Friday, July 22, 2022

'I’ve gotten beat' on my 'Shark Tank' bets, Mark Cuban admits

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By Christine Hall and Haje Jan Kamps

Friday, July 22, 2022

Fri-yay! Grab your calendar and mark November 17, 2022, on it, and then snag yourself an airline ticket to Miami, Florida. That's right, TC Sessions continues, with a Crypto special event. It's our first dedicated crypto event, so come along, get your NFTs, blockchains, and web3 on. Get yer tickets today and save a couple of hundred bucks! — Christine and Haje

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Image Credits: Christopher Willard / ABC / Getty Images

The TechCrunch Top 3

  • Exceptional assessments: That's our play on Better Opinions, an Indian startup that claims to be building "a prediction market," and just may be Meta's next acquisition in the region, Manish writes.
  • Rolling with the defaults: Microsoft users will want to set their calendars for July 27. That is when the tech giant will block Office macros by default to cut down on malware being introduced via email. This is something Carly reports had been paused by Microsoft earlier this year, but now is back in full swing.
  • One company's cutback is another company's lesson: Big Tech taking a time-out on hiring may provide some leeway for startups to dive into that expertise talent pool and come back up with some, as Alex puts it, "human capital for their financial capital."

TC Sessions: Crypto 2022

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Startups and VC

"Shark Tank," America's favorite television show, masquerading as “this is how investing works,” made Mark Cuban a household name. It may come as a surprise, then, that overall, Cuban hasn't made a profit off his Shark Tank portfolioAmanda reports.

Ride-hailing services may be getting a quality upgrade: "We needed to employ our drivers so that we could not only select and vet, but importantly, train and performance-manage them to drive a consistent high-quality experience for our passengers," Alto's founder told Rebecca.

Oh, and Haje got very excited about interviewing the Sarcos Robotics and Boston Dynamic CEOs about how to take robots from the lab into the real world.

More? More!

How to check for founder-investor alignment before you start fundraising

Everyone wants to get their company off the ground, which is why it’s critical to find an investor who shares your values and perspective.

It’s particularly tempting to accept the first offer that comes, but “choosing the right partner for the right stage of your business can make the difference between building a billion-dollar company and losing control.”

Partners Evan Kipperman, Paul Hughes and Len Gray at law firm Wiggin and Dana shared a post with TC+ that explores the finer points of working with institutional investors, angels, friends and family and capitalists of other stripes.

“As funding gets harder to come by, your risk tolerance may change, but your process for evaluating investors should not.”

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

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How to check for founder-investor alignment before you start fundraising image

Image Credits: Joseph Giacomin / Getty Images

Big Tech Inc.

It was apparently a day of people announcing they are leaving companies. First, Kirsten reports about VW Group CEO Herbert Diess, who is leaving after four years at the helm. Porsche boss Oliver Blume was appointed by the board to take Diess's place starting September 1. The move may have been foreshadowed — Kirsten writes that Diess "has survived a number of confrontations and power struggles with the board and unions over the past two years."

Next, just as SAP announced its second-quarter earnings, TechCrunch learned that DJ Paoni, the company's president of SAP North America, was leaving after 26 years. Natasha M and Ron have more.

Natasha M was also all over a late-breaking item about Apoorva Mehta, Instacart’s executive chairman, who announced via Twitter that once the company goes public, he will step down from the board.

Now over to some further second-quarter earnings chat. Snapchat reported revenue was up, but missed analyst expectations and declined to forecast future financial performance, Aisha reports. Later in the day, Lucas writes that Snap’s stock was not doing so well as a result. Meanwhile, Twitter reported a quarterly sales drop and also revealed it spent $33 million trying to close the Elon Musk acquisition, Paul writes.

Even more:

  • Copyright, schmopyright: Kyle digs a bit deeper into commercial image-generating artificial intelligence, and the legal issues therein, in light of DALL E-2's beta launch.
  • Don't let that get on you: We enjoyed Amanda's look into a TikToker who may have gotten in over her head with some Pink Sauce that allegedly had some questionable nutritional information, and some customers reported the sauce bottle had exploded in packages before it got to them.
  • Do you want to ride?: Jaclyn provides us with a bit of car porn today with a look at the Cadillac Celestiq flagship EV and some explanation from the automaker on why it is its "most advanced vehicle in 120 years."
  • Move over: Oh, and Tesla and its suppliers now have their own dedicated lane when crossing the Mexican border, Rebecca reports.

As you know from reading above, yesterday was TC Sessions: Robotics, and so you don't miss out, here are some highlights from Brian and Devin:

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Thursday, July 21, 2022

Amazon wades deeper into healthcare with its $3.9B purchase of One Medical

TechCrunch Newsletter
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By Christine Hall and Haje Jan Kamps

Thursday, July 21, 2022

Well hello again! It's Thursday — heat waves are heat wavin', and all of TechCrunch is psyched about a fun and engaging Robotics event today. That's not all that's happening, though. We’ve had 70 new stories on the site since our last newsletter, which means that we got to learn about all sorts of wild and wonderful happenings in our world of startups and company building. It was extra-double-plus hard to select the best of the best for the newsletter, but we tried our best. Enjoy!  — Christine and Haje

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Image Credits: Tetra Images / Getty Images

The TechCrunch Top 3

  • Amazon grabs a stethoscope: Amazon showed its continued interest in healthcare by announcing its intent to acquire primary medical provider One Medical for $3.9 billion. Ingrid writes that details are a bit thin as to how One Medical will integrate with Amazon, but it has people on Twitter wondering what the marketplace behemoth will do next. And that's just the kind of thing that Alex is good at. He dives into the deal to let us know just what Amazon is getting for its billions.
  • Someone’s got their eye on you: Manish brings us an update on Indian edtech giant Byju, which you might recall fired hundreds of employees a month ago. Now it seems like it will have some legal troubles to contend with. A lawmaker is calling for an investigation into the company's finances.
  • It's not goodbye forever: Airbnