Feb
02

A picture-perfect San Francisco Tudor mansion made famous by a painting and owned by Nicholas Cage is on the market for $11 million — see inside

This stunning San Francisco mansion asking $11 million has several claims to fame. It was featured in the painting "An Evening Journey," by artist Evgeny Lushpin, and it was once owned by actor Nicolas Cage, according to The Wall Street Journal. Cage bought the home for $9.4 million in 2006, and sold for only $8.5 million in 2008.

Now, the home is once again for sale, requesting $10.95 million. The home is listed with Mark Allan Levinson at Compass.

Scroll to see photos of this luxurious and historic mansion.

Original author: Mary Meisenzahl

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Feb
02

A box-office analyst explains how the Oscars impact a movie's earnings, and what film got one of the biggest bumps in recent memory

Oscar nominations can give a movie a box-office boost, but it's harder to come by in the age of streaming and online video.Paul Dergarabedian, the Comscore senior media analyst, told Business Insider that it depends on whether a movie still has an "untapped audience.""American Beauty" experienced one of the biggest Oscar bumps in recent memory, Dergarabedian said, earning 43% of its domestic box office after nominations were announced.There's no clear example this year of a movie experiencing anything close to what "American Beauty" did, but recent movies like "Green Book" and "Room" show that it's still possible.Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories.

The Oscars are right around the corner, and the nominated movies will be vying for the most coveted trophies in Hollywood. But there's another prize that movie studios likely hope for during Oscar season: box-office gold.

As best-picture contenders expand into more theaters ahead of the big night, the relationship between Oscar recognition and box-office success is a tricky one.

"Oscar nominations can supercharge a movie's prospects, but it depends on its release in the marketplace," Paul Dergarabedian, the Comscore senior media analyst, told Business Insider.

One of the best examples is a 20-year-old drama with a connection to this year's best-picture frontrunner, "1917," Dergarabedian said.

1999's "American Beauty," from "1917" director Sam Mendes, won best picture at the 2000 Oscar ceremony. Leading up to its major victories, which also included best director (Mendes), the movie received one of the most significant Oscar bumps in recent memory.

"American Beauty" Dreamworks

'American Beauty' surged at the box office after gaining major Oscar nominations

"American Beauty" — which opened in limited release in September, 1999 and received a wide release that October — had earned $75 million domestically by the time Oscar nominations were announced on February 15, 2000. It wasn't bad for a movie made on a $15 million budget (before inflation), but it was only in seven theaters the week before the announcement and had all but stalled. 

Then it expanded to 1,287 theaters the weekend of February 18 and grossed another $5.6 million over that weekend, its 24th in theaters, according to Comscore. It suddenly jumped from 54th in the box-office rankings back into the top 10. It went on to make $130 million in North America, 43% of which came after nominations were announced. 

"There's no downside to a best-picture nomination," Dergarabedian said. "['American Beauty'] had played out by the end of 1999 and was hovering in a handful of theaters, and then boom." 

20 years later, significant Oscar bumps are harder to find, but not out of the question

The post-nominations success of "American Beauty" is significant in part because it got a wide release to theaters in October, four months before its Oscars-fueled surge at the box office, and was already relatively successful during its original theatrical run.

20 years later, there's no guarantee that it would benefit so much financially from Oscar nominations.

This year, there's not a clear example of a movie experiencing anything close to what "American Beauty" did.

"1917" is finding success, but it was released right in the thick of awards season, so any "bump" directly related to Oscars buzz is difficult to gauge. The same can be said for many nominated movies that are released late in the year to seemingly better resonate with Oscar voters.

"Green Book" Universal

A significant Oscars box-office bump depends on how long a movie has been in theaters and "how much untapped audience" there still is for a nominated movie, according to Dergarabedian. In the age of streaming and online video, that's rare — but not totally unheard of.

The best-picture winner "Green Book" and 2015's "Room," a best-picture nominee, are two prime examples of movies that benefited from Oscars buzz. The former hit theaters in November, but still made 50% of its $85 million domestic box office after nominations were announced two months later, according to Comscore.

Similarly, "Room" made 65% of its box office after getting major nominations. In both cases, the studios — Universal and A24, respectively — gave them a substantial theatrical expansion after nominations were announced.

"'Room' is a textbook example of a movie that might have languished in obscurity without the wave of critical acclaim and awards buzz," Dergarabedian said.

Each best-picture nominee's domestic box-office percentage after the nominations were announced are below, according to Comscore, along with their original release date (nominations were announced on January 13):

"1917" — 62% (released December 25)"Ford v Ferrari" — 3% (November 15)"Jojo Rabbit" — 15% (October 18)"Joker" — 0.2% (October 4)"Little Women" — 21% (December 25)"Once Upon a Time... in Hollywood" — 0.5% (July 26)"Parasite" — 18% (October 11)"The Irishmen" — N/A (Netflix)"Marriage Story" — N/A (Netflix)
Original author: Travis Clark

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Feb
02

Facebook released its first-ever Super Bowl ad, and likely paid just as much as Trump and Bloomberg for 60 seconds during Q4

Facebook is airing its first-ever Super Bowl ad during Q4, and the 60-second commercial spot featuring Sylvester Stallone and Chris Rock is already available to watch on YouTube.The "Ready to Rock?" ad, which highlights the diverse uses of Facebook Groups, likely cost just as much as the 60-second ads bought by Donald Trump and Mike Bloomberg.Trump and Bloomberg purchased their campaign ads for more than $10 million, and since 30-second spots cost around $5.6 million this year, Facebook probably spent more than $10 million too.Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories.

