May
21

Extra Crunch roundup: Jam City SPAC, startup PR, telemedicine market map, more

Los Angeles startup X1 helps businesses keep track of "data in the wild," from inappropriate emails and photos to sensitive company information being shared improperly by employees.CEO Craig Carpenter said the big data analytics startup is providing an important service at a time when businesses need to stay on top of the way data is being stored and handled for privacy and compliance reasons. "It could be anything, harassing photos or emails," Carpenter told Business Insider. "They can take action. They can delete it. They can pop it up in front of a user and say, 'Hey, listen, this does appear to be appropriate. We've got a problem here."Here's the pitch deck X1 used to raise $5 million from investors including Palisades Growth Capital:Click here for more BI Prime stories.

Businesses nowadays deal with a deluge of data, much of it stored in all sorts of devices and accounts that are not easy to monitor.

Tracking all of that information can be critically important for businesses for legal reasons, or to simply be aware of what's going on in the organization.

The Los Angeles startup X1 uses big data analytics to help business track what CEO Craig Carpenter calls "data in the wild," which covers confidential company documents to jokes and photos shared by employees on their network. The startup's customers include Disney, Chevron, and Bank of America.

"We have, you know, gobs and gobs of data out there," he told Business Insider. "They don't know if they have all sorts of really bad information in their system that they don't have it in a file share somewhere so you can audit and you can take action."

The challenge for most businesses, he said, is that "less and less corporate data over the last 5 to 10 years is in structured systems that are managed by corporations by more." In many cases, businesses must deal with information in semi or unstructured format, and it's not necessarily under a  company's control," he added.

The information may be stored in multiple laptops and other devices, or in a Dropbox folder and other tools that may or not be supported by the company, Carpenter said. 

And it's important for businesses to know where their information  is located to comply with privacy and transparency regulations, such as the California Consumer Privacy Act which just took effect this year and the General Data Protection Regulation in Europe. The information could also be useful and even critical in internal investigations and risk assessment audits or in legal disputes.

"It's for legal proceedings," he said. "It's for investigations. It's for monitoring. It's for privacy settings."

The data "could be anything," Carpenter said. "It could be harassing photos or emails, whatever the case may be. And they can take an action or delete it. They can pop it up in front of a user and say, "Hey, listen, this doesn't appear to be appropriate. We've got a problem here."

Launched in 2003, X1 was initially focused on using analytics to boost business productivity before pivoting to data discovery and compliance, Carpenter said.

The startup raised $5.1 million from investors, including Palisades Growth Capital and George Kadifa, the former head of HP Software.

Here's the pitch deck X1 used:

Original author: Benjamin Pimentel

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Aug
06

Scaling to $10M ARR with a Virtual Company: Fred Plais, CEO of Platform.sh (Part 6) - Sramana Mitra

Amy Nobile founded Love, Amy in April 2019 to help people find love on dating apps after meeting who she calls "the love of her life" on Bumble post-divorce.Nobile conducts photoshoots for dating app profiles, holds sexting consultations, and "ghost banters" with clients' matches. Less than a year in, Nobile has built a full-fledged business from word-of-mouth, transforming a side-hustle into a service that charges clients $5,000 for three months.But Nobile insists she's more "mirror" than matchmaker, helping clients first find love within before finding it in a partner.Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories.

The best way to make someone fall in love with you on a dating app is with a photo featuring a dog — even if that means borrowing your neighbor's tiny Maltese.

On a recent Saturday afternoon in downtown Manhattan, a 30-something, Ivy League-educated consultant did just that, curling up on her couch, cuddling a toy dog as his owners cooed at him encouragingly.

Amy Nobile, a petite, fit, blonde in a red sweater, furiously snapped away on her iPhone in an attempt to capture the perfect photo to send send suitors swiping in the consultant's favor.

Nobile charges $5,000 to help people find love on dating apps. The 50-year-old founded the high-end dating concierge service Love, Amy in April 2019 after finding "the love of her life" on Bumble post-divorce. Based in New York City, her clients range in age from 25 to 75, and are of various genders and sexual orientations across the country.

I joined her and the consultant a week into their working relationship for the wardrobing and photoshoot included in Nobile's three-month package. The consultant, whose name is not being published for professional reasons, posed in a black and tan wrap dress and jeans paired with a simple tee at various locations including Washington Square Park and a local café.

"It's important the clothes make them feel good," Nobile said. "It's all about showing off their figure in a way that's not too sexy."

The only accessory missing was a dog.

"Dogs are a great conversation starter," according to the dating concierge. Luckily, the consultant happened to cross paths with her neighbors during the shoot — and they were eager to lend their pup to the cause.

Amy Nobile helps people find love on dating apps. Hollis Johnson/Business Insider

The power of manifestation

Some may call running into the tiny Maltese a coincidence, but Nobile would call it manifestation — the concept of making something happen with your thoughts and beliefs. Growing up outside of Detroit, Nobile said she began "manifesting from an early age."

"When you look back, you can connect the dots," she recalled. "During childhood, I loved to imitate people, I was the friend girlfriends would turn to for advice."

A graduate of Albion College in Michigan, Nobile studied communications and ended up interning at NBC in New York City. That spawned a career in public relations, where she met her now-ex-husband. The couple relocated to San Francisco when Nobile was 26, where she navigated motherhood — she's the mother of two teenagers — with best friend Trisha Ashworth, whom Nobile had met in an NYC acting class.

"I loved Amy immediately because I could tell she was authentic with no pretense," Ashworth said. "She is super goofy and brings out the goof in me."

The two began hosting Starbucks meetings with other moms to dive into the struggles of motherhood. From those conversations came three books the pair co-authored about empowering women and, eventually, a spot on Oprah's couch. The duo, who also founded a jewelry company called Ash + Ames, penned a fourth book about reinvention after 40.

Nobile, by this point back in NYC, said she couldn't write the final tome without taking a look at her own 20-year marriage. After realizing she and her husband had grown apart, they decided to amicably separate. She then took on what she called a social experiment: making dating her job. Re-entering the dating world post-divorce, she said, "was like landing on Mars or learning Mandarin."

"I'd heard of some of the apps, but the only resource I had were a few single girlfriends who had nothing but negative things to say about them," Nobile said.

She cast her net wide and went on up to six dates a day until she met her current partner. Her friends, discouraged by dating apps and impressed by Nobile, asked for help. Nobile took over one of her friend's profiles and, as she tells it, landed the friend more dates in a month than she'd gone on all year. Nobile transitioned her cupid side hustle into a full-time job within three months. And that's how Love, Amy was born. 

Finding a hole in the dating scene

On the kitchen counter of Nobile's apartment — a luxury high-rise with picturesque views in Manhattan's Financial District — sit eight iPads, one for each of her current clients. 

Nobile with her eight iPads and one of her "woo-woo" accessories. Hollis Johnson/Business Insider

Since her clients are located across the country, not needing to log in and out of separate dating app accounts lets her give clients undivided attention while also tricking location services. Nobile says she's had 66 clients since launching her business 10 months ago, typically juggling seven at a time.

