• StrictlyVC: June 24, 2015

    Happy Wednesday, everyone! No column today — we were busy figuring out what’s what at TechCrunch yesterday.

    We did want to thank the many of you who’ve reached out to us about an internship here at StrictlyVC. You’re an impressive lot. We had a bit more interest than we were expecting (thank you); we’ll be looking at your resumes and other details and getting in touch soon.

    One last note: More than a quarter of the tickets for our September 16 event sold yesterday. (In other words, you have time, but don’t wait until the last minute.) The agenda is here; tickets are available for purchase here. Also, if you are interested in partnering with us on the program as a sponsor, let’s talk!

    —–

    Top News in the A.M.

    Uh, oh, take note, Bay Area readers: ominous new cracks have been found in the rods on San Francisco’s new Bay Bridge tower.

    Yahoo CEO Marissa Mayer is addressing investors this morning at a shareholder’s meeting. You can catch the live stream here.

    —–

    New Fundings

    Autho, a 1.5-year-old, Bellevue, Wa.-based “universal identity platform,” has raised $9.3 million in funding led by Bessemer Venture Partners, with participation from K9 Ventures. More here.

    Barkly, a two-year-old, Boston, Ma.-based endpoint security startup, has raised $12.5 million in Series A funding led by New Enterprise Associates, with participation from Sigma Prime Ventures. The company has now raised $17 million altogether. More here.

    Belong, a year-old, Bangalore, India-based recruitment startup, has raised $5 million in Series A funding led by Matrix Partners and Kunal Bahl and Rohit Bansal, the co-founders of Snapdeal, with participation from earlier backers Blume Ventures, Phanindra Sama, and Raju Reddy. More here.

    Biodesix, a 10-year-old, Boulder, Co.-based molecular diagnostics company that  develops and commercializes blood-based tests for precision medicine in oncology, has raised $11 million in Series E  funding from earlier investors (whose names it has never disclosed). More here.

    Calcivis, a three-year-old, Edinburgh, Scotland-based medical devices company whose tools enable dentists to better see and address tooth erosion, has raised roughly $7 million in new equity and grant funding from Archangel Investors, the Scottish Investment Bank, and the European Commission, under its Horizon 2020 SME Instrument programme.

    eFounders, a five-year-old, Brussels-based startup studio, has raised $6 million from Fotolia co-founder Oleg Tscheltzoff to build its next batch of software-as-a-service startups. TechCrunch has more here.

    Frame, a three-year-old, San Mateo, Ca.-based service that allows users to run desktop programs like Adobe Photoshop or Microsoft Excel directly from their browser, has raised $10 million in Series A funding from Columbus Nova Technology Partners, Bain Capital Ventures and SQN Venture Partners. The company had previously raised $2.5 million in seed funding. TechCrunch has more here.

    Goodservice, a year-old, Mumbai, India-based company whose app aims to serve as a kind of virtual personal assistant to users, has raised $1.6 million in seed funding from Sequoia Capital. More here.

    HackerOne, a three-year-old, San Francisco-based company whose bug bounty platform helps companies find vulnerabilities in their products, has raised $25 million in Series B funding led by New Enterprise Associates, with participation from earlier backer Benchmark and a long list of prominent individuals, including Salesforce CEO Marc Benioff. TechCrunch has more here.

    Indix, a 4.5-year-old, Seattle, Wa.-based product intelligence company that provides analytics and insights to brands and retailers, has raised $15 million in funding from Nokia Growth Partners, Nexus Venture Partners and Avalon Ventures.

    MDLive, a six-year-old, Sunrise, Fla.-based telehealth company, has raised $50 million in new funding from Bedford Funding. The company has now raised at least $73.6 million altogether from investors, shows Crunchbase. Previous backers include Sentara Healthcare, Sutter Health, Heritage Group and Kayne Anderson Capital Advisors.

    Palantir Technologies, the 11-year-old, Palo Alto, Ca.-based company specializing in software used in counterterrorism and the financial industry, is raising up to $500 million in new capital at a valuation of $20 billion, according to BuzzFeed News. The company raised money late last year at a $15 billion valuation; at a $20 billion valuation, Palantir would be the third-most-valuable startup in the U.S. behind Uber and Airbnb, notes BuzzFeed.

    PromisePay, a two-year-old, Melbourne, Australia-based secure payment gateway company, has raised $2 million in funding from Cultivation CapitalReinventure, and numerous individual investors. The company had previously raised several hundred thousand dollars in seed funding. More here.

    Squadrone System, a 1.5-year-old, Palo Alto, Ca.-based company behind an autonomous flying camera, has raised $3 million from Living Water Investment Corp. The company has now raised $5 million altogether. More here.

    Soundtrack Your Brand, a two-year-old, Stockholm, Sweden-based service that allows retailers to manage in-store Spotify streams, has raised $10.9 million in Series B funding led by Telia Sonera, with participation from Creandum, Northzone Ventures, Play Networks, Wellington Partners and Spotify.

    SQZ Biotech, a two-year-old, Boston, Ma.-based developer of a platform that enables the intracellular delivery of macromolecules, has raised $5 million in Series A funding led by Polaris Partners, with participation from 20/20 Healthcare Partners and others. More here.

    Stockspot, a two-year-old, Sydney, Australia-based automated investment advisor and fund manager, has raised an undisclosed amount of capital from Rocket Internet and H2 Ventures, a new fintech venture capital fund. Australia’s Financial Review has more here.

    TissueTech, a 14-year-old, Miami, Fla.-based regenerative tissue engineering company, has raised $15 million in Series B funding from River Cities Capital Funds and Ballast Point Ventures.

    VenueNext, a two-year-old, Palo Alto, Ca.-based company whose tools aim to help guests and venue operators easily manage live events (from ticketing to parking and directions to loyalty programs), has raised $9 million in Series A funding from investors, including Causeway Media Partners, Live Nation and Twitter Ventures. TechCrunch has more here.

    ViraTherapeutics, a two-year-old, Innsbruck, Austria-based biopharmaceutical company developing cancer immunotherapies based on cancer-destroying viruses, has raised raised €3.6m (roughly $4 million) in the first closing of its Series A round. Boehringer Ingelheim Venture Fund and EMBL Ventures co-led the financing, with participation from Austria Wirtschaftsservice.

    —–

    New Funds

    Blockchain Capital, a 1.5-year-old, San Francisco-based micro venture firm, has held a first closing on its second fund with $7 million. The firm invests exclusively in blockchain-enabled technology companies. More here.

    DBL Partners, a six-year-old, San Francisco-based firm founded by former J.P. Morgan exec Nancy Pfund, has announced a new, $400 million fund, as well as a new managing director in Ira Ehrenpreis, who spent the previous 19 years as a general partner at the firm Technology Partners. The firm aims to back startups that have a positive social or environmental impact, reports Venture Capital Dispatch.

    —–

    Exits

    Circa, the news app, is shutting down. The company just made the announcement.

    The founders of GoFundMe, a five-year-old crowdfunding site, are selling a majority stake in their business to a syndicate of investors and stepping down from day-to-day operations. The investor group is led by Accel Partners and Technology Crossover Ventures, and Rob Solomon, a former Groupon COO and Yahoo exec who joined Accel as a venture partner in 2013, will head up its new leadership team. The WSJ has more details about the company — valued in the deal at $600 million — here.

    —–

    People

    Space X‘s roughly 700 annual interns are reportedly compensated well, but the company wrings plenty of work out of them in return. According to a Bloomberg report, it’s standard for them to work 80 hours a week. More here.

    It’s official. Google cofounder Sergey Brin and 23andMe founder Anne Wojcicki have gotten divorced after eight years of marriage. They married in 2007 and have two children together. Business Insider has more here.

    The “Silicon Valley 100,” which is Business Insider’s take on the “most amazing and inspiring people in tech right now.”

    —–

    Jobs

    Hubspot is looking for a director of strategic partnerships. Candidates can be based in San Francisco, with quarterly travel to Cambridge, Ma., or vice versa.

    —–

    Essential Reads

    The real reason banks are happy to help startups stay private.

    Box just announced a huge partnership deal with IBM. More here.

    WPP, Snapchat and the Daily Mail have announced a new marketing agency that will create online brand-sponsored video and print content. The name: Truffle Pig. Bloomberg has more here.

    After just one year, Alibaba Group is selling it U.S. website 11 Main to rival online marketplace OpenSky, with merchants saying they grew disenchanted with the company’s first experiment in American e-commerce. More here.

    Startups are finding the best employees are actually employed.

    How Uber takes over a city.

    —–

    Detours

    The man who created the plastic pink flamingo has died.

    All treble, no base.” Why some men sound gay and others don’t.

    A city accidentally tickets a truck sculpted in its honor. (Meter maids.)

    A patient was just awarded $500,000 by a jury after his phone’s voice recorder, accidentally left on during a procedure, captured mocking comments his doctors made about him while he was under anesthesia(!).

    —–

    Retail Therapy

    The largest private tract of land in the world is on sale. Price: $375 million.

  • StrictlyVC: June 23, 2015

    Happy Tuesday, everyone. We have news! We’re hosting our next StrictlyVC event in San Francisco in late summer, and we’re thrilled to announce our terrific speaker line-up, which includes the straight-shooting Chamath Palihapitiya, founder of  Social+Capital Partnership; legendary investor and DFJ cofounder Steve Jurvetson; serial entrepreneur and venture capitalist Tony Conrad of both About.me and True Ventures; and Matt Mullenweg, the founder and CEO of WordPress.com parent Automattic, valued at more than $1 billion during its last financing in 2014.

    And there’s more!

    It all happens Wednesday evening, September 16, at the sleek Autodesk Gallery at 1 Market Street. (Special thanks to the wonderful team at Bolt for helping us secure such a cool venue.) As always, we’ll also have yummy food and drinks for you. The full speaker list and agenda is here. To buy tickets, click here. Space is limited.

    —–

    Top News in the A.M.

    Facebook knocked Wal-Mart out of the top 10 most highly valued companies in the world yesterday.

    —–

    L.A.’s Crosscut Ventures Rounds Up $75 Million

    L.A.’s startup ecosystem has more money today, thanks to Crosscut Ventures, a local, seven-year-old outfit that just closed its third fund with $75 million – considerably more than the $50 million was looking to raise when it hit the fundraising trail at the beginning of 2014.

    Crosscut’s newest pool — whose investors include The James Irvine Foundation, Top Tier Capital, and numerous family offices — is also roughly five times the size of the firm’s second fund, which closed with $16 million in 2012. (The outfit collected just $5.1 million for its first, proof-of-concept, fund in 2008.)

    Is it Crosscut, or L.A., or a combination of the two? We recently asked cofounder Brian Garrett, who cofounded Crosscut with fellow managing directors Rick Smith and Brett Brewer — all of whom are joined in the newest fund by managing director Clinton Foy, previously a venture partner. Our conversation has been been edited here for length.

    You’ve just raised a lot of money, considering where you started seven years ago. How do you explain it?

    A lot of it has to do with the general momentum of L.A. ecosystem. When [local VC] Mark Suster announced [his firm, Upfront Ventures’s]$280 million fund last year and hosted its [invite-only] Upfront Summit [in February], I think everyone became more aware of what’s happening here. I don’t think they’d thought it was a long-term or a sustainable [shift] until then.

    There’s also a lack of competition relative to the opportunity here, and, more specific to us, there aren’t a lot of micro venture firms that have four managing directors – two of whom have 15 years of venture experience. [Editor’s note: Garrett and Smith were previously partners at Palomar Ventures.]

    What are your biggest hits to date?

    We’ve had seven exits out of 18 investments in our first fund, four of which produced 9x returns, including [the e-commerce site] ShoeDazzle. We sold our stake when late-stage investors were buying. We had local market knowledge about how competitive that market was getting. We also sold [the digital ad company] Pulpo Media to the public company Entravision for a 9x return; we sold [the e-document repository] Docstoc to Intuit for a 9x – we were the first money in. We also made another secondary sale that hasn’t yet been announced.

    We’ve had two liquidity events in our second fund, too, with the sale of Lettuce to Intuit for a 4x, and the sale of Gradient X to Amobee [a mobile ad company acquired by SingTel in 2012] for 2x our investment.

    You mention ShoeDazzle, which you’d funded when it was valued at less than $10 million. Sounds like you were smart to get out when you did, though did you the miss out on the chance to invest in founder Brian Lee’s next startup, The Honest Company?

    We did. We were at the tail end of fund one and didn’t have a lot of money left, and some sharp-elbowed Silicon Valley VCs took the whole round. We definitely should have gotten money into Honest Company.

    How do you view secondary sales generally? 

    We look at them on a deal-by-by deal basis to evaluate whether to hold or sell. We have a stake now in a company whose valuation is similar to where ShoeDazzle’s was when we decided to sell, but we’re holding because we think it will be a multibillion-dollar company.

    We look at the market landscape and who the buying audience will be and whether the next plateau of value creation is worth the risk it will take to achieve.

    Where do you think it’s not worth the risk?

    In ad tech, for example, we think you’re either first in a new category and you get a big exit via an acquisition from Google or Yahoo, or you’re in the walking dead zone, along with tons of other good, profitable ad tech businesses that no one wants to buy because it’s become so hard to defend any particular intellectual property or sustain a differentiation.

    You were long juggling Crosscut with a startup you’d cofounded, a fashion and media platform called StyleSaint. Meanwhile, Brett was a senior VP of corporate development at the company Adknowledge. Are you both still doing double-time?

