Jun
06

This floating tiny home can be 3D printed in only 48 hours, and is designed to last 100 years — see inside

Way back in 1998, developer Epic Games took the technology behind its hit PC first-person shooter "Unreal" and released it as the first version of the Unreal Engine.

Nowadays, Epic Games is best known as the proprietor of the smash-hit "Fortnite," the most popular game in the world, with some 250 million players. Less visibly, the Unreal Engine has grown over the years to become the foundation for blockbuster games including "Kingdom Hearts 3," the forthcoming "Mortal Kombat 11," and, naturally, "Fortnite" itself. Epic says that 7.5 million developers are using Unreal Engine today.

Now, Epic Games is putting the pieces in place to bring these two worlds closer together, CEO Tim Sweeney told Business Insider in a conversation at the Game Developers Conference earlier in March. Ultimately, he says, this plan stands to take "Fortnite" beyond its roots, and make it a true online world.

"We see that as 'Fortnite' evolves, it's evolving beyond being a game," said Sweeney. He says "there'll be more and more interesting things happening in that world" that will allow it to "evolve in ways that previous games haven't."

Read more:The CEO behind 'Fortnite' says the entire video game industry is missing the 'inevitable' trend as the barriers between consoles and smartphones get obliterated

The big idea, says Sweeney, is that Epic views "Fortnite" as sort of the ultimate expression of what the Unreal Engine is capable of — its graphics and cross-platform support, sure, but also its ability to support large-scale online events like the massively popular Marshmello concert, which attracted 10 million players.

10 million gamers tuned in for a virtual Marshmello concert in "Fortnite." "Fortnite"/Epic Games

On the other side of the coin, Sweeney says that "Fortnite's" Creative mode— where players work together to build, rather than battle — has attracted 100 million players since it launched in December. Sweeney says that he sees this Creative mode as an extension of the Unreal Engine; a version that's "super easy to use" for all players.

The ultimate goal, says Sweeney, is to establish a "continuum" between "Fortnite" and the Unreal Engine, to ease the transition from playing "Fortnite," to building in "Fortnite," to developing advanced content with the Unreal Engine.

"We're a digital ecosystem company. 'Fortnite' is the 250 million user version of the tool, which is a game and also a creative platform for 100 million people for building content. Which is an impressive number and bigger than any game engine by far," Sweeney said. "And then 7.5 million people have been in Unreal Engine 4, the super-high-end content creation tool."

Creative mode lets "Fortnite" players team up to build, not battle. Epic Games

The ultimate goal, says Sweeney, is to build "something like the Metaverse" — the idea for a "collective virtual shared space," as Wikipedia puts it, popularized in science fiction novels like Neal Stephenson's "Snow Crash" and Ernest Cline's "Ready Player One." Indeed, "Fortnite" has been likened to a social network unto itself, as a place for kids especially to hang out online.

Read more:The CEO behind 'Fortnite' used to be one of Microsoft's fiercest critics. Now, he explains why he thinks it's a 'new company' under CEO Satya Nadella.

"It can't be just a game and it can't be just an engine, it's gotta be something that's he runs the full gamut," Sweeney said. "Nothing like this exists right now, but we're seeing it emerge this year. It's exciting."

It should be noted that Epic isn't the only one trying to build the Metaverse: Roblox, the massively popular online gaming platform, has a similar line of thinking around combining gameplay with creative tools to make something bigger. Facebook's Oculus VR unit, too, has ambitions around building social, virtual worlds.

Sweeney says that Epic has a responsibility to "maintain a great experience" and "set the tone" for players as it gradually broadens its scope, but that the committed "Fortnite" player base forms a strong foundation from which to build.

"'Fortnite' has, I think, the most positive gamer community that's ever emerged from a game at this scale," said Sweeney. "I think it's partly because of the great community, and partly because of the tone set by the game. Half the time when you're eliminated, you're laughing, because the situation that happened is hilarious."

Original author: Matt Weinberger

Continue reading
  71 Hits
Jun
06

Startups Weekly: The George Floyd protests come home to the tech industry

China is the world's largest electric vehicle market. In 2018, it was responsible for 56% of global electric vehicle sales with 1.2 million units sold.

In an effort to capture a greater percentage of that market, Tesla is building a factory in Shanghai, the first that will be wholly-owned by a foreign car company. For now, Tesla is shipping vehicles to Chinese customers from the United States.