A number of those clients are members of the 40-plus crowd who are diving back into the dating world post-divorce and are skeptical of using technology to do so.

"It's frustrating, time-consuming, and exhausting," Sally, 52, said of trying dating apps after her marriage dissolved. When she first started working with Nobile, the dating expert took one look at Sally's profile and told her, "You need better pictures." And so Nobile marched over to Sally's apartment with a stylist friend in tow.

"Amy made it manageable," she said. "I wanted someone to just help me stay in the game."

Nobile says she's been surprised by the number of  millennials, nearly 40% of her clients, who have prioritized their careers over finding a relationship and need a professional to help them flirt.

As the consultant explained to her neighbors as she scooped up their dog: "I like to outsource all aspects of my life."

The art of ghost bantering

In the age of digital everything, Love, Amy is something of an exception. The business doesn't have a Facebook page. It has an Instagram account, but its following isn't very big — a mere 384  — and it's mostly dedicated to reposting famous love quotes.

I first heard of Love, Amy the way most of her clients have, through word of mouth. I soon found myself in Nobile's apartment listening in on a wrap-up call with a 33-year-old woman working in finance who, as Nobile told me in the pre-call debrief, had "found the one."

"I never would have swiped on him — he was a little nerdy and I was vain," said the 32-year-old. "I'd rather meet someone authentically, and you changed my mind on that."

"It's human nature to have a type," Nobile responded. "I needed to nudge you ... The turning point was when you became vulnerable."

Between ongoing coaching and post-date analysis, Nobile spends at least four to six hours a day on the phone with her clients. She's always on-call, even if the client is frantically texting mid-date from the bathroom.

Nobile "ghost banters" for clients, swiping and matching on their behalf. Hollis Johnson/Business Insider

Spending time with clients, whether in person or over a video call, helps Nobile get a better sense of their vibe and build a rapport. It also helps with what Nobile calls "ghost bantering" — impersonating clients on their dating apps.

It's a process that draws on what she identified as an early knack for imitating other peoples' voices and style of speaking, and one that helps draw clients, particularly some of Nobile's shyer clients, out of their shells.

"I'm such an introvert," said Sally, a writer. "Amy turned that around and made it an advantage. I don't think of it as deception, because Amy helps you be true to yourself."

As we spoke, Sally announced she was sitting next to her boyfriend of six months. She met him on Hinge with Nobile's help.

Personal happiness, good energy, and self-care

"Finish this sentence: My best friends who really know me would say that my 'dirty little secret' is..."

It's one of the 70-plus prompts on the seven-page intake form Nobile sends all clients after their initial meeting. The form is part of their homework, along with reading two books — "The Happiness Advantage" by Shawn Achor and "Manifesting Made Easy" by Jen Mazer — and taking a character strength survey.

It doesn't just give Nobile an idea of a client's personality, history, or the type of love they seek, but also allows her to see if they're prioritizing themselves. "You can only meet someone as deeply as you've met yourself," said the dating concierge.

"You can only meet someone as deeply as you've met yourself."

But not every singleton who applies gets accepted.

Nobile told me if she thinks a client is "blocked" — spiritually, physically, or mentally — she turns them away with tips on self-care and tells them to come back. Someone who feels emotionally stuck in the past might receive contacts for meditation, energy work, or therapy. Once they're "clear and ready," she puts together a dating strategy.

It's not surprising coming from someone who describes herself as a bit "woo-woo" when it comes to her spirituality. Nobile, who meditates and does pilates daily, begins every morning blasting music and dancing around in her underwear, giving thanks for her life.

"As adults, we get so boxed into behaviors adults should have," said the love guru. "I was given advice by a shaman once to look at life through the eyes of a child. When you're a child there's no restrictions."

"The profile isn't the person"

While Nobile found success by tapping into a niche market, she isn't the only one to do so. Meredith Golden of SpoonMeetSpoon coaches customers on perfecting profiles and, like Nobile, impersonates them on the apps. Alyssa Dineen of Style My Profile helps style clients' wardrobes and craft profiles.

April Davis of the traditional matchmaking service, Luma Search maintains that matchmakers like herself have an advantage because they actually get to meet the suitors in person. But, she said, there is a market need for online dating consultants. "Dating apps are a part-time job," she said, and online dating concierges "are experts at communication and more efficient."

Nobile's clients struggle with the impersonal aspect of online dating, she said. Hollis Johnson/Business Insider

As Nobile puts it, dating apps have "shifted the dynamic of dating in the way we begin relationships and the way the seeds are planted."

Nearly 40% of heterosexual couples in 2020 met their partner online. Since 1980, when dating first hit screens, the percentage of couples meeting in person has decreased, with one exception: Those who met in a bar or restaurant. 

"I'm the bridge that marries the technology with the energy and connection of a real relationship ... it's this chasm that people are missing," Nobile said. 

The toughest hurdle her clients grapple with is that the process is impersonal. Nobile said when it comes to online dating, chemistry often doesn't ignite until you're comfortable in the second or third date.

She admits that there's a perception that online dating is less romantic because people think it's inorganic. But, she noted, it's all about infusing flirtation. 

"We have to figure out a way to communicate our essence, charm, and warmth [online]," Nobile explained, adding that people often mistakenly feel as though they can only introduce flirting once the date is taken offline.

"I have supersmart clients — doctors, lawyers, CEOS — and when I really drill down in my third meeting with them, I find out they have a sixth sense of humor but they're withholding that," she said.

She recalled working with one client, a doctor, who communicated very formally over text and email. "The minute I entered her home, I figured out she had a kooky sense of humor. I infused that in her profile and bantering, and now she's attracting guys who understand her humor."

People are frustrated by technology, but they need it to succeed in love; that dichotomy is baffling to a lot of people.

Nobile described the relationship between romance and technology as a complicated one.

"The more technology proliferates, the lonelier people feel and the need and desperation for love grows," she said. "People are frustrated by technology, but they need it to succeed in love; that dichotomy is baffling to a lot of people."

More than a wingwoman

You may think Nobile is a modern-day matchmaker, or a "wingwoman" or "fairy dating godmother," as some clients refer to her. But she's quick to tell you differently.

"I'm more of a mirror, so people can take a look at who they are, who they want, and meet quality people." 

And if the instant success of Love, Amy says anything, it's that she's a savvy business woman. She landed early press in The New York Times, bringing in an initial wave of business. In 2020, Nobile said she will increase rates twice, though she refuses to comment on specifics regarding earnings.

No matter what, Nobile — who fondly discusses the breast cancer survivor she walked through her first intimate experience after reconstructive surgery and the man in a wheelchair who she'll soon be working with — is adamant that the human touch can't be lost as business expands. While she envisions eventually having ambassadors or a team, right now, she said, it has to be her.

"It takes a certain type of person," Sally said. "Amy understands human nature in a way most people wouldn't and she's got the energy."

After all, Nobile says, everyone is searching for a soul mate.

"At the end of the day, how many people are like 'Oh, I had a crazy awesome career?'" she asked. "No, you're ruminating on love."

