Jun
19

Aiven: 91% of developers say open source is in their future

Of the 1.3 billion people who live in India, more than 100 million of whom are using digital payment apps each day, only about 20 million today invest in mutual funds and stocks. An Indian startup that is betting on changing that figure by courting millennials has just received a big backing.

Groww, a Bangalore-based startup, said today it has raised $21.4 million in a Series B financing round that was led by U.S.-based VC firm Ribbit Capital. Existing investors Sequoia India and Y Combinator also participated in the round, said the two-year-old startup that has raised about $29 million to date.

Groww allows users to invest in mutual funds, including systematic investment planning (SIP) and equity-linked savings. The app, which maintains a very simplified user interface to make it easier for its largely millennial customer base to comprehend the investment world, offers every fund that is currently available in India.

Lalit Keshre, co-founder and CEO of Groww, told TechCrunch in an interview earlier this week that the market of mutual funds is increasingly widening in India and the startup is hoping to accelerate its growth with the fresh capital. Other than that, he plans to double Groww’s headcount to 200 in the coming months.

Groww has amassed about 2.5 million registered users, two-thirds of whom are first-time investors, Keshre said. Groww is currently free to use and does not charge any commission on transactions. The startup eventually plans to offer a paid service as it looks to monetize its user base, but Keshre declined to share a timeline on how soon that would happen.

Groww will also soon begin to offer the ability to purchase stocks from its eponymous app, said Keshre, a former executive at Flipkart who co-founded Groww with three other Flipkart colleagues (Harsh Jain, Neeraj Singh and Ishan Bansal).

In a statement, Micky Malka, founder of Ribbit Capital, said, “We backed the Groww team because we believe in their mission. They have built the most trusted product in this space and are on the path to create a category-defining product.”

Ribbit Capital has made a number of investments in India in recent months. Last month, it invested in Cred, a startup that is trying to improve the financial behavior of credit card holders, and BharatPe, a payments solution for businesses.

In recent years, a number of startups such as INDWealth and Cube Wealth have emerged in India to offer wealth management platforms to the country’s growing internet population. Many established financial firms such as Paytm have also expanded their offerings to include investments in mutual funds.

Ashish Agarwal, a principal partner at Sequoia Capital India, said, “Investment products such as mutual funds and stocks were traditionally sold offline through financial advisors, who were mis-incentivized to sell high-commission products. Groww is taking a refreshing approach with a zero-commission mobile first model, enabling investors to make their own investment choices through a slick and easy user interface.”

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Feb
08

Best of Bootstrapping: Bootstrapping A Virtual Company To $25M - Sramana Mitra

The Daily Crunch is TechCrunch’s roundup of our biggest and most important stories. If you’d like to get this delivered to your inbox every day at around 9am Pacific, you can subscribe here.

1. Automattic raises $300 million at $3 billion valuation from Salesforce Ventures

Automattic, the company behind WordPress.com, WooCommerce and soon Tumblr, has raised new funding at a $3 billion post-money valuation. And the entire $300 million round comes from one investor — Salesforce Ventures.

“What we want to do is to become the operating system for the open web,” said founder and CEO Matt Mullenweg. “We want every website, whether it’s e-commerce or anything to be powered by WordPress.”

2. Roku unveils a new streaming player lineup, plus Roku OS 9.2 launch

The company is announcing updated versions of both its entry-level and high-end players. It’s also introducing a new version of the Roku Express exclusively for Walmart, and a Streaming Stick that will be exclusively sold at Best Buy.

3. Airbnb says it will go public next year

The company is part of a big unicorn herd that emerged roughly a decade ago (a herd that includes Uber, Lyft, The We Company and Postmates), and is one of the latest to declare its public market plans.

4. Nintendo Switch Lite review

Brian Heater says that if he was choosing between the Switch and the Switch Lite, he’d go for the Lite — but he’d grit his teeth a bit at the idea of sacrificing a couple hours of battery life in the process.

5. Netflix co-founder Marc Randolph on the company’s earliest days, the streaming wars and moving on

Randolph also shared why it took him 16 years to tell his story about what has become one of the most impactful companies in the history of television. (Extra Crunch membership required.)

6. Google completes controversial takeover of DeepMind Health

The personnel move had been delayed as trusts associated with the National Health Service considered whether to shift their existing DeepMind contracts to Google. (Ultimately, they did shift to Google.)

7. Stephen Curry Brings SC30 Inc. to Disrupt SF

When Golden State Warriors point guard and two-time MVP Stephen Curry isn’t playing basketball, he’s working with his business partner and former college basketball teammate Bryant Barr. Together, Barr and Curry run SC30 Inc., which manages Curry’s investment, media, philanthropy and brand partnership interests.

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Mar
12

Revolut lets you purchase gold

Twenty+ startups, each with six minutes to tell the world what they’re about. If they can prove to our panel of judges that they’re the best of the best, they’ll walk away with $100,000 and their name forever etched on the Disrupt Cup.

That’s the core idea behind the Startup Battlefield, a pillar of TechCrunch Disrupt SF — which, as you might know, is just weeks away. As the event approaches, the list of incredible speakers and world-renowned judges only grows.

We’re thrilled to announce that Alfred Lin and Marissa Mayer will be joining us as Battlefield finals judges.