Facebook is bringing its 2020 ad campaign to the Super Bowl, with its first-ever national commercial set to air during Q4. The theme of the Facebook ad, which is available now on YouTube, is the wide variety of interests served by Facebook Groups.

Both actor Sylvester Stallone and comedian Chris Rock are featured in the ad, which is called "Ready to Rock?" and is themed around the diversity of different Facebook Groups related to rocks, such as rock climbing, rocking chairs, experiment rocketry, and a Rocky Balboa group.

At a full 60 seconds long, Facebook's ad is likely around as expensive as the highly publicized campaign ads running for 2020 contenders Mike Bloomberg and President Donald Trump. Bloomberg spent more than $11 million on his 60-second ad, and Trump likely spent the same, as sources knowledgeable about Fox's pricing said a minute cost about $11.2 million.

On average, a 30-second spot during this year's Super Bowl costs $5.6 million, so the $11.2 million price point adds up. Facebook almost definitely spent more than $10 million but didn't immediately respond to Business Insider's request for comment about the total cost.

The Super Bowl ad is part of Facebook's year-round "More Together" campaign, which encourages Facebook users to connect in groups about their various interests and experiences.

Facebook is also running high-profile digital takeovers on Super Bowl Sunday, including a YouTube masthead and ads on sites like NFL.com, Hulu AdBlitz, and Allrecipes.com, where people will be finding Super Bowl recipes, the company told Business Insider.

Original author: Kat Tenbarge

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Feb
02

Here are all of the new products Apple is expected to launch this year (AAPL)

Apple is expected to launch a slew of new products this year, including the rumored iPhone 12, a new iPad Pro, an Apple Watch that can track your sleep, and other gadgets.It's looking like Apple could make a big push into augmented reality by outfitting its new iPhones and iPads with 3-D camera sensors, possibly setting the stage for an AR headset.Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories. 

Last year was a big moment for Apple product launches. Not only did the company keep with its schedule of releasing a trio of new smartphones and an Apple Watch in September, but 2019 also held a few surprises such as a new iPod touch and two new pairs of AirPods.

This year is bound to be just as eventful for Apple, if the rumors and reports are to be believed. Apple is expected to release its first 5G-enabled iPhones in the fall as well as a new low-cost smartphone among other devices.

Here's a look at some of the new Apple gadgets we're expecting to see in 2020. 

Original author: Lisa Eadicicco

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Feb
02

Report: WeWork has a new CEO and he’s a real estate — not a tech — exec

If WeWork wanted to cement the impression that it no longer strives to be viewed as a tech company but rather as a real estate giant focused on leasing space, it would probably choose a veteran from the real estate world.

That’s just what it has done, too, according to a new story from the WSJ that says the company, which was famously forced to pull its initial public offering last fall, has settled on Sandeep Mathrani as its new top banana.

Mathrani has spent the last 1.5 years as the CEO of Brookfield Properties’ retail group and as a vice chairman of Brookfield Properties. Before joining the Chicago-based company, he spent eight years as the CEO of General Growth Properties. It was one of the largest mall operators in the U.S. until Brookfield acquired it for $9.25 billion in cash in 2018.

Mathrani also spent eight years as an executive vice president with Vornado Realty Trust, a publicly traded real estate company with a market cap of $12.5 billion. (Brookfield is slightly smaller, with a market cap of roughly $8 billion.)

Mathrani will reportedly relocate to New York from Miami, where, according to public records, he owns at least one high-rise apartment that he acquired last year.

He’ll be reporting to Marcelo Claure, the SoftBank operating chief who was appointed executive chairman of WeWork in October in order to help salvage what Claure has himself said is an $18.5 billion bet on WeWork by SoftBank.

Specifically, Claure told nervous employees at an all-hands meeting shortly after his appointment, “The size of the commitment that SoftBank has made to this company in the past and now is $18.5 billion. To put the things in context, that is bigger than the GDP of my country where I came from [Bolivia]. That’s a country where there’s 11 million people.”

Claure — who earlier spent four years as the CEO of SoftBank-backed Sprint — was reportedly trying to hire T-Mobile CEO John Legere for the CEO’s post. Legere later communicated through sources that he had no plans to leave T-Mobile, yet just days later, in mid-November, Legere, who joined T-Mobile in 2012, announced that he’s stepping down as CEO after all, though he will remain chairman of the company. (According to the Verge, his contract is up April 30.)

Sprint and T-Mobile were expected to merge, though 13 states, led by the attorneys general of New York and California, are suing to block the deal over concerns that the merger would hurt competition and raise prices for users’ cell service.

Either way, Mathrani is a stark contrast to WeWork’s co-founder and longtime CEO Adam Neumann, who was pressured to resign from the company after his sweeping vision for it as a tech company that enables customers to seamlessly shift from one WeWork location to another while also paying for software and services was met with extreme skepticism by public market investors.

Indeed, though SoftBank marked up the company’s value over a number of private funding rounds — all the way to a brow-raising $47 billion — public investors began raising questions about its real value, and WeWork’s governance, as soon as WeWork publicly released the paperwork for its initial public offering.

Between the in-depth look its S-1 provided into the company’s spiraling losses; the degree of control held by Neumann (not fully understood previously); and a series of unflattering reports about his leadership style, including beginning with the WSJ; it didn’t take long before the company was forced to abandon its IPO dreams.

No doubt it’s now Mathrani’s job to eventually resuscitate those.

According to the WSJ, SoftBank has already established a five-year business plan that it expects will get the company to profitability and allow it to be cash-flow positive by some time next year.

