• StrictlyVC: August 25, 2017

    Friday! [Clouds part, rainbows appear in background.] Hope you have a fantastic weekend, everyone.:)

    Friends in Texas, we’re thinking of you!

    Top News in the A.M.

    A South Korean court just found 49-year-old Samsung heir Lee Jae-yong guilty of bribery and sentenced him to five years in prison. The decision could freeze up decision-making at the global electronics powerhouse, suggests the Associated Press.

    Uber just abandoned its plans to move into a massive, 380,000-square-foot building in Oakland.

    Sponsored By . . .

    StrictlyVC is brought to you this week by Rosebud Communications. We’re small, scrappy, and get the job done. Our retainer is $6,250 per month, and we love going up against the bigger guys who charge $12K or more. Reach us at info@rosebudpr.io; operators are standing by.

    Racing Against Big Rivals, India’s Ezetap Raises $16M

    There are more than 1 billion cellphone users in India. The country also abruptly went cashless last November, when Prime Minister Narendra Modi announced that millions of high-denomination currency notes would no longer be legal tender.

    These two developments play nicely into the vision of Ezetap, a six-year-old, Bangalore-based startup whose software as a service is used by more than 200,000 merchants; they’re using its technology to transact payments via everything from physical cards to online payments to wallets to one-click payments in applications via India’s new UPI system.

    Indeed, Ezetap and its ilk, which were once seen as innovators, are quickly becoming mainstream, with Indians being forced to switch to electronic payments quickly. The company’s biggest challenge now: capturing market share as fast as possible from its better-known and more richly funded regional competitors, including the Alibaba and SoftBank-backed outfit Paytm, whose parent company was recently valued at $7 billion; and MobiKwik, which reportedly raised around $35 million earlier this month from the non-bank finance company Bajaj Auto Finance.

    Investors seem to think Ezetap has a shot against its deeper-pocketed rivals. The company just closed on $16 million in new funding led by JS Capital Management, which is the venture firm of Jonathan Soros, with participation from Jeff Skoll Group and earlier backers Social Capital and Horizons Ventures.

    “India is on the brink of a massive surge in consumer consumption, but not until the underlying payments infrastructure is securely in place,” Social Capital founder Chamath Palihapitiya said in a statement to the press about Ezetap, whose $3.5 million Series A round Social Capital led back in 2012.

    That puts the company “in an incredible position,” Palihapitiya said.

    Time will tell what Ezetap is able to make of it.

    More here.

    (Other) New Fundings

    Amitree, a nearly five-year-old, San Francisco-based online platform that helps home buyers navigate the process of buying a house, has raised $7 million in funding led by Vertical Venture Partners, with participation from Accel Partners and Seven Peaks Ventures. TechCrunch has more here.

    Ember Technologies, a five-year-old, Westlake Village, Ca.-based maker of temperature-controlled mugs, has raised $13 million in fresh capital from a long list of private individuals. Ember has now raised more than $20 million altogether, including from StubHub CEO Scott Cutler, eBay Chief Product Officer RJ Pitman, singer Demi Lovato, and Robert Brunner, chief designer of Beats by Dre and the former head of design at Apple. L.A. Biz has more here.

    Go-Jek, a seven-year-old, Jakarta, Indonesia-based ride-hailing startup that rivals Uber and Grab regionally, has raised $100 million from JD.com according to Reuters. The money is part of a $1.2 billion round that Go-Jek is trying to close and which will give the company a $3 billion post-money valuation, says TechCrunch. More here.

    Mirador, a three-year-old, Portland, Ore.-based digital small business lending platform, has raised an undisclosed amount of funding from CMFG VenturesMore here.

    Revive Kombucha, a seven-year-old, Petaluma, Ca.-based employee and family-owned brewery, has raised $7.5 million in Series B funding led by Peet’s Coffee. A long list of individual investors also joined the round. More here.

    Stride Health, a three-year-old, San Francisco-based benefits startup for independent workers, has raised $23.5 million in Series B funding led by F-Prime Capital Partners, with participation from Portage3 Ventures and earlier backers Venrock and New Enterprise AssociatesMore here.

    New Funds

    Baidu, along with the biggest life insurer in China, China Life, are forming a 7 billion yuan ($1 billion) private equity fund to target internet and other technology investments, the companies said earlier today. VentureBeat has more here.

    Primus Capital, a 34-year-old, Cleveland, Oh.-based venture capital and private equity firm, is looking to raise up to $500 million for its eighth fund, according to an SEC filing.

    People

    Melinda Gates: I spent my career in technology. I wasn’t prepared for its effect on my kids.

    Early Uber investor Shervin Pishevar  who was introduced to Uber by Benchmark’s Bill Gurley and Matt Cohler — has penned a letter to Uber’s board, demanding that Benchmark Capital drop its lawsuit against former CEO Travis Kalanick. Pishevar has also filed a legal motion, asking for Benchmark’s case to be dismissed. More here.

    Verve, an ad tech firm that has raised at least $64 million, has quietly laid off staff in recent weeks in a sign of the company’s struggles.

    Also Sponsored By . . .

    Nicky Goulimis is a fast-talking, smart-as-a-whip Brit who came to America for a Stanford MBA. But something she found surprised her: In spite of her great UK credit history, she had a hard time getting a car, apartment, and credit card in the U.S. So she co-founded Nova, which enables immigrants to bring their credit “passport” with them — unlocking a world of quality customers for lenders. (And yes, they’re a Financial Solutions Lab company, today’s sponsor.)

    Data

    There are more unicorns in the startup world than ever before, but fewer companies are reaching a $1 billion valuation than in years past, says Pitchbook. More here.

    Essential Reads

    These former Apple engineers just built a $700 door lock.

    Uber‘s board is gathering today to talk CEOs; there will be plenty of bickering, too.

    Google is issuing refunds to advertisers over fake traffic, though some are questioning the level of those refunds.

    Detours

    Turd Reich: San Francisco dog owners are laying a minefield of dog poop for some out-of-town guests.

    The innovation that changed fashion forever.

    UFC champion Conor McGregor or a pretentious barista?

    Retail Therapy

    Crosley Rocket Jukebox. (It would not suck to have this in your office.)

  • StrictlyVC: August 24, 2017

    Hi, all, happy Thursday. Hope you’re enjoying these last weeks of August.:)

    A quick note to our reporter friends out there, especially those of you in the Bay Area. If you are interested in attending our upcoming SVC event the evening of September 27, let us know; we’re happy to send you a press pass. (Full-time journalists only, please.)

    We also wanted to mention that over at TechCrunch, on Tuesday, September 19, the second day of TC’s upcoming Disrupt show, we’re organizing a breakfast discussion around fundraising tips from successful female founders. It’s going to be a lively chat, including with Jini Kim of Nuna (whose company has raised $90 million to date) and Elizabeth Iorns of Science Exchange (which closed its Series C earlier this year). This is a closed-door session, so won’t be live-streamed. If you’re a reporter who’s attending the event and you’d like to come, just let us know and we’ll make sure to get you a pass.

    Top News in the A.M.

    Holy b’doly. WeWork just announced a $4.4 billion investment from the SoftBank Group and its Vision Fund. More here.

    Sponsored By . . .

    StrictlyVC is brought to you this week by Rosebud Communications. We’re small, scrappy, and get the job done. Our retainer is $6,250 per month, and we love going up against the bigger guys who charge $12K or more. Reach us at info@rosebudpr.io; operators are standing by.

    A Battery Company with Bold Claims Just Closed a $30M Seed Round

    There’s no shortage of battery companies battling with Tesla for market share. Outfits around the world are building out battery capacity to fill the needs of automakers and energy storage developers alike — so much so that overcapacity has led to lower battery prices.

    Still, a year-old, L.A.-based battery company called Romeo Power thinks its future looks very bright, thanks to a combination of talent, materials, and techniques that it claims enables the company to achieve at least 25 percent more energy density — and sometimes upwards of 200 percent more — than existing lithium-ion battery packs. In fact, its very tagline is: “The world’s most energy dense battery packs.”

    It’s a bold claim, and one that skeptics will surely dismiss as little more. But Romeo has a number of things working in its favor. For starters, cofounder and CEO Mike Patterson has previously founded — and sold — three companies, including InAuth, a mobile authentication and fraud detection company that American Express bought last year for undisclosed terms.

    The 190-person company features a number of veterans of SpaceX, Samsung, Tesla, and Amazon, so there’s institutional know-how about manufacturing, procurement, design, and about battery packs specifically. Indeed, cofounder and CTO Porter Harris spent a year at Faraday Future as its chief battery architect; before that, he spent four years at SpaceX as an energy storage engineer. In fact, Porter has been working on batteries for the last decade, dating back to an earlier engineering gig at The Aerospace Corporation, in Southern California.

    Romeo is also fueled by capital. Specifically, it just closed on $30 million in seed funding —  all of it from its management team, unnamed family offices, and past shareholders who’ve invested in Patterson’s startups and “were willing to throw into the next one,” he says. (Asked if he has something against venture capitalists — or vice versa — Patterson says that’s not the case. “I’m not saying we won’t raise venture in the future, but not now.”)

    More here.

    (Other) New Fundings

    51zhaoyou.com, a two-year-old, China-based business-to-business  e-commerce platform that trades in diesel, gasoline, and kerosene, has raised $31.8 million in Series B funding led by DCM Ventures. Others to join the round include the venture capital firm SIGGGV CapitalYunqi Partners, the Uber-like truck logistics start-up HuochebangSky9 Capital and Chuangban Investment. China Money Network has more here.

    AbleTo, a nine-year-old, New York-based telehealth company that matches people with therapists and behavioral coaches, has raised $36.6 million in funding led by Bain Capital Ventures, with participation from Aetna and earlier backers .406 VenturesSandbox IndustriesHLM Venture Partners, and Horizon Healthcare ServicesMore here.

    Blend, a five-year-old, San Francisco-based technology company focused on consumer lending, just raised $100 million in Series D funding. The round was led by Greylock Partners, with participation from Emergence Capital8VCLightspeed Venture Partners, and Nyca Partners. The company has now raised $166 million altogether. More here.

    Clearink Displays, a five-year-old, Fremont, Ca.-based developer of reflective display technology for various industry applications, has raised $5 million in Series C funding. The round, which is half subscribed, was led by Vestech International, which is an investment fund backed by a number of Asian display manufacturers. More here.