Alfred Lin is a partner at Sequoia Capital, and by no means a stranger to the startup world. He helped to helm LinkExchange as VP of Finance leading into its $265 million acquisition by Microsoft in 1998, and was COO at Zappos, leading into its billion-dollar acquisition by Amazon. He now sits on the board of companies like Airbnb, Dia&Co, Houzz and DoorDash.

Marissa Mayer was one of the earliest employees at Google, where she’d go on to lead the company’s search and mapping divisions. She led Yahoo! as president and CEO from 2012 to 2017, including through its acquisition by Verizon (disclosure: TechCrunch’s parent company) for nearly $5 billion in 2016. She’s now the co-founder of Lumi Labs, a stealthy incubator/lab in Palo Alto, the website of which says is “focused on building consumer applications enabled by artificial intelligence.”

Lin and Mayer join an outright amazing list of speakers, panelists and judges coming to Disrupt, including the likes of Marc Benioff, Marillyn Hewson, Cyan Banister, Will Smith, Ashton Kutcher, Michael Seibel, Ellen Pao, James Park, Aaron Levie, Joseph Gordon-Levitt, Aileen Lee and many, many (seriously, many) more.

Disrupt SF runs from October 2nd to 4th at the Moscone Center. Need tickets? You can find those right here.

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Jul
22

The game store cold war is heating up

Darkstore, the tech-driven fulfillment solution to enable e-commerce companies to offer same-day delivery, just raised a $21 million Series B round led by EQT Ventures. The deal will bring EQT principal Laura Yao to Darkstore’s board of directors.

This Series B round comes less than one year after Darkstore raised a $7.5 million Series A round. In total, Darkstore has raised more than $30 million in funding.

Darkstore works by exploiting excess capacity in storage facilities, malls and bodegas and enables them to be fulfillment centers with just a smartphone. The idea is that brands without local inventory can store it in a Darkstore and then ship out same-day. Darkstore charges brands across three areas: fulfillment, storage and delivery.

“Consumer expectations are relentless,” Yao told TechCrunch via email. “We want things now, now, now. Obviously, it’s in a brand’s best interest to be able to meet those demands. The amazing team at Darkstore has built a platform-agnostic, cost-effective way for brands to do so, and in the process has unlocked a new revenue stream for urban infrastructure, and created valuable partnerships with last-mile delivery services.”

Currently, Darkstore has more than 600 fulfillment centers across 39 cities in the U.S., including Honolulu, Toledo, Ohio and Omaha, Neb.

Darkstore is unable to share the full roster of its customers, but it has worked with the likes of Nike, premium headphones maker Master & Dynamic, mattress startup Tuft & Needle and others. With the additional funding, Darkstore plans to grow the general team, as well as the management team.

Yao added, “We’ve worked with Lee [founder Lee Hnetinka] and the team for over a year and have been able to see this Darkstore flywheel come to life, and are excited to see what the future holds.”

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Aug
03

Thought Leaders in Big Data: Ganes Kesari, CEO of Gramener (Part 3) - Sramana Mitra

Travel has been a popular category for entrepreneurs to build capital-efficient businesses in. Read the story of Glamping Hub. Sramana Mitra: Let’s start at the very beginning of your journey. Where...

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Original author: Sramana Mitra

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Aug
14

Ex-NSA chief Mike Rogers and Team8 founder Nadav Zafrir will be at Disrupt SF

Today’s 457th FREE online 1Mby1M Roundtable For Entrepreneurs is starting NOW, on Thursday, September 19 at 8 a.m. PDT/11 a.m. EDT/5 p.m. CEST/8:30 p.m. India IST. Click here to join. All are...

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Original author: Maureen Kelly

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Sep
19

Airbnb says it will go public next year

Airbnb has said that it will have its initial public offering in 2020.

The company is one of the last of the big unicorn herd that grew up roughly a decade ago (a herd that includes Uber, Lyft, The We Company and Postmates) to declare its public market intentions.

Yesterday evening the company announced it had hit over $1 billion in revenue for the second quarter 2019. It’s the second time in the company’s history that it pulled in more than $1 billion, according to the statement.

Airbnb also said that through September 15, 2019 users who list their homes and rooms on the company’s marketplace have made more than $80 billion since the company’s launch. The supplemental income for underpaid teachers alone clocks in at $160 million, and roughly 51% of people surveyed by the company said hosting has helped them afford their home.

The company also said that Airbnb’s housing stock now includes 7 million listings in more than 100,000 cities around the world. Airbnb says that over 1,000 cities have more than 1,000 listings — eight years ago, that figure was only 12.

Airbnb is also pulling in more money from its tourism business, with more than 40,000 tours and “experiences” booked in over 1,000 cities.

All of this travel has led to over $100 billion in economic impact across 30 countries, the company said.

This growth hasn’t come without controversy, and Airbnb’s success will depend on its ability to continue to thread the needle between government regulation over the company’s impact on housing prices and the creation of vacant apartments and homes that are only investment properties that increase Airbnb’s housing stock.

The company’s imminent public offering is good news for investors like Andreessen Horowitz, Manhattan Venture Partners, Sequoia Capital, TCV, Firstmark and Altimeter Capital, which have collectively invested roughly $4.4 billion into the company, according to Crunchbase.