Nobile helps her clients experience personal growth. Hollis Johnson/Business Insider

Nobile told me she has an 85% success rate in helping clients find someone special, which she defined as exclusively dating — and whether they've met that person or not, she's given them tools to succeed on their own. It may sound like marketing hype, but everything I've heard from clients has screamed newly acquired confidence.

I accompanied Nobile to a check-in meeting with a 60-something female client re-entering the dating scene. While recapping recent dates and Bumble prospects, she reiterated, with a smile, "I've realized I'm really ready to meet someone."

As for the consultant, she's still looking for that special someone. Meanwhile, inspired by Nobile, I decided to try my hand at playing matchmaker. On a weeknight not long after my visit to Nobile's apartment, I demanded that my roommate hand over her phone as she complained about her Hinge prospects. Within one week, I had set her up on three dates. She's now been seeing one of those guys for three months, the longest she's ever dated someone from an app.

The icebreaker I used to kick off their initial banter? It was inspired by no other than a photo of him and a dog — which, it turned out, he had borrowed from a coworker.

Original author: Hillary Hoffower

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Feb
15

Colors: Basque Hermitage, San Juan de Gaztelugatxe III - 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...

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Original author: Sramana Mitra

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Feb
15

The CEO of C. F. Martin & Co. explains why the iconic American brand has endured and prospered since 1833

Chris Martin is the CEO of C. F. Martin & Co., the most famous maker of acoustic guitars in the world.The company was founded by his great-great-great-grandfather, a German immigrant, in 1833.Martin has been steering the company into its third century, tackling numerous challenges while remaining focused on the brand's core value: quality.Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories.

Christian Frederick Martin IV is a genial, mellow raconteur who shouldn't be mistaken for a man who doesn't know his business.

The 64-year-old CEO has to. It's his job to ensure that the company that bears his name, founded in 1833 by his great-great-great-grandfather, remains the best acoustic-guitar maker in the world.

"It's my obligation to continue to reach for the perfect guitar," he said in an interview at C. F. Martin & Co.'s factory and headquarters in Nazareth, Pennsylvania.

He's not kidding around. For well over a century, the company's acoustic guitars have defined the sound of essentially every musical genre, but particularly country and bluegrass, folk, and rock 'n' roll. Willie Nelson plays a Martin (an especially battered example named "Trigger"). Dolly Parton played a Martin. Joni Mitchell played a Martin. Led Zeppelin's Jimmy Page played a Martin. Hank Williams. Johnny Cash. Eric Clapton. Neil Young. John Mayer. Coldplay's Chris Martin (no relation). Kurt Cobain. Ed Sheeran. Elvis Presley!

And that's just the tip of a vast iceberg that strummed and plucked what Martin has been crafting from wire and wood since before the Civil War. I could occupy your time for many more paragraphs simply reviewing the bluegrass kings who have favored Martin's groundbreaking dreadnought design, which has become the default shape and style of pretty much every inexpensive starter acoustic one can buy. (A modern version of the original, first sold in 1931, can be had for $3,600 as a D-28 model, vintage examples of which from before World War II go for nearly $100,000.)

A brand with a history deeper than almost anyone else's

Elvis was a fan. Matthew DeBord/Insider

If there were ever a company that could rest on its considerable laurels, it's C. F. Martin & Co. With annual revenue of about $120 million and reliable profits, the privately held company operates its famous factory in Pennsylvania, about two hours west of New York City, as well as a plant in Navojoa, Mexico. Its core product is the acoustic guitar, though Martin also manufactures strings, ukuleles, and accessories like straps.

While there's considerable variety in Martin's offerings, what the company is really selling is quality, quality, and more quality. There likely isn't a guitarist on earth who hasn't coveted a Martin at some point.

Chris Martin credits the founder, Christian Frederick Martin (the first), with establishing the brand's astoundingly durable reputation.

"We don't know what possessed him to be a guitar builder," Martin said, adding that C. F.'s family might have been happier had he entered the family furniture business and not been seduced by musical instruments.

C. F. "developed his own style," Martin said, and would take quality as far as he could, always with the musician in mind.

Chris Martin summed up a typical player's attitude toward the company's guitars as "These things aren't cheap, but I need a good tool."

Or, as Clapton put it when discussing several new signature models in 2013, it was Martin that had "the seal of approval from the master musicians."

Avoiding the curse of being just for wealthy guitar players

A worker at Martin's Pennsylvania factory. Matthew DeBord/Insider

That summarizes the Martin philosophy. The priciest guitars are essentially handcrafted by master luthiers in Martin's custom shop, while the least-expensive models, at less than $500, are renowned for their value. And the heart of the lineup is reasonably priced, given the predictable level of performance delivered.

Musicians might prefer Gibson or Taylor or Collings guitars, but they know that if they pick up a Martin, at any price point, it will do more than get the job done.

In that context, Martin's yearly output of about 100,000 instruments is a testament to how effective it's been at pursuing quality in the US and Mexico. And while production in Mexico is now politically complicated, Martin has been committed to it since 1989, when it experimented by shifting string production south of the border. In 2014, the company celebrated 25 years in Navojoa by creating a special commemorative dreadnought model adorned with regional graphics.

Mexico and Asia are the main alternatives to US-based manufacturing, and while the uptick in quality from China and Indonesia in recent years has been stunning, the experience of Martin and others — including Fender, in California — has been that Mexico can deliver a consistently superb guitar at a competitive price.

Guitar tops are cut precisely with lasers. Matthew DeBord/Insider

For Chris Martin, who became CEO in 1986, the move to Mexico was all about making sure his company didn't become so elite that it lost musicians at the beginning of their journey.

"I saw us becoming a brand that people decided they weren't wealthy enough to own," he recalled. "That was never my family's intent. But we can't compromise, and that's an ongoing conversation."

Martin is a trim, witty man who is constantly seeking to keep the family business relevant, and that requires some innovative thinking. For example, when string production moved to Mexico, string makers in Pennsylvania were confronted with job losses. Martin offered them a deal: Learn to build guitars, and stay with us. Some employees chose to retire, but many took him up on the offer.

Martin quality at lower prices has been a boon for the company — and its dealers.

"They say, 'Thank you for giving me a range of guitars,'" Martin said. "Now we can take you from $500 to your heart's desire, and the dealers like that. We need the dealers to make this work."

Managing the challenges and opportunities of e-commerce and sustainability

Inlays in a fretboard. Matthew DeBord/Insider

That's a bold stance to take as the music business shifts from brick-and-mortar sales to e-commerce. And Martin isn't ignoring the opportunity. He knows the company could enjoy robust online guitar sales, if it chose to go that way. But it prefers to work with authorized Martin dealers. (Martin fans can buy accessories, branded clothing, and other modest items via the company's website.)

"It allows you to use the internet as a tool," Martin said, adding that it's critical for retailers to emulate their physical presence in the digital world.

But beyond that, Martin wants customers to put their hands on what they hope to buy, especially if they choose to invest in a limited-edition or custom-made guitar. Chris Martin is a Porsche aficionado — he owns several 911s, the German automaker's iconic sports car — and was inspired by the factory-delivery model. Martin's "Buy from Factory" program enables customers to order a guitar and then visit the factory in Nazareth to collect it, or to select an instrument from the stock on hand.

