Aug
31

This $199 'Star Wars' toy is the best example yet of the technology that could one day replace the smartphone (DIS, AAPL, MSFT)

Two of the world's most powerful CEOs, Elon Musk and Jeff Bezos, have been locked in a heated rivalry for the past 15 years. While the two mainly feud over their respective space ambitions — Musk runs SpaceX, while Bezos launched Blue Origin — they also compete for talent, and Musk has taken public issue with Bezos on several occasions. Musk called Bezos a copycat over some of Amazon's business ventures, said Amazon is a monopoly that should be broken up, and appeared to make digs about Bezos' age.For his part, Bezos has made veiled critiques of Musk's main goal, which is to send humans to Mars. As both CEOs grow their wealth and power, their feud will likely continue on. These days, both SpaceX and Blue Origin are designing lunar landers for a NASA mission to return humans to Mars.Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories.

Over the last 15 years, two of the world's most high-profile CEOs, Elon Musk and Jeff Bezos, have been engaged in a simmering rivalry. 

The two execs have sparred over their respective space ambitions — Musk runs SpaceX, while Bezos owns Blue Origin — but it hasn't stopped there: Musk has called out Bezos for running what he deemed a monopoly, and has called Bezos a copycat for his self-driving car interests. 

Musk and Bezos are two of the most powerful CEOs in the world. Bezos is currently the wealthiest living person and runs Amazon's sprawling empire while also involving himself in Blue Origin's quest to send people to the moon. Musk is a dual CEO, manning the ship at both Tesla and SpaceX. Over the years, their not-so-subtle rivalry has even given way to Twitter spats and name-calling. 

Here's how Musk's and Bezos' rivalry began and everything that's happened since. 

Original author: Avery Hartmans

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Sep
11

Bitcoin has now dropped $500 after more reports China will ban cryptocurrency exchanges

Gumroad CEO and early Pinterest employee Sahil Lavingia will announce details of his new VC fund next week.Lavingia is creating a "rolling fund," a new type of fund operated by AngelList that allows investors to pay up on a quarterly basis and cancel if they're dissatisfied.Lavingia said he was drawn to the rolling fund model because it requires little effort, allowing him to keep his CEO job while operating a fund on the side.Rolling funds were introduced by AngelList earlier this year to allow new VCs to depart from the fundraising methods of traditonal venture firms that raise large amounts from fund investors over an extended time period.Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories.

Sahil Lavingia never considered getting into venture capital until AngelList introduced its new "rolling fund" model earlier this year. As the CEO of e-commerce site Gumroad, he never had time.

"I'm sort of gainfully employed," Lavingia told Business Insider. "So that was just never on the table for me. I'd really never considered being a VC for that purpose."

But Lavingia was intrigued by the rolling fund model, which allows investors to "subscribe" to a fund, paying relatively low amounts into it on a quarterly basis. New investors can start a subscription at any time. That's different from the fundraising path for traditional venture firms, which often take long periods of time to raise large sums from their investors, who are called limited partners.

Lavingia wouldn't need the substantial operational infrastructure of a big VC firm. For a fee from his rolling fund, AngelList would handle all the legal and regulatory busywork for him. All he had to do was let them know who was investing.

Now he's the latest tech figure to create their own rolling fund. Earlier in July news leaked that former Facebook employee Dave Morin was starting his own fund, Offline Ventures.

Lavingia said his fund will wrap up its investment period this Saturday and he will announce further details next week, including how much it raised and how much he plans to invest per startup. 

The startup CEO said he won't have strict rules about what he invests in, but he wants it to be a mix of his own esoteric personal interests and physical products that make the world better.

"When I look at my phone, there's been so much innovation in the last forty years," Lavingia said. "It's like this crazy window. But when I look out my actual window, it looks the same as it probably did a bunch of years ago, which I think is kind of strange."

People are drawn to the rolling fund model for various reasons. For Lavingia, it's convenience. But the end result is an alternative to the way traditional venture firms raise and announce large new funds every few years. 

"VC's say they like disruption," Lavingia said. "But we'll see how much they like disruption when they're the ones getting disrupted."

The limited partners in traditional venture funds commit to making periodic payments into the fund for as long as a decade, and to wait for the VC's startup investments to pay off. But investors in a rolling fund can bow out. 

The ability of investors to stop paying into a rolling fund could put pressure on the person running the fund to perform, quickly. That's why Lavingia is asking investors in his fund to commit for a year.

"I've told folks to think longer-term," Lavingia said, "So I'm hopeful they'll be understanding."

But Rich Wong, a partner at prominent traditional venture firm Accel, said he approved of the shortened timeframe of the rolling fund, seeing it as a heightened version of the pressure that he faces at his own firm.

"That's called discipline," Wong said. "That means if you're kicking butt, of course there'll be tons of interest. But if you aren't, that is actually the system working. "

Lavingia said he doesn't have to travel to persuade people to invest in his fund. He doesn't need to take people out to dinner. He doesn't have to make any significant investment of time into fundraising other than asking people who already know him if they're interested. That's why he says most of his investors are friends, coworkers, and colleagues.

"One of the things that I'm excited about is that there's people who have never been LPs before," Lavingia said.

