Investment

...now browsing by category

Everything about my investments

 

The Nabru Sofas

Monday, March 29th, 2010

Nabru is a company that makes modular sofas meaning you can completely customise your sofa, from the size of the cushions down to the number of arms and the colour of the covers. My girlfriend and I were looking to acquire a corner-sofa-bed, which doesn’t sound very complex, but turned out to be as we had tight specifications:

  • no leather or any fabric of the sort,
  • around £1,000 (most sofas in DFS, John Lewis were about £2,000),
  • durable (i.e. hard cushions that stay hard for a long time),
  • has to fit through our flat – we have a corridor making quite a tight angle into the room.

After much shopping and testing, we came across Nabru by searching for corner-sofa-bed on the Internet. In a nutshell, Nabru offers a few ‘standard’ configurations, which you can customize or you can design your own sofa. We went with the latter and visited their showroom to give us an idea of what the fabric looks like and what some of the options are (N.B. you can order fabric swatches to get a proper feel). The sofa arrived a mere 3 days (!!!) after ordering it (we ordered it on a Sunday). I didn’t take a picture of what you receive but you can imagine a pallet full of bits and bops about 6 feet high… quite daunting.

The following videos are to show what the bits look like and give you an idea of assembly. It was very easy but a bit time consuming to put together, but great fun overall. I love the fact that everything is modular and everything can be ordered-reordered afterwards. If you ever have a party and break an arm, you can order it! if you ever stain in in a way that is not washable (all covers come off), you can order new ones!! It is truly amazing.

Click to continue »

SaveNabaztag or the journey of a rabbit

Tuesday, October 20th, 2009

nabaztag_book_strategy2The journey of the rabbit started mid-August after the publication in ‘Les Echos’ (French financial newspaper) that the company behind the Nabaztags (Wifi Rabbits) – Violet – was going under. If you follow the French entrepreneurial scene, you will find that innovative companies are hard to come by; and successful innovative companies are even rarer. People who disagree should compare the age of the companies in the CAC40 vs SP500.

‘Because we don’t like to see Rabbits die’ or because we are slightly crazy, Franck and I decided to rescue the company by placing a bid for it. Unfortunately, none of us had or have the adequate funds so we decided to crowfund the bid.

Click to continue »

‘Retrouve Doudou’ or the art of finding a lost security blanket

Monday, October 19th, 2009

Who said that products targeted at young children can also be used for grown-ups? Well apparently Iddoo and its Retrouve Doudou say so! In short a ‘Retrouve Doudou’ consists of two little devices: one that you attach to the kid’s security blanket, and one that you keep in a known location. The idea is twofolds:

  • if the kid misplaces his/her security blanket at home, you can use the second ‘Retrouve Doudou’ to ping the first one. The first one will then emit noise, light up.
  • if the kid misplaces his/her security blanket outside and you cannot ping it, there is a code on the back of the ‘Retrouve Doudou’ that allows the finder to get back in touch with the owner via the Iddoo website.

retrouvedoudouAs it turns out (I chatted with the inventor/CEO at the ‘Salon Baby’ in Paris), he made a large proportion of his sales from…. adults (men) who consistently lose their keys!

Click to continue »

What makes a good investment?

Sunday, October 11th, 2009

‘What makes a good investment?’ is a question that I have been asked a number of times and that I will try and answer in this short post. For a starter, I would like to differentiate between investment and speculation as defined by Ben Graham. The main difference between the two is risk. With speculation, you are making a bet on the future stock movement of a given company, for which you may or may not know anything about (high risk). With investment, you make a calculated analysis of the company’s growth prospect, irrespectively of its stock price (for a starter) (low risk c.f. below). Click to continue »

Wuiper or social attraction redefined

Thursday, September 17th, 2009

logoI came across the Wuiper whilst at La Cantine in Paris. The product was presented by a team of young entrepreneurs to a very attentive crowd. There are many ways to define what wuiper is:

  • a round plastic disc with a sticky side
  • a new way of communicating amongst people
  • a shy guy’s way to a lady’s heart

However, since all good marketers know that a “product is what a product does”, let me describe to you a plausible situation. Imagine yourself walking down the street minding your own business, when you suddenly pass this wonderfully beautiful girl/man. You have the choice of either approaching him/her with the high and present risk of failure and looking ridiculous. Or, you can quickly text a message to the number on the wuiper and then launch it onto the girl/man (hence the sticky side). Later on, the object of your desire will find the wuiper inviting him/her to texting the wuiper’s number to retrieve your message. The beginning of a love story….

Click to continue »

Le Noble Age

Thursday, August 6th, 2009

Le Noble Age is a company managing retirement homes for OAP in France. They are a new company who has been in operation for 4 years and clearly very successful.

You will find below calculations carried out on the 6th of August to determine whether Le Noble Age was a bargain trading at €14.7.

Click to continue »

Bubbles… old and new

Friday, June 26th, 2009

Bubbles are round, soapy and full of air… Economic bubbles are not soapy, nor round, nor full of air…. but full of cash !! Times of growth when liquidity is abundant and rates of return are high are prosperous for creating bubbles because why would an investor put money on a 4% savings account when you can invest, say in technology or real estate and get a 10-15-20% annual return!!!

Click to continue »

Open Sourced Money

Thursday, March 26th, 2009

I have read a recent article from the Harvard Business Review (April 2008) about the economics of open source. In the article, a company CEO was confronted with opening the code of her beloved software. The main arguments for doing so were (if I recall accurately):

  1. the “community” is doing it anyway
  2. the “community” will get the features it wants
  3. the “community” will alleviate pressure on the developers
  4. The first argument poses an interesting dilemma for most companies as it is/can be seen as pure “theft” of intellectual property – after all, people are reverse-engineering their software and releasing unofficial versions…
  5. This argument is at the core of going open source… after all a company’s product is meant to give the customer what he wants. But what if it doesn’t know what a customer wants? then let the customer satisfy its own needs.
  6. The 3rd argument is the easiest to see from a company’s perspective: programmers reuse code = they spend more time on value-adding bits = reduction in costs.

Where the value lies…

A company has developed a product that is currently selling very well. This product has some sort of software that allows it to do all the cool tidbits, which give the product its value (that’s why customers pay for it after all). There is however a gap from the customer’s point of view: the difference between gross value (what the customer thinks the product will do) and net value (what the product actually does). The difference being a perception cost, which importance can go from disappointment (”oh, it doesn’t do that”) to frustration (”I’m never buying from this company again”).

… in reducing perception cost

So far so good, all companies know they need to reduce this perception cost if they want to improve their turnover. The problem is however twofold:

  • the perception cost is hard to qualify (what does the customer want?)
  • in our fast moving world, the perception cost changes quickly (what does the customer want now?)

The first point should be addressed by a good marketing department. The second point can only be addressed through the constant release of new products (or new patches, updates, upgrades…). Firefox is a typical example is this domain. The customer wants Ajax support, here’s a release, the customer wants tabbed browsing, here’s another release1. I didn’t choose Firefox innocently because here is where the power of open source truly lies:

open source allows customers to be involved in the product fabrication

… in customer’s eyes

With this argument in mind, one could wonder: so where is the value of my product? and why would a customer pay for something he can get for free?

The answers to these questions are industry and sector specific, you cannot compare the way Nokia makes money to the way Talend makes money despite the fact that both companies use open source. Open source is a new dimension to the business world that will be explored in another post.

Firefox actually got a lot cleverer with the release cycle through the use of addons allowing it to provide and test new functions before official releases []