Saturday, January 29, 2022

Google will offer G Suite legacy edition users a 'no-cost option'

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Friday, January 28, 2022 By Alex Wilhelm

Hello and welcome to Daily Crunch for January 28, 2022! It's nearly blizzard o'clock where I am, so please enjoy the following newsletter as my final missive before hunkering down. In happier and better news, TechCrunch Early Stage is coming up in just a few months and not only am I hype about it, I'll hopefully be there IRL. See you soon! – Alex

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The TechCrunch Top 3

  • Google invests up to $1B in Airtel: With a $700 million investment and $300 million in "multi-year commercial agreements" with Airtel, and Indian telco, Google has made its second major bet on Indian infra. Recall that Google also put money into Jio, another Indian telco. The deal underscores the importance of the country in the future of technology revenues.
  • What's ahead for Europe: On the heels of news that European startups had an outsized 2021 when it came to fundraising, TechCrunch explored what's ahead for the continent. Some expect a slowdown from peak activity, while others anticipate further acceleration. Regardless of which perspective you favor, European venture investment is expected to remain elevated for some time to come.
  • Zapp raises $200M: And speaking of European startups, Zapp, the U.K.-based quick-convenience delivery startup, just raised a massive Series B. The company previously raised $100 million, meaning that this round was big in absolute and comparative terms. As we see some consolidation in the fast-delivery space, this deal caught our eye.

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Startups/VC

  • Are charter cities the future for African tech growth? TechCrunch's Tage Kene-Okafor has a great piece up on the site noting that "African cities have the fastest global urban growth rate," which is leading to overcrowding. Some folks think that "charter cities offer a solution." Special economic zones of all types have been tried before – will they offer African tech a faster route forward?
  • Personalized learning is hot: Our in-house edtech expert Natasah Mascarenhas has a great piece out today on personalized learning startups – Learnfully, Wayfinder, Empowerly, and others – that are taking the lessons of remote schooling to heart and working to make products that work better for our kids. It's an encouraging, fascinating story.
  • Rise wants to remake team calendaring: There is no shortage of apps in the market to help individuals and teams work together. But we might not need as many as we have. That's why Rise is making me think. The team calendaring app just raised a few million, and could replace a few tools that myself and friends use. I wonder if the solution to the Tool Overload of 2022 is tools that do less, intentionally.
  • Canvas wants non-tech folks to be able to squeeze answers from data: Developers are in short supply, so no-code tools that allow folks who don't sling code to do their own building are blowing up. Similarly, a general dearth of data science talent in the market is creating space for tools like Canvas, which "is going all in with a spreadsheet-like interface for non-technical teams to access the information they need without bothering data teams," TechCrunch reports.
  • Zigbang buys Samsung IoT business: The IoT promises of yesteryear are coming true, and not. Samsara recently went public on the back of its IoT business. That was a win for the category. That Zigbang, a South Korean proptech startup, is buying Samsung's IoT unit feels slightly less bullish.
  • Series F-tw? Once upon a time I would have mocked a Series F as indication that the company in question had failed to go public. But that was then. Today Series Fs are not that rare. Indian B2B marketplace Moglix just raised one, which doubled its valuation to $2.6 billion. Tiger co-led the $250 million round.

And if you are looking down the barrel of a blizzard, TechCrunch's Equity podcast has your downtime covered. Enjoy!

European, North American edtech startups see funding triple in 2021

Pre-pandemic, VCs were notoriously reluctant to invest in education-related companies. Today, edtech startups are seeing higher average deal sizes, more seed and pre-seed funding from non-VC investors, and an influx of generalists.

According to Rhys Spence, head of research at Brighteye Ventures, funding for edtech startups based in Europe and North America trebled over the last year.

“Exciting companies are spawning across geographies and verticals, and even generalist investors are building conviction that the sector is capable of producing the same kind of outsized returns generated in fintech, healthtech and other sectors,” writes Spence.

(TechCrunch+ is our membership program, which helps founders and startup teams get ahead. You can sign up here.)

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Big Tech Inc.

