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Business Focus >>

The new manufacturers The new manufacturers

A great British renaissance has been taking place. From Aberdeen to the West Country, the zing is back in manufacturing. It’s about time this spectacular story was told.

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Your cameraphone just got smarter

by Matthew Rock & Real Deals - Wednesday, 30th January 2008 -

Your cameraphone just got smarter

The world economy may be on its knees, but teenagers will still want to swap photos, music and idle chat. And that's great news for the UK's next potential technology giant, ShoZu.

Unless you've been living on Mars for the past few years, you may have noticed that young folk enjoy spending time on their computers or phones chatting, emailing, downloading music, posting pictures and blogging.

Until now, they've faced one irritating obstacle: they can't, generally, coordinate their various devices so that they can, say, post pictures to their blog via their mobile/ cameraphone. Instant integrated communication, off all devices, is the holy grail.

Enter ShoZu, the British start-up whose software may just make such mobile-social network linkage a reality. Today the London-based firm, which started in 2001, agreed a third-round funding deal with SEB Venture Capital that will put a further $12m into the company's coffers. The company’s existing backers Atlas Venture, Crescendo Ventures and TTP Ventures also participated in the financing.

Mark Bole, ShoZu's CEO, points out that global mobile penetration is now at 50 per cent – that's around 3.3 billion subscribers – just 26 years after the first cellular network was launched. By securing pre-installation agreements with handset manufacturers, ShoZu plans to be central to the next great phase of mobile phone usage.

The business is a classic modern technology tale: early-stage business with significant venture backing; already expanding globally, with offices in London, San Francisco, France, Spain and Italy; and tapping into the exploding phenomenon of "mass publishing". Bole previously held senior roles in Nokia and mobile solutions
provider Incomit.

It all sounds very Jack Bauer but, listening to Frank Kelcz of SEB, ShoZu could really be on to something: “Demand for mobile-to-web-enabling technology is being driven by a variety of factors, including the need to stay connected with online media like Flickr and Facebook on the go, and ShoZu has the opportunity as well as the initial market presence to dominate the space.”

ShoZu is definitely one to watch.

BUISNESS NEWS >>

Blue-rinse entrepreneurs make millions

By Kate Pritchard - March 04, 2008 5:41pm GMT

They started out selling their home-made chutney to the WI and school fetes. Now two mums-turned-mavericks have clinched a big-bucks deal with Waitrose to supply their luxury range of Anglo-Indian sauces.

Why school stinks

By Kate Pritchard - February 27, 2008 3:50pm GMT

Starting out with just a tool kit and a van, Charlie Mullins has built a £15m-turnover plumbing business, unblocking drains for the likes of Jonathan Ross, Eric Clapton and Gordon Ramsay. His biggest regret? “I left school when I was 15. I wish I’d escaped much earlier.”

The science of hiring good employees

By Rebecca Burn-Callander - February 27, 2008 2:15pm GMT

There’s no precise formula to hiring good people,” says Jason Stockwood, international MD of Match.com. “But I do have one piece of advice.”

Entrepreneurs and FDs go hand in hand

By Catherine Woods - February 26, 2008 4:12pm GMT

Employing a good finance director to keep a watchful eye on costs is the most important thing a fast-growing company can do, according to Vtesse Networks founder Aidan Paul.


BUSINESS COMMENT >>

Most Commented

Ebay entrepreneur turns over £2m a year

When Jamie Murray sold his Playstation over the auction site at Christmas three years ago, he had no idea that today he’d have built an online business shipping 12,500 items a month. Here’s how.


By Rebecca Burn-Callander


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