Part of that plan clearly involved layoffs; it cut 2,400 employees in late November, shortly before the Thanksgiving holiday in the U.S. It has also been selling off companies that were acquired at Neumann’s direction but are seen as non-core assets.

What WeWork does not intend to curtail, reportedly, are its efforts to open new locations, even if it acquires them at a slower pace than in previous years.

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Feb
01

Startups Weekly: One Medical IPO raises unicorn hopes

Maybe ‘tech-enabled’ is good enough for public markets?

Everybody’s talking about revenues after WeWork, but maybe you still don’t need to have all the right numbers in place to achieve a strong IPO? That’s the initial takeaway Alex Wilhelm has after One Medical’s successful debut this week. One might think it looks like a tech-enabled unicorn, that doesn’t generate the recurring revenue and margins of a true tech-powered business.

But, the doctor-services provider closed up almost 40% on a somewhat ambitious price of $14 per share. It had raised $532.1 million during its time as a private company, with a fairly recent valuation of $1.71 billion. With its closing value of $19.50 per share today, One Medical is now worth $2.38 billion.

That’s despite gross margins under the 50% mark, deeply minority recurring revenue and 30% revenue growth in 2019 at best, as Alex noted on Extra Crunch Friday. It is now worth about 8.5x its trailing revenues.

“There are cash-generating SaaS companies that are growing only a bit more slowly that are trading for lower multiples,” he has previously observed. “I cannot see what makes the company — an unprofitable, only moderately growing upstart with non-recurring revenue — worth a SaaS multiple. Especially as its gross margins aren’t great and aren’t improving.”

Meanwhile, mattress-seller Casper, which also filed new information about its IPO plans this week, has numbers that aren’t all that different. But it’s just hoping to not take too big of a haircut on its last private valuation, Alex separately noted on EC.

Maybe public investors still care about a great story, despite the rough debuts of Blue Apron, SmileDirect, WeWork and a range of others? Certainly, One Medical’s work to improve medical care is laudable regardless of these questions (in fact, it won the Best Healthcare Startup Crunchie in 2013).

Stay tuned for more.

How acquirers look at your company

Let’s say the public markets are not for you, though, and instead you want to get acquired. Ed Byrne of Scaleworks looks at this both as a startup investor and, through a separate part of his company, as an acquirer, and has kindly provided a detailed explainer on Extra Crunch for startup founders.

Here are his key deciders from the purchaser perspective:

Downside protection: Are we confident we are not going to lose money?Median: If we work hard, focus on good business operations and execute the low-hanging fruit, will we be able to grow this business enough to make a solid return (solid return being an increased valuation multiple from a higher revenue base)?Upside: If one of our category creation ideas pans out, and we succeed in winning a very targeted segment of the market, is there an opportunity for this business to be a real winner and provide outsized returns?

Buying and taking on someone else’s business is always a scary proposition — the unknown unknowns — but if you get comfortable with the fundamental of the company, acquisitions can be a real accelerator compared to the epic effort — and high risk — of starting from scratch.

Where top VCs are investing in travel, tourism and hospitality tech

Want to build the next Airbnb? In this week’s investor survey, Arman Tabatabai spoke to some of the most active and successful investors in travel-oriented industries today — the general mood is pretty positive, with M&A expected to help incumbents boost consumer-facing service quality, and new technologies cracking open more possibilities for companies of all sizes.

Respondents include:

Bonny Simi, JetBlue Technology VenturesPete Flint, NFXTige Savage, Revolution VenturesBrad Greiwe, Fifth WallPrashant Fonseka, Tuesday Capital

A conversation with ‘the most ambitious female VC in Europe’

Starting a company in Europe? Want to? Here’s how Blossom Capital cofounder and long-time investor Ophelia Brown explains the opportunities in the region to Steve O’Hear.

Having now been in this ecosystem for so long, I think the inflection point is the number of successful high-growth companies that we’ve produced from Europe, be it Adyen, Spotify, Farfetch, Elastic and Klarna, where my [Blossom] partner Louise was as well, I think what it has really shown to people is that you can take risk at the early stage and build meaningful businesses from Europe. And I think that’s really encouraged a new next generation of entrepreneur. And Europe is changing its mindset that it’s okay to fail.

And I think the other shift is that now people are saying, “okay, well, I’m not going to move to the valley and trying to build my teams because talent is so competitive and so expensive over there, I want to build in Europe.” And then finally, the great engineering, design, product talent here and then being helped by funds like us to scale it at the beginning and early stages, and then going on to produce some really interesting things. I don’t think U.S. funds are coming over here because they see cheaper pricing and lower valuations. They’re coming over here because they are looking at markets and industries and finding the potential next best thing over in Europe.

Around the horn

SoftBank wants its on-demand portfolio to stop losing so much money (TC)

Tracking corporate venture capital’s rise over the past decade (EC)

True product-market fit is a minimum viable company (TC)

Gauging email success, invite-only app launches and other growth tactics (EC)

All eyes are on the next liquidity event when it comes to space startups (TC)

Essential advice for securing your small startup (EC)

Adding India to your business (TC)

#EquityPod

This week’s episode features Alex along with co-host Danny Crichton talking about:

Kleiner Perkins’ fast investment of a recent $600m roundFree Agency’s tech play for talent managementThe huge round for “Ring for enterprise” VerdakaInsurance startup funding trendsUpdates on the on-demand warsThe latest in tech IPOs

Get Startups Weekly in your inbox every Saturday morning, just sign up here

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Feb
01

Colors: Basque Hermitage, San Juan de Gaztelugatxe - 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
01

Justin Kan opens up (Part 1)

Greg Epstein Contributor
Greg M. Epstein is the Humanist Chaplain at Harvard and MIT, and the author of The New York Times bestselling book "Good Without God." Described as a “godfather to the [humanist] movement” by The New York Times Magazine in recognition of his efforts to build inclusive, inspiring and ethical communities for the nonreligious and allies, Greg was also named “one of the top faith and moral leaders in the United States” by Faithful Internet, a project of the United Church of Christ and the Stanford Law School Center for Internet and Society.