A more pressing challenge for Martin is literally fundamental. Environmental regulations have restricted manufacturers from importing endangered woods, making it difficult for Martin to continue business as usual in an age of climate change and sustainability.

But Chris Martin isn't backing away from that one either.

"We can take the circuitous route to explain why it matters to us — or I can just say that it's purely selfish," he quipped. "If we don't pursue sustainability, I can tell my daughter to sell this thing as fast as you can."

Martin has embraced Forest Stewardship Council standards for some of its all-solid-wood guitars, and for other models it's blended solid-wood tops made from abundant Sitka spruce with high-pressure laminated body materials and fretboards made of paper-like materials. A few Martins effectively use no solid woods whatsoever. Again, these guitars sound as good as a Martin should, though for the purists the company has to come up with ways to build all-wood versions of its stalwarts and the reproductions of classics that the vintage-guitar market has created a demand for.

Interestingly, Martin's most sustainable guitars are also popular with performing musicians, who appreciate their value, durability, and lack of susceptibility to the temperature and humidity changes that affect all-wood instruments.

Defying the gloom and doom around the guitar business

Pulled into Nazareth. Matthew DeBord/Insider

Observers of the guitar market have argued that the instrument's popularity is in terminal decline, an argument bolstered by a 2017 Washington Post article that lamented the six-string's twilight. But Chris Martin doesn't buy it.

"If you look at very commercial music, sometimes it's hard to find a guitar," he said. "But if you go below that, there's lots of guitars."

He said that for one of Martin's key customer groups — acoustic-only musicians who play house concerts and small venues — there remains abundant grassroots activity.

"The electric-guitar companies are more reliant on a superhero," he said.

So the Martin proposition is no less appealing now than it was 100 years ago. The business renews itself, thanks to the founder's great-great-great-grandson remaining true to the company's principles.

"There's always been a fantastic pool of people who've wanted to work here," said the CEO, whose name is on the headstock of every instrument the company makes.

"The brand has never been as strong as it is today. How many people, when you ask them what they do for a living, they can say, 'I make the best of its kind'?"

Original author: Matthew DeBord

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Feb
15

Scaling to a $700M Exit: Zain Jaffer, CEO of Vungle (Part 4) - Sramana Mitra

Sramana Mitra: What happened with Gokul? Zain Jaffer: Gokul became a very pivotal figure. When we got into Angel Pad, a lot of people didn’t believe in our idea. It was very disheartening. There must...

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Original author: Sramana Mitra

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Feb
14

HQ Trivia shuts down after acquisition falls through

HQ Trivia is dead. Today the company laid off its full staff of 25 and will cease operation of its trivia, sports and word guessing games, a source close to the company confirmed. You can watch the insane, drunken final episode here

HQ Trivia had a deal in the works to be acquired, but the buyer pulled out yesterday and investors aren’t willing to fund it any longer, CEO and co-founder Rus Yusupov said in a statement attained by CNN Business’ Kerry Flynn:

“We received an offer from an established business to acquire HQ and continue building our vision, had definitive agreements and legal docs, and a projected closing date of tomorrow, and for reasons we are still investigating, they suddenly changed their position and despite our best efforts, we were unable to reach an agreement,” Yusupov writes. “Unfortunately, our lead investors are no longer willing to fund the company, and so effective today, HQ will cease operations and move to dissolution. All employees and contractors will be terminated as of today.”

With HQ we showed the world the future of TV. We didn’t get to where we hoped but we did stretch the world’s imagination for what’s possible on our smartphones. Thanks to everyone who helped build this and thanks for playing.

— Rus (@rus) February 14, 2020

Launched in October 2017, TechCrunch wrote the first coverage of the 12-question live video trivia game started by two of the former Vine founders. Users could win real money by answering all the questions and not being eliminated in multiple daily games. HQ Trivia had raised more than $15 million, including a Series A led by Founders Fund. At one point it had more than 2.3 million concurrent players.

But eventually the novelty began to wear off. Cheaters came in, splitting the prize money down to just a few dollars or cents per winner. Copycats emerged internationally. Engineering issues led users to get kicked out of the game.

Then tragedy struck. Co-founder Colin Kroll passed away. That exacerbated internal problems at HQ Trivia. Product development was slow, leading users to grow tired of the game. New game types and viral features materialized too late.

A failed internal mutiny saw staffers prepare to petition the board to remove Yusupov from the CEO position. When he caught wind of the plot, organizers of the revolt were fired. Morale sunk. By July 2019, downloads were just 8% of their previous year’s, and 20% of the staff was laid off. HQ managed about 15 million all-time installs, peaking at 2 million in February 2018, while last month it had just 67,000, according to Sensor Tower.

The demise of HQ Trivia demonstrates the fickle nature of the gaming industry, and the startup scene as a whole. Momentary traction is no guarantee of future success. Products must continually evolve and adapt to their audience to stay relevant. And executives must forge ahead while communicating clearly with their teams, even amongst uncertainty, or find their companies withered by the rapid passing of time.

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Feb
14

Tinder founder funds sex tips app Lover

Want to spice up the bedroom without paying for pills or awkward visits to a sex therapist? A new app called Lover lets you take a sexual personality quiz, explore carnal knowledge tutorials and discretely figure out which turn-ons you share with your partner. Built by board-certified sexual medicine clinical psychologist Dr. Britney Blair, Lover launches today on iOS with $5 million in seed funding from Tinder founder Sean Rad and other investors.

“It is strange that there are such taboos around sex when it is something we all do…whether we enjoy ourselves or not. We think it is time to start the conversation around this important aspect of our health,” says Dr. Blair. “We believe Lover can help build confidence, facilitate communication, improve partner connection and just raise consciousness about sex and sexuality.”

A solid portion of Lover’s content is free for the first seven days, including audio guides to oral sex, video explainers on how to be generous in bed and multi-step “playlists” of content like “Getting Hard, Made Easy.” Lover charges $9.99 per month or $59.99 per year for continued access to themed educational materials like “Coreplay Not Foreplay” and “Fantasy To Reality” that are recommended based on the results of your sexual questionnaire.

Almost 50% of women and 40% of men have a sexual complaint . . . [but] most people don’t realize how common and treatable their issues are,” Dr. Blair tells me. “In our [pre-launch tests] focused purely on erectile dysfunction, 62% of users reported improvements to their erections within three weeks of using the app. That’s pretty wild when you think Viagra’s efficacy rate is approximately 65% and it lasts only five hours.”

Startups like digital pharmacy Ro have scored $500 million valuations just 18 months after launch by prescribing and selling men’s health drugs like Viagra. Lover sees a market for education-based alternative approaches to sexual wellness.

Lover co-founders (from left): Jas Bagniewski, Dr. Britney Blair and Nick Pendle

Dr. Blair got interested in the space a decade ago after a Stanford grad school lecture illuminated how prevalent sexual problems are but how quickly they can be resolved with learning and communication. She teamed up with her CEO Jas Bagniewski, who’d been the manager of Europe’s largest e-commerce business, Zalando in the U.K., and a founder of City Deal that sold to Groupon. Bagniewski and fellow Lover co-founder Nick Pendle started European Casper mattress competitor Eve Sleep and brought it to IPO.

