Today's Entrepreneur: Jonathan Cobb
No. 1 mistake: Not listening to their customers (or: not having any customers to listen to)
Today's Entrepreneur is Jonathan Cobb, CEO and Founder of Cloudstead.io. Cloudstead is a private cloud platform that seamlessly integrates an unlimited number of applications, giving users massive privacy improvements compared to current cloud services such as Google and Dropbox.
Cobb is active in the startup community, speaking at industry events and advising new entrepreneurs. He is a graduate in B.S, Computer Science at Washington University in 1998.
Cloudstead.io (currently in the top-8 finalists) is competing in Vator Splash Oakland 2015 global startup competition. Watch him live on April 23.
Cloudstead self-categorizes itself into these areas: Apps, cloud computing, group applications, software as a service, storage, enterprise software, and small business.
The top 8 finalist will compete and present live on stage in front of several hundred tech influencers (CEOs, media and investors).
Here's a little about Cobb:
Companies I've founded or co-founded: Kiptronic, Hyperic
Achievements (products built, personal awards won):
These honors are for the products that my team has built over the years:
- Winner, 2008 AlwaysOn OnMedia 100
- Finalist, 2009 MOBI Award for Best Mobile Platform Innovation
- Finalist, 2010 MOBI Award for Best Mobile App Platform
- Winner, 2010 DPAC Award for Best Mobile Advertising Network Innovation
- Finalist, 2011 Digiday Video Award for Best Mobile Video Technology
My favorite startups: Wickr, Silent Circle, Docker
What's most frustrating and rewarding about entrepreneurship/innovation?
What's the No. 1 mistake entrepreneurs make? Not listening to their customers (or not having any customers to listen to)
What are the top three lessons you've learned as an entrepreneur?
Full bio
Jonathan Cobb is a serial entrepreneur who founded Kiptronic (acquired by Limelight Networks), a mobile video platform used by many global media companies including ESPN, NBC, Disney, and Viacom. Jonathan is active in the startup community, speaking at industry events, advising new entrepreneurs, and judging startup competitions, including Startup Weekend and Angel Hack. Until founding Cloudstead, Jonathan was Head of Engineering at Tout, a social video company transforming the way we experience local news and events. Jonathan holds a B.S. in Computer Science from Washington University in St. Louis.
*Want to be included in our Today's Entrepreneur series? Email me: mitos@vator.tv
Mitos Suson
I produce Vator Events and enjoy the challenge. I am learning and growing a lot, being involved with Vator and loving every moment of it!
All author postsRelated Companies, Investors, and Entrepreneurs
Cloudstead, Inc
Startup/Business
Joined Vator on
Cloudstead is a private cloud platform that seamlessly integrates an unlimited number of applications, giving users massive privacy improvements compared to current cloud services such as Google and Dropbox. When a user launches their own cloudstead, we give them a key and throw away ours. We can't ever get in again unless the user requests it.
Cloudstead is remarkably versatile. It can run any application, written in any popular language. That means that Cloudstead’s growing platform adapts quickly to the changing needs of users across varied businesses. Currently, Cloudstead has over a dozen applications, including email, calendar, storage, surveys, collaborative documents, bug tracking, project management and more. Soon, we'll be adding an app a day.
All of these apps work together to form a cohesive system that is a joy to use, while also providing the privacy everyone should have.
Cloudstead is a private cloud that’s also uniquely affordable, offering many of the same benefits that large companies enjoy when they build expensive, complex private clouds.
Questions & Answers:
Q. Companies like Google and Dropbox provide some of the services you do, such as storage, email and tools. What's Cloudstead's proposition over those services?
A. Google Apps and/or Dropbox/Box are just a fraction of what users want and need. SMBs, need lots of other software, such as MailChimp, SurveyMonkey, GitHub, Basecamp, Hipchat, Confluence, Jira, New Relic, Airbrake.io, Mixpanel, the list goes on and on. Cloudstead not only replaces ALL of it, but does so 1) with an integrated system in which all components work together, saving your team a ton of it's most precious resource - time, and 2) much less expensively (savings of 80% or more)
So the accurate comparison is not between Cloudstead and Google/Dropbox, but rather between Cloudstead and a disjointed hodgepodge of 15+ different SaaS applications. The current cloud patchwork wasn’t designed to work together, and doesn’t.
Here is some of the pain that SMBs experience with stitched together Frankenstein SaaS - and that Cloudstead's integrated system elimiinates:
Management Headache. You have to manage users in a dozen different places. Onboarding is a pain. Offboarding is even worse -- who inherits the files and data? Does your SaaS vendor even support this? Every one is different. With Cloudstead, you manage users in one place, for all your apps. Your accounts will automatically have access to new apps that you install.
It's Expensive. Many of these services call themselves "Freemium," but really they are "Tease, then gouge”; you pass the skimpy free tier in a hurry, and then it gets really expensive. But by then, the hooks are in your company and the switching cost is high, so you're stuck overpaying. With Cloudstead, you pay one flat rate for the right size of your "cloudstead" for both computing power and storage, and then add as many accounts and apps as you like. Your Cloudstead will tell you when it's getting bogged down and it's time to upsize your Cloudstead.