He can even raise money in unorthodox ways, like sounding the horn to his sizable Twitter following to invest. Under some circumstances, that public appeal would be a violation of SEC rules, but Lavingia is operating under SEC Rule 506(c). The rule allows him to advertise his fund provided he only takes on "accredited investors," people or businesses that verifiably have large incomes or a large net worth, and so are less likely to be financially ruined if their investment doesn't pan out.

The nature of rolling funds means that there's a low barrier of participation — both for the people who run them, and the people who invest in them. The W Fund, a rolling fund focusing on early-stage tech companies created by women, has a minimum quarterly investment of just $6,250. Lavingia also set his minimum at $6,250, but allowed some investors to go as low as $1,250.

Lavngia hopes that means opening up the famously homogeneous VC world to "more diverse LPs, more diverse GPs, and more diverse founders eventually as well."

"There's going to be a broader base of fund managers, hopefully," Lavingia said. Those managers could be "scattered all across the country and the world, eventually, (and) that will bring varied sets of experience to use," Lavingia said.

Original author: Max Jungreis

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Sep
11

Analysts expect Apple to get a revenue boost from the iPhone X's augmented reality apps (AAPL)

SPACs are on the rise, and they have developed an interest in "hype'' sectors: cannabis, space travel, electric cars, and sports gambling.Some hyped-up companies demonstrate a potential for growth, but remain unprofitable, whereas other hyped-up companies belong to industries that investors generally avoid, like gambling.But hype is actually a powerful creative force in the longer arc of tech innovation, says one VC, and funding hyped-up ideas can draw in fresh talent and lead to further innovation.Elon Musk launched Tesla in 2003 in response to the failure of General Motor's hyped-up electric cars, which were all recalled from the streets earlier that year.Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories.

What do cannabis, space travel, electric cars, and sports gambling all have in common? 

For one thing, startups in these industries have grabbed the attention of SPACs. 

But more importantly, these adventurous fields have also generated what some investors call hype, says VC Duncan Davidson. 

That hype factor hasn't deterred SPACs, the so-called blank check companies that give startups a quick route to the public markets by acquiring them.

But for many reasons, more conventional investors are hesitant to back hyped-up companies like Virgin Galactic and Nikola: While both demonstrate a serious potential for growth, they remain unprofitable. It might be a while before Virgin Galactic actually makes money by sending eager travelers into space. 

Given that industries like space tourism have never proven to be profitable, it's easy to see why hyped-up companies get a bad reputation, in and out of Silicon Valley. 

But hype is actually a powerful creative force in the longer arc of tech innovation, Davidson said. The seasoned VC said that SPACs can take a chance on far-out tech prospects and put new ideas on the tech industry's radar. 

Even if overstated, the early rush of enthusiasm over a new sector like AR/VR or space travel draws in fresh talent and capital that helps pave the way for a new crop of entrepreneurs and startups, even if the sector's earliest players fail spectacularly.

After the 1990s, in the era that saw the dot-com boom and bust, some investors believed that there was no money to be made from the internet, Davidson said.

While the dot-com experiment imploded, the boom cycle nevertheless got investors and entrepreneurs to start paying more attention to the internet. That paved the way for the tech-focused startup ecosystems that have emerged in Silicon Valley and other corners of the world. 

In recent years, one area that has generated a lot of hype, but not a lot of everyday users, has been AR/VR. 

When the coronavirus pandemic struck, augmented reality and virtual reality technologies were touted as possible tools to help with treating coronavirus-related anxiety, training employees, enhancing distance learning, and watching live sports. "But the average person likely doesn't have access to a virtual reality headset," Business Insider's Caroline Hroncich has previously reported. 

What AR/VR represent, then, is untapped potential. Around the globe, consumers have purchased just 26 million VR headsets, and it remains to be seen whether the coronavirus pandemic will help to transform AR/VR products into household consumer goods.

But even if AR/VR technologies don't take off soon, history tells us that the initial hype from 2017 and 2018 could clear the way for future innovation. 

To see how that could play out, one need look no further than the history of hype and the electric car. 

In the 1990s, GM launched its own pioneering electric car, General Motors EV1, long before Tesla's Elon Musk became a Twitter personality. GM failed to popularize the electric car and make it profitable, and the company officially canceled the program in 2003, after losing millions and recalling every single one of its electric cars. 

As it turns out, GM's decision to gut and shutter its electric car initiative prompted Elon Musk to launch Tesla in 2003. Now, the electric car company is also venturing into electric trucks and SUVs, as well as solar-powered panels and batteries. 

So if tech history is to teach us anything, it's that innovation emerges out of the rubble of boom and bust cycles. 

Sure, more VCs and startups will be looking into the option of going public through SPAC mergers than ever before. But, investors and entrepreneurs alike should also be thinking about what may emerge if and when the SPAC bubble bursts. 

Original author: Alexander Torres

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Sep
11

Bankin lets you save money on Yomoni

Original author: Taylor Nicole Rogers

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Aug
31

Basis Set Ventures gets real to get to the heart of AI startups

With the pandemic increasing the amount of food delivery and hurting restaurants' bottom lines, buzzy ghost kitchens see an opportunity to grow. The category had already attracted a lot of interest, notably from Uber co-founder and former-CEO Travis Kalanick, who launched CloudKitchens in 2016. We compiled 14 of the biggest players in the ghost kitchen world to show the international scope of the budding space.Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories.

