• Market Tumult and the Marginal Productivity Trap

    productivity1By Craig Hanson

    The most disruptive aspect of capital market shifts isn’t simply that financing your business becomes easier or harder. It’s that the underlying math the market uses to value your company fundamentally changes. Public markets, venture capitalists and even employees evaluate you through a different framework. These shifts can be dramatic, with severe consequences for those still adhering to the prior paradigm. The market is reminding us of the potential for one of these systemic shifts now.

    For the past couple years, investors of all stages have been chasing furiously after high-growth companies, and rewarding them with valuation multiples exponentially higher than the difference in their growth rate would otherwise imply. An almost single-minded obsession on growth rates has understandably driven companies to dramatically increase their sales and marketing spending, faster than historical norms, fueled by round sizes larger than historical norms.

    The constraint, however – the gravitational impact of expansion economics – is that as more sales and marketing budget is spent in a period of time, the efficiency of that spend (in terms of qualified leads, sales prospects, sales, etc) naturally declines. This law of diminishing marginal productivity makes sense when you stop to think about it. When you move from the top 10 ROI marketing programs to the next 20 down the list, you’re investing in lower return programs. If you see 50 sales rep candidates in a quarter, and move from hiring the top 5 to hiring the top 20, you’re going to get lower productivity reps (assuming the manager is good at picking reps in the first place).

    Despite this, in the recent environment, CEO’s have felt immense pressure, and a bit of economic rationale, in increasing sales and marketing spending even as the productivity of those dollars declines. In other words, even as it drives productivity and efficiency metrics down, some CEOs keep stepping on the gas. Why? There are 2 reasons: one bad and one (temporarily) good.

    First the bad reason. Foremost, as some investors are pumping up round sizes, at all stages, much higher than normal, CEOs given this largesse naturally feel immense pressure to spend it. In too many cases, they have to increase spending dramatically in order to have any hope of reaching the herculean growth rates needed to justify the lofty valuation they just received. Shooting the moon is the only play in the book which has hope.

    There is a second reason, which has slightly more economic rationale, but only temporarily. CEOs may calculate the exponential increase in valuation multiple they receive for an extra 10% of annual growth, relative to the diminishing marginal impact of the sales and marketing money they’re spending. In essence, even though that next dollar spent on sales and marketing is getting you less and less revenue impact, that little bit of revenue impact is still getting you up the exponentially-increasing valuation multiple curve, enough to still justify it.

    The problem with this calculus is this: The diminishing marginal productivity curve is fairly constant, and only increases or decreases over time with the structural effectiveness and size of your programs. This takes time and concerted effort to change. The valuation reward curve, however, is entirely market dependent, and can fluctuate on a dime. In other words, the extra premium you think the market will give you for all of that extra sales and marketing spend can go away. With the recent market drops, this is a shocking wake up call for some CEOs who thought the valuation-for-growth math was a constant.

    Historically, this is exactly what happens to companies when market preferences shift. Those of us who’ve been through a couple cycles remember this full well, but many CEOs and even VCs today weren’t around the last time the math changed unexpectedly.

    In most market stages, public and private market investors care about both growth and the cost of that growth. The metrics of your company’s growth tell the story of its effectiveness, and thus of its sustainability. It’s not just about the growth – it’s how you get there that matters in the long run.

    By taking on mega-rounds, CEO’s should know that they’re doing three things: (1) narrowing their range of operational plan options, as going for broke is the only thing that can work; (2) putting increased pressure on their company to perform to match those expectations, because anything less will eventually create a negative spiral of down-rounds, underwater employee options, and employee defections; and (3) having to hit these high performance standards while slipping lower and lower down the marginal productivity curve.

    Screen Shot 2015-08-28 at 6.47.41 AM

    Worse yet, we see a lot of companies approach us looking for a round much larger than normal as a means to jack up the growth rate and improve the metrics. These are the companies I run from. It shows CEOs who don’t yet have the model working well, have usually achieved good but not exceptional growth, and yet want to spend their way even further down the marginal productivity curve.

    In my view, there can be a place for large financing rounds. But that time is once you have the metrics humming, a well-returning place on the productivity curve, and the discipline to spend at a pace the company can soundly keep up with.

    How are we handling this at our venture capital firm? Admittedly, as expansion stage investors (typically Series B,C,D), we get to rigorously analyze early performance of the company’s model. We pay attention to the productivity and efficiency, and then work our fingers to the bone helping CEOs improve this further as they ramp up the growth curve and move the marginal productivity curve forward over time. We respectfully pass on companies where the model isn’t working or where the CEO doesn’t know what has to be done to build a well-oiled model. Those CEOs who know how to read the metrics of their business and have an astute sense of how to turn it into a powerful platform as they ascend up the expansion stage have our respect and loyalty.

    In most market environments, and perhaps now once again, markets care about both your growth and how you get there. CEOs who pay attention to the fundamental strength of their operating model will guide their companies well no matter what the macro markets do. They know that metrics matter.

    As markets have reminded companies before and now once again, those who sacrifice metrics for growth shall eventually have neither.

    Craig Hanson is the cofounder of Next World Capital, a San Francisco-based expansion-stage venture firm.

  • StrictlyVC: August 27, 2015

    Hi, everyone, happy Thursday!

    —–

    Top News in the A.M.

    China has cut its holdings of U.S. Treasuries to raise needed capital to support the yuan, reports Bloomberg.

    Uber’s China arm has closed its $1 billion fundraising round early, reports Reuters. More here.

    —–

    VC Brian O’Malley on the Next Wave in “On Demand”

    Brian O’Malley is good at his job. He’s good enough, in fact, that two years, ago, Accel Partners plucked him out of his former firm, Battery Ventures, so he could bat for its team instead.

    As venture industry watchers know, these moves are rare, and they often pay off. Two famous examples include Sequoia Capital enticing Jim Goetz to leave Accel in 2004; Goetz has since led hugely profitable deals for Sequoia, including WhatsApp. Peter Fenton, also formerly of Accel, has similarly done a bang-up job for Benchmark, which lured him away in 2006.

    Earlier this week, we sat down with O’Malley at Accel’s new San Francisco’s office to talk about switching firms, as well as why, despite a sudden cooling toward on-demand companies, he’s as bullish as ever about them.

    We’re running one part of that chat today; stay tuned for the rest.

    Across both Battery and Accel, you’ve backed numerous startups that meet on-demand needs, like HotelTonight, the sports ticketing app Gametime, and the food delivery app Sprig. Are you still interested in apps that meet last-minute needs?

    At Accel, we’ve done three on-demand companies. We put a small piece in Sprig. We’ve backed the [Uber-for-kids startup] Shuddle. And we invested in Din [formerly called Forage], which is kind of like Blue Apron but that leverages the whole on-demand infrastructure, so you aren’t relying on all this packaging and UPS to get food across the country.

    You mean Din is piggybacking off other on-demand startups?

    If you think about it, Uber, Postmates, Sidecar — they all have APIs.

    More here.

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    New Fundings

    Able, a 1.5-year-old, Austin, Tex.-based collaborative lender that connects entrepreneurs with capital, has raised $6 million in Series A funding co-led by Blumberg Capital and RPM Ventures, with participation from Peterson Partners and Expansion Ventures AngelList Syndicate. Silicon Hills has more here.

    Augury, a four-year-old, New York-based company that diagnoses machines based on the sounds they emit, has raised $7 million in Series A funding led by Formation 8, with participation from Pritzker Group and earlier backers First Round Capital and Lerer Hippeau Ventures. Venture Capital Dispatch has more here.

    Benson Hill Biosystems, a three-year-old, Raleigh, N.C.-based agricultural biotech company that helps customers identify strategies that increase gains in crop plants, has raised $7.3 million in Series A funding led by Middleland Capital, with participation from Mercury Fund, Prelude Ventures, Prolog Ventures, Alexandria Venture Investments, Cultivation CapitalTechAccel and earlier backers Missouri Technology Corporation and Biogenerator. More here.

    Eko Communications, a three-year-old, Bangkok, Thailand-based enterprise messaging company, has raised $5.7 million in Series A funding led by the Shanghai, China-based investment firm Gobi Partners. TechCrunch has more here.

    Lugg, a year-old, San Francisco-based on-demand moving company that just graduated from Y Combinator’s summer class, has raised $3.8 million in seed funding led by A Capital, with participation from SV Angel, CrunchFund and numerous angel investors, including Gmail creator Paul Buchheit. TechCrunch has more here.

    Modumetal, an eight-year-old, Seattle-based maker of nanolaminated metals and materials, has raised $33.5 million in venture and debt funding. Founders Fund led the venture round, with participation from Sunshine TechCatamount Ventures, Second Avenue Partners, Goldenseeds, Alliance of Angels members and Concur Technologies CEO Steve Singh. Hercules Technology Growth Capital provided the debt. TechCrunch has more here.

    PreNav, a two-year-old, San Carlos, Ca.-based company that can fly a drone within centimeters of a structure, allowing for its close inspection, has raised $1.2 million in seed funding from investors, including Pejman Mar Ventures, Drone.vc, Oculus VR co-founder Michael Antonov and angel investor Toivo Annus. Venture Capital Dispatch has more here.

    Pronto, a year-old, London-based food delivery service, has raised $1.6 million in seed funding from Playfair Capital and Seedcamp. Other investors in the round include the London Co-Investment Fund, Ballpark Ventures, The Next Web cofounder Patrick de Laive and other unnamed angel investors. TechCrunch has more here.