The plan is to combine Dr. Blair’s educational materials with Bagniewski and Pendle’s e-commerce chops to monetize Lover through subscriptions and eventually recommending products like sex toys for purchase. Now they have $5 million in seed funding led by Lerer Hippeau, and joined by Manta Ray Ventures, Oliver Samwer’s Global Founders Capital, Fabrice Grinda and Jose Marin. The cash will go toward building out an Android app and adding games that partners can play together in bed.

There are plenty of random sex tip websites out there. Lover tries to differentiate itself by personalizing content based on the results of a Myers-Briggs-esque quiz. This asks you how adventurous, communicative and assertive you are. You then receive a classification like “The Muse” with a few pages of explanation, for example, revealing how you like to inspire others while being the center of attention.

From there, Lover can suggest guides for mastering your own sexual personality or branching out into new behavior patterns. There’s also a feature copied from another app called XConfessions for figuring out what you and your partner like. You connect your apps and then separately swipe yes or no on questions about whether you’d like “having your partner drip candle wax on you” or “your partner dressing as a strict cop.” If you and they match, the app tells you both so you can try it out.

Overall, Lover’s content is a lot higher quality and more compassionate than where most people learn about sex: pornography. Having a real sexual medicine doctor overseeing the app lends credibility to Lover. And the design and tone throughout make you feel empowered rather than sleazy.

Still, Dr. Blair admits that “it’s hard to motivate people into behavioral change, people already have subscription apps on their phones and we may run into ‘subscription fatigue.’ ” People might feel natural paying for Viagra because the impact is obvious. The value of a subscription to sex tips might seem too vague or redundant to what’s free online.

To get a lot of users opening their wallets, not just their pants, Lover will need to do a better job of previewing what’s behind the paywall, and offering more interactivity that online content lacks. But if it can give users one unforgettable night thanks to its advice, it may be able to seduce them for the long-run.

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Feb
14

General Catalyst leads $6 million investment in team productivity startup Range

In case you haven’t heard, VCs are loving on workplace software as of late, and productivity tools that help teams collaborate seem to be a particular frothy area of investment. A smattering of top VC firms and angels, including General Catalyst, First Round Capital, Bloomberg Beta, Biz Stone and Ellen Pao, are throwing their confidence behind a new productivity startup called Range.

The tool is focused around helping small teams collaborate, grow closer and track their work together. There are quite a few startups with this exact pitch, Range’s key advantage seem to sit with their founding team, which is helmed by Medium’s former head of engineering Dan Pupius, Jennifer Dennard (people ops at Medium) and Braden Kowitz, who was a design partner at GV. The company has used their network to build out an early network of customers, including teams at Twitter, Carta and Mozilla, as well as a network of VCs that are bankrolling their efforts.

The SF-based team tells me they have locked down $6 million in seed funding led by General Catalyst as they look to expand their customer base. I chatted with the very nice team of co-founders over a Zoom call and got to see how they used the product internally.

“I left Google to join Medium with [Ev Williams and Biz Stone], and we were experimenting with a bunch of different organizational practices, really trying to answer the question of why do companies get worse as they get bigger and could we deploy different management practices at Medium in order to prevent that issue,” Pupius told TechCrunch. “Through that journey we started building internal tools and we kind of saw this opportunity for software to intentionally encode a lot of the organizational processes or values, and then towards the end of my tenure at Medium, I reconnected with Braden and Jen and we just essentially decided to tackle the problem together.”

The core of the product is a bit of a replacement to stand-ups, prompting each user to note what they’re working on every morning, which they can tag to existing larger projects and which is then all interconnected and viewable by members of the specific Range team. The need for a product like this really highlights one of Slack’s big limitations, where even with threads, there really isn’t a great way for communications to be organized in a digestible manner. Every update in Slack drives a conversation that pushes salient info further up the history into obscurity, something that can especially harm remote teams.

Beyond check-ins, Range is also helping teams keep track of their objectives and meetings as well as team directories. The product has integration support with Google Docs, Google Calendar, Slack, Asana, Jira, GitHub, Trello, Quip, Figma and others to ensure that information isn’t getting further siloed by adding a new piece of productivity software to the mix. The product has a startup-friendly pricing structure; it’s free for teams under 10 and each additional member costs $14 per month. Pricing obviously gets a bit more customized when it comes to larger customers.

Range will likely draw some comparisons with Notion from an organization standpoint, though it also feels much more smoother as a result of being less open-ended. One of the more unique aspects of the product is that the top of the home screen isn’t centered on OKRs or analytics, rather it asks team members a new question every day meant to foster further bonding, and asks them to describe how they’re feeling with an emoji. It’s kind of silly, but the team hopes that short bursts of introspection can push teams closer together in subtle ways that collaboration software doesn’t usually enable.

“We found that people are doing really cool things but they’re not talking to each other about it,” Dennard told TechCrunch. “And so one of the advantages we have as a company is that we can actually help create that community for people.”

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Jul
31

CallPage lets you call your website visitors

“If I was running Clearbanc by myself, it probably would have gone off the cliff eight times at this point,” says Clearbanc co-founder Andrew D’Souza. 

“If I were running the company by myself, it would be half its size,” adds Michele Romanow, Clearbanc’s other co-founder.

In addition to starting the $420 million-backed fintech company together, D’Souza and Romanow are in a relationship.

The two initially met at an event in San Francisco, and followed up with a friendly informational interview at a Mexican restaurant. D’Souza’s fundraising experience was a draw for Romanow, who at the time was looking for information about how to raise cash for her startup. Romanow ended up selling her company to Groupon, but her conversation with D’Souza helped to anchor the valuation. It was also the beginning of a relationship. 

When they started dating in 2014, they swapped war stories about company building. Their connection hinged on this initial commonality — D’Souza had fundraised all his businesses, whereas Romanow had bootstrapped. It was from these conversations that they created Clearbanc, the Canada-based VC firm that specializes in non-dilutive revenue share agreements for startups.

Startups with coupled co-founders at the helm are scoring big funding rounds and exiting companies. Julia and Kevin Hartz co-founded Eventbrite, which went public on the New York Stock Exchange in 2018. Married couple Diane Greene and Mendel Rosenblum were on the co-founding team of VMware, which sold to Dell in 2015. The bond of a relationship may be a secret weapon in company building for new-wave tech startups, but that doesn’t come without risks, like co-founder disharmony, equity supermajority and even divorce.

Clearbanc founders Andrew D’Souza and Michele Romanow

“Just put the phone down.”

Talk to anyone with a co-founder title at a startup and you’ll find one trend: free time is nearly nonexistent. Couples running a business together say it’s advantageous to be on the same workday cycle. “When you’re working on the same business, you’re on the same cadence of when things are blowing up,” says Romanow. “So I know exactly why Andrew is on his phone. I know that if he doesn’t do this, I will have to do it.” 