The pandemic has closed thousands of restaurants, many for good, while food delivery volume is increasing substantially. Much of the country reopening indoor dining, but Opentable is reporting that the amount of seated diners continues to substantially underperform last year. 

Ghost kitchens, a buzzy class of startups, were already betting that delivery would grow in market share, attracting founders including billionaire Uber ex-CEO Travis Kalanick, but the rapid increase in delivery demand has accelerated their growth. 

These companies operate a kitchen that hosts multiple restaurants or menus, from which they only do delivery orders (or sometimes pick up). Some run their own food brands, while others partner with local chefs or established delivery brands. 

While American startup hotbeds like Silicon Valley and New York have seen multiple ghost kitchen startups, this trend is worldwide, with Dubai, India, and Western Europe emerging as other areas that have spawned multiple startups. 

"Every single restaurant globally became a ghost kitchen overnight," Corey Manicone, CEO and cofounder of Zuul Kitchens, told Business Insider. He said that the pandemic has accelerated the concept by three to five years, but that there's a lot of growth ahead. 

"We're at the same place as e-commerce in the early 2000s," he said. 

Money continues to flow into the space: both Zuul and hotel-focused ghost kitchen Butler Hospitality raised money in July, $9 million and $15 million respectively. Karma Kitchen, a UK based kitchen, recently raised $318 million as well. 

In a time of economic contraction, the model makes a lot of sense for restauranteurs. Real estate and labor costs can be pooled across multiple restaurants, lowering the amount of square footage and the number of employees a restaurant needs. Less overhead, with the same amount of income. 

Read more: Bond, which has raised $15 million from investors including Lightspeed, wants to become the Shopify of logistics by turning vacant retail space into warehouses

The pandemic's impact on retail space, including restaurant space, has also been a boon for the industry. Firms convert restaurant space, underutilized retail space, and occasionally industrial space into ghost kitchens. Two of those three categories, retail and restaurants, are having an outsized negative effect from the pandemic, which leads to a glut of supply for ghost kitchens.

While real-estate firms may not have originally planned to bring ghost kitchens into their space, the bottoming out of demand from traditional tenants has opened many up to the business. 

"A lot of these development companies, larger landholders, and real-estate firms are taking a forward-looking, reset view of what is the best way to optimize their holdings for the future," Jim Collins, founder and CEO of Kitchen United, told Business Insider. 

We've created a list of 14 of the hottest startups in the space, highlighting where they've received money and what's different about their concept. 

Original author: Alex Nicoll

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Sep
15

CNN is ramping up its tech coverage with a new venture titled 'Pacific'

Mark Zuckerberg is warning that restricting Facebook's ad targeting will hurt small businesses.The Facebook CEO and other senior execs say the social network was a "lifeline" for many companies during the pandemic.During a call with analysts on Thursday, they argued that heavy-handed regulation on Facebook risks negative "macro-economic" effects.The remarks highlight how the company is using the pandemic to defend itself amid mounting political and regulatory scrutiny.Facebook has rolled out extensive new products in response to coronavirus, including new ways for businesses to connect with customers and new tools for users to talk to one another.

Facebook has previously warned that attempts to curtail its power would be a gift to China, which is building giant tech companies that don't share the same democratic values it does. Now Facebook has a new reason it says regulators should leave it alone: What's bad for Facebook is bad for small businesses.

The Silicon Valley-headquartered social networking firm is facing unprecedented political and regulatory pressure — from antitrust concerns that culminated in a historic hearing on Wednesday to advertiser concerns around content moderation, and perennial calls for greater privacy protections for users.

The company is now putting fresh emphasis on its positive impact on the economy during the coronavirus crisis, arguing that its advertising tools present a "lifeline" to small businesses and that attempts to restrict its ad tools could have "macro-economic" effects.

On Thursday, Facebook reported its second quarter financial results for 2020. It was a resounding success across the board, handily beating Wall Street's expectations on everything from revenues to user numbers, sending its stock climbing 8%.

The company's senior executives used a subsequent call with analysts to reinforce Facebook's economic importance — offering a look at how Facebook is using the pandemic to bolster its political defenses. 

First, CEO Mark Zuckerberg warned that regulation around online advertising could impact the entire economy. Here's what he said (emphasis added): 

"That's why I am often troubled by the calls to go after internet advertising, especially during a time of such economic turmoil like we face today with Covid. It's true that making it more difficult to target ads would affect the revenue of companies like Facebook. But the much bigger cost of such a move would be to reduce the effectiveness of the ads and opportunities for small businesses to grow. This would reduce opportunities for small businesses so much that it would probably be felt at a macro-economic level. Is that really what policymakers want in the middle of a pandemic and recession? The right path, I believe, is regulation that keeps people's data safe while allowing the benefits of this kind of personalized and relevant advertising."

