Libby Cook

Libby Cook

Libby Cook

One the many benefits of joining the recently formed Blackstone Entrepreneurs Network of Colorado Board is having the opportunity to meet Libby.  She is a great contributor to the board, CU, the State and the entrepreneurial community.  She was a founder of Wild Oats and still plays a major role in the health food industry as a mentor and angel investor.  She also has a cool philanthropic pursuit named the Philanthropiece Foundation.  It was originally formed in 1997 as the Wild Oats Community Foundation,  providing low cost holistic health care and education services to needy neighborhoods in the United States and in addition to operating the Wellness Centers, the foundation has been engaged in the community of Boulder, Colorado, collaborating on several educational and community initiatives.

Libby gives a lot of her time as she currently chairs the Center for the Advancement of Sustainable Enterprise (CASE) at Colorado State University, and actively serves on advisory boards for the University of Colorado School of Law,  Silicon Flatiron Center’s Entrepreneurship Initiatives at the University of Colorado, and Justice & Empowerment Initiatives, in addition to the Blackstone effort.

Cool lady - check out her activities to better the State and the world.

Dan Caruso's Envysion

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Let me start with the obvious, Dan Caruso is a brilliant entrepreneur, in an elite group certainly in the state and even the country, probably in the world. First, as one of the founding employees of Level3, then with the ICG turn around and now Zayo.  Dan prints money for his employees, himself and his investors and builds sustainable world class enterprises in the process. With ICG, he took a $15M investment from Columbia Capital and returned them over $200M eighteen months later - that's amazing.  And by all accounts, he is doing the same thing at Zayo which will likely have a market cap of $6-8B when they go public in the next year. Dan Caruso is a brilliant entrepreneur.  

Dan is also one of my favorite people in the whole world - intense but easy going, laser focused but open minded, tough as nails but generous, intelligent but practical. Dan is a unique individual. 

With that said, when he first told me about his vision for Envysion seven or eight years ago, I didn't get it. A company focused on putting video survelance as a service into retail outlets using newly installed broadband pipes - where was the value add?  Why couldn't the company just do that themselves?  More importantly, if it was something the retailer decided not to do themselves, how hard would it be to convince them to completely change their work flow to include video as a management tool if you did it for them?  The whole proposition seemed difficult at best. 

Well I was wrong as I learned in a briefing recently from Dan and Matt Steinfort, (Envysion co-founder and CEO). Envysion is thriving. They have almost a hundred employees in Louisville, strong financial backing from CapitalOne and Parthenon Capital Partners and multi-year contracts with large clients such as Chipotle, Big Lots, Einstein, Taco Bell, Chick-fil-a, Cinemark and Verizon and show healthy growth and profitability.

The key value add (that I was missing before) comes from Envysion's ability to tie video surveillance to critical company data, providing operators with instant and actionable insights (through innovative analytics and targeted audits) improving their operations and saving them money.

Chipotle is a case in point. They use the Envysion system in every store they have nationwide and it is a critical part of their management process.  One of their Key Performance Metrics is how quickly they can get a customer through the line and they use the Envysion video in detailed time and motion studies to carve seconds from that process.  They use it to compare one store to the next, or single store performance throughout a day.  They use it to make staffing decisions or flag performance issues.  In short, it is a fully integrated part of their work flow analysis and they pay Envysion a bundle for that insight.  That is cool.

Aside from Dan's brilliance, a lot of credit has to be given to Matt Steinfort for his persistence and strong execution.  He has built a really talented management team and impeccable customer service.   Congrats to Dan and Matt for building a great company and proving me wrong!

Amy Stursberg - Executive Director of the Blackstone Charitable Foundation

Amy Stursberg - Executive Director Blackstone Charitable Foundation

Amy Stursberg - Executive Director Blackstone Charitable Foundation

Had the great pleasure on Monday to meet Amy Stursberg - the Executive Director of the Blackstone Charitable Foundation. 

The Blackstone Charitable Foundation was founded at the time of Blackstone's Initial Public Offering in 2007, and is focused on directing its resources and applying the intellectual capital of the firm to foster entrepreneurship globally.

The Foundation has committed to a five-year, $50 million Entrepreneurship Initiative to create connected networks, or “ecosystems”, of master coaches in regions across the nation and around the world. Their generous donation to fund the creation of the Blackstone Entrepreneurs Network of Colorado (an initiative that I serve on the Board of) is a great blessing for our state and we are all indebted to Amy, and John Gray at Blackstone for such a generous gift and the vision to help us create such a cool network.

