MitchelLake Hits the Skyline of Brisbane Last Night

The MitchelLake Group continues it’s support and sponsorship of Silicon Beach Brisbane, which is known as delivering the largest networking events for web / tech startups in Brisbane and is constantly growing. These events regularly attract 150-250 odd entrepreneurs, technologists, investors and supporters from Brisbane’s start-up eco system.

Last nights event formed part of the finale of Startup Spring which is a three-week long, Australia wide festival of events and activities that celebrate and promote the tech startup community in Australia.

The event was held at The Exchange Hotel’s Skybar and you will see from the photo below, the MitchelLake Brand was showcased amongst the Brisbane City skyline.

Thanks to all who attended and we look forward to the next event, a huge Xmas Party which will be announced soon.

Go to Silicon Beach Brisbane if you would like to join the networking group and get involved in Brisbane’s start-up tech community.

Cheers

Kyle McGinty

MitchelLake Queensland

MitchelLake Group Welcomes a New Laker: Peter Farkaly

We are thrilled to welcome Peter Farklay to the SF family.

Peter has over 5 years recruiting experience primarily focused on technical searches in the enterprise and consumer software space in the SF Bay Area. He has managed year plus in house recruiting engagements with Model N (MODN), Proofpoint (PFPT), and Luidia. In addition, he has performed successful contingent searches for organisations such as Facebook, Pandora, SanDisk, Dish Networks, Epocrates, and Salesforce.

Peter spent the last four years working at Gravity People, a boutique contingent and RPO firm based in downtown San Francisco. He holds a B.A. from the University of Colorado and lives in the Haight with his (brand new) wife. He’s a standup comedy fan and mathematics enthusiast. He once solved Hilbert’s Sixteenth Problem on a beer coaster while on a bender at Cresta but lost it shortly thereafter in a dice game.

Please say hello and connect with Peter on LinkedIn or shoot him a note, peter@lakemr.com.

Welcome to the team, Peter!

MitchelLake announced as a finalist for the 2013 Recruitment Excellence Awards

We are thrilled to learn MitchelLake is a finalist for the 2013 Recruitment Excellence Awards.

MitchelLake was nominated for Best Boutique Agency and the Deloitte Recruitment Excellence Award. We are in great suspense as we await the royal blue carpet event at the Art Gallery of New South Wales on October 25th.

Thank you to our clients and candidates who provided references and information for our nominations.

We look forward to sharing any good news with you.

MitchelLake Group Q2 Market Snapshot

We see market conditions in the US improving outside of tech, resulting in driving customer adoption and growth for talent across a broader skill set range. The recent report from Silicon Valley Bank on US market conditions for Q2 has some great data.

Many folks talked about a bubble 12 months ago with what can only be described as an investment frenzy in early stage consumer web companies. I’ve not heard that term mentioned again for some time as we see a market dominated by acquisitions, acqui-hiring, VC firms angel investing and an economy rebounding from what can only be called a once-in-a-generation market correction.

We saw an increase in tech venture investing:

Venture capitalists invested $1.9 billion into 270 Internet-specific companies during the second quarter of 2013. This investment level is 39 percent higher in dollars and 12 percent higher in deals than the first quarter of 2013 when $1.3 billion went into 241 deals and is the first time in five quarters that the sector has experienced an increase in investing levels. Five of the largest 10 rounds for the quarter were in the Internet-specific category. ‘Internet-Specific’ is a discrete classification assigned to a company with a business model that is fundamentally dependent on the Internet, regardless of the company’s primary industry category.

PWC MoneyTree Report and

TechCrunch VC Investments Doubled Q2

We are seeing a number of tech firms who completed seed/series A rounds pre-financial crisis, specifically within the enterprise sphere. These firms are now raising large international expansion rounds or planning to list on the NASDEQ. This, combined with a continual flow of early stage tech firms raising capital rounds, has resulted in a very strong job market. What was focused purely around engineering demand 18 months ago has broadened into customer acquisition roles and much more demand within enterprise focused companies. We are finding key sales hires tricky based upon very specific needs as enterprise companies become more and more targeted. Visas under the E3 structure for Australians are still available to get year around, as long as you have a degree.

Digital transformation continues to be a strong flavour across Australia and NZ and existing monopolies leverage traditional revenue streams to build consumer and enterprise online marketplaces, increasing profits. The early stage tech market continues to see strong growth as do highly attractive targets or US venture and private equity firms. Why you ask? It seems like a lack of early stage funding in AUS creates lean, profitable and undiluted companies who are ready to access much bigger markets with capital injections. Australia tech firms that are able to build profitable localised markets and models that can scale globally, have a very unique opportunity. The fact they can take large capital rounds during a retained capital holding now seems to be a benefit rather than a curse. Are Australia based, early stage ventures some of the best in the world? The ones that are able to grow a customer base seem to be. It’s going to be very exciting to see how the next 12 months treat companies such as Atlassian, Aconex, andOZforex, to name just a couple.