    Cubic Telecom, an 11-year-old, Dublin, Ireland-based supplier of data connections for cars and other IoT devices, has closed a new $46.5 million funding round from investors, including chipmaker Qualcomm and Audi‘s venture arm. TechCrunch has more here.

    Descartes Labs, a three-year-old, Santa Fe, N.M.-based data company that’s applying machine learning to satellite imagery, has raised $30 million in Series B funding led by March Capital, with participation from seed investors Crosslink Capital and the company’s Series A lead, Cultivian SandboxMore here.

    Eko Communications, a five-year-old, New York and Thailand-based company that operates a messaging app targeted at businesses, has closed a strategic investment of $2 million to grow in Japan and expand into Europe and the U.S.. The funding was led by Japanese corporate Itochu, which provided $1 million and will partner to help expand sales. Earlier backers, including Gobi Ventures, also joined the round. TechCrunch has more here.

    G2 Esports, a four-year-old, Berlin, Germany-based esports team, has raised an undisclosed amount of funding, including from FC Barcelona midfielder André Gomes, Eric Mindich’s Everblue Management, and MACRO VentureMore here.

    Gabi, a year-old, San Francisco-based company that monitors insurance rates from various carriers, then advises users on their optimal coverage, has raised $2.6 million in seed funding from SV Angel, A.Capital Ventures, and Germany’s Project A Capital. TechCrunch has more here.

    GaiaWorks, an eight-year-old, China-based workforce management software company, has raised $19 million in additional Series B funding led by Warburg Pincus, with participation from Matrix Partners China and Genesis Capital. China Money Network has more here.

    Maihaoche, a three-year-old, China-based new car e-commerce platform, has raised $29 million in Series B funding led by Welight Venture Capital(founded by a former EVP at Tencent Holdings), with participation from Northern Light Venture Capital and the South Korean venture capital firm LB Investment. China Money Network has more here.

    New Funds

    Magma Ventures, an 18-year-old, Israel-based venture capital firm, has raised $24 million for its first growth equity fund, shows an SEC filing. Magma appears to have closed its fourth and most recent early-stage fund with $150 million in 2014. More here.

    Scopus Ventures, a year-old, Los Angeles-based venture capital firm, is looking to raise upwards of $25 million for its debut venture fund, shows an SEC filing. One of its managing partners, Robert Mai, was formerly a wealth advisor and family office consultant in New York. Another, Eran Gilad, was formerly the CEO of Tracx, a social media management company. More here.

    SparkLabs Group started in 2012 with a Seoul-based accelerator dedicated to boosting South Korea’s then-nascent startup ecosystem. Now it’s going back to its roots with the launch of a $50 million fund for early-stage Korean startups that want to expand globally. TechCrunch has more here.

    IPOs

    Nothing too notable today, though you might want to check out the sixteen things CEOs should do before an IPO, according to former OpenTable CEO (and now Andreessen Horowitz partner) Jeff Jordan.

    Exits

    The online food ordering-and-delivery market, once very hot, appears to be cooling down a little in China, says TechCrunch. Baidu, the country’s search giant confirmed that it has just sold its Xiaodu food delivery subsidiary to Rajax, which operates Ele.me, China’s leading food delivery business. More here.

    People

    Former Twitter COO Adam Bain has joined the board of a new $500 million special purpose vehicle launched by Social Capital that plans to help startups go public without enduring the dreaded IPO process.

    Susan Fowler, the former Uber engineer whose blog post about the company’s troubling internal workings eventually led to Travis Kalanick’s ouster, has a new message for the Supreme Court: get rid of arbitration agreements.

    Also Sponsored By . . .

    Eddie Lim had a problem. He had sold his company to Visa and was prepping to start another, when he tried to refi his home in Palo Alto. Interest rates? Super low. His home value? High. The answer? No dice; he was unemployed. Which made him wonder: Why is home wealth so illiquid in the first place? And so he started Point, a company selected by the Financial Solutions Lab, today’s sponsor. Here’s the rest of his story.

    Essential Reads

    Apple plans to offer a premium version of its iPhone for $999.

    Roku isn’t only maintaining its lead as the top streaming media player device in the U.S.; it’s increasing it.

    Detours

    Salaries of top TV talent revealed.

    Aging parents have lots of stuff, and their children don’t want it.

    Now you can rent a dad in Japan.

    Retail Therapy

    Miniature Eames chair and ottomon, perhaps to go with the real deal.

    Honestly, we’re not so sure about this trend (if you were to ask our opinion).

  • StrictlyVC: August 23, 2017

    Well, hello, and happy Wednesday.:)

    Top News in the A.M.

    VIPKid, an online education company that matches Chinese students with North American teachers and has been exploding as parents seek out high-quality education for the children, just raised $200 million, exactly one year after raising $100 million. Investors include Sequoia Capital China and Tencent Holdingssays Bloomberg, The company is reportedly now valued at $1.5 billion. (Worth noting: Founder and CEO Cindy Mi is speaking at TechCrunch’s upcoming Disrupt event next month.)

    Wall Street banks are warning that a downturn is coming.

    Sponsored By . . .

    StrictlyVC is brought to you this week by Rosebud Communications. We’re small, scrappy, and get the job done. Our retainer is $6,250 per month, and we love going up against the bigger guys who charge $12K or more. Reach us at info@rosebudpr.io; operators are standing by.

    This Purveyor of “Human Grade” Pet Food Just Raised $12.6M from VCs

    Ollie, a two-year-old, New York-based subscription service that sells what it calls human-grade pet food, has raised $12.6 million in Series A funding.

    The round was led by Canaan Partners, with participation from WME Ventures, Rosecliff Ventures, RiverPark Funds, Correlation Ventures and earlier backers Primary Venture Partners and Lerer Hippeau Ventures. It brings the company’s total funding to roughly $17 million, including a $4.4 million seed round led by Primary and Lerer Hippeau last fall.

    The company certainly takes dog food seriously, promising to customize recipes based on each dog’s “unique needs” as well as recommending the perfect portion and delivering that precise amount of food to its customers’ doors.

    It uses a third-party USDA kitchen in Pennsylvania to produce its meals, which include chicken, beef, and lamb heart dishes with butternut squash, rutabaga, chickpeas, potato, cranberries, kale, strawberries, and cod liver oil, among other ingredients that you probably do not associate with dog food (yet!).

    More here.

    (Other) New Fundings

    Art19, a six-year-old, San Francisco-based podcast technology company, has raised $7.5 million in Series A funding led by Bertelsmann Digital Media Investments and DCM Ventures. Other investors participating in the round included United Talent AgencyGallo DigitalZach Coelius and Array Ventures. TechCrunch has more here.

    Baozhunniu, a two-year-old, Beijing, China-based customized insurance products company, has raised $14 million in Series B funding led by the venture firm Marathon Venture Partners. Other investors in the round include Matrix Partners ChinaXinyi CapitalZhongguancun Dahe Capital, and Denise Peng, a venture partner at GGV Capital. China Money Network has more here.

    Forward Networks, a four-year-old, Palo Alto, Ca.-based company whose technology aims to help engineers and operators visualize and search complex networks to debug problems, verify network-wide policy correctness, and predict network behavior prior to making major changes, has raised $16 million in Series B funding. DFJ led the round; it was joined by investors that include Andreessen Horowitz and A.Capital Ventures. TechCrunch has more here.

    ICEYE, a two-year-old, Espoo, Finland-based satellite-based service aiming to provide access to near-real-time imagery from space, has raised $8.5 million in funding led by Draper Nexus, with participation from True VenturesLifeline VenturesSpace AngelsDraper Associates and Finnish Funding Agency for Innovations. ICEYE has now raised $18.7 million altogether since its founding. TechCrunch has more here.

    Innowatts, a four-year-old, Houston, Tex.-based energy analytics startup, has raised $6 million in Series A funding led by Shell Technology VenturesMore here.

    Lumity, a three-year-old, San Mateo, Ca.-based HR benefits startup that aims to help employers optimize and simplify health care costs, has raised $19 million led by DFJ. TechCrunch has more here.

    Memphis Meats, a two-year-old, San Francisco-based “clean” meat startup (it uses animal cells versus actual animals), has raised $17 million in Series A funding led by DFJ. Other investors to join the round include CargillBill GatesRichard BransonAtomicoNew Crop CapitalSOSVFifty YearsKBW VenturesInevitable VenturesSuzy WelchKyle Vogt, and Kimbal Musk. VentureBeat has more here.

    Raised Real, a year-old, San Francisco-based subscription meal delivery service designed for growing babies, has raised $5 million in funding from privately held food delivery giant Schwan’s CompanyMore here.

    Roost, a three-year-old, Sunnyvale, Ca.-based smart home technology startup, has raised $10.4 million in Series B funding led by Aviva Ventures, with participation from Desjardins Insurance and Fosun RZ CapitalMore here.

    Shanghai Distributed Technologies, a young, Shanghai-based company behind Onchain, a local version of blockchain technology, has raised its first round of institutional funding from Fosun Group, says Reuters. The size of the investment is not being disclosed. More here.

    Sliver.TV, a two-year-old, Cupertino, Ca.-based esports entertainment platform in 360-degree VR, has raised $9.8 million in Series A funding led by Danhua Capital, with participation from Heuristic Capital PartnersZP CapitalDCMSierra VenturesThe VR FundSamsung Next Fund and Sony Innovation Fund. TechCrunch has more here.

    Square Roots, a year-old, Brooklyn, N.Y. -based urban farming accelerator that invites applicants to participate in a yearlong program where they’re trained in urban farming, has raised $5.4 million in seed funding. Collaborative Fund led the round for the company, which was founded by Elon Musk’s brother, Kimbal Musk. TechCrunch has more here.

    SquadLocker, a six-year-old, Warwick, R.I.-based startup that allows athletic teams to build and launch custom online gear stores quickly and easily, has raised an undisclosed amount of Series B funding led by Causeway Media PartnersMore here.

    StoryStream, a five-year-old, U.K.-based platform that helps marketers centralize and display all their best social media content, has raised roughly $1.5 million in funding led by MMC VenturesMore here.

    Truss, a year-old, Chicago-based commercial real estate tech platform, has raised $7.7 million in Series A  led by Navitas Capital, with participation from Hyde Park Angels. TechCrunch has more here.

    IPOs

    Snap‘s lead IPO underwriter, Morgan Stanley, just lowered its price target for the stock — again.

