Archive for April, 2010

Chrysalis Ventures Looks for Cost-savvy Healthcare Companies

Wednesday, April 28th, 2010

MedCity News, April 28, 2010,  by Mary Vanac

Louisville, Kentucky - Sixteen-year-old Chrysalis Ventures saw the recent worldwide financial crisis as an opportunity to invest in Middle America.

While some venture firms spent the crisis hoarding their cash, or investing more in existing portfolio companies, the Louisville, Ky., firm made seven new investments in the Midwest and South last year. That included a $4 million co-investment in CerviLenz Inc. in Chagrin Falls, Ohio, and leading a $10 million round for Foundation Radiology Group in Pittsburgh, Pa.

“We were one of the most active venture firms for new investments in the entire country,” said Koleman Karleski, managing director for the Louisville firm’s healthcare practice. “We thought it was a terrific time to place some new bets.”

Chrysalis raised $175 million in 2008 — just before the financial crisis began. The firm manages about $400 million in assets and has invested in 65 healthcare and technology companies since its start in 1993. Chrysalis is no slouch on returns. One of its 2008 exits — HealthMedia in Ann Arbor, Mich., which was sold to Johnson & Johnson (NYSE: JNJ) for an undisclosed amount — returned $18 for every $1 his firm invested, Karleski said.

The firm likes to make an early-stage investment between $3 million and $5 million in a young business, and then “build up to a $10 [million] to $15 million investment over the life of our relationship with that company,” Karleski said.

Chrysalis recently named Wendy Jarchow as director of business development for the Upper Midwest, which is Ohio, Michigan and Western Pennsylvania. Jarchow will work in the firm’s Cleveland office. She replaces Chris Sklarin, who went to work for Northeast Ohio biomedical company developer BioEnterprise early this year. Karleski explains his firm’s model for flushing out exciting healthcare technologies.

Q. What types of healthcare companies is Chrysalis looking to invest in?

A. The two areas that we find most attractive right now are productivity-enhancement and consumerism c0mpanies. We’ve made investments in both types over the last couple of months.

The so-called healthcare reform package that just passed through Congress really was about access to the system. If we do get another 30 [million] or 40 million people accessing the system over the next five or six years, how do we deal with that?

Costs have been out of control for a long time, but none of the reform legislation was focused on genuine cost-controls. So a lot of the companies that we invest in are focused on productivity enhancements, meaning they’re either working to lower costs or deliver higher value-per-clinical-dollar spent.

We’re also interested in consumerism. We’re all paying more money out of our own pockets for healthcare through high deductibles and health spending accounts. Healthcare costs are being shifted from employers to individuals. Over time, individuals will have to become healthcare consumers.

They’ll have to get the information to consume healthcare services appropriately. They’ll need access to different kinds of services that they’re willing to pay out-of-pocket for. We need to give them the technology to do this.

Q. Where does the Cleveland office fit into Chrysalis?

A. The middle part of the country is under-ventured, but it’s full of the kinds of assets you need to build great, young businesses. One of the things a venture capital firm tries to do is make itself local to the entrepreneurs and the technology creators.

Wendy will be on the ground in Northern Ohio, Western Pennsylvania and Ann Arbor, Mich., meeting the folks at the universities who have interesting technologies, meeting people who are spinning out of major corporations and thinking about new business ideas. We want to be involved early on, helping catalyze those efforts.

Q. Some venture firms credit the Ohio Capital Fund — a fund-of-funds that invests Ohio Third Frontier dollars in promising companies — for drawing them to Ohio. Is that true for Chrysalis?

A. Only to the extent that those initiatives have catalyzed more entrepreneurial development in Northern Ohio. Northeast Ohio venture developer JumpStart and others are terrific organizations at helping individuals with interesting ideas begin to think about how to pull the assets and resources together to turn themselves into real businesses.

For a firm like Chrysalis, which is looking to make larger institutional investments in these young companies, we benefit greatly from the fact that states like Ohio, Pennsylvania and Michigan have been willing to invest heavily in entrepreneurial ecosystems that spawn the best ideas and new, exciting entrepreneurs.

Q. How does Chrysalis see itself as a resource for entrepreneurs?

A. A lot of young companies stall after they receive their initial financing — from the founders’ credit cards, friends and family, or an economic development grant — and then take a major step, like develop a product or bring on board the first customer.

