT Association of Canada).

NRC-IRAP works with small- and medium-sized Canadian firms, providing expertise and advice as well as potential funding in developing their innovative ideas. Financial assistance for this project is a direct result of the Government of Canada?s Economic Action Plan outlined in Budget 2009.

About Lead to Win

Lead to Win (http://www.leadtowin.ca) is a program designed to create and grow successful technology companies in Canada’s Capital Region. Lead to Win enables talented individuals to:

  • Acquire practical knowledge and tools required to establish and grow technology business
  • Develop a strong business opportunity
  • Build large and diversified network to obtain resources
  • Build the right foundation to sell to first customers and raise funds
  • Increase motivation, energy and confidence

The next session of Lead to Win starts in the November of this year at Carleton University. Applications are being accepted. To apply, complete and submit the form available athttp://www.leadtowin.ca.

All materials of the Lead to Win program are freely available for use by other communitiesand organizations.

The Lead to Win program is made possible by support from the following organizations:

Lead to Win Strategic Associates

City of Ottawa, Carleton University, Talent First Network, Ottawa Chamber of Commerce,onconference, OCRI, Developpement economique - CLD Gatineau, NRC-CNRC Industrial Research Assistance Program, Arrow Electronics, Inc.

Lead to Win Associates

Wesley Clover, Purple Forge, The Code Factory, Ottawa Patent Agency, Weyes Eyes, Peter’s New Jobs, Freescale Semiconductor, TIM, TiE, McLarty & Co, Congruance IT, KPMG, HBS, Ottawa Talent Initiative, Vitesse, Versature, Fraser Milner Casgrain, Blindside Networks, Gowlings, Holis Associates, Altera, Netcelerate, Ideas to Revenue, HI-Q.A. Electronic Assembly, Trivaris, Flow Ventures, BDC Venture Capital, Fidus, Algonquin College, Cisco, LJD Technology, Lumenera, Ontario Centres of Excellent, neuroLanguage, Telfer School of Management University of Ottawa, Bederra Research, WiLAN, Alcatel-Lucent


To become a supporter of Lead to Win, or for more information on the program, please contact Dr Bailetti at [email protected].

Lead to Win Update - October 9, 2009

Lead to Win Update - October 9, 2009

The next Lead to Win session is scheduled for November 3-5 and November 23-25.; Lead to Win is currently accepting applications - please spread the word!

Lead to Win Phase 3 Businesses Wins

  • 10 new technology jobs in the region (5.1% of our target to deliver 196 jobs by July 2012)
  • $833,200 private and public investment (4.2% of our target to raise $20 million by July 2012)
  • Five startups sold products or services to first customers
  • Two startups created new market niches
  • Five startups introduced new product and services
  • Three startups secured testers for their prototypes
  • Two startups secured representation and supplier agreements with large companies

Sessions Planned and Delivered To Date

  • May/June: Status - Delivered May 19-21, June 23-25, held at Carleton University
  • July/August: Status ? Delivered July 28-30, August 25-27, held at Telfer Executive Leadership Centre (University of Ottawa)
  • November: Status ? Confirmed for November 3-5, and November 23-25, to be held at the Queens Executive MBA facility in Ottawa

Applicants To Date

  • May/June: over 100 expressions of interest, 82 completed applications, 62 people accepted, 39 people (30 businesses) graduated to Phase 3 of LTW
  • July/August: over 100 expressions of interest, 68 completed applications, 46 people accepted, 27 people (20 businesses) graduated to Phase 3 of LTW

Expansion of Program to Meet Demand

  • Original plan was to hold two LTW sessions in 2009 with 30 participants per session ? one in May/June and the second in October/November.
  • As demand was far higher than anticipated, we doubled the capacity of the May/June session from 30 to 60 people (and accepted 62). We accelerated the following session into July/August and saw a similar high demand despite vacation season - we increased capacity from 30 to 45 people (and accepted 47) for that session.
  • We have reserved a venue for the additional November session, which was not in the April 2 proposal to the City of Ottawa
  • We are running at 100% higher capacity between the extra participants and extra sessions vs. our April 2 proposal to the City of Ottawa

“The Entrepreneurial Effect” in Ottawa

You are invited to the following event to launch a new book “The Entrepreneurial Effect”. Brian Hurley from Lead to Win and I are both contributors to the book.

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“The Entrepreneurial Effect” in Ottawa

You are invited to meet some of the people who are inventing our future. Join us for a gathering of Ottawa’s entrepreneurs, investors and support organizations, as we celebrate and highlight the excitement and buzz happening in Ottawa’s start-ups. This is your opportunity to network with today’s and tomorrow’s tech industry leaders.

Come join us on November 5th at 7:30pm

359 Terry Fox Drive, Suite 210.

SPEAKERS:

Terry Matthews, Chairman, Mitel

Claude Haw, President, OCRI (Ottawa Centre for Research and Innovation), www.ocri.ca

James Bowen, selecting author, www.entrepreneurialeffect.com

John Reid, (Introducing speaker), President, CATA (Canadian Advanced Technology Association, www.cata.ca

This event is also the launch for the book, “The Entrepreneurial Effect”, a book which is a collection of practical advice written by 30 successful Ottawa technology entrepreneurs. The book is billed as “your own virtual board of advisors” and has a foreword by Terry Matthews, founder and current chairman of Mitel. Articles include valuable and pragmatic advice on innovation, management, leadership, sales, planning, investing, and research.

The book is published in Ottawa by Invenire ( www.invenire.ca) and available for $27.95 from www.commonerspublishing.comand selected bookstores.

The event is free but seating is limited so reserve your spot by sending an email to:[email protected] or by phoning the book distributor at 613-523-2444.

Refreshments will be available, and are graciously donated by David Smithwww.creativekosher.com