The Seattle tech scene got its first entrant in what looks like a coming wave of initial public offerings when Zillow made its intentions official, filing paperwork with federal regulators Monday for a future stock sale. In its filing, the online real-estate listing and mortgage database said it would seek about $52 million from the stock market—not a huge sum for an IPO, but significant for the area’s entrepreneurship and investing community nonetheless.
Zillow has seen increasing competition in the online real-estate sector, including vocal San Francisco-based startup Trulia, which recently boasted that it was assembling an “IPO-ready management team.” HitWise reported that Zillow’s traffic ranked No. 3 among real estate websites, one spot ahead of Trulia and just behind Yahoo—where Zillow’s listings appear under a partnership.
There was plenty more action elsewhere on the Seattle tech beat:
—PopCap looks like it’s also ready to hit the public markets. The Seattle casual game company recently went on a media and investor blitz in New York, talking up its growth, revenue, and position in the hot gaming market. We gleaned a lot of interesting bits from the various interviews that PopCap gave, including an assertion that it generated $100 million in revenue last year, an increase of about 20 percent from the year before. The company’s leaders also discussed difficulties in getting investors to understand the difference between its development compared to a console game publisher, and the attractiveness of hitting the public market before social-game giant Zynga.
—Speaking of Zynga, I headed over to the San Francisco company’s new Seattle office to look at the digs and hear some remarks from founder and CEO Mark Pincus on the company’s plans for its new Northwest beachhead. In one word: Hiring. The maker of addictive Facebook-based games like “FarmVille” and “Mafia Wars” was not shy at all about inviting techies in the packed crowd to send in their resumes—Pincus gave out his e-mail address and spent quite a bit of time talking one-on-one with people afterward about jobs.
—Microsoft co-founder Paul Allen continued drumming up interest in his new autobiography, “Idea Man,” with an interview on 60 Minutes that delved into some of the early Microsoft stories and Bill Gates arguments detailed in the excerpt published recently in Vanity Fair. For a guy who hasn’t