NEXT Trucking co-founders Lidia Yan and Elton Chung have raised $125 million total for their logistics startup, including a $97 million Series C from Brookfield and Sequoia. The pair says that the company is a presence that’s fully built into their lives and their relationship at all times. While that may be great for a business, it’s not always great for their marriage. “We got into a momentum of talking about work all the time. Not only at the office but at home,” says Yan. The solution is a simple rule enforced by an iPhone alarm. All work-related talk must cease after 8pm every day after the alarm goes off. They also use free time on the weekends to go to restaurants in LA, one of their shared passions. 

NEXT Trucking co-founders Lidia Yan and Elton Chung

Co-founder couples say that if you’re scaling a company, you’ll have to be okay with putting other life decisions on hold, like going on your honeymoon or having kids. 

Leslie Voorhees and Calley Means were married in 2016, but still haven’t taken their honeymoon. They co-founded Anomalie, a wedding dress customization startup that has raised $18.1 million. Instead of vacationing to Bora Bora the day after their wedding, the newlywed founders hopped on a plane to China, where Leslie stayed for a couple of months to set up the supply chain for Anomalie. The couple admits that even now, they don’t make time for their personal lives.

“We have not spent more than an hour of our entire marriage not talking about wedding dresses. It’s not necessarily the healthiest thing, but we’ve enjoyed obsessing about wedding dresses every day,” says Leslie.

Their skills complement each other: Calley’s superpower is that he can move fast, whereas Leslie is more methodical and good at setting up structure. While they say that being a co-founder couple has strengthened their bond, they’re working on setting boundaries. Being a founder means you have to sacrifice other areas of your life for the company. 

“Once we raise the Series D, we’ll start thinking about having kids,” jokes Calley — in what may not actually be a joke. 

Leslie Voorhees and Calley Means, Anomalie co-founders

Investors are warming up to married co-founders

Clearbanc wants to make it easier and faster for startups to raise growth capital. Their 20-minute term sheet product is meant to help founders raise money in 20 minutes, rather than the traditional 3 to 6 months the process typically takes. But how did investors react to Clearbanc’s co-founders relationship status? Not well, at first. 

A Clearbanc investor passed on an early round, explaining to D’Souza and Romanow that they would have backed either of them individually, but that they were worried about backing them as a couple, especially since they had only been dating for a year at that point.

“The same investor ended up coming in two rounds later at 100 times the valuation,” says D’Souza. This, they felt, proved that fear of investing in a couple was a false sense of increased risk.

It seems investors today agree. When the married co-founders of Apli, a Mexico-based on-demand recruiting platform, walked into the office of ALLVP, the fund wasn’t entirely sure about what it meant to invest in a company run by a married couple.

Founders Vera and Jose met while studying together at Harvard Business School before working at two separate Rocket Internet companies in Mexico and foundling Apli. The business model, product market fit and potential impact for the company were typical factors the fund mulled over before writing a check, but ALLVP also considered the founders’ married status.

“After some discussion, we decided to analyze the team as any other founding team,” says ALLVP partner Federico Antoni. Besides the obvious personal chemistry, there was a professional chemistry between Vera and Jose. “We weighed the risk of divorce and decided to take it. We gained a team fully invested in the company and one that could balance personal life and startup life.” 

Equity could pose another risk factor. Investors could be wary of founder couples depending on the equity structure. If their finances are combined, a co-founder couple could own a supermajority of a startup. Say two non-married founders owned 20% of a company — a co-founder couple whose finances are tied together would own 40%. Given this logic, VCs would inherently have more negotiating power if the founders aren’t financially linked.

VCs I talked to didn’t necessarily agree with that logic, though.

“The only thing with equity that matters to me is if the founders have enough,” says Andreessen Horowitz General Partner David Ulevitch. “Venture capital investments are inherently minority investments, so it’s really just about ensuring founders are motivated and rewarded for building something enduring.” 

But what happens when the dual identities of co-founder and spouse don’t work?

Divorce won’t necessarily be the demise of a startup

Sara and Josh Margulis founded Honeyfund, a honeymoon registry site, in 2006. The then-married couple appeared on Shark Tank in 2015, winning an investment from Kevin O’Leary. Sara says that Honeyfund is different from popular wedding startups like Zola and The Knot in that the core product is a crowdfunding platform enabling newly engaged couples to organize wedding and honeymoon financing. 

When Sara and Josh divorced in 2019, the first instinct was to sell the company. However, “the more we pulled apart professionally, the more opportunities I saw to organize the team the way I wanted to and push the priorities that I wanted,” Sara says. Ultimately, Sara decided she would buy her ex-husband out of the company and continue on a new trajectory as CEO. 

“If we hadn’t been working together, our separation process would have been different. There were truths that needed to be spoken that were emotionally difficult in a marriage, that I didn’t want to put on Josh in the middle of a big Target partnership launch.”

The genesis of their business was rooted in their own experience as a married couple. They’d won the affection of Sharks, operating in a $72 billion industry hinging on the commoditization of love and lasting marriage. But the honeymoon phase can’t last forever. Up to 50% of married couples in the United States will split, according to the American Psychological Association.  

Now, Margulis’ experience of divorcing her co-founder is informing new products and a marketing strategy as she continues to iterate on her startup.

Post-divorce, Margulis has been working on a content-focused strategy at Honeyfund that will include a book and a podcast centered around the idea of how couples can successfully navigate marriages. She’s sourcing 14 years’ worth of Honeyfund couples to be interviewed, along with research from psychologists and marriage experts to help couples avoid the doom she went through. 

The secret weapon

Co-founder couples are the first to eagerly point out an obvious advantage. Aligned passions, equal motivation, complementary skillsets and industry experience are a baseline for any co-founder relationship, married or non-married. But being married to your co-founder includes unique challenges like time management and setting boundaries in the boardroom and in the bedroom.

“Co-founder disputes are the number one early startup killer, but it doesn’t have to be that way,” writes Garry Tan, managing partner at Initialized Capital and former Y Combinator partner.

Co-founders aren’t always aligned on big decisions at the company. Is remote work allowed? Who do we accept funding from and how do we deploy capital? Who do we hire for a key executive role?

There are plenty of things to fight about when the stakes are high and your employees’ careers are at risk. And co-founder disharmony has been a key reason many startups flounder. But being proactive about conflict management rather than avoiding it is key — as is knowing when to get professional help from an executive coach or a therapist. This could help early-stage companies recalibrate and dodge turmoil. 

If this line of reasoning holds, co-founder couples may be at an advantage because they already have built-in communication tools in their relationship.

Ulevitch says that for him, couples as co-founders is not a turn off.

“Lots of co-founding teams fall apart, and it’s often to not really knowing each other very well, especially when the going gets tough. Couples actually solve for that aspect nicely.” Founders certainly back up this assertion. 

“One of the company values is to disagree and commit,” says NEXT Trucking’s Lidia Yan. In what she describes as a rare occasion when executives are not aligned on a decision, she says that a vote will take place, and then the team will all commit to the final decision. In order to mitigate risk, founders say it’s key to have well-defined job descriptions. Stay in your zone, and because you are partners, you should already trust each other with what each person is specialized at. 

Being married to your co-founder is a secret weapon, according to Helena Price Hambrecht and Woody Hambrecht.