It's a line that was echoed by COO Sheryl Sandberg, who described Facebook as a "lifeline for businesses" during COVID-19:

"Along with our free tools, personalized advertising is a lifeline for businesses – especially small businesses who can't afford broad campaigns aimed at mass audiences. For just a few dollars, now more than 9 million advertisers use our platforms to reach audiences interested in their products – and we enable this in a way that protects people's privacy and produces measurable results. In today's economy when businesses are struggling and customers aren't physically walking into their stores or restaurants, this is more important than ever.

Facebook has poured considerable resources into its coronavirus response efforts — building new tools like Shops to help businesses build online profiles during pandemic lockdowns around the world, as well as major grant programs to small businesses. 

The company has seen business continue to grow by double-digit percentages, despite the economic crisis that has devastated so many other sectors of the economy. Facebook's revenues grew by 11% year-over-year in Q2 of 2020, up to $18.69 billion. And user numbers for Facebook similarly grew by 12% year-over-year, as people flocked to its online services to communicate with friends and family they couldn't meet with physically.

CFO Dave Wehner took a similar tack in his comments — also singling out changes Apple is making to protect users privacy in the upcoming iOS 14 as similarly troubling. "Our view is that Facebook and targeted ads are a lifeline for small businesses, especially in a time of COVID," he said. "And we are concerned that aggressive platform policies will cut at that lifeline at a time when it is so essential for small business growth and recovery."

In this telling, Apple and privacy advocates aren't just out to get Facebook, then, but a risk to the health of the high street and mom-and-pop businesses — a line of argument that matches Facebook's interests with those of the broader economy.

It remains to be seen if regulators buy it.

Got a tip? Contact Business Insider reporter Rob Price via encrypted messaging app Signal (+1 650-636-6268), encrypted email (This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.), standard email (This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.), Telegram/Wickr/WeChat (robaeprice), or Twitter DM (@robaeprice). We can keep sources anonymous. Use a non-work device to reach out. PR pitches by standard email only, please.

Original author: Rob Price

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Jun
30

Cocos game engine finally supports Nintendo Switch

Greg Robertson: We left our jobs and rented some cubicles at the architect’s office. After all, he didn’t have architects working because nobody was doing anything in real estate. One of the premises...

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Original author: Sramana Mitra

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Jul
01

The DeanBeat: The wonderful tropes of horror in The Quarry

Even the hard-charging world of early-stage startups has its share of procrastinators, lollygaggers, slow-pokes, wafflers and last-minute decision makers. If that’s your demographic, today is your lucky day.

You now have an extra week (courtesy of Saint Expeditus, the patron saint of procrastinators), to score early-bird savings to Disrupt 2020, which takes place September 14-18. Buy your pass before the new and final deadline — August 7 at 11:59 p.m. (PT) — and save up to $300. Who says prayers (or secular entreaties) go unanswered?

Your pass opens the door to five days of Disrupt — the biggest, longest TechCrunch conference ever. Drawing thousands of attendees and hundreds of innovative early-stage startups from around the world, you won’t find a better time, place or opportunity to accelerate the speed of your business.

Here are four world-class reasons to attend Disrupt 2020.

World-class speakers. Hear and engage with leading voices in tech, business and investment across the Disrupt stages. Folks like Sequoia Capital’s Roelof Botha, Ureeka’s Melissa Bradley and Slack’s Tamar Yehoshua — to name just a few. Here’s what you can see onstage so far.

World-class startups. Explore hundreds of innovative startups exhibiting in Digital Startup Alley — including the TC Top Picks. This elite cadre made it through our stringent screening process to earn the coveted designation, and you’ll be hard-pressed to find a more varied and interesting set of startups.

World-class networking. CrunchMatch, our AI-powered networking platform, simplifies connecting with founders, potential customers, R&D teams, engineers or investors. Schedule 1:1 video meetings and hold recruitment or extended pitch sessions. CrunchMatch launches weeks before Disrupt to give you more time to scout, vet and schedule.

World-class pitching. Don’t miss Startup Battlefield, the always-epic pitch competition that’s launched more than 900 startups, including big-time names like TripIt, Mint, Dropbox and many others. This year’s crop of startups promises to throw down hard for bragging rights and the $100,000 cash prize.

Need another reason to go? Take a page out of SIMBA Chain founder Joel Neidig’s playbook:

Our primary goal was to make people aware of the SIMBA Chain platform capabilities. Attending Disrupt is great way to get your name out there and build your customer base.

It’s time for all you last-minute lollygaggers to get moving and take advantage of this second, final chance to save up to $300. Buy your pass before August 7 at 11:59 p.m. (PT).

Is your company interested in sponsoring or exhibiting at Disrupt 2020? Contact our sponsorship sales team by filling out this form.

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Aug
03

An Alternative To Freemium That Worked For HubSpot [video]

Here they are, ranked by how much weight we put behind them:

 

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Aug
02

You can’t afford to make poor decisions about incentive stock options

Owning one brick-and-mortar business seems complicated enough. But running multiple locations? For many owners, that’s a constant juggling act of phone calls, check lists and driving back and forth from store to store. In the middle of a pandemic, it gets all the more complex.

Delightree, a company out of the previous Alchemist Accelerator class, has raised $3 million to build a tool hyper-focused on helping owners of franchise businesses (think hotels, gyms, restaurant chains, etc.) take their operations and workflows digital.