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Sep
19

Book: Super Pumped: The Battle for Uber

As Amy and I settle into our time in Homer, we spent a lot of last weekend (and the evenings) reading. We don’t have a TV up here, so our lying around entertainment is reading with some bonus knitting time for Amy.

I’ve been working my way through the books at the upcoming Authors and Innovators Business Ideas Festival and got through three of them so far. I also read a near-final draft of John Minnihan’s upcoming book and The Impossible Long Run: My Journey to Becoming Ultra by Janet Patkowa.

But, the best book of last weekend was Super Pumped: The Battle for Uber by Mike Isaac. It’s the first major book about the story of Uber, by a New York Times writer who has covered tech (and Uber) for a long time.

It’s incredibly fast-paced. It’s in the same category of a number of other “first major book about an emergent important company by a journalist” including Bad Blood (Theranos) by John Carreyrou and The Facebook Effect by David Kirkpatrick.

While I knew over 80% of the content in the book, having it strung together in a time sequence, with emphasis on key activities that happened at the same time, or influenced other future actions, was critical to the narrative and extremely well done by Isaac. While some of it had a reporter flavor, most were non-judgmental and let the activities stand on their own. Periodically Isaac would nudge you toward a conclusion, but most of the time he let you take your view where you wanted from the context provided.

It’ll be interesting to see where Uber is in a decade. In the meantime, reflecting on how it got to where it is today is fascinating.

Original author: Brad Feld

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Aug
09

Roundtable Recap: August 8 – An Innovative Take on VC Funding - Sramana Mitra

Today’s 457th FREE online 1Mby1M Roundtable For Entrepreneurs is starting in 30 minutes, on Thursday, September 19, at 8 a.m. PDT/11 a.m. EDT/5 p.m. CEST/8:30 p.m. India IST. Click here to...

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Original author: Maureen Kelly

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Mar
12

Amazon is recommending all employees around the world work from home, but a lot of them can't actually do so (AMZN)

According to a recent research report, the global revenue management market is estimated to grow 17% annually to $31 billion by the year 2025. ModelN (NYSE: MODN) is a leading player in the industry...

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Original author: MitraSramana

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Sep
19

Bootstrapping First from Colorado, Then Scaling with VC Funds: Faction CEO Luke Norris (Part 4) - Sramana Mitra

Sramana Mitra: Do you have a sense of where your pricing model is settling into based on these early interactions? When you were starting to get bombarded by VCs, did you know where your price point...

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Original author: Sramana Mitra

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Sep
19

10 things in tech you need to know today

10 things in tech you need to know today, September 19 - Business Insider
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USINTLDEAUSFRINITJPMYNLSEPLSGZAES Business Insider logoThe words "Business Insider". Follow us on: We asked VCs which European startups impressed them the most this year. Here are the top 15. Advertising agencies are under threat on all sides, and now a new study shows trust in the business is lower than ever There are 6 billion very good reasons for WeWork to go public this year, despite the fact that Wall Street doesn't want it I'm 34 and make $200,000 a year as a freelancer. This is exactly how I spend my money to both scale my business and still enjoy my Miami life. Goldman Sachs' massive quant business now rivals AQR and Two Sigma. We talked to the bank's top quant about asset growth, finding data sources, and why critics of computerized trading are wrong.
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Original author: Charlie Wood

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Aug
26

Techstars’ Saba Karim is coming to TechCrunch Disrupt 2021

Indonesia has one of the fastest-growing e-commerce markets in the world, but the logistics industry there is still very fragmented, creating headaches for both vendors and customers. Shipper is a startup with the ambitious goal of giving online sellers access to “Amazon-level logistics.” The company has raised $5 million in seed funding from Lightspeed Ventures, Floodgate Ventures, Insignia Ventures Partners and Y Combinator (Shipper is part of the accelerator’s winter 2019 batch), which will be used for hiring and customer acquisition.

Shipper was launched in 2017 by co-founders Phil Opamuratawongse and Budi Handoko, and is now used by more than 25,000 online sellers. Indonesia’s e-commerce market is growing rapidly, but online sellers still face many logistical hurdles.

The country is large (Indonesia has more than 17,500 islands, of which 600 are inhabited) and unlike the United States, where Amazon dominates, e-commerce sellers often use multiple platforms, like Tokopedia, Shopee, Bukalapak and Lazada. Smaller vendors also sell through Facebook, Instagram, WhatsApp and other social media. Once an order has been placed, the challenge of making sure it gets to customers starts. There are more than 2,500 logistics providers in Indonesia, many of whom only cover a small area.

“It is really hard for any one provider to do nationwide themselves, so the big ones usually use local partners to fulfill locations where they don’t have infrastructure,” says Opamuratawongse.

The startup’s mission is to create a platform that makes the process of fulfilling and tracking orders much more efficient. In addition to a package pick-up service and fulfillment centers, Shipper also has a technology stack to help logistics providers manage shipments. It is used to predict the best shipping routes and consolidate packages headed in the same direction and also provides a multi-carrier API that allows sellers to manage orders, print shipping labels and get tracking information from multiple providers on their phones.

When it launched three years ago, Shipper began by focusing on the last-mile for smaller vendors, who Opamuratawongse says typically keep inventory in their homes and fulfill about five to 10 orders per day. Since many give customers a choice of several logistics providers, that meant they needed to visit multiple drop-off locations every morning.