  • Northern Light Venture Capital's He Huang says the Chinese robotics market is overheated: Per the investor, robotics in China is "riddled with speculation and overvalued companies," calling the situation a bubble. It's worth noting that China's central government is working to retool where its tech investment dollars flow.
  • Robinhood goes down, back up: This morning, in the wake of the company's lackluster earnings report, TechCrunch dug through why Robinhood's stock sold off in after-hours, pre-market, and early trading sessions yesterday and today. And then Robinhood turned around and gained ample ground during the rest of the day. It's a weird market moment, but good news for the U.S. fintech all the same.
  • Google to allow legacy G Suite users to move to free accounts: After angering techies still using the "G Suite legacy free edition" by announcing that it was ending the program and requiring payment, the search giant has decided to "offer more options to existing users," TechCrunch reports. Somewhere inside of Google, a business decision just met the market and was flipped on its head. Makes you wonder who is calling the shots over there, and if they previously worked for McKinsey.

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Friday, January 28, 2022

4 years after launch, fintech platform Esusu saddles unicorn with $130M Series B

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Thursday, January 27, 2022 By Alex Wilhelm

Hello and welcome to Daily Crunch for January 27, 2022! Today's news is a pretty positive roundup. New fund? Oh yeah. Huge rounds? You bet. We even have new unicorns to discuss. On the other side of the coin, the IPO market appears more ossified than open. – Alex

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The TechCrunch Top 3

  • Facebook's stablecoin bet proves unstable: So much for Facebook – er, Meta – taking over the blockchain world with its own stablecoin. The assets of Diem, for which Meta was a key consortium member, are reportedly being sold for a few hundred million dollars. Cheap? No. But also a fraction of the hopes that the project once had.
  • The new seed, Series A and Series B benchmarks: How far have the standards shifted for early-stage startups when it comes to revenues? The good news is that we have the data. The bad news is that it's mostly what you expected – startups are raising larger, later rounds with less revenue than before. Growth, it turned out, was the more surprising delta to examine.
  • New funds! TechCrunch has notes on a number of new funds out today that are worth digging into. This Week in Fintech has a fund now, and Portugal's Indico Capital Partners has €50 million for its ocean tech fund. There are others. South Korean internet conglomerate Naver Group has a $100 million fund for what TechCrunch described as "metaverse creators." It's amazing how fast that word became ubiquitous, and therefore passé.

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Startups/VC

We have a host of mega-rounds to chat through today, but first some words of warning: It appears that the IPO climate is frozen shut.

What that will mean for companies like Esusu, which just raised $130 million, or Ascend, which just raised $280 million in equity and debt for its BNPL-flavored approach to insurance, is that there is a mountain of private-market wealth out there that needs an exit. The question is just when those checks can be cashed. And if they will get more than a dollar back per dollar invested.

IPO issues or not, the crypto world is busy taking on more external capital. One particular play in the blockchain world is the infrastructure effort, building products that will support other products. This is often a good bet. Twilio is an example of the infra game coming up trumps. AWS is another. So when another crypto backend player like Fireblocks pushes its valuation to $8 billion, we know what's going on. (And speaking of crypto, don't forget the impending tax issue or the startups working to keep folks off the government's naughty list.)

And now, our regular funding round rundown:

  • Quan wants to take on employee churn: There are two kinds of employee exits, from the corporate perspective: regretted churn and unregretted churn. The former is when someone you wanted to keep quits, and the latter is when someone you wanted to fire does you a favor. Quan, which just raised capital, wants to tackle the former by, we report, bridging the "gap between engagement surveys and well-being perks."
  • Bloss is building a company for expecting parents: With birth rates in decline in many parts of the world, it's clear that we're in a new era when it comes to parenting. A time when it's more choice than default. Bloss wants to link expecting parents with experts, which makes good sense, given that babies don't precisely come with a handbook when they enter the world. The company just raised a pre-seed round.
  • Parthean will teach you personal finance whether you like it or not: That's slightly unfair, but the idea behind Parthean is that most folks aren't great with money and need help. So, it is going to teach users concepts and then prompt them to take a particular action toward, in theory, financial health. Natasha's story here is great, and worth reading if you are curious about the intersection of edtech and fintech. The company just raised $1.1 million.
  • The.com is a website builder with a great URL: Short URLs were mega-hype back in the day when you had to have a .com or live a life apart from the consumer spotlight. Things have since changed. But The.com is taking us back to the '90s with its great name and product: website building. But unlike the template-focused builders of the past, this time the company is using "blocks." As someone with both websites and no coding skills, this appeals to me.
  • The Vets is a bet that you want the vet to come to your step: Flush with $40 million in new capital, The Vets wants to make animal care an at-home affair. As someone who has spent far too much time in the last year standing outside his local vet, waiting for a certain puppy to finish her checkup while, variously, burning up in the summer and freezing in the winter, I love this idea.