A big part of the idea with Delightree is to move much of what currently happens through pen-and-paper checklists over to smartphones, allowing franchise owners to know what’s going at their locations from afar. They digitize workflows like the daily store opening/closing procedures or maintenance routines, with employees checking boxes on their devices rather than a paper to-do list. If something gets missed along the way, Delightree can automatically ping the owner to let them know before it becomes an issue.

They’ll also help to automate and track things like onboarding new employees and staying prepared for inspections, while giving owners a centralized place to make team-wide announcements or contact employees.

Delightree evolved out of a previous company built by its co-founders, Madhulika Mukherjee and Tushar Mishra. They’d been working on Survaider, a tool that monitored customer feedback across social media, review sites, etc., and turned that feedback into actionable to-do lists.

“When we were piloting it, our customers started saying: ‘can we create our own tasks? Or can I tell something to my employees through this?’ ” Mishra told me. “It was just such an obvious problem, so we started building Delightree.”

Delightree co-founders Tushar Mishra and Madhulika Mukherjee

The team has also been working on a feature they call Delightcomply, which helps stores stay up to date on the latest CDC guidelines for businesses operating through the pandemic, and to automatically share compliance details with potential customers. A business could use Delightcomply to publicly outline the steps it’s taking to keep employees/customers safe, for example, with the listing automatically updated to show the status of each task.

Delightree is currently working directly with each new customer to help them through the initial setup — specifically, to help franchisees take the standard operating procedures they receive directly from the brand owners and turn them into Delightree workflows. They’re still working out their exact pricing model, but say that they charge on a per-location-per-month basis, with pricing varying depending on the size/complexity of the business. They’ve set up a waitlist for anyone interested.

This $3 million seed round was funded by Accel Partners, Emergent Ventures, Brainstorm Ventures, Axilor Ventures and Alchemist. As part of the deal, Emergent partner Anupam Rastogi has joined Delightree’s board of directors.

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Aug
03

Resolve, Zeiss partner on spatial biology apps that let scientists see inside cells

This week, the CEOs of Facebook, Apple, Alphabet and Amazon were called before the House’s Antitrust Subcommittee to defend the vast empires they’ve built. Jeff Bezos, Tim Cook, Sundar Pichai and Mark Zuckerberg faced questions about how their business practices propelled them into the market-dominant giants they are today. They lead four of the top six most valuable public companies in existence and are widely regarded as reshaping the consumer world, both within the tech industry and beyond. Watch TechCrunch reporters Taylor Hatmaker, Devin Coldewey and Alex Wilhelm discuss what happened during the hearing and what this might mean for the future of big tech.

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Jun
14

Summer Vacation

The week after George Floyd was murdered, I decided to read a book a week by a Black author. I went online and found a bunch of lists that had popped up. I bought about 25 books, all in physical form, and piled them up on my reading table near my couch.

On Saturdays, my primary activities of the day are reading, running, napping, and being with Amy. Two weeks ago, I read Ibram X. Kendi’s book How To Be An Antiracist. Last weekend I read Ta-Nehisi Coates’ book Between the World and Me. Tomorrow, I’m going to read John Lewis’ Across That Bridge: Life Lessons and a Vision for Change. And then, for the rest of August, I will read books written by Black Women.

The books by Kendi and Coates were both spectacular. I learned a lot from each, and they caused me to reflect on a lot of things while challenging a bunch of assumptions I had (many of which I’ve now modified or eliminated, although I’m sure I’ll need reinforcement to have the premises disappear from my brain.)

I read Lewis’ March Trilogy in comic book / YA form about a year ago. It was great. But, sitting with and reading his autobiography seems like a powerful thing to do this weekend.

Last night, I read COVID-19: The Pandemic that Never Should Have Happened and How to Stop the Next One by Debora MacKenzie. She wrote it in two months as the pandemic started, and did a great job. It goes well beyond just Covid, exploring past pandemics, things we could have done, didn’t, and why we are in the situation we are in now. As with my new book The Startup Community Way, she builds her framework on complex systems, explains them clearly, and applies the structure to the Covid crisis.

Finally, if you are a podcast person, I have two personal ones that I really enjoyed doing. The first is from the Techstars GiveFirst podcast and is with Len Fassler, titled Brad Feld and the mentor who changed his life.

The other is with Harry Stebbings on his 20 Minute VC podcast and is around mental health. I’m a guest, along with Jerry Colonna and Tracy Lawrence. 20VC: Brad Feld, Jerry Colonna, and Tracy Lawrence on Depression and Mental Health, Why You Cannot Tie Happiness to Milestones & Why Fear, Anxiety and Guilt are Useless Emotions.

The podcast with Len gave me chills when I listened to it, and Harry’s was excellent other than the missing Oxford comma in the title.

Original author: Brad Feld

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Jun
14

How one founder is bringing the global corporate security industry out of the dark ages

In case you missed it, you can listen to the recording here: 496th 1Mby1M Roundtable July 30, 2020: With Julianne Zimmerman, Reinventure Capital

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Original author: Maureen Kelly

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Jun
14

Fraud protection startup nSure AI raises $6.8M in seed funding

As the Internet of Things proliferates, security cameras are getting smarter. Today, these devices have machine learning capability that helps the camera automatically identify what it’s looking at — for instance, an animal or a human intruder? Today, Cisco announced that it has acquired Swedish startup Modcam and is making it part of its Meraki smart camera portfolio with the goal of incorporating Modcam computer vision technology into its portfolio.