Shipper offers pick-up service performed by couriers (who Opamuratawongse says are people like stay-at-home parents who want flexible, part-time work) who collect packages from several vendors in the same neighborhood and distribute them to different logistics providers, serving as micro-fulfillment hubs. Shipper signs up about 10 to 30 new couriers each week, keeping them at least 2.5 kilometers apart so they don’t compete against each other.

The company began setting up fulfillment centers to keep up with vendors whose businesses were growing and were turning to third-party warehouse services. Shipper has established 10 fulfillment centers so far across Indonesia, including Jakarta, with plans to open a new one about every two weeks until it covers all of Indonesia.

Opamuratawongse says he expects the logistics industry in Indonesia to remain fragmented for the next decade at least, and perhaps longer because of Indonesia’s size and geography. Shipper will focus on expanding in Indonesia first, with the goal of having 1,000 microhubs within the next year and 15 to 20 fulfillment centers. Then the company plans to tackle other Southeast Asian countries with rapidly-growing e-commerce markets, including Thailand, Vietnam and the Philippines.

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Sep
19

Meet Ron Fisher, the SoftBank executive who awarded WeWork a $47 billion valuation months before it delayed its $10 billion IPO

It's not clear if Ron Fisher's billion-dollar gamble will pay off.

The SoftBank executive sits on WeWork's all-male board, having led the Vision Fund's multiple investments in the startup since 2017. As the Vice Chairman and Head of Investment at SoftBank Group, Fisher, 71, is one of the most senior employees overseeing SoftBank's first $100 billion Vision Fund, and the firm's WeWork investment could very well be his legacy.

SoftBank, and Fisher by extension, is widely credited with overinflating WeWork's valuation in later stage private funding rounds. SoftBank first became publicly involved with the New York-based coworking startup in August 2017 after it purchased $1.3 billion worth of shares from a group of undisclosed existing investors. At the time, WeWork was valued at $16.9 billion. That same month, SoftBank led the startup's $1.7 billion Series G, which valued it at $21.2 billion. At its peak, WeWork was privately valued at $47 billion after a $5 billion direct investment from SoftBank.

Read More: The history of WeWork's meteoric valuation rise — and fall

Now, Fisher's investment looks precarious, at best. After pouring billions in private funding into WeWork, the buzzy startup has decided to delay its public offering originally planned for the end of September. Once valued at $47 billion, the startup is now reportedly considering listing at a significantly discounted valuation of around $10 billion.

As one of only six board members, Fisher is in the unique position of knowing what might come next for the beleaguered real estate startup. But he may have sacrificed a lot to get there.

Here is what we know about Fisher, the SoftBank executive who led Vision Fund's controversial investment in WeWork.

Original author: Megan Hernbroth

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Oct
18

Netflix Betting Big on India - Sramana Mitra

WeWork may have postponed its initial public offering in the face of investor skepticism, but the commercial real estate giant has plenty of reasons to push through its IPO by the end of the year anyway.

At least 6 billion of them — the coworking company has a $6 billion loan that's riding on it going public by December 31. Indeed, when WeWork officially delayed the IPO, it said that it still expects to go public by the end of 2019.

But that's not the company's only motivation for pressing forward with the offering, real estate and business experts told Business Insider. Plain and simple, WeWork needs more cash to keep growing and even to just stay in business. The lack of a successful IPO could hurt both its bankers and its biggest backer. And the longer it delays an offering, the more likely it is that negative market or economic trends could harm its business and further depress demand for its shares.

"Everybody, except the market, wanted this thing to go public," said Scott Galloway, a professor of marketing at New York University and former startup founder who has been sharply critical of WeWork's offering, in a recent conversation with Business Insider.

WeWork representatives did not respond to an email seeking comment.

The company on Tuesday announced that it would postpone its offering until at least next month. The move came after it had faced significant pushback from public investors, who were disturbed by its revelations of spiraling losses, potential conflicts of interest involving CEO Adam Neumann and other executives, and questionable governance structure. Analysts and potential experts also worried about its nominal $47 billion valuation and its potential resilience in an economic downturn.

Read this: Here's how WeWork answered the 5 biggest questions about its business — and why analysts are still worried about its upcoming IPO

In response, WeWork took several steps to reform its governance, including reducing the number of votes Neumann will have for each of his shares from 20 to 10. It also, reportedly, pitched investors on the idea of it going public with a much reduced valuation. Last week, it was reportedly considering debuting with a market capitalization of as little as $10 billion.

WeWork appeared desperate to go public, for good reason

Those repeated efforts to try to placate and lure in potential investors smacked of desperation, said Jeff Langbaum, a real estate analyst with Bloomberg Intelligence.

"What it sounds like is they were getting to the point where it almost didn't matter what [WeWork] was worth," Langbaum said. "They needed to come out."

WeWork's business model, which involves building out and outfitting numerous offices spaces around the world, has required copious amounts of cash. WeWork Perhaps WeWork's biggest impetus for pushing on with the IPO despite investor resistance was the prospect of the massive loan. A collection of banks, including JPMorgan Chase and Goldman Sachs, which are leading WeWork's offering, has agreed to lend WeWork up to $6 billion — up to $3 billion right after the IPO with another $3 billion available by early 2021.

But in order to get access to that financing, WeWork has to raise at least $3 billion in an IPO by December 31 — unless the lenders decide to give it more time.