Our job — and Wendy’s job, in particular — is to get out early on and help those entrepreneurs understand that there is smart, active, interested capital available to them. We explain that we bring not only capital, butthe resources and networking experience to help entrepreneurs make the tricky journey between starting a business and realizing success as a mature company some years down the road.

Chrysalis Ventures Looks for Cost-savvy Healthcare Companies

Wednesday, April 28th, 2010

MedCity News, April 28, 2010,  by Mary Vanac

Louisville, Kentucky - Sixteen-year-old Chrysalis Ventures saw the recent worldwide financial crisis as an opportunity to invest in Middle America.

While some venture firms spent the crisis hoarding their cash, or investing more in existing portfolio companies, the Louisville, Ky., firm made seven new investments in the Midwest and South last year. That included a $4 million co-investment in CerviLenz Inc. in Chagrin Falls, Ohio, and leading a $10 million round for Foundation Radiology Group in Pittsburgh, Pa.

“We were one of the most active venture firms for new investments in the entire country,” said Koleman Karleski, managing director for the Louisville firm’s healthcare practice. “We thought it was a terrific time to place some new bets.”

Chrysalis raised $175 million in 2008 — just before the financial crisis began. The firm manages about $400 million in assets and has invested in 65 healthcare and technology companies since its start in 1993. Chrysalis is no slouch on returns. One of its 2008 exits — HealthMedia in Ann Arbor, Mich., which was sold to Johnson & Johnson (NYSE: JNJ) for an undisclosed amount — returned $18 for every $1 his firm invested, Karleski said.

The firm likes to make an early-stage investment between $3 million and $5 million in a young business, and then “build up to a $10 [million] to $15 million investment over the life of our relationship with that company,” Karleski said.

Chrysalis recently named Wendy Jarchow as director of business development for the Upper Midwest, which is Ohio, Michigan and Western Pennsylvania. Jarchow will work in the firm’s Cleveland office. She replaces Chris Sklarin, who went to work for Northeast Ohio biomedical company developer BioEnterprise early this year. Karleski explains his firm’s model for flushing out exciting healthcare technologies.

Q. What types of healthcare companies is Chrysalis looking to invest in?

A. The two areas that we find most attractive right now are productivity-enhancement and consumerism c0mpanies. We’ve made investments in both types over the last couple of months.

The so-called healthcare reform package that just passed through Congress really was about access to the system. If we do get another 30 [million] or 40 million people accessing the system over the next five or six years, how do we deal with that?

Costs have been out of control for a long time, but none of the reform legislation was focused on genuine cost-controls. So a lot of the companies that we invest in are focused on productivity enhancements, meaning they’re either working to lower costs or deliver higher value-per-clinical-dollar spent.

We’re also interested in consumerism. We’re all paying more money out of our own pockets for healthcare through high deductibles and health spending accounts. Healthcare costs are being shifted from employers to individuals. Over time, individuals will have to become healthcare consumers.

They’ll have to get the information to consume healthcare services appropriately. They’ll need access to different kinds of services that they’re willing to pay out-of-pocket for. We need to give them the technology to do this.

Q. Where does the Cleveland office fit into Chrysalis?

A. The middle part of the country is under-ventured, but it’s full of the kinds of assets you need to build great, young businesses. One of the things a venture capital firm tries to do is make itself local to the entrepreneurs and the technology creators.

Wendy will be on the ground in Northern Ohio, Western Pennsylvania and Ann Arbor, Mich., meeting the folks at the universities who have interesting technologies, meeting people who are spinning out of major corporations and thinking about new business ideas. We want to be involved early on, helping catalyze those efforts.

Q. Some venture firms credit the Ohio Capital Fund — a fund-of-funds that invests Ohio Third Frontier dollars in promising companies — for drawing them to Ohio. Is that true for Chrysalis?

A. Only to the extent that those initiatives have catalyzed more entrepreneurial development in Northern Ohio. Northeast Ohio venture developer JumpStart and others are terrific organizations at helping individuals with interesting ideas begin to think about how to pull the assets and resources together to turn themselves into real businesses.

For a firm like Chrysalis, which is looking to make larger institutional investments in these young companies, we benefit greatly from the fact that states like Ohio, Pennsylvania and Michigan have been willing to invest heavily in entrepreneurial ecosystems that spawn the best ideas and new, exciting entrepreneurs.

Q. How does Chrysalis see itself as a resource for entrepreneurs?

A. A lot of young companies stall after they receive their initial financing — from the founders’ credit cards, friends and family, or an economic development grant — and then take a major step, like develop a product or bring on board the first customer.