The companies did not reveal the purchase price, but Cisco tells us that the acquisition has closed.

In a blog post announcing the deal, Cisco Meraki’s Chris Stori says Modcam is going to up Meraki’s machine learning game, while giving it some key engineering talent, as well.

“In acquiring Modcam, Cisco is investing in a team of highly talented engineers who bring a wealth of expertise in machine learning, computer vision and cloud-managed cameras. Modcam has developed a solution that enables cameras to become even smarter,” he wrote.

What he means is that today, while Meraki has smart cameras that include motion detection and machine learning capabilities, this is limited to single camera operation. What Modcam brings is the added ability to gather information and apply machine learning across multiple cameras, greatly enhancing the camera’s capabilities.

“With Modcam’s technology, this micro-level information can be stitched together, enabling multiple cameras to provide a macro-level view of the real world,” Stori wrote. In practice, as an example, that could provide a more complete view of space availability for facilities management teams, an especially important scenario as businesses try to find safer ways to open during the pandemic. The other scenario Modcam was selling was giving a more complete picture of what was happening on the factory floor.

All of Modcams employees, which Cisco described only as “a small team,” have joined Cisco, and the Modcam technology will be folded into the Meraki product line, and will no longer be offered as a standalone product, a Cisco spokesperson told TechCrunch.

Modcam was founded in 2013 and has raised $7.6 million, according to Crunchbase data. Cisco acquired Meraki back in 2012 for $1.2 billion.

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Aug
02

Podcast network Gimlet Media scores $15 million in funding

Fascinating story of MediaAlpha, beautifully told by Co-founder CEO Steve Yi, relates how the team has navigated through various experiments to over $100 million in revenue. Sramana Mitra: Let’s...

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Original author: Sramana Mitra

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Aug
02

Eat the suburbs

CRISPR tech startup Mammoth Biosciences is among the companies that revealed backing from the National Institutes of Health (NIH) Rapid Acceleration of Diagnostics (RADx) program on Friday. Mammoth received a contract to scale up its CRISPR-based SARS-CoV-2 diagnostic test in order to help address the testing shortages across the U.S.

Mammoth’s CRISPR-based approach could potentially offer a significant solution to current testing bottlenecks, because it’s a very different kind of test when compared to existing methods based on PCR technology. The startup has also enlisted the help of pharma giant GSK to develop and produce a new COVID-19 testing solution, which will be a handheld, disposable test that can offer results in as little as 20 minutes, on site.

While that test is still in development, the RADx funding received through this funding will be used to scale manufacturing of the company’s DETECTR platform for distribution and use in commercial laboratory settings. This will still offer a “multi-fold increase in testing capacity,” the company says, even though it’s a lab-based solution instead of a point-of-care test like the one it’s seeking to create with GSK.

Already, UCSF has received an Emergency Use Authorization (EUA) from the FDA to use the DETECTR reagent set to test for the presence of SARS-CoV-2, and the startup hopes to be able to extend similar testing capacity to other labs across the U.S.

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Aug
02

Mystro is an app aiming to bring in more bacon for Uber and Lyft drivers

News broke last night that Affirm, a well-known fintech unicorn, could approach the public markets at a valuation of $5 to $10 billion. The Wall Street Journal, which broke the news, said that Affirm could begin trading this year and that its IPO options include debuting via a special purpose acquisition company, also known as a SPAC.

That Affirm is considering listing is not a surprise. The company is around eight years old and has raised north of $1 billion, meaning it has locked up investor cash during its life as a private company. And liquidity has become an increasingly attractive possibility in 2020, when new offerings of all quality levels are enjoying strong reception from investors and traders who are hungry for equity in growing companies.

The Exchange explores startups, markets and money. You can read it every morning on Extra Crunch, or get The Exchange newsletter every Saturday.

But $10 billion? That price tag is a multiple of what Affirm was worth last year when it added $300 million to its coffer at a post-money price of $2.9 billion. There were rumors that the firm was hunting a far larger round later in 2019, though it doesn’t appear — per PitchBook records — that Affirm raised more capital since its Series F.

This morning let’s chat about the company’s possible IPO valuation. The Journal noted the strong public performance of Afterpay as a possible cognate for Affirm — the Australian buy-now, pay-later firm saw its value dip to $8.01 per share inside the last year before soaring to around $68 today. But given the firm’s reporting cycle, it’s a hard company to use as a comp.

Happily, we have another option to lean on that is domestically listed, meaning it has more regular and recent financial disclosures. So let’s learn how much revenue it takes to earn an eleven-figure valuation on the public markets by offering consumers credit.

Affirm’s business

Affirm loans consumers funds at the point of sale that are repaid on a schedule at a certain cost of capital. Affirm customers can select different repayment periods, raising or lowering their regular payments, and total interest cost.