WeWork has a pressing need for cash. Its IPO filings show that it burned through $2.2 billion last year just operating its business and purchasing property and equipment to fit out its office spaces. Such spending consumed another $1.5 billion in the first six months of this year.

At the end of June, WeWork had $2.5 billion in cash on hand, not including another $575.6 million it's had to set aside to primarily to help guarantee certain of its leases. At the rate it was going through cash in the first half of this year, it would burn through its unrestricted cash stash by early May.

And that may overstate how quickly it's likely to consume cash. The vast majority of WeWork's cash burn in recent years has come not from spending more on the day-to-day costs of running its business than it's collecting in revenue, but from its ostensibly longer term investments in property and equipment for its office spaces. But the reason that's so is that the company has been able to defer much of one of the chief costs of running its business — paying rent to its landlords.

In 2017, the company deferred $752,063 in rent. In 2018, that figure went up to $1.3 billion.

'They need the money'

Landlords often give a discount on the first year or two of rent to tenants who sign long-term deals. They also often give tenants a credit for improvements they make to the spaces they lease. Landlords typically earn back those credits and discounts by charging more in the later years of a lease.

Because of its vast expansion in recent years, WeWork is in the early years of long-term deals on many of its spaces. Its number of locations worldwide jumped from 111 in 2016 to 528 by the end of June. The deferred rent it reported reflects the discounts it's gotten on signing all those spaces.

The bills for all those spaces are going to start coming due soon. Next year, the company will owe $2.2 billion on its operating leases. It will owe another $2.3 billion in 2021.

"They need the money," said David Erickson, a senior fellow in finance at the University of Pennsylvania's Wharton School of business. He continued: "They don't have a lot of runway."

To date, WeWork has raised billions of dollars in the private markets, both from selling shares in venture funding rounds and from issuing debt or taking out loans. Even if it doesn't go public, it might be able to turn to its existing lenders and investors and potentially even from its landlords for more cash, business and real estate experts said.

WeWork has tried to convince investors to place it in the same category as tech firms such as Zoom, which had a standout public offering earlier this year. Mark Lennihan/Associated Press But the potential $9 billion in cash at stake with an IPO is important to WeWork for more than just keeping the lights on, they said. WeWork has tried to sell itself as not just another commercial real-estate firm, but as a fast-growing tech company. The distinction is important, because how investors classify WeWork will determine its valuation. The public market tend to pay a marked premium for hot young tech companies over real estate firms.

Crucial to WeWork's attempt to have the market put its business in the same category as the likes of relatively young cloud software firms like Slack and Zoom has been its rapid rise in revenue. Its sales more than doubled in each of the last two years, and are on track to do so again this year.

But as its cash burn indicates, that growth has been extraordinarily expensive. Its loss nearly doubled last year after more than doubling the year before, and it loses nearly a dollar for every dollar in revenue it sees.

Because there's little indication that WeWork will staunch those losses anytime soon, the company needs to have access to vast amounts of cash to continue its breakneck growth and be able to sell itself as something more than the average real estate firm, Bloomberg's Langbaum said.

"If they don't raise the money [in the IPO], they can't continue to grow. And if they can't continue to grow, then there's a very difficult story for them to sell," he said. "If they want to be able to grow in the future," he continued, "they need to get it done."

A recession could pose big problems for WeWork

But the company likely faces other time pressures for completing the IPO in the near term beyond just the year-end deadline imposed by banks behind the $6 billion credit line. One big one is the potential for a recession, which many economists, investors, and business leaders fear could hit the US economy as soon as next year. Such a downturn could pose a double threat to WeWork's hopes for going public if its offering got pushed back that far.

The IPO market tends to dry up in recessions. Worse for WeWork, the commercial real estate market tends to be hit especially hard in downturns, said Tom Smith, a cofounder of Truss, an online commercial real-estate marketplace. Due to the short-term nature of the deals its customers sign with it, WeWork's business could be hurt more than other real-estate firms by a recession.

Masayoshi Son, CEO of SoftBank, which has been trying to raise a second $100 billion venture fund even as its investment in WeWork has come under pressure. Kim Kyung-Hoon/Reuters Potentially investors have already been spooked by the theoretical danger of a recession to WeWork's business. But in the case of an actual downturn, they'd be able to see how WeWork's business really does perform in one, Smith said. WeWork could be posed with the prospect of trying to sell shares amid weak demand for new shares overall while having to report worsening business results to potential investors.

"It's important to have this [IPO] event before a [down] cycle" in the economy, said Smith. "No one knows when that cycle is going to hit," he continued. "I think [WeWork's] management really was cognizant of that."

And there's another timing factor that WeWork faces, Smith said. One of the longstanding concerns about WeWork's business has been that it the bulk of its customers are freelancers, startups, solo practitioners, and small businesses — the kinds of people and companies that tend to be most vulnerable in a recession. The company has been trying to address that concern by signing up larger businesses as its customers. At the beginning of June, 40% of its customers were companies that have 500 or more employees, up from just 20% as of March 2017.

But the company lured in many of those customers with sharply discounted deals, said Smith, whose company's marketplace counts WeWork among its customers. In the second half of last year, particularly, the company was offering remarkable promotions — in some cases, it was charging about half the going market rate for space, Smith said.