I am a chaplain trying to understand the tech world, and to me, that means I need to understand people like Justin Kan.

Who, after all, most “represents tech?” There are the obvious answers: secular deities like Bill Gates, Elon Musk or the late Steve Jobs. Or there are the often-marginalized figures on whom I’ve often preferred to focus in writing this column: the immigrant women of color who built the industry’s physical infrastructure; social workers and feminist philosophers who study how tech really works on a subconscious level, and how to fix it; or the next generation of leaders who represent the future of tech even as they worry about the inequalities they themselves embody.

But you can’t understand what has come to be the power and mystique of tech without also understanding the minds of its enigmatic founders. Justin Kan is a serial entrepreneur and founder who, whether you appreciate his public voice or not, certainly stands out as one of the most interesting examples of that classic Silicon Valley archetype: a tech entrepreneur ostensibly doing much more than just selling technology.

Kan famously started his business career not long after he graduated from Yale in 2005 by creating Justin.tv, a tech platform from which he broadcast his own life 24/7. Fifteen years later, Kan’s original idea seems quaint, given the level of self-promotion and oversharing that’s become commonplace. And yet, as he was arguably the first person to turn surveillance capitalism into not only overt performance art but also a noteworthy career in startups and venture capital, one can’t help but take the idea of Justin Kan seriously, at the very least as a harbinger of what is to come.

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Feb
01

What Nutanix got right (and wrong) in its IPO roadshow

Back in 2016, Nutanix decided to take the big step of going public. Part of that process was creating a pitch deck and presenting it during its roadshow, a coming-out party when a company goes on tour prior to its IPO and pitches itself to investors of all stripes.

It’s a huge moment in the life of any company, and after talking to CEO Dheeraj Pandey and CFO Duston Williams, one we better understood. They spoke about how every detail helped define their company and demonstrate its long-term investment value to investors who might not have been entirely familiar with the startup or its technology.

Pandey and Williams reported going through more than 100 versions of the deck before they finished the one they took on the road. Pandey said they had a data room checking every fact, every number — which they then checked yet again.

In a separate Extra Crunch post, we looked at the process of building that deck. Today, we’re looking more closely at the content of the deck itself, especially the numbers Nutanix presented to the world. We want to see what investors did more than three years ago and what’s happened since — did the company live up to its promises?

Plan of attack

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Feb
01

Uber could soon be banned from its most profitable European city. We asked its rivals how they will avoid the same fate.

After years of back-and-forth with regulators, Uber could be kicked out of London by the end of 2020. The UK capital's transport regulator blasted Uber on safety, saying 14,000 fraudulent rides took place where drivers hadn't uploaded accurate photos to their profiles.Business Insider asked competitors Kapten, Bolt, Ola and Xooox how they planned to avoid the same fate as Uber in the city. Ola, the Indian ride-hailing app, announced on Friday it would launch in London this month. Click here for more BI Prime stories.

After a troubled few years battling transport authorities, Uber looks set to lose its license in London at some point in the next 12 months. 

In November, London's transport regulator Transport for London (TfL) refused to renew the ride-hailing firm's license, highlighting a "pattern of failures" on safety and security. In some 14,000 cases, it said, Uber drivers had completed trips using an incorrect profile picture.

FILE PHOTO: A Bolt (formerly known as Taxify) sign is seen on the taxi car in Riga Reuters

Appealing the decision has kept Uber on the road for now, with an as-yet-to-be-determined court date set to resolve the matter once and for all – but when and if Uber is kicked out of London, what happens next? 

Today, the Silicon Valley startup still dominates the London market, with around 45,000 drivers and millions of users. But competitors have been mobilizing, both to ensure they're best placed to lure new drivers onto their platform and to scoop up Uber's customer base. 

Competitors capitalized on Uber's troubles. French competitor Kapten, which launched in London in 2019, said in a statement: "London needs ride-hailing, but doesn't need Uber." It added: "We believe it is the duty of a responsible ride-hailing operator to work cooperatively with regulators." 

Around the same time another opponent, Bolt, sent its customers an email, claiming news of Uber's woes had brought in "thousands of new sign-ups already". 

Catty putdowns aside, it's clear the ride-hailing firms are eyeing the potential gap in the market. But with that opportunity comes risk: On the surface, none of these companies offer a discernibly different service to Uber, and will be subject to the same regulatory pressures. 

Business Insider asked four of the best-known ride-hailing startups in London how they plan to avoid the troubles that have plagued Uber. 

(Disclaimer: All figures below apply to London only.) 

Original author: Martin Coulter

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May
28

Anthropic is the new AI research outfit from OpenAI’s Dario Amodei, and it has $124M to burn

Airbnb quietly acquired Eliot, a real-time pricing calculator for rental property owners, in a previously unreported 2018 deal, an Airbnb spokesperson confirmed to Business Insider.

Airbnb bought up Eliot, an on-demand rental pricing tool, in a previously unreported deal in October 2018, an Airbnb spokesperson confirmed to Business Insider.

Eliot, founded in 2017 by Edouard Tabet, analyzed "billions of vacation rental pricing points to accuratly [sic] predict short-term rental revenue, trends and price surge events," its website said in 2018, according to The Internet Archive.