Our job — and Wendy’s job, in particular — is to get out early on and help those entrepreneurs understand that there is smart, active, interested capital available to them. We explain that we bring not only capital, butthe resources and networking experience to help entrepreneurs make the tricky journey between starting a business and realizing success as a mature company some years down the road.

Mary Vanac is co-founder of MedCity News and serves as its vice president and Ohio bureau chief.

iSqFt touted as Third Frontier success

Friday, April 23rd, 2010

The Cincinnati Enquirer, April 23, 2010

BLUE ASH – Ohio Gov. Ted Strickland Friday used a local construction software services company as an example of why voters should approve the extension of the state’s technology and job creation Third Frontier program next month.

“We all know that Ohio needs jobs right now, and this is the tangible solution to that,” Strickland told a crowd of employees at Construction Software Technologies Inc., better known as iSqFt. “This is not a partisan issue … we are all joined together to get this passed.”

The Ohio Legislature is asking for voter approval for $700 million in bonds to continue the program another four years – it is set to expire at the end of 2012. The initial $500 million bond was approved in 2005, and the extension is in front of the voters on May 4.

ISqFt received a $2 million loan in 2006 from Third Frontier’s Innovation Ohio Fund, and has already started repaying that loan with interest. It has applied for another $1 million, which it hopes to use to improve its online product, which lets construction contractors and builders bid on projects using the Internet as opposed to getting physical plans. Company founder and chief executive officer Dave Conway told Strickland that the company has gone from 4-5 employees in 2000 to more than 330 currently, with the company planning to hire more than 70 this year alone.

“We’ve been very successful, but we’ve been able to do it with the help of the taxpayers, and we’re now being able to pay them back with interest,” Conway told his employees.

Strickland’s visit came a day before the campaign for Issue 1 was scheduled to begin in earnest in Southwest Ohio. Campaign officials said television ads were set to begin airing Saturday on local stations. The same ad began airing earlier this week in Cleveland and Columbus.

Connecture, Inc. Acquires Insurint to Transform Sales Automation for the Health Insurance Industry

Monday, April 19th, 2010

ATLANTA, GA – April 19, 2010 – Connecture, Inc. announced today that it has acquired Insurint in a bold step towards transforming health insurance distribution. This combination creates the largest end-to-end sales automation provider in the health insurance market by joining Insurint, a leader in broker sales automation with Connecture, the leader in health insurance carrier sales automation.

The strategic combination broadens Connecture’s suite of services that help payers attract and maintain the growing numbers of consumers buying individual insurance plans through the broker channel. As the individual health insurance market continues to gain momentum, the company will offer health insurers and brokers a full range of options through a multi-carrier channel. Connecture comes to the relationship with over 80 health insurer customers who reach over 50,000 insurance agents. Together, the companies serve more than half of the nation’s leading insurance carriers including many Blue Cross Blue Shield carriers, WellPoint, Kaiser, United Healthcare, Humana One, and Assurant Health.

Through combining Connecture’s eApplication health insurer sales automation platform with Insurint’s multi-carrier quoting broker platform, the company will offer technology that fully automates the end-to-end quoting, application, and enrollment processes. The combination will offer straight-through processing from lead management to quoting and application through to enrollment and post-sale management, with a one-of-a-kind software solution specifically designed to meet the growing demands of the health insurance market. Benefits will include the opportunity for brokers to sell more business and reduce drop-off; true end-to-end automation for intermediaries, agents, and aggregators; and reduced frustration, friction, and cost in the marketplace.

“In this post-health care reform environment, it is critical that technology is leveraged to take cost and friction out of the membership acquisition and retention process. Public and private aggregators and brokers will continue to play a large role in the health insurance market if they leverage the benefits that technology has to offer. Our combined solution will enable those distribution channels to leverage such benefits,” explained Dan Maynard, Chief Executive Officer of Connecture. “We are excited to join forces with Insurint to bring this technology to market.”

Added Connecture director David Jones, Jr., Chairman of Chrysalis Ventures, “I’m excited about Connecture’s opportunity to help insurers lower costs for their members and customers. This acquisition will extend the reach and impact of the company’s productivity-enhancing solutions.” In addition to Chrysalis, Connecture’s other institutional investors include SSM Ventures, Total Technology Ventures, and LiveOak Equity.

Further detail about this acquisition will be announced at Connecture’s upcoming User Conference on May 12-13, 2010.

About Connecture, Inc.