Because WeWork generally offers short-term deals, even to its largest customers, those agreements are starting to come up for renewal, he said. The company is hoping to have those customers re-up at market rates, he said. It's unclear how much success they'll have. But there are warning signs, he said.

Its partners also need it to go public

Many of the companies who signed those deals were originally in the market for traditional office space. They only signed up for space with WeWork because the promotions were so dramatic, he said.

Jamie Dimon, CEO of JPMorgan Chase, which, together with other lenders, has loaned WeWork and Neumann each hundreds of millions of dollars. Brian Snyder/Reuters "They priced it so you couldn't say no," Smith said. "But now," he continued, "you get a renewal offer, and it's double what you've been paying — we'll see what the reaction is."

The company's success or failure in getting those customers to renew should be known in the next three to six months, he said. WeWork would almost certainly like to go public before it has to report anything about that to public investors, he said.

"They want to have monetization before some of these fundamental problems are revealed," he said.

But WeWork was and is likely getting pressure to go public from the outside too. SoftBank is trying to attract investors in a follow-on to its $100 billion Vision Fund. Having WeWork's IPO blow up is about the worst marketing pitch it could have, especially after it already has lost a reported $600 million on its Uber stake, Galloway said.

If WeWork went public, it at least could potentially sell some shares and get some of its cash out, he said — though Galloway also said that he doesn't actually expect WeWork to go public at all, and that the IPO will be completely scrapped.

Still, JPMorgan Chase and other banks have loaned Neumann hundreds of millions of dollars, backed by his shares in WeWork, and have loaned hundreds of millions more to WeWork itself. With WeWork's valuation under intense pressure, its IPO in doubt, and its cash running short, those loans look increasingly risky, Galloway said.

"You have a ton of parties here who needed to get this done," he said.

Got a tip about WeWork or another company? Contact this reporter via email at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it., message him on Twitter @troywolv, or send him a secure message through Signal at 415.515.5594. You can also contact Business Insider securely via SecureDrop.

Original author: Troy Wolverton

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Sep
18

Amid Snap's struggles as a public company, CEO Evan Spiegel gives this advice to founders: 'Don't go public' (SNAP)

Snap CEO Evan Spiegel had some #nofilter advice for founders taking companies public for their first time.

"Don't go public?" Spiegel said on stage at a Goldman Sachs investor conference in New York on Wednesday.

It's been little more than two years since Spiegel rang the opening bell on Wall Street. The photo messaging company's stock has struggled to trade above its IPO price of $17 a share, closing at $16.90 on Wednesday.

Snap is recovering from a wildly unpopular app redesign and a delayed update for Android users, in the same period that competitors like Instagram debuted features like Stories and duplicated its augmented reality filters. The company stopped adding and actually started losing users, though user growth has turned around so far in 2019.

The audience, mostly consisting of investors, laughed at Spiegel's remark. The moderator cracked that they would edit his reply out of the webcast recording, Alex Heath, a reporter at tech news site The Information, said in a tweet.

Spiegel then got serious.

"I think for us going public has really been a trust-building exercise with a totally new set of investors. And I think that, frankly, is something that takes time," said Spiegel, Snap's cofounder, who took it public in spring 2017.

"If we look at our investors who were private investors with us for many, many years, we build relationships with them by telling them we were gonna take a big risk, telling them what our vision was, and then executing. And over three, four, five years, we've built a lot of trust with those shareholders.

"We just have to go through the same process now with the new set of shareholders and building new relationships," Spiegel said. "And I think we just have to execute on the business, frankly, and deliver results."

Original author: Melia Russell

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Sep
18

WeWork founders Adam and Rebekah Neumann are close friends with Ivanka Trump and Jared Kushner and invited them to Rebekah's extravagant 40th birthday bash in Italy

Rebekah Neumann's 40th birthday party in Italy was set to rival a celebrity's bash. The celebration included luxury suites for around 40 people and a yacht, perfect for exploring the Amalfi Coast off of Positano, one of the three cities on the itinerary.

But the invite list caused some headaches. Rebekah and her husband Adam, two of WeWork's three founders, have maintained a close relationship with Donald Trump's daughter, Ivanka Trump, and her husband, senior White House adviser Jared Kushner. The Neumanns wanted to invite the couple to the big party in Italy.

See more: Now WeWork wants to be a manufacturer. The coworking company is opening a 200,000-square-foot New Jersey plant to make its signature aluminum and glass walls.

The Kushners did not attend, and sources offer differing accounts about why. One ex-employee who worked closely with the WeWork executive team said that WeWork's then-head of communications - who did not respond to a request for comment - argued against their inclusion. The comms head was worried about the optics of socializing with Trump administration officials because of WeWork's generally progressive stance on social issues, this person said.

At the last minute, Adam Neumann agreed not to have his friends at the party. But another source familiar with the matter said Ivanka and Jared were invited, but the three-city event was too logistically challenging for the couple's security team.

Regardless of the party, three former employees who worked closely with senior management confirmed that the couples remain close.

A WeWork representative declined to comment, citing the company's quiet period ahead of its IPO. A spokeswoman for the Kushners did not respond to a request for comment.

Love, the Kushners

As WeWork navigates a rocky path to going public, the founders' leadership style has been under a microscope by current and potential investors. The company has more conflicts of interest among leadership than typical public companies, particularly around Adam Neumann's property dealings. WeWork took steps last week to address some of those perceived problems, though now the company is delaying its IPO plans after a chilly response from potential investors.