Read more: The CEO of China's largest electric-car company compares Tesla to high fashion — and says his company is the 'girl next door'

Tesla's primary domestic competition in China's luxury electric-vehicle market is Nio, which released its first vehicle, the ES8 SUV, in 2018. The ES8 has a 220-mile range, up to seven seats, and a starting price of around $67,000.

Though it was first released in 2015, Tesla's Model X SUV is the company's closest competitor to the ES8.

Here's how the two vehicles compare.

Original author: Mark Matousek

Continue reading
  73 Hits
Mar
31

186th 1Mby1M Entrepreneurship Podcast With Shalini Prakash, 500 Startups - Sramana Mitra

Shalini Prakash, Venture Partner at 500 Startups, India, talks about the opportunities in the Indian market.

___

Original author: Sramana Mitra

Continue reading
  52 Hits
Mar
31

This CEO explains how the hottest trend in software development helped his startup take off and raise $50 million in new funding

It's taken a while, but Sauce Labs may finally be right where it wants to be.

The San Francisco startup offers a cloud-based service that allows developers to automatically test their web and mobile applications for bugs. It specializes in offering programmers the chance to test their applications on multiple simulated devices or browsers at once, allowing them to markedly speed up the process of development.

The company, which has about 300 employees and development teams in Berlin and Warsaw, announced last that it's secured $50 million in new, late-stage venture funding from Riverwood Capital. The new company's new funds came with a valuation north of $380 million, or more than double what it was in 2016 when Sauce Labs last raised capital.

The company launched 10 years ago, but it didn't really take off until an industry-wide shift in app development took root, said Charles Ramsey, Sauce Labs's CEO. But now that it has, business is booming, he said.

"The market is changing rapidly, to our advantage," he said.

Sauce Labs is benefitting from an Agile approach

In recent years, a growing number of companies have embraced so-called Agile software development. In Agile, big software projects are divided up into discrete chunks. Small teams typically work on those different pieces of the projects in parallel and by iterating on them repeatedly. The process usually allows organizations to develop software faster than with older methods, in which development is generally done sequentially and only after each step is completed, and allows them to more rapidly fix problems and introduce new features.

One of the things that can delay Agile development, though, is testing each new feature in and iteration of an app, Ramsey said. In the past, testing was a largely manual process, requiring actual human beings — whether volunteers or paid employees — to try out apps and features, he said. That can be a slow, potentially expensive or logistically challenging, and often incomplete; it's often hard to test all of an app's features in a set amount of time.

Read this:$25 billion Atlassian is releasing a new tool to help developers release code faster as it takes on GitHub

That's where Sauce Labs' service comes in. By offering automated testing and allowing organizations to tap into multiple simulators simultaneously, its service can quicken the process and allow it to be more comprehensive.

"Testing is a constraint to really great Agile development," Ramsey said, "and so we're getting a lot of attention."

It has more offerings in the works

Sauce Labs' service, which it offers as a subscription, allows organizations to test their apps to make sure they work across different operating systems, browsers, and devices. In addition to its simulators and emulators, it also offers a service that allows organizations near the end of the development process to try out their apps on actual devices via manual testing.

And the company, whose offerings have already become popular in the financial services, health care, and media industries, is planning to offer an even more comprehensive service, Ramsey said. It's developing a feature that would allow programmers to test out small snippets of code. The feature reflects how the development environment continues to evolve as more organizations are embracing Agile, he said. Those organizations are wanting to test their code more often and earlier in the development process, he said.

Sauce Labs plans to continue to add on to its offerings, including through an acquisition that Ramsey said is imminent but declined to discuss. It should have the opportunity to do so, thanks to this newest round of funding.

"We want people to be able to test at every step of the development process with the appropriate tool," Ramsey said.

Got a tip about a startup or other tech 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

Continue reading
  62 Hits
Mar
31

Thought Leaders in Healthcare IT: CareDash CEO Ted Chan (Part 3) - Sramana Mitra

Sramana Mitra: How would you tackle the issue in any given community? Let’s say you’re a patient in any given community. Given your insurance and its coverage, there aren’t that...

___

Original author: Sramana Mitra

Continue reading
  45 Hits
Mar
31

Your AirPods are probably disgusting — here's how to clean them (AAPL)

You probably wouldn't wear the same outfit day after day without tossing it in the laundry, just like you wouldn't eat off of the same fork without washing it. But most people probably can't say the same for their earbuds.

When Business Insider swabbed 22 pairs of earbuds last year to see what types of germs might be residing on them, Columbia's microbiology lab found that two samples had grown yeast and one sample had grown a type of bacteria associated with dirt. While that test did not include Apple's AirPods, it's still in your best interest to keep yours clean.