    Remerge, a 1.5-year-old, Berlin, Germany-based mobile app marketing platform, has raised $3 million in Series A funding led by earlier backer Point Nine Capital, with participation from VC Fonds Technologie Berlin and earlier backers German Startups Group and WestTech Ventures. The company has now raised $4 million altogether. TechCrunch has more here.

    ReShape Medical, a seven-year-old, San Clemente, Calif.-based maker of non-surgical weight loss devices, has raised $38 million in Series D funding led by HealthCor Partners Management, with participation from Endeavour Vision and earlier backers SV Life Sciences, New Leaf Venture Partners, U.S. Venture Partners and Venture Investors. More here.

    Resolution Games, a months-old, Stockholm, Sweden-based virtual reality games studio co-founded by Candy Crush developer Tommy Palm, has raised $6 million in Series A funding led by Google Ventures, with participation fromCreandum, Initial Capital, Bonnier Growth Media and Partech Ventures. VentureBeat has more here.

    ServiceMax, an eight-year-old, Pleasanton, Ca.-based company that makes field service management software for technicians, has raised $82 million in Series F funding led by Premji Invest, with participation from GE Ventures,PTC Inc., and Cloud Apps Capital. Earlier backers also joined the round, including Emergence Capital Partners, Kleiner Perkins Caufield & ByersMayfield, Meritech Capital Partners, Adams Street Partners, Crosslink Capital, Questmark Partners, Sozo Ventures, and Trinity Ventures. The company has now raised $204 million altogether, shows Crunchbase. More here.

    Spoonflower, a 7.5-year-old, Durham, N.C.-based company offering custom fabric, wallpaper and gift wrap printing, has raised $25 million in funding led byNorth Bridge Growth Equity, with participation from Bull City Venture Partners. More here.

    Yuneec, a 16-year-old drone and aerospace company with offices in Hong Kong, Shanghai, Ontario, Ca., and Hamburg, Germany, has raised $60 million funding from Intel Capital. Bloomberg has more here.

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    New Funds

    PCH, which designs custom products for startups and Fortune 500 companies, is teaming up with Johnson & Johnson Innovation to identify and financially support  consumer health hardware startups. If you’re an entrepreneur with a health hardware startup, you can learn more about the new program — as well as apply to be part of it — here.

    —–

    Exits

    Life360, a seven-year-old, San Francisco-based maker of smartphone apps that help keep families connected, has acquired Chronos Mobile Technologies, a three-year-old, San Francisco-based startup whose mobile apps passively collect data from users’ smartphones in order to highlight trends and connections between various behaviors. Terms of the deal were not disclosed. Life360 has raised roughly $76 million from investors, including DCM, Bessemer Venture Partners, and Fontinalis Partners. Chronos had raised an undisclosed amount of seed funding from Maven Ventures, Draper Associates, Major League Baseball, and Plug & Play Ventures, among others. TechCrunch has the story here.

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    People

    Amazon is scaling back its efforts to develop consumer devices and laying off dozens of engineers in the process. The WSJ has the story here.

    Serial entrepreneur Garrett Camp is stepping in a second time to rescue his first company, StumbleUpon. Business Insider has the story here.

    Former Apple CEO John Sculley has just helped launch a line of stylish smartphones for Asia-based consumers via his new company, Obi Worldphone. More here.

    Y Combinator appointed a COO yesterday: Qasar Younis, a former YC alum who spent years at Google before joining the accelerator outfit as a full-time partner last year. Fortune has more here.

    —–

    Essential Reads

    Watch out, Siri. Facebook has begun testing out a personal digital assistant technology dubbed “M.”

    The Apple Watch isn’t a flop at all, says IDC.

    Turns out almost none of the women in the Ashley Madison database ever used the site. [Pulls out world’s tiniest violin.]

    —–

    Detours

    The 50 best colleges where students earn high starting salaries.

    Tesla’s Model S P85D just broke Consumer Reports’ ratings system.

    Ten popular grammar myths debunked by a Harvard linguist.

    Street photography of Japan by Takashi Yasui.

    —–

    Retail Therapy

    With Betabrand’s red-eye wrap sweater, you don’t have to look crazy anymore.

    Cool clock.

  • StrictlyVC: August 26, 2015

    It is Wednesday. We are halfway there, people!

    No column today. (We have some good stuff coming your way tomorrow.)

    —–

    Top New in the A.M.

    Windows 10 is evidently a giant hit for Microsoft. Corporate VP Yusuf Mehdi says that more than 75 million devices are now running the operating system, less than a month after its rollout began. ZDNet has more here.

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    New Fundings

    7Park Data, a three-year-old, New Hork-based analytics company that sells its information products to enterprises, has raised $3 million in Series A funding led by Mueller Ventures. More here.

    Apto, a three-year-old, Denver, Co.-based maker of a commercial real estate CRM and deal management app, has raised $8 million in Series B funding led byAdam Street Partners. The Tech Bulletin has more here.

    BasharSoft, the six-year-old, Cairo, Egypt-based company behind the popular, three-year-old Egyptian online recruiting platform Wuzzuf, has raised $1.7 million in Series A funding from the Sweden-based firm Vostok New Venturesand U.K.-based Piton Capital. TechCrunch has more here.

    Charge Messenger, a year-old, L.A.-based messaging app that hopes to make room for itself in a crowded market that already includes WhatsApp, Line, and Viber, has raised $1.7 million in seed funding. Its investors and advisors includePelion Venture Partners, Atlas Venture, Maiden Lane Ventures,Metamorphic Ventures, Cherubic Ventures, GrandCentral founder Craig Walker, Twilio co-founder John Wolthuis, and Slicehost co-founder Matt Tanas. TechCrunch has more here.

    Docady, a 1.5-year-old, Tel Aviv, Israel-based company whose iOS app lets users store and manage documents, has raised $1.5 million in funding from investors, including Pitango Ventures and Disruptive, the venture fund of Tal Barnoach, Eilon Tirosh and various former AOL video execs. TechCrunch hasmore here.

    Everykey, a three-year-old, Cleveland, Oh.-based company whose access device intends to be the “master key” for users’ phone, computer, online accounts, and more, has raised $720,000 in seed funding led by IncWell, an early-stage venture firm founded in 2013 by former Chryser CEO Tom LaSorda. The company also received $195,000 from grants through the state of Ohio, including the GLIDE Innovation Fund and NCOTF. More here.

    Fluxx, a five-year-old, San Francisco-based grants management platform for the philanthropic sector, has raised $10.2 million in Series A funding led byFelicis Ventures, with participation from The Kresge Foundation. More here.

    Intercom, a four-year-old, San Francisco-based customer communication platform, has raised $35 million in  Series C funding led by ICONIQ Capital, with participation from earlier investors The Social + Capital Partnership andBessemer Venture Partners. The company, which has now raised $66 million altogether, has more here.

    MOCACARE, a two-year-old, Palo Alto, Ca.-based maker of a heart tracker called MOCAheart, has raised $2 million in Series A funding led by the Singapore-based fund JDM, with participation from EMB International and earlier backers DCM Ventures, Lenovo Group, ONSET Ventures and Raven Ventures. TechCrunch has more here.

    Onapsis, a six-year-old, Boston-based cyber security company focused on business-critical applications, has raised $13.8 million in fresh funding, shows an SEC filing. The company had previously raised $12.6 million from investors, including Endeavor Catalyst, TPG Capital, Endeavor, and .406 Ventures.

    Velostrata, a year-old, Israel-based, early-stage hybrid cloud startup, has raised $14 million in Series A funding led by Norwest Venture Partners andGreylock IL Partners. TechCrunch has more here.

    —–

    New Funds

    Looks like FedEx may be getting into more alternative investing, if not strict corporate venturing. A new SEC filing shows the company has set aside $150 million for a vehicle called FedEx Alternative InvestmentsMichael Brandmeyer, a VP at Goldman Sachs Asset Management who has been running a hedge fund investment vehicle for the bank called Petershill, is listed on the filing. So are Goldman Sachs managing directors Harold Hope and J. Christopher Kojima.

    —–

    Exits

    Chic by Choice, a 1.5-year-old, London-based startup resembling RentTheRunway, has acquired its German competitor La Remia. Terms were undisclosed. TechCrunch has more here.

    Hortonworks, the publicly traded, big data company built on Hadoop, is paying an undisclosed amount to acquire the months-old, Washington, D.C. based company Onyara, which makes scalable dataflow software. TechCrunch has more here.

    —–

    People

    Former JPMorgan Chase analyst Ashish Aggarwal, a 27-year-old UC Berkeley graduate, has been charged along with two friends in an alleged insider trading scheme that netted more than $670,000 in illicit profits. The trades centered on two tech deals, including Salesforce’s acquisition of ExactTarget in 2013. CNN has more here.

    Andrew Chen, an entrepreneur and popular blogger known for his focus on mobile products, metrics and user growth, has joined Uber in a role that will see him supercharge driver signups, referral programs and more. He writes about the move here.

    Former Washington D.C. mayor Adrian Fenty, who joined Andreessen Horowitz as a special advisor in 2012 and joined the law firm Perkins Coie the following year as a business development manager, is positioning himself to advise more tech firms wanting to do business in Washington, suggests the Washingtonian.

    “Angry Birds” maker Rovio is cutting another 260 jobs — or 38.8 percent of its 670 employees — after reducing its workforce by 110 employees roughly a year ago. TechCrunch takes a look at the news here.

    Drew Vollero, a former finance executive at toy maker Mattel, is joining Snapchat as its VP of financing and acting CFO. He’ll report to Imran Khan, a former Credit Suisse banker who joined Snapchat in January as its chief strategy officer. The WSJ has the scoop here.
    —–

    Jobs

    Osage University Partners, the venture firm, is looking to hire a tech associate. The job is in Philadelphia.

