Friday, December 3, 2021

Oura Ring offers a smaller wearable for tracking fitness data

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Friday, December 03, 2021 By Alex Wilhelm

Hello and welcome to Daily Crunch for December 3, 2021! I don't know about you, but after watching stocks get hammered all day, I mostly want to snag a nap and breathe. But things were worse for DocuSign and Didi than they were for us, so we can take solace in that. What did Didi do? Well, let's talk about it. —Alex

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Image Credits: Brian Heater

The TechCrunch Top 3

  • Didi to delist: The latest detail from the dada-esque Didi disaster came today, with the Chinese ride-hailing giant announcing that it will delist from U.S. markets. It will, instead, list in Hong Kong. The Didi IPO, akin to the failed Ant debut, may become timeline markers of further decoupling of the Chinese market with the larger world.
  • Read this Amanda Silberling piece on the creator economy: The worldwide success of Netflix's “Squid Game” has spawned a cottage industry of me-toos. None, perhaps, more notable than an entry from YouTuber MrBeast. I once saw a clip of him burying himself alive for laughs. Regardless, Silberling digs into the YouTube economy and how stunts can leverage already-created content. It's worth reading.
  • SPACs challenge Amazon, Microsoft: The blank-check company circus continued this week with news that Rumble — the video hosting platform that has ridden right-wing personalities to prominence — will go public via a SPAC. And like the Trump Technology deal, it has a long-term vision to take on the internet's major platform companies. To which we say, good luck.

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Startups/VC

  • How to think about the Oura Ring: Our own Brian Heater has a great dig into the Oura Ring 3, which he argues is not an Apple Watch replacement. Instead, he says, it's a replacement for a fitness band. Given that I have turned my Apple Watch into a fitness band by nuking all of its notifications aside from those prompting me to move my lard about, I do not mind Heater's view.
  • Vinehealth raises pre-Series A money: A $5.5 million round was once Series A scale. Now it's seed, or something a little later. No matter how Vinehealth wants to describe its latest round, the London-based digital health startup that's built an app offering personalized support for cancer patients while also making it easier to gather patient-reported outcome data now has the capital it needs to reach its next round. Let's see how it scales.
  • Umamicart has a great name: What does Umamicart do, if you had to guess? Would you reckon, say, the delivery of Asian ingredients? Bingo! That's what it does, and the company just raised $6 million to keep the growth coming.
  • Zindi is using community solve data questions: What happens if you blend community and AI and deploy the result to tricky data problems? You get Zindi, it turns out. TechCrunch has a toothsome look at the South African concern that you should read.
  • If you need a weekend listen, there's new Equity (here) out for your audio enjoyment.

3 ways to recruit engineers who fly under LinkedIn's radar

This week, LinkedIn rolled out support for Hindi users, allowing it to reach approximately 500 million people in India and 100 million more around the globe.

Talented developers abound in emerging markets, but few of them use the same social network that so many startup recruiters rely upon. Additionally, many devs simply don’t like social media — so what’s your plan for reaching them?

We’re in the midst of a talent drought, so it’s a good idea to draw water from more than one well. To bring in a broader mix of candidates, use the three ideas laid out here to elevate your startup’s hiring game.

(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.

  • Facebook Messenger tests payment splitting: When you reach Facebook's scale, every product in the market is a potential add-on to your core service. So, that Big Blue is adding payment splitting to its Messenger service is not a huge surprise. What can users do with the ability to "share the cost of bills and expenses through the app"? Well, most of what you can do with Venmo or Splitwise, we reckon.
  • Tech stocks get hammered (again): Leading the downward charge, DocuSign was the first horseman of the tech valuation unravelling this Friday. Shares of tech stocks took a number of blows this week, pushing software stocks into bear market territory. Sure, valuations are still high, but the hype could be evaporating atop the market's warm climate.
  • Why is Pinduoduo growing food? This was a surprise to my eyes. Chinese e-commerce giant Pinduoduo unveiled a huge agricultural effort in August, where it is seemingly putting both capital and focus. "The program won't be profit-driven, the company promised, and all profit from the second quarter and 'any potential profits in future quarters would be allocated to the initiative,'" TechCrunch reported. My first take is that this is how tech companies in China can keep being tech shops while also fitting into the top-down demand for “common prosperity.”