Chaotic Data Management and Lack of Privacy. It’s nearly impossible to track data when it’s stored across a dozen different vendors. Worse, it’s difficult to know who has access to it. By keeping your data in your Cloudstead, you always know where it is, what is public, what is shared, and what is private.
Cloudstead’s integrated system solves all of these problems.
Q. How do you differ from services such as Xendo and Scoro?
A. Cloudstead is a much broader product than either Xendo or Scoro.
Xendo enables search across multiple third party services and websites. In contrast, Cloudstead not only provides the search, but actually provides the apps themselves AND Cloudstead powers system-wide search across all the Cloudstead applications. Xendo is essentially a feature that is provided within the much broader Cloudstead product.
Scoro provides a suite of applications. However, already, even at pre-launch, Cloudstead has many more applications than Scoro. More importantly, Cloudstead is NOT simply a suite of application, it’s an open source platform available for developer and anyone who wants to build for it. The platform is language-agnostic – enabling rapid integration of popular open-source applications. The Cloudstead build platform will be very appealing to independent cloud developers due to how easy it is to use. Because of this, we predict that in the not-too-distant future, we’ll be adding an application a day.
And even comparing "apples to apples" (noting that Cloudstead is much more than apples; it's more like the whole supermarket), Cloudstead has major advantages over Scoro, including, cost. Scoro starts at $11 per user per month. Cloudstead's much more sensible model is pay for usage –meaning the many SMBs with a lot of light users can save on operating costs.
Yet another major advantage of Cloudstead is privacy. Scoro houses users' data on servers that Scoro can access at will, Cloudstead provides a key to users that they own. Period
Q. I've read some about Cloudstead's pipeline. What are the benefits of signing up right now?
A. Get your company started Faster: Today, right out of the box, you can get a new company up and running faster than with Google Apps or any other cloud platform, public or private.
Launch now and within minutes you can start using your cloudstead with: email, calendar, file sharing, email list management, collaborative docs, blogging, online surveys, web analytics, project management, source control, issue tracking.
Stop Wasting Time: Most businesses struggle with managing dozens of Incompatible SaaS vendors. With Cloudstead, all of your accounts are in one place. Enjoy single-sign-on across all apps. Onboarding/offboarding is a cinch. And we don't lock you in, so you don't have to worry about possibly wanting to go somewhere else in the future.
Save Money: Cloudstead is a fully-integrated private cloud with a simple all-you-can-eat pricing model. (cost calculator screenshot or textual summary here)
Q. What is your initial target market?
A. Our first verticals are tech startups and software developers, because:
1) They are intensive users of SaaS;
2) They understand the advantages of a well-designed, integrated system, versus the problems inherent in a patchwork of SaaS vendors.
3) We understand their needs (source control, issue tracking, web conferencing, web analytics, etc). Our “Startup Bundle” app suite is designed exactly for them.
Q. Is there a channel strategy to get adoption? If so, who are your partners?
A. Yes. We are in talks with datacenters, co-working spaces, and other organizations that are keenly interested in white-labeling Cloudstead to offer to their customers. We are also talking with consultants ("freelance CTO's") who design and implement whole technology systems for their clients. Cloudstead is a perfect offering in this common scenario. Since Cloudstead is so easy to use and understand, it makes the consultants' jobs easier and their clients happier.
Q. How does your team divvy up responsibilities?
A. Brian and Jonathan head the technical work. Chip is a swiss army knife, primarily focused on product, customer support and marketing; he also does some tech work. Karen leads our outbound marketing and messaging. EJ handles all the business operations including legal/finance, and also has a strong hand in recruiting and fundraising.
Q. What are the use cases for Cloudstead?
A. Small-to-midsize company or tech startup is faced with three types of pain commonly associated use of multiple 3rd party cloud services.:
a) Lack of integration- multiple users or departments using on different platforms and services with varied security protocols, passwords, and storage. Information is not as secure, search is cumbersome and the "shadow IT" problem of individual users choosing whatever services they like is wasting time and creating stress for the real IT department and leadership. Cloudstead is a simple, private cloud solution for use by SMBs and startups that want and need their data and cloud software easily managed, searchable and secure.
b) Cost - lack of control over varied cloud SaaS pricing models that can spike after a certain user tier is exceeded. User-based pricing that doesn't account for light vs. heavy users and potential spikes in operating cost from 3rd party cloud vendors make for big headaches in budget. Shadow IT from non-integrated cloud services also creates budget mayhem. Cloudstead is and affordable private cloud solution for use by SMBs and startups that can save hundreds, even thousands of dollars in TOC compared to the current, multi-platofrm approach.
c User on- and off-boarding. Startups on a growth trajectory are adding new users across a panoply of cloud services. On-boarding them is time-consuming. Furthermore, control over security of data is a concdern when its spread among users on different platforms. SMBs with regular turnover have similar challenges and for both, off-boarding is an even bigger concern and time suck. Cloudstead is a simple and secure private cloud solution for use by SMBs and startups that safeguards control and access to data and makes on and off-boarding users simple and fast.
Jonathan Cobb
Joined Vator on
CEO and Founder of Cloudstead.io. Founded mobile-video pioneer Kiptronic, acquired by Limelight Networks in 2009. Jonathan is active in the startup community, speaking at industry events and advising new entrepreneurs.