    —–

    Essential Reads

    Apple has lost a ruling at Germany’s top civil court over a patent for unlocking smartphones with a finger swipe.

    Why GoGo’s infuriatingly expensive, slow Internet still owns the skies.

    Inside the fight over bitcoin’s future.

    —–

    Detours

    Google’s eerie secret interview process for programmers.

    The dog make-up tutorial you never wanted.

    Impressive Oreo art.

    —–

    Retail Therapy

    The Mercedes 2017 S-Class Cabriolet. It’s a full-size drop-top and it’s coming soon.

    Lion Killer Dentist Halloween costume. (Not an endorsement, but also, notably, an actual product for sale!)

  • StrictlyVC: August 25, 2015

    Hi, happy Tuesday, everyone!

    A quick mention: As some of you have discovered, our September 16 event is now sold out. For what it’s worth, we opened up a waitlist yesterday — it’s here — and we’ll do our best to accommodate a few more of you between now and then. Thanks to those of you who purchased tickets; we’re excited to see you. We’re also very thankful to our wonderful speakers and to our friends and partners, including at Bolt and Ludlow Ventures, for helping make possible what’s going to be a very fun night!

    —–

    Top News in the A.M.

    This Ashley Madison business is far from over. Here’s the latest.

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    A Slick New 401(k) Platform, From TaskRabbit Cofounder Kevin Busque

    In recent years, Kevin Busque began to notice something at TaskRabbit, the outsourced jobs marketplace that he co-founded seven years ago with his wife, and TaskRabbit’s CEO, Leah Busque.

    The company employs a lot of younger employees, and according to Busque (who was long the company’s VP of Technology but also tackled HR for some time), they weren’t taking advantage of TaskRabbit’s 401(k) program.

    In fact, the participation rate was somewhere in the range of 30 to 40 percent — on par with other U.S. businesses, where 401(k) participation is around just 36 percent, Busque says.

    According to Government Accountability Office testimony from 2013, numerous reasons explain such low figures. Sometimes, the employer plans of small businesses are too expensive. Sometimes, employees worry they aren’t making enough money to contribute to retirement savings. Often, too, retirement plans are so confusing that employees – younger staffers especially — decide they’re not worth the hassle.

    Enter Guideline Technologies, Busque’s four-month-old, San Francisco-based company, which has just raised $2 million in seed funding from New Enterprise Associates, Lerer Hippeau Ventures, SV Angel, Red Swan Ventures, BoxGroup, Xfund and 500 Startups.

    Its big idea: To work with small and mid-size employers in making 401(k) plans affordable for employees — as well as dead simple to set up.

    More here.

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    New Fundings

    BlueData, a three-year-old, Mountain View, Ca.-based company that helps customers generate virtualized big data clusters, has raised $20 million in Series C funding led by Intel Capital, with participation from Amplify PartnersAtlantic Bridge, Ignition Partners, and an unnamed strategic investor. TechCrunch has more here.

    carbonTRACK, a five-year-old, Victoria, Australia-based energy-tech startup that helps users to track their energy use in their homes, has raised $1.4 million (U.S.) in seed funding from Impact Investment Fund and Wolf Capital. Startup Daily has more here.

    Coursera, the three-year-old, Mountain View, Ca.-based online education service, has raised $49.5 million in Series C funding led by New Enterprise Associates. Other investors include Kleiner Perkins Caufield & ByersInternational Finance Corporation, and Times Internet Limited. Coursera expects a second closing of the round this fall. TechCrunch has more here.

    EHang, a year-old, San Carlos, Ca.-based drone startup, has raised $42 million in Series B funding led by GP Capital, with participation from earlier backers GGV Capital, ZhenFund, PreAngel, Lebox Capital and OFC. TechCrunch hasmore here.

    Fanatics, a 20-year-old, Jacksonville, Fla.-based e-commerce company focused on sports merchandise, has sold a minority ownership stake to private equity firm Silver Lake for $300 million, Fortune is reporting this morning. The company, acquired in 2011 by eBay spinoff Kynetic, had earlier raised $320 million in minority equity funding from Andreessen Horowitz and Insight Venture Partners and another $130 million from Alibaba Group.

    FluGen, an eight-year-old, Madison, Wi.-based biotechnology company at work on a  “universal” influenza vaccine, has raised $12 million in Series A funding from Venture Investors, the Wisconsin Alumni Research Foundation, the State of Wisconsin Investment Board, and other new and existing investors led by Knox LLC. More here.

    Friendsy, a 2.5-year-old, Princeton, N.J.-based student-only social network, has raised $500,000 in seed funding from Lerer Hippeau Ventures and Slow Ventures, firms that had previously provided the startup with $200,000 in funding. Princeton University also joined the round. TechCrunch has more here.

    Greenhouse Software, a three-year-old, New York-based recruiting optimization platform, has raised $35 million in Series C funding led by Thrive Capital, with participation from Benchmark, The Social+Capital Partnership, and Groupe Arnault.

    Scality, a six-year-old, San Francisco-based object-based storage startup, has raised $45 million in Series D funding led by Menlo Ventures, with participation from new strategic partner Broadband Tower, Scality employees, and earlier backers IDInvest, Digital Ambition Fund, Iris Capital, Omnes Capital and Galileo Partners. The company has raised $80 million to date. Silicon Valley Business Journal has more here.

    Simility, a year-old, Palo Alto, Ca.-based maker of adaptive fraud prevention software, has raised $3.45 million in seed funding led by Accel Partners. More here.

    Spare5, a 10-month-old, Seattle, Wa.-based company that helps businesses outsource menial tasks like tagging and describing images (the company calls itself a “snack-sized task platform”), has raised $10 million in Series A funding led by Foundry Group, Madrona Venture Group and New Enterprise Associates. TechCrunch has more here.

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    New Funds

    Owl Ventures — founded by Tory Patterson and Jed Smith, who previously ran the consumer goods and tech fund Catamount Ventures — has closed a $100 million fund. Venture Capital Dispatch has the story here.

    Peakview Capital, the two-year-old investment arm of the management consulting giant Shengjing Group, has been investing about $1 billion a year in private equity and venture capital funds. Next year, though, it plans to invest more than $1.5 billion, and much of it in the U.S. Venture Capital Dispatch has more here.

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    IPOs

    In the U.S., there are 40 fewer deals in the IPO pipeline than this time last year. The WSJ has more here.

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    Exits

    Shopa, a nearly two-year-old, London-based social shopping site, is reportedly shutting down and its CEO is out just seven months after it raised $11 million from investors, including Notion Capital and Octopus Investments. Business Insider takes a look at what’s happening here.

    —–

    People

    Meet Liam Casey, the founder and CEO of PCH International, otherwise known as the tech industry’s “fixer” in China.

    —–

    Jobs

    Saints Capital, which makes primary and secondary investments in venture-backed startups, is looking for an analyst. The job is in San Francisco.

    —–

    Essential Reads

    Aerosense, Sony’s joint-venture drone company, yesterday unveiled a prototype of the flying machines it will use to serve business customers.

    Uber is testing bus-style “smart routes” with designated pick-up and drop-off areas.

    —–

    Detours

    Wall Street: Still very white and very male.

    Posture for a healthy back.

    Why teenagers are the worst.

    —–

    Retail Therapy

    Do mosquitoes love you? Try this.

    OCD for breakfast.

  • StrictlyVC: August 24, 2015

    Hi, everyone, welcome back!

    —–

    Top News in the A.M.

    Chinese stocks plummeted earlier today, erasing gains for the year. It’s dragging our markets down with it, too. (A tumbling stock market could also mean bad juju for so-called unicorn companies.)

    Need more proof that the stock market is in trouble? Apple CEO Tim Cook emailed TV personality Jim Cramer this morning to calm nervous investors.

    —–

    Having Won Over VCs, Y Combinator Turns to LPs

    Last week, Y Combinator ran investors through 105 presentations by early-stage startups in a two-day show it calls Demo Day. The pace of deal-making for such events, staged every summer and winter, has grown so feverish that the incubator introduced a new wrinkle: backers could commit to plowing millions into a company by simply clicking the equivalent of an “easy button” via an online dashboard that Y Combinator created.

    Many local VCs seemed too busy to notice. Brian O’Malley of Accel Partners was walking around on his phone. Jon Sakoda of New Enteprise Associates made the rounds. Hunter Walk of Homebrew looked to be taking a couple of meetings, too.

    Yet there were other, more surprising guests. There, in the front row, was “Stevie” Cohen, the famed hedge fund manager. Elsewhere in the audience, a money manager for Major League Baseball sat rapt, listening to the procession of startup presentations.

    Perhaps the most interesting category of attendee, though, were more traditional limited partners, who typically invest in venture and private equity funds.

    Indeed, while it used to be that VCs treated their LPs a bit like mushrooms, keeping them mostly in the dark, today’s LPs want to be closer to the action, and for them, Y Combinator is Ground Zero.

    More here.

    —–

    New Fundings

    AppInside, a months-old, Israel-based mobile application security platform that identifies vulnerabilities, has raised $2.3 million in seed funding from Accomplice and unnamed angel investors. The Globes has more here.

    Cavendish Kinetics, a nine-year-old, San Jose, Ca.-based radio chip design company, has raised $36 million from undisclosed backers in a round that brings its total funding to $105 million. The company’s earlier backers include Tallwood Venture Capital, Wellington Partners, Celtic House Venture Partners, Qualcomm Ventures, and Quadia. VentureBeat has more here.