    Brett and I are now full-time with the fund. Brett [quit Adknowledge] six months ago; I’ve been full time since August of last year, when I set out to raise the fund. I quickly realized I couldn’t wear both hats.

    —–

    New Fundings

    >Alert Media, a two-year-old, Austin, Tex.-based emergency communication platform for interactive mass notification, has raised $4.2 million in Series A funding led by Silverton Partners, with participation from ATX Ventures and Capital Factory.

    Appuri, a three-year-old, Seattle, Wa.-based customer data platform, has raised $2 million in seed funding led by Divergent Ventures, with participation from Baseline Ventures and Vulcan Capital. More here.

    AtScale, a 1.5-year-old, San Mateo, Ca.-based company whose software connects widely used business intelligence tools, has raised $7 million in Series A funding led by UMC Capital, with participation from AME Cloud Ventures, and earlier backers Storm Ventures and XSeed Capital. The company has now raised $9 million altogether. More here.

    BlaBlaCar, a nine-year-old, Paris-based carpooling platform, is looking to raise fresh funding at a valuation of more than $1 billion, reports Bloomberg. The company has so far raised $110 million investors, including Lead Edge CapitalAccel Partners, and Index Ventures.

    Casper, the 1.5-year-old, New York-based online mattress retailer, has  raised $55 million in Series B venture funding, at a pre-money valuation of $555 million, according to Venture Capital Dispatch. Institutional Venture Partners led the round, joined by Scooter Braun, the Pritzker Family and celebrity investors. Earlier backers also participated, including Lerer Hippeau Ventures, New Enterprise Associates, Norwest Venture Partners, Slow Ventures, SV Angel, Vaizra Investments and Queensbridge Venture.

    Coravin, a four-year-old, Burlington, Ma.-based company whose device allows users to access and pour bottles of wine without pulling the cork (so as not to disturb the wine’s aging process), has raised $13.6 million in Series C-1 funding led by Windham Venture Partners, with participation from Quadrille Capital. The company has now raised $41.8 million to date, shows Crunchbase.

    Credit Karma, an eight-year-old, San Francisco-based platform that provides credit scores to users and serves as a portal for visitors to search and apply for various financial services, has raised $175 million at a $3.5 billion valuation from Tiger Global Management, Valinor Management and Viking Global Investors, reports TechCrunch. The company had previously raised $193 million over five rounds, shows Crunchbase. More here.

    Currency Cloud, a three-year-old, London-based cross-border money transfer service, has raised $18 million in Series C funding led by Sapphire Ventures, with participation from Rakuten and earlier backers Anthemis GroupAtlas Venture, Notion Capital, and XAnge Private Equity. More here.

    DigitalGenius, a two-year-old, New York-based automated customer-service platform, has raised $3 million in funding led by Metamorphic Ventures, with participation from Lerer-Hippeau Ventures, Lowercase Capital, RRE Ventures and Lumia Capital.

    Dollar Shave Club, the three-year-old, Venice, Ca.-based online seller of razors and other men’s grooming products, has raised $75 million in fresh funding less than a year after announcing its last, $50 million, round. Investors include Dragoneer, a growth-stage investment firm, as well as earlier backers Venrock, Technology Crossover Ventures, and Forerunner Ventures.

    Dropoff, a year-old, Austin, Tex.-based on-demand, same-day delivery platform for businesses, has raised $7 million in Series A funding led by Greycroft Partners, with participation from Correlation Ventures, Texas Atlantic Capital, and Wild Basin Investments. More here.

    Enigma, a four-year-old, New York-based data discovery and analytics company, has raised $28.2 million in Series B funding led by New Enterprise Associates, with participation from Two Sigma Ventures, New York City Investment Fund, and earlier backers American Express VenturesComcast Ventures and The New York Times Company.

    Envoy, a San Francisco, Ca.-based maker of sign-in software for office visitors to register and check-in via an iPad-based system, has raised $15 million in Series A funding from Andreessen Horowitz. The company had previously raised $1.5 million in seed funding from angel investors, including Marc Benioff, Alexis Ohanian, Garry Tan and Semil Shah (a StrictlyVC advisory board member). More here.

    eWings, a two-year-old, Berlin-based maker of flight-booking software, has raised $1.2 million in funding led by High-Tech Grunderfonds, with participation from FSF Beteiligungs and Kima Ventures. More here.

    Grand Rounds, a four-year-old, San Francisco-based company whose service gives employees access to healthcare advice and treatment from professionals in the U.S. regardless of where they live, is being valued at roughly $750 million as part of a new financing round, according to TechCrunch. The company has so far raised $51 million, shows Crunchbase. Its backers include Harrison MetalVenrock, and Greylock Partners.

    Heal, a six-month-old, Santa Monica, Ca.-based startup providing on-demand primary healthcare services (it was cofounded by serial entrepreneur Nick Desai), has raised $5 million in seed funding from Slow Ventures, March Capital, and Pritzker Group.

    Jelli, a seven-year-old, San Mateo, Ca.-based platform for the audio advertising market, has raised $21 million in Series B funding from iHeartMediaUniversal Music Group, and earlier backers Relay Ventures, Intel Capital, and First Round Capital.

    Koubei, an 11-year-old Hangzhou, China-based “dormant brand” under Alibaba Group Holding, is being revived by Alibaba and its affiliate Ant Financial, which are investing nearly $1 billion in a 50/50 joint venture under the Koubei name that they hope can tap China’s fast-growing local services market. (Instead of on-demand, they call the industry online-to-offline, or O2O.) The WSJ has much more here.

    Olapic, a 4.5-year-old, New York-based startup that helps brands leverage user-generated images, has raised $15 million in Series B funding led by Felix Capital, with participation from Unilever Ventures, Fung Capital,Longworth Venture Partners, and serial entrepreneur Michael Lazerow.

    OneSource Virtual, a 25-year-old, Irving, Tex.-based company that offers business process cloud-sourcing services, has raised $150 million in new equity funding led by Technology Crossover Ventures, with participation from earlier backer Halyard Capital. More here.

    Portworx, a seven-month-old, Redwood City, Ca.-based company that’s creating software-defined infrastructure for “containerized” applications, has raised $8.5 million in funding led by Mayfield Fund.

    Senet, a six-year-old, Hudson, N.H.-based network services provider for low-cost, long-range Internet of Things applications, has raised $18 million in Series A funding from investors, including Fisk Ventures, Milestone Venture Partners, City Light Capital, and Harbor Light Capital Partners. More here.

    Snowflake, a three-year-old, San Mateo, Ca.-based data warehousing services company, has raised $45 million in Series C funding led by Altimeter Group, with participation from return backers Redpoint Ventures, Sutter Hill Ventures, and Wing Ventures.

    Transphorm, an eight-year-old, Goleta, Ca.-based semiconductor company focused on power conversion technology, has raised $70 million in new funding led by KKR, with participation from earlier backers Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers, Foundation Capital, Google Ventures, Soros Quantum Strategic Partners, INCJ and Fujitsu.

    Uber, the six-year-old, San Francisco-based ride-hailing company, is raising money from Chinese fund manager Hillhouse Capital Group, and the deal nvolves purchasing bonds that will convert into shares at a discount to Uber’s IPO price. The WSJ has the story here.

    Yotpo, a four-year-old, Tel Aviv, Israel-based startup that allows companies to generate social reviews for their e-commerce websites or products, has raised $15 million in funding led by Marker, with participation from Innovation Endeavors, Vintage Investment Partners, Blumberg Capital and Access Industries. The company has now raised around $28 million altogether, shows Crunchbase.

    —–

    New Funds

    New Leaf Venture Partners, a 10-year-old, New York-based, early-stage firm focused on life sciences, has raised a $200 million growth equity fund, says VentureWire.

    Whitecap Venture Partners, a Toronto-based firm that began as the venture arm of a family office, has held a final close on its third fund, having received $100 million in commitments from its first outside LPs, including Kensington Venture Fund, Bank of Montreal, and several high net-worth families. Whitecap focuses on three verticals: information technology, med tech, and food tech.

    —–
    People

    Slack founder Stewart Butterfield lashed out at the Wall Street Journal Sunday night, after an editorial in the paper said last week’s killing of nine people at a famous church in Charleston, South Carolina, was caused by a “problem that defies explanation.” Noting that the “problem” is systemic racism, Butterfield wrote in a series of angry tweets that “[a]cknowledging that we still have a very, very long way to go is literally the least anyone could do.”More here.

    According to Twitter, there’s no way cofounder Jack Dorsey becomes its permanent CEO unless he quits his other company, Square.

    Less than three months into the job as interim chief executive of Jay Z’s Swedish music streaming service, Tidal, Peter Tonstad has been fired. The company, privately owned by Jay Z and a consortium of artists, will be run by executives in New York and Oslo until a new CEO is in place, a company spokesperson tells the WSJ.

    Where in the world Uber is hiring, and for what jobs (from our friends at Silk).

    —–

    Jobs

    Breakout Labs, a Thiel Foundation venture fund, is looking to hire a portfolio manager. A background in science, health care or engineering is a plus. The job is in San Francisco.

    —–

    Essential Reads

    Six massive shifts coming soon to power markets near you.

    Same-day delivery company Instacart announced Monday that it had started to reclassify some of its giant workforce as part-time employees. More here.

    According to recent market research, Facebook is on track to deliver two thirds as many video views in 2015 as YouTube does — two trillion versus YouTube’s three trillion. VentureBeat has more here.

    North Dakota looks poised for a transformation thanks to the burgeoning drone industry.

    —–

    Detours

    The difference between a supercar and hypercar (should it come up).

    Nine ways to spot a liar.

    The town that banned Wi-Fi.

    —–

    Retail Therapy

    The You and Me Ping Pong Table. (You’d probably win some points for using this as a conference table.)

  • StrictlyVC: June 22, 2015

    Good morning, everyone, and welcome back! Hope you wonderful dads out there had a great Father’s Day yesterday.

    —–

    Top News in the A.M.

    Hours after singer Taylor Swift criticized Apple in an open letter yesterday, the company said it will pay royalties to artists and record labels for music played during a free, three-month trial of its new streaming music service. The WSJ has more here.

    —–

    Talking 1099 Workers (and More) with Redpoint’s Ryan Sarver

    Last week, the California Labor Commission found that a San Francisco-based Uber driver should have been legally classified as an employee, and not a contract worker, by the company.

    The ruling could be a very big deal for Uber and many other on-demand companies that argue they’re an appealing alternative to people who want to work flexible hours and to be their own bosses — even if they aren’t paying them unemployment, workers compensation or health benefits, all of which would cost such companies roughly 30 percent more per worker.

    The ruling could also be a big deal for investors who’ve poured hundreds of millions of dollars into such companies, though at a dinner last week with partner Ryan Sarver of Redpoint Ventures, it was clear that Sarver isn’t concerned about Uber and its ilk losing this fight. We talked at some length about the case, as well as what types of on-demand companies Sarver wouldn’t be inclined to fund, regulatory tussles notwithstanding. Our chat has been edited for length.

    You’ve invested in a number of on-demand companies, including [the peer-to-peer car buying and selling marketplace] Beepi and [home-cleaning service] Homejoy. If contract workers are reclassified as full-time workers, what happens to them?

    It’s so hard to predict where things are going to go. There’s a huge new class of people who really want flexible work, and that shift is happening and it’s growing and it’s not going away. You’re then trying to match regulation to them that was written in the 1930s and hasn’t been updated since. I don’t know where we land, but we need regulation that maps to those trends.

    What if we don’t get it? How big an impact would that make on, say, Luxe [an on-demand valet service that Redpoint has also backed]?

    It’s hard to say until we know what the rulings are going to look like, but labor is really important and Luxe is competing for it with Uber and Beepi and other [on-demand services]; it’s competitive. And [success] will come down to who can attract and retain that labor.

    Toward that end, what should these companies’ priorities be? Helping their contract workers land health care? Educating them about savings? Beyond the break room and free snacks, how do you win the labor race?

    Churn on the supply side is a big problem for a lot of these on-demand companies, so many of them are focused on hiring, training, and retaining [contract workers]. I think you need more than [break rooms], I agree. What Luxe is doing is giving employees a career path. If you become a really good valet, you become a shift captain. If you become a good shift captain, you can move inside Luxe’s operations center and become a full-time employee. I think smart companies are telling these employees: maybe you want flexible schedules now, but down the road, if you want to move into a full-time position, we’re also going to offer that to you.

    A new layer of companies is emerging to cater to these contract workers, providing them with shift-management software and other things. As an investor, do you think they’re interesting?

    The on-demand labor market is still pretty small; even with a million or so [on-demand] drivers around the world – that’s still a small labor force. As it continues to grow, maybe it becomes more interesting over time, but I think it’s a little too early to tell [what the potential] of those services will be.

    What’s the craziest business you’ve been pitched?

    Well, I did see bodyguards on demand. [Laughs.]

    Are you interested in telemedicine or these other on-demand startups that don’t require big city rollouts?

    I’m a big Doctor on Demand user and I love it, but it’s super infrequent. You’re going to use it in the moment, not every week [because it costs $40 for a 15-minute consultation]. There’s another startup, Better, that gives users access to “personal health assistants” that you might use on a more frequent basis, like, “Hey, our little guy has a rash, what should we do?” I think eventually, there will be a blending of the two, so that you can touch a service in a lightweight way and escalate [to the doctor level] if you need to.

    [Most consumer spending] goes to transportation, food, and housing, though healthcare is also an enormous one.

    Housing is interesting. What do you think of OpenDoor, the on-demand online home-selling service?