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Thursday, December 2, 2021

After a transitional year, Apple announces its 2021 App Store Award winners

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Thursday, December 02, 2021 By Alex Wilhelm

Hello and welcome to Daily Crunch for December 2, 2021! There's a lot going on. More fintech in Latin America. Actuator launching. App Store Awards. The week's software selloff. It's a lot, so buckle in. Maybe the news slowdown will come next week? Here's hoping! – Alex

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Image Credits: Apple

The TechCrunch Top 3

  • Better.com shows how not to fire people: Here's a small tip: If you announce that you have raised or otherwise managed to access hundreds of millions of dollars, don't fire a bunch of your team right afterward. Not only is it bad PR — and it definitely is — it's also just an awful thing to do. Anyways, Better.com got access to half its SPAC money early and then laid off 9% of its staff.
  • Grab goes public, quickly sheds value: The Grab SPAC was supposed to be a crowning moment of sorts for the company. And then, despite raising oodles of capital and avoiding the poison of shareholder redemptions, shares of Grab still ate it hard today. Despite stocks rising in the United States, the Nasdaq-listed Grab shed around 20% of its value, at least as I write this to you. Ouch.
  • Guess who won App Store Awards: No really, guess. I would not have anticipated that a mobile League of Legends game would win the iPhone gaming prize. It feels a bit anachronistic that Apple picks favorites each year, a bit like the Grammys, if the Grammys also owned the music marketplace. Perhaps we should do some sort of Best of TechCrunch collection and see if Apple News picks it up.

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Startups/VC

  • Timnit Gebru gets the last laugh: Following her high-profile exit from Google, former Alphabet AI ethicist Gebru "has set up shop herself with a brand new research institute, DAIR, focused on the topics she felt were being sidelined at Google," TechCrunch reports. The best revenge is living well, they say. That or founding your own company to do the damn work.
  • IRL buys AaBeZe Labs: This story makes me happy. Because there was a time when app names made no sense. And then startups started to have names like Vertical SaaS 4 Ur Industry, and it all got a bit corporate. IRL is a social app, while AaBeZe does "digital nutrition." Hell yeah, tech being weird. I will now go take 17 virtual supplements to avoid getting a virus.
  • Say it with me: ~ community ~ Community became a buzzword in the startup space after it got super expensive to buy an audience from social networks. So, build your own community, and it makes acquiring customers cheaper! Viola! There's more to it than that, but that's a bit of context regarding what Playground is up to. Per TechCrunch reporting, "Playground is a social platform that seeks to help people discover and develop community while empowering creators to monetize their audience." (Don't forget that if you say "monetize community" three times in the mirror, you only get coal in your stocking.)
  • Two stories from Mexico: Mendel has raised $35 million to work on the corporate spend issue that has proven so lucrative in the United States. And Kueski just added a bajillion dollars to its accounts to help it grow its Mexico-focused BNPL solution.
  • Glorify raises venture capital money: Nothing says "Christianity" like raising venture capital to fund an app that sells folks religious material. And while we're just muttering Matthew 19:24 to ourselves, we should note that a16z just backed Glorify to the tune of $40 million. We presume $4 million will get tithed.
  • How much does it cost to deliver groceries? Trick question. The answer is infinite capital. Evidence? JOKR just raised again, and Swiggy is going to drop $700 million on its own "instant" grocery delivery effort.

4 analysts break down Bret Taylor's pretty sweet week

Bret Taylor is on a roll: On Monday, he became the chair of Twitter’s board, and a day later, Salesforce made him its co-CEO and co-chair.

Enterprise reporter Ron Miller looked back at Taylor’s career to better understand how a one-time Google product manager ended up co-leading one of the world’s most valuable companies. To get a fuller perspective, he interviewed four analysts:

  • Liz Herbert, VP and principal analyst, Forrester Research
  • Holger Mueller, analyst, Constellation Research
  • Brent Leary, founder and principal analyst, CRM Essentials
  • Jason Wong, analyst, Gartner

(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.

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Wednesday, December 1, 2021

Spotify packs its 2021 year-end recap with new sharing, social features

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Wednesday, December 01, 2021 By Alex Wilhelm

Hello and welcome to Daily Crunch for December 1, 2021! Yes, we've made it to the final inning of the year, which means that the news cycle will slow and we all get some time off? Right? Probably not, but in alternative good news, Brian Heater's robotics newsletter launches tomorrow. It's called Actuator and it is going to kick maximum backside. Snag it here!Alex

P.S. Blue Origin's Ariane Cornell is coming to TC Sessions: Space 2021!