Synchrony offers similar installment loans to consumers, along with other forms of capital access, including privately-branded credit cards. (Verizon, TechCrunch’s parent company, recent offered a card with the company, I should note.)  Synchrony is worth $13.5 billion as of this morning, making it a company of similar-ish value compared to the top end of the possible Affirm valuation range.

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Jul
30

Bootstrap First from Belarus, Raise Money Later from Silicon Valley: PandaDoc CEO Mikita Mikado (Part 3) - Sramana Mitra

Greg Robertson: Dan and I stayed there for a couple years, but it was brutal. We then got a call from a friend of ours who was restarting a company that he had sold again to another company. They had...

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Original author: Sramana Mitra

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Jul
30

A disappointed Pokémon GO Fest attendee has proposed class-action lawsuit against Niantic

Entrepreneurs are invited to the 497th FREE online 1Mby1M mentoring roundtable on Thursday, August 6, 2020, at 8 a.m. PDT/11 a.m. EDT/5 p.m. CEST/8:30 p.m. India IST. If you are a serious...

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Original author: Maureen Kelly

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Aug
03

Savings app Qapital now offers a checking account and debit card

Dan Miller Contributor
Dan is a Partner at True Search where he leads the firm's Investment Professional practice, having worked with many top VC & PE firms in their senior hiring efforts.
More posts by this contributor Recruiting for diversity in VC

Like many industries with a high concentration of wealth — and the careers that help professionals accumulate it — investment firms have a severe dearth of diversity in their ranks.

Regardless of whether the focus is venture capital, private equity or any other investment asset class, the firms are replete with white men. Though there have been some modest efforts of late to push for diversity, particularly in VC, these have yielded single digit percentage changes at best — and nothing at worst. Only 9% of investment decision makers in VC today are women; just 2% are Black.

Some firms have made reasonable inroads on this problem with good intentions. Based on my search experience recruiting investment professionals, I would guess that at least half of those searches were for clients with a strong preference to hire a “diverse” candidate. The Black Lives Matter movement has recently advanced the dialogue even further and has shined a light on underrepresentation in VC more than ever. “How do we increase our pipeline of diverse candidates?” is a question I heard frequently before 2020, but in past weeks this has become a chorus. Unfortunately, if solving this problem were as easy as telling a recruiter you want more diversity, it might have been solved long ago.

Below are a few common pitfalls we see in our searches with VC firms in particular, as well as some thoughts on how firms can improve their hiring processes, in order to work toward having more diverse representation within their investing teams.

Job description: Great comes in many forms

The most common reason I see for hiring processes leading to a slate with primarily white male candidates is because the criteria my client views as required almost completely precludes the possibility that the candidate slate will be diverse.

Taken as a given that women and minority men are not well-represented at senior levels in VC, any job spec that asks for a candidate to have seven to 10 years of experience in the industry, or a large number of board seats or investments led, will mean that the pool of “qualified” candidates will consist of mostly white men. This has historically been referred to as the “pipeline problem” and it’s an increasingly well-studied concept that academic literature is beginning to point to as a bias that pushes the onus of hiring minorities away from the hiring manager and on to the candidate pool. Even for firms that remain committed to hiring underrepresented groups without making adjustments to their criteria, the result is a zero-sum game where proven minority investors rotate from firm to firm, and an outcome that does not increase diversity in the industry as a whole.

VC firms seeking to improve their diversity have to recognize that great comes in many forms. By crafting broader specs and really thinking about the qualifications for their investing roles, a whole new talent pool opens up. To see that new pool of talent though, firms must first determine what characteristics are relevant to the role, and avoid tenure (or other tenure stand-ins) as the main criteria. VC investing is as much an art as a science; firms should decide what personal traits make somebody strong in their organization and why. How would a different viewpoint be additive to sourcing or diligence discussions?

Firms then need to commit to interviewing for those traits and perspectives, and assessing candidates along those same lines. One VC firm I worked with interviewed dozens of candidates before they realized that their process focused too much on financial acumen and not enough on the other factors they felt would make somebody a strong venture capitalist, resulting in a final slate of safe, “qualified,” and mostly nonminority candidates.

We reworked our process, and theirs, to interview for different criteria moving forward. We asked about overcoming hardships and about risks taken, and we got a sense for what type of impact that person made in whatever organization they came from rather than just asking about deals and transactions. It should be no surprise that the candidates with noninvesting backgrounds are performing much better in the process now, and the value they’d add to the organization more clear, even though the interviewers and the roles are the same.

Affinity bias: Go beyond what’s familiar

A broad spec and a team committed to hiring diverse talent, and interviewing appropriately, are great starting points. But then there is much more to do. Affinity bias is a well-known phenomenon that many investors are likely aware of, but it is pernicious in hiring settings and can be a serious challenge to overcome. Affinity bias in hiring is when a person or group of people prefer a candidate who looks, talks, acts or has a similar background to them.

In the case of hiring candidates with diverse backgrounds, affinity bias may be the tallest hurdle. In VC, the job is in many ways to seek common ground with the people you talk to. Good VCs are relationship builders — with entrepreneurs, other VCs and strong executives they want to recruit into their portfolio companies. But most investors are white people from affluent communities who attended elite universities and have worked at top-tier banks or consulting firms. In some cases there may have been a stint at another top-tier institution, be it a technology company or another investment firm.