    Everything But The House, a seven-year-old, Cincinnati, Oh.-based online estate sale marketplace, has raised $30 million in Series B funding led byGreenspring Associates, with participation from earlier backers Greycroft Partners and Spark Capital. The company has now raised $43 million altogether. TechCrunch has more here.

    Freee, a three-year-old, Tokyo, Japan-based accounting software-as-a-service startup led by ex-Googler Daisuke Sasaki, has raised $28.7 million in Series C funding from Recruit Holdings, Japan Co-Invest, and earlier backer DCM. The company has now raised $45.9 million altogether, shows Crunchbase. Tech in Asia has more here.

    Get Smart Content, a nearly four-year-old, Austin, Tex.-based company whose tech helps marketers provide site content and messaging based on visitors’ profiles and web-based interactions, has raised $3.5 million in funding led by Origin Ventures, with participation from earlier backers Chicago Ventures and Virgo Capital. More here.

    Link Labs, a 1.5-year-old, Annapolis, Md.-based company that builds long-range machine-to-machine networks for the Internet of Things, has raised $5.7 million in funding from TCP Venture Capital, the Maryland Department of Business and Economic Development, and unnamed individual investors. Capital Gazette has more here.

    Mirantis, a 4.5-year-old, Mountain View, Ca.-based company that says it delivers all the software, services, training and support needed for running OpenStack, has raised $100 million in new funding led by Intel Capital, with participation from Goldman Sachs, August Capital, Insight Venture Partners, Ericsson, Sapphire Ventures and WestSummit Capital. (Last week, we told you that the company — which raised $100 million in October of last year, too — had raised at least $75 million, per a regulatory filing.) TechCrunch has more here.

    RNTS Media, a five-year-old, San Francisco-based investment company that acquires and owns businesses in the mobile ecosystem, has raised 100 million euros, or $112 million, in a convertible bond. VentureBeat has more here.

    SkinVision, a three-year-old, Amsterdam-based digital health startup whose smartphone tech and vision algorithms help users track changes to their moles with the aim of identifying suspicious growth, has raised $3.4 million from the European pharmaceutical firm LEO Pharma, with participation from earlier backer Personal Health Solutions Capital, a Dutch investment firm focusing on consumer-centric digital health opportunities.

    Stream.io, a year-old, Boulder, Co.-based company whose development tools aim to help companies reduce the time required to build feeds for their mobile apps and websites, has raised $1.75 million in funding from investors, including Brad Feld/FG Angels, Techstars Ventures, and Tahoma Ventures, among others. BizWest has more here.

    Syndax Pharmaceuticals, a 10-year-old, Waltham, Ma.-based clinical-stage pharmaceutical company focused on an inhibitor for solid tumors and hematological tumors, has raised $80 million in Series C funding led by Fidelity Management & Research Company and Delos Capital Fund, with participation from EcoR1 Capital, OrbiMed, Jennison Associates (on behalf of certain clients), Tavistock Life Sciences, Arrowpoint Partners,Cormorant Asset Management, BioMed Ventures and undisclosed mutual funds. Earlier backers Domain Associates, MPM CapitalRusnanoMedInvest and Forward Ventures also joined the round. FierceBiotech has more here.

    Thread, a three-year-old, London-based e-company that’s aiming to make shopping easier for men, has raised $8 million in funding from Balderton Capital and other investors. The Sunday Times has more here.

    —–

    New Funds

    Hatteras Venture Partners, a 15-year-old, Durham, N.C.-based venture firm focused on life sciences and other healthcare technologies, has raised $90 million for its fifth fund, which could reportedly reach as much as $150 million before it holds a final close. Its anchor LP is the Irish life sciences firm Malin. The firm, which specializes in the Southeast U.S., closed its last fund with $90 million. Xconomy has more here.

    InnoSpring, a three-year-old, Santa Clara, Ca.-based U.S.-China tech incubator, announced this morning that its Shanghai, China-based holding company has raised $10 million in strategic funding from Chinese auto parks maker Wanxiang Group. More here.

    The LA Dodgers Accelerator, a new, L.A.-based accelerator program in partnership with R/GA, is kicking off its first class today with ten sports-related tech startups. TechCrunch has the story here.

    Lakestar, a Zurich, 2.5-year-old, Switzerland-based venture firm founded by longtime VC Klaus Hommels, has closed its second fund with $385 million. TechCrunch has more here.

    Versant Ventures, a 16-year-old, Menlo Park, Ca.-based healthcare venture capital firm, has launched its third biotech incubator, Highline Therapeutics, in Manhattan. The firm says it’s busily forming partnerships with local academic institutions — beginning with the Weill Cornell Medical College — and that several other formal programs will be announced over the coming months. Carlo Rizzuto, who’d joined as Versant from Novartis Pharmaceuticals in 2012, will manage the firm’s newly established New York base. Xconomy has more here.

    —–

    People

    Apple has hired senior engineer Jamie Carlson from electric car maker Tesla Motors, as part of its effort to build a team of experts in automated driving. Reuters has the story here.

    Talk about a change in direction: Stephen Colbert’s first handful of “Late Show” guests will include SpaceX and Tesla CEO Elon Musk and Uber CEO Travis Kalanick. The Verge has more here.

    Silicon Valley companies like may provide companies plenty of perks, but enough child care (including day care centers so employees can remain close to their toddlers) is not one of them yet, argues Buzzfeed.

    —–

    Jobs

    Hulu is looking to hire a business development and partnerships manager. The job is in Santa Monica, Ca.

    —–

    Essential Reads

    In Uber’s quest to Win over China, Tencent blocks the way.

    How not to commit fraud when raising money, by Andreessen Horowitz.

    —–

    Detours

    No, you don’t have to drink eight glasses of water a day.

    —–

    Retail Therapy

    A “paparazzi proof” penthouse in L.A. Cost: $50 million.

    Action hero beach blankets. (Heh.)

     

  • StrictlyVC: August 21, 2015

    Friday, old friend, are we ever happy to see you. (Long Thursday.) Hope you have a stupendous weekend, everyone!

    —–

    Top News in the A.M.

    Uber plans to go public in the next 12 to 18 months, according to a leaked presentation.

    Twitter‘s shares closed at $26 last night — meaning they’re all the way back down to their IPO price. More here.

    Intuit announced surprising plans yesterday to sell Quicken (among other properties). More here.

    Worries of a deepening China economic slowdown intensified earlier today after a private survey showed the factory sector shrank at its fastest rate in almost6.5 years this month.

    —–

    CrowdFunding Platform OurCrowd Seeks a Broader Audience, Including with Traditional VCs

    Many crowdfunding startups now make it easier for founders to reach a bigger audience of investors. The question is whether investors are as keen to continue funding crowdfunding sites.

    OurCrowd may find out soon. The two-and-a-half-year-old, Jerusalem-based hybrid platform enables accredited investors to back startups through its site, as well as makes direct investments in each of those companies. In the meantime, it’s thinking about its own, next funding round.

    To learn the latest about the company, which raised $25 million in Series B funding from undisclosed investors last year, we talked yesterday with founder and CEO (and longtime VC) Jon Medved.

    OurCrowd has brand recognition in the U.S., but I’m not sure people understand how it differs from other crowd-funding platforms.

    Honestly, ten years ago, the Valley was much less Valley-centric than it is today. The world goes global and is connected on the web, yet the Valley becomes more hyper local than ever. It’s really contrary to all the trends. We can all meet in cyberspace, but if you’re not physically in the Valley, it’s often like, “Who are you?”

    Dare I ask if you’ve thought about opening a Bay Area office?

    We’re looking to establish a presence in Silicon Valley. We’re actively looking for a managing director [in the Bay Area], someone with rich angel and venture capital experience, if you want to tell your readers.

    You sometimes lead deals on your platform, is that correct?

    Yes, in fact, we just launched a deal for $25 million that we’re leading. Most people, when they think of crowdfunding, they think of deals that are small, but we’re far ahead of that; we’re doing millions of dollars on average, and in this particularly case, we’re investing more than $10 million.

    The already profitable company [called Mprest] basically makes software that powers the Iron Dome, which is the Israel-based system that shoots missiles out of the air before they land. In Israel, you have about 15 seconds if someone shoots at you from the Gaza Strip. This system responds within a second, creating instruction sets to intercept whatever has been fired — and it’s now taking its technology into the Internet of Things.

    To do what?

    More here.

    —–

    New Fundings

    Avegant, a three-year-old, Redwood City, Ca.-based company whose media headset, Glyph, supports 3-D and virtual reality content, has raised $24 million in Series B funding led by the Chinese mobile Internet company Hangzhou Liaison Interactive Information Technology Co. Ltd. Venture Capital Dispatch has the story here.

    Carbon3D, a two-year-old, Redwood City, Ca.-based maker of 3D printing machinery and software, has raised $100 million in funding led by Google Ventures, with participation from Reinet Investments, Yuri Milner and earlier investors Sequoia Capital, Silver Lake Kraftwerk and Northgate Partners. VentureBeat has more here.

    ChurchDesk, a five-year-old, Copenhagen, Denmark-based startup that makes mobile apps for church engagement and management, has raised $2 million in funding led by Mangrove Capital Partners. TechCrunch has more here.

    Dianrong.com, a nearly three-year-old, Shanghai, China-based peer-to-peer lender, has raised $207 million in new funding co-led by Standard Chartered Private Equity and China Fintech Fund, with participation from Boahi Leasing. Earlier this year, Tiger Global Management also invested an undisclosed amount of money in the company. TechNode has more here.