Connecture is solely focused on delivering integrated web-based sales, service and process automation solutions to the health insurance industry. Connecture has automated elements of the insurance sales and service process for over 80 health plans and insurers, and its InsureConnect suite of products currently supports the sales and servicing of 11 of the 20 largest health plans and insurers in the country. Its industry-proven solutions encompass the entire spectrum of multi-channel insurance sales and services for small group, large group, and individual markets. Connecture offers an end-to-end business process transaction platform consisting of focused modular applications that fully integrate with existing systems. Connecture’s solutions have proven to deliver increased sales, enhanced broker loyalty, improved back-office efficiencies, lower customer acquisition costs, and decrease overall operating expenses. For more information, call Meg Riddle at 262.408.3865 or visit the Connecture website at www.connecture.com.

About Insurint

Insurint provides a proprietary, professional-grade, web-based agent quote engine portal that aggregates accurate real-time quotes from multiple highly-rated health insurance carriers, life insurance carriers and carriers of related insurance products. Insurint’s user-friendly platform enables agents to view and share with proposed insureds detailed comparisons of multiple insurance products, policy brochures and other useful information instantly, resulting in a highly competitive application processing platform for insurance agents and consumers. More information can be found at http://www.insurint.com/

Dr. Becky Smith Named Senior Advisor at HealthTeacher

Tuesday, April 13th, 2010

NASHVILLE, TN – HealthTeacher announced today that Becky Smith, Ph.D., CHES, has been named as Senior Advisor to HealthTeacher. Smith retired in March, 2010 after serving 24 years as the Executive Director for the American Association for Health Education as well as many years promoting and teaching health in the classroom.

“Becky has spent a lifetime dedicated to health education, and we are honored to have her join HealthTeacher,” said Scott McQuigg, CEO of HealthTeacher. “Becky’s experience, knowledge and leadership will be invaluable as we continue to work with teachers, schools and communities to improve the health of America’s youth.”

Smith will serve in an advisory capacity to HealthTeacher and act as liaison with educators and other health education organizations.

“I am very pleased to become affiliated with HealthTeacher as they provide leading edge online health education resources for teachers and students across the country,” said Becky Smith, Senior Advisor to HealthTeacher. “I am looking forward to contributing to their outreach and innovation.”

Smith’s previous experience includes twelve years of teaching within health education professional preparation at institutions of higher education and nine years of public school teaching. She has held appointments at Ohio University, Illinois State University, and Indiana State University. From 1991 through 2001, Smith served on the Board of Trustees of the International Union for Health Promotion and Education (IUHPE), and as the regional director of the North American Regional Office (NARO) of IUHPE. She was a founding member and former vice chairperson of the National Commission for Health Education Credentialing, Inc. From 1992-94, she served as the chairperson of the National School Health Education Coalition. Smith served as the chairperson of the National Coordinating Committee on School Health and Safety, 2001-2003 and as chairperson of the Alliance for Curriculum Reform, 2005-2006.

Smith was a founding Board member of the Foundation for the Advancement of Health Education and has renewed her Board membership in 2010. She is also a Commissioner, for the Accreditation Commission of the National Association for Health Education Centers.

Smith is a Fellow of the American School Health Association, a Charter Fellow of the American Association for Health Education and a Fellow of the North American Society of Leaders in Health, Physical Education, and Recreation. She is a member of the health education honorary, Eta Sigma Gamma and has received their Distinguished Service Award. In addition, she has received a Professional Service Award and Presidential Citation from the American Association for Health Education.

Smith has directed a wide diversity of projects in health education and health promotion funded by government, corporation, and foundation sources. She served as the editor of the Journal of Health Education from 1986 through 1997, served as the executive editor of the American Journal of Health Education 1998-2010 and the International Electronic Journal of Health Education from 2001-2010. She has served on more than 20 national advisory committees, and is the author of numerous publications and papers presented at national and international meetings.

About Health Teacher

HealthTeacher is a leading provider of online health, wellness and prevention education resources
for kindergarten through 12th grade and is used by more than 20,000 teachers nationwide. HealthTeacher provides teachers the resources, tools and background material to educate students about making healthy lifestyle choices through more than 300 lesson plans aligning to the National Health Education Standards. HealthTeacher helps establish community-based health education collaboratives by developing partnerships between healthcare organizations, businesses, community leaders and schools to address the growing issues affecting the health status of children. To learn more, visit www.healthteacher.com

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Digitalsmiths Announces VideoSense 2.7, Enables Greater Discovery and Monetization

Monday, April 12th, 2010

Las Vegas, NV at NAB 2010 – April 12, 2010

Digitalsmiths, the video metadata experts, announced today at NAB the latest version of its flagship product, VideoSense®.