White men are more likely to have these backgrounds. In a hiring process, white male VCs will naturally find ways to connect with candidates with similar backgrounds (i.e., other white men), in contrast to candidates with none of those same experiences, even when the candidates with other backgrounds are equally qualified for the role.

Affinity bias can be very subtle. It is human nature to feel the conversation was easier with somebody who in many ways has led the same life you did. It can feel somewhat logical even: The critique of the nonwhite or nonmale candidate is never as obvious as “They didn’t go to Stanford” or “They don’t belong to my country club.” Rather, it is often expressed as something softer and subjective — a seldom-articulated criteria of cultural fit. “Our culture is different from the place they work” is the most common. “I’m not sure they have the drive” is another, or “They don’t have an X-factor.” Now, these critiques can be completely legitimate.

A candidate may indeed be a bad fit for the culture of the firm because, for example, their prior employer was a gigantic corporate machine reliant on extraneous processes and they are interviewing for a role at a small entrepreneurial organization. But sometimes, particularly when interviewing candidates from different backgrounds, culture fit is a mask for affinity bias, and VCs (like all interviewers) need to be conscious of this tendency.

Look in the right networks

Investment firms almost always try to make a hire through their own network before leading a full search, and even before posting a job as being open anywhere online. This has become such an ingrained behavior that it is often discussed as a best practice. Unfortunately, “hiring through our network” almost certainly means the slate of candidates that a firm considers at the outset is going to be heavily nondiverse. Unless a firm (or to broaden this guidance, an organization) is already diverse across multiple vectors, then beginning a search by canvasing the firm’s own network is highly unlikely to yield a “diverse” candidate. This seems innocuous but it can actually be harmful to the odds that the firm ever hires a candidate from an underrepresented group. Why? There is another bias at work, the status quo bias.

Studies have shown that people tend to make choices that favor the status quo. Creating a balanced slate of choices is critical to avoid disfavoring minority candidates inadvertently. One study showed that having multiple women or Black candidates on a finalist slate increased the odds that the selected would be a minority by 70x-100x. But if a group of interviewers meets five white men through their networks before they meet anybody else, it is going to take an disproportionate number of underrepresented minority candidates to overcome the group’s bias toward hiring the “status quo” of the white men they met at the outset of the search.

At True Search, we recently audited one of our own searches to look for candidate-selected markers of their identity. We compared our pool of candidates to the NVCA diversity data from 2018. Compared to the industry averages, our pool of candidates was half as white and twice as female as the industry at large. I am not sharing that data as an advertisement for True Search, and in fact we strive to do more and are working on multiple programs to increase our networks with diverse candidate pools. The point is, when a VC firm uses a search firm or any outside consultant for a search, the pool of candidates is going to be much more diverse than if that VC firm simply calls up the people in their network, who probably are not all that diverse.

Focus on inclusion

A commitment to hiring more talent with underrepresented backgrounds is great; actually doing it is even better. Many studies have shown that diversity improves the performance of a team, but the onus is on the organization to foster an environment where those viewpoints are appreciated. In my discussions with VCs who are minorities, they point out that once they are in the door of the firm they still face challenges that white male colleagues don’t.

They are less likely to have mentors who share their backgrounds, and investing is largely an apprenticeship business. If they did not come from Stanford or Harvard, they are less likely to see deals that come through the sorts of personal networks that the firm is likely accustomed to seeing. If they came from a noninvesting background, they may be taken less seriously when presenting investment ideas to the team of career investors. A firm has to support diversity of thought once it is in the door, or the contributions of those team members may be unappreciated.

Firms can do many things to foster strong talent from diverse backgrounds once they are in the organization. Minority investors have shared some great ideas with me as I was thinking through this article, so these suggestions aren’t just my own. Underrepresented groups have historically (in the short history of such groups having any significant representation in the investing world) formed mentorship networks that transcend the walls of a given firm, such as Latinx VC, BLCK VC and All Raise.

VC firms should build as much connectivity with those sort of networks as possible. This will not only increase the odds that a firm will see more candidates from underrepresented groups, but it will also mean that the firm can play a role in finding strong mentors for their diverse talent throughout their career. Those networks can be built through small individual actions like attending and sponsoring events, or sharing job postings in the firm and portfolio with those networks.

VC firms can also help to jump-start a hire’s network in venture. Imagine a scenario where a firm hires a noninvestor with a unique yet amazing background into an investing role. Their peers all went to Stanford or worked at Facebook and are sourcing their deals through those personal networks. VC firms can use their resources to help close that network gap, such as by setting aside small pools of capital for a seed fund to be deployed by new investors with diverse backgrounds, thereby giving them a boost in early network building. I’ve seen firms deploy this strategy as a way to keep tabs on high potential operators, or on partner-level candidates they want to get to know more before they commit to hiring full-time.

Firms can help train junior talent and better prepare them for future full-time roles in venture by running intern or analyst programs and emphasizing the hiring of underrepresented groups into those roles. Even a part-time gig in VC will give a candidate a leg up in future interview processes, and even if that person goes off to another firm for a full-time role, the network back to that person will remain and could be helpful as a source of (or mentor to) the diverse talent the firm hires in the future.

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