    GuiaBolso, a three-year-old, Sao Paolo, Brazil-based personal finance management platform, has raised $7 million in new funding led by Ribbit Capital, with participation from Omidyar Network, QED Investors, Kaszek Ventures, e.Bricks,Valor Capital, and numerous individual investors. More here.

    Hightower, a 2.5-year-old, New York-based leasing management platform for the commercial real estate industry, has raised an undisclosed amount of strategic funding from Newmark Grubb Knight Frank Corp., Starwood Capital CEO Barry Sternlicht, Rudin Management CEO Bill Rudin, and earlier backer Aaron Levie of Box. The funding comes just four months after the company raised $13 million in Series B funding led by RRE Ventures. New York Business Journal has more here.

    Marilyn Monroe Spas, a three-year-old, Orlando, Fla.-based chain of spas that plans to begin teaching classes about the salon, spa, and beauty industry, has raised $20 million in funding from JCR Holdings. The round brings the company’s total funding to $36 million, it says. More here.

    Orbus Therapeutics, a 3.5-year-old, Palo Alto, Ca.-based company working on therapies to treat rare diseases like anaplastic astrocytoma, has raised $32.5 million in Series A funding from Longitude Capital, H.I.G. BioVentures and Adams Street Partners. More here.

    —–

    New Funds

    Lerer Hippeau Ventures, the 5.5-year-old, seed-stage, New York-based venture capital firm, is looking to raise up to $75 million for its fifth fund, shows an SEC fiing that states the first sale has yet to occur. The firm closed its fourth fund with $62 million in June of last year. StrictlyVC had chatted with managing director Eric Hippeau about that vehicle, and what the firm finds most interesting, here.

    Point Judith Capital, a 14-year-old, Boston-based early-stage venture firm, is looking to raise up to $100 million for its fourth fund, shows an SEC filing that states the first sale has yet to occur. The firm had targeted the same amount for its third fund, which it began raising in 2011 and whose closing it didn’t publicly announce.

    —–

    Exits

    Local Motion, a four-year-old, San Mateo, Ca.-based fleet management startup that had raised more than $6 million from investors, including Andreessen Horowitz, has been acquired by the car-sharing company Zipcar for an undisclosed amount. More here.

    Maxymiser, a nine-year-old, New York-based maker of cloud-based consumer personalization software that had raised more than $15 million from investors, including NXT CapitalInvestor Growth Capital, and Pentech Ventures, has been acquired by enterprise software giant Oracle for undisclosed terms. ZDNet has more here.

    —–

    People

    Tech stocks have been taking a beating lately, and venture capitalist Bill Gurley of Benchmark thinks private market valuations might be next.

    Facebook and Asana cofounder Dustin Moscovitz writes smartly on Amazon, tech company culture, and why rest matters.

    —–

    Jobs

    SurveyMonkey is looking to hire a director of corporate strategy. The company is in Palo Alto, Ca.

    WPP is looking to fill a junior corporate development role. The job is in New York.

    —–

    Essential Reads

    Spotify just “got real creepy with the data it collects” about users, Forbesreported yesterday. For this weirdness, the company now says it’s sorry.

    Google’s Life Sciences unit, previously part of its X research lab, is becoming its own company under Alphabet. More here.

    The coders, entrepreneurs, venture capitalists, designers, and scientists (and, yes, one actress) behind L.A.’s tech boom.

    —–

    Detours

    Glenn O’Brien opens up about the abrupt end of his beloved “Style Guide” column in GQ.

    —–

    Retail Therapy

    Sidecar bicycle. Do not try this in New York, or any other crowded, urban setting for that matter, unless you have a death wish.

  • StrictlyVC: August 20, 2015

    Happy Thursday, everyone!

    Really nice seeing some of you yesterday at Y Combinator‘s second Demo Day. For those of you who missed it or else maybe spaced out occasionally, here’s a list of the 52 startups that pitched investors.

    —–

    Top News in the A.M.

    Snapchat lost $128 million and generated only $3 million in revenue between January and November of 2014, according to leaked financials published yesterday by Gawker.

    JPMorgan Chase, Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley are teaming up to create a company that will pull together and clean reams of data used to determine pricing and transaction costs. The WSJ has the story here.

    —–

    Amazon Softens Blow of Times Piece, But Attorneys Warn of Celebrating Too Soon

    In recent days, Amazon has worked to soften the blow of a blistering piece about its culture in Sunday’s New York Times. In the article’s immediate aftermath, Jeff Bezos wrote a memo to employees, saying the account “doesn’t describe the Amazon I know or the caring Amazonians I work with every day.” He further pointed employees to a newer piece by current Amazon engineer Nick Ciubotariu that praises the company’s workplace environment.

    The moves helped push the story in a positive direction for the company, as did the Times’s own public editor’s assessment of the story, which, she wrote yesterday, should have provided more balance and context. (The Times’s executive editor, Dean Banquet, later let her know that he disagreed entirely with her assessment.)

    Still, employment attorneys suggest it may be a little soon for Amazon to break out the bubbly. They think there could well be a class-action lawsuit in the many anecdotes cited by the Times of employees who were treated poorly — particularly those who appear to have they lost their jobs owing to health issues and other demands outside of Amazon.

    Says Wilma Liebman, a visiting scholar at Rutgers University School of Management and Labor Relations, who spent three terms as a member of the National Labor Relations Board (including, most recently, as its chair): “Being a very tough boss, not being nice, not being sympathetic – that isn’t illegal in itself.” Violating overtime law and discriminating against women because they are pregnant is, however.

    More here.

    —–

    New Fundings

    Grand Rounds, a four-year-old, San Francisco-based service that connects patients with highly specialized care, has raised $55 million in new funding, including from Facebook CFO David Ebersman and Venrock. The company has now raised $106 million to date. The New York Times has more here.

    Payoneer, a 10-year-old, New York-based financial services company that enables users to transfer and receive money through re-loadable MasterCards, has raised $50 million in Series E funding led by Wellington Management Company, with participation from earlier backer Susquehanna Growth Equity. Shares were purchased from existing investors, though all major shareholders in the company retained their holdings, says the company. More here.

    Ring, a four-year-old, Santa Monica, Ca.-based smart doorbell maker that aims to reduce crime by enabling homeowners, no matter where they are, to see and speak with visitors over their smartphones, has raised $28 million in Series B funding led by Sir Richard Branson, Shea Ventures and American Family Insurance. Other participants in the round included True Ventures, Upfront Ventures and angel investor Sky Dayton.Siklu, an 8.5-year-old, Petah Tiqva, Israel-based millimeter wave technology company, has raised $18 million in Series D funding from investors, including Sercomm Corporation, Argonaut Private Equity, Evergreen Venture Partners, DFJ Tamir Fishman Ventures, Qualcomm Ventures, The Tamares Group and Amiti Ventures.

    SmackHigh, a nearly two-year-old, Boston-based startup that aggregates submissions from high school students via social media and its own website and distributes them across thousands of high schools across the U.S., has raised $1.65 million in seed funding led by Flybridge Capital Partners, with participation from an AngelList syndicate led by Twitter exec Wayne Chang, and Boston Seed Capital. Several prominent angel investors from the Boston area also joined the round. BetaBoston has more here.

    Solexel, a 10-year-old, Milpitas, Ca.-based solar cell and module maker backed by solar panel maker SunPower and semiconductor company Spirox, has seemingly closed a Series D round with $95 million in funding from investors, including King Saud University in Saudi Arabia, through its venture arm, Riyadh Valley Company. Other investors in the round include Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers, DAG Ventures, Gentry Ventures, GSV Capital, Gentry Ventures, and Jasper Ridge Partners. Global University Venturing has more here.

    Sovrn Holdings, a 20-month-old, Boulder, Co.-based programmatic advertising and publisher platform company, has raised $18 million in funding led byFoundry Group, with participation from Oak Investment Partners, Archer Venture Acquisitions and entrepreneur John Battelle. More here.

    Yoogaia, a two-year-old, Espoo, Finland-based startup that charges monthly subscriptions to users wanting to watch live yoga classes and other fitness instruction via its web platform, has raised $3 million in seed funding from Nokia Growth Partners, Inventure, Sanoma Ventures and Point Nine Capital. TechCrunch has more here.

    Zynergy, a four-year-old, Singapore-based renewable energy company, has raised an undisclosed “multi-million dollar” amount of funding from Kohli Ventures. More here.

    —–

    Exits

    Freshdesk, a three-year-old provider of SaaS customer support software, has acquired the three-year-old, Bangalore, India-based live video chat and co-browsing platform 1CLICK for an undisclosed amount. The acquisition follows a $50 million Series E funding that Freshdesk closed in April, led by Tiger Global Management. (The company has raised $95 million altogether.) Meanwhile, 1Click.io had raised an undisclosed amount of seed funding from Blume Ventures.

    Viki, the five-year-old, Seoul-based video site owned by Japan’s Rakuten, has acquired Soompi, an English-language news and fan site dedicated to Korean cinema and dramas, for “less than $10 million.” Interestingly, as TechCrunch notes, Soompi was a property of rival Crunchyroll, an anime video distribution company that Chernin Group had acquired for undisclosed terms last year.

    —–

    People

    SoftBank’s Nikesh Arora — the man who Chairman and CEO Masayoshi Son is backing as his replacement at the Japanese company — is doubling down on his employer after he agreed to buy $483 million in company shares from his own pocket. As tweeted investor Hunter Walk about the news yesterday, “Wow. Kinda beats that Twitter insider buying news from last week, eh?”