    Exits

    Okay, so this is more like an attempted exit, but: Match Group, the parent company of a variety of dating apps, offered to acquire Bumble for $450 million over the summer, according to TechCrunch. A source close to the company suggests that Bumble is valued at over $1 billion. More here.

    People

    James Damore,  the engineer who was fired by Google after he criticized the company’s diversity policies for ignoring differences between the sexes, has hired civil rights lawyer Harmeet Dhillon to explore filing a lawsuit.

    Former CIA agent Valerie Plame Wilson has launched a campaign to buy Twitter to kick off the president.

    Donald Trump is reportedly eyeing his potential opponents in 2020 and at the top of his list of possible challengers: Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg.

    Also Sponsored By . . .

    StrictlyVC is also brought to you by the Financial Solutions Lab at CFSI, which is laser-focused on fintech solutions that can help more Americans become financially healthy. FinLab alums have raised $130 million in follow-on funding, and you may know some of them: Digit, Even, PropelEARN, Albert, EarnUpWiseBanyan + more. Don’t miss a thing: Sign up for blog updates.

    Essential Reads

    Google and Walmart are partnering to challenge Amazon.

    Why Apple has scaled back its ambitions for a self-driving car.

    Uber drivers can now choose what specific types of trips they are willing to accept.

    Snapchat‘s first scripted fare is coming by year end.

    All the companies from day two of Y Combinator‘s Demo Day.

    Detours

    Fake shadows in Redwood City.

    The SpaceX space suit revealed.

    Why you should eat an enormous breakfast.

    Retail Therapy

    Here’s how to make your own “Game of Thrones” cape, before it’s too late.

  • StrictlyVC: August 22, 2017

    Hi, happy Tuesday.:) SO MANY CALLS TODAY. (We didn’t forget you.)

    Top News in the A.M.

    Sonos says its customers won’t be given an option to opt out of its new privacy policy, leaving them with sound systems that may eventually “cease to function.”  They don’t seem too happy about the development.

    Sponsored By . . .

    StrictlyVC is brought to you this week by Rosebud Communications. Everybody’s still talking about the solar eclipse today. We’d say the sun did a good job of “getting the word out.” Smart, on-message media coverage = higher valuations. We’re the hardest-working PR firm in the business. Send us an email; operators are standing by: info@rosebudpr.io

    This 23-Year-Old Just Closed Her Second Fund with $22 Million

    Laura Deming is not your typical venture capitalist. Then again, she isn’t typical in many ways.

    For starters, the 23-year-old, New Zealand native was home schooled, developing a love of math and physics and, perhaps most interestingly, the biology of aging, along the way. In fact, she became so preoccupied with the last that at age 11, Deming wrote to Cynthia Kenyon, a renowned molecular biologist who specializes in the genetics of aging, asking if she could visit Kenyon’s San Francisco lab during a family trip to the Bay Area. Kenyon said yes. When, soon after the visit, Deming asked if she could work in the lab, Kenyon said yes again.

    Deming’s family moved to the U.S. to make it possible, and it’s highly doubtful they regret the decision. Indeed, by age 14, Deming was a student at MIT, and two years after that — at the tender age of 16 — she was a college drop-out, having been accepted into Peter Thiel’s two-year-old, Thiel Fellowship program, which gives $100,000 to young people “who want to build new things.”

    Often, those “new things” evolve along the way. Not for Deming, who pitched the idea of a venture fund that would support aging-related startups, and has since turned that early concept into Longevity Fund, an early-stage venture outfit that just closed its second fund with $22 million.

    Earlier today, we caught up with Deming, who’s now 23, to learn more about her path — and which technologies she’s betting on to extend the human lifespan.

    It’s incredible that this all started with an email to a UCSF professor.

    [Cynthia Kenyon] is the most amazing person I’ll ever meet.

    What did you do in her lab, exactly?

    We were working with tiny, see-through worms. You put them on plate of jelly and you see what happens if you change their genetic material. Do they live longer or die faster? If you starve them, they live longer. If you starve worms and also turn off certain genes, could you get them to live even longer? I was naïve, but I really wanted to make the longest-living worms ever. [Laughs.]

    More here.

    New Fundings

    Animusoft, a three-year-old, Miami, Fl.-based software platform for drones, has raised $1 million from investors, including from Accelerated Growth Partners, a South Florida network of angel investors. The Miami Herald has more here.

    CommandScape, a newly launched, Delray Beach, Fl.-based company that offers control centers, video surveillance and security for buildings, has raised an undisclosed amount funding from founder Jim Clark, who is best known for cofounding Netscape but who moved to Florida years ago to jump into real estate investing. USA Today has more here.

    Databricks, a nearly four-year-old, San Francisco-based machine learning and analytics platform that was founded out of the UC Berkeley AMPLab, has raised $140 million in Series D funding led by Andreessen Horowitz, less than a year after raising $60 million led by New Enterprise Associates. The company has now raised $247 million altogether. TechCrunch has more here.

    Druva, a nine-year-old, Sunnyvale, Ca.-based cloud-based data protection provider, has raised $80 million in fresh funding led by Riverwood Capital. Other participants include Sequoia Capital IndiaNexus Venture PartnersNTT FinanceTenaya Capital and other, earlier backers. The company has now raised $200 million altogether. VC Circle has more here.

    Elucida Oncology, a three-year-old, New York-based clinical development stage company whose technology aims to identify and treat an array of solid tumor cancers, has raised $10.9 million in funding, shows an SEC filing.

    GoodTime, a year-old, San Francisco-based startup that uses employee data to schedule interviewers faster and more cost effectively, has raised $2 million in seed funding led by Big Basin Capital and Walden Venture Capital. TechCrunch has more here.

    Hyper Anna, a two-year old, Sydney, Australia-based startup that has created a kind of virtual, AI-powered data analyst, has raised $16 million in funding led by Sequoia Capital China, with participation from seed investors Reinventureand AirTree Ventures. Australia’s Financial Review has more here.

    Julive, a three-year-old, China-based online-to-offline real estate agency, has raised “tens of millions of U.S. dollars” in a round led by Vertex Venture Holdings, with participation from earlier backer Source Code Capital. China Money Network has more here.

    ShoCard, a two-year-old, Cupertino, Ca.-based blockchain-based identity management system, has raised $4 million in funding. Morado and AME Cloud Ventures led the round with participation from Storm VenturesDanhua CapitalCorrelation VenturesRecruit Strategic Partners and Robert Tinker, the founder and former CEO of MobileIron. More here.

    Sigstr, a four-year-old, Indianapolis, Ia.-based cloud platform for employee email personalization, has raised $5 million in Series A funding. Hyde Park Venture Partners led the round, with participation from Battery VenturesHubSpotGrand Ventures and High Alpha CapitalMore here.

    Skytap, an 11-year-old, Seattle-based company that runs its own cloud with the goal of helping enterprises that want to modernize their infrastructure bring their existing applications to its service, has raised $45 million in Series E funding. Goldman Sachs Private Capital Investing led the round, with participation from existing investors. The company has now raised $109 million, altogether. TechCrunch has more here.

    Tulip.io, a four-year-old, Toronto-based startup whose mobile software allows sales associates and retailers to engage more effectively with customers, has raised $40 million in new funding led by Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers. The WSJ has more here.

    New Funds

    1confirmation, a fund that plans to invest in blockchain-based companies, is looking to raise $20 million for its debut fund, says Bloomberg. Mark Cubanand the venture capital firm Runa Capital is among its investors, and its technical advisors include investor-founder Balaji Srinivasan and programming language JavaScript founder Brendan EichMore here.

    Unshackled Ventures, a three-year-old organization that funds and helps foreign entrepreneurs who want to base their startups in the U.S., is raising a targeted $25 million for a second fund, according to an SEC filing. Axios has more here.

    IPOs

    Crystal Biotech, a Pittsburgh, Pa.-based gene therapy company at work on treatments for dermatological diseases, is planning to raise up to $35 million in an IPO, shows a new filing.  Marketwatch has more here.

    Meanwhile, Blue Apron has been hit with multiple class-action lawsuits over its sinking share price. TechCrunch has more here.

    People

    GoDaddy has named chief operating officer Scott Wagner its new CEO, announcing earlier today that current CEO Blake Irving will retire at the end of this year.

    Veteran media executive Ross Levinsohn was named publisher and CEO of the 135-year-old L.A. Times yesterday.

    The newest board seat for VC Mary Meeker: it’s with the PGA Tour Policy Board, a council that governs the tour.

    Also Sponsored By . . .

    Today’s StrictlyVC is also brought to you by the Financial Solutions Lab at CFSI, which would like to gently remind you that if you’re lucky, you’re going to get old. But your parents will first — and if they’re lucky, their money will last the rest of their lives. But what if there was a way to keep an eye on your folks’ financial lives, without taking away their financial independence? There is — it’s EverSafe, one of this year’s Lab companies. Here’s their story.

    Jobs

    Nextworld Capital is looking to hire an associate. The job is in San Francisco. (We hosted our May event at NextWorld; you can get a feel for its digs here.)

    Data

    Parents are maybe not great role models when it comes to texting and driving, suggests a new survey.

    Essential Reads

    Why big business is racing to build blockchains.

    All 50 startups from day one of Y Combinator‘s Demo Day.

    Coinbase’s individual customers get burglarized—with surprising and unsettling frequency — and fraud protections are mostly unavailable.

    Detours

    The next step after a bad first impression at work.

    Foiling fast in Silicon Valley.

    JayBey just shelled out $88 million for a new L.A. mansion — the most expensive home sale of the year in L.A.

    Retail Therapy

    The Plaza Hotel. Now it can be yours (for around $500 million).

  • StrictlyVC: August 21, 2017

    Hi and happy Monday, everyone! No column today. (It was the first day back to school in our house, so hectic. We’ve also been distracted by this stupefying solar eclipse, which we’re still watching online.)

    In separate news: our upcoming event, Wednesday, September 27, in San Francisco, is nearly sold out. We have roughly a dozen seats and that’s it, alas. If you don’t have a ticket but know you want to come, don’t delay.

    Thank you to Bolt and to Ballou PR and to Rosebud Communications for partnering with us; your support is invaluable. Thanks, too, to the wonderful Sarah McBride of Bloomberg, who will be leading the evening’s VC chat.

    Top News in the A.M.

    Bitcoin Cash is crashing.

    Watch Google unveil the next version of Android, coming up live in a bit right here.

    New Fundings

    Capital Float, a four-year-old, Bangalore, India-based digital finance company that provides working capital and business loans to SMEs, has raised $45 million in Series C funding led by Ribbit Capital, with participation from SAIF PartnersSequoia India and Creation Investments. TechCrunch has more here.