    We [invested in] Beepi and they’re very similar models from what I know. OpenDoor will take inventory and buy it from you and fix it up and resell it. Beepi won’t fix up your car, but they’ll send in a mechanic who has a very structured checklist and goes through the service and gives you a price to buy it that day and take it off your hands and bring it into their inventory. Then someone can buy it sight unseen because they trust that the mechanic has done the work and priced it properly.

    I think OpenDoor is doing something very similar, but they’re trying to increase the value of the homes. It’s really interesting and much more complicated than what Beepi is doing. It’s a very big swing.

    —–

    New Fundings

    Advanced Cell Diagnostics, an eight-year-old, Hayward, Ca.-based molecular pathology company developing cell- and tissue-based diagnostic tests for personalized medicine, has raised $22 million in Series C funding led by Summit Partners, with participation from Kenson Ventures and return backers Morningside Ventures and New Leaf Venture Partners. The company has now raised $40.8 million altogether.

    Airbnb, the seven-year-old, San Francisco-based community marketplace for people to list and book personal spaces, is reportedly raising $1 billion in funding at a $24 billion valuation. According to Crunchbase, the company has already raised almost $800 million from investors, including SherpaCapitalTPG Growth, T. Rowe Price, Dragoneer Investment Group, Founders Fund, CrunchFund, and Sequoia Capital. The WSJ has the story here.

    Ant Financial, Alibaba’s Hangzhou, China-based online payments affiliate, has completed an undisclosed amount of fundraising that values the company at between $45 billion and $50 milion, according to the Financial Times. Ant Financial operates Alipay, the PayPal-like online payments company that handled $778 billion in the year ended June 2014, according to Alibaba. As the Financial Times notes, that’s three times the amount handled by PayPal over the same period. Ant Financial’s main shareholder is Jack Ma, Alibaba’s chairman. Dealbook delved into its business late last year. Much more here.

    Are You A Human, a four-year-old, Detroit, Mi.-based startup that enables anyone offering commerce, services, or ads online to know they are addressing a human (versus a bot), has raised $4.2 million in Series A funding led by Detroit Venture Partners, with participation from MDC Dream VenturesFoundry Group Angels and NCT Ventures.

    Artesian Solutions, the nine-year-old, U.K.-based platform that provides companies with better intelligence on their B2B customers and future prospects, has raised $8 million in Series B funding led by Kreos Capital and previous investor Octopus Investments. The company has now raised at least $11.2 million altogether, shows Crunchbase.

    Bond Street, a 1.5-year-old, New York-based company that makes loans to small businesses, has raised $110 million in equity and debt capital led by Spark Capital and the Jefferies investment bank, with individual investors including Nathan Blecharczyk, co-Founder of Airbnb; David Chang, chef and owner, of Momofuku; and others. David Haber, co-founder of Bond Street, left Spark Capital to start the company. New York Business Journal has more here.

    Case Wallet, a 15-month-old, New York-based company behind a credit-card-size device used to securely store and send bitcoin, has raised $1.5 million in seed funding led by FuturePerfect Ventures, with participation from RRE Ventures, High Line Venture Partners and the Rochester Institute of Technology Fund.

    CropX, a nearly two-year-old, Tel Aviv, Israel and San Francisco-based startup whose sensors and app measure soil moisture and temperature levels to help farms adjust their irrigation systems, has raised $9 million in Series A funding. Finistere Ventures led the round, joined by Innovation EndeavorsGreenSoil Investments and the company’s earlier backers, including OurCrowd. Venture Capital Dispatch has more here.

    Cryptzone, a 13-year-old, Waltham, Ma.-based maker of context aware encryption software, has raised $15 million in Series B funding led by Kayne Partners, with participation from earlier backer Medina Capital. More here.

    Cure Forward, a year-old, Cambridge, Ma.-based company seeking to connect cancer patients with clinical trials, has raised $15 million in Series A funding from Apple Tree Partners. BetaBoston has more here.

    DIDiT, a two-year-old, New York-based mobile-first social platform that enables users to discover, connect and plan lifestyle experiences, has raised $2 million in seed funding led by BRaVe Ventures, with participation from numerous angel investors. More here.

    FreedomPop, a four-year-old, L.A.-based upstart freemium mobile carrier, has raised $30 million in funding led by European venture capital Partech Ventures, with participation from an unnamed strategic investors and previous backers DCM and Mangrove Capital. The company has now raised $49.3 million altogether, shows Crunchbase. Recode has more here.

    Knyttan, a two-year-old, London-based on-demand fashion startup, has raised £2 million ($1.6 million) in seed funding led by Connect Ventures, with participation from Felix Capital, Playfair Capital, and Ballpark Ventures. TechCrunch has more here.

    Komprise, a year-old, Campbell, Ca.-based company selling data management-as-a-service, has raised $6 million in Series A funding led by Canaan Partners. TechCrunch has more here.

    LiveIntent, a six-year-old, New York-based company that makes technology for in-email display advertising, raised $32.5 million in a funding round led by FTV Capital, with participation from Battery Ventures, First Round Capital and Shasta Ventures. The company has now raised $65.1 million altogether, shows Crunchbase. TechCrunch has more here.

    Mapbox, a five-year-old, Washington, D.C.-based mapping platform for developers that makes it easier for location to be core to any mobile or online application, has raised $52.4 million in Series B funding led by DFJ Growth, with participation from Thrive Capital, Pritzker Group, Promus Ventures and former Goldman Sachs Group co-president Jon Winkelried.

    Mayvenn, a 2.5-year-old, Oakland, Ca.-based e-commerce company that enables beauticians to sell hair extensions and other products without having to purchase, store or ship any inventory themselves, has raised $10 million in Series A funding led by Andreessen Horowitz, with participation from Trinity Ventures, Core Innovation Capital, Troy Carter’s Cross Culture VenturesImpact America, and numerous individual investors, including Jimmy Iovine and Serena Williams.

    Moovo, a seven-month-old, Delhi, India-based on-demand logistics booking platform, has raised seed funding from YouWeCan Ventures and angel investors. YourStory has more here.

    Namely, a three-year-old, New York-based HR software platform that offers cloud-based applications has raised $45 million in Series C funding led bySequoia Capital, with participation from earlier backers Matrix Partners,True Ventures, Lerer Hippeau Ventures and Greenspring Global Partners. The company has now raised $77.8 million altogether, shows Crunchbase. Recode has more here.

    Oxford Sciences Innovation, a months-old, Oxford, England-based company that funds spinoffs from Oxford University’s tech and science departments, has raised an undisclosed amount of capital from Google Ventures’ European branch. The company is looking to raise upwards of $500 million altogether. More here.

    Sano, a three-year-old, San Francisco-based company making a wearable device that monitors metabolic activity, has raised $10.3 million in seed funding led by True Ventures and Intel Capital, with participation from Felicis Ventures, Elevation Capital, Floodgate, and Rock Health. TechCrunch hasmore here.

    Sense.ly, a two-year-old, San Francisco-based patient engagement and chronic disease monitoring platform centered around a virtual medical assistant, has raised $2.2 million in Series A funding. Backers include Launchpad Digital Health, Fenox Venture Capital and TA Ventures. The company has now raised $3.5 million altogether, shows Crunchbase.

    Smart Vision Labs, a two-year-old, New York-based company whose first device aims to make eye exams cheap and accessible worldwide, has raised $6.1 million in funding led by Techstars Ventures, with participation from Heritage Group, Connectivity Capital, and Red Sea Ventures. Forbes has much more here.

    Tamr, a 2.5-year-old, Cambridge, Ma.-based startup that helps companies understand and unify all of their disparate databases, has raised $25.2 million in Series B funding from Hewlett Packard Ventures, Thomson ReutersMassMutual Ventures and other unnamed participants, with participation from earlier backers New Enterprise Associates and Google Ventures. The company has now raised $42.4 million altogether. More here.

    Tech In Asia, a four-year-old, Singapore-based news site that reports on Asia’s tech ecosystem, has raised $4 million in funding to turn the site into a community hub that includes a Crunchbase-like database and paid-for analytics service. Backers include SB ISAT Fund, Walden InternationalMarvelstone, and M&S Partners, along with individual investors. The company had previously raised $2.89 million over several small rounds, including from East Ventures, Fenox Venture Capital and Simile Venture Partners. TechCrunch has more here.

    Tidemark, a six-year-old, Redwood City, Ca.-based enterprise financial planning software company, has raised $25 million in funding from the management software vendor Workday, along with earlier backers Andreessen Horowitz, Greylock Partners and others. Tidemark has now raised $118.4 million altogether, shows Crunchbase. Recode has more here.

    Vox Mobile, a nine-year-old, Independence, Oh.-based company that helps businesses adapt their products to mobile platforms, has raised $6.7 million in a round led by TELUS Ventures, Mutual Capital Partners Funds, Edison Partners and Permal Capital. Forbes has more here.

    —–

    New Funds

    Arboretum Ventures, a 13-year-old, Ann Arbor, Mich.-based venture firm, is looking to raise $215 million for its fourth fund, shows an SEC filing that was filed last week and states the first sale has yet to occur.

    RezVen Partners, a new, Newport Beach, Ca.-based early-stage venture firm focused on software and digital and social media companies, has closed a new fund with $50 million in capital commitments. More here.

    —–

    Exits

    Campus, a two-year-old, San Francisco-based startup that rented out rooms in some 34 houses in the San Francisco Bay Area and New York, is no more — meaning its more than 150 residents need to find somewhere else to live before the official closure on August 31st. The company was founded by Thiel fellow Tom Currier and presumably raised money beyond the $100,000 that Peter Thiel gives budding entrepreneurs to drop out of school. Still, it managed never to disclose as much in various reports about the company (that StrictlyVC has read, anyway).  Business Insider has more here.

    —–

    People

    Politico published a meaty piece on businessman and former New York City mayor Mike Bloomberg, and among the many nuggets it holds is a breakdown of just how reliant Bloomberg Media is on those lucrative Bloomberg terminals: Per Politico: the company’s “many layers of ‘added value’ . . . the magazines, the TV channels, the specialized verticals . . . generally lose money. Lots of it. Businessweek, easily the most appealing product to consumers, reportedly burns almost $30 million a year. The TV operation has lost about $100 million a year for the past decade.”

    John Doerr says he “felt sick” when he first saw the gender discrimination charges brought against his firm, Kleiner Perkins, by former partner Ellen Pao. Last week, in an interview with Bloomberg TV, Doerr said, “I think it was an error to promote Ellen into an investing partner role. That didn’t work out for her. She was a really good chief of staff but not a good investor.” Video from that interview here.

    Alex Stamos, the world-renowned cybersecurity expert and vocal NSA critic who now commands Yahoo‘s team of “Paranoids” to protect the company from all manner of threats, says the “vast majority of people are not safe using the internet everyday.” Vice Media profiles him here.

    Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg with wife Priscilla Chan have donated $5 million to a scholarship program that helps young undocumented students attend college. Called TheDream.US, the program is geared toward students who come to the U.S. as children with no authorization and wish to pursue higher education. The program was cofounded in 2013 by Donald Graham, CEO of the Graham Holdings Company and a former Facebook director. USA Today has more here.

    —–

    Jobs

    Capital One Ventures is looking to hire a junior-level manager. The job is in San Francisco.

    —–

    Essential Reads

    Alipay is a phenomenon that’s difficult to fathom outside of China. Its president, Jingling Li, explains it to Fortune here.

    —–

    Detours

    Twenty-one amazing photos of Saturn.

    Why reading can make you happier.

    Here’s everyone you probably Googled last night during “True Detective.”

    —–

    Retail Therapy

    A vegetable-tanned English Bridle leather six-pack carrier, for your craft beers. (Warning: Bringing this to a party will get you punched in the face, or it should.)

  • Talking 1099 Workers (and More) with Redpoint’s Ryan Sarver

    Ryan SarverLast week, the California Labor Commission found that a San Francisco-based Uber driver should have been legally classified as an employee, and not a contract worker, by the company.

    The ruling could be a very big deal for Uber and many other on-demand companies that argue they’re an appealing alternative to people who want to work flexible hours and to be their own bosses — even if they aren’t paying them unemployment, workers compensation or health benefits, all of which would cost such companies roughly 30 percent more per worker.

    The ruling could also be a big deal for investors who’ve poured hundreds of millions of dollars into such companies, though at a dinner last week with partner Ryan Sarver of Redpoint Ventures, it was clear that Sarver isn’t concerned about Uber and its ilk losing this fight. We talked at some length about the case, as well as what types of on-demand companies Sarver wouldn’t be inclined to fund, regulatory tussles notwithstanding. Our chat has been edited for length.

    You’ve invested in a number of on-demand companies, including [the peer-to-peer car buying and selling marketplace] Beepi and [home-cleaning service] Homejoy. If contract workers are reclassified as full-time workers, what happens to them?

    It’s so hard to predict where things are going to go. There’s a huge new class of people who really want flexible work, and that shift is happening and it’s growing and it’s not going away. You’re then trying to match regulation to them that was written in the 1930s and hasn’t been updated since. I don’t know where we land, but we need regulation that maps to those trends.

    What if we don’t get it? How big an impact would that make on, say, Luxe [an on-demand valet service that Redpoint has also backed]?

    It’s hard to say until we know what the rulings are going to look like, but labor is really important and Luxe is competing for it with Uber and Beepi and other [on-demand services]; it’s competitive. And [success] will come down to who can attract and retain that labor.