On-demand or "surge" pricing, where prices for a product fluctuate as demand ebbs and flows, has been an essential aspect of platform-based companies like Uber, Lyft, and Airbnb, allowing them to make more money during busy times and keep consumers coming during slower periods.

In 2015, Airbnb rolled out its Smart Pricing feature, which it said "allows hosts to set pricing controls that automatically adjust to demands in order to stay competitively priced." Since Smart Pricing's debut predated the Eliot by several years, it's unclear whether Airbnb wanted to acquire the company's technology and talent, buy out a potential competitor, or both.

Airbnb did not disclose how much it paid for the company or what the terms were, though Tabet's LinkedIn profile lists his current job title as "head of growth, Growth & Traffic" at Airbnb. The domain for Bold's website now redirects to a company called Velo Payments, which says it's "making the payouts process accurate, reliable and easy." Business Insider could not confirm whether there is any connection between the companies.

Bold is among several acquisitions made by Airbnb that the company has been relatively quiet about, in contrast to its purchases of companies like HotelTonight and Luxury Retreats. With Airbnb preparing to go public in 2020, investors will be paying close attention to how each of its more than 20 past purchases have paid off.

Original author: Tyler Sonnemaker

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Feb
01

'I didn't even google it': Elon Musk's girlfriend Grimes describes her pregnancy and how she feels 'woefully ill prepared'

Musician Grimes, who is reportedly the girlfriend of tech billionaire Elon Musk, opened up about her pregnancy and how she feels "woefully ill prepared."She posted a photo on Instagram asking her followers for pregnancy advice and apologizing for not promoting her album more or posting on social media more often.She went on to describe her pregnancy for the first time, talking about how it has "been good" but taken a toll on her physically.Grimes said she felt "woefully ill prepared" because she said she didn't really understand what she was getting into."I didn't even google it, I was just like sure [why] not," she concluded her post.Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories.

Musician Grimes, who is reportedly dating tech billionaire Elon Musk, opened up about her pregnancy and how she feels "woefully ill prepared."

Grimes wrote on Instagram asking for pregnancy advice and apologizing to fans for not promoting her album more.

"This whole thing has been a bit of an ordeal," Grimes wrote. "Had some complications early on, a decent second trimester but starting to hurt everywhere at 25 wksz [sic]."

Despite the complications, the pop star mentioned that "it's been good too," but has taken a toll on her physically. Grimes said she felt "woefully ill prepared" because she said she didn't really understand what she was getting into.

"I didn't even google it, I was just like sure [why] not," she concluded her post.

The musician first ignited pregnancy rumors on Instagram after posting a semi-nude photo of her with a fetus Photoshopped onto her stomach with a caption about being "knocked up." She subsequently posted another photo on Twitter of her looking pregnant, to which Musk cryptically responded "x is y."

The couple officially went public with their relationship after appearing together at the Met Gala in 2018.

Original author: Lauren Frias

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Feb
01

Mark Zuckerberg says he's become 'more religious' after becoming a father in rare public discussion about faith: 'The last few years have been really humbling for me' (FB)

Mark Zuckerberg has grown "more religious" over the past few years.The Facebook CEO said the birth of his daughters and the challenges his company have faced have influenced his faith.The 35-year-old tech exec made the rare public comments about religion at a conference in Utah.Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories.

Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg says he's grown more religious over the last few years as a result of fatherhood and the "challenges we've been through as a company."

In an on-stage interview at a conference in Utah on Friday, the 35-year-old technology executive made rare public comments about his Jewish faith.

Asked about who his mentors are Zuckerberg segued into a discussion about religion. "I've become more religious," he said: "The last few years have been really humbling for me."

He went on: "I think there's a comfort in knowing and having confidence that there are things bigger than you ... it's why I have so much faith in democracy overall, it's why I care so much about giving people a voice."

Zuckerberg attributed his evolution to two factors: The issues his company has faced over the last few years, and the birth of his two daughters, now aged four and two. 

He added: "You have to believe in things that are bigger than yourself."

Zuckerberg subsequently jokingly clarified that "I did not mean to say that God is a mentor."

The billionaire chief executive grew up in Dobbs Ferry, New York in a Jewish household. He only rarely talks about his faith, and in a reply to a Facebook post in 2016 said that after a period of questioning in his life, he no longer considered himself an atheist. " I was raised Jewish and then I went through a period where I questioned things, but now I believe religion is very important," he wrote.

His wife Priscilla Chan is Buddhist, he wrote in a Facebook post in 2015.

Got a tip? Contact this reporter via encrypted messaging app Signal at (+1) 650-636-6268 using a non-work device, email at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it., Telegram or WeChat at robaeprice, or Twitter DM at @robaeprice. (PR pitches by email only, please.)

Original author: Rob Price

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May
28

Meet Justos, the new Brazilian insurtech that just got backing from the CEOs of 7 unicorns

Airbnb bought payments startup Bold Financial Technologies in November 2016 in a previously unreported deal, a spokesperson confirmed to Business Insider.Bold aimed to make international payments easier and more secure for large marketplaces like Airbnb and Uber.

In November 2016, continuing its under-the-radar buying spree, Airbnb acquired Bold Financial Technologies, a startup that aimed to make international payments safer and more convenient, an Airbnb spokesperson confirmed to Business Insider.

Bold, started in 2014 by Sean Safahi and Noah Spirakus, targeted clients like Airbnb, Uber, Lyft, and eBay that facilitate payments to lots of recipients, Safahi told the Phoenix Business Journal. Airbnb, whose platform had just surpassed two million listings earlier in 2016, had a growing need for managing payments to hosts across the globe.