    Commonwealth Joe, a five-year-old, Arlington, Va.-based coffee roasting company, has raised $2.5 million in seed funding led by Mendacre, with participation from Hammerstone Capital and Stroud Companies. Technical.ly DC has more here.

    eMoov, a seven-year-old, Essex, England-based online real estate agency, has raised £9 million ($11.6 million) in funding led by JXC Ventures, with participation from Episode 1 VCMaxfield CapitalSpire and Startive Ventures. TechCrunch has more here.

    Let’s Do This, a year-old, London-based online sports listing startup that wants to build the “Airbnb of endurance events,” has raised £1 million from numerous individuals in tech, banking, and sports. Business Insider has more here.

    Magmode, a two-year-old, Beijing-based Chinese men’s fashion start-up, has raised $15 million in addition Series B funding led by the Sino-French private equity firm Cathay Capital Private EquitySinovation Ventures also joined the round. China Money Network has more here.

    Monstar Lab, an 11-year-old, Japan-based software development firm, has raised $6.3 million in funding, including from YJ CapitalShinsei Corporate InvestmentSan-In Chuo Television Broadcasting CoFenox Venture Capital and Tanabe Corp. Tech in Asia has more here.

    Prodigy Finance, a 10-year-old, London-based platform that helps students fund their studies by connecting them with alums who’ll loan them money based on their future earning potential, has raised $40 million in Series C funding. Index Ventures led the round, with participation from Balderton Capital and the African fintech accelerator AlphaCode. Business Insider has more here.

    UangTeman, a three-year-old, Jakarta, Indonesia-based online microlending platform, has raised $12 million in Series A funding led by K2 Venture CapitalEnspire Capital and Alpha JWC Ventures, with participation from Draper Associates. DealStreetAsia has more here.

    New Funds

    Beoff Lewis, a partner at Founders Fund, is leaving to start his own fund, says Bloomberg. If that sounds familiar, it’s because he’s following a similar path as Luke Nosek, a Founders Fund cofounder who also recently left the firm to start his own fund. Nosek’s fund is called Gigafund, and its objective in part is to help Elon Musk’s rocket company, SpaceX, raise money. Meanwhile, Lewis reportedly plans to raise more than $100 million for his new fund, with Founders Fund as an anchor investor. More here.

    The pan-Asian venture capital and growth equity firm Epsilon Venture Partners – which recently marked the first close of its $350 million fund – expects to hit its final close by early next year, it says. The firm, set up two years ago, was founded by Sudheer Kuppam, the former India and Asia Pacific managing director of Intel Capital; it plans to invest at least one third of its fund in Indian companies and the rest in North and Southeast Asian countries. DealStreet Asia talks with Kuppam here.

    Exits

    Cisco said today that it plans to buy Springpath, a five-year-old, Sunnyvale, Ca.-based software startup known for the development of a distributed file system for hyperconvergence that enables server-based storage systems. Cisco is paying around $320 million, says ZDNet. According to Crunchbase, Springpath had raised $34 million from NEARedpoint VenturesSequoia Capital, and Stanford UniversityMore here.

    Amazon-owned video game streaming site Twitch has acquired ClipMine, a three-year-old, Palo Alto-based video indexing platform that’s now being put to use to translate visual information in videos – like objects, text, logos and scenes – into metadata that can help people more easily find the streams they want to watch. Terms of the deal weren’t disclosed. ClipMine had raised $2.6 million in funding, according to Crunchbase. Its backers included renowned investor Ram Shriram, former Facebook vice president Greg Badros, entrepreneur Amarjit Gill and Cadence CEO Lip-Bu Tam. TechCrunch has more here.

    People

    Investor-operator Ellen Pao has published a new book about sexism in Silicon Valley. The Cut has an excerpt.

    Over half a dozen residents of a San Francisco “castle” have become bitcoin millionaires. Business Insider takes a look inside.

    Also Sponsored By . . .

    Today’s StrictlyVC is also brought to you by the Financial Solutions Lab at CFSI, which selected Blueprint Income, Dave.com, EverSafe, Grove, Nova, Point, Token Transit, and Tomorrow for this year’s Lab class. What makes these startups so special?

    Jobs

    Rev1 Ventures, a Columbus, Oh.-based seed-stage venture firm, is looking to hire a director of investments.

    Data

    The solar eclipse is reportedly costing companies at least $700 million in lost worker productivity. (To quote the characters from “Billions,” one of our favorite shows: worth it!)

    Essential Reads

    How hate groups forced online platforms to reveal their true nature.

    Since Britain gave notice it was leaving the European Union in March, a growing list of British VC firms has been told they will not receive financial support from the European Investment Fund, the EU agency that provides almost half of the money for the region’s venture capital industry.

    An inside look at Ford’s $1 billion bet on Argo AI.

    Detours

    The evolution of Drogon the Dragon, in “Game of Thrones.”

    How your feelings affect your face.

    Retail Therapy

    Freak out a date (and anyone else who visits you).

    VW is bringing back its Microbus, and it’s electric.

  • StrictlyVC: August 18, 2017

    Hi, happy Friday, all! We’re publishing a little earlier today, as it’s a morning of planes, trains and automobiles for us.

    Much thanks again to Semil Shah for offering to help here and there with StrictlyVC while we’ve been catching up with family and friends on the East Coast and Midwest. For today’s edition, he talks with Zach Supalla, the founder and CEO of Particle, a self-described “prototype-to-production platform for developing an Internet of Things product,” about what Supalla learned while raising the company’s Series A round. Hope you enjoy it.:)

    Top News in the A.M.

    Travis Kalanick has hit back at Benchmark in a court filing. You can read it here.

    Sponsored By . . .

    This weekend, it’s time to put an end to your buffering. eero was the world’s first home mesh WiFi system and the new 2nd generation is even better. With more power, a smaller form-factor, and Thread, new eero systems can blanket homes of any shape, size, or layout with WiFi so good, you’ll never think about it again. For StrictlyVC readers: use code StrictlyVC at checkout and select overnight shipping for free!

    How I Raised It: Particle’s Zach Supalla on Landing a Series A

    By Semil Shah

    Zach Supalla is CEO and co-founder of Particle, a venture-backed start-up that’s making it easier to build internet-connected hardware. The company has so far raised roughly $35 million over six rounds, including from Spark Capital, O’Reilly AlphaTech Ventures, Qualcomm Ventures, Rincon Venture Partners, and Root Ventures. We talked with him recently about how he got the ball rolling.

    As a founder, how do you define what a Series A means?

    I would define a Series A as the first raise where you’re raising off of traction, not just a concept or vision. It can be tough to define seed versus Series A versus Series B financially, because a large seed round can be larger than a small Series A. But the way I see it, a founder typically needs to raise anywhere from a few hundred grand to a couple million dollars to get their product to market, at which point they can start collecting data about customer interest, and that’s the point at which they’re raising a Series A.

    How many months did it take to raise the A, and how many meetings did it take?

    It took me about six months to raise our Series A. I met with roughly fifty funds. Our Series A ended up being a bit complex; we brought in a total of $10 million, but it was a mix of two smaller equity rounds — $4 million plus $3 million plus another $3 million in venture debt. We were originally trying to raise between $10 million and $15 million in equity.

    Looking back now, what were the biggest mistakes you made in raising  Series A and why? What are the most important lessons you learned in that process?

    My pitch deck for the Series A felt like a seed deck – it was more focused on vision and less on traction and metrics. It took me a while to figure out what was most compelling to investors at this stage, especially because it can be challenging to extract real honest feedback from investors, so I had already burned half of my potential investors before I refactored the deck to make it more metrics-based.

    I was also pretty cagey about sharing our financial model, based on some feedback I had gotten from other founders. The concept was that every Series A fund will put an associate on the deal who will be responsible for reviewing the financial model and poking holes in it. The less information you give them, the fewer holes they will be able to poke, so don’t share unless necessary.

    The problem with that strategy is it slowed the process down a lot and created a perception of a lack of momentum. VC partners are influenced by their associates, but honestly, they’re more influenced by the social pressure around a raise that feels “hot,” so it’s better to optimize for speed than around managing the associate.

    For our Series B raise, I was very aggressive with our data room; I filled it with a ton of information and data and gave it to investors before people even asked. It sped up the process significantly, and many investors told me that they really appreciated our transparency.

    How about one last piece of advice for aspiring-seed-stage CEOs who are out there trying to raise a Series A round?

    Remember you’re not in R&D anymore; you’re building a business. It should feel that way. You should be tracking metrics that are key to your business, and they should be improving month-over-month or quarter-over-quarter. If those things aren’t true, you’re not ready. Get your business in a good position so that you can raise from a position of strength and get good terms.

    New Fundings

    Boatsetter, a four-year-old, Miami, Fl.-based boat rental community connecting boat owners and capitals with prospective clients (it’s an Airbnb for boats), has added $4.75 million in funding to its December 2016 Series A round. The company has now raised $17.75 million altogether, including from Great Oaks Venture CapitalNordic Eye Venture CapitalAMP Brickyard Ventures and numerous others. Notably, it’s is using some of its new funding to acquire a competitor, Boatbound, for undisclosed terms. TechCrunch has more here.

    CareAcademy, a four-year-old, Boston-based startup that provides specialized online training for senior home care professionals, has raised $1.675 million in seed funding, including from Rethink EducationLumina Foundation, and Techstars Venture Capital FundMore here.

    FilmTrack, a 10-year-old, Studio City, Ca.-based end-to-end rights management platform that helps media and entertainment companies manage and monetize their intellectual property, has raised $5.5 million in Series C Funding from Insight Venture Partners. The company has now raised $40 million altogether. CityBizList has more here.

    Huochebang, a six-year-old, China-based truck logistics start-up that helps drivers find commodities to transport, facilitates truck sales, as well as provides other services to China’s trucking industry, has raised $56 million in “Series B-3” funding led by All-Stars Investment. The company has now raised $327 million, including a $156 million round involving Baidu that closed just three months ago. China Money Network has more here.

    Immersv, a two-year-old, Bay Area-based mobile 360 VR ad network, has raised $10.5 million Series A led by Rogers Venture Partners, with participation from Foundation CapitalThe Venture Reality FundInitial CapitalEast VenturesHTC ViveMCJ Co., GREEi-mobileMetaps, and Gigi Levy. TechCrunch has more here.