    Colin Bryar, a former Amazon vice president, has joined the Singapore-based online grocery-delivery service RedMart as COO. Venture Capital Dispatch hasmore here.

    Cecile Lal, a former Yahoo employee sued by the company in May for breach of contract and fiduciary duty, has agreed in a settlement to pay the company an undisclosed sum and to cooperate with its ongoing investigation of confidential information leaked to journalist Nicholas Carlson. Carlson published a book about Yahoo CEO Marissa Mayer in January. More here.

    Serial entrepreneur Alex Rampell, who most recently cofounded the e-commerce payment and advertising company TrialPay (sold to Visa earlier this year), is the newest general partner at Andreessen Horowitz. Rampell, who will be focused on fin tech startups, is longtime friends with fellow Andreessen Horowitz general partner Chris Dixon. One of Rampell’s earlier companies, FraudEliminator, merged into a company of Dixon’s called SiteAdvisor. SiteAdvisor was later acquired (in 2006) by McAfee. The New York Times has more here.

    —–

    Jobs

    Uber is looking to hire a business operations and corporate development associate to primarily cover UberChina. The job is in San Francisco.

    —–

    Essential Reads

    YouTube is opening a production studio in Mumbai, India. TechCrunch has more here.

    California regulators said they have evidence that Uber has failed to screen out 25 drivers with criminal records, including convictions for kidnapping and murder. The WSJ has more here.

    Microsoft is reportedly interested in acquiring the cloud-computing software startup Mesosphere, valued by bankers at more than $1 billion. Mesosphere has raised roughly $50 million from investors, shows Crunchbase. Its backers include Khosla VenturesAndreessen HorowitzCenter ElectricFuel Capital, SV Angel, and Data Collective. The Information has the story here.

    —–

    Detours

    Black arts: the $800 million family selling art degrees and false hopes.

    Forty old high-school yearbook photos of Wall Street’s titans.

    —–

    Retail Therapy

    The Embassy Gardens sky pool, coming soon to London.

  • StrictlyVC: August 19, 2015

    Hi, everyone. It is Wednesday! Already!

    We’ll be at Y Combinator’s second Demo Day for part of this afternoon, representing TechCrunch. If you’re also heading there and want to chat about your top picks, please find us; we’d love to tawk. In the meantime, here are the 50 startups that presented at its Demo Day yesterday.

    —–

    Top News in the A.M.

    GrabTaxi, the taxi-hailing app that rivals Uber in Southeast Asia, is getting some support from China after it announced a $350 million Series E round from a range of investors that — most interestingly — includes Didi Kuaidi, China’s largest taxi app firm. TechCrunch has more here.

    Snapdeal — currently in a three-way battle for e-commerce dominance in India with rivals Flipkart and with Amazon — has raised $500 million in fresh funding at a valuation of $4.7 billion led by Alibaba and Foxconn. Bloomberg has more here.

    Uber is upping its focus on India, with an undisclosed amount of strategic funding from Tata Capital, one of India’s largest wealth management organizations. As TechCrunch notes: Tata is a “potentially very influential ally in Uber’s battle against Indian rival Ola, which is present in over 100 cities and has the support of SoftBank, Tiger Global and other heavy-hitting investors.”

    —–

    Adam Lisagor of Sandwich Media on Making the Killer Corporate Video

    Adam Lisagor, an L.A.-based video producer, has more demand for his corporate videos than he can handle, thanks to the breakout success of product launch videos for Square, Airbnb, and Warby Parker among many dozens of others. Demand doesn’t look to be tapering off any time soon, either. We talked with Lisagor about his own six-year-old, startup, Sandwich Video, yesterday.

    A Forbes piece earlier this year attributed your early success to a seemingly serendipitous meeting with Jack Dorsey, who asked you to make a video for Square. How did he find you?

    I was Internet friends, then real-life friends, with Robert Andersen, who was the first lead designer at Square [and is today its creative director]. Since we were friends and I’d done my own video for an app I worked on with a friend, and done one professional video for Genentech that no one saw, Robert suggested I fly up and meet with Jack. I thought he was photogenic and charismatic and that he could speak about the product as clearly as anyone, but he said, “No, I want you to do it.” And that was that.

    Sandwich’s pricing model allows for startups to pay you partly in equity. How many stakes have you amassed that way?

    About 35 at this point.

    You also announced the Sandwich Fund earlier this year with Ludlow Ventures, a Detroit-based venture firm. The idea is to assemble a portfolio of select companies that will provide you with early shares instead of pay you the roughly $100,000 that it costs to make a video. How many stakes have you taken through that fund?

    Only one so far: Cur, [which makes a pain relief wearable that people apply like a bandaid]. As a product, it was really interesting to me because it seemed like such a slam sunk. I tried it and it worked exactly as promised.

    Has Sandwich itself raised any outside funding or would it?

    For more of our interview with Lisagor, click here.

    —–

    New Fundings

    AlienVault, an 8.5-year-old, San Mateo, Ca.-based company that delivers a hybrid threat management solutions combined with a crowd-sourced threat intelligence platform, has raised $52 million in new funding led by Institutional Venture Partners, with participation from Trident Capital, Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers and GGV Capital. The company has now raised roughly $116 million altogether. TechCrunch has more here.

    Api.ai, a five-year-old, Palo Alto, Ca.-based developer of artificial intelligence and natural language tech that enables developers to add Siri-like conversational interfaces to their apps, has raised $3 million in funding led by SAIC Capital. TechCrunch has more here.

    CastAR, a year-old, Palo Alto, Ca.-based augumented reality gaming startup, has raised $15 million in a round led by Playground Global, the hardware accelerator and fund launched earlier this year by Android co-founder Andy Rubin. Venture Capital Dispatch has more here.

    Guideline Technologies, a months-old, San Mateo, Ca.-based company whose automated investment technology incorporates an individual’s entire financial ecosystem to make ongoing recommendations and adjustments to his or her 401(k), has raised $2 million in seed funding from investors, including New Enterprise Associates, Lerer Hippeau Ventures, SV Angel, Red Swan Ventures, BoxGroup, Xfund, and 500 Startups. More here.

    Iconixx, a five-year-old, Austin, Tex.-based maker of compensation management software, has raised $10 million in funding co-led by Harbert Venture Partners and S3 Ventures, with participation from earlier backer Ballast Point Ventures. More here.

    IntelligenceNODE, a three-year-old, Mumbai, India-based big data analytics startup that serves retailers, has raised $4 million in Series A funding led by New Enterprise Associates and Orios Venture Partners. TechCrunch has more here.

    Kahuna, a four-year-old, Palo Alto, Ca.-based mobile marketing startup, has raised $45 million in Series B funding led by Tenaya Capital, with participation from earlier backers Sequoia Capital and SoftTechVC. The company has now raised about $58 million altogether. Venture Capital Dispatch has more here.

    Kik, a six-year-old, Waterloo, Ontario-based messaging app, has raised $50 million in new funding from China’s Tencent at around a $1 billion valuation. More here.

    Kindara, a three-year-old, Boulder, Co.-based startup that helps women track ovulation cycles and fertility, has raised $5.3 million in seed funding led by Boston Seed Capital, with participation from SOS Ventures, Good Works Ventures, PV Ventures, MENA Venture Investments, and 62 Mile Ventures. TechCrunch has more here.

    Klarna, a 10-year-old, Swedish payments startup, has reportedly seen its valuation double to $2.25 billion in a secondary offering that involvedNorthzone, mutual fund Wellington Management, and the foundation Wellcome Trust, which purchased roughly $80 million worth of stock from company insiders. Klarna was valued at about $1.4 billion last year when it raised roughly $100 million from earlier backers. Venture Capital Dispatch has more here.

    Mirantis, a 4.5-year-old, Mountain View, Ca.-based company that says it delivers all the software, services, training and support needed for running OpenStack, has raised $75 million in fresh funding, according to regulatory filing flagged by Dow Jones. The company had raised $100 million in funding in October of last year led by Insight Venture Partners. More here.

    NextHealth Technologies, a two-year-old, Denver-based predictive analytics company, has raised $1 million in funding, including from the City of Denver’s Office of Economic Development and numerous health industry veteran executives. More here.

    Owlet Baby Care, a two-year-old, Provo, Ut.-based maker of the Smart Sock baby monitor, has raised $6 million in Series A funding led by Formation 8, with participation from TOMS Shoes founder Blake Mycoskie and earlier backers Azimuth Ventures, ffvc, Eniac Ventures and Peak Capital. Owlet also receiving another $1 million for participating in a government National Institutes of Health grant. The grant and the Series A collectively bring the amount that Owlet has raised to $9.2 million. More here.

    Revel Systems, a five-year-old, San Francisco, Ca.-based iPad point-of-sale platform, has raised $13.5 million in Series C-3 funding from ROTH Capital Partners. the round has now reached $110 million altogether, and the company has collectively raised $128.5 million, according to Crunchbase. More here.

    Royole Corporation, a two-year-old, Shenzhen, China-based company that develops rollable displays that can be incorporated into smartphones, computers and TVs, has raised $172 million in Series C funding from investors, including IDG Capital Partners, Shenzhen Capital Group, Shenzhen Green Pine Capital Partners, AlphaWealth, Jack and Fisher Investment, and other undisclosed investors. China Money Network has the news here.

    SpotHero, a four-year-old, Chicago-based on-demand parking app, has raised $20 million in Series B funding led by Insight Venture Partners, with participation from Battery Ventures, Bullpen Capital, Chicago Ventures,Draper Associates, OCA Ventures, Pritzker Group Venture Capital and 500 Startups. The company had previously raised $7 million. TechCrunch hasmore here.