    Toward that end, what should these companies’ priorities be? Helping their contract workers land health care? Educating them about savings? Beyond the break room and free snacks, how do you win the labor race?

    Churn on the supply side is a big problem for a lot of these on-demand companies, so many of them are focused on hiring, training, and retaining [contract workers]. I think you need more than [break rooms], I agree. What Luxe is doing is giving employees a career path. If you become a really good valet, you become a shift captain. If you become a good shift captain, you can move inside Luxe’s operations center and become a full-time employee. I think smart companies are telling these employees: maybe you want flexible schedules now, but down the road, if you want to move into a full-time position, we’re also going to offer that to you.

    A new layer of companies is emerging to cater to these contract workers, providing them with shift-management software and other things. As an investor, do you think they’re interesting?

    The on-demand labor market is still pretty small; even with a million or so [on-demand] drivers around the world – that’s still a small labor force. As it continues to grow, maybe it becomes more interesting over time, but I think it’s a little too early to tell [what the potential] of those services will be.

    What’s the craziest business you’ve been pitched?

    Well, I did see bodyguards on demand. [Laughs.]

    Are you interested in telemedicine or these other on-demand startups that don’t require big city rollouts?

    I’m a big Doctor on Demand user and I love it, but it’s super infrequent. You’re going to use it in the moment, not every week [because it costs $40 for a 15-minute consultation]. There’s another startup, Better, that gives users access to “personal health assistants” that you might use on a more frequent basis, like, “Hey, our little guy has a rash, what should we do?” I think eventually, there will be a blending of the two, so that you can touch a service in a lightweight way and escalate [to the doctor level] if you need to.

    [Most consumer spending] goes to transportation, food, and housing, though healthcare is also an enormous one.

    Housing is interesting. What do you think of OpenDoor, the on-demand online home-selling service?

    We [invested in] Beepi and they’re very similar models from what I know. OpenDoor will take inventory and buy it from you and fix it up and resell it. Beepi won’t fix up your car, but they’ll send in a mechanic who has a very structured checklist and goes through the service and gives you a price to buy it that day and take it off your hands and bring it into their inventory. Then someone can buy it sight unseen because they trust that the mechanic has done the work and priced it properly.

    I think OpenDoor is doing something very similar, but they’re trying to increase the value of the homes. It’s really interesting and much more complicated than what Beepi is doing. It’s a very big swing.

  • StrictlyVC: June 17, 2015

    Hi, everyone, hope your Wednesday is off to a great start!

    Quick favor: if you’ve been discovering StrictlyVC in spam in recent weeks, could you shoot us a quick email? We’re working with our ESP this morning to get things resolved once and for all and could use your help.

    We also wanted to remind you that StrictlyVC will not be publishing tomorrow or Friday. (We have some major housekeeping to do before joining forces with TechCrunch.) We’ll see you back here Monday.:)

    —–

    Top News in the A.M.

    Amazon may soon pay normal people to deliver packages en route to their destinations as part of a crowdsourced delivery program. The WSJ has more here.

    A security flaw has left 600 million Samsung smartphones at risk of being hacked.

    Tesla Motors is getting a cash injection in the form of a loan worth up to $750 million from banks like Bank of America, JP Morgan Chase, and Deutsche Bank ,reports Business Insider. The capital might concern Tesla fans, but CEO Elon Musk has said the company needs “staggering” amounts of money to grow its operations, and Tesla has five years to pay back the money, says BI.

    Uh oh, Uber.

    —–

    The Case Against Anthony Noto (and Most Other CFOs) Becoming CEO

    Dick Costolo — who is stepping down as CEO of Twitter in July — has, at a couple of recent conferences, described Twitter CFO Anthony Noto as more than an “accountant” and said that Noto was not brought into the company “just be a CFO.”Yesterday, the Wall Street Journal even suggested that Noto has emerged as a front-runner to replace Costolo, describing Noto – a former tech banker at Goldman Sachs and a former CFO of the National Football League – as a “take-charge” executive, based on interviews with his supporters at the company.

    But promoting Noto to the top spot may not be such a great idea — not based on the experience of longtime executive recruiter Jon Holman, who says CFOs tend to make lousy CEOs. In fact, of the hundreds of C-level executives that Holman has placed over the last 30-plus years, he says he has “never” placed a CFO as a CEO – “nor would I recommend it to someone.”

    Holman “doesn’t know Noto at all,” he is quick to say. He adds that Noto could become the “second or third guy in history who has gone from CFO to CEO and been successful.” But he’s highly skeptical of the model for a variety of reasons.

    First, it’s likely that until April — when Noto was also put in charge of Twitter’s floundering marketing department — Noto has never managed anything near the roughly 4,000 employees that Twitter has around the world.

    “At Goldman, Noto was an analyst, meaning he was a domain expert who knows a huge amount about various industries,” observes Holman. “But he was never managing large numbers of people,  and the people he was managing [in the several years that Noto spent as co-head of the investment bank’s technology, media and telecommunications group] were analysts – not people in marketing, sales, finance, engineering . . .” notes Holman.

    More, says Holman, while CFOs generally sound like they know everything, they do not. “Because CFOs sit in on board meetings along with the CEO, they speak as if they understand the business.They understand the financials of the business. They know that, ‘We’re spending 33 percent of revenue on sales and marketing.’ But they’ve never run a sales organization, and their job has never been on the line if there’s a revenue shortfall,” he notes.

    Not last, CFOs tend to reign in spending and to generally take the most conservative path possible, notes Holman. That’s probably not ideal at Twitter, which has shied away from making dramatic changes to its platform — and been soundly criticized for it. “Most CEOs are outer directed, while CFOs are inner directed,” says Holman. Using a baseball analogy, he observes that “Most CEO types want to swing for the fences; CFOs want players to hit singles.”

    That’s not to say Twitter should rule out Noto completely, suggests Holman. In fact, he could make sense as CEO in the very short term.

    Among other reasons why a company like Twitter might bring in a CFO is if “you have investors who think the sky is falling, or, in this case, that it’s a big problem that Twitter isn’t converting tweets to revenue. CFOs generally speak in appropriate adult-like tones and can [massage] investors and assure them that a company will get it all figured out.”

    Another argument for promoting the CFO is when a company is just going to sell itself anyway, says Holman. In that case, “What you need is someone who understands how to sell a company, someone who will run a [sales] process, which Noto clearly knows how to do.”

    A third reason a CFO like Noto could make sense right now is “if there’s a perception that what a company needs to do is big-time pruning: laying people off, getting expenses under control, those kinds of things that CFOs tend to be really good at.”

    Of course, all of these scenarios would be a prelude to bringing in someone else, and Twitter already has an interim CEO lined up in co-founder Jack Dorsey.  Could we see the equivalent of two interim CEOs at the company?

    Twitter “can do whatever it wants,” says Holman. “Is it a clever strategy? Probably not.”

    —–

    New Fundings

    123ContactForm, a seven-year-old, Timisoara, Romania-based provider of web forms and surveys for companies and NGOs, has raised more than $1 million in funding from Catalyst Romania.

    Bluebridge, a four-year-old, Fishers, Ind.-based, cloud-based mobile app development and management platform, has raised $2 million in funding led by CultivationCapital and Allos Ventures, with participation from angel investors, including ExactTarget cofounder Scott Dorsey. The company had previously raised $2. 8 million in seed and debt financing.

    Boxful, a six-month-old, Hong Kong-based valet storage startup (it comes to take and store users’ surplus items), has raised $6.6 million in Series A funding from Great Eagle, Arocrest Capital, Tinghsin Group, Lonsdale CapitalSoundwill Holdings, Vega Properties and Carlton Holdings.

    Brightwheel, a year-old, San Francisco-based mobile platform for preschools and daycares that allows teachers to track attendance, record observations, and gain insights into daily activities while administrators can send paperless, automated tuition invoices, has raised $2.2 million in seed funding.  The round was led by RRE Ventures and Eniac Ventures, with participation from CrossLink Capital, Golden Venture Partners, Red Swan Ventures, and SherpaVentures.

    Cohesity, a two-year-old, Santa Clara, Ca.-based company that consolidates what are called “secondary” storage systems (meaning anything that doesn’t run a company’s production applications), has quietly raised $70 million across two funds, it says. The company, founded by Mohit Aron — who previously cofounded the “unicorn” storage company Nutanix — most recently raised $55 million in Series B funding led by Artis Ventures and Qualcomm, with participation from Accel Partners, Battery Ventures, Google Ventures andTrinity Ventures. Cohesity’s earlier, $15 million, Series A round was led by led by Sequoia Capital and Wing Venture Capital. Venture Capital Dispatch has the story here.

    Convene, a 5.5-year-old, New York-based conference and meeting company that promises to “orchestrate the perfect meeting” for its customers (it has access to more than 70 meeting rooms in New York and Washington, D.C.), has  raised $15.5 million in Series B funding led by Conversion Venture Capital, with participation from earlier backer Boathouse Capital. The company has now raised roughly $21 million altogether. More here.

    Crocus Technology, an 11-year-old, Santa Clara, Ca.-based maker of magnetic sensors and embedded memory products, has raised $21 million in new funding from NanoDimension, Innovation Capital, IdInvest Partners,Ventech, Sofinnova, CEA Investissement, Rusnano, Industrial Investor Group, and Kreos Capital. The company has now raised $194 million altogether.

    Doctor on Demand, a nearly three-year-old, San Francisco-based telemedicine company that connects patients via video with certified doctors, has raised $50 million in Series B funding led by Tenaya Capital, with participation from Qualcomm Ventures, Dignity Health, 23andMe’s Anne Wojcicki, and earlier backers Venrock, Shasta Ventures, and Sir Richard Branson. The company has now raised $74 million altogether. TechCrunch has more here.

    FACEIT, a three-year-old, London-based online gaming platform, disclosed yesterday that it raised $2 million in funding earlier this year led by United Ventures. More here.

    Iris.tv, a three-year-old,  L.A.-based company that makes personalized video recommendations to viewers who watch short clips online, has raised $5.3 million in Series A fundng from Sierra Wasatch, BDMI, Progress Venturesand individual backers, including Machinima founder Allen DeBevoise. Venture Capital Dispatch has much more here.

    Kezar Life Sciences, a months-old, South San Francisco, Ca.-based company focused on the development of drugs targeting protein homeostasis for autoimmune disorders, has raised $23 million in Series A funding fromMorningside Venture, Cormorant Asset Management, EcoR1 Capital, 9W Capital Management, Omega Funds, Aju IB Investment, and private investors.

    LeadPages, a 2.5-year-old, Minneapolis, Mn.-based company whose software enables businesses to create responsive mobile landing pages, launch pages, sales pages and other conversion pages, has raised $27 million in Series B funding led by Drive Capital, with participation from Foundry Group and Arthur Ventures. The company has now raised $38 million altogether. More here.

    Minio, an eight-month-old, Woodside, Ca.-based open source cloud storage product, has raised $3.3 million in seed funding led by Nexus Venture Partners and General Catalyst Partners, with participation from AME Cloud Ventures, Index Ventures, and numerous individual investors. TechCrunch has more here.

    Pixelligent Technologies, a 13-year-old, Baltimore, Md.-based advanced materials company that makes next-generation materials for applications in solid-state lighting, flat panel displays, optical components and film, has raised $3.4 million in new funding from undisclosed sources. The company has raised roughly $26 million altogether at this point. (It has also been awarded more then $12 million in U.S. grant programs.)

    ServiceTitan, a two-year-old, Glendale, Ca.-based mobile, cloud-based management platform for home service businesses, has raised $18 million in Series A funding led by Bessemer Venture Partners at a post-money valuation of $100 million. The company had previously raised an undisclosed amount of seed capital. Its other backers include Mucker Capital, I2BF Digital, and AMENALAV Group.

    Studitemps, a seven-year-old, Cologne, Germany-based company that places qualified students as temp workers,  has raised $12.4 million in Series C funding from Iris Capital, XAnge, Seventure and b-to-v.

    SQL Sentry, an 11-year-old, Charlotte, N.C.-based maker of software for SQL server database professionals, has raised $25 million in funding from Mainsail Partners. More here.

    Tumblbug, a four-year-old, Seoul-based Kickstarter-like crowdfunding platform for independent creators, has raised more than $1.5 million in Series A funding led by DCM Ventures, Naver and Strong Ventures.

    Tute Genomics, a three-year-old, Provo, Ut.-based company that sells cloud-based analytics, interpretation, and reporting for clinical sequencing, has raised $3.9 million in Series A1 funding from Intermountain HealthcareHealthbox, and China-based Tencent Holdings. The company has raised now raised $7.7 million altogether.

    Vroom, a two-year-old, New York-based used car sales startup, has raised $19 million in venture funding and $35 million in debt funding from roughly 15 wealthy individuals, including former pro football player John Elway and former Autonation and Blockbuster CEO Steve Berrard. Fortune has the story here.

    —–

    New Funds

    Garage Technology Ventures in Palo Alto, Ca., and Startup Lab in Oslo, Norway, are launching a joint venture called Silicon Valley Catalyst to fund and grow emerging European tech companies. More here.

    Y Combinator is raising money to create a new venture fund, according to an SEC form flagged by Business Insider yesterday. The outfit isn’t talking yet about the vehicle, Y Combinator Continuity Fund I. But our former colleague, Jon Marino, reported back in March that Y Combinator was looking to raise several billion dollars for a fund to deploy in the later-stage rounds of its most promising portfolio companies, like Dropbox and Airbnb.

