ServiceU highlighted in Memphis Business Journal
Monday, June 24th, 2002Changing Stripes
by Tommy Perkins
Like a true Internet entrepreneur, Tim Whitehorn has had to change his stripes a few times.
When he founded ServiceU.com in 1997, the software development veteran launched an Internet software consulting business, that, through 2000, specialized in selling software over the Internet as an application service provider.
“Most people just wanted to have a Web site that was sort of a brochure on the Web,” he says. “I’m not even sure the term ASP had even been coined.”
But as other Web-based companies expanded their offerings to stay afloat, ServiceU began to narrow its focus, honing its model in late 1999 to event scheduling through EventU, a software product that was the outgrowth of a project for one client.
The service struck a chord among large facilities that sought bookings for their numerous rooms. ServiceU signed up 500 customers, chiefly churches and schools, for the EventU product.
In October 2000, Whitehorn’s company raised $3.15 million in venture capital in a round led by Delta Capital Management, which contributed more than half.
But within the niche of event scheduling, ServiceU happened upon another niche that would change the company’s focus again — transaction processing.
“We realized that we needed to be able to add event registration for the customer,” Whitehorn says. “We could publish events online, but we needed to be able to collect payments online.”
And so ServiceU rolled out TransactU and invaded the realm of e-commerce infrastructure by offering a “turnkey”
Web payment system, meaning that it required no programming by the customer.
“It’s an early company, and like a lot of early companies, you start out on one path and find out there’s a different path to go,” says Don Mundie, Delta Capital’s managing partner. “They’re focused on one product offering that was not a major effort when we invested, but it appears to have a much more ready market than the event scheduling.”
Mundie says he expects ServiceU to be profitable by late 2003.
ServiceU is the third startup for Whitehorn, who is 38. A software veteran at FedEx Corp., he founded ATS Networks in 1992 and sold the company in 1996.
“I’m in a startup family and a startup business,” he says. “It’s been a very exciting few years.”
At FedEx and ATS he says he learned the value of long distance business models, where companies collect monthly service fees, which provide the revenue stream for ServiceU.
Whitehorn says the realm of online payment systems is dominated by “shopping carts” — systems that catalogue merchandise for sale — and models that are heavily dependent on credit cards as currency.
TransactU, he says, is geared toward customers who sell “intangible assets” such as registrations and bookings. It also offers features that allow buyers to pay by check while offering merchants bill presentment.
“90% of businesses don’t take credit cards, but every business has to take payments,” Whitehorn says.
Among those businesses is Bellevue Baptist Church, which plays host to as many as 20 events in a day. Using TransactU, the church sold 2,000 tickets online for its Singing Christmas Tree service.
“With TransactU, they’ve developed a nice module there either with electronic check or credit card features,” says Randy Redd, minister of church programming at Bellevue. “For things like the Singing Christmas Tree, Passion Play and conferences, it gives us enough flexibility to cater to whatever our need might be there, with a minimum of screens that the user might have to use to register.”
Whitehorn says ServiceU will continue to target small businesses and government operations that don’t have the budget to develop e-commerce applications in house, but he says he’s looking to expand the client base to parks and recreation departments, apartment complexes, schools and toll roads.
“I envision a day when a teacher tells her class that a field trip will cost $20 and can send out e-mails with the link to the payment site directly to parents,” he says. “That way, you’ve kept the money out of the kids’ hands, the teacher’s hand and a the accounts receivables clerk’s hand.”