Read More

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The TechCrunch Top 3

  • China may ban foreign IPOs: Big news from a leading startup market as reporting indicates that the Chinese government may block a method by which domestic tech companies are listed on foreign exchanges. Alibaba and others have used the technique, which opens the door for further economic and technological decoupling between China and the rest of the world.
  • Match settles with Tinder co-founders: Allegations that "IAC and its then-subsidiary Match Group had manipulated financial data" to put a low valuation on Tinder when it was folded into the larger company have been settled for more than $400 million. That's a right bucket of duckets.
  • Taxpayer money to support Chinese surveillance? In a critical piece of reporting, TechCrunch’s Zack Whittaker writes that "at least three U.S. federal agencies, including the military, have purchased China-made video surveillance equipment banned from use in the federal government." Not good!

Freshworks CRO Sidharth Malik named global CEO of CleverTap

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Startups/VC

Before we dive into a bevy of discrete pieces of startup news, another 3D printing company is going public! Via a SPAC! This time it's Austin-based Essentium. Recall that Desktop Metal went public via a SPAC previously. Its stock traded as high as $34.94. It is worth $6.08 per share today.

  • From coaching to SaaS: Providing coaching to corporate staff is big business, but it remains, at its core, a human game. That means modest margins. Sounding Board is moving from the coaching world into the coaching software industry, which helped it land a $30 million Series B. Jazz Venture Partners led the round, which is a firm I had not heard of before.
  • Butter wants to cut the churn: To avoid making an extensive butter/churn joke that would surely get cut before this newsletter reaches you, let it suffice to say that Butter, a startup, is in the anti-churn game. Yes, Butter doesn't want you to have to churn all by yourself. See? Impossible to avoid. Regardless, the company just added $7 million to its accounts to help companies avoid losing revenue to payments issues.
  • What's AI good for? A lot, it turns out. Our own Devin Coldewey has notes on how AI is showing promising signs as a solution for both protein generation and mathematics. Startups, take note!
  • And speaking of AI, Sydney-based Harrison.ai has raised $129 million (AUD) for its work to build medical tech using artificial intelligence.
  • Goalsetter is taking on youth financial literacy: Let's be clear, most people are bad with money. This is for a number of reasons, including the simple fact that financial education in the U.S. is weak at best. Kid-focused financial platform Goalsetter wants to work on the matter by tying child access to allowances and the like to learning more about money.
  • Republic buys Seedrs: Republic helps private-market shares trade in the United States. Seedrs helped U.K.-based companies crowdfund equity rounds. Now, thanks to a $100 million deal, the American company will own the European concern.
  • Do you want a weed credit card? Buying legal cannabis is a pain in the neck in the United States, thanks to both historically racist laws and neo-Puritan forces. Regardless, SuperNet has built a credit card that will work for, and with, dispensaries. A small step, but a welcome one.
  • Nuro + 7/11 = autonomous deliveries in California: Yes, another week, another news item of a small-scale self-driving service making its way to market. While I am not sure that Slurpee delivery is the real killer app for autonomous delivery, I would try this out for no other reason than to encourage more of the same.
  • And if you need even more, the Equity crew recently dug into the matter of founders, CEO status and when a company might outgrow its progenitor as chief exec.

How to execute an amplified marketing strategy

Every blog post, Tweet and Instagram Story is an opportunity to explain to customers (and the board) how the company creates value or is a step ahead of the competition.

But quality will always beat quantity when it comes to content marketing; Googlebot may be hungry for new links, but potential customers demand expertise and insights.

Marketers need a new plan of action that puts creativity before quantity, audience before engine, and sets connection as the top priority,” says Lindsay Tjepkema, CEO of audio and video content marketing platform Casted.

(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.

Today is the day! Yes, it is Spotify Unwrapped 2021, which means that we've spent the afternoon posting to Twitter all about our excellent musical tastes. TechCrunch has more here on what's new.

And, yes, even more from Amazon:

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Image Credits: Spotify

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If you’re curious about how these surveys are shaping our coverage, check out this article on TechCrunch+ from Marjorie Radlo-Zandi, "4 key strategies for succeeding at international expansion."

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