    —–

    People

    Brian McClendon, a Google engineering VP and 10-year company veteran of the company who was charge of Google Maps, is leaving to oversee Uber’s new Advanced Technologies Center out of Pittsburgh, reports Recode. McClendon is only the latest Googler to be poached by the popular car-service company. At a StrictlyVC event last month, Tom Fallows, another Uber exec recently poached by Google, remarked half-jokingly on stage that he was surprised in discovering on his first day that “one out of three people is a former Google colleague.”

    At the Bloomberg Technology conference yesterday, Mike Schur, an executive producer of TV shows, including “Parks & Recreation,” weighed in on whether or not there’s a tech bubble. “This feels like a very tense moment right now . . .” with “absurd” deals and valuations.” Schur added: “I think Hollywood really likes to satirize any subculture that’s more absurd and self-obsessed than we are.”  More here.

    —–

    Jobs

    Salesforce is looking to hire a senior corporate development manager. The job is in San Francisco.

    —–

    Essential Reads

    Microsoft announced an executive shake-up this morning. More here.

    Etsy, the newly public, Brooklyn-based online marketplace, anounced its own take on the crowdfunding model made popular by Kickstarter: Fund on Etsy. Now sellers can integrate fundraising directly into their virtual storefronts, as well as raise money for products they haven’t yet made. More here.

    —–

    Detours

    new theory of distraction.

    An airport adventure for a lost toy.

    Nothing like having Arnold tell you to “turn left.”

    —–

    Retail Therapy

    BMW’s new, tech-laden 7-Series sedan, coming this fall. It isn’t cheap, but you’ll get what you pay for.

  • StrictlyVC: June 16, 2015

    Happy Tuesday, everyone!

    No column this a.m.

    —–

    Top News in the A.M.

    LastPass officials warned yesterday that attackers have compromised servers that run the company’s password management service and made off with cryptographically protected passwords and other sensitive user data. Ars Technica’s resident password expert said it’s nothing to sweat. (We went ahead and changed our master password anyway.)

    Remember how, last week, everyone thought Twitter president Adam Bain was the clear front runner to succeed Dick Costolo as CEO of the company? Scratch that. Now Twitter CFO Anthony Noto reportedly has pole position.

    —–

    New Fundings

    Ambassador, a five-year-old startup that helps companies manage their referral marketing programs, has raised $2.6 million in Series A funding led by Arthur Ventures, with additional investment from Zelkova VenturesLudlow Ventures, Social Starts and Matchstick Ventures. TechCrunch has more here.

    Actility, a five-year-old, Paris, France-based company that makes network software and managed information systems for the so-called Internet of Things market, has raised €22.5 million ($25 million) led by Ginko Ventures, the European investment arm of Foxconn. Other participants in the round include telcos Orange, Swisscom, and KPN, as well as previous investor Fonds Ecotechnologies, which is managed by Bpifrance Investissement, Idinvest Partners, and Truffle Capital.

    Azimo, a three-year-old, London-based digital money transfer service, has raised $20 million in Series B funding led by Frog Capital, with participation from MCI Investments and earlier backers, including e.ventures and Greycroft Partners. The company had previously raised $11 million in funding. More here.

    Beleza na Web, a seven-year-old, São Paulo, Brazil-based beauty e-commerce company, has raised $30 million in Series C funding from an undisclosed New York private equity firm. The company’s $5 million Series A round closed in 2011, with participation from Kaszek Ventures and Tiger Global Management. TechCrunch has more here.

    Connectifier, a three-year-old, Costa Mesa, Ca.-based next-gen job recruitment platform, has raised $6 million in funding led by True Ventures, with participation from Galeo-Ventures, Okapi Venture Capital, and angel investors Sean Ellis, Andrew Chen, Jonathan Downey, and James Hong. TechCrunch has much more about the company, founded by two former Google engineers, here.

    CyMedica Orthopedics, a 2.5-year-old, Scottsdale, Az.-based company that develops and commercializes products that target joint injuries, has raised $11.5 million in Series A funding from Research Corporation TechnologiesCalifornia Technology Ventures, and Aphelion Capital.

    Dreamware, a three-year-old, Naples Fla.-based company whose software automates the listing process for a variety of industries (its flagship product is Car Lister, which lets people list and buy vehicles for sale), has raised $6.5 million in angel funding from undisclosed sources. Tech.Co has more here.

    enSilo, a 10-month-old, San Francisco-based cybersecurity startup, has raised $10 million in Series A funding led by Lightspeed Venture Partners, with participation from earlier backer Carmel Ventures.

    GitHub, a seven-year-old, San Francisco-based startup that helps companies and developers build software, is talking with investors about a new, $200 million round that would value the company at about $2 billion, reports Bloomberg. Roughly three years ago, the company raised $100 million in Series A funding from Andreessen Horowitz — a bet that (we think still) represents the venture firm’s biggest single bet. (Andreessen Horowitz has since plowed even more capital, across two rounds, into Tanium, an outfit that helps companies pinpoint security threats and manage their sprawling computer networks.)

    Hello, the three-year-old, San Francisco-based company behind the Sense sleep tracker, has raised $40 million in new funding led by Temasek Holdings, according to the Financial Times. The company, which had previously raised at least $10.5 million as part of an earlier round, and another $2.4 million through a Kickstarter campaign, is now valued at between $250 million and $300 million, sources tell TechCrunch. More here.

    HomeLane, a year-old, Bangalore, India-based company that boasts of integrated interior design and manufacturing capabilities that allow its customers to customize their homes, has raised $50 million in new funding from earlier investor Sequoia Capital and others, reports The Tech-Portal. Just earlier this year, Sequoia — with participation from Aarin Capital — had provided the company with $4.5 million in Series A funding.

    La Ruche qui dit oui, a four-year-old, Paris-based e-commerce platform where users group themselves to buy directly from their local farmers, has raised $9 million in Series B funding led by Union Square Ventures and Felix Capital, with participation from XAnge and Quadia. The company has now raised $13.1 million altogether. Techcrunch has much more here.

    Lavu, a five-year-old, Albuquerque, N.M.-based startup that provides iPad-centric point of sale systems for restaurants, has raised $15 million in its first outside funding, led by Aldrich Capital Partners. More here.

    Philo, a five-year-old, Cambridge, Ma.-based startup that’s helping cable and satellite TV providers re-engage college-age students with a live TV service that offers search, sharing and a network-based DVR, has raised $10 million in Series B funding led by earlier investor New Enterprise Associates. Other participants in the round include CBC New Media Group; HBO; Rho Ventures; XFUND; and Philo CEO Andrew McCollum. Crunchbase shows the company has now raised $18.8 million altogether. TechCrunch has more here.

    The Players Tribune, a 10-month-old, New York-based site founded by former New York Yankees shortstop Derek Jeter, where professional athletes create their own content (think first-person essays, tvideo content, podcasts and original photography), has raised $9.5 million in Series B funding. New Enterprise Associates led the round, with participation from earlier backers, including Thomas Tull of Legendary Entertainment. Business Insiderhas the story here.

    PolicyGenius, a two-year-old, Brooklyn, N.Y.-based online insurance broker, has raised $5.3 million in Series A funding led by Karlin Ventures and Susa Ventures, with participation from insurers Transamerica and AXA. Venture Capital Dispatch has more here.

    Sketchfab, a three-year-old, New York-based marketplace for 3D file sharing (users can create sharable 3D files, browse them, or buy them), has raised $7 million in Series A round led by FirstMark Capital, with participation from earlier backers TechStars, Balderton Capital, Partech Ventures andBorealis Ventures. The company has now raised $9 million altogether. TechCrunch has more here.

    SigOpt, an eight-month-old, San Francisco-based Y Combinator alum at work on an optimization technology, has raised $2 million in seed funding from Andreessen Horowitz and Data Collective. TechCrunch has more here.

    Wahanda, a seven-year-old, London-based salon-booking site, has raised €65 million ($73 million) in fresh funding from its sole outside investor, Japan’s Recruit Holdings, which now owns 80 percent of the company after buying outother investors last month. The company has also acquired ZenSoon, a beauty platform in France, for an undisclosed amount. TechCrunch has more here.

    Zymergen, a two-year-old, Emeryville, Ca.-based biotech startup that makes microbial DNA manipulating robots, has raised $42 million in Series A funding led by Data Collective, with participation from AME Cloud Ventures, DFJHVF, Innovation Endeavors, Obvious Ventures, True Ventures and Two Sigma Ventures. The company has now raised $44 million altogether. TechCrunch has much more here.

    —–

    New Funds

    Foundation Capital, a 20-year-old venture capital firm with offices on Sand Hill Road and more newly in San Francisco, is looking to raise up to $325 million for its eight fund, shows an SEC filing that states the first sale has yet to occur. Foundation’s last two funds were $750 million (closed in 2008) and $282 million (closed in 2013), respectively.

    Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers has launched a new $4 million seed fund called KPCB Edge — a carve-out from its $450 milion 16th fund, closed last year. Mike Abbott, who joined the firm as a general partner in 2011 after working as Twitter’s VP of engineering, is leading the effort, but three newer employees —  Anjney Midha, 23; Ruby Lee, 23; and Roneil Rumburg, 22 — will oversee its day-to-day operations. Venture Capital Dispatch has much more here.

    —–

    IPOs

    Fitbit, the eight-year-old, San Francisco-based maker of wearable fitness devices, has increased the target size of its IPO by a whopping 37 percent to $655.5 million, reports Bloomberg. The company is now offering 34.5 million Class A shares for $17 to $19 apiece, up from its original plans to sell 29.85 million shares at $14 to $16 apiece. As Bloomberg notes, Fitbit would be valued at about $3.9 billion at the high end of its new offering range. No doubt there’s a lot of demand for the offering; Fitbit will be one of alarmingly few tech companies that have gone public in 2015. As readers know, it’s also now facing two lawsuits that were recently filed against it by competitor Jawbone (and which will be expensive to battle, presumably).

    The investment bank Houlihan Lokey has confidentlaly filed for an IPO that’s expected later this year. The WSJ has the story here.

    —–

    People

    Evernote CEO Phil Libin is talking to candidates who could replace him as CEO and “may be close to something,” Libin said in an interview with The Information yesterday. (Subscription required.) “We’ve been looking for a professional CEO for a while,” Libin told the outlet, adding it would be “someone who is going to be better than me at it. . . I’m a product person.”

    Google is in talks with a developer to lease or buy a slice of 3 million square feet of offices and R&D space that’s being developed in San Francisco’s Hunters Point Shipyard, reports the San Francisco Business Times.  As the piece notes, the $8 billion redevelopment project, which also includes the former Candlestick Park site, is “drawing looks” from numerous Silicon Valley titans.

    Sounds like Google has yet again made VP Neal Mohan an offer he could not refuse; he says he’s staying put at the search giant and not departing for Dropbox, which was reportedly trying to woo him as its head of product. (Recode says additional compensation wasn’t involved as it was when Twitter tried recruiting Mohan from Google several years ago, but we’re not sure that rules out other enticements.)

    Zynga has acquired Superlabs, an incubator founded by Zynga CEO Mark Pincus before his return to Zynga in April. The deal cost Zynga just $1 but could “amount to a lot more depending on employee compensation packages and stock grants,” say Recode, noting that the “grants for Superlabs’ nine employees may include as much as 1.1 million shares of Zynga stock.” (That sounds like a big fat conflict of interest to us, but readers may recall that Pincus has a lot more voting power than anyone else.)

    —–

    Jobs

    Tribeca Venture Partners is hiring an associate. The job is in New York.

    A top venture firm (trust us on this) is looking for a senior director of marketing for its Menlo Park, Ca., office. Email resumes to vcmarketing2015 [at] gmail [dot] com.

    —–

    Data

    A data-driven argument against a bubble, care of Andreessen Howoritz. (This is worth zooming through.)

    —–

    Essential Reads

    Singapore rising: The plot to become the next big tech hub.

    —–

    Detours

    The real housewives of Westeros.

    An Antwerp townhouse with the world’s largest windows.

    Beautiful motorcycles.

    —–

    Retail Therapy

    The only “WALL ST” license plate issued in the state of New York is for sale right now on EBay. (It comes with a 13-year-old Mercedes S-Class with 89,000 miles on the odometer.) Buy it now!

  • StrictlyVC: June 15, 2015

    Good Monday morning, everyone! Hope you had a wonderful weekend.

    Before we jump into things, as some of you already know, a little “personal news” of mine emerged Friday afternoon; I’ve joined TechCrunch as Silicon Valley Editor.

    The role will see me bolstering TC’s coverage of the money flowing into startups and I’m exceedingly happy about it. TechCrunch has a top-notch staff that I’m truly humbled to be joining. It’s also highly forward-thinking, as we’ve all seen in the past. Everyone at TC recognizes that this is a (now pretty big) community that’s important to me and valuable to you, and it’s very supportive of StrictlyVC’s continued growth, which I greatly appreciate. I think you will, too, given the extensive resources it will allow StrictlyVC to leverage.

    Note that in preparation for this new role at TechCrunch, I’m taking off two days at week end, so no SVC Thursday or Friday.

    Now back to our regularly scheduled programming.:)

    —–

    Top News in the A.M.

    China’s taxi app war is quickly growing more heated. Last week, we learned that Uber is raising $1 billion solely for its business in China. Now, Bloomberg is reporting that Didi Kuaidi — China’s largest taxi app company — is out to raise $1.5 billion at a $15 billion valuation.

    Alibaba plans to launch an online video streaming service in China later this summer called TBO, or Tmall Box Office, with content bought from China and other countries as well as made in-house. The idea: to emulate Netflix and HBO. Reuters has more here.