Amy is a great person and truly dedicated to the mission of fostering entrepreneurship globally and it was a treat to get to know her and work together on this important effort!

Art Zeile and Hosting.Com

Art Zeile - CEO Hosting.Com

Art Zeile - CEO Hosting.Com

I received a nice update from Art Ziele, the CEO of Hosting.Com last week and it is great to hear how well things are going for him and his company.  Art, of course, is iconic in the entrepreneurial community in Colorado and has worked directly with dozens of private equity and venture capital firms, raising hundreds of millions in debt and equity during his career . He has served on the boards of Intrado, iTriage and SMS Management Services and prior to Hosting.Com, was the CEO of QTC Management, co-founder and CEO of INFLOW and a founder of LINK-VTC (acquired by Global Crossings in 1995).  He attended the Air Force Academy and the JFK School of Government at Harvard (where my wife worked when I was there at school and we both loved) and been contributing in Colorado in so many ways ever since. 

Hosting.Com is thriving.  They provide Infrastructure as a Service/IaaS to over 3,000 clients worldwide including NBCUniversal, Cricket, Brookstone, Stanford, the Dallas Cowboys, Humana, the NFL, Smuckers and more and have data centers in six cities across the US.  They are increasingly focused on highly reliable web hosting for high target sites like CNBC, which are prime targets for hackers trying to disrupt their business or take down their website based on what the broadcast personalities may say from one night to the next.  It was quite impressive to hear how they were able to protect CNBC during a recent all out hacker assault. 

Art has also committed to help the Blackstone Network in whatever way he can and we appreciate his willingness to contribute and the great credibility he provides.  Thanks Art for doing all you do!

Urgent Rx on a Critical Mission

UrgentRx

Heard a pitch last week by Jordan Eisenberg, the founder and CEO of UrgentRx.  First of all, what a dynamic and infectious individual.  He is the epitome of the energetic, wear every hat, do everything entrepreneur and you can see how with his energy level.  He was on his way back from the east coast with no sleep when we met and you would have never known it.  Jordan is a serial entrepreneur/inventor and worked on CollarCard, BottleCard (acquired), was the creator of Buddy Network (acquired) and worked with Maurice Kanbar (founder of Skyy Vodka) amongst other successes. 

He is totally pumped about UrgentRx and after hearing his pitch, it would be hard not to be. The idea is simple - UrgentRx is a line of fast-acting, portable over-the-counter medications that provide easy to take (no water - rip the package open and pour it in your mouth), pleasant tasting, FDA compliant medication for headache, upset stomach, an allergic reaction...you name it.  The packaging is high impact and catchy and the product has been selling really well to their primary demo - "Go Getters/Grinders" (males/;females, 25-45 years old, busy with work and family, needs easy on the go solutions).

That's enough, but the really unique thing about UrgentRx has been their incredibly creative "incremental merchandising" approach.  Getting shelf space in any store, let alone the right store is next to impossible for new brands these days.  Their solution - patent-pending, high-impact displays that take up only dead space - the pole next to the register at checkout, a magazine rack border, stuck to the soft drink dispenser - you get the idea.  That is creative and just the kind of idea that good entrepreneurs come up with when established entities see a road block. 

These guys are building a pretty cool brand and doing well.  Not the kind of thing directly in my investment wheelhouse but you have to give them credit and I will enjoy watching their success!

Novinda - Cleaning Up the Coal Industry

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I was introduced to Ed Williams this week, who is the CEO of Novinda.  Ed is a very successful entrepreneur and Novinda is an interesting story. Their heritage is in advanced materials and their focus in the last two or three years has turned to developing a portfolio of patented products that address mercury emissions in coal burning power plants.

The US market alone for mercury control consumables is a billion dollar annual opportunity if the April, 2015 required implementation date of the EPA's new MATS (Mercury & Air Toxics Standards) holds. The Company's primary technology, Amended Silicates HgX, provides 40-75% operational cost savings for mercury control under the new regs and is being tested in over 50 plants in the US currently. Now they are reliant on the regulation implementation to kick in and are out raising a $5M bridge to full scale production and sales in 2015.

Ed adds to the story as an accomplished manager and serial entrepreneur.  He ran an $800M division of Apple, served as the CEO of Firefly Energy and has been successful in a number of other early stage development companies.