    LiftIgniter, a four-year-old, San Francisco-based startup that uses data science to help publishers and retailers optimize their websites and mobile apps in real-time, is raising $6.4 million in a round led by Storm Ventures. TechCrunch has more here.

    Outdoor Voices, a five-year-old, New York-based recreational apparel — or “athleisure wear” — company, is raising $9 million in new funding and has collected at least $6.5 million toward that end, shows a new SEC filing. Outdoor Voices had raised $13 million in Series B funding just last year. Its investors include General Catalyst PartnersForerunner VenturesCollaborative Fund, and 14WMore here.

    ThoughtSpot, a five-year-old, Palo Alto, Ca.-based startup whose business intelligence-powered tool, dubbed SpotIQ, suggests content to people based on past searches and likes, has raised $60 million in Series C funding led by Lightspeed Venture PartnersCapital One Growth Ventures also joined the round, along with earlier investors General Catalyst PartnersGeodesic Capital and Khosla Ventures. The company has now raised $160 million altogether. The WSJ has more here.

    Unity Biotechnology, a year-old, Brisbane, Ca.-based biotechnology company that’s aiming to create therapeutics that prevent, halt, or reverse numerous diseases of aging, has raised an additional $35 million in Series B financing that brings the round — previously closed roughly a year go  — to $151 million. Its new Series B investors include INVUS OpportunitiesThree Lakes PartnersCycad GroupCOM Investments, and Pivotal Alpha Limited. They joined the company’s earlier Series B investors, including ARCH Venture PartnersBaillie GiffordFidelity Management and Research CompanyPartner Fund Management, and VenrockMore here.

    New Funds

    Gobi Partners, a China-based venture capital firm, has held a first close of its Southeast Asia-focused fund with $50 million in capital commitments, including from Malaysia Venture Capital Management, the Korean home shopping company GS Shop, and the Indonesian investment firm CKM. China Money Network has more here.

    Leap Global Partners, a Palo Alto, Ca.-based cross-border venture capital firm that  looks to fund technologies created by entrepreneurs in Mexico and the U.S., has held a first close for its debut fund with $15 million in capital commitments. The firm, founded Goldman Sachs alums Roman Leal and Pablo Perez, invests in seed and Series A rounds and has backed four startups already, including Insikt, a fintech lending-as-a-service startup; and Listo, a consumer-facing company that offers financial services to underserved Latinos in the US. More here.

    People

    Mic.com, the millennial news site, laid off 25 staffers yesterday in what is part of a larger pivot to video that it will begin later this month.

    Facebook COO Sheryl Sandberg just transferred 590,000 shares of Facebook stock, worth just under $100 million, to a special fund she uses for charitable donations, according to a document filed yesterday with the SEC.

    Three and a half years after his return, Chris Wanstrath says he will step down as CEO of the popular developer platform GitHub after leading the search to find his own replacement. Wanstrath reportedly made the announcement as the company passes $200 million in revenue.

    Jobs

    Aflac, the Fortune 500 insurance company known for its duck mascot, is hiring a venture capital associate. The right candidate can work from Charlotte, N.C.; Atlanta; or the Bay Area.

    Essential Reads

    Can Silicon Valley disrupt its neo-Nazi problem? (Relatedly, check out this illuminating report.)

    Scientists at Johns Hopkins say they’ve developed a test that spots tiny amounts of cancer-specific DNA in blood and have used it to accurately identify more than half of 138 people with relatively early-stage colorectal, breast, lung and ovarian cancers. More here.

    The Essential phone is now available.

    Detours

    A revealing look at CEO travel habits.

    How to get through a workday on no sleep.

    Retail Therapy

    skateboard by Hermès (priced around where you would guess).

    Rare Apple shoes, yellowing from wear and age, and on track to sell for more than than $10,000 to one very hard-core Apple fan.

  • StrictlyVC: August 17, 2017

    Thursday! Just a mention that we’ll be traveling tomorrow with our kids, so StrictlyVC will likely be either very short or very late. We’ll have much more for you Monday.:)

    Also, in our rush to publish yesterday, we failed to mention that our friend Semil Shah had interviewed Mike Maples for the newsletter. Many of you wrote to let us know you enjoyed Maple’s advice; we just wanted to give credit where it’s due.

    Top News in the A.M.

    U.S. stocks are tumbling today and Treasuries rising on rising speculation that Donald Trump’s pro-growth policy agenda is imperiled following a rebuke by business leaders.

    Sponsored By . . .

    At eero, we believe the foundation of home technology has been broken for far too long. So in 2014, we assembled a team of the brightest engineers and designers with a singular goal: make WiFi so great it disappears. And that’s just what we’ve done. eero is simpler, performs better, and is more intelligent than any WiFi solution on earth. For StrictlyVC readers: get your eero whole-home WiFi system with code StrictlyVC at checkout and select overnight shipping for free.

    Social Capital Brings Aboard a New Partner: Mike Ghaffary

    If you’ve worked in tech in the Bay Area over the last decade or more, you quite possibly know Mike Ghaffary, a USC grad who nabbed both his MBA and JD from Harvard before beginning to work his way through a number of well-known institutions.

    From his first stop at Summit Partners, to co-founder of the news and talk radio service Stitcher (sold to Deezer in 2014), to business development roles at TrialPay and Yelp to eventually CEO of Yelp Eat24, Ghaffary has seemingly been working toward a career as a venture capitalist since completing his degrees.

    Now, with Yelp selling its food ordering service Eat24 to GrubHub for $287.5 million earlier this month (roughly twice what Yelp paid for it in early 2015), he has landed just that role.

    To wit, Ghaffary just joined Social Capital as one of five full-time partners on the firm’s venture team.

    It’s good timing for Social Capital, whose co-founder, Mamoon Hamid, left earlier this monthto join Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers. In fact, it was Hamid who introduced Ghaffary to the firm, inviting him to an offsite retreat last year where Ghaffary had a chance to meet the entire team and spend more time with another Social Capital co-founder, Chamath Palihapitiya, who oversees the firm as its CEO.

    We had a quick chat with Ghaffary yesterday and he sounds, understandably, excited about his new post, where he will be investing in both consumer and enterprise deals.

    More here.

    New Fundings

    Alzeca Biosciences, a five-year-old, Houston, Tex.-based early-stage healthcare diagnostic company that’s trying to develop best-in-class imaging technologies for the early detection of Alzheimer’s Disease pathology, has raised $11 million in Series A financing from undisclosed sources. FierceBiotech has more here.

    Codacy, a three-year-old, Lisbon, Portugal-based automated code review platform provider, has raised $5.1 million in Series A funding led by EQT Ventures, with participation from FaberCaixa CapitalJoin Capital, and Seedcamp. TechCrunch has more here.

    Color Genomics, a four-year-old, Burlingame, Ca.-based genetic health screening startup, has raised $80 million in Series C funding from General Catalyst PartnersCRV, and Emerson Collective. The company has now raised $150 million altogether. CNBC has more here.

    LVL Technologies, a six-year-old, Austin, Tex.-based company that’s developing proprietary sensor platforms for wearables (it was formerly called BSX Athletics), has raised $6.75 million in Series A funding. Samsung Catalyst Fund led the round, with participation from Maxim Integrated Products and other unnamed individual investors. More here.

    Ripcord, a months-old, Hayward, Ca.-based company that uses machine vision, robotics, artificial intelligence and machine learning to digitize all of an enterprise’s records, has raised $40 million in Series B funding. The round was led by Icon Ventures, with participation from Kleiner PerkinsLux Capital, and Silicon Valley Bank. The company has now raised $49.5 million altogether. More here.

    Tokopedia, an eight-year-old, Jakarta, Indonesia-based online marketplace for individuals and business owners, has raised $1.1 billion in funding in funding led by Alibaba. TechCrunch has more here.

    TuSimple, a two-year-old, Beiijing-based autonomous truck technology startup, has raised $20 million in funding led by Sina, with participation from Nvidia. TechCrunch has more here.

    Wine.com, a San Francisco-based online wine retailer, says it has raised $15 million in funding from earlier investors. It didn’t name any outfits specifically, but the company is majority owned by Baker Capital, a New York-based private equity firm. More here.

    ZingBox, a 2.5-year-old, Mountain View, Ca.-based startup whose software guards IoT devices from threats on the Internet, has raised $22 million in Series B funding led by Dell Technologies Capital and TriventuresMore here.

    Exits

    Google has acquired AIMatter, a startup founded in Belarus that has built both a neural network-based AI platform and SDK to detect and process images quickly on mobile devices, and a photo and video editing app that has served as a proof-of-concept of the tech called Fabby. The company had raised approximately $2 million in venture funding from Haxus Venture Fund. Terms of the deal aren’t being diclosed, but TechCrunch reports that the service will continue to run, and that most of the company’s employees will join Google. More here.

    ShapeShift, a three-year-old, Zug, Switzerland-based digital currency exchange platform, has acquired KeepKey, a Kirkland, Wa.-based hardware wallet for digital assets like Bitcoin and Ethereum. Financial terms weren’t disclosed but this was an “all bitcoin deal.” ShapeShift has raised roughly $13 million from investors, shows Crunchbase, including Earlybird Venture Capitaland Digital Currency Group. KeepKey doesn’t appear to have raised outside funding (or announced it, in any case). Reuters has more here.

    People

    National Economic Council Director (and former Goldman Sachs president) Gary Cohn is said to be “disgusted” by President Trump’s statements in the wake of the violence at a white supremacist demonstration in Charlottesville, Va. He isn’t going anywhere, though. (In you’re still confused over how Cohn landed at the White House in the first place, Vanity Fair published a piece this month titled, “The Untold Story of How Gary Cohn fell for Donald Trump.”)

    Last night, Apple CEO Tim Cook sent an email to all global employees condemning racism and bigotry. More here.

    WeWork has hired Shiva Rajaraman as its chief product officer. Rajaraman worked briefly at Apple earlier this year to help shape its video strategy. Before that, he held posts as the VP of Product at Spotify, and as a director of product management at Google. Dave Fano, previously WeWork’s chief product officer, will (somewhat confusingly) become chief product & growth officer.

    Fortune just published its annual “40 under 40” list. You can check it out here.

    Jobs

    LaunchCapital, a seed and early-stage venture firm, is hiring an associate. The job is in New Haven, Ct.

    Essential Reads

    Facebook quietly shut down an internal discussion group at the end of last year, after employees reportedly used the anonymity within the group to make racist and sexist comments. Business Insider has more here.