And there was more. France's Sigfox, which raised more than $300 million, is dead. A Quizup founder is building an MMO, and PortalOne raised $60 million for its "immersive" gaming platform. Whew! What a day!

Dear Sophie: 3 questions about immigration and naturalization

Dear Sophie,

My F-1 OPT will run out this June. My employer has agreed to register me in the H-1B lottery in March.

What are my options if I'm not selected in the lottery?

—Gritty Grad

Dear Sophie,

I'm in the U.S. with an L-1A visa that will max out later this year. My wife has been with me during the whole period on an L-2. Can my wife apply for H-1B this year?

Would she need to leave the country to activate it?

—Helpful Hubby

Dear Sophie,

I have a 10-year green card that will expire later this year. I've been married to a U.S. citizen for 11 years, but we are in the process of divorcing.

Can I apply for U.S. citizenship even after my divorce?

—New Year, New Life

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Big Tech Inc.

  • LG Energy Solution goes public: The IPO market is closed, but there are always exceptions. Such is the case with LG's electric vehicle battery maker. For obvious reasons – the global car industry is racing toward an all-electric future as quickly as its aging leaders can manage. And all those cars are going to need batteries. The company is now worth a little more than $98 billion.
  • Messenger updates its E2E encryption: While governments around the world continue to try to find enough backbone to make the comically bad choice of banning encryption, Meta is moving along with its work to make its Messenger service more secure. Good!
  • And if you have longed to pay for yet another streaming service, the good news is that Disney+ is coming to 42 more countries later this year.

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Thursday, January 27, 2022

No-code SaaS platform CaptivateIQ spears $1.25B valuation with $100M Series C

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Wednesday, January 26, 2022 By Alex Wilhelm

Hello and welcome to Daily Crunch for January 26, 2022! Today we have surveillance robots, a Harry Potter reference, layoffs and startup news galore. Heck, we even have some Reddit news in the mix. It's a good day to be a tech fan, worker and general consumer. Enjoy! – Alex

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Image Credits: Left to right: CaptivateIQ co-founders Hubert Wong, Mark Schopmeyer and Conway Teng / CaptivateIQ

The TechCrunch Top 3

  • Taking a robot surveillance company public in 2022: Is not an easy feat, frankly. Given a rising general consciousness about privacy, Knightscope is going public at an interesting time. The IPO window has also been tricky of late, with some companies delaying their offerings. We have our eyes on this, if for no other reason than the fact that robots are inherently cool.
  • Firebolt's valuation soars higher: Announcing a $100 million round at a $1.4 billion valuation is big news for any company. For a startup that shares a name with a Harry Potter broomstick, it's somewhat epic (we tried to work a golden snitch joke into the headline here and failed). Per our own Ingrid Lunden, Firebolt is "taking on Google's BigQuery, Snowflake and others" with a cloud data warehouse product that it claims is both less expensive and faster.
  • Layoffs at Glossier: Eighty corporate staffers at Glossier are out, we learned today. TechCrunch notes that the layoffs are worth about a third of the company's corporate workforce. The gist, per an internal email, is that the company is going to leverage third-party tech instead of, we presume, building its own.

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Startups/VC

Today's startup news is a really neat mix of things, so we're proceeding in paragraphs instead of bullet points so that we can stretch our legs. To work!

With the stock market in turmoil, and valuations falling for tech companies around the world, three TechCrunchers put their heads together to answer a question: How should founders prepare for a decline in startup valuations and investor interest? We tend to put out three-views pieces around singular news events, but this time we had some fun with a trend.