    WaVe Life Sciences, a six-year-old, Boston-based genetic medicine company focused on advancing stereopure nucleic acid therapies for patients impacted by rare diseases, has raised $66 million in Series B funding led by new investorForesite Capital, with participation from Fidelity Management & Research Company, New Leaf Venture Partners, Redmile Group, Jennison Associates (on behalf of certain clients), Cormorant Asset Management, and certain private investment funds advised by Clough Capital Partners. Earlier backers RA Capital Management and Kagoshima Shinsangyo Sosei Investment also joined the round. BioPortfolio has more here.

    —–

    IPOs

    Edge Therapeutics, a six-year-old, New Providence, N.J.-based company with a drug delivery system for brain hemorrhaging and other acute neurological conditions, has filed an S-1 form with the SEC, revealing plans to raise up to $115 million. Just five months ago, the comapny had raised $72.5 million in Series C funding, including a C-2 round led by Venrock, with participation from Sofinnova Ventures, Janus Capital Management, New Leaf Venture Partners and BioMed Ventures.

    RegenXBio, a seven-year-old, Rockville, Md.-based company that’s developing gene therapies for rare diseases and licensing out gene delivery technology, has filed with the SEC to raise up to $100 million in an IPO. More here.

    SynCardia Systems, a 14-year-old, Tucson, Az.-based developer and manufacturer of temporary implantable artificial hearts, has registered plans with the SEC to raise up to $40 million in an IPO. More here.

    —–

    Exits

    Anova, maker of an automated sous vide cooker, is spending $9.2 million in cash to acquire Get Fresh, whose CEO, Stephen Svajian, will become CEO of Anova. Anova, which had raised $1.8 million in a Kickstarter campaign in 2013, is paying $9.2 million in cash. Get Fresh had raised one seed round from Zenefits COO David Sacks and Cotap CEO Jim Patterson (who were formerly colleagues at Yammer). GetFresh never disclosed the amount of that seed round. TechCrunch has more here.

    PayPal has bought Modest, a Chicago-based startup headed by the former chief technology officer of President Obama’s 2012 re-election campaign. Modest helps merchants build mobile apps, and had raised an undisclosed amount of seed funding from Hyde Park Venture Partners and Base Ventures. Fortune has the story here.

    —–

    People

    After three years, Paul Maritz is stepping down as CEO at Pivotal Software, a data analytics, cloud computing and software-development services company spun out of EMC and VMware. His successor: Rob Mee, who cofounded Pivotal Labs, a software development company. The WSJ has more here.

    —–

    Jobs

    Kapor Capital is looking for a full-time portfolio services director. The job is in Oakland, Ca.

    —–

    Data

    From the New York Times: “Last year, Yale paid about $480 million to private equity fund managers as compensation — about $137 million in annual management fees, and another $343 million in performance fees, also known as carried interest — to manage about $8 billion, one-third of Yale’s endowment. In contrast, of the $1 billion the endowment contributed to the university’s operating budget, only $170 million was earmarked for tuition assistance, fellowships and prizes.”

    —–

    Essential Reads

    Hackers finally posted that stolen Ashley Madison data.

    With the help of its investors, including Sequoia Capital and China Broadband Capital, the home-sharing startup Airbnb is gearing up for a big push into the booming market of Chinese travelers.

    —–

    Detours

    How to be an expert in anything.

    At Lucali, pizza for the A-list and the landlady upstairs.

    “I’m Phil Brock, and I want to be your bald wingman.”

    —–

    Retail Therapy

    Surf Snowdonia. (GoPro CEO Nick Woodman checks it out here.)

  • StrictlyVC: August 18, 2015

    Hi, everyone! Hope you have a great Tuesday.

    —–

    Top News in the A.M.

    Google has finally launched Android One, a standard created for Android devices in developing countries, in Africa. VentureBeat has more here.

    In other Google news, the next version of Android, called “Marshmallow,” is reportedly coming soon, though there’s no official timetable. TechCrunch has more here.

    —–

    EShares, Now Valued at $77 Million, Looks Far Beyond Silicon Valley

    Three-year-old eShares digitizes paper stock certificates along with stock options, warrants, and derivatives to create a real-time picture of who owns what at a startup. It also makes it far simpler to transfer ownership of all of the above — which goes a long way in explaining the company’s traction. The Mountain View, Ca.-based outfit right now maintains the cap tables of 1,500 companies, including Slack and Blue Bottle Coffee, and says it’s adding 200 more companies each month. Perhaps more important, eShares has won the trust of roughly 35 law firms, the gatekeepers for most startups and their paper certificates.

    But eShares — which has just raised $17 million in Series B funding at a post-money valuation of $77 million from insiders like Spark Capital and Union Square Ventures — isn’t just racing to win over tech startups. Now, the 42-person company wants the rest of the world’s still-private small and mid-size businesses on its platform, too.

    We talked with cofounder and CEO Henry Ward about his big plans yesterday.

    As of last year, eShares charged companies $159 a month or roughly $1,900 a year to maintain an ongoing valuation. It also charged a $20 fee every time a company issued a new grant and another $20 every time someone exercised the sale of one of their holdings.

    That hasn’t changed, and the model works well at the early stage, though a lot of our larger customers go to an all-you-can-eat annual subscription model. We don’t publish the pricing (publicly) but that typically happens when companies hit 50 employees.

    Worth noting: Employees on eShares can hook up their bank account to their eShares account and self-exercise their options and we wire the money straight to the company, as well as issue the employee new stock certificates. It’s much easier than the normal paper exercise, where employees have to get the company to process [the transaction every time they want to exercise their options].

    You must have pretty good insight into what’s happening in terms of secondary sales, too. Are you noticing more shares selling to insiders versus third parties or vice versa? 

    >I can’t talk specifics, but secondaries are getting a lot of attention. We joined forces with [the secondary investment firm] Industry Ventures [which participated in eShare’s new round] to work on streamlining the process and bringing more transparency to it.

    As an investor, does Industry Ventures get “first dibs” on secondary sales where you’re helping companies facilitate their movement?

    For more of our conversation with Ward, click here.

    —–

    New Fundings

    Apiary, a four-year-old, San Francisco-based company that aims to make API development simpler and more collaborative, has raised $6.8 million in Series A funding led by Flybridge Capital Partners, with participation from Baseline Ventures and Credo Ventures. The company has now raised $8.4 million to date. More here.

    Aviacode, a 16-year-old, Salt Lake City-based medical coding-related software and services company, has raised $16 million in growth equity funding from Frontier Capital. More here.

    Away, a months-old, New York-based direct-to-consumer luggage company that sources its own components and promises to bring down prices by cutting out middle men, has raised $2.5 million in seed funding co-led by Forerunner Ventures and Accel Partners. TechCrunch has more here.

    BuzzFeed, the seven-year-old, New York-based media company, has raised $200 million in funding from NBCUniversal. (Recode had reported this was coming a couple of weeks ago, though its number was off by $50 million.) The company has now raised roughly $300 million altogether, including from Andreessen Horowitz, New Enterprise Associates, Lerer Hippeau Ventures, and RRE VenturesMore here.

    CloudDesk, a two-year-old, Singapore-based desktop virtualization software company that originally targeted educational institutions and is now moving into other commercial and governmental sectors, has raised roughly $418,000 from the Singapore National Research Foundation and IncuVest, a Singapore-based investment firm and incubator. The outlet e27 has more here.

    Datameer, a six-year-old, San Francisco-based big data analytics company built on Hadoop, has raised $40 million in Series E funding led by ST Telemedia, an investment firm based in Singapore. Top Tier Capital Partners, Kleiner Perkins Caulfield & Byers, Redpoint Ventures, Next World Capital, and Software AG also participated. The company has now raised more than $76 million altogether. TechCrunch has more here.

    Deezer, an eight-year-old, Paris, France-based music-streaming service that targets consumers in Europe and Africa, is seeking funds from investors in a transaction that could value it at about 1 billion euros ($1.1 billion), reports Bloomberg. Deezer has 16 million actively monthly users and 6 million paid subscribers, compared with Spotify’s more than 75 million active users and 20 million subscribers. More here.

    Filament, a three-year-old, Reno, Nev.-based developer of decentralized Internet-of-things infrastructure, has raised $5 million in Series A funding led byBullpen Capital, with participation from Verizon Ventures, Crosslink Capital, Samsung Ventures, Digital Currency Group, Haystack, Working Lab Capital, and Techstars. More here.

    First Light Fusion, a four-year-old, Oxford, England-based company that was spun out from the University of Oxford to develop a process for achieving affordable fusion energy, has raised £22.7 million ($35.5 million) from investors, including the intellectual property business IP Group, a fund managed by Invesco Asset Management, clients advised or managed by Sandaire Investment Office, and the University of Oxford.

    MarketInvoice, a four-year-old, London-based peer-to-peer business lender, has raised £6 million ($10 million) from Northzone and the family office of Paul Forster, the co-founder of job search engine Indeed.com. Business Insider has more here.

    Marvel, a two-year-old, London-based startup that lets users turn sketches into mobile app “prototypes,” has raised $2 million in new seed funding from Index Ventures and Connect Ventures, with participation from earlier backers. TechCrunch has more here.

    Peach, a year-old, Seattle-based company whose web-based technology provides order processing and food logistics services to restaurants under a revenue-sharing agreement, has raised $8 million in Series A financing led by Madrona Venture Group, with participation from Vulcan Capital. Xconomy has much more here.