Haus co-founders Helena Price Hambrecht and Woody Hambrecht

Helena and Woody met during the pre-swipe era on OkCupid in 2012. “I had just joined the online dating space and saw this hot farmer dude. We were a 96% match, so I messaged him,” says Helena of how she first connected with her future husband. 

“I literally thought someone was catfishing me,” thought Woody upon reading Helena’s message. “There’s no way this person is writing me. It took me three or four times to write her back because I wasn’t sure if she was a real person.” 

After some back and forth, the two met at a dive bar in the San Francisco Richmond neighborhood on a date that culminated in drinking 40s and watching rap videos on their phones in the park. “It’s kind of hard to explain, but it was just so easy. We knew we were going to know each other for the rest of our lives. Maybe as friends, maybe more, we didn’t know.” They stayed friends for four years, and were married in 2018. 

Haus’ genesis was a combination of the founders’ backgrounds, and the direct-to-consumer aperitif brand just scored a $4.5 million seed round. Woody owned a wine and aperitif brand but felt that he wasn’t making a big enough impact. Helena, a Silicon Valley branding and production veteran, felt that Gen Z didn’t want to get drunk anymore, and millennials are tired of compulsory, expensive happy hours. In deciding where to put their money, younger consumers are thinking about their bodies, brand image, transparency, sustainability and authenticity.

Helena wondered why the same standards aren’t being applied to as big of an industry as liquor. Why was there not a Glossier or Everlane of alcohol? She felt that while there’s a massive opportunity with all these shifting consumer trends, no one can make a direct-to-consumer alcohol brand. Haus was born from what the founders say was a magic “techie married a wine maker” moment. Woody knew about a legal loophole that could allow the couple to build the Glossier of alcohol. 

“There’s this tiny sliver in the aperitif realm, where if a beverage is made of mostly grapes and is under 24% alcohol, it can be classed as a wine and sold DTC,” explains Helena. They had that idea when they had a three-month-old baby. “We do not have time to do this but we have to do it because it’s the best idea we’ll ever have in our life,” she says. 

“We have a tool kit. We are married. If we have a disagreement about something, we are going to work it out because we’re married. Our skillsets are so clearly defined so there’s not much friction. For us it’s this cool balance where we have two totally separate camps of expertise,” remarks Helena. 

Woody and Helena have another secret weapon. They work with a business coach who has a background in psychotherapy, and believe that all co-founders should go to therapy together, because it’s always deeper than just business. 

Talkspace founders Roni and Oren Frank

Talkspace’s Roni and Oren Frank would agree. Their journey to the mental health world started from a crisis within their own relationship.

“Our marriage was falling apart, and we eventually decided to give it a last chance in couples therapy.” It was the first time either of them had experienced therapy. It taught them how to communicate better, read each other and support each other better. It gave them tools to manage conflict. 

Therapy inspired Roni to leave her career as a software developer and go back to graduate school to study psychology. While studying, she says she was exposed to how broken the mental health system in America is.

Roni says that research showed 25% of Americans suffer from mental health complications, yet an entire two-thirds of that bucket has no access to mental health care. The two founders both felt passionate about fixing this problem based on how instrumental therapy was in rescuing their own marriage. They decided to launch a platform that lets patients and therapists communicate online. 

Talkspace, which wants to open access to mental healthcare, has now raised $110 million, most recently a $50 million Series D. The product ideation for the company was integral to the relationship, and the company now has more than 100 employees. But when Talkspace was a young, 10-person startup, it was a lot harder. Roni notes that the co-founder relationship provoked extreme anxiety.

“I didn’t sleep well, I didn’t eat well and I experienced burnout.” She says she had to force herself to place boundaries when it comes to being consumed with work. However, overall, her experience has been that sharing a mission and a goal empowers the marriage, a healthy inverse.

Co-founder couples rave about the experience of running a business with their spouse. It’s no doubt these companies are developing proprietary products, running winning marketing strategies and generating big rounds and exits.

The married co-founder dynamic appears to be great for business, but time will tell if it works as equally well for marriages.

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Feb
14

6 strategic stages of seed fundraising in 2020

Seed fundraising is rarely easy, but it certainly used to be a lot less complicated than it is today. In a simpler world, a seed investor (or maybe two) would lead a round, which meant that they would write the terms of the deal in a term sheet and then pass that document to their friends to flesh out the funds and eventually close the round. That universe of investors was small and (unfortunately) often cliquish, but everyone sort of knew each other and founders always knew at least who to start with in these early fundraises.

That world is long since gone, particularly at the seed stage. Now there are thousands of people who write checks into the earliest startup venture rounds, making it increasingly challenging for founders to find the right investors. “Pre-seed,” “seed,” “post-seed,” “seed extension,” “pre-Series A” and more terms get batted about, none of which are all that specific about what kinds of startups these investors actually invest in.

Worse, obvious metrics in the past that helped stack-rank investors — like size of potential check — have come to matter far less. In their place are more nuanced metrics like the ability to accelerate a deal to its closing. Today, your greatest lead investor may be the one who ends up writing the smallest check.

Given how much the landscape has changed, I wanted to do two things for founders thinking through a seed fundraise. First, I want to talk about how to strategize around a seed fundraise today, given the radical changes in the market over the past few years. Second, I want to talk about a couple of the archetypes of startup stages you see in the market today and discuss how to handle each of them.

This article focuses on “conventional” seed fundraising and doesn’t get into a bunch of alternative models of VC that I intend to explore in the coming weeks. If you thought traditional seed investing is complicated, wait until you see what the alternatives look like. The upshot, though, is that founders with the right strategy have more choices than ever, and, ultimately, that means there are more efficient ways to use capital to get the desired outcome for your startup.

Thinking through a seed fundraise strategy

Let’s get some preliminaries out of the way. This discussion assumes that you are a startup, looking to fundraise a seed round of some kind (i.e. you’re not looking to bootstrap your company) and that you are looking to close some sort of conventional venture capital round (i.e. not debt, but equity).

The problem with most seed fundraising advice is that it isn’t tailored to the specific stage of the startup under discussion. As I see it, there are now roughly six stages for startups before they reach scale. Those stages are:

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Feb
14

Why startups are raising more venture debt as VC dollars near all-time records

Hello and welcome back to our regular morning look at private companies, public markets and the gray space in between.

As I write to you, SaaS and cloud stocks are busy setting fresh all-time highs and as we’ve seen, venture interest in modern software companies is pushing more money into the sector. But despite it appearing to be an incredibly good time to raise equity funding, venture debt and revenue-based financing appear to be having a moment.

So why are more folks talking about and raising debt to help power their startups, even when valuations are high and there is a lot of venture capital to be raised?

As with all explorations of complex, evolving trends, there’s no one answer. But, some data from a 2019-era survey on venture debt and a conversation I had with equity-free SaaS finance shop Element Finance’s John Gallagher (Element is a Scaleworks spinout) help explain what’s going on. Let’s start with how big the venture debt world is and how fast it is growing and then turn to what’s powering its expansion.

