startups

  • South African startup Synthasite raises $5 million in Series A round

    Techcrunch reports that Synthasite, the browser based website builder that is backed by Vinny Lingham has raised $5 million in a Series A investment round from Swiss based Columbus Venture Capital. You can find more details on Vinny's blog and a formal press release here.

    This is great news for the Cape Town based Synthasite, which launched into beta two weeks ago, and good news for South African startups in general. They have proved that it is possible to get decent VC for a South African startup, but that it is much easier when you have a professional product with unique features and global appeal. So many current SA startups are clones or variations on international ideas, and our local internet population is not large enough to justify the kind of investments that these startups are looking for.

    Congratulations to Vinny Lingham and the Synthasite team

  • SouthAfricaTube - another video sharing site

    I was surfing the net this morning when I saw a Google adsense ad promoting a new South African themed video sharing site called SouthAfricaTube.com. I am not sure what scares me more about the site - the fact that it does not even host its own videos, the "designed in Front Page by my cousin Dwayne in 1996" retro look, or the fact that someone would spend money advertising something like this on Google. On further investigation I managed to find Kenyatube.com and Nigeria-tube.com, all using the same code and shit design, and all with around 10 actual videos masquerading as content.

    As much of a waste of time that the site is, it poses interesting questions for the nascent South African video sharing sites like Zoopy, myvideo and Twac. How are these sites going to differentiate themselves from the rest of the local herd, and how are they going to provide local users with an incentive to post videos on their sites instead of YouTube? Tyler Reed has written an detailed comparison of the three current local sites that is well worth reading. Twac has an interesting model - professionally made (and genuinely funny by the looks of things) content that you have to purchase or buy a subscription for, as well as free user submitted content. Myvideo is offering (somewhat controversially) to pay a R1000 bounty for newsworthy video content, while Zoopy, by far the most professionally designed of the three, is going for the social networking angle and letting users share video as well as photos.

    The problem that all of these sites face is that the barrier to entry into the market is so low. Anyone with a credit card can go and buy a domain and a  $99 Clip-Share php script (look familiar MyVideo.co.za?), and launch their own video sharing site. The key, as always, is content. I reckon the key to all three of these sites future success lies in figuring out how to gain traction with the schoolkids that make most of the user generated video content. Once you have a social group or school using a specific service then the growth will be exponential. The first one to figure out how to do this will be the winner here.

  • Don’t screw up the Start-up

    Eric Edelstein, incuBeta founder and roving VC, has started a series of blog posts entitled "Don't screw up the Start up". I reckon these posts are going to be essential reading for anyone who is looking to start up an internet venture, or any other venture for that matter. I first met Eric in the late nineties when I was consulting in the internet gambling industry and hooked up with him again at the last JHB 27 Dinner. He really knows his stuff - I am going to be following all of these posts avidly.

    Eric is also making an interesting play in the suddenly crowded African blog aggregator space. The past month has seen the launch of Amatomu and Afrigator, and Eric is building another one. It is going to be really interesting to see how he differentiates his service from the other ones, and how he appeals to the broader market out there. In his words:

    How do we give the average man in the street value? This is the million dollar question and one we’ll be working on really hard in the next few weeks.

    That is a key question. The average internet surfer (ie, not geek) has never heard of Technorati, IceRocket, Digg or Reddit, never mind the African equivalents of these services. How do you make your service useful to these people? If you can aggregate and track enough blogs, and extract decent intelligence out of them then there are a number of business models that come into play. Getting there isn't going to be easy, but the service that manages to answer these questions is going to have a winner on its hands.

    Eric Edelstein » Don’t screw up the Start-up - PART 1 - Research


Hi, I'm Jaxon Rice. By day I run a Johannesburg based web company called Soup and by night I am the frontman of the Diesel Whores. This is my personal blog. more...

Previous Posts

Thought Leader

The latest posts from my weekly sporadic column at Thoughtleader.co.za

Side Notes

Interesting finds, articles and other web ephemera