    Piramal Realty, the four-year-old, Mumbai, India-based real estate development arm of the Piramal Group, has raised $150 million from Goldman Sachs in exchange for a minority stake in its business. The capital follows roughly $284 million invested in the company earlier this year by the private equity firm Warburg Pincus. The Hindu has the story here.

    Platform9, a two-year-old, Sunnyvale, Ca.-based cloud service that aims to transform infrastructure into an agile, self-service private cloud in minutes, has raised $10 million in Series B funding led by Menlo Ventures, with participation from earlier backer Redpoint Ventures. The company has now raised $14.5 million altogether. TechCrunch has more here.

    Roposo, a nearly two-year-old, Gurgaon, India-based fashion discovery startup, has raised $15 million from Tiger Global Management just a few months after having attracted a $5 million Series A check from the firm. Times of India has the story here.

    Solu, a year-old, Helsinki, Finland-based startup that’s operating in stealth but is reportedly targeting the personal computer market with a new type of OS and its own hardware, has raised $1.3 million in seed funding from KSV Finland, along with numerous individual investors. TechCrunch has more here.

    Swipe, a three-year-old, London-based, web-based PowerPoint alternative that features audience analytics, real-time polls and live syncing, has raised an undisclosed amount of capital from earlier investors Passion Capital and Playfair Capital. The company say it has now raised roughly $1 million in total. TechCrunch has more here.

    Talenta, a 1.5-year-old, Jakarta, Indonesia-based, cloud-based human resources management startup, has raised an undisclosed amount of bridge funding led by Fenox Venture Capital, with participation from earlier backer East Ventures. Tech in Asia has more here.

    Tracksmith, a 2.5-year-old, Wellsley, Ma.-based running apparel brand that features classic styling (think “run-swim-run” shorts, among other things), has raised $4.1 million in Series A funding led Pentland Brands, the management group behind Reebok, Speedo, and Lacoste footwear, among other sporting brands. The company has now raised $5.7 million altogether. TechCrunch has more here.

    —–

    New Funds

    OMERS Ventures, the four-year-old venture unit of Canada’s Ontario Municipal Employees Retirement System, has raised $199 million in new funding. The WSJ has more here.

    —–

    People

    Joanne Bradford, a longtime media executive who was most recently Pinterest’s head of partnerships, has joined the online lender SoFi as its chief operating officer. Recode has the story here.

    Entrepreneur-investor Justin Kan was the victim of a hate crime over the weekend, when an unidentified man wrote a derogatory racial epithet on his garage door. Reports Buzzfeed: After a neighbor painted over the epithet in the wrong color (without seeking Kan’s approval), and a TV station misspelled his last name, Kan joked on Facebook hat he’d been the “victim of a hate crime, a help crime, and now a name crime.”

    —-

    Essential Reads

    Product Hunt, the app discovery site, is taking aim at Reddit and Twitter by introducing live interviews.

    Uber, the ride-sharing startup that has suffered from several data breaches, plans to quadruple the size of its 25-person security team by year end, its chief security officer Joe Sullivan told the Financial Times yesterday. More here.

    —–

    Detours

    This is what happens to your body when you stop exercising. (Do not read if you’ve stopped exercising.)

    Manspreading, upstreaming, and other stock photos of New Yorkers.

    Future grooms, a very high bar has just been set.

    —-

    Retail Therapy

    If you liked Lite-Brite as a kid, you’re going to love (like?) Everbright.

  • StrictlyVC: August 17, 2015

    Hi, happy Monday, everyone, hope you had a terrific weekend.

    We are back! No column today, though. (We arrived back in town a little late yesterday and we’re still knee deep in tangled chargers and dirty clothes.)

    —–

    Top News in the A.M.

    The NSA‘s ability to capture Internet traffic in the U.S. is reportedly rooted in an “extraordinary, decades-long partnership with a single company: AT&T.” ProPublica has the story here. (You may have already seen the Snowden documentary “Citizenfour.” If not, we recommend catching that at some point, too.)

    The owner of home shopping network QVC is acquiring five-year-old Internet retailer Zulily for $2.4 billion in cash and stock, the companies said this morning. It’s paying $18.75 per share, a 49 percent premium to Zulily’s closing price of $12.8 on Friday. The WSJ has more here.

    —–

    New Fundings

    Ascentage Pharma, a six-year-old, Hong Kong-based biopharmaceutical company at work on a drug meant to treat chronic lymphocytic leukemia and glioblastoma multiforme, has raised $15.5 million in Series A funding co-led byOriza Seed Capital and YuanMing Capital, with participation from EFung Capital, BioVenture Capital, Grains Valley Venture Capital, and undisclosed investors.

    EnTouch Controls, a six-year-old, Richardson, Tex.-based company that develops energy management systems for small commercial facilities, has raised $6 million in Series C funding from undisclosed investors. Earlier backers in the company include SJF Ventures, NRG Energy, and Trailblazer CapitalMore here.

    Helper.io, a six-month-old, Los Gatos, Ca.-based automated hiring marketplace that says it uses machine learning, psychometric assessments, and data analytics to improve hiring decisions, is looking to raise its first round of capital, shows an SEC form that doesn’t list a target. More here.

    ImmunoGum, a four-year-old, Orange, Ca.-based company that packages together vitamins that support the immune system in gum form, has raised $1.2 million in seed funding from Tech Coast Angels. More here.

    Loyalty Bay, a 1.5-year-old, London-based maker of lead generation software, has raised a $1 million round led by Talis Capital, with Howzat PartnersNEON Adventures, Chris Mairs and Richard Verney participating. TechCrunch has more here.

    MapD, a two-year-old, San Francisco-based company that builds fast GPU-databases to allow users to interact with and visualize big data in real time, has raised $7.8 million from investors, shows an SEC filing. The company had previously raised $2 million in seed funding from Google Ventures, Nvidia, and Vanedge Capital.

    Pacific Ag, a 17-year-old, Hermiston, Ore.-based crop residue supply company, has raised $7 million in funding from Advantage Capital Agribusiness Partners. More here.

    Shijiebang, a three-year-old, Beijing, China-based online travel firm that creates customized travel packages for wealthy Chinese tourists traveling overseas, has raised an undisclosed amount of Series B funding, says the company. According to Crunchbase, Shijiebang has previously raised $12 million, including from China Rock Capital, Fosun Kinzon Capital, and Yahoo cofounder Jerry Yang. More here.

    Yogrt, a year-old, Indonesia-based dating application, has raised $3 million in funding from Centurion Private Equity and Linear Ventures. The company was co-founded by Jason Lim, former managing director of Acer Indonesia, and several serial entrepreneurs. More here.

    YourStory Media, a seven-year-old, Bangalore, India-based company that showcases Indian startups, has raised between $3 million and $5 million in venture funding led by Kalaari Capital, with participation of Ratan TataQualcomm Ventures and others. It’s the first external round for the company. VCCircle has more here.

    —–

    New Funds

    Decheng Capital, a four-year-old, Shanghai, China-based healthcare investment firm that provides capital to early and growth stage life science companies in China and the U.S., is looking to raise up to $250 million for its second fund, shows an SEC filing. The company had targeted $125 million for its debut fund in 2012. (We’re not sure if it hit, or exceeded, that target.) More on the firm here.

    —–

    Exits

    Grid Dynamics, a nine-year-old, Menlo Park, Ca.-based company that sells scalable ecommerce technology software to grocery companies, has acquired Qubell, a two-year-old company that had developed an autonomic application management platform for cloud applications. Terms of the deal weren’t disclosed, but Grid Dynamic is using part of a new, undisclosed amount of Series B funding led by previous backer Benhamou Global Ventures to help fund it. More here.

    Housing.com, a SoftBank-backed real estate platform in India, has spent $2 million to acquire HomeBuy360, a four-year-old, Bangalore-based startup that provides an online sales and customer relations management platform that connects developers, agents and buyers. TechCrunch has more here.

    —–

    People

    Amazon founder Jeff Bezos responds to the New York Times’s gripping weekend read about Amazon’s “bruising workplace,” saying that “The NYT article prominently features anecdotes describing shockingly callous management practices, including people being treated without empathy while enduring family tragedies and serious health problems. The article doesn’t describe the Amazon I know or the caring Amazonians I work with every day.”More here.

    Tyson Clark has joined Google Ventures as a partner, reports Fortune. Clark most recently worked in corporate development at Andreessen Horowitz, and, earlier in his career, spent six years in the U.S. Navy as a nuclear propulsion submarine officer. More here.

    For what it’s worth, the fund owned by billionaire George Soros has sold most of its shares in retail giant Alibaba, slicing its holdings to 60,000 shares (worth $4.9 million) down from $370 million worth of shares at March’s end. The BBC has more here. (Meanwhile, the WSJ has more here on the fresh threat Alibaba faces from new rivals.)
    —–

    Jobs

    Twitch, the video platform and gamer community acquired by Amazon last year, is looking to hire a VP of business development.

    —–

    Essential Reads

    An Airbnb stay went very wrong recently, and confused about what to do, the company opted not to get involved.

    Buzzfeed takes a deep dive into Pinterest’s ambitious e-commerce platform.

    VCs have invested tens of millions of dollars in companies that service society’s upper crust, while largely passing on profitable companies aiming to help the downtrodden.

    —–

    Detours

    Zombie fashion: Why dead brands are coming back.

    How old people became the future of the auto industry.

    The problem with ever-changing work schedules and child-rearing.

    President Obama is plotting life after the presidency (and soliciting advice toward that end from Reid Hoffman, John Doerr, and Vinod Khosla, among others).

    —–

    Retail Therapy

    Tired of answering questions about your Apple Watch? Try this.


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