Airbnb did not disclose how much it paid for the company or what the terms were, though Safahi now works on "payments partnerships" at Airbnb, according to his LinkedIn profile. The domain for Bold's website now showcases a company called Velo Payments, which says it's "making the payouts process accurate, reliable and easy." Business Insider could not confirm whether there is any connection between the companies.

Bold is among several acquisitions made by Airbnb that the company has been relatively quiet about, in contrast to its purchases of companies like HotelTonight and Luxury Retreats. With Airbnb preparing to go public in 2020, investors will be paying close attention to how each of its more than 20 past purchases have paid off.

Original author: Tyler Sonnemaker

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Feb
01

Airbnb quietly acquired cloud storage startup Minbox in 2016

In 2016, Airbnb bought Minbox, a tool for syncing files across cloud storage services like Google Drive and Dropbox, an Airbnb spokesperson confirmed to Business Insider.The previously unreported purchase was one of several quiet acquisitions by Airbnb in 2016.Airbnb did not say how much it acquired Minbox for or how it has integrated Minbox's team and technology.

Airbnb, in a previously unreported May 2016 transaction, bought a small cloud service startup called Minbox, an  Airbnb spokesperson confirmed to Business Insider.

Minbox let users sync files across multiple cloud service providers like Dropbox, Google Drive, Box, Evernote, Slack and OneDrive. Started in 2013 by Alexander Mimran, Michael Lawlor, and Simon Fletcher, the company raised a seed round of $800,000 from Correlation Ventures, Rho Ventures, and other individual investors, according to the Wall Street Journal.

Airbnb did not disclose how much it paid for Minbox, what the terms were, or what happened to its team or product. However, it appears to be an "acqui-hire," as Mimran and Lawlor both went on to work at Airbnb, according to their LinkedIn profiles, and the Minbox app is no longer available for download on its website.

Minbox is among several acquisitions made by Airbnb that the company has been relatively quiet about, in contrast to its purchases of companies like HotelTonight and Luxury Retreats. With Airbnb preparing to go public in 2020, investors will be paying close attention to how each of its more than 20 past purchases have paid off.

Original author: Tyler Sonnemaker

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Jan
31

Airbnb quietly acquired property management startup Proprly in 2016

Airbnb quietly bought Proprly, a property management service for short-term rentals, in a previously unreported May 2016 deal, an Airbnb spokesperson confirmed to Business Insider.The purchase suggests that Airbnb's appetite for expanding beyond bookings to become a one-stop shop for travel predated its 2018 acquisition of property management software Luckey.

In a previously unreported deal in May 2016, Airbnb bought Proprly, a property management service that managed cleaning, guest check-in, and other aspects of the rental process on behalf of hosts, an Airbnb spokesperson confirmed to Business Insider.

The popularity of platforms like Airbnb and HomeAway's VRBO has given rise to a related industry of startups, like Proprly, that cater to the newfound needs of property owners. Countless companies have popped up to offer everything from cleaning services to home security to insurance, custom-tailored for short-term rental operators.

Airbnb has mostly stayed out of offering those services itself, preferring instead to partner with other providers. But its acquisition of Luckey, a property management software company, caused some observers to speculate whether it might be adjusting its strategy.

While Airbnb eventually shut down Proprly, the purchase suggests it may have been experimenting with building out more in-house services as far back as 2016.

Airbnb did not disclose how much it paid for the company or what the terms were, though Proprly's founder, Randy Engler, joined Airbnb shortly after the deal and currently works on its Olympics partnership team, according to his LinkedIn profile.

Proprly is among several acquisitions made by Airbnb that the company has been relatively quiet about, in contrast to its purchases of companies like HotelTonight and Luxury Retreats. With Airbnb preparing to go public in 2020, investors will be paying close attention to how each of its more than 20 past purchases have paid off.

Original author: Tyler Sonnemaker

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Jan
31

Outgoing IBM CEO Ginni Rometty made her full $5 million cash bonus in 2019, and might still get another $13.3 million in stock (IBM)

The day before IBM formally announced that CEO Ginni Rometty would step down in April, the company released some information about her 2019 pay package.Rometty received her full cash bonus of $5 million for the year — something that hasn't always happened during her tenure, during which she's overseen a difficult period of transition for IBM.The filing also showed that in 2019, she was granted $13.3 million in stock, which was slated to be paid out as a performance-based reward through 2021.It's not clear if or how Rometty will get that money, given that she's leaving in the first part of 2020, though the company may speed up the process as part of a retirement package.Investors may get more clarity when IBM releases its next proxy statement, which it typically does in March.Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories.

The day before IBM formally announced that it had selected a successor for CEO Ginni Rometty, the company released some information about her 2019 pay package.

Notably, Rometty earned her full 2019 performance bonus of $5 million in cash. That's in addition to her annual salary of $1.6 million, also in cash. She hasn't earned that $5 million every year, by the way — last year, her bonus was just over $4 million, well below the target.

In a proxy statement released in March 2019, IBM said that for 2019 it had made "no change to Mrs. Rometty's base salary or target annual incentive. She was granted an annual long-term incentive award valued at $13.3 million."

It was to be comprised of shares dependent on her hitting performance goals (65%) between the years 2019-2021, with the remaining as restricted stock units, not tied to performance (35%). 

However, on Tuesday, days before the company announced her planned retirement, IBM disclosed via an SEC form, "The Long-Term Incentive Awards will be granted on June 8, 2020" and that 100% of this grant was performance-based as RSUs.

It's not entirely clear from the filing if this is the same $13.3 million stock grant discussed in the 2019 proxy. This tranche was scheduled to be granted in June of this year.