As an investor, the somewhat binary nature of their trajectory dependent on regulation over the coming year or two is somewhat unsettling but the story is interesting and the opportunity is large. The greenhouse problem is global, not local. The less coal we us in the US, the more cheap coal there will be for China and India to consume and it doesn't much matter where in the world it is consumed, everybody feels the impact so cleaning up coal is a necessary reality for all of us regardless of how prolific natural gas becomes in the US and Novinda appears well positioned in one segment of that important game.  

Novinda could become quite large, very fast if regulation stays on their side which would be great for them and also for Colorado - definitely one to watch. 

Cool Idea, Cool Company, Cool Planet

I heard a presentation recently by Howard Janzen, the CEO of Cool Planet. Often in Colorado entrepreneurs start companies to stay in the state. Much less often people transplant successful enterprises in order to migrate here. Howard's Cool Planet is one of those rare and beautiful stories.  Activity like this is great for Colorado and we should applaud and embrace it and do what we can to help make Howard feel at home here and thrive. 

The Cool Planet story centers around the production of "carbon negative hydrocarbon fuels".  They take various non-food biomass feedstock sources and produce high performance hydrocarbon fuel and a co-product known as CoolTerra.  The hydrocarbon fuel is gasoline and diesel - not ethanol - and is virtually indistinguishable from the refined equivalent and extremely price competitive. 

CoolTerra is the cool part.  It is a co-product of the process and a soil additive that promotes better water and nutrient absorption and dramatically faster crop growth.  The overall impact (including the burning of the gasoline for transportation) is carbon negative - that's right - it reduces the overall carbon footprint.  Too good to be true - maybe - we are all aware of the enormous sums that have been lost chasing similar clean tech dreams over the past few years.  The ultimate success of the concept is dependent on getting the process fine tuned and scalable.  Never the less, they have had incredible early testing success with a pilot fractionator built in 2012 and their first plant will be on line in 2015 so we will know shortly how well it works. 

They have great investors including, North Bridge, Shea Ventures, ConocoPhillips, Exelon, GE, Google Ventures, and BP and have raised over $150M through a Series D round.  They also have great exposure being on the CNBC Disruptor 50 Class of 2014 list, receiving the Frost & Sullivan 2014 Technology Innovation Award, the Global Hot 100 at the World Summit on Innovation & Entrepreneurship, the IHS-CERA Energy Innovation Pioneer list and many more.

You have got to love a guy that went to both Colorado School of Mines and HBS (there aren't many of us) and Howard has an incredible track record of success.  He was the CEO of One Communications until it was sold to EarthLink in 2011 and before that he was the President of Sprint Business Solutions (10k employees, and $12B in annual revenue).  Before that he was the Chairman of Williams Communications Group.  He also has a great track record of giving back.  Howard serves as a board member for a number of non-profit organizations including The Colorado School of Mines Foundation, The University of Tulsa, Hillcrest Healthcare System, Morningside Foundation and The Heart of America Boy Scout Council. He also serves on the Governor's Science and Technology Council for the State of Oklahoma and is a Commissioner and Chairman of the Global Information Infrastructure Commission (GIIC).

Their long term plans include building over 400 plants through the US and potentially multiples of that worldwide over the next decade.  They also plan to built a fabricating facility possibly right here in Colorado to build components for those plants.  What a great story and accomplished business and community contributor in Howard.  Please help us in welcoming him to our great state!

Three Years With S&P Capital IQ And Quite Happy

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While I typically stay away from plugging for services and products that I use, I will make the exception with Standard & Poors Capital IQ platform.  The S&P CapIQ platform combines great global company information, credit ratings and market research with powerful tools for financial analysis, projections and risk assessments. The web access is easy to use from any machine and/or device and we find the Excel-based platform and the spreadsheet plugins and templates provides a great way to automate screens, analysis and provide both real-time and historical info on companies, markets, transactions, and people worldwide. CapIQ is integrated completely with every aspect of our workflow now and is an incredibly powerful tool. The team at S&P including Shannon Scott and Justin Sevy here in Colorado and Aarti Desai in Chicago have been fantastic to work with and they have gone out of their way to include us in their next generation platform feedback group which has been fun. Although smaller than their competitors, Factset and Blomberg, we find them incredibly responsive and a great alternative to the bigger more traditional players in this space. I would definitely recommend the platform to anybody in asset management, private equity, investment banking, advisory or corporations. Great service!