    A big, successful trial of probiotics at long last.

    Detours

    Inside Japan’s retro gaming shops, which are now drawing buyers worldwide. (Some are paying up to $18,000 per title!)

    A masterful master shot.

    The incredible, shrinking airline seat.

    Retail Therapy

    A mansion in L.A. that won’t sell, so its owners keep increasing its price.

  • StrictlyVC: August 16, 2017

    Well, hello, and happy Wednesday. Do you have a solar-eclipse strategy yet? (We’re still working on ours.)

    Top News in the A.M.

    The most-liked tweet in history was published last night.

    Top CEOs who were members of Donald Trump’s Strategic and Policy Forum just agreed to disband the group, following his comments yesterday that “both sides” were responsible for the violence initiated by neo-Nazis and white supremacists in Virginia this past weekend. The policy group had included IBM CEO Ginni Rometty, JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon, and GM CEO Mary Barra among a dozen others. “There really was nothing to debate,” one member told CNBC. More here.

    Sponsored By . . .

    At eero, we believe the foundation of home technology has been broken for far too long. So in 2014, we assembled a team of the brightest engineers and designers with a singular goal: make WiFi so great it disappears. And that’s just what we’ve done. eero is simpler, performs better, and is more intelligent than any WiFi solution on earth. For StrictlyVC readers: get your eero whole-home WiFi system with code StrictlyVC at checkout and select overnight shipping for free!

    Mike Maples on How to Raise a Fund in Today’s Climate

    By Semil Shah

    Mike Maples founded the early-stage firm Floodgate roughly a decade ago and it’s fair to say that things have gone pretty well for him since. His bets include Twitter, Twitch.TV, Bazaarvoice, Spiceworks, Demandforce, and Okta. He’s been on the Midas List. And Maples was involved as a founder and operating executive at Tivoli Systems, acquired by IBM after going public, and Motive, acquired by Alcatel-Lucent after going public. (The firm has also benefited from an early bet on Lyft made by Ann Miura-Ko, who joined Maples a year later as cofounder.)

    When Maples raised his first, $15 million, fund, it took just one month, and most of the capital came from one individual investor — though he lined up six altogether. We talked with him recently about that fund, as well as what aspiring fund managers need to keep in mind today. Our chat has been edited for length.

    You raised your first fund fairly easily, based on your operating background.

    I always had a pretty realistic view of the purpose of Fund 1. I saw it as a booster rocket for the future. Either it would propel Floodgate to escape velocity, or it would flame out quickly. Many first-time fund managers have a target to raise and they go out and try to raise it. In general, I disagree with this approach. Instead, I looked at my fund size as “that which I can raise from the true believers in 30 days or less.” My view was that if someone wanted to invest in my fund, they already had decided for the most part. So . . . rather than say “I’m raising $25 million” or $50 million or whatever,  I took the perspective of: I am new at this. I might lose money. I might not like managing a fund. You might not like how I manage a fund. What is an amount you would consider investing, given these realities?

    If you don’t have a set of people who already believe, I hate to be the bearer of bad news: You are likely not ready to raise a fund.

    When did you start talking with more traditional LPs, and how did you approach them?

    I started building these relationships before I closed Fund 1 but did not pitch any of the more traditional LPs [for Floodgate’s second fund].  My view was that it was important to get to know LPs when I was not fundraising. It was more straightforward to have honest conversations and not try to sell around objections or try to out-guess what people were looking for.

    One of the unanticipated benefits of this was that I really got to understand how some of the best LPs thought about investing in the very best firms. I could get data and insights about the types of portfolios that produced the winning returns and the best practices of building great teams and funding great founders.

    You should never be in sell mode with a potential LP. You should  . . . use the meeting as an opportunity to test your ideas and improve them. When you have the chance to meet with a new potential LP and you are not in  sell mode and you get an objection about your strategy, you can say, “Interesting. Tell me more about that.” If the LP is right because they have more perspective or data, you’ll get better and smarter. If you disagree on a first-principles basis after receiving the feedback, you’ve dodged a bullet because you have different values. When your investors have different values than you, it’s a miserable existence.

    Anything else you can tell folks who are out there in today’s market, trying to raise a fund?

    First, you are not for everybody. Some people will see your advantage and value your advantage. Most will not. Just like a startup raising money, your early customers — in this case, LPs — are not the mainstream. They are the people who believe what you believe. Your task is to find these people. If most don’t believe what you believe, then that’s OK. Come back to them when they do.

    Second, don’t try to outguess what people are looking for. Ask yourself honestly why you’re raising a fund and in what ways you’re going to be awesome in a crowded world of way too many VC dollars. You need a crystal clear answer to this, especially as a first-time fund manager, including to justify the use of your own time. A lot of people enjoy investing in startups and would like more money to invest in more. LPs don’t care about your desire to fund startups; they care about your unique strategy to get paid for the risk you take.

    Third, turn off your happy ears. By the time you have decided to raise money, most of the people who will invest have already decided. If they are not willing to declare their commitment quickly, they are not ready. If the sum of the money of committed investors who believe in you right now does not add up to a fund, then you are either raising money too soon or trying to raise too much. Accept this, as well as the fact that if you are awesome, there will always be another chance down the road. But failure mode is pressuring and rushing people.

    New Fundings

    3Bar Biologics, a four-year-old, Columbus, Oh.-based company that uses living microbes to stimulate plant growth (its product is applied to seeds), has raised $2 million in funding, including from Rev1 VenturesMaumee VenturesOhio TechAngel FundsQueen City AngelsCarmen Innovations, and SVG Thrive FundMore here.

    Actionable Quality Assurance, a 3.5-year-old, Gainesville, Fla.-based software as a service platform for thorough monitoring of food safety for restaurants, has raised $2 million in seed funding from a private angel investment group. More here.

    GeoTix, a two-year-old, Traverse City, Mi.-based ticketing platform that aims to help local and regional media companies grow their revenue, has raised $1 million in funding, including from Boomerang-Catapult and Casey Cowell, a co-founder of U.S. Robotics. More here.

    HiScene, a five-year-old, Beijing-based startup that’s developing hardware and software products for augmented reality, has raised roughly $14 million in Series B funding led by Shanghai Cableway Investment, with participation from Sincere CapitalVstar Capital and the Chinese smartphone and selfie app developer Meitu. China Money Network has more here.

    ilos Videos, a two-year-old, St. Paul, Mn.-based provider of a video platform for the workplace, has raised $1.5 million in seed funding led by Active Capital, with participation from Ingram Content Group and Hyde Park Venture Partners. The company has now raised $3 million altogether. More here.

    Kingo, a four-year-old, Ciudad de Guatemala, Guatemala-based solar energy technology company, has raised $8 million in Series B funding led by FCP (the innovation fund of Colombian utility EPM), ENGIE (a French utility), FMO (a Dutch development bank), Proparco (a French development bank), and H-Reff(a renewable energy fund). The company has now raised $19 million altogether. FinSMEs has more here.

    Lift, a three-year-old, Toronto-based startup that helps customers find cannabis clinics and book appointments with them, has raised $3 million in Series A funding from undisclosed backers. More here.

    MedAware, a five-year-old, Raanana, Israel-based company whose software performs real-time evaluations of prescribed drugs against up-to-date patient profiles to eliminate prescription errors, has raised $8 million in Series A funding. Backers included BD (Becton, Dickinson and Company), Gefen CapitalOurCrowd and Yingcheng City Fubon TechnologyMore here.

    Options, a 23-year-old, New York-based provider of cloud-enabled managed services to the global capital markets, has raised roughly $100 million in growth funding from Bregal Sagemount, a New York-based private equity firm. More here.

    Phil, a two-year-old, San Francisco-based, end-to-end prescription management and delivery service that connects patients with local pharmacies, has raised $10 million in funding led by Crosslink Capital. Other participants in the round include Eniac VenturesSofttech VCForerunner VenturesSV AngelSilicon Valley Bank, and Transmedia CapitalMore here.

    Respond Software, a year-old, Mountain View, Ca.-based expert system that says it emulates the decision-making and judgement of a seasoned security analyst, has raised $12 million in Series A funding led by CRV and Foundation CapitalMore here.

    SnapApp, a six-year-old, Boston-based SaaS platform used by B2B marketers to create, publish, and measure interactive content, has raised $10.2 million in Series B funding, including from Providence Strategic Growth, the growth equity affiliate of Providence Equity Partners. Xconomy has more here.

    YangTian, a two-year-old, Tianjin, China-based developer of light industrial robotic arms that are used for a variety of jobs like handling, assembling, polishing, and coating, has raised $7 million in “pre-A” funding from Lenovo Capital and the Incubator GroupGSR Ventures and Yinxinggu Capital also joined the round. China Money Network has more here.

    New Funds

    645 Ventures, a four-year-old, New York-based, seed-stage venture  firm, is looking to raise up to $30 million for its second fund, according to an SEC filing. The company was cofounded by Nnamdi Okike, a former principal at Insight Venture Partners, and Aaron Holiday, a former associate at DFJ Gotham Ventures and former entrepreneurial officer at Cornell Tech.

    Andrew Ng, the cofounder of Coursera and formerly Baidu’s chief scientist, is looking to raise up to $150 million for a new vehicle called The AI Fund. TechCrunch has more here.

    Round13 Capital, a six-year-old, Toronto-based tech-focused venture capital firm, has closed on $95 million in commitments for its newest fund, from backers that include high-net-worth individuals, family offices, National Bank, and the pension fund LiUNA. The firm funds growth-stage Canadian companies. More here.

    IPOs

    Despegar, an 18-year-old, Buenos Aires-based online travel company, yesterday filed to raise up to $100 million in an IPO on the NYSE. The company, a rare “unicorn” in Latin America, is owned in part by Tiger Global Management, which has been investing actively in Brazilian startups for years. Other shareholders include ExpediaGeneral AtlanticSequoia CapitalInsight Venture Partners and Accel Partners. Reuters has the story here.

    MongoDB, a 10-year-old, New York-based database startup that has raised more than $300 million from VCs, has confidentially filed to go public, says TechCrunch. At the time of its last private valuation in 2015, MongoDB was reportedly a $1.6 billion company. More here.