It is also not clear yet if IBM will accelerate any portion of Rometty's unearned long-term grants as part of her retirement package. Rometty will be staying on as CEO for one more quarter, through April, and then continue on as chairman through 2020.

This form promised more information about pay in its 2020 proxy, which it usually files in March.

But for now, she finished 2019 with her full $5 million, which has got to feel good.

Rometty had a rough run at IBM overseeing the company through a major transformation as the IT world stopped buying so much hardware and software from legacy players like IBM and turned to cloud services, often from companies like Amazon Web Services and Microsoft.

IBM's revenue was $104.5 billion in 2012, the year she took over, it said. Revenues shrunk to $77.2 billion in 2018 and returned to growth at $79.6 billion in 2019, the company said. Rometty also purposefully sold off poor performing units, shedding $2 billion worth of lackluster businesses, she told CNBC.

With the happy news that the company had returned to growth in 2019, Rometty also promised that IBM would continue to grow, not just in revenue but profit margins, too.

The share price bounced for a few days after the earnings report, but investor confidence didn't hold and the stock declined to its pre-earnings price by the day before her retirement announcement.

With news that she's turning over the keys to 29-year company veteran Arvind Krishna, the exec that orchestrated IBM's $34 billion Red Hat acquisition, the stock is on the rise again.

Original author: Julie Bort

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Jun
02

OroraTech’s space-based early wildfire warnings spark $7M investment

In mid-December, the $967 million data management company DataStax faced a round of layoffs, impacting somewhere between 60 to 100 employees, three sources estimated.Late last year, DataStax hired former Apigee CEO Chet Kapoor, who took that company public and later sold it to Google, to replace Billy Bosworth as chief executive.Under Kapoor's leadership, DataStax will focus more on its cloud offerings and engaging with its developer community amid rising competition with tech titans like Amazon and Microsoft.The changes arrive as DataStax comes under significant competitive pressure: Amazon Web Services, the market-leading cloud platform, launched a service based on the same technology as DataStax's flagship product."We do not comment on rumors and speculation," a DataStax spokesperson said.Click here for more BI Prime stories. 

The $967 million data management startup DataStax, which was previously reported to be planning a 2019 IPO, faced a major round of layoffs right before Christmas, and shortly after a leadership shakeup that saw the arrival of a new CEO.

Somewhere between 60 to 100 people were laid off in mid-December, three sources close to the company estimated. According to Pitchbook, DataStax has about 500 employees. The professional services and customer success team were hit the hardest by the layoffs, sources said, and employees in the graph database, solutions engineering and sales teams were also impacted. 

DataStax builds software using Apache Cassandra, a popular open source database that was originally started at Facebook. Internally, some DataStax employees believe the company was too slow to offer versions of its software that were optimized to run on cloud platforms like Amazon Web Services or Microsoft Azure, and that it was struggling to compete with those tech titans, who offer their own database products, four sources said. 

The layoffs were driven from a change in direction under new CEO Chet Kapoor, who joined in October, to focus more on the company's cloud offerings, a source said. A key part of Kapoor's strategy is to build the company's appeal to developers and generate a loyal community of users as a bulwark against competitors, three sources said.

"We do not comment on rumors and speculation," a DataStax spokesperson said.

DataStax has had several leadership departures and changes in the past year, including another major round of layoffs. In July, the company laid off a little less than 10% of staff and moved some employees into new teams as part of a restructuring. 

"This has been a time of tough decisions and we have done everything we can to transition these valued people with dignity and compassion," DataStax's former CEO Billy Bosworth and cofounder Jonathan Ellis wrote in a blog post at the time. 

DataStax CEO Billy Bosworth DataStax

In October, Kapoor, the former Apigee CEO known for taking that company public and later selling it to Google for $625 million, joined DataStax as chief exec, replacing Bosworth.

Since then, chief product officer Ed Anuff, chief financial officer Don Dixon, and chief strategy officer Sam Ramji, all former Apigee employees, have joined DataStax's leadership team.

Kapoor's tenure as CEO was quickly met with a new challenge to the company: Amazon Web Services, the market-leading cloud platform, in December launched a service based on Cassandra, the open source database software at the core of DataStax's flagship product.

"DataStax is the largest contributor of code, service, support, and training to the Apache Cassandra project and community, and we recognize the sign of a flourishing project is greater market attention and investment," Ellis said in a statement at the time. "With that, we welcome Amazon's news as another vehicle that accelerates Cassandra adoption."

Do you work at DataStax? Got a tip? Contact this reporter via email at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it., Signal at 646.376.6106, Telegram at @rosaliechan, or Twitter DM at @rosaliechan17. (PR pitches by email only, please.) Other types of secure messaging available upon request. You can also contact Business Insider securely via SecureDrop.

Original author: Rosalie Chan

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Jun
02

Startup Alley tickets are selling out in record numbers

Hulu CEO Randy Freer is set to exit the streaming company, Disney announced on Friday.The streaming company's leadership will report to execs within Disney's direct-to-consumer and international business as part of a reorganization.Disney is bringing Hulu closer to help scale all of its platforms more quickly, it said.Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories.

Hulu CEO Randy Freer is stepping down from the streaming company as Disney brings Hulu deeper into its streaming segment, Disney announced on Friday.  

Leaders at Hulu will report directly to execs within Disney's direct-to-consumer and international business as part of the reorganization. 

The leadership change comes after Disney agreed in May to acquire Comcast's minority stake in Hulu and take full ownership of the streaming company. Disney has since made Hulu a key part of its streaming strategy as the general-audience complement to its family-friendly Disney Plus service and its sports-focused ESPN Plus platform.

