Yammer CEO David Sacks receives the first prize by TechCrunch's Michael Arrington and Jason Calacanis
The 5 jury winners and overall winner: Amosphir, fitbit, GrockIt, GoodGuide, Swype and Yammer (left to right)
This year’s TechCrunch50 is over and the winners have been announced:
The overall winner of this year’s TechCrunch50 is Yammer. The announcement was done American-Idol style and GoodGuide (the site tells you which products contain unhealthy substances; it was my favorite) placed second.
Yammer is twitter for companies. I like Yammer, but it was not my favorite.
Don’t get me wrong: I am sure they will get a lot of registrations from employees of many organizations and it will spread viral. I am sure many employees will find it cool and use it.
Their distribution model is also very smart: Anybody can register (no pre-approval by their company necessary) and people are grouped according to their work E-Mail addresses (like Facebook did with colleges in the early days). If companies want to claim their network to manage and administrate it, they have to pay.
Therefore I think it’s likely that Yammer will be a commercial success - esp. given the traction they now get from being a TechCrunch50 winner. - However I am not sure if this will actually increase productivity or distract employees even more (in addition to E-Mail, work phone, cellphone, instant messaging, intranet, surfing the web and of course meetings). In the end we all still need time where we actually do work - instead of only communicating about it.
In addition to overall winner Yammer, there are five more companies that won a “jury selection” (one of them is runner-up GoodGuide). The full list or jury selection winners is:
- Atmosphir (jump’n'run game, but with user-generated levels)
- fitbit ($99 gadget you attach to your cloth; calculates calorie consumption based on that and makes health sugestions)
- GrockIt (Massively Multi-Player Online Learning Game)
- GoodGuide (web site with information on bad ingredients in products and most healthy alternatives)
- Swype (new input method for touch screens: “draw” the word on the virtual keyboard in one continuous motion from letter to letter; the application will then recognize the word)
Here is my overall conclusion of the three days:
Quality of the organization
I’ve said something similar already on day 1: The overall organization was good, but not excellent (measured by the expectations one may have for such a high profile conference). Most attendees I spoke to expressed a similar opinion.
But I should also praise the TechCrunch team for two reasons:
First of all the video recording of all speeches and the possibility to watch the recordings in the archive is excellent.
Secondly the organizers were very flexible to adopt a new jury format that was proposed by judge Yossi Vardi. TechCrunch reacted by letting the audience decide and changed immediately: The jury from then on did not do a joint Q&A with all of the start-ups of one session as one big group, but instead do the Q&A immediately after the presentation just with this company. The judges were also on-stage all the time and not just for the Q&A. I liked the new format better.
Therefore my criticism to the organization is only valid, if you apply very high standards as the benchmark (which I did). But the key thing of such a conference is the content – and that was very good.
Quality of the start-ups
I’ve been amazed by some of the 52 start-ups, but I have also been critical with some of them in my reports.
I spoke to a couple of attendees reg. the quality of the start-ups we saw since Monday. Some of them were disappointed as they expected to be blown away even more by the 50 best start-ups out of more than 1,000. I share that to some degree, but I even more agree to what Don Dodge said on stage after the last start-up presented:
“If you saw Google when they were 6 months old, you would have said they are lame”. He said in his opinion the start-ups this year were very good and far more polished than last year.
He asked for our imagination reg. what these start-ups could achieve. I think he is right. After all that’s why it’s called venture capital. If success and failure were obvious at early stage, banks would fund them.
Worth the trip?
If you just want to know what new trends there are in the start-up scene, you can also lock yourself in a room and watch the TechCrunch50 live stream.
For me it was definitely worth the flight, because almost everybody from the world-wide start-up scene was here and I met great people.
This trip will help me to finally decide on my start-up idea in the next couple of weeks.
Tags: tc50, techcrunch50
worth the trip? probably. worth reading your summary? totally. keep posting summaries of conferences like that. very helpful. ever thought of that for a start-up? keep posting anyway :)