    Exits

    Netsertive, a Morrisville, N.C.-based marketing technology company, has acquired Mixpo, a Seattle-based video advertising software company. Financial terms weren’t disclosed. Mixpo had raised more than $10 million in funding from investors, including GrowthWorks CapitalMadrona Venture Group, and Yaletown Partners. Netsertive has raised roughly $38 million, including from RRE VenturesBabson Capital ManagementHarbert Venture Partnersand Greycroft Partners. GeekWire has more here.

    People

    Shelby Bonnie, the cofounder of CNet and more recently spent four years as a managing director with Allen & Co., is newly the CEO of Pylon, an artificial intelligence cmpany that’s building custom experiences for Amazon Echo and Google Home. Business Insider has more here.

    Nicole Sanchez, co-founder and CEO of Credit Hero, has joined female founder-focused seed fund XFactor Ventures. More here.

    Data

    According to Facebook, 45 million people send birthday wishes on its platform each day. It just equipped them with some new features, too.

    According to a poll by the public relations firm Weber Shandwick, roughly half of millennials believe CEOs “have a responsibility to speak up on issues important to society”— compared to just 28 percent of Gen Xers and Baby Boomers. (H/T: Fortune’s Alan Murray.)

    Essential Reads

    Uber is in talks to raise as much as $12 billion, according to Bloomberg. Approximately $1 billion to $1.5 billion would be used to acquire new shares, and anywhere from $2 billion to $10 billion would be used to buy out the shares of existing shareholders.

    Apple is budgeting $1 billion to procure and produce original content over the next year, says the WSJ, a sign of how serious it is about making a splash in Hollywood.

    Why Benchmark may want to cash out of Uber, in Dealbook.

    Waymo may get an edge over rival Uber as the two head into an explosive trade secrets trial this fall. Today, a federal judge said he’ll likely tell the jury about how Uber’s lawyers “misled the court” and repeatedly failed to produce documents that could be important in the case. The SJ Merc has more here.

    Detours

    Millennials like vintage, but they haven’t inherited a love of antiques.

    Jimmy Kimmel’s not-terrible idea to make Donald Trump king.

    It’s always a Florida man.

    Retail Therapy

    Solar eclipse camps. (Hey, it’s one option.)

  • StrictlyVC: August 15, 2017

    Hi, everyone! Hope you’re having a stellar Tuesday. (Sorry we’re a bit late in sending this out — busy day.)

    Top News in the A.M.

    Uber just settled an FTC investigation into data mishandling, privacy and security complaints that date back to 2014 and 2015, agreeing in to put in place a comprehensive privacy program, including undergoing regular independent privacy audits. The FTC’s order extends for a period as long as 20 years. TechCrunch has more here.

    Snap employees were able to sell their stock yesterday for the first time since the company went public back in early March. Unsurprisingly, it was the fourth biggest day of trading volume so far. Recode has more here.

    Sponsored By . . .

    This week it’s time to put an end to your buffering. eero was the world’s first home mesh WiFi system and the 2nd generation is even better. With more power, a smaller form-factor, and Thread, new eero systems can blanket homes of any shape, size, or layout with WiFi so good, you’ll never think about it again. For StrictlyVC readers: use code StrictlyVC at checkout and select overnight shipping for free!

    This Founder Wants to Find Biz Dev Jobs for One Million Americans

    Fahim Fazal grew up in government housing. He worked, as do many students, at McDonald’s during high school. He didn’t go to college.

    These aren’t the kinds of details that might excite a recruiter at a big tech company, yet Fazal has done just fine, including co-founding a company a decade ago that sold to Oracle, where he spent the next two and a half years; becoming an advisor at CodeNow, which works with underrepresented youth to teach foundational computer programming; and more recently, cofounding SVAcademy. What it does: find people like Fazal himself who are under-resourced but have no shortage of grit, and training them how to work in a professional tech setting. It’s getting them jobs, too, including at places like Salesforce, Box, and the still-private Zuora, which is a software company for subscription businesses.

    Fazal, who cofounded SVAcademy with Joel Scott, an operator who spent the last decade with HP, leaving as VP of operations at Hewlett Packard Enterprise, is taking the wraps off the company today. He’s also disclosing that SVAcademy recently raised $2 million in funding from Bloomberg Beta, Rethink Education, Precursor Ventures, Uprising Ventures, 500 Startups and WTI, along with numerous angel investors. We talked with him yesterday to better understand how the outfit is working with employers to get nontraditional candidates into their workforces — and why they want to.

    You say you want to give a million women, minorities, and under-resourced Americans high-paying jobs in sales, or business development. 

    Yes, the types of students we’re looking for are incredibly diverse. So far, 60 percent of the roughly 1,000 people who’ve been qualified for the program have been first-generation college students, 50 percent have been women, and one-third have been African American or Latino.

    What does your platform, or your programming, involve?

    It’s entirely virtual. We want to provide access to students wherever they might be while also exporting Silicon Valley mentorship and experience throughout the country. It’s 15 months long. Once you get into the program, you spend the first three months working on the skills needed in field. That’s 250 hours spent with your class and a teacher and a mentor, learning the technical skills and social and emotional skills you need to perform business development and sales at a SaaS company.  If you pass, you get connected with a growing number of employers who are partnering with us, then we continue to coach and mentor you and help you close your skill gap for the first 12 months on the job.

    Who pays for this programming?

    More here.

    New Fundings

    Apli, a year-old, Mexico City-based on-demand talent-as-a-service platform, raised $1.5 million in funding, including from AllvpSocial CapitalSoldiers Field AngelsIgnia Partners and accelerator Numa MexicoMore here.

    CellSavers, a two-year-old, on-demand smartphone and tablet repair service, has raised $25 million in funding led by Red Dot Capital Partners, with participation from Samsung NextMaverick VenturesKreos Capital and earlier backers Sequoia Capital and Carmel Ventures. The company, which is renaming itself as Puls, has now raised $43 million altogether. TechCrunch has more here.

    Claim it!, a three-year-old, New York-based mobile social marketplace, has raised $2.5 million in seed funding led by Newark Venture Partners, with participation from Infor, former Saks CEO Steve Sadove and NBA players Thaddeus Young and Al HarringtonMore here.

    Filld, a two-year-old, Palo Alto, Ca.-based mobile fueling startup, has raised $9.65 million in Series A funding led by Shea Ventures, with participation from Cendana Capital and earlier backers PivotNorth CapitalJavelin Venture PartnersLightspeed Venture Partners and Lucas Venture GroupMore here.

    Happify Health, a five-year-old, New York-based platform that combines emotional health interventions with engagement and gaming technology, raised $9 million in funding. TT Capital Partners led the round. MobiHealthNews has more here.

    HomeLight, a five-year-old, San Francisco-based company looking to connect home sellers with the top real estate agents in their area, has raised $40 million in new funding led by Menlo Ventures, with participation from Citi Ventures. The company has now raised $55 million altogether. TechCrunch has more here.

    Minibar Delivery, a four-year-old, New York-based marketplace for wine, beer and spirits that delivers on demand, has raised $5 million in funding led by Corigin Ventures, with participation from Female Founders FundWinklevoss CapitalLaunchCapital and RiverPark Ventures. TechCrunch has more here.

    NuOrder, a six-year-old, West Hollywood, Ca.-based online wholesale platform and marketplace for the fashion industry, has raised $8 million in funding led by Argentum, with participation from Upfront VenturesGreycroft PartnersCowboy VenturesNovel TMT, and Box Group. VentureBeat has more here.

    One Signal, a three-year-old, San Francisco-based startup that enables developers to easily add personalized push notifications to their apps, has raised $7 million in Series A funding led by SignalFire. The company has now raised $9.5 million altogether, including from Rakuten Ventures, Factual CEO Gil Elbaz, Safegraph CEO Auren Hoffman, and Drawbridge CTO Devin Guan. TechCrunch has more here.

    Poshmark, a six-year-old, Redwood City, Ca.-based online marketplace for  buying and selling second-hand clothing, is in talks to raise more than $50 million in a funding round that could value the startup at roughly $600 million, says Reuters. More here.

    Smilo, a year-old, Wayland, Ma.-based maker of baby feeding and soothing products, has raised $3.25 million in seed funding, including from Norwest Venture Partners and Brand Foundry Ventures. TechCrunch has more here.

    WebLinc, a 23-year-old, Philadelphia, Pa.-based digital commerce technology company that sells its software to online retailers, has secured $5 million in venture debt from Horizon Technology Finance Corporation, a publicly traded specialty finance company. More here.

    New Funds

    Base Partners, a 10-month-old, São Paulo, Brazil-based investment firm, has raised $75 million for its debut fund, says Fortune. More here.

    Carmel Ventures, a 17-year-old, Israel-based venture capital firm, is raising a fifth fund, shows an SEC filing that does not list a target. The firm closed its fourth fund with $194 million in 2014, including from LPs that included the China-based companies Baidu, Ping-An, and Qihoo360. More here.

    Quest Venture Partners, a nine-year-old, Palo Alto, Ca.-based seed-stage venture firm, is raising up to $40 million for its third fund, shows an SEC filing. The outfit closed its sophomore fund with $45 million three years ago. More here.

    Exits

    Microsoft is buying Cycle Computing, a 12-year-old, Stamford, Ct.-based company that develops software for orchestrating workloads in the Azure, Amazon, and Google clouds. Terms aren’t being disclosed. Cycle Computing had raised “non-equity assistance” from Microsoft previously. ZDNet has more here.

    Pattern Technologies, a two-year-old, Redwood City, Ca.-based software company that helps salespeople manage their customer relationships, has been acquired by publicly traded WorkDay for undisclosed terms. CEO Derek Draper announced the news on LinkedIn yesterday, though reached for more information, he told us he isn’t at liberty to disclose more details. (Don’t worry, we’re still working on it!) Pattern had raised $2.5 million from investors, including First Round CapitalSoftTech VCFelicis Ventures and numerous angel investors. We’d talked with the company last year.

    Target has acquired Grand Junction, a four-year-old, 13-person San Francisco-based transportation technology company, to better compete in the same-day and local-delivery wars. Financial terms weren’t disclosed. Fortune has more here.

    Transplace, a 17-year-old, Frisco, Tex.-based provider of transportation management and other third-party logistics services, has been acquired by TPG Capital and the company’s management for undisclosed terms. They purchased the outfit from Greenbriar Equity Group.

    People

    Yesterday morning, Merck CEO Kenneth Frazier‘s quit Donald Trump’s manufacturing business council following Trump’s response to the violent “unite the right” rally in Charlottesville, Va., this past weekend. By late afternoon, two others had followed Frazier out the door: Intel CEO Brian Krzanich, who says he’ll serve the administration when it stands up for “equality and other cherished American values,” and Under Armour CEO Kevin Plank, who issued a statement, saying his company engages in “innovation and sports, not politics.” (Trump is handling the departures just as you might imagine.)

