23 New Geo Big Data Sets for Smart Cities

The universe of geographically-tagged big data is growing exponentially.  From Brookings, here are 23 public and private sectors generating data 24/7 across the globe.  The possibilities are vast.

GeoDisrupting Commerce: IoT, Beacons, Robots

GeoDisrupting Commerce: Iot, Beacons, Robots

retail-iot-market-map

 

These are the top companies bridging the physical and digital worlds, based on CB Insights.

Company Chart

Retail IoT Company List
Company Category Select Investors
Hiku At-Home Shopping Buttons Otter Rock Capital, Plug and Play Accelerator, Firsthand Technology Value Fund
Kwik At-Home Shopping Buttons Norwest Venture Partners, NFX Guild
Crowder Beacon Analytics And Marketing Wearable IoT World Labs
Estimote Beacon Analytics And Marketing Bessemer Venture Partners, Innovation Endeavors
Footmarks Beacon Analytics And Marketing Commerce.Innovated
Freedom Smart Labs Beacon Analytics And Marketing Kapil Goel
Kimetric Beacon Analytics And Marketing Microsoft Ventures Accelerator
Minodes Beacon Analytics And Marketing MarketTech
Monolith Beacon Analytics And Marketing Startup Wise Guys
Movvo Beacon Analytics And Marketing Caixa Capital
Proxidyne Beacon Analytics And Marketing Undisclosed
Radius Networks Beacon Analytics And Marketing Core Capital Partners, Contour Venture Partners
Resun8 Beacon Analytics And Marketing Undisclosed
Sensorberg Beacon Analytics And Marketing WestTech Ventures, Berlin Technologie Holdings
Swirl Networks Beacon Analytics And Marketing Twitter Ventures, Longworth Venture Partners, Softbank Capital
Euclid Analytics Beacon- And Sensor-Based Analytics Harrison Metal, NEA, Benchmark
Innorange Beacon- And Sensor-Based Analytics Undisclosed
Measurence Beacon- And Sensor-Based Analytics Undisclosed
RetailNext Beacon- And Sensor-Based Analytics August Capital, Commerce Ventures, Nokia Growth Partners, StarVest Partners
Scanalytics Inc. Beacon- And Sensor-Based Analytics Wearable IoT World Labs
Tamecco Beacon- And Sensor-Based Analytics Yume no Machi SoZo Iinkai
Torch Beacon- And Sensor-Based Analytics Target Accelerator Program
VideoMining Beacon- And Sensor-Based Analytics Ben Franklin Technology Partners
Viewsy Beacon- And Sensor-Based Analytics Qualcomm Ventures, Kima Ventures
Walkbase Beacon- And Sensor-Based Analytics SBT Venture Capital
Aislelabs Beacon-Based Marketing Salesforce Ventures, Rho Ventures
Beabloo Beacon-Based Marketing Baozun
Bfonics Beacon-Based Marketing Undisclosed
Blue Bite Beacon-Based Marketing Undisclosed
ConnectQuest (CQ) Beacon-Based Marketing Undisclosed
Ebizu Beacon-Based Marketing Cradle Fund
Ifinity Beacon-Based Marketing SpeedUp Venture Capital Group
Shelfbucks Beacon-Based Marketing Capital Factory
Aisle411 Indoor Mapping Cultivian Ventures, St. Louis Arch Angels
Cartogram Indoor Mapping Undisclosed
Indoora Indoor Mapping Startupbootcamp Smart Transportation & Energy
Cosy Inventory Tracking 500 Accelerator
QueueHop Inventory Tracking Y Combinator
Carttronics Loss Prevention Undisclosed
Gatekeeper Systems Loss Prevention Undisclosed
Fellow Robots Service Robots HAX, Crowdfunder
Simbe Robotics Service Robots HAX
Oak Labs Smart Dressing Rooms Wing Venture Capital, R/GA Accelerator

 

The Knowledge LUMAscape

LUMA Partners debuts a useful map of the knowledge players in the digital world.  A helpful guide surely to be updated.2016-4-15-Knowledge-LUMAscape_v3

 

The Billion Dollar Opportunities in Hyperlocal

With Google’s acquisition of Waze earlier this year, local tech is back in the limelight. During a panel at Street Fight Summit in New York last month, Matt Turck of First Mark Capital, Ben Siscovick of IA Ventures, and Jason Klein from On Grid Ventures discussed where the Billion Dollar Opportunities are these days in the geo-space.

Click to play the Street Fight Summit 2013 panel on You Tube.JEK StreetFight 2013

GeoIntent: Going to Where the Puck Will Be

GeoDisruption

reposted from Streetfight

BY JASON E. KLEIN

04 SEPTEMBER 2013

In my last column for Street Fight, How the GeoWeb Will Change Consumer and Business Behavior, I talked about how location-based technologies will continue to be a dislocating force across B2B, B2C, and C2C Markets.  So what can make a business geo-disruptive?  Beyond location awareness, it is far more important to know where a person is headed and his needs and wants at the destination.  Let’s call this “GeoIntent.”