The company is bringing Hulu closer to help scale all of its platforms more quickly, it said.

"I want to thank Randy for his leadership the last two years as CEO and for his collaboration the past several months to ensure an exceptionally bright future for Hulu," Kevin Mayer, Disney's head of direct-to-consumer and international, said in a statement. "With the successful launch of Disney+, we are now focused on the benefits of scale within and across our portfolio of DTC businesses. Further integrating the immensely talented Hulu team into our organization will allow us to more effectively and efficiently deploy resources, rapidly grow our presence outside the U.S. and continue to relentlessly innovate. There is a tremendous amount of opportunity ahead, and I am confident in our ability to accelerate our positive momentum and better serve consumers."

Freer said in a statement: "I am grateful for my time at Hulu, and the opportunity to work and learn with an incredibly talented and dedicated group of people. I also want to thank Kevin and The Walt Disney Company, as well as NBCUniversal and Fox, for providing me the opportunity to lead Hulu during a time of tremendous growth and significant industry transformation. Hulu has established itself as a leading choice for consumers looking for the best TV service available today, and I am confident Hulu will thrive inside Disney under DTCI's leadership and resources."

Freer will remain in his role for the next several weeks to help with the transition.

Original author: Ashley Rodriguez

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Jul
15

The best Prime Day headphone deals from Bose, Sony, Beats, and more

The primary-care startup One Medical just went public.

On Thursday, One Medical priced its shares at $14 apiece, the low end of its expected range of $14-$16 a share. The stock started trading at $18 a share late Friday morning, closing the day 58% higher than where it priced at $22.07 a share. 

It trades under the ticker ONEM.

One Medical CEO Amir Dan Rubin. One Medical When One Medical opened for business in San Francisco in 2007, its goal was to upend the way people got medical care by making it easy and convenient to see a doctor. The company charges a $200 annual fee and bills your insurance. One Medical had 397,000 members and operated in 77 locations as of September 30, according to the filing.

At the close Friday, One Medical is valued at roughly $2.7 billion, based on the more than 122 million of shares outstanding disclosed in its S-1.

According to the company's filings, One Medical's net losses deepened as membership climbed. From 2017 to 2018, losses widened from $31.7 million to $44.4 million. For the first nine months of 2019, One Medical's net loss was $34.2 million.

The company had about 397,000 members as of September 30, up from 346,000 at the end of 2018.

In its filing, One Medical listed the top shareholders in the company and their stakes.

These are One Medical's top investors, and how much their stakes are worth:

The Carlyle Group, a private-equity firm that in 2018 led a $220 million private financing round for One Medical, taking on a massive stake in the company. As of the IPO, Carlyle Group owns 28.2 million shares, or 22.9% of One Medical after the offering, a stake worth $621.4 million based on the closing share price Friday. Benchmark Capital, a Silicon Valley venture firm that was an early investor in One Medical, owns 13.6 million shares of One Medical, worth $300.8 million at the close of the first day of trading. The firm has a 11.1% stake in the company after the offering.Oak Investment Partners, another early investor in One Medical, owns 12 million shares, or 9.8% after the offering. That stake is worth $265.3 million based on the closing price on Friday. Tom Lee, the founder of One Medical who served as its CEO until 2017, owns 8.2 million shares of One Medical ahead of the IPO, or 6.6% after the offering, a stake worth $181.9 million. According to the filing, Lee resigned from One Medical's board of directors in August. A doctor and entrepreneur, Lee has since gone on to found a new healthcare startup called Galileo, which offers a mix of online and in-person care.DAG Ventures, another early investor in One Medical, owns 8 million shares, or 6.5% after the offering. That stake is worth $176.1 million.GV, which led One Medical's $30 million Series F round in 2013, owns 6.2 million shares of One Medical, or 5% after the offering, a stake worth $136.5 million. JPMorgan, which led One Medical's $65 million financing round in 2015, owns 5.7 million shares, or 4.7%. That stake is worth $126.4 million.Maverick, another early investor in One Medical, owns 5.5 million shares, or 4.4%, a stake worth $120.5 million.Amir Dan Rubin, 50, is the president, CEO, and chair of the board at One Medical. Rubin joined One Medical in August 2017 after working as an executive at UnitedHealth Group's Optum division. Before that, he was the CEO of Stanford Health Care. He owns 5.3 million shares of One Medical, a 4.2% stake in the company after the offering. That stake is worth $117.2 million.Andrew Diamond, 49, is the chief medical officer of One Medical, overseeing the doctors that practice at One Medical's clinics. He is also a member of the company's board of directors. He has served as the company's chief medical officer since September and was the company's national medical director before that. Diamond has been practicing with One Medical since 2007, according to his LinkedIn profile. He owns 304,309 shares in One Medical, worth $6.7 million.Kimber Lockhart, 33, is One Medical's chief technology officer and a member of the board of directors. She joined the company in 2014 and became chief technology officer in 2015. Before One Medical, she worked at the cloud-storage company Box. Lockhart owns 620,390 shares in One Medical, worth $13.7 million.Kalen Holmes, 53, is a member of One Medical's board, which she joined in January 2017. A former Starbucks executive, Holmes also sits on the board of Red Robin and Zumiez. She owns 31,915 shares of One Medical, worth $704,364 at the opening price.  David Kennedy, 49, a partner at Serent Capital, has been on the board of One Medical since 2007. He owns 381,341 shares, worth $8.4 million at the opening price.

This article was published on January 6 and has been updated.

Original author: Lydia Ramsey

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