The Neumanns have used the company to advocate for progressive causes, including environmental issues and the LGBT community, so the former employees said the close ties to the couple, and by extension the White House, seemed hypocritical.

While the fact that the two couples have a relationship is far from secret, most media depictions up until this point had focused on their business ties and real estate negotiations, but not the details of their social connection and how it was perceived within WeWork.

Rebekah was photographed standing behind Ivanka Trump at actor Hugh Jackman's New York home last year. One former staffer said the couples dine occasionally and that the Neumanns have received gifts from the couple at headquarters, including a basket for the Jewish holiday Purim, which the ex-employee said had a note that ended "Love, the Kushners."

'Tequila shots and arm wrestling'

Adam Neumann has not shied away from talking about his business relationship with Kushner - WeWork is a major tenant in an office complex in Dumbo Heights, Brooklyn owned by Kushner's family real estate business, Kushner Companies. In 2014, Kushner told Forbes that he was initially skeptical of WeWork's pitch.

"It took us a little bit to get on the same page. My first impression was they had very big ambition, but I wanted to make sure there was enough substance behind it," Kushner said.

Per earlier reports, Kushner and Adam Neumann have taken tequila shots - Adam's drink of choice - and gone head-to-head in an arm wrestling match to settle a minor disagreement. Kushner lost. But Adam Neumann has called the real estate heir a mentor.

"I find Jared to be one of the most sophisticated real estate developers on earth," he told Bloomberg Businessweek in 2016. "A lot of times when I'm with Jared, I take cues from his behavior just to learn how to act. You know, just to act a little bit better myself because it's always good to learn."

Are you a current or former WeWorker with a story to share? Contact this reporter via encrypted messaging app Signal at +1 (646) 768-1627 using a non-work phone, email at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it., or Twitter DM at @MeghanEMorris. (PR pitches by email only, please.) You can also contact Business Insider securely via SecureDrop.

Original author: Meghan Morris and Julie Bort

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Nov
08

Give First Podcast with Rajat Bhargava

California lawmakers approved a landmark bill that would force gig-economy companies like Uber, Lyft and others to treat many workers as employees instead of independent contractors, potentially devastating their business and drastically altering the ride-hailing industry as we know it.

Assembly Bill 5, which will codify a three-part test for determining worker status as written in a recent court decision, was signed by Gov. Gavin Newsom on Wednesday, September 18.

Newsom previously indicated support for the move, saying that tech companies and other employers are eroding workers' basic protections like "minimum wage, paid sick days, and health insurance benefits." In a Wednesday letter sent to California lawmakers, Newsom called the law "landmark legislation for workers and our economy."

The move could affect over 1 million workers in California.

Lyft, which is planning a $90 million fight against the new rules alongside Uber and DoorDash, said after the legislation was passed that it was disappointed in lawmakers.

"Today, our state's political leadership missed an important opportunity to support the overwhelming majority of rideshare drivers who want a thoughtful solution that balances flexibility with an earnings standard and benefits," a representative said last week. "The fact that there were more than 50 industries carved out of AB5 is very telling. We are fully prepared to take this issue to the voters of California to preserve the freedom and access drivers and riders want and need."

In a blog post earlier this month, Uber outlined its proposed compromise it hopes to reach with politicians and labor leaders.

"That is why we have been at the table in California — with other rideshare companies, lawmakers, the Governor's office, and labor unions — to propose a truly innovative framework that we believe would preserve Uber's key benefit for drivers (flexibility) and key benefit for riders (reliability), while improving the quality and security of independent work," the company said.

Lorena Gonzales, the bill's sponsor, praised the Senate for finally passing the bill.

"The State Senate made it clear: your business cannot game the system by misclassifying its workers," the Democrat said in a statement. "As lawmakers, we will not in good conscience allow free-riding businesses to continue to pass their own business costs onto taxpayers and workers. It's our job to look out for working men and women, not Wall Street and their get-rich-quick IPOs."

The bill could devastate Uber, Lyft and other gig-work companies

The law, which would take effect January 1 if signed by the Governor, would codify a three-part test that would determine a worker's status as an employee or independent contractor. That test says a worker is an employee unless the employer proves that:

(A): The worker is "free from the control and direction" of the company that hired them while they perform their work.

(B): The worker is performing work that falls "outside the hiring entity's usual course or type of business."

(C): The worker has their own independent business or trade beyond the job for which they were hired.

Lyft's CFO, Brian Roberts, told investors at a conference hosted by Citigroup last week that any increased costs associated with reclassifying drivers or the backlog of employment lawsuits would be passed through to consumers. That would mean much higher prices on rides in the state, as well as a potential slowdown in work for drivers.

An Uber executive, however, took a much harsher criticism of the bill, telling Business Insider that the law would cause a fundamental shift in how the company does business. Uber has no plans to re-classify drivers as employees any time soon, the person said.

Wall Street analysts are perhaps the most worried. Barclays estimated that the re-classification alone, and the $290 million in associated costs, could bankrupt the companies.

"Beyond higher wages, ride-hailing companies would be responsible for half (6.2%) of employees' Social Security and Medicare (1.45%) tax, as well as the costs for administering any employee benefits (e.g., health care and 401ks)," the bank's analysts said in a note to clients.