See below for tips and tricks on how to clean your AirPods. Be careful to avoid getting liquid in any of the AirPods' openings, especially the charging ports, since they're not water resistant.

Original author: Lisa Eadicicco

Continue reading
  45 Hits
Mar
31

Here's what you need to know about Jumia, the Alibaba of Africa that's getting ready to IPO on the New York Stock Exchange (JMIA)

One of the first unicorns out of Africa is about to go public.

Jumia Technologies' public debut is expected any day now. On Thursday, Nigerian-founded company set a price range of $13 to $16 per American depository share, according to its updated offering paperwork. At the mid-point of its price range, the company, which plans to have its shares trade under the ticker symbol "JMIA," would raise $195.8 million in its IPO at a $1.1 billion valuation.

It expects to raise another $56 million in a private sale of stock to Mastercard Europe at the same time as its public offering. Morgan Stanley is leading the IPO, working with Citigroup; Germany's Berenberg Capital Markets; RBC Capital Markets; Raymond James; Stifel, Nicolaus; and William Blair.

Jumia was born in Nigeria, but is based in Germany

Jumia was founded in 2012 in Lagos, Nigeria. It eventually grew into the conglomerate known as the Africa Internet Group, run by cofounders and co-CEOs Sacha Poignonnec and Jeremy Hodara.

On January 31, 2019, AIG officially renamed itself Jumia Technologies after its popular Nigerian e-commerce website, one of a handful of different companies it previously operated under the AIG umbrella. The company has sold off some of those subsidiaries to other owners, including online real estate website Jumia House.

Despite its African founding and focus, Jumia's global business is incorporated and has its headquarters in Berlin.

The startup's biggest and earliest backers include Africa-based Mobile Telephone Networks, which owns 29.7% of Jumia; Germany's Rocket Internet, which owns 20.6%; and the cellular company Millicon, which owns 9.6%, according to the documents Jumia has filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission. Among its other investors is Goldman Sachs.

Jumia offers e-commerce, logistics, and payments

Like Amazon in the US and Alibaba in China, Jumia has established itself in Africa as the go-to marketplace for a wide variety of goods and services. On its sites, customers can purchase clothing and electronics, order food for delivery, and even book hotel rooms.

But Jumia offers more than just consumer shopping sites. It also helps sellers ship their goods to customers via its logistics service and offers them a payment service.

The company has 41 million active customers, and 81,000 active retailer partners who sell through its sites.

Jumia brought in $149.6 million in revenue last year, which was up 39% from 2017, according to its filings. But like Lyft and many other technology companies going public lately, Jumia is still operating in the red. It lost $195 million in 2018, compared to about $189 million the year before.

Read this:READY FOR LYFT-OFF: Lyft to IPO on Friday at whopping $21 billion valuation

The company claims to be the "only" successful e-commerce business working across Africa. But it believes it has more room to grow as internet penetration increases across Africa and as online shopping grows in popularity.

"As Africa becomes more affluent and 'connected,' we believe that African consumers will increasingly become aware of online shopping," the company said in its latest SEC filing. "Moreover, organized retail is underdeveloped across most of the continent, making the distribution of goods less efficient than in other regions in the world. "

Jumia's marketplace is available in 14 African countries, which represent 72% of the continent's overall gross domestic product, according to the filing. Residents of those countries accounted for 74% of the €1.4 trillion in consumer spending across Africa, Jumia said in the filing.

"Though still nascent, we believe that e-commerce in Africa is well positioned to grow," the company said.

Original author: Becky Peterson

Continue reading
  52 Hits
Mar
31

Thought Leaders in Healthcare IT: Tarek Sherif, CEO of Medidata (Part 7) - Sramana Mitra

Sramana Mitra: How is it that you have 18 out of the top 25 pharma? Given what you describe, it seems to me like you should be having 25 out of the 25. Tareq Sherif: I agree with you. But it’s a...

___

Original author: Sramana Mitra

Continue reading
  17 Hits
Jun
10

1Mby1M Virtual Accelerator Investor Forum: With Nick Adams of Differential Ventures (Part 3) - Sramana Mitra

I wasn’t able to sleep last night, so after doing the final copy edit on Do More Faster 2nd Edition, I started reading J.D. Lasica’s new book Catch and Kill: A high-tech conspiracy thriller. My brain was toast and my head was full of dripping dead virus goo, so I hoped some good mental floss would help pass the time.