    That raid on the U.S. government’s personnel office likely included the theft of security-clearance information. Yikes. The breach, along with the Anthem data breach, reportedly pose indefinite threats of future harm, too.

    —–

    How Stanford Management Co. Sees the World (Brace Yourself, Israel)

    Last week, at the PreMoney Conference in San Francisco, veteran venture capitalist Heidi Roizen moderated a panel that asked institutional limited partners for their view of the world.

    The speakers each had unique insights, but the audience may have been particularly attuned to one – John Powers, who served as president and CEO of Stanford Management Company for nine years. (He left his post last year and remains “unpotted,” as he put it.) As Roizen noted in introducing Powers, Stanford is among the world’s most sought-after investors given the power of its imprimatur — not to mention the $25 billion it has to manage, roughly 5 percent of which it invests in venture capital.

    Luckily for attendees, Powers didn’t disappoint. In fact, he spoke candidly about a wide range of issues that may help capital-seeking venture firms better understand Stanford’s point of view, even while it’s likely to disappoint many of them. Here’s some of what he had to say:

    On whether or not Stanford is likely to reinvest in a firm it has backed previously:

    We’re looking at track record over time, and sticking pretty close to a roster of people who’ve been great VCs over a long period, because . . . there is a huge amount of persistence. It’s a brand business. It’s a business where the brand of the VC attracts the opportunity set. It’s sort of the only form of capital that I can think of that’s driven by brand attractiveness as opposed to price.

    On when and whether Stanford will invest in a new venture fund:

    We didn’t fund a lot of new venture funds over the course of my time there, but we did [invest] pretty steadily, every couple of years, in one or two new funds, [and] brandedness was the key. So what about this fund would lead us to think it can establish brandedness? That could come in the form of notorious founders. Andreessen Horowitz was branded day one because of the pedigrees of both Marc [Andreessen] and Ben [Horowitz]. The guys at Emergence Capital had a niche strategy that happened to be a large niche but was identifiable and you could see, okay, they can build a story around their early participation in and ownership of this view of the world. [We like that] as opposed to a general purpose, “We’re going to do a little software,  a little semis and hardware, and a little consumer” venture fund. It was much harder for us to see [how the latter types of funds could] get escape trajectory.

    On what Stanford worries about:

    The one thing you have to remember in venture is that a few outcomes can totally transform a fund. So whatever you do analytically to think, ‘These guys are going to get branded’ or whatever, stumbling into the right deal can transform a fund.

    That’s true, too, when you fire someone. If this guy’s long in the tooth, they’re not cutting it anymore, we’d like to fire them, you do that, [then] they come in with one home-run deal in the next fund and you look foolish in front of your board.

    On why Stanford isn’t keen on investing internationally:

    You’d invest internationally if you felt you were going to get better returns than domestically or if you felt that you were going to get something that diversified the stream of cash flows to you. So you go country by country.

    In very large measure, the Israeli venture community is the 51st state of the U.S. venture community; I think you don’t get superior returns over time or haven’t in general, and you don’t get diversification away from investing in a cybersecurity company in the U.S. So you’d go to Israel if you felt like you couldn’t gain access to the best stuff in the U.S. Therefore you were sub-optimizing but doing the best you could by investing in a very vibrant entrepreneurial community over there – just recognizing that it’s probably [not] going to match up over time with what Sequoia can do for you over here.

    China is very different. There are huge indigenous sources of demand, a massive reinvention of the economy; the streams of opportunity that you see there . . . may be emulative of, but not derivative of, what you get in the U.S. from a returns standpoint.

    India has been a bit of a confusing hybrid, with not the same level of indigenous demand [as China], though that appears to be changing to some degree.

    On being “cold-blooded”:

    Speaking from my former seat at Stanford, you have to be pretty cold-blooded. Are we better off spending time trying to get a little better allocation out of Sequoia in the next fund than we are flying around the Far East or something? [The answer, thinks Stanford, is yes.]

    ——

    New Fundings

    Aledade, a year-old, Bethesda, Md.-based company that partners with primary care physicians to provide everything they need to create and run an Accountable Care Organization (ACO), has raised $30 million in Series B funding led by ARCH Venture Partners, with participation from earlier investor Venrock. Forbes has more here.

    Codagenix, a four-year-old, Stonybrook, N.Y.-based software-based platform for vaccine design, has raised $2 million in Series A financing led by Topspin Partners. The company has now raised $3.8 million altogether.

    Doppler Labs, a two-year-old, N.Y.-based wearable technology company, has raised an undisclosed amount of funding from Live Nation Entertainment,Universal Music Group and WME. Among its first products: the Active Listening System, an in-ear system that uses two wireless buds and an app to let users control and personalize their live audio environment. The company is also running a Kickstarter campaign. More here.

    Homesuite, a 1.5-year-old Palo Alto, Ca.-based furnished rental platform, has raised $2.3 million in seed funding from Battery Ventures, Bessemer Venture Partners and Foundation Capital, with participation from GrubHub cofounder Mike Evans and renowned investor Pierre Lamond.

    Karma Recycling, a two-year-old, New Delhi, India-based electronic waste management and electronics buy-back company, has raised an undisclosed amount of funding from IIMA CIIE’s Infuse Ventures, one of the only clean tech-focused funds in India, and the global sustainability practice Environmental Resources Management.

    Milestone Pharmaceuticals, a 10-year-old, Montreal-based developer of cardiovascular drug therapies, has raised $17 million in Series B funding led by Domain Associates, with participation from earlier backers Fonds de solidarité FTQ, Pappas Ventures, BDC Capital, GO Capital, and iNovia Capital. The company has now raised $30 million altogether, shows Crunchbase.

    Moonlighting, an eight-month-old, Charlottesville, Va.-based on-demand, mobile jobs marketplace, has raised $1.9 million in funding led by The McClatchy Company, New Richmond Ventures, the Baltimore Angels and Millennial Media founder Paul Palmieri.

    PowWow Energy, a 2.5-year-old, Sunnyvale, Ca.-based SaaS startup that mines farmers’ utility billing information to track pump behavior, has raised $3 million in funding from the state of California, as well as funding from theUniversity of California Santa Barbara and UC Davis. Angel investors provided the remaining $700,000. More here.

    TripleLift, a three-year-old, New York-based programmatic native technology company, has raised $10.5 million in Series B funding led by Edison Partners. The company has now raised $16.6 million altogether, shows Crunchbase. Its earlier backers include True Ventures, iNovia Capital, Laconia Capital and NextView Ventures.

    Winko Games, a months-old, Barcelona, Spain-based studio that’s creating “hardcore” games on mobile, has raised $1.4 million in seed funding. Backers included London Venture Partners, Initial Capital, and Kibo Ventures. The company is planning to release its first game in the fourth quarter of this year.

    Yesware, a five-year-old, Boston- and San Francisco-based company whose sales acceleration platform helps streamline responses to prospects and customers, has raised $13.3 million in funding led by Foundry Group, with participation from Battery Ventures, Google Ventures, Golden Venture Partners and IDG Ventures. The company has now raised $33 million to date, shows Crunchbase.

    Zane Benefits, a nine-year-old, Salt Lake City, Ut.-based maker of individual health insurance reimbursement software for small businesses, has raised $1.5 million in funding from Kickstart Seed Fund and Royal Street Investment and Innovation Center.

    Zhong, a two-year-old, Shanghai-based online insurance seller, has raised 5.78 billion yuan ($931.3 million) in its first round of fundraising, including from Morgan Stanley; China’s top domestic investment bank, China International Capital Corp; and private equity firm CDH Investments. Zhong was founded by Alibaba Group Holding’s executive chairman Jack Ma, Tencent Holdings chairman Pony Ma and Ping An Insurance Group chairman Ma Mingzhe.  Ant Financial, the finance affiliate of Alibaba, is the largest shareholder in the company with a 16 percent stake, reports Reuters.

    —–

    New Funds

    Entertainer and investor Snoop Dogg is looking to raise $25 million for his new venture fund, Casa Verde Capital, shows an SEC filing first flagged by Fortune’s Dan Primack. Among the outfit’s most recent investments: Eaze, a medical marijuana delivery service in California that raised $10 million in April led by DCM Ventures.

    —–

    IPOs

    Fitbit is just one of 10 companies expected to price on U.S. exchanges this week. Renaissance Capital has the whole list here.

    —–

    Exits

    Stratasys, the publicly traded 3D printing and manufacturing company, is spinning off Bold Machines, a 10-month-old unit focused on incubating new products made with 3D printing. Bre Pettis, the founder and former head of MakerBot, which Stratasys acquired in 2013 for $403 million, will leave Stratasys to lead Bold Machines. TechCrunch has more here, including analysis about what drove the move.

    —–

    People

    Yahoo hearts Katie Couric. According to Recode sources, it’s just signed a new contract raising her annual pay from $6 million to $10 million — not far from the $15 million per year she was reportedly paid as the anchor of CBS.

    Meet real estate “rock star” Ken DeLeon, who has “taken the Silicon Valley real estate world by storm with his ambition, marketing skills and breezy braggadocio,” reports the San Jose Mercury News. “People are kind of drawn to me. They want to be around me,” he tells the outlet. “I pretty much raised the bar for everybody, for the expectations of what a good agent should be.”

    Twitter president Adam Bain is reportedly the front runner to succeed Dick Costolo as the company’s next CEO. But venture capitalist John Doerr appears to have other ideas. In an interview last week with Bloomberg’s Emily Chang, Doerr said he thought that “Reed Hastings would be a good CEO at Twitter. I think Sundar [Pichai] at Google would be a great CEO at Twitter.” When asked about the full-time jobs of both, Doerr said, “I expect the CEO that’s recruited to Twitter will have a job.”

    “For a time, he lived on a 20-acre estate in Bedford, N.Y., overseen by a butler whom he paid $50,000 a year, and he hosted grand parties for 60 guests or more.” Today, entrepreneur Fabrice Grinda leads a simpler life, one in which he apparently drives his friends and mother crazy, judging from this New York Times profile.

    —–

    Jobs

    Obvious Ventures, the nearly year-old, San Francisco-based venture firm started by Twitter co-founder Ev Williams, is hiring a senior associate. The job is in San Francisco.

    —–

    Essential Reads

    Here’s what happens to your $10 after you pay for a month of Apple Music.

    Facebook is eating the $140 billion hardware market. Business Insider explains here.

    Parking apps are facing obstacles at every turn.
    —–

    Detours

    Getting rich quick and preserving creative autonomy? That’s the yuccie dream.

    The real science behind Jurassic World.

    The Cinder Cone.

    —–

    Retail Therapy

    Sushi-themed suitcase covers.

  • StrictlyVC: June 12, 2015

    Hello and happy Friday, everyone! Hope you have a super weekend.

    By the way, some of you mentioned finding yesterday’s newsletter in spam. We’re not sure why Gmail is giving us a hard time this week, but if you missed it, it’s here. (You can always email us about delivery issues or anything else and we’ll do our best to help.)

    —–

    Top News in the A.M.

    To the surprise of pretty much everyone — including those who’ve been asking for his head — Dick Costolo is stepping down from his role as CEO of Twitter after nearly nearly five years on the job. Company cofounder Jack Dorsey will serve as interim CEO — or maybe even as the company’s permanent CEO. He seemed to leave the door open to that possibility in an interview yesterday with Business Insder. The WSJ has letters from both men to Twitter employees here.

    Blackberry may be ditching its own operating system in favor of Android. More here.

    Uber is reportedly raising $1 billion expressly to take on its China-based rivals. The company suggests it’s further along in that fight than those rivals would have you believe, too. More here.

    —–

    A New Hardware Firm Emerges: Meet Root Ventures

    You may have noticed: Hardware investing is in vogue. Andy Rubin, creator the mobile operating system Android, recently launched Playground Global to advise device makers in exchange for equity. Formation 8 is raising a $100 million hardware-focused venture fund. That’s saying nothing of the seed-stage fund Bolt, which raised $25 million a few months ago, and the numerous accelerators now focused on backing hardware startups, including Haxlr8r, Lemnos Labs, and Highway1, which is an offshoot of the custom design manufacturing company PCH International.

    Now, the Bay Area has yet another entrant on the scene: San Francisco-based Root Ventures, which just closed its debut, hardware-focused fund with $31,415,927 (the first 10 digits of Pi), capital that it raised from a gaggle of high-net-worth investors along with the fund of funds manager Cendana Capital.

    Root Ventures is a single-GP fund founded by Avidan Ross, a trained engineer who was previously CTO of the private equity firm CIM Group. Ross isn’t widely known (yet) in press circles, but a growing number of venture capitalists and entrepreneurs have grown acquainted with him through the roughly 10 bets he has placed in recent years with the help of his friends’ capital.

    Some of Ross’s older bets include Wallaby Financial, a mobile finance company that was acquired by Bankrate in December for an undisclosed amount. Another is Skycatch, an aerial robotics platform that received its first check from Ross and which has gone on to raise $24.7 million altogether, including from Google Ventures. Ross also wrote the first check for Momentum Machines, a company whose robots turn raw ingredients into packaged hamburgers without human intervention. It just raised an undisclosed amount of follow-on financing from Founders Fund.

    “I don’t think people were investing in me based on my individual track record as an angel,” says Ross. “Those investing in me know me from a previous life [as CTO] of a pretty large investment firm where I built a lot of great relationships with people who trust my ability to invest in great technology.”

    Ross, who raised much of his new fund late last year, has so far made three investments on behalf of Root Ventures, where he plans to make concentrated bets and to write first checks in the range of $500,000.