Joel Moxley - Foro Energy

Joel Moxley

Joel Moxley

Over the last several weeks I have had the pleasure to meet a new face - new to me anyway - Joel Moxley a PhD from MIT, a serial entrepreneur, an active angel investor and a great contributor back to our community.  We met through BEN Colorado and I look forward to working more with Joel.  Currently Joel is a founder and in charge of business development at Foro Energy.  Before Foro, he was an Entrepreneur-in-Residence at North Bridge Venture Partners.  He has had loads of entrepreneurial success himself as a Co-Founder of PriorSmart, acquired by RPX Corporation (NASDAQ:RPXC), and as the Vice President of Operations of Semprus Biosciences, acquired by Teleflex Incorporated (NYSE:TFX), that developed specialty materials for medical devices.

Foro is pretty cool too.  The company is built around technology developed at Colorado School of Mines (one of my alma maters and near and dear to my heart) and is focused on the  commercialization of high power lasers for the oil, natural gas, geothermal, and mining industries.  Apparently their unique capability is to be able to bust through the “sound barrier” of Stimulated Brillouin Scattering that previously made it impossible to transmit high power lasers over long distance fiber optic cables.  With this problem solved, they got a nice grant from US Department of Energy and are working on commercializing technology to transmit high power lasers over long distance fiber optic cables enabling step change performance in applications to drill, complete, and workover wells - a pretty novel and unique application of laser technology.

With all that going on, Joel has still been able to dedicate loads of time to the BENCo advisory activity and has been a prolific contributor with lots of value add.  My thanks to Joel for his efforts to give back to our entrepreneurial community and looking forward to getting to know him better in the months and years ahead!

Simple Energy Is Simply Elegant!

Simple Energy Mission

They say that great organizations are built around easy to understand, powerful, actionable and emotional missions.  If that is true, then Simple Energy is off to a good start.  Their mission (graphic left - click to expand) is not only compelling but according to Yoav Lurie and Justin Segall (the two founders who I met earlier this week) it is really working. 

Simple Energy has a simple product.  Their utility partners (like SDG&E and Pepco) pay them a fee to engage with the utility customer base on the utility's behalf to help those customers save energy.  That is a regulatory requirement so the utilities are motivated to do it and according to Simple Energy not very good at it.  Simple Energy pockets the cash and then provides three things to that customer base, (1) Energy Insights - data-driven micro-targeted messaging providing tips, insights and rewards for the customer in catchy, easy to understand emails and web engagement, (2) Energy Community - social competitions and leaderboards encouraging users to conserve and rewarding engagement, and (3) Energy Rewards - a marketplace for energy-related products and services that helps the user put their savings to work.

The key to their success is the third objective above.  In essence, the utility is paying Simple Energy a fee to sell that utility's customers (in a fully endorsed way) products using credits the customer obtained through conservation and/or product subsidies that come from the utility with the purchase of energy savings appliances, air conditioners, etc.  It is really an elegant model and Simple Energy seems to be doing a great job executing it.

We got their pitch as part of the Blackstone Entrepreneurs Network briefings and I was truly impressed.  Great to have such a creative group of folks right here in Boulder doing well by doing the right thing for the environment!

Sage Hughes - A Shining Star From CU Law

Sage Hughes graduation - CU Law School

Sage Hughes graduation - CU Law School

May 16, 2014 is a big day in the Gatz household (Julie Gatz is my invaluable assistant and Sage's mom) - a big day because today is the day that Sage graduates from CU law school.  That is a big day for anybody but it is especially important because of all Sage has already accomplished at CU and all she will undoubtedly accomplish in NYC.  She is headed to probably one of the most prestigious law firms in the entire country - Simpson, Thatcher. 

For 2015, Simpson Thacher was ranked #6 on The Vault's Top 100 Most Prestigious Law Firm Rankings, and #1 in Private Equity. The firm is also recognized in various other surveys, including Vault.com’s 2010 review of the 20 Best Law Firms to Work For.

The firm has relationships with private equity firms Blackstone Group and Kohlberg Kravis Roberts, and it has longstanding ties to JPMorgan ChaseBank of America, and the United States Department of the Treasury.