Consider OpenTable, the dining reservation booking engine. It’s an excellent example of a multi-platform application that requires users to express their intent for dining — in terms of travel distance, timing, type of cuisine, and potentially many other factors. OpenTable is opt-in, and the user readily volunteers his geo-intent in as much detail as he or she is willing to share. While restaurants may dislike splitting a booking fee with OpenTable, isn’t this better than a world where geo-intent is unknown, and mobile devices are bombarded with tiny, irrelevant banner ads when you are within range of a seemingly clueless advertiser?

For the geo and mobile world to move towards its promise, web designers should be focusing more on creating engaged, opt-in behavior, and gaining robust information on GeoIntent.  With better information on geo-intent, solutions can be well targeted, and privacy concerns are more likely to fade.

I recently came across a very clever early stage company called Transit Chatter that’s a wonderful illustration of using predictive analytics to determine geo-intent. Transit Chatter is designed to be the app for everyone riding the Chicago Transit system, which, unlike New York, has most of its riders above ground getting a live mobile signal. The app knows where you are going and when you will get there, and provides timely information and advertising based on this geo-intent. Plus, it reaches commuters when they are highly likely to be engaged in their mobile devices, without a TV in the background. Once the commuter is disembarking from the train or bus, and caught in the rush of the crowd, it’s too late.

Waze, the Israeli crowd-sourced navigation app that Google just purchased for $966 million, also has real-time information on where you are headed, but an engaged mobile user on a traditional mobile device should not be in the driver’s seat of a moving vehicle. There is geo-intent in the app, but engagement at the wrong time can be life-threatening. Waze, of course, offers other advantages to Google in terms of keeping its geo-data robust, and Google wants to replace human drivers anyway.

Other notable examples of geo-intent include weather.com, which elicits information on your destination and activities, and, of course, numerous travel sites.  All these companies are a great example of Wayne Gretzky’s advice: “Skate to where the puck is going to be, not where it has been.”

The risk of focusing myopically on where the puck, or an individual, is at a particular moment, is that by the time you message gets there, it’s marginally relevant at best, annoying and creepy at worst. Poorly targeted mobile ads, particularly ones that are supposedly more clever and disruptive, are the enemy of enterprises that relay on consumer’s opting in to truly useful geo-applications.

One final note, congratulations to Jumptap, cited in my last column as strong “geo-infrastructure” provider who offers marketers new ways to make location relevant, which was sold to Millennial Media in a deal valued up to $225 million in August.

JEK Goodman Headshot Compressed SquareJason E. Klein is the founder/CEO of On Grid Ventures, an investment and advisory firm focused on the startup and reinvention of businesses capitalizing on digital and location-based technologies.  Follow him on twitter @JKNews.

How the GeoWeb Will Change Consumer and Business Behavior

Reposted from Street Fight.

How the GeoWeb Will Change Consumer and Business Behavior

30 JULY 2013 BY 

The new Google Maps personalized interface.For about 2000 years, ever since Ptolemy wrote his treatise Geographia, maps and geography have helped humans understand their surroundings in the context of their neighbors, their town, their country, the Earth, and the Universe. For about 400 years, since Mercator figured out how to portray the curved Earth on a flat piece of paper, not much changed in the world of geography — until the launch of 24 GPS satellites by the U.S. Department of Defense about 30 years ago.

Digital location-based technologies are now a transformative force for consumers and businesses, particularly when coupled with the rapid adoption of mobile and the growth of big data. I’m a big believer in the future for “GeoDisruption” — the potential for consumers and businesses to interact in fundamentally new ways to take advantage of increasingly precise location-based technologies.

This is the debut of a column I’ll write for Street Fight exploring the growth of the “GeoWeb” and the emergence of GeoDisruptive trends and companies. When I’m not writing columns, I am the CEO/founder of On Grid Ventures, an investment and advisory firm focused on digital and location-based technologies.

GeoDisruption:  Where we are
Location-based technologies have already been a dislocating force in many industries.

  • Automobile marketing at the local level used to be all about newspapers and television, and companies like AutotraderCars.com, and Autobytel have used geo-based lead generation to irrevocably shift in-market auto buyers and local car marketing spending to the GeoWeb.
  • GPS has made paper maps obsolete.
  • General B2C platforms like Yelp are changing the way we evaluate local services.
  • Vertical B2C platforms like OpenTable are changing the way we find and book nearby restaurants.

The major portals and aggregators are all making increasing bets on the potential for GeoWeb.  Google, with Google Maps and Places; Yahoo, with its leadership position in local news and content aggregation; IAC, with CityGrid and UrbanSpoon; and AOL with Patch.Google’s recent acquisition of Israeli startup Waze for over $1 billion is a high-water mark in the development of the GeoWeb as it affirms the importance of user-generated, location-based content.