    The most recent of his portfolio companies is operating in stealth mode, but it’s easy to see the appeal of the others. Mashgin — company Ross met through entrepreneur friends — has developed an automated checkout kiosk machine that employs computer vision to identify any object on a surface (down to the different-flavored Snapples, says Ross). The big idea: to create a far more seamless experience for shoppers.

    The company graduated late last year from Y Combinator and is about to announce a “significant” amount of follow-on funding, says Ross, who wrote its first check.

    Ross also invested in Prynt, which makes a smartphone case that prints out photos. He met the company during his honeymoon in China. The young company was operating out of the Haxlr8r accelerator in Shenzhen, “and I asked if I could take a three-hour break and visit with the companies. I immediately thought: ‘This is amazing.’”

    If you don’t understand why a printing up a digital photo might be interesting, Ross says Prynt’s opportunity goes “above and beyond printing out a polaroid. When you print a photo, you’re basically printing up the last frame of a 10 second video. With Prynt photos, you hand them to someone else, they point their phone at the photo, and the photo becomes alive [by featuring those full 10 seconds]. It’s like a Vine that only that person can watch. It creates privileged access.”

    Others must like it, too. Prynt recently raised $1.5 million in a Kickstarter campaign earlier this year.

    Ross says the company also just raised a “sizable seed round that’s unannounced. An earlier SEC filing suggests the amount is $2 million.

    —–

    New Fundings

    8tracks, a seven-year-old, San Francisco-based platform for music listeners to create their own playlists, has raised $2.5 million in debt funding from Silicon Valley Bank. The company has now raised $5.3 million altogether, shows Crunchbase. Its venture investors include SoftTech VC, Andreessen Horowitz, and Index Ventures.

    BloomThat, a two-year-old, San Francisco-based e-commerce florist, has raised $5.5 million in Series A funding led by Forerunner Ventures, with participation from SherpaVentures, Rothenberg Ventures and earlier backers First Round Capital and Vaizra Investments. The company has now raised $7.6 million altogether.

    Boxful, a six-month-old, Hong Kong-based startup that enables customers to store unwanted items in warehouses, has raised $6.6 million to develop its domestic business and expand into other parts of Asia. Investors include the real estate firms Great Eagle, Carlton Holdings and Soundwill Holdings, along with Chinese conglomerate Tinghsin Group and venture firms Arocrest Capital, Lonsdale Capital and Vega Properties. TechCrunch has more here.

    Convirza, a three-year-old, Draper, Ut.-based call marketing analytics platform, has raised more than $20 million in Series B funding led by an unnamed East Coast-based investment group. The company has raised nearly $25 million altogether. More here.

    Evrything, a four-year-old, Ontario-based platform that connects consumer products to the web and manages real-time data in the cloud to drive their applications, has raised $7.5 million in new funding from undisclosed sources. The company has now raised $14.5 million altogether, including from CiscoAtomico, and Dawn Capital.

    GoGoVan, a two-year-old, Hong Kong-based on-demand logistics startup, has raised $10 million in Series B-plus funding, reports Tech In Asia. The round was led by former 91 Wireless CEO Hu Zemin, with participation from earlier backers, including Renren CEO Yizhou Chen.

    La Renon Healthcare, a seven-year-old, Ahmedabad, India-based pharmaceutical research, marketing and manufacturing company, has raised $16 million in Series A funding from Sequoia Capital. VC Circle has more here.

    Miura Systems, a U.K.-based company that makes point-of-sale devices, has raised $16 million in funding led by DFJ Esprit Secondaries, with participation from DFJ Esprit EIS funds. More here.

    Spire, a three-year-old, San Francisco, Ca.-based satellite-powered data company, has been awarded $2.9 million in grants from Scottish Enterprise, the international investment and trade promotion agency of the Scottish government. The funds follow $25 million in Series A funding that Spire raised last year from RRE Ventures, Moose Capital and others.

    —–

    People

    Serial entrepreneur Kevin Rose is merging his newest startup Watchville — a news aggregation app focused exclusively on wristwatches — with Hodinkee, a site for wristwatch enthusiasts. Hodnikee is based in Manhattan, and Rose, who is taking the full-time position of CEO of the company, is heading there to live, reports the New York Times.

    Investor Chris Sacca talked with Bloomberg’s Emily Chang yesterday, and they wound up talking about his hot tub at his California home near Lake Tahoe. (He calls it the Jam Tub.) According to Sacca, who has made a fortune owing to early and aggressive bets on Uber, Uber CEO Travis Kalanick used to spend “eight to ten hours” there at a time. “I’ve never seen a human with that kind of staying power in a hot tub,” Sacca said. He also told Chang that he invites entrepreneurs to his home to feed them and measure them up and wouldn’t invest in anyone who doesn’t get up to put their dishes in the sink.

    Sarah Tavel, a former VP at Bessemer Venture Partners who joined Pinterest as a product manager more than three years ago, is returning to VC as Greylock Partners’ first investment partner. More here.

    —–

    Essential Reads

    That recently disclosed hack of the federal Office of Personnel Management, the government’s human resources division, is a lot worse than first reported.

    No team? No idea? No problem. A new venture firm says it will fund you anyway.

    —–

    Detours

    short history of Rupert Murdoch’s heirs apparent.

    Conversation resignation letter.

    Oh, those meddlng millennials’ parents!

    —–

    Retail Therapy

    Okay, fine, we’ll take one pair of these ridiculously cool sunglasses.

  • StrictlyVC: June 11, 2015

    Hi, everyone, good morning! The countdown to Game 4 begins, woot!

    —–

    Top News in the A.M.

    Jawbone is really putting the screws to its biggest rival in the wearable fitness device market, Fitbit. For the second time in two weeks, its parent company, AliphCom, has lodged a lawsuit again Fitbit, reports the WSJ. Its newest complaint: that Fitbit infringed on a patent for “a wellness application using data from a data-capable band” after Jawbone spent more than $100 million on R&D toward that end. Fitbit said in a statement, “We are unaware of any confidential or proprietary information of Jawbone in our possession and we intend to vigorously defend against these allegations.” In late May, Jawbone filed its first lawsuit against Fitbit, saying it hired away Jawbone employees who nabbed its intellectual property on their way out. Eight-year-old Fitbit unveiled plans to go public in early May.

    Google is launching a new company tasked with developing technologies that improve urban life, reports the New York Times. Called Sidewalk Labs, the company will be headed by Daniel Doctoroff, former deputy mayor of New York City for economic development and former chief executive of Bloomberg. Among other technologies the company is expected to pursue are those thatreduce pollution, curb energy use, and lessen the cost of city living. In September 2013, Google similarly launched another company, Calico, that aims to extend human life.

    —–

    Amid Unicorn Talk, High-Potential, Low-Glamour PayNearMe Slogs Along

    PayNearMe doesn’t get a lot of attention from the press. Partly, that’s because the five-year-old, Sunnyvale, Ca., company doesn’t seek it out. But PayNearMe is also in a business that’s not nearly so relatable to many in Silicon Valley as enterprise messaging or high-end black-car services. It’s focused on the roughly 25 percent of people in the U.S. who don’t have bank accounts but buy things — like the rest of us — that would be hard to pay for in cash, like rent, healthcare, and online goods.It’s a huge market, one that’s remarkably underserved excepting older players like MoneyGram and Western Union. It’s also a lot of work to build, making it a fairly long-term bet, one into which investors like True Ventures, August Capital, and Khosla Ventures have already sunk $71 million, including a $14 million inside round earlier this year.

    How does it work? Say a person needs to pay their rent or buy a bus ticket. PayNearMe has relationships with both brick-and-mortar stores –including, crucially, 7 Eleven, Ace Cash Express and Family Dollar — as well as businesses like property management software companies. Together, the companies make it possible for anyone to walk into one of more than 17,000 locations with cash, and walk out with a receipt for payment.

    This week, we talked with PayNearMe founder and CEO Danny Shader – previously a CEO of Good Technology, an EIR at both Kleiner Perkins and Benchmark, and cofounder of Accept.com, an online consumer-to-consumer payments service that sold to Amazon for $175 million in stock in 1999 – to learn more about the gritty, complex business he’s been building.

    PayNearMe doesn’t give out a lot of numbers, but you say that overall payment volume has more than tripled from this time last year. 

    Our business is growing five to 10 percent a month, which keeps compounding, so it’s getting to be a pretty sizable business. It’s extremely hard to build up an entirely new payment network, but we’ve done it, it’s working, it’s growing, and it’s incredibly defensive. But it’s not for the faint of heart.

    You could boil the ocean, trying to go after everyone who’s unbanked. What’s your process like?

    We pursue things vertical by vertical. So the biggest vertical is lending, then rent and municipal government payments, and now healthcare is driving a lot of new people into the insured ranks and they need to pay their premiums. Within a vertical, there’s a handful of software companies that are systems of record, whether it be for property management companies or government agencies, and we integrate into those software systems. For rents, for example, we integrate with AppFolio and ManageAmerica, a property management system for manufactured housing, meaning mobile homes.

    We try to go after very large accounts directly or go downstream.

    Going downstream [to smaller players] sounds like a lot of work. How do you do it? How many employees do you have altogether?

    We have more than 50, roughly half of whom are in Sunnyvale, with the rest scattered [around the U.S.]. And it does take time to get going on a new vertical. Say we want to do something in health, in medical records. We’ll go to a trade show and call on [some of the vendors] , and they’ll typically say, “Go away, my customers aren’t asking for you.” So we’ll go to end customers and invest heavily in getting them to work with us, and they do, and they talk about it, and a year later, the software providers say, “We want to integrate with you.”

    Processing rent payments is one of your biggest businesses, but we understand that Family Dollar will no longer be accepting rent payments, that it grew worried about safety issues around people walking in with large sums of cash. We’ve asked the company about it but they haven’t responded.

    I can’t speak for Family Dollar, but rent is a big vertical and we’re processing rent at a ton of other locations. Other folks will be joining our network, too.

    PayNearMe shares its economics with stores like Family Dollar and 7 Eleven. Do you discuss that split? Is it 50/50?

    I can’t comment on [the percentage of transaction fees we pay out], but it’s [a good deal for them]. Imagine: Hey, our sales force will sign up big entities like municipalities that will include your logo [so people know where to pay their bills], and we’ll pay you a commission, and by the way, we’re sending you valuable foot traffic.

    PayNearMe has a lot of stuff coming. Can you give readers a curtain raiser?

    I can say that we now have a complete set of money transmitting licenses in the U.S. and Puerto Rico that we spent the last three years and millions of dollars [to obtain]. The licenses allow us to act as an agent of a consumer, taking their money and delivering it to some other location. It lets us enter adjacent markets. [But that’s all I can say.]

    Do you anticipate these adjacent businesses will be larger than what you’ve already built?

    I think we could build a big public company doing what we’re doing. It’s a massive market hidden in plain sight. Most people in the Valley are asking if cash is going away. Actually, the cash market is increasing, and the bifurcation between the 1 percent and everyone else is contributing to that.

    —–

    New Fundings

    AbilTo, a seven-year-old, New York-based online video conferencing platform that delivers targeted health-changing programming, has raised $12 million in Series C funding led by HLM Venture Partners, with participation from earlier backers BlueCross BlueShield Venture Partners, .406 Ventures and Sandbox Industries. The company has now raised $21 million altogether, shows Crunchbase.

    Bright Funds, a three-year-old, San Francisco, Ca.-based platform for individual and workplace giving, has raised $1.8 million in funding led byAspiration Growth, with participation from Bloomberg Beta, 10K Investments, Wellspring Growth Partners, Mission & Market, and individual investors. Per Crunchbase, the company has now raised roughly $3 million altogether.

    Dojo Madness, a seven-month-old, Berlin, Germany-­based startup that makes a digital coaching app for a popular e-sports game called “League of Legends,” (and has broader plans up its sleeve), has raised $2.25 million in seed funding from DN Capital, London Venture Partners, March Capital Partners, 500 Startups, The HIVE, and numerous angel investors. VentureBeat has more here.

    Kolibree, a two-year-old, Paris, France-based company whose “connected” electric toothbrushes enable parents to follow their kids’ brushing on their mobile devices with real-time feedback, has raised an undisclosed amount of Series A funding from SEB Alliance, Innovacom, Cap Horn Invest and the Dental Investment Group for Health.

    Local ID, a nine-month-old, Venice, Ca.-based intelligence platform designed to maximize brands’ local marketing efforts, has raised $1.9 million in seed funding led by Crosscut Ventures, with participation from TechnicolorTenOneTen, Baroda Ventures, Double M Partners, Tallwave, Wavemaker Partners and Queens Bridge Venture Partners. TechCrunch has more here.

    Locent, a year-old, Santa Monica, Ca.-based company that’s aiming to help merchants sell products and services using two-way text messaging, has raised an undisclosed amount of funding from Chaac Ventures, a seed-stage firm focused on Princeton University’s alumni tech founders. (Locent founder Matt Joseph, who previously worked in investments and operations at LaunchPad LA, graduated in 2010.) More here.

    Luqa Pharmaceuticals, a five-year-old, Hong Kong-based pharma company focused on dermatology, has raised $15 million in new funding led byMorningside Ventures.

    QualMetrix, a three-year-old, Miami, Fla.-based company whose cloud-based healthcare analytics platform that provides reporting to payers, providers and employers, has raised $5 milion in Series B funding led by VSS Monitoring founder Terence Breslin. (His company was acquired for an undisclosed amount in 2012.) QualMetrix has now raised $9.3 million altogether.