Moving along, news broke today that UBS is buying robo-advisor Wealthfront for $1.4 billion. Those of us who were paying attention to fintech back in the day will recall when Wealthfront and Betterment battled it out for new customers and assets, building new tech to attract capital and users while also working to crush one another. The story is now partially closed, so we took a look at the deal from the perspective of revenue, assets under management and customers.

In good news for European startups generally – not like they have been suffering, mind – Spain's startup law is "months away," we report. The idea here is that Spain wants to attract more tech talent and startups. This makes good sense as tech companies can grow into large firms replete with high-payings jobs, given the space and time to do so. What's in the law? According to our own Natasha Lomas, the bill covers "key areas like tax breaks for investors, talent incentives like stock options and a new digital nomad visa to attract international tech workers."

Back on this continent, TechCrunch wrote today about Boom, the supersonic jet startup that wants to bring back fast traveling for consumers. Since the Concord kicked the bucket, we've all been flying at speeds that are pretty piddling compared to how fast our species has managed in the past. And we've all been kinda like, all right, I guess. I didn't think that the comnpany was going to survive, but it has, and Boom is planning on building its speedy jets in North Carolina. Go Tarheels, I suppose!

Today from the oh god just go public file, Reddit is testing a method of allowing its users to upload NFTs as their profile pictures. Twitter recently did this. It's a bit like uploading a picture to be your profile picture, but more complicated. Regardless of what regulars think of the NFT boom, it's clear that tech-heads are all-in.

Speaking of tech workers, how most companies hire their engineers is a bit backwards. Most developers don't really spend their time doing solo logic work on whiteboards while being watched by recruiters. So why is that how they are vetted? Byteboard's new method of testing computer engineering talent just landed $5 million, so perhaps change is on the way.

If you live in Europe, you might want to invest in Asian stocks. Or if you live in Latin America, you might want to invest in companies public in the United States. This is not always as simple as you might think, so Vest's work to help folks in the larger Americas investing in U.S. companies caught our eye. Founders Fund is backing the company's work.

One interesting part of today's startup landscape is the world of sales. SalesOps software is no small niche, with Gong proving that the sales use case can lead to serious dollars. CaptivateIQ is another player in the space, albeit with a different focus. Per our own Mary Ann Azevedo, CaptivateIQ "has developed a no-code SaaS platform to help companies design customized sales commission plans," just raised $100 million and tripled its revenue last year.

And from the miscellaneous bucket, the Equity team had Bessemer growth-stage investor Mary D’Onofrio on to chat changing valuations, exit multiples and what's ahead for startups. And I made a small argument that more drama in the tech space would do us good.

A CISO's playbook for responding to zero-day exploits

The Log4Shell exploit that gave bad actors the ability to execute malicious code on infiltrated servers made global headlines and ruined many cybersecurity professionals' holidays.

Despite a series of high-profile attacks, many companies still lack a response plan, writes Jonathan Trull, SVP of customer solutions, architecture and engineering at Qualys.

Drawing on his experience as a CISO, Trull outlines three steps companies can take to develop a playbook:

  • Establish a standard operating procedure
  • Inventory, inventory, inventory
  • Information gathering, sharing and analysis

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Big Tech Inc.

  • Apple closes security holes: There are updates out for iOS 15.3 of macOS Monterey 12.2, so if you use those operating systems, it's time to patch your code. The iOS update alone fixes 10 security bugs.
  • Activision Blizzard won't voluntarily recognize union, because of course: Nothing says we're an employee-focused company more than looking at the collective will of your staff and saying no. Or at least that appears to be what corporations think. Not that you or I had high hopes for a company immiserated by its own incompetence, but, hey, hope springs and all that.
  • Snap upgrades its AR shopping feature set: Per our own Sarah Perez, the social network Snapchat is "upgrading its AR shopping experience," including changes to "Shopping Lenses" and analytics for third parties.
  • More money for EVs: Rita Liao agrees with you and me that there are quite a lot of electric vehicle companies to track. Thankfully, she's on the beat so that we can stay informed. This time it's "Jidu, an electric carmaking company founded by Baidu and its Chinese auto partner Geely," which just raised $400 million.

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