    Bill Gates made his largest gift since the turn of the century, giving 64 million of Microsoft shares valued at $4.6 billion on June 6, according to an SEC filing. More here.

    Pandora has appointed Robert Lynch as its new president and CEO. Lynch was the founding CEO of Dish’s Sling TV. More here.

    Netflix’s cofounder has a crazy plan: let people visit the movie theater as often as they want each month — for the price of a single ticket.

    Essential Reads

    Travis Kalanick’s and Anthony Levandowski’s texts tell the tale of what Uber knew about Waymo‘s tech.

    Amazon wants to cut delivery times down to mere minutes, allowing shoppers in select areas to pick up their items almost immediately after ordering them.

    Detours

    From emo meme to EDM king: James Van Der Beek.

    Jim Carrey’s art.

    Retail Therapy

    The Klipsch Capital One speaker. Classic looks, modern components!

  • StrictlyVC: August 14, 2017

    Hi, happy Monday, everyone! We’re still traveling with our family; to help out with the newsletter, investor and friend Semil Shah has a new “how I raised it” type interview for readers — this time with Homebrew, the seed-stage, San Francisco-based firm. Hope you enjoy it. More tomorrow.:)

    Top News in the A.M.

    Uber‘s board is in preliminary talks with three investor groups wanting to buy shares in the company. Dragoneer’s investment coalition wants to buy out shareholders at a discount to Uber’s current valuation. So does Softbank. Both groups would also purchase a small number of new shares at Uber’s $68.5 billion valuation to prop up that figure. A third group, led by early investor Shervin Pishevar, has apparently talked with an existing investor about buying its shares at the current valuation. The New York Times has the story here.

    Sponsored By . . .

    This week it’s time to put an end to your buffering. eero was the world’s first home mesh WiFi system and the 2nd generation is even better. With more power, a smaller form-factor, and Thread, new eero systems can blanket homes of any shape, size, or layout with WiFi so good, you’ll never think about it again. For StrictlyVC readers: use code StrictlyVC at checkout and select overnight shipping for free!

    How We Raised It: Homebrew’s Founders on Raising Fund One

    By Semil Shah

    Satya Patel and Hunter Walk founded Homebrew in 2013 after respective tenures leading product at Twitter and consumer product management at YouTube. Homebrew’s broad focus is on startups supporting the so-called bottoms-up economy, which helps businesses, customers, and individuals drive growth and innovation through simpler, cheaper, and more direct access to technology, information, and customers.

    We talked with both partners recently for their advice on how to get a debut fund off the ground.

    You’ve both been operators at big-name companies. Satya, you’d also been a VC before, including at Battery Ventures, where you’d spent four years. How long did it take to raise Homebrew’s first fund? How many LP meetings did it take?

    We raised Homebrew’s first fund in early 2013 and it took about 100 days from our first LP outreach to the single close of a $35 million fund, including a month of paperwork.

    We started with a list of 40 LPs who fit the following criteria: institutional LPs who had already invested in early stage, sub-$100 million funds and specifically, our friends’ funds, so every introduction was a warm handoff to an LP who had a prepared mind for what Homebrew was going to pitch them. From the initial outreach list of 40 LPs, 20 converted into first meetings.

    You closed that fund with $35 million. How much were you targeting?

    We’ve always taken the perspective of funding a strategy – i.e.,  raise all we need but not more. Fund 1 is a $35 million fund [because that] was what we thought it would take to lead and co-lead seed rounds. It turned out to be a bit undersized given the increase in round sizes during 2013-2014 in particular. We right-sized in our second fund [raising a $50 million seed-stage fund and a $35 million fund for follow-on deals].

    Did that second round of funds came together fairly easy?

    We raised it in January 2015 and started investing out of it late spring 2015. The process of raising it was just a few weeks because LPs were investing “lines rather than dots.” We were still proving out Homebrew’s ability to be a great firm, but we had some data points that suggested we weren’t terrible or, as LPs say, “We were doing what we said we’d do.”

    One thing we messed up – at the very least in our communications, if not our decision-making – was that we largely eliminated the “friend and family” allocations because we needed to try and fit in new institutional LPs. We didn’t do a very good job of explaining why some of the people who bet on us early couldn’t continue investing with Homebrew. If we could do it over, we at least would have put more thought and care into these conversations.

    Can you offer a few more pieces of advice to aspiring fund managers out there in today’s market?

    We get a lot of calls from people looking to raise first funds, and also lots of diligence requests from LPs looking at these funds. Three pieces of advice we always give are:

    Have a compelling reason why you exist — why top founders want to take your money versus all the other sources available. Seed is perceived as lower barrier to entry because fund sizes can be smaller, which helps first-time managers, but it’s a stage where dealflow is dark and picking is hard.

    Understand portfolio construction, reserve allocation, ownership dilution and so on. There are many folks coming from the operating side who don’t think about the investment manager aspect of this businesses. You need to understand how your fund size, check size, point of entry, target ownership percentage and so on, all work together in a consistent manner. Trying to make these decisions separately is like telling six different engineers to go into different rooms, each build a random different feature and then stick it together to make a product. It doesn’t work that way.

    Be deliberate in your raise timeline and treat it like a sales pipeline where you’re trying to hit your quota for the quarter. We all coach our startups about fundraising and then sometimes don’t take our own advice. You need to create momentum, spend real time getting to know LPs during that period, but push people to make decisions. You’re not going to raise a fund in a week, but a year of fundraising with rolling closes is a distraction and perhaps a signal that you’re doing something suboptimally.

    New Fundings

    Altaeros, a 17-year-old, Somerville, Ma.-based rural broadband connectivity provider, has raised an additional $7.5 million in funding from SoftBank GroupMore here.

    Dragos, a year-old, Hanover, Md.-based industrial control system cybersecurity company, has raised $10 million in Series A round funding co-led by Allegis Capital and Energy Impact PartnersDataTribe, a cybersecurity startup studio that seed-funded Dragos, also joined the round. More here.

    Er Geng, a three-year-old, Hangzhou, China-based short video content producer, has raised $14 million in Series A funding led by Yunfeng Capital, (a private equity firm cofounded by Jack Ma), with participation from Source Code Capital. China Money Network has more here.

    Here Be Dragons, a two-year-old, L.A.-based production studio focused on virtual reality content, has raised $10 million in Series A funding at a pre-money valuation of $55 million. The round was led by Discovery CommunicationsMore here.

    IOpipe, a two-year-old, Seattle-based application operations platform for AWS’s Lambda service, has raised $2.5 million in seed funding from Madrona Venture GroupNew Enterprise Associates and Underscore VC. TechCrunch has more here.

    Poncho, a four-year-old, New York-based weather service, has raised $2.4 million in funding led by Lightspeed Venture Partners. Earlier backers also joined the round, including RRE VenturesComcast Ventures, andBetaworks. TechCrunch has more here.

    Silversheet, a three-year-old, L.A.-based medical credentialing management platform, has raised $5 million in Series A funding led by Summation Health Ventures. The company has now raised $10.2 million altogether, including from Upfront VenturesRincon Venture PartnersSV AngelSlow VenturesBAM VenturesAct One Ventures, and Cyan and Scott BanisterMore here.

    TuneIn, a 15-year-old, San Francisco-based online radio company, has raised $50 million in funding, reportedly at a post-money valuation of $500 million. The round was led by MarkerInstitutional Venture Partners and Comcast Ventures. The company has now raised $140 million altogether. Bloomberg has more here.

    Zuoyebang, a two-year-old, China-based, K-12 online education company that was spun out of Baidu, has raised $150 million in Series C funding led by H Capital, with participation from Tiger Global ManagementSequoia CapitalLegend CapitalGGV Capital and Xianghe Capital. China Money Network has more here.

    New Funds

    K9 Ventures, a nine-year-old, seed-stage venture firm that has become renowned in Silicon Valley circles for working closely with budding startups at the paper napkin stage, has closed its third fund with $42 million. The firm’s founder and its sole general partner, Manu Kumar — a serial entrepreneur with a PhD in computer science from Stanford — tends to invest less than a million dollars at the outset. But founders get his help building their teams, and their prototypes, in exchange. We have more for you here.

    Exits

    A Berlin-based fintech company, Savedo, has been acquired by Deposit Solutions, an open banking platform that’s backed by Peter Thiel. No terms were disclosed. Deposit Solutions, based in Hamburg, has developed a savings infrastructure platform for banks, as well as a savings product for customers. Tech.eu has more here.

    IPOs

    Rovio Entertainment, the company behind the “Angry Birds” mobile games and movie franchise, is planning an IPO as early as next month that could value it at $2 billion, says Bloomberg. More here.

    People

    Merck CEO Kenneth Frazier became the latest executive to cross Donald Trump when he quit a business council run by the White House, drawing an immediate rebuke from Trump on Twitter. Frazier was taking a stand against intolerance and extremism in the wake of the violent “unite the right” rally in Charlottesville, Va. — and Trump’s tepid response to it.

    It’s not easy being the first and only Fox News host in Silicon Valley. But Steve Hilton, a tech entrepreneur who was once chief adviser to former Prime Minister David Cameron of Britain (and whose wife is PR powerhouse Rachel Whetstone), added that role to his résumé in June. More here.

    Power VC Vinod Khosla just lost his very protracted battled to prevent access to a public beach that he closed off for his private use.

    Ebay founder Pierre Omidyar wants to build a dairy farm on the island of Kauai. Here’s why, says the New York Times.

    A former employee of the lending startup SoFi has filed a lawsuit alleging that he was fired for reporting sexual harassment of female coworkers. The plaintiff’s lawyer says a broader class-action lawsuit will be filed next week on behalf of mistreated SoFi employees. Fortune has the story here.

    Essential Reads

    Two reasons the virtual currency Bitcoin just surged past $4,000.

    The Uber dilemma.

    An artificial intelligence beat one of the world’s top Dota 2 players so badly in that he threw in the towel in the middle of a second game against the bot.

    Detours

    In Manhattan and Brooklyn, home sellers are getting a reality check.

    Turns out it’s (probably) fine if you only exercise on the weekend.

    Hah. How to make a blockbuster movie trailer.

    Retail Therapy

    Sneakers just made to be drawn on.


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