I finally crawled into bed at about 3am after reading about half of the book. Today was supposed to be the emotional warm up for the Knoxville Marathon. Instead, it has been a lay on the coach, read, doze, read some more, get up and do some work with Amy on the final copy edit of Venture Deals 4th Edition, and read some more.

Instead of a marathon weekend, this has turned into a book weekend. It’s gloomy outside and I’m still fighting with Nev (Mr. Nasty Evil Virus), so as the cliche goes, Catch and Kill has been just what the doctor ordered.

Lasica does a great job of world-building in the near future, weaving together high-tech and super evil bad guy billionaires, a mysterious fantasy island, efforts to undermine and transform the geopolitical superstructure, and authoritarians who just want more, more, more.

The protagonist, Kaden Baker, is everything one wants in a kick ass 23-year-old female character who saves the world, but almost dies trying. Several times. Oh, and she saves her half-sister (who she didn’t know about) and her dad (who she also didn’t know about), along with a bunch of other people.

There were lots of twists and turns along the way and Lasica keeps the pace up throughout the entire book. Some day, when I write a sci-fi novel, I will credit Lasica, along with Eliot Peper, William Hertling, Daniel Suarez, and many others as my inspirations.

Original author: Brad Feld

Continue reading
  36 Hits
Mar
30

Thought Leaders in Healthcare IT: CareDash CEO Ted Chan (Part 2) - Sramana Mitra

Sramana Mitra: Help me parse what you said about TripAdvisor. TripAdvisor is actually become a booking site. Isn’t that how they make most of their money? I haven’t been following their...

___

Original author: Sramana Mitra

Continue reading
  84 Hits
Nov
08

1Mby1M Virtual Accelerator Investor Forum: With Biplab Adhya and Venu Pemmaraju of Wipro Ventures (Part 4) - Sramana Mitra

Jason Rowley Contributor
Jason Rowley is a venture capital and technology reporter for Crunchbase News.

After years of fierce competition as private companies, Uber and Lyft are going public on U.S. markets. Scooter service providers, the transportation trend du jour, raised hundreds of millions of dollars to scatter scooters on city sidewalks (to the chagrin of residents and regulators alike) throughout 2017 and 2018. On the other side of the Pacific, Grab and Go-Jek are raising gobs of cash as they continue to scale upward and outward.

Of all the seed, early and late-stage venture funding raised over the past couple of years, how much of the total went to companies in the ride-hailing, food delivery and last-mile transportation categories (which encompasses bikes and scooters)? Probably not as much as you’d think.

Taken together, companies in these sectors raised less than 10 percent of the total venture dollar volume reported for each of the past five full calendar years.

We’ve charted it out based on yearly totals. Take a peek:

To be sure, we’re still talking about a lot of money here. Companies in these three categories raised more than $22 billion in venture funding rounds (not including private equity) in 2017 and more than $18 billion in 2018.

Ventures in the transportation space loom large in the media, and how could they not? It’s a forbiddingly capital-intensive market to play in, requiring companies to raise massive sums, which make for good headlines.

In its early years, competition between on-demand, point-to-point transportation marketplace companies rewarded brashness and speed with early scale and the long-term structural advantages conferred to first the firms which grew the fastest.

But those advantages may not have been as stiff as first expected. Lyft beat Uber to the public markets, raised its valuation during its IPO roadshow, priced at the top of its extended range and then popped 21 percent when it started trading.

That success means that the red chunks of our above chart weren’t all fool’s bets. Instead, a good chunk of the equity represented is now liquid. Of course, there’s a lot more work to do for literally every other ride-hailing, ridesharing, scooter-renting and other wheels-providing unicorns in the world: They still have to go public.

Continue reading
  15 Hits
Mar
30

April 4 – 438th 1Mby1M Mentoring Roundtable for Entrepreneurs - Sramana Mitra

Entrepreneurs are invited to the 438th FREE online 1Mby1M mentoring roundtable on Thursday, April 4, 2019, at 8 a.m. PDT/11 a.m. EDT/4 p.m. CET/8:30 p.m. India IST. If you are a serious entrepreneur,...

___

Original author: Maureen Kelly

Continue reading
  59 Hits
Jun
27

Legendary Apple designer Jony Ive says that a conversation with Steve Jobs inspired the name of his new company LoveFrom: 'You are expressing your gratitude to humanity' (AAPL)

Amid calls for a dozen different global cities to replace Silicon Valley — Austin, Beijing, London, New York — nobody has yet nominated “nowhere.” But it’s now a possibility.