"With current driver earnings and incentives running at an estimated 78% and 76% of gross bookings for Uber and Lyft, respectively, a 25% increase in driver wage/benefit costs would essentially drive take rates to zero (absent rate increases to riders)."

"We think an adverse ruling on the contract workforce issue would potentially bankrupt both Uber and Lyft," they concluded.

Shares of Uber and Lyft fell less than 1% in early trading Wednesday following the bill's passage through the Senate.

Gearing up for a $90 million fight

If the bill becomes law and no deal is reached, Uber, Lyft and DoorDash have pledged a $30 million each for a ballot proposal to exempt themselves from the new rules.

Among Uber and Lyft's proposals for an alternative is a minimum wage for drivers while they are on their way to a ride, or actively shuttling passengers, as well as portable benefits that would follow them between jobs, and a collective bargaining agreement.

The companies are hoping to pioneer what's known as "sectoral bargaining," a popular labor technique in European countries, in the United States. That would mean Uber, Lyft and other gig-work companies would bargain with the industry at-large, and not just workers on their platform.

Original author: Graham Rapier and Rosie Perper

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Sep
18

Get your Startup Alley Exhibitor package plus bonus hotel stay

It’s getting down to the wire for your opportunity to show off your early-stage startup in Startup Alley at TechCrunch Disrupt SF this October 2-4. There’s simply no better way to place your ideas and technology in front of influential change agents that can help you propel your business forward and set the stage for future success. Here are just four of the many reasons you should exhibit in Startup Alley.

1. Awesome exposure to the media 

Along with 10,000+ attendees, Disrupt SF will have more than 400 members of the media. We’re talking the big guns — CNBC, Bloomberg, Forbes, Financial Times — alongside TechCrunch writers, scouring the floor looking for stories about fascinating founders, emerging tech trends or maybe even a future unicorn. Scoring media coverage can work wonders for your bottom line — as Luke Heron, CEO of TestCard, learned when he exhibited in Startup Alley:

We got a fantastic writeup in Engadget, which was really valuable. Cash at the beginning of the start-up journey is difficult to come by, and an article from a credible organization can help push things in the right direction.

Last year, TestCard closed a $1.7 million funding round.

2. Beaucoup investor attention

Journalists aren’t the only influencers perusing the tech and talent on display in Startup Alley. Investors are just as eager to find up-and-coming prospects to add to their portfolios. It’s the perfect place to start conversations and develop relationships that lead to big changes. And we’ve got a plethora of investors (both traditional VCs and corporate folk) in the Valley: Sequoia, Verizon Ventures, GV, SoftBank, Naspers, AT&T, Honda Innovations and more. Here’s what David Hall, co-founder of Park & Diamond, had to say about his experience:

Exhibiting in Startup Alley was a game-changer. The chance to have discussions and potentially form relationships with investors was invaluable. It completely changed our trajectory and made it easier to raise funds and jump to the next stage.

Last year, Park & Diamond closed its first round of funding, allowing the company to relocate to New York and make its first key hires.

3. Wild Card shot at the Startup Battlefield competition

Missed out on the Startup Battlefield applications? All exhibitors in Startup Alley get a chance to win one of TWO Wild Card entries to the Startup Battlefield pitch competition. TechCrunch editors will select two standout startups as Wild Card teams that will go on the Main Stage to compete head-to-head in Startup Battlefield for $100,000 equity-free cash, the Disrupt Cup and even more glorious investor and media attention. 

4. Free hotel stay for Startup Alley companies who book now

With all of those reasons, it’s hard to top all the value you’ll get from a Startup Alley Exhibitor Package, but we’ll even sweeten the deal and throw in a complimentary 3-night stay at a SF hotel if you book by Wednesday, September 25. All of this opportunity for $1,995 sounds like it’s too good to be true, but if you act now, this can become your reality.

There you have it. What are you waiting for? Buy your Startup Alley Exhibitor Package and strut your stuff at Disrupt San Francisco 2019.

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Feb
05

Mobile banking alternative Bnext expands to Mexico

When Apple unveiled the first Apple Watch in 2014, the first thing CEO Tim Cook highlighted was how the watch performs as a timepiece — noting that the watch is synced so closely with the Universal Time Standard that it's always within 50 milliseconds of accuracy. After all, the Apple Watch's most important job is telling the time, right?

While that may be true, there's a good chance your Apple Watch turns into a blank black square for most of the day as it sits idly on your wrist.

That's all about to change with the Apple Watch Series 5, which the company is launching on September 20, with a price starting at $400. Ths new model comes with a new always-on display that can show information like the date, weather, activity progress, and any other metric you can add as a complication to one of Apple's watch faces — even when the screen isn't activated.

It's one of the few features that distinguishes the Apple Watch Series 5 from its predecessor, the Series 4, which Apple no longer sells. Other than a new screen that doesn't turn off, the new watch comes with a built-in compass and the ability to call emergency services even when traveling internationally.

Read more: The iPhone 11 proves Apple learned an important lesson after last year's iPhone launch — most people don't want to pay $1,000 for a new smartphone

I've only just unboxed the Apple Watch Series 5, but here's a look at the characteristics that have stood out to me so far. Our full review will dive more deeply into these features and other details about the watch.

Original author: Lisa Eadicicco

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