As we continue to see tech companies in the valley expand based upon improving US market conditions and strong interest from venture and PE investing, demand for very specific/experienced talent continues to drive up broader pressure on salaries and cost of living in the bay area. Atherton, next to Palo Alto, is now rated as one of the top 5 most expensive districts in North America. Difficulties in obtaining Visas to work in the US and demand for localised experience reduce the level of incumbents coming to the market – except for Australians who still don’t consume the total number of E3 Visas provided.

Whilst the bay area is without a doubt one of the most multicultural environments I have ever experienced, it is extremely difficult to import talent. Part of this is due to the fact it’s difficult to get visas, but primarily it is due to the need for experienced Silicon Valley scar tissue. With deep capital pockets, the bay area attracts a lot of international founders looking to complete funding rounds. Founders coming into the market are seeking to hire localize talent, not import. The most significant trend we see moving forward is a willingness to keep or build development teams outside of the valley. This trend will only increase as Visa difficulties restrict importation. I would expect demand upon South American, Eastern European and Southeast Asian engineering/development centers to expand rapidly. What needs to dramatically improve is conferencing facilities and the collaboration of people across long distances.

Concluding, we see no foreseeable decline in demand for talent in the bay area, only a continued increase. Growth in VC investments will drive SME ventures, which on a % basis employ significantly more numbers than enterprise companies. This demand for talent has now scaled beyond engineering/product based skills into Sales, Account Management, Business Development, Consulting and Customer Acquisition based marketing roles. Demand from B2B tech ventures now exceeds consumer.

On how people hire, we continue to see a lot of investment into recruitment related tech. Much of this innovation continues to be centered around acquisition of talent, specifically, identification. This is in my belief a rabbit warren with little value add. Unfortunately, the number of engineers you see don’t help you build a great team. They key is selection and highly targeted identification, with purposed based reasoning. Understanding candidate behavioral trends is critical to knowing when to approach and what type of engagement will be attractive. Leveraging innovation from big data can assist us with helping understand how employee and employer fit. Helping candidates understand what type of employers are attractive based upon their profession and personal circumstances will reduce turn over, increase longevity, output, and enable better skills development. Until there is further investment into such areas, demand for recruiting firms who have deep understanding of specific market dynamics and invest in R&D will be able to charge a premium. Others will continue to act as commodities. Not all recruitment companies are the same……..it’s not about sourcing……it’s about selection.

MitchelLake Group Welcomes a New Laker: Madeleine Nguyen

MitchelLake Group welcomes a new Laker to the to the LakeMR, SF family.

Most recently, Madeleine was on the in-house counsel team for a semi-conductor company in Silicon Valley. She has now set aside her legal aspirations to join the thrilling world of recruitment.

A Bay Area native who went to university in Washington, DC, and law school in St. Louis, Madeleine has recently returned to the city by the bay. She’s a serious golfer and leads underwater archaeology expeditions in her spare time.

You can reach her at madeleine@lakemr.com.

Welcome to the team, Madeleine!

MitchelLake Group Welcomes a New Laker : Emma Jones

We are delighted to welcome Emma Jones to the MitchelLake family. Emma will be based out of our Sydney office as Principal for the Sydney and APAC Executive Search arm of the MitchelLake Group; Lake Republic.

Emma joins us with some 20 years experience of recruiting, both internally and externally. 12 of these years are IT&T sector focused, six of them in executive search. She has worked in startups and large corporates, in the UK, USA and now Australia. Emma moved from her UK home to Sydney in 2011 and since arriving has focused on the digital and UX space where her passions for technology and innovation are very squarely satisfied.

Emma has a long held passion for riding horses and an ambition to ride across the snowy mountains. Since arriving in Australia, she has developed a love for good coffee and carrot cake anywhere on Sydney’s beautiful Northern Beaches.

Connect with Emma below:

Email

LinkedIn

Twitter

Phone: +61 409 630 047

MitchelLake Group Welcomes a New Laker: Haylee Brittliffe

MitchelLake Group is extremely excited to welcome Haylee Brittliffe as the latest addition to the Sydney family. Our new Laker will help grow MitchelLake’s contracting division, with a particular focus on the project services space.

Prior to joining MLG, Haylee spent three and a half years growing the media practice at Itcom. Haylee grew a contract book from zero to 40 contractors in the project services space. She spent time onsite at News Ltd working directly within their Streamline Editorial Transformation program of work, rapidly ramping up resources on a large $60M investment into News Ltd’s editorial system upgrade.

Outside of work she has a love for vintage 2 stroke motorcycles/racing, world adventuring, and sideways rain.

Connect with Haylee below:
Email
LinkedIn
Ph. +61 410 218 094

The hidden pain in the innovation space

MitchelLake Group’s co-founder Jon Tanner talks to The Sydney Morning Herald’s Adam Courtenay about ESOP tax and how it is forcing some companies to move to more entrepreneur-friendly tax jurisdictions, such as Singapore, Hong Kong and the US.

Start-ups frustrated by unfair tax

If you were to ask the start-up community what was the biggest pain in the innovation space, chances are they’d all be in unison – get rid of the ESOP tax.

Read full article here.

Source:

The Sydney Morning Herald.