There are two trends to unpack here. The first is startups that are fully, or almost fully, remote, with employees distributed around the world. There’s a growing list of significant companies in this category: Automattic, Buffer, GitLab, Invision, Toptal and Zapier all have from 100 to nearly 1,000 remote employees.

The second trend is nomadic founders with no fixed location. For a generation of founders, moving to Silicon Valley was de rigueur. Later, the emergence of accelerators and investors worldwide allowed a wider range of potential home bases. But now there’s a third wave: a culture of traveling with its own, growing support networks and best practices.

You don’t have to look far to find startup gurus and VCs who strongly advise against being remote, much less a nomad. The basic reasoning is simple: Not having a location doesn’t add anything, so why do it? Startups are fragile, so it’s best to avoid any work practice that could disrupt delicate growth cycles.

Continue reading
  14 Hits
Mar
30

Colors: Winter Storm on Rice Terraces - Sramana Mitra

I’m publishing this series on LinkedIn called Colors to explore a topic that I care deeply about: the Renaissance Mind. I am just as passionate about entrepreneurship, technology, and business, as I...

___

Original author: Sramana Mitra

Continue reading
  65 Hits
Jul
06

This startup streamlines the pro bono work of lawyers, including those fighting for immigrants at the border

I’ve been open about my journey with depression and the importance of addressing and destigmatizing issues around mental health. So I was excited that one of our Techstars programs – the MetLife Digital Accelerator powered by Techstars – is looking closely at mental health startups for their 2019 class. If you’re a founder innovating in the mental health market, I encourage you to apply for this program.

The MetLife Digital Accelerator powered by Techstars is focused on insurtech startups. MetLife and Techstars managing director Mee-Jung Jang are defining insurtech broadly, and mental health is a key area of focus. They are looking at all types of mental health startups in their search including ones helping individuals improve their everyday mental fitness, using data to better assess and predict serious mental health conditions, and providing easier access to care at the moment of need.

Over half of all humans will experience a major mental health challenge in their lifetime. Yet, mental health still carries a stigma, and many people suffer silently including our coworkers, friends, and family. The startup journey is immensely difficult, so the quiet sufferers include many entrepreneurs. Mental health startups that take advantage of new technologies and data could have a huge positive impact by solving these problems.

The MetLife Digital Accelerator powered by Techstars recruits globally and is stage agnostic. Founders in this program have unique access to the resources of both Techstars and MetLife, a Fortune 50 company with over 100 million customers worldwide in nearly 50 countries and serving 90 of the Fortune 100 as their clients in the US.

If you’re a founder of a mental health startup, I encourage you to request office hours with managing director Mee-Jung Jang with this form and follow her on twitter to keep posted on her startup recruiting tour. Or, just apply now as applications are open until April 7th.

I’m excited to see which mental health companies get accepted into the MetLife Digital Accelerator powered by Techstars.

Original author: Brad Feld

Continue reading
  26 Hits
Jun
09

Twitter and Square are making Juneteenth a permanent company holiday (TWTR, SQ)

Lyft completed its long-awaited IPO this week, trading 21 percent higher Friday than its initial offering price of $72 per share. It closed its first day of trading at about $78 per share, up roughly 9 percent.

I spoke to IPO guru Brian Hamilton, the CEO of banking software company Sageworks, about Lyft’s offering to get a sense of how Wall Street views the buzzworthy tech unicorn. As I wrote earlier this week, Wall Street doesn’t seem to care about profitability, prioritizing growth instead. Lyft is definitely growing, quickly, and working hard to shrink its losses. Hamilton said the price per share was reasonable, and, given Lyft’s positive cash flows, he seemed confident the company will fare well on the Nasdaq this year.

He was especially clear about one thing: Lyft’s offering is nothing like Snap’s. “The camera company,” if you remember, had posted only $404.5 million in revenue ahead of its IPO, which valued it at $23.8 billion: “It’s not crazy land; it’s not nuts; it’s not Twitter, it’s not Snap; it’s reasonable actually, I’m surprised,” Hamilton told TechCrunch. “I’ve seen some of these tech companies go for much higher valuations [and] those companies commanded much higher sales multiples.”

Ultimately, Lyft commanded an 11x revenue multiple, on par with what we expect from Uber next month. Lyft could have priced higher given demand, though my Equity co-host Alex Wilhelm argued against that prospect on this special episode, where we discuss Lyft’s first day of trading.

Hamilton, like Alex and I, also emphasized the benefit of beating Uber to the public markets and debuting on the stock exchange at peak bull market: “The markets are hot, people want to put their money somewhere,” he said. “Even the people that have been on the fence want [Lyft stock].”