To have a CU grad headed to a firm with that kind of reputation is an incredible feather not only in Sage's cap but for CU Law School too.  Congrats to Sage and to Phil Weiser (the dean) for such great success!  I look forward to seeing all Sage with accomplish and to the other great talent that Phil and CU Law School are producing!

 

 

Blackstone Entreprenuer's Network Board

Senator Michael Bennet - Blackstone Entrepreneurs Network

On April 23, 2014, the Blackstone Charitable Foundation formally announced the donation of $4 million dollars to Silicon Flatirons (at the University of Colorado) to form the Blackstone Entrepreneurs Network of Colorado.  The gift and initiative was announced at an event featuring Governor John Hickenlooper, Senator Michael Bennet, University of Colorado President Bruce Benson, University of Colorado-Boulder Chancellor Phil DiStefano, Blackstone Charitable Foundation Executive Director Amy Stursberg, and The Blackstone Group Managing Director Jon Gray.

The Blackstone Entrepreneurs Network in Colorado (BEN Colorado) has a mission to strengthen and grow the networks across the aerospace, bioscience, digital/technology, energy, and natural foods sectors and will focus on the Boulder and Denver Metro Area regions initially but expand to include the entire state over time.

The vision is to combine Master Entrepreneurs and Advisors to open up important networks of influence to a select number of companies on the verge of rapidly 'scaling up'. The goal is to extend, expand, and connect the networks of experience and expertise in and outside of Colorado.

I have been asked to participate in this incredible project on the Steering Committee of the Advisory Board and I am greatly honored to be involved and grateful for the generous Blackstone contribution and their selection of Colorado as a place to implement the vision.

 

Tom Wheeler - A Peak At His Agenda For The FCC

Tom Wheeler, FCC Chairman

Had dinner with the FCC Chairman, Tom Wheeler, last night in Boulder, hosted by Phil Weiser (Silicon Flatirons).  In attendance were half a dozen Colorado entrepreneurial leaders.  The setting was informal and Chairman Wheeler was interested in hearing about issues the FCC should be concerned about from us and also interested in highlighting some of his agenda as the new Chairman.  

Chairman Wheeler has some of the standard background you would expect of an FCC Chairman - President of the National Cable & Telecommunications Association and a prominent cable and telecom lobbyist, but he also has an interesting background in venture and entrepreneurship and is quite well plugged into current technology trends, social media, etc.  He is also an extremely well informed and published historian (Take Command: Leadership Lessons of the Civil War (Doubleday, 2000) and Mr. Lincoln's T-Mails: The Untold Story of How Abraham Lincoln Used the Telegraph to Win the Civil War (HarperCollins, 2006), and many of his opinions seem to come from that extensive historical viewpoint. 

Unlike some of his predecessors, in his short time in that post he has already formed some strong positions on critical issues such as net neutrality.  Rather than seeing the federal appeals court decision last month to vacate the FCC’s 2010 Open Internet rules as a major setback, he feels that is actually a blessing in disguise as it allows the FCC now to re-craft policy around net neutrality that is broader and more comprehensive.  He told us we wouldn't have to wait long to get an idea of what he intends to do there.

He also seems to have a desire to be more collaborative with industry, preferring to call or visit with CEOs in cable or wireless to brainstorm ideas and solutions rather than the more traditional but ridged formal process around NPRMs, etc.  That would be a really welcome breath of fresh air.

It was great to get the chance to met him in a small setting and to hear first hand a little about his background and vision for the Commission.  It was also fantastic to hear about his extreme confidence in Phil Weiser and his policy contributions.  My gratitude to Phil for hosting the event for letting me be a part of it.

Gigi Sohn Appointed As Special Counsel for External Affairs - FCC

My friend Gigi Sohn is headed to the FCC.  Chairman Tom Wheeler today announced Gigi will serve as the Special Counsel for External Affairs at the FCC.  In my opinion, he could not have made a better choice.  Gigi has served since 2001 as the President and CEO of Public Knowledge and, from 2011-2013 as the Co-Chair of the board of directors of the Broadband Internet Technical Advisory Group (BITAG). She has served on the board of the Telecommunications Policy Research Conference (TPRC) and on the Advisory Board of the Center for Copyright Information. In 1997, President Clinton appointed Gigi to serve as a member of his Advisory Committee on the Public Interest Obligations of Digital Television Broadcasters.  Gigi is a tireless consumer advocate and should serve us well at the FCC. Good luck and keep up the great work Gigi!