    Tuhu Yangche, a four-year-old, Shanghai, China-based online car maintenance platform that invites customers to book car services appointments, as well as shop for products online, has reportedly raised roughly $100 million in Series C funding from Yuyue Capital, Far East Horizon, Legend Capital, and Qiming Venture Partners.

    Unum Therapeutics, a year-old, Cambridge, Ma.-based biotechnology company developing an antibody-directed cellular immunotherapy, has raised $65 million in Series B funding led by New Leaf Venture Partners, with participation from Brace Pharma CapitalSeattle GeneticsCowen Private Investments, Jennison Associates (on behalf of certain clients), Novo A/S,Sabby Management,Sectoral Asset Management, and Wellington Management Company. Earlier backers Fidelity Biosciences, Atlas Venture and Sanofi-Genzyme BioVenture also joined the round. The company has now raised $77 milion altogether, shows Crunchbase. More here.

    XTuit Pharmaceuticals, a four-year-old, Cambridge, Ma.-based biopharmaceutical company that’s developing products for use in the diagnosis and treatment of oncological, tumor, and inflammatory diseases, has raised $22 million in Series A funding led by New Enterprise Associates, with participation from Polaris PartnersCTI Life SciencesArcus Ventures and Omega Funds.

    ZypMedia, a two-year-old, San Francisco, Ca.-based programmatic media-buying platform for local advertising, has raised $4.4 million in Series B funding led by publicly traded Sinclair Broadcast Group, with participation from earlier investor U.S. Venture Partners.

    —–

    Exits

    In April, Fortune reported that Ouya, the startup video game console maker, was on the auction block after tripping a debt convenant that it wasn’t able to restructure. Now, word is the company is talking with Razer, a computer and accessories maker popular with gamers. CNet has the story here.

    Whitepages, the online people and phone number directory, has acquired San Francisco-based NumberCop to bolster its abilities to detect spam and scam calls within its Caller ID smartphone application. CrunchBase doesn’t list any investors for NumberCop. More from TechCrunch here.

    —–

    People

    Venture capitalist Matt Murphy, who left Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers earlier this year, didn’t travel far for his new job, joining another  Sand Hill Road firm — Menlo Ventures — as managing director. He becomes one of seven investing partners at the firm, including Mark Siegel, with whom Murphy attended business school at Stanford. Venture Capital Dispatch has more here.

    For the year ended in April, Google CEO and cofounder Larry Page received a 97 percent approval rating from employees who submitted reviews to the career site Glassdoor. That makes him the most popular tech CEO, according to the site, which shows Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg isn’t doing too shabbily, either, with a 94 percent approval rating by employees. More here.

    The CEO of Otter Media, the Web video joint venture between AT&T and The Chernin Group, is leaving after less than a year on the job, reports Recode.

    In a letter to employees, Virasb Vahidi, formerly chief commercial officer at American Airlines, wrote that “it has become clear to [Chernin Group CEO Peter Chernin] and me that the role of the CEO is different than we had originally envisioned.”

    “Unicorn” companies are increasingly hunting for talent at the Googleplex.

    —–

    Jobs

    eBay is looking for a director of corporate development. The job is in San Jose, Ca.

    Oracle is hiring a corporate development associate. The job is in Redwood Shores, Ca.

    —–

    Essential Reads

    After trading some public jabs earlier this week, payroll provider ADP has filed a defamation lawsuit against the high-flying human resources firm Zenefitsreports the WSJ. ADP’s complaint states that Zenefits and its CEO, Parker Conrad, launched a “manipulative and malicious public relations campaign, ignoring its own conduct, to defame ADP and drive away ADP’s clients.” ADP has since sent an email offering a competing product called Opum to Zenefits customers. TechCrunch has more on that last twist here.

    Amazon may be launching daily live video shows to help sell stuff. More here in USA Today.

    —–

    Detours

    The Godfather of Clickbait.

    The first official TV trailer for the new Bond movie.

    —–

    Retail Therapy

    Nest Cam.

  • StrictlyVC: June 10, 2015

    Hi, happy Wednesday, everyone! We have a slightly abbreviated version of the newsletter today. Between celebrating a certain 8-year-old’s birthday and watching yet another incredible NBA Final’s game last night, we were offline much of yesterday.

    On a separate note, we’ve heard from a number of you who’ve been finding your copy of StrictlyVC in spam. We’ve talked with our new email service provider about it, and the best advice it can offer is to a.) unmark the email as spam when you find it in the deepest recesses of your digital junk mail and b.) add our email address to your contact list. (We’ll be over here, cursing at Gmail, in the meantime.)

    —–

    Top News in the A.M.

    Chinese web giant Baidu will reportedly launch its first driverless car in the second half of this year, with the help of an unnamed car manufacturer. Worth noting: Baidu owns a stake in Uber, which also looks to be aggressively pushing into autonomous driving technologies. The BBC has the story here.

    That Spotify round is official. According to the WSJ, which reported in April that the music-streaming company was assembling another huge financing, Spotify just closed on $526 million in funding that values the company at $8.5 billion — twice the valuation of its publicly traded rival Pandora. (Both companies operate at a loss). Spotify’s new investors include a wide range of investors, including British asset managers Baillie Gifford, Landsdowne Partners and Rinkelberg Capital; Canadian hedge funds Senvest Capital and Discovery Capital Management; Nordic telecom operator TeliaSonera; and U.S. investors Halcyon Asset Management, GSV Capital, D.E. Shaw & Co., TCVNorthzone, P. Schoenfeld Asset Management, and Goldman Sachs. Founded nine years ago, Spotify has now raised $1.1 billion altogether.

    —–

    New Fundings

    Arrowlytics, a year-old, Charlotte, N.C.-based company whose online analytics dashboard helps healthcare organizations by pulling data from their various platforms nightly into one system, has raised $3 million in funding led by Surgical Care Affiliates. More here.

    Duolingo, a 3.5-year-old, Pittsburgh, Pa.-based free language education platform, has raised $45 million in new funding led by Google Capital in a round that values the company at $470 million. Duolingo had previously raised $38.3 million across three rounds, including from Union Square VenturesNew Enterprise Associates, and Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers. Business Insider has more here.

    Fetchr, a three-year-old, Dubai-based, Shyp-like company that picks up and delivers mail and other packages to customers in the Middle East (where not everyone has a street address), has just raised $11 million in Series A funding. New Enterprise Associates led the round, with participation from Triple Point Capital, Ben Narasin, Delta Partners, and Dhabi Holdings, among others. VentureBeat has more here.

    Melinta Therapeutics, a 15-year-old, New Haven, Ct.-based company that develops and commercializes antibiotics to overcome drug-resistant infections, has raised $67 in funding led by Malin Corporation, with participation from earlier backer Vatera Healthcare Partners. The company has now raised roughly $280 million altogether, according to Crunchbase data. Previous investors include Warburg Pincus, ABS Ventures, and Oxford Bioscience Partners, among many others.

    PAX Labs, an eight-year-old, San Francisco-based maker of vaporizers (the kind you inhale instead of smoking cigarettes), has raised $46.7 million in new funding from Fidelity Management & Research Company, Sivia Capital and earlier backers Tao Capital Partners and Sand Hill Angels, among others. TechCrunch has more here.

    Spreemo, a five-year-old, New York-based health-care software company that focuses on workers’ compensation specialty benefits management, has raised an undisclosed amount of funding from Pamplona Capital Management.

    SumUp, a three-year-old, Berlin-based mobile payments startup, has raised an undisclosed amount of funding led by Swiss backer Venture Incubator that brings its total funding to $45 million (€40 million), it tells TechCrunch. The company’s earlier investors include Tengelmann Ventures, Groupon, andBBVA VenturesMore here.

    Tile, a 2.5-year-old San Mateo, Ca.-based maker of a location-tracking device and app that helps users find items that are lost, has raised $3 million more in Series A funding from Khosla Ventures. The company has now raised $13 million in Series A funding altogether, including from GGV Capital, AME Cloud Ventures, Slow Ventures, Rothenberg Ventures, and Tandem Capital, among others. Altogether, the company has now raised $18.8 million, shows Crunchbase.

    Twist Bioscience, a two-year-old, San Francisco-based company that helps scientists create chemicals, pharmaceuticals and other products using synthetic biology, has raised $37 million in Series C funding led by publicly tradedIllumina, with participation from Fidelity Management & ResearchForesite Capital Management and earlier backers ARCH Venture PartnersPaladin Capital Group and Tao Invest. The company has now raised $82.1 million altogether, shows Crunchbase.

    Volta Industries, a five-year-old, San Francisco-based company that designs, installs, and maintains electrical charging stations in five cities, including San Francisco and L.A., has raised $7.5 million in funding: $4.5 million in equity financing led by Three Bridges Ventures and a $3 million financing facility from SQN Capital. More about the company here.

    Voonik, a two-year-old, Bangalore, India-based e-commerce platform that features the clothing and jewelry merchandise of numerous stores, has raised $5 million in Series A funding led by Sequoia Capital, with participation from earlier backer Seedfund. The company has now raised $5.5 million to date.

    WalkMe, a three-year-old, San Francisco-based company whose cloud-based service aims to help professionals guide and engage prospects and customers and complete online tasks, has raised $25 million in Series D funding led by Greenspring Associates, with participation from earlier backers Gemini Israel Ventures, Giza Venture Capital and Scale Venture Partners. The company has now raised $42.5 million altogether, shows Crunchbase data.

    —–

    New Funds

    High Alpha, a new, Indianapolis, Ind.-based venture studio focused on conceiving, launching, and scaling new enterprise cloud companies, has raised $35 million from investors, including Emergence Capital, Greenspring Associates, Hyde Park Venture Partners and numerous angel investors. The company’s partners include Scott Dorsey, cofounder and former CEO of ExactTarget (which sold to Salesforce for $2.5 billion in 2013); Mike Fitzgerald, ExactTarget’s former EVP of corporate development and cofounder of Gravity Ventures; Eric Tobias, founder and CEO of iGoDigital (which sold to ExactTarget); and Kristian Andersen, founder of Studio Science and cofounder of Gravity Ventures.

    Intel Capital yesterday took the wraps off a new fund that’s investing in tech startups run by women and underrepresented minorities. The Intel Capital Diversity Fund will commit $125 million to startups across a broad spectrum of industries, and it’s being led by Intel Capital managing director Lisa Lambert. Venture Capital Dispatch has more here. The fund has already made four investments, including Brit + Co, a San Francisco-based media and e-commerce platform. (We talked briefly with founder Brit Morin earlier this week about that new round.)

    OurCrowd, a early three-year-old, Jerusalem-based global equity crowdfunding platform, has launched a specialized $10 million early-stage fund focusing exclusively on seed-stage startups. The minimum investment is fixed at $50,000 for accredited investors while the fund will provide up to $500,000 for a select group of companies.

    —–

    Exits

    AOL has acquired a predictive analytics startup called Velos for an undisclosed amount, shutting down the startup’s service in the process. VentureBeat has more here.

    —–

    People

    Online measurement and advertising company Quantcast has hired a new CFO: Stephen Collins, former CEO at Bazaarvoice, reports TechCrunch. He replaces Peter Kuipers, who joined Quantcast at the end of last year from The Weather Company. Quantcast says Kuipers “has left the company to pursue other opportunities.”

    Indian e-commerce company Snapdeal has hired former Yahoo exec Anand Chandrasekaran as its chief product officer. According to the WSJ, Chandrasekaran will be working with Snapdeal’s roughly 1,000 software engineers, a group that’s expected to double in the next year as it increasingly focuses on improving Snapdeal’s mobile application, which now accounts for 75 percent of its sales.

    Being a billionaire isn’t as easy as it looks, Jack Ma suggested in a talk at the Economic Club of New York this week. The Alibaba founder and executive chairman, whose stake in the company is currently valued at roughly $37 billion, told attendees: “If you have less than $1 million, you know how to spend the money.” Once you become a billionaire, you’re expected to spend your wealth to benefit “society.” The New York Post has more here.

    —–

    Jobs

    Orix, the financial services giant, is looking to hire a managing director into its venture group. The job is in San Francisco.

    —–

    Essential Reads

    A simmering battle between the “unicorn” HR benefits company Zenefits and payroll giant ADP became public yesterday when Zenefits took to its site to tell those of its customers who are paid through ADP that ADP has been systematically deactivating Zenefits accounts that those small businesses had expressly set up. In a statement, ADP attributed its move to Zenefits “pulling sensitive information, including unmasked Social Security numbers and employee banking information, in a manner that did not comply with ADP’s standards for data security.”  TechCrunch has more here.

    Elon Musk’s SpaceX has asked the federal government for permission to begin testing a project that would see a constellation of 4,000 small, cheap satellites beam high-speed Internet signals to all parts of the world. It “would be like rebuilding the Internet in space,” Musk has said. The Washington Post has more here.

    The attorneys general of New York and Connecticut have been quietly investigating Apple‘s negotiations with music companies in search of potential antitrust violations. (So has the European Commission.) The New York Times has the story here.

    The Apple Watch: a break-up story.

    —–

    Detours

    Sixteen ways you’re using LinkedIn wrong.

    Jerry Seinfeld is tired of political correctness.

    “This Friday, June 12, will be my last day at Yelp. I don’t intend to look for another tech job.”

    Unusual homes around the world.

    —–

    Retail Therapy

    The D’Hauteville Concrete Chair. Cool. Also conducive for short meetings.


  • StrictlyVC on Twitter