Here’s what else happened this week.

Uber is buying…

…Careem, its Middle Eastern counterpart. Uber will pay a whopping $3.1 billion to acquire the seven-year-old company. The deal had been rumored for months and is expected to close in Q1 2020, pending applicable regulatory approvals.

Airbnb’s road to IPO

Airbnb announced this week that it has checked in half-a-billion guests to its 6 million global participating properties. Damn. It’s also closing in on some of the larger hospitality industry incumbents like Hilton and Marriott. This paints a nice picture for a company that is more than ready to IPO and is surely preparing its pitch to public market investors. No word yet on when Airbnb will file, but it’s looking like it’s still several months out.

Deal of the week

I promised myself I wouldn’t write Casper and unicorn in the same sentence, but it seems inevitable at this point. The mattress startup raised a $100 million Series D this week at a valuation of $1.1 billion and became the newest entry to the unicorn club. Target — which once tried to acquire Casper — NEA, IVP and Norwest Venture Partners participated in the round. Casper has previously raised $240 million in equity funding from celebrity investors Leonardo DiCaprio and 50 Cent, as well as institutional investors, including Lerer Hippeau.

Startup capital

Restaurant manager Toast raises $250M at $2.7B valuation
Airwallex raises $100M at a valuation north of $1B
Vlocity nabs $60M Series C on $1B valuation
Lola.com raises $37M to take on SAP 
Boundless gets $7.8M to help immigrants navigate the green card process

Venture $$$

Jon Sakoda, a former partner at the esteemed venture capital firm NEA, has taken the wraps off his new, Cisco-backed fund, called Decibel. Sakoda can’t disclose the precise size of the fund yet, but he told TechCrunch he’s working very collaboratively with Cisco, including its corporate venture arm, Cisco Investments. Plus, 500 Startups has raised $33 million for its Middle Eastern-focused fund, 500 Falcons.

Extra Crunch

This week’s recommended read for our Extra Crunch subscribers: What’s the cost of buying users from Facebook and 13 other ad networks? Subscribe to EC here.

Podcast M&A

Spotify is making good on its promise to spend millions on podcast M&A, following its purchases of Gimlet and Anchor for $340 million. This week, the music streaming giant announced that it had acquired a small podcasting studio called Parcast, known best for true-crime and other factual serials in genres like mystery, science fiction and history.

Meet Evan Spiegel’s sister, Caroline

She spoke to TechCrunch about her first big project. Called Quinn, Caroline plans to launch a website dedicated to sexy text and audio on April 13th. She describes Quinn as “a much less gross, more fun Pornhub for women.” Read TechCrunch’s Josh Constine’s full interview with Caroline here.

#Equitypod

If you enjoy this newsletter, be sure to check out TechCrunch’s venture-focused podcast, Equity. In this week’s episode, available here, TechCrunch’s Connie Loizos, Crunchbase News’ Alex Wilhelm and I chat about Wall Street’s appetite for unicorns, Casper’s big round and more. Then, in a special Equity Shot, we discuss Lyft’s first day trading on the Nasdaq.

Want more TechCrunch newsletters? Sign up here.

Continue reading
  9 Hits
Mar
30

Thought Leaders in Healthcare IT: Tarek Sherif, CEO of Medidata (Part 6) - Sramana Mitra

Sramana Mitra: Have you started monetizing that? Have you started offering products on top of the datasets? Tareq Sherif: We actually have. Sramana Mitra: Give me an example. Tareq Sherif: There’s...

___

Original author: Sramana Mitra

Continue reading
  57 Hits
Jun
09

Sign up for tomorrow’s Pitchers & Pitches session

It all started when 32-year old Hiroki Takeuchi, then a freshman at Oxford University, got dragged along to an event in his first week of university.

A student in the year above corralled Takeuchi, who had just started studying Mathematics, into attending a gathering of the Oxford Entrepreneurs in 2004.

"There wasn't really like a tech scene in the UK," Takeuchi told Business Insider. His awareness of tech startups was basically nil, but his experience at the Oxford Entrepreneurs event sparked an interest in starting a company.

"It was through that society that I kind of got quite involved, learnt all about startups in general, but also in particular tech startups," he told Business Insider.

Takeuchi's journey towards becoming a founder took off when in the summer following his first year, he managed to swing an internship with a programme which had little to no profile in the UK — Y Combinator.