As part of the company’s ongoing commitment to releasing breakthrough time-based metadata technology, VideoSense® 2.7, the leading studio-grade metadata management system, is made generally available today and includes powerful new features to harness metadata for advanced applications and increase insight with enhanced reporting. The new tools include expanded Free Form Search, customizable playlist creation, and enhanced reporting that allows trend-tracking at the asset and time-based metadata level.

“In today’s always connected, always plugged-in world of converged media, content is accessed, viewed and shared across multiple screens (Internet, TV, mobile devices, tablets, gaming consoles, etc.),” said Colin Dixon, senior partner, TDG. “As over-the-top video services continue to mature, seamless consumer experiences must be matched by increasingly sophisticated back-end systems which support them – from entitlement rights management to clearance management to multiplatform distribution. We see deep metadata management as key to OTT’s ultimate success. Digitalsmiths is one company that gets it at all the levels required.”

“The evolving digital media landscape and proliferation of connected devices is rapidly changing the way video content is consumed – which means more opportunities and challenges for our clients. With VideoSense 2.7, operators and programmers are able to easily manage which digital assets are cleared for multiple platforms, regions and users, while also capitalizing on new revenue streams that are made possible by time-based metadata,” said Ben Weinberger, CEO and co-founder, Digitalsmiths. “Premium content providers have only scratched the service when it comes to strategizing around the untapped revenue streams that the rich metadata in VideoSense can provide such as personalized viewer experiences, new licensing opportunities and audience building.”

VideoSense 2.7 features include:

Harness Metadata for Advanced Applications

Discovery – Digitalsmiths’ breakthrough Free Form Search technology is now fully embedded in the VideoSense user interface to make it faster and easier to find and manage video assets.

Free Form Search delivers highly accurate and smart results across a broad set of criteria (e.g. actor names, characters, locations, scenes, genres, specific dialogue, product placement, etc.) to precisely pinpoint the exact frame of video where the search criteria appears.

Here is one way to monetize from this feature: Imagine a content provider finds that viewership consistently drops off at 42 seconds into a 90 second video clip. By searching on the time-based metadata in this frame, a studio or advertiser, can customize or improve an advertisement at that frame to better engage the audience. Ultimately, by increasing the number of people watching a clip for its duration, it helps build the audience. Additionally, this increases the impressions of an advertisement and the value to the advertiser.

Editorial and Dynamic Playlists – Using the Free Form Search feature, one can create custom editorial and dynamic playlists in VideoSense.

For instance, popular pre-defined playlists are easy to take advantage of and include: “Highest Rated,” “Most Popular,” and “Latest Content.” However, with the rich video metadata created in VS MetaFrame™, playlists can be customized to meet a company’s unique business needs, which might include: “all scenes with a coffee cup” or “all scenes that mentioned the word love” or “all scenes that include a puppy”

Increase Insight with Enhanced Reporting

Reporting Drilldown – A new reporting feature allows one to drill down to the asset and time-based metadata level, offering deeper insight, enabling content providers to spot trends and manage their video assets proactively.

Additional Resources

Check out the CEO and CTO’s latest thoughts on the Digitalsmiths Blog

Send us a tweet! @Digitalsmiths

You know some of our customers; check out who we work with

Digitalsmiths

Digitalsmiths provides the industry’s only studio grade solution for premium video metadata and advanced digital media analysis that empowers organizations to open up new revenue streams for film and TV content on any platform, increase viewing times and engagement, and build bigger audiences that watch more video. To date, Digitalsmiths has indexed over 3,000,000 tracks of metadata across 29,000 pieces of content and more than 200 terabytes of premium video content.

The company’s flagship product, VideoSense®, is the preferred premium metadata and digital media analytics solution for today’s leading Hollywood studios, broadcasters, distributors and publishers including Warner Bros., Paramount Pictures, Telepictures and TMZ.com. Digitalsmiths was named one of the “Top 45 Companies to Watch” by Dow Jones, one of the “OnHollywood Top 100” and “OnGlobal 250” by AlwaysOn, “Technology of the Year” by North Carolina’s Council for Entrepreneurial Development (CED), and winner of the “Streaming Media Readers’ Choice Awards.” http://www.digitalsmiths.com.