GeoDisruption:  Where we’re headed
While the growth ambitions of Google, Yahoo, and others will continue to be fed with more acquisitions of GeoWeb companies, the application of location-based technologies is increasing more broadly in three areas: Business-to-Consumer, Business-to-Business, and Consumer-to-Consumer.

  1. B2C marketing (i.e., GeoMarketing) will continue to be transformed as innovative companies apply location-based technologies to how they acquire, transact with, and retain customers. GeoMarketing will be essential for most local retail and service businesses, and the landscape is ripe for vertical players in areas beyond automotive and restaurants, across the entire local landscape. Early stage companies like BeautyBooked are already trying to become the dominant search and booking platform in verticals like place-based salon services. ReachLocal and Yodleare growing fast as companies that help local businesses reach consumers, and national marketers are increasingly shifting dollars to locally targeted digital marketing and promotion.
  2. C2C interaction (i.e., “GeoSocial”) can also be further shaped as individuals increasingly become comfortable with sharing their location with family, friends, colleagues, and people with similar interests. Foursquare has jumped to an early lead as the platform for consumers to share their location, but Facebook, Google, and others are gaining fast.
  3. B2B companies that enable location-based innovation (i.e., “GeoInfrastructure”) continue to be a hotbed for venture investment.  Location itself is nice, but it needs to be in the context of an individual, the surrounding locations, time of day, and other factors.  This all needs to be accomplished respecting an individual’s privacy. Companies like Jumptap and Place IQ are finding new ways to provide marketers with context that makes location relevant.

While I have a background in computer science, I’ve never been a fan of pure technology. I am a believer, however, in the potential for increasingly accurate digital, location-based, real-time data to better inform the decisions we all make every day on where to go, with whom, what to buy, and other areas. The rapid proliferation of mobile devices is certainly an enabler, but the greatest innovation will come from insights into how a consumer’s behavior varies based on his or her specific location. We’re now a long way from zip-code targeting, and more GeoDisruption is on its way.

Jason E. KleinJason E. Klein is the founder/CEO of On Grid Ventures, and investment and advisory firm focused on the startup and reinvention of businesses capitalizing on digital and location-based technologies.  Follow him on twitter @JKNews.

GeoConquest

GeoConquest =

To successfully use unmanned drones (or mobile digital devices) to target unsuspecting civilians (or shoppers) entering enemy territory (your competitors’ GeoFenced locations).

drone

look up
 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Verve claims a 30% higher click-through rate from GeoConquesting than standard GeoFencing, based on a study of 17 campaigns on Mother’s Day.

Verve CEO Tom MacIssac told Mediapost, “The one big theme from this research is that if you’re going to target users near your own stores … it’s really effective to also target people who are near your competitor’s stores,”  While Verve advertisers have embraced geo-fencing for their own stores, they’re not typically pairing that activity with putting up a geo-fence around rival outlets.

 

 

A Yodle IPO in 2013?

Yodle, the leading Silicon Alley-based digital marketing platform for small businesses, is “strongly considering” an IPO, according to CEO Court Cunningham, as reported by Street Fight.
10590521-yodle-logo

Yodle is profitable and generating over $130 million in revenue annually, Cunningham said recently.

Yodle bought Atlanta-based Lighthouse 360, it was reported today.  Lighthouse 360 has built an advanced customer relationship management (CRM) system for dental offices which reportedly does a terrific job integrating all those systems in a dentist’s office.  Yodle plans to expand the technology each of its 30 verticals.

Read our 2012 Yodle post here.

Some other metrics of note.

  • Yodle has $130 million annual revenues, and 30,000 mostly smaller clients with an average of $4k per client per year.

ReachLocal stock closed today at $13.50, up more than 2x in 14 months.

Update:  March 7

A Yodle source gave me some other revenue numbers, expecting 35% growth this year.

2011:  $75 million

2012: $130 million

2013F:  $175 million.

The Big Data Landscape

Once again, bigger than ever, here is the 2017 Big Data Landscape:

 

For more on Big Data, click here.  

For our investing criteria:  Investment Criteria.

For Matt’s useful 2017 update, here.

Here is version 3.0 of the Big Data Landscape, from Matt Turck, now at FirstMark.

Big Data Landscape

 

And, for some context, here is the prior version:

 

Lessons from Fidelity’s Jim Speros

A few points from Fidelity’s highly regarded CMO Jim Speros caught my eye in eMarketer.

First, Jim has brought Fidelity’s marketing mix to 40% digital, up from 15% just four years ago when he came to Fidelity.  This is on the leading edge of major marketers today.

Second, Fidelity’s new “Thinking Big” campaign is designed first for digital as the lead medium.

Third, Fidelity gained nice ground over the recent economic downturn by spending relatively heavily, and continuously, on its “Green Line” campaign.  Jim says “Marketers who maintain their marketing pressure during an economic downturn usually come out of it stronger than competitors.”

More here.