Y Combinator to GoCardless

Two of Takeuchi's friends, brothers Harjeet (Harj) and Kulveer Taggar, went out to Silicon Valley in 2007 to join Y Combinator, a startup incubator famous for producing prodigies such as Airbnb, Dropbox, and Twitch.

Read more: Sam Altman, one of the world's most influential tech investors, has stepped down as president of Y Combinator

Harj and Kulveer were setting up a company called Boso, a student marketplace. "It was like eBay for students," Takeuchi said, and luckily he talked his friends into letting him come along for the ride as an intern.

While in the Valley, Harj and Kulveer ended up clubbing together with Patrick and John Collinson — who would go on to found payment company Stripe — on a new company called Auctomatic, a super-niche inventory management system for eBay power sellers (people who sell high volumes of items on eBay).

Takeuchi interned for a summer, doing odd jobs and learning about how tech startups work. "I was just doing loads of random stuff," he said, adding that all of them were learning on the fly. "They were building this product that none of them had ever used before, none of them were eBay power sellers."

He recalled that, at one point, the group bought a bunch of lasers from China to sell on eBay to gauge how their product was working. After that summer of odd jobs and lasers, he knew what he wanted to do.

"I got the startup bug," he says.

Chance encounters with the GoCardless founders

After graduating from Oxford, Takeuchi didn't feel he was quite ready to found his own company — so he took a placement at consultancy firm McKinsey. He picked the placement specifically because after two years, McKinsey would shove him out the nest.

In his first week at McKinsey he met his future cofounder: Matt Robinson. "We immediately hit it off, " he remembers. "Through the whole of that [time] we would think about various ideas and brainstorm things on whiteboards and all that sort of stuff — ultimately none of it came to anything."

When the time came to leave McKinsey the pair knew they wanted to work together, but they ended up roping in another cofounder — Tom Blomfield, the CEO of unicorn fintech Monzo.

Read more: Meet the 35 most exciting young entrepreneurs, engineers, and advisors in UK fintech

Blomfield had been in the year above Takeuchi at Oxford. Blomfield was a cofounder of Boso with Harj and Kulveer Taggar, but had been on a year abroad in Paris so his and Takeuchi's paths came close but never crossed.

By strange coincidence, however, Blomfield was just due to start at McKinsey as Takeuchi and Robinson were getting kicked out and setting up shop. Lucky for them, Blomfield was moving between consultancy jobs and so had a few months of gardening leave.

"If you know Tom, you know it doesn't take long to realise there's no way the guy's going to take three months of gardening leave," Takeuchi says.

Monzo cofounder Tom Blomfield. Noam Galai/Getty Images for TechCrunch

Blomfield never started at McKinsey, and Takeuchi is acutely aware of the interwovenness of GoCardless' origins. "It's all weirdly connected," he laughs.

The trio started work on what was then an idea for a group-payments startup, and Takeuchi's knowledge of Y-Combinator proved a massive advantage for the fledgeling firm. "I remember when Tom and I were first starting out and I said, 'it's a no brainer, we're doing YC,' and they were like 'what's YC,'" he says.

In 2011 GoCardless was born, a startup focussing on building tech to ease recurring payments between businesses. Takeuchi still vividly remembers his first fundraise, which he managed at the age of 24.

"The first fundraise was super hard," he says. How did they pull it off? "A lot of mistakes and persistence," he says, chuckling. Since that first raise, GoCardless has secured $122 million of investment, $75 million of which came in February.

"It always comes down to momentum... especially [in] the last 10 years it's so cheap to go and start something. You can go and spin up servers with AWS at almost zero cost. With the click of a few buttons you can write code and build products that can go and be used by... millions of people from your bedroom," he says.

Both his cofounders have now left, leaving Hiroki at the helm of GoCardless. Matt Robinson departed in 2015 and now heads up home sale startup Nested, while Blomfield left in 2013 and now runs Monzo.

Takeuchi describes the breakup as amciable. "I don't think [Blomfield] wanted to ever be involved in a B2B company. When we started GoCardless, we weren't aware enough of what we were doing to really realise what we're building," he explains.

He also says Blomfield talked to him about Monzo while they were still starting GoCardless. "We were like, retail banking sucks, there must be a better way to do this."

Takeuchi radiates pride that Robinson and Blomfield have branched out an set up their own companies. "That's one of the coolest things about it all," he said.

He speaks highly of Monzo. "In 10, 15, 20 years, what bank is not going to be a technology company? I think there's going to be a fundamental shift, and I think Monzo are doing a great job of leading the way with that."