Rising debt

The data we’re going to discuss is directional and probably pretty accurate, which is just fine for what we want to do today: detail a general trend of rising venture debt volume over the past few years to confirm what we’ve presumed to be a trend for some time.

Thanks to a report from last year undertaken by Kruze (a startup accounting and HR consultancy), what the firm described as the “largest survey of the venture debt market” undertaken, including firms that “control well over half of the venture debt dollars in the United States,” here are estimated totals of domestic venture debt volumes for the past half-decade:

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Feb
14

Best of Bootstrapping: ActiveCampaign CEO Bootstraps Using Services to $40M - Sramana Mitra

ActiveCampaign CEO Jason VandeBoom has built a disciplined, profitable business and scaled it to $40 million in 2017 revenue. The company was first bootstrapped using services, and later raised ~$20...

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Original author: Sramana Mitra

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Feb
14

Bootstrapping by Services from Wisconsin: SignalWire CEO Anthony Minessale (Part 2) - Sramana Mitra

Sramana Mitra: What year is this happening? Anthony Minessale: 2002. Sramana Mitra: What was the competitive landscape like? Were RingCentral and Grasshopper around? Anthony Minessale: It was right...

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Original author: Sramana Mitra

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Feb
14

February 20 – 473rd 1Mby1M Mentoring Roundtable for Entrepreneurs - Sramana Mitra

Entrepreneurs are invited to the 473rd FREE online 1Mby1M mentoring roundtable on Thursday, February 20, 2020, at 8 a.m. PST/11 a.m. EST/5 p.m. CET/9:30 p.m. India IST. If you are a serious...

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Original author: Maureen Kelly

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Feb
14

This co-op wants to put money back into patients’ hands

Too often, people are asked to give away their insights and time for free. Jen Horonjeff, founder and CEO of healthcare startup Savvy, knows this first hand and is trying to change that by applying a cooperative model to her business.

As an infant, Horonjeff was diagnosed with juvenile idiopathic arthritis. Since then, she has been diagnosed with a number of autoimmune conditions. Seven years ago this month, she had a brain tumor removed.

“I’ve just always been somebody who’s been a patient,” Horonjeff tells TechCrunch.

Horonjeff’s experience in the health system led her to become a human factors engineer focused on human-centered design, she says. In that area, work centers on trying to fit the world to people with different abilities, rather than the other way around. From there, Horonjeff, who has her doctorate in environmental medicine, has been most interested in patient-centered outcomes.

“So what matters to patients and what affects their health and health behaviors outside of just the traditional things [are what] we’ve been looking at,” she says. “It was being on that side of the professional equation that I heard my colleagues and partners talking about wanting to help patients, but they were never talking with them. And what they were talking about were not the same priorities as the patient communities that I was part of. And because I’m very open about my condition, they kept coming to me to ask me to be that sole patient representative. When they kept coming back to me, that was really a signal of a diversity issue, since I am white with a Ph.D. in New York City.”

Horonjeff’s discomfort with the lack of diversity led her to become a matchmaker between healthcare innovators and patient communities. This is where the idea for Savvy was born.

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Feb
14

Roundtable Recap: February 14 – You Have 30 Seconds to Capture My Attention - Sramana Mitra

As our guest this week, we had Deepak Jeevankumar, Managing Director at Dell Technologies Capital. We discussed his fund’s focus and preferences. PhonePass As for entrepreneur pitches, first up we...

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Original author: Sramana Mitra

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Feb
14

Big meditation money, new VC funds, and how do you value Airbnb?

Hello and welcome back to Equity, TechCrunch’s venture capital-focused podcast, where we unpack the numbers behind the headlines.

After having a good time with NEA’s Rick Yang last week, we thought we’d bring on another venture capitalist. So this week Danny and I had Elliott Robinson from Bessemer swing over for the show. As it turned out, he was about as correct as guest as possible as not only did the topics of the week line up with where he invests, he’s also friends with some of the folks that we discussed on the show.

So what did we talk about? A whole host of things including two rounds:

Headspace’s fascinating $93 million hybrid, debt-and-equity round that pushes its known capital raised to date ahead of arch-rival Calm’s own.Nova Credit’s $50 million round to help power its cross-border credit system. (We all thought this one was smart.

Then we turned to two new funds, including Battery’s battery of new capital vehicles that add up to $2 billion. In this part of the discussion we also touched on capital velocity, and why some firms are writing the same number of checks, but still need more capital. On the other end of the capital spectrum, Equal Ventures put together its first fund, and we riffed on the health of the micro-fund ecosystem.

The news run continued, with our trio touching on Airbnb’s recent financial results, and our wonderment about how to price the firm, the closure of Brandless (RIP), and the issues at SoftBank.

All that and we had to leave Lyft’s fascinating earnings and Uber’s profit promises alone as we ran a bit long with just that set of topics. A good week, and we’re back Monday morning!

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Feb
14

Cloud Stocks: Qualys Counts on Google and Microsoft for Growth - Sramana Mitra

Cloud services security provider Qualys (Nasdaq: QLYS) recently announced its fourth-quarter results that failed to particularly impress the market. But the company is focusing on attracting the...

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Original author: MitraSramana

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Feb
14

Where top VCs are investing in construction robotics

Venture capital has been flooding the various subverticals under the robotics umbrella in recent years, and the construction space is one of the largest beneficiaries.

Last November, we surveyed 13 of the top robotics-focused VCs to find out which areas of robotics are exciting them most going into 2020. One of the most common areas of attention respondents highlighted were startups focused on construction and manufacturing. In 2019 alone, the robotics space saw roughly 600 venture-backed fundraising rounds, while construction companies successfully raised roughly 200 venture rounds.

With our 2020 Robotics + AI sessions event on the horizon in early March, we’re diving back into the sector to learn about the attributes of construction attracting robotics VCs the most and which types of startups VCs are actually writing checks for in 2020. We asked 16 leading people who actively invest in construction robotics and work at firms spanning early to growth-stage to share what’s exciting them most and where they see opportunity in the sector:

Rohit Sharma, True VenturesMatt Murphy, Menlo VenturesGrace Ge, Menlo VenturesTravis Connors, Building Ventures Saman Farid, Baidu VenturesAaron Jacobson, New Enterprise Associates (NEA)Shaun Abrahamson, Urban UsAtin Batra, Twenty Seven VenturesBen Bayat, NextGen Venture PartnersAndrew Ackerman, Dreamit VenturesDuncan Turner, SOSV & HAXZach Aarons, MetaProp VCNiki Pezeshki, Felicis VenturesAvidan Ross, Root VenturesKia Nejatian, Plug & PlayMiles Tabibian, Plug & Play

Rohit Sharma, True Ventures

True Ventures has been investing in industrial automation broadly for over 4 years, focusing on founders who bring technology to market that eliminates repetitive manual labor and multiplies human productivity by automating routine tasks.

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Feb
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Scaling to a $700M Exit: Zain Jaffer, CEO of Vungle (Part 3) - Sramana Mitra

Zain Jaffer: Just to set the context, Vungle was recently acquired by a private equity group called Blackstone for $780 million all cash. The transactions closed towards the end of 2019. At that...

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Original author: Sramana Mitra

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