Foundation Radiology taps Pittsburgh native Tom Skelton as new CEO

Friday, April 9th, 2010

Pittsburgh Business Times,  April 9, 2010, by Patty Tascarella

Foundation Radiology Group, a Downtown-based diagnostic imaging company, has appointed Tom Skelton CEO.

Skelton succeeds Dr. Brandon Chan, who remains chief innovation officer and a board member.

“The thing that struck me first was the market opportunity,” Skelton said. “We’ve all heard the stories that U.S. health care is a problem, but I really believe effective use of imaging technology is part of the key to dealing with this issue.”

Foundation Radiology provides around-the-clock on site and teleradiology interpretation of various scans, including X-rays, MRI and CT for small to midsize hospitals.

Skelton also saw a “great personal opportunity” by joining Foundation Radiology, which raised $10 million in April 2009 from investors, and grew employment from 27 to 66. In 2008, sales were $8.4 million, and while Foundation Radiology would not say if it reached the $24 million it forecasted a year ago, the company said it is “pleased with our current growth rate.”

Skelton, a Pittsburgh native who has lived in North Carolina for 15 years, had been senior vice president and chief operating officer of ElComp Systems, a Carnegie Mellon University spinout. He helped ElComp grow to more than $15 million in revenue prior to its 1994 acquisition by Medic Computer Systems, Raleigh, N.C., a predecessor company to Misys Healthcare Systems. Skelton eventually became Misys CEO.

In June, he joined MED3000, a Green Tree-based health care management and technology company, as executive vice president and president of its technology services division.

“Tom has spent virtually all of his career trying to make health care more productive through the use of technology, and he has a strong track record of successfully doing that,” said Koleman Karleski, managing director of Chrysalis Ventures, the Louisville-based venture capital firm that invested in Foundation Radiology last spring. “He’s a terrific fit as the company is entering its expansion stage. Our job, as the investors and board, is to ensure that it has a seasoned management team to help grow this, which is why we brought Barbara Beaudin on as CFO (last fall) and then Tom. We now think we have a team that can grow this company over the next several years.”

Karleski praised Foundation Radiology’s physician co-founders Chan and Dr. Derek Armfield, for “ a phenomenal job” establishing the company. Armfield is president of clinical services.

“The business has grown up and it’s time for more experienced managers to grow it to the next phase,” Karleski said. “This is very natural evolution.”

The company is now focused on growing clients, Skelton said, particularly in rural community hospitals in its geographic region of Pennsylvania, Ohio, West Virginia and Kentucky.

“We want them to know who we are and how we can help them,” Skelton said.

He is in the process of moving his family back to the Pittsburgh region and learning more about his new company.

“I’m on a pretty steep learning curve and kind of drinking out of the fire hose,” he said. “It’s nice to come back to the area where I was raised and, hopefully, put myself in a situation where I get to use my Steeler season tickets on occasion.”

Foundation Radiology Group

Diagnostic imaging company

Founded: 2006

Based: Downtown

CEO: Tom Skelton

Employees: 66

Revenue: Does not disclose

Web site: http://www.foundationradiologygroup.com/
ptascarella@bizjournals.com | (412) 208-3832

Chrysalis Ventures Managing Director Koleman Karleski to Participate in NVCA M&A Webcast

Wednesday, April 7th, 2010

Louisville, KY, April 7, 2010Koleman Karleski, Managing Director at Chrysalis Ventures will participate as a panelist on the April 9th webcast titled, “Evolving Trends for Venture Backed M&A Transactions” sponsored by the National Venture Capital Association and Proskauer Rose LLP. Karleski will be joined by Paul Ciriello, Partner, Fairhaven Capital; Sarah Reed, General Counsel, Charles River Ventures; James Wilder, Director, Housatonic Partners; and Alexander Temel, Partner, Proskauer Rose LLP as moderator.

Recently, Karleski has counseled two healthcare portfolio companies through the M&A exit process. In December 2009, MedServe was sold to Stericycle and in October 2008, HealthMedia was sold to Johnson & Johnson.

Click here to register for the webcast.

About Chrysalis Ventures

Founded in 1993, Chrysalis Ventures manages one of Mid-America’s largest funds for early-stage and growth investments with approximately $400 million under management. Focused on partnering with entrepreneurs to build enduring businesses in industries undergoing significant transformation, Chrysalis has invested in over 65 companies primarily in the Healthcare and Technology sectors. Headquartered in Louisville, KY, Chrysalis has offices in Cleveland, Pittsburgh and Ann Arbor. For more information, please visit www.chrysalisventures.com.