Nielsen Backs VC Fund Pereg Focused on Marketing, Israeli Startups

Nielsen (NYSE: [[ticker:NLSN]]), the television ratings company, is backing a new VC firm, Pereg Ventures, based in New York, that will be looking for early stage advertising and Web-based-marketing technology startups, as well as Israeli entrepreneurs seeking to crack the US market.

Pereg said in its press release that it will invest in “market intelligence innovations, advertising solutions, management tools, and related mobile and online enablers.” Although it will focus predominantly on the U.S., it also plans to serve as a bridge between Israeli entrepreneurs and U.S. capital.

As Silicon Valley entrepreneur Sramana Mitra wrote in Xconomy in July, Israel has the second largest number of startups after the U.S. but there is a shortage of Israeli capital. “Over the past 12 years, the local VC industry has shrunk from 80 VC funds to only eight funds that are actively investing,” Mitra wrote.

New York-based Nielsen is the anchor investor in Pereg but its involvement is conditional on Pereg obtaining total investment commitments of at least $25 million, which the VC firm said it plans to do in the first half of 2013.

Claudia Iannazzo, a former consultant with Red Door Consulting in New York and a longtime player in international startups, will be CEO and partner of Pereg, while Itzhak Fisher, Nielsen’s executive vice president of global business development, will serve as chairman and partner.

Author: Catherine Arnst

Catherine Arnst is an award- winning writer and editor specializing in science and medicine. Catherine was Senior Writer for medicine at BusinessWeek for 13 years, where she wrote numerous cover stories and wrote extensively for the magazine’s website, including contributing to two blogs. She followed a broad range of issues affecting medicine and health and held primary responsibility for covering the battle in Washington over health care reform. Catherine has also written for the Boston Globe, U.S. News & World Report and The Daily Beast, and was Director of Content Development for the health practice at Edelman Public Relations for two years. Prior to joining BusinessWeek she was the London-based European Science Correspondent for Reuters News Service. She won the 2004 Business Journalist of the Year award from London’s World Leadership Forum, and in 2003 was the first recipient of the ACE Reporter Award from the European School of Oncology for her five-year body of work on cancer. She holds a bachelor’s degree in journalism from Boston University.