A catastrophic accident

Since GoCardless was founded in 2011, British fintech has exploded. "I feel like I've been really lucky to be part of that," Takeuchi says. "We ended up raising money mainly from Europen investors, but it was through learnings in America that we were able to go and do that. That, and a lot of rejection."

GoCardless' recent $75 million raise, included backing from GV (previously Google Ventures), Salesforce, and Adam Street Partners.

This was GoCardless' first raise following a life-changing event for Takeuchi. In September 2016, the founder was left paralysed after a cycling accident. He now uses a wheelchair, and was back to work just six months after the accident.

Takeuchi prefers not to dwell on the accident or his recovery during his interview with Business Insider. He told TechCrunch's Steve O'Hear in 2017 that he occasionally has flashbacks to the accident but, for the most part, he doesn't remember it.

At the time, he told O'Hear that he was dialling into board meetings just 24 hours after major surgery. Told by doctors it would take him six-to-12 months to complete a rehab programme, Takeuchi did the job in just seven weeks. He gave a speech at the GoCardless Christmas party in December 2016, just two months after the accident.

Takeuchi was back to work just six months after the accident. GoCardless

Along with its latest fundraise, GoCardless also announced it's been working on a system facilitating international recurring payments. Takeuchi says the company has been working on it for a few years, stitching together all the different financial systems across different countries.

"It's clearly not done, there's hundreds of countries around the world and each one has different systems, but by the middle of this year we'll cover about 70% of the global recurring payment volume," he says.

The shadow of Brexit

While GoCardless has been busy stitching together a global payments system, its been having to allow for major political upheaval which could radically change financial systems in the UK.

Brexit has forced GoCardless' development teams to make technical provisions for all the potential outcomes, and Takeuchi said they've had to make "drastic changes" on the backend.

"It's been frustrating because we've had to divert resources and investments into doing things that I hope will have been a complete waste of time, but we've taken the approach of saying — no matter what happens, even if we crash out at the end of this month, we need to be in a position where we can support our customers without there being any kind of blip in the service," he explains.

"If we crash out then all financial services companies don't know what's going to happen with passporting and financial regulation. We assume we won't be able to passport anymore, [but] who the f--k knows," he says.

"Brexit will end up being a missed opportunity for London and the UK more broadly," Takeuchi adds. "It's not gonna shrink [the London tech scene] because there's just too many companies growing very fast that are not likely to move out of London. What worries me for the London ecosystem is more the next companies — will they start in London or will they go somewhere else?"

He says that he's already starting to see an impact on recruitment for GoCardless, as European hires are becoming more difficult to convince. People are apprehensive about taking up a job in Britain. That's a problem when half of your product developers come from Europe.

"It's potentially a lot harder to scale up big product development teams in London when so much of the talent has historically come from across Europe," he says.

Frustrated though he is by Brexit, Takeuchi doesn't seem daunted. He says engineers have always been tough to hire, "but we're quite good at it." Takeuchi has come a long way since those early days in Oxford.

Original author: Isobel Asher Hamilton

Continue reading
  148 Hits
Mar
30

436th 1Mby1M Entrepreneurship Podcast With Sumant Mandal, March Capital Partners - Sramana Mitra

Sumant Mandal is Managing Director at March Capital Partners, a firm that invests largely in enterprise facing businesses with deep technical differentiation.

___

Original author: Sramana Mitra

Continue reading
  60 Hits
Mar
30

DC Universe revealed the release date for 'Swamp Thing,' its next original series

DC Universe announced when its next original series will premiere on the streaming platform at Wondercon in California on Friday.

"Swamp Thing" will debut on DC Universe May 31. The series is based on the DC Comics character of the same name created by writer Len Wein and artist Bernie Wrightson.

DC Universe also revealed that the second half of "Yong Justice: Outsiders" will premiere July 2, and "Titans" season 2 and the animated "Harley Quinn" series will debut this fall.

A first-look image from "Star Girl," which premieres in 2020, was also revealed. The image is below:

"Stargirl" debuts on DC Universe in 2020. DC Universe

DC Universe — a streaming platform that includes original TV shows, classic DC Comics movies, and digital comic books — has been off to a hot start with its original shows since it launched in September.

Its first three originals — "Titans," "Young Justice: Outsiders," and "Doom Patrol"— have consistently been among the seven most in-demand streaming shows in the world, according to weekly data provided to Business Insider by Parrot Analytics.

A spokesperson told Business Insider that the biggest upticks in free-trial sign-ups, aside from the initial launch, have corresponded with the premiere of new series.

Original author: Travis Clark

Continue reading
  73 Hits