Spoke To The Telecom Graduates In Boulder Last Week

Beautiful CU In the Fall

Always a treat to interact with the great students at the Masters Telecom Program at CU.  I was in Boulder last week speaking to over a hundred of the students in the program and I am always encouraged about the future of technology in our nation's youth when I am there.  I spoke about the roll of satellites in global telecommunications in general and highlighted the current competitive battle going on to dominate broadband on commercial airlines (between ViaSat and Gogo amongst others).  I got great questions and interest and a very nice email from every single student in the auditorium (which severely clogged my inbox but was a very nice gesture non-the-less).   Thanks to Jill Dupre, the Associate Director, for having me and thanks to everybody there for the very warm welcome!

Phil Weiser Named Dean Of CU Law School

Phil Weiser - Dean CU Law

Incredible news for Phil Weiser, for the University of Colorado, Silicon Flatirons and the state as well, as Phil is named Dean of the University of Colorado Law School.  Phil has been the senior adviser for technology and innovation to the National Economic Council at the While House and he will now be returning to Boulder.  I agree with the CU Provost Russell Moore who said Phil's credentials are impeccable, as he is a well-known, nationally recognized great legal mind.  He is also an incredible rainmaker for CU and our state and a networker extraordinaire.

 

I have known Phil for almost two decades and enjoyed working with him on everything from Silicon Flatirons to Governor Ritter's Innovation Council and am excited to have him back in Colorado!   Congrats, Phil, on you new appointment.  It could not have gone to a better person!

Speaking At The Cable Center Next Week

Cable Center - Denver, Colorado

Next week on October 4th I will be speaking on Disruptive Innovation and a Changing Technological Environment at the Cable Center in conjunction with a conference focused on the technological dynamics, economic forces and business issues, as well as public policy and social implications of the shift from broadcast (multicast) to video-anywhere (unicast).  Should be a great event.

Phil Weiser appointed as White House Senior Advisor for Technology and Innovation

A huge congratulations for my good friend, Phil Weiser, who was recently named as the Senior Advisor for Technology and Innovation to the National Economic Council Director at the While House.  He has spent the last year as the Deputy Assistant Attorney General at the DOJ - Antitrust Division and now gets even closer to the flame.  I got to know Phil while he was on the CU Law School faculty before joining the DOJ and through Silicon Flatirons Center for Law, Technology and Entrepreneurship (which he founded). 

Phil Weiser - White House Senior Advisor

Before going to Washington to aid the Obama Administration, Phil has been at CU for over a decade where he worked to establish a national center of excellence in telecommunications and technology law.  He is a networker extraordinaire and a prolific author - having written a number of books includingThe Jury and Democracy: How Jury Deliberation Promotes Civic Engagement and Political Participation; Telecommunications Law and Policy; and Digital Crossroads: American Telecommunications Policy in the Internet Age amongst others.  He is extremely smart and will serve us very well in the White House.

I have missed seeing Phil around CU over the past year while in Washington and I guess this will only prolong that but the Administration could not have picked a better person!

ViaSat To Buy Internet Provider WildBlue for $568M

In an article in the Wall Street Journal today, ViaSat announced the purchase of WildBlue for $568M buying out existing shareholders Liberty Media, Intelsat, Kleiner Perkins and the NRTC.  WildBlue now has over 400,000 subscribers and has been growing rapidly but is capacity constrained and this deal paves the way for an expansion of the service using new ViaSat technology, including the ViaSat-1 satellite scheduled to launch in early 2011. 

The two companies have worked together for over ten years and this acquisition is a great thing for both sides.  By joining forces, the two companies will be able to reduce long-term costs and risk of expanding Internet access via satellite and brings a great combination of scaled services and terrific brand name at WildBlue together with technology creation expertise at ViaSat.

Obama Appoints Don Gips Ambassador to South Africa

Don Gips

President Obama announced today his appointment of my great friend, Don Gips as Ambassador to South Africa.  Don has been out of the public sector for awhile at Level3 but having raised over $500k during the campaign and serving on the President's transition team advisory board this is a well deserved and expected appointment.  Don is an incredibly talented public servant clear back to the late 1990s when he was Vice President Al Gore's Chief Domestic Policy Advisor and he also put in a stint as the chief of the FCC international bureau amongst many other incredible accomplishments.

Although I will sure miss hanging out with you Don, I couldn't be more happy for you and your new adventure!  Congrats on your appointment and on a job well done.