Edmonton Journal

SADNESS, AND SCHADENFRE­UDE

Element AI'S sale to Silicon Valley firm stokes sharp reactions, Martin Patriquin writes.

- For more news about the innovation economy, visit www.thelogic.co

In the fall of 2018, a 40-page document circulated within Canada's tech scene. Marked “confidenti­al” and with no author identified, the report — titled simply “Element AI company analysis” — claimed to delve into the innards of a company that had taken Montreal's tech community by force.

Only two years old at the time, Element AI had muscled into Montreal, dazzled politician­s and garnered millions of investment dollars from the likes of BDC Capital, Intel Capital and Real Ventures. So perhaps that anonymous report — which excoriated the company — was born of fear of the new behemoth on the block. Or perhaps it was sour grapes. In any case, re-reading it after the Nov. 30 announceme­nt that Element AI has essentiall­y been sold for parts to California-based Servicenow is either karmically damaging or an exercise in schadenfre­ude, depending on your outlook on these things.

Element AI, the anonymous report said, “appears to be a `ponzi grand cru' more than a real company” — one that went on a hiring spree, pumped itself up with a heavy dose of public relations and government lobbying, then used the resulting hype to give itself a “hyperbolic and completely unsupporte­d” $1-billion valuation.

It decried Element AI'S “lack of public informatio­n, transparen­cy and data,” its “technical claims that have little commercial potential,” its “highly predatory talent acquisitio­n tactics,” the “significan­t conflict of interest between Element AI and Mila,” the Montreal AI think tank where Element AI co-founder Yoshua Bengio is scientific director.

“Just because Element AI says something about themselves does not make it true,” it read.

In short, the report was a nasty bit of work, poison pen letter meets Powerpoint. The claims it made were anonymous and unverified, and I'm only writing about it now, in the wake of the sale, because it highlights two truths about Element AI. One, that much of Montreal's establishe­d tech types had a visceral dislike of this glittering new interloper, and two, that many of their suspicions about Element AI'S commercial viability turned out to be rooted in fact.

The terms of Element AI'S sale to Servicenow were not disclosed. The Globe and Mail's sources claimed it sold for less than US$400 million, while a Techcrunch report pegged the purchase price at around US$500 million. Both prices are well below its 2019 valuation of between US$600 million and $700 million.

The company had less than US$10 million in revenue in 2018. When it closed its last funding round, in September 2019 — a Us$151.4-million Series B with funding from the Caisse de dépôt et placement, BDC Capital and the Government of Quebec, among many others — the company and its backers said the money was intended “to transform Element AI into a company with a commercial focus” and “accelerate the deployment and commercial­ization of solutions that meet customer needs.”

However, its “go-to-market strategy,” launched as COVID-19 was shutting the world down, felt like rearrangin­g the deck chairs in the shadow of an iceberg. “The company wasn't going anywhere; it was in serious difficulty,” a source from one of Element

AI'S investors told me, on the condition they not be named so as to speak freely. “The choice was to give Element AI a bigger platform, which Servicenow can provide, and keep the company in Montreal. Or you let it wither on the vine.”

By all accounts, its investors won't lose their shirts. “I think this is a good outcome for the company and the Caisse de dépôt,” one told The Logic regarding the sale.

If there was a bright spot within Element AI — a reason for its still-formidable price tag — it was its research and IP output. Hype aside, Bengio wanted the company to be a wellspring of tech innovation that would buck the cliché by remaining stubbornly within Canada's borders. The company's raft of scientists has been prolific, with some 19 Canadian patent filings since the beginning of 2019 alone and hundreds of Google Scholar citations in its four years of existence.

“I bet we were batting above average even if you compare us to publicly funded academic labs,” a person from Element's research side told me, requesting anonymity because they weren't authorized to speak publicly about the company. “There was a lot of bitching about Element within some circles in Quebec. And honestly, some of it was warranted. But I believe that if we'd been in the Valley, we would have seen more enthusiast­ic support for what we were achieving.”

Those IP filings will now belong to a California company.

“This is a cheap acquisitio­n for Servicenow, and now it will create value for a foreign company in a highly strategic field,” Coveo CEO Louis Têtu told me. “Can anyone explain to me how this is good for the Quebec economy?”

Servicenow issued its first volley of pink slips within hours of announcing the acquisitio­n — with particular­ly deep cuts in Element's consulting and government relations department­s, according to a shareholde­r with knowledge of the affair. This only adds to the sting, particular­ly since the company has seen a 31-per-cent decrease in its staffing over the last two years, according to Linkedin data.

Neverthele­ss, it will keep its name “for the near term” and will retain “most” of Element

AI'S technical talent, according to a Servicenow spokespers­on. Gagné is joining the company, while Bengio will transition to serve as a technical adviser for Servicenow after the transactio­n closes. Neither men were made available for comment.

Much like Kitchener-waterloo, Ont.-based smart-glasses maker North, another Ip-heavy outfit acquired by Alphabet earlier this year after its own failure in the marketplac­e, Element's sale heralds the demise of a buzzy Canadian startup that failed to live up to its own lofty goals. And yet the idea of Element remained contagious even as the fig leaf was slipping away. In the fall of 2019, Element raised US$151.4 million from big-name investors in that Series B.

In 2018, Justin Trudeau suggested that Element and other like-minded tech businesses would help transform Canada from a hewer of wood to a builder of knowledge.

Old habits die hard, it seems; as the Financial Post pointed out Monday after news of the sale broke, the federal government was primed to hand over $20 million, “a conditiona­lly repayable contributi­on,” to Element over five years, a mere five months before Servicenow showed up, chequebook in hand.

“They were long on hype and short on business, and I think Element is a cautionary tale for government­s falling prey to hype,” said Jim Balsillie, former Research In Motion (now BlackBerry) CO-CEO and chair of the Council of Canadian Innovators.

Balsillie isn't wrong. And while he's among the first to put his name to it, he isn't the first to say it.

 ?? CLAUDE- SIMON LANGLOIS FILES ?? Element AI swept investors off their feet when it launched in Montreal in 2016. A source says the company was “in serious difficulty” when it was sold to Servicenow.
CLAUDE- SIMON LANGLOIS FILES Element AI swept investors off their feet when it launched in Montreal in 2016. A source says the company was “in serious difficulty” when it was sold to Servicenow.
 ?? MUSCHI/ FOR POSTMEDIA NEWS FILES CHRISTINNE ?? Canada was counting on Element AI CEO Jean-françois Gagné to help transform it from a hewer of wood to a builder of knowledge.
MUSCHI/ FOR POSTMEDIA NEWS FILES CHRISTINNE Canada was counting on Element AI CEO Jean-françois Gagné to help transform it from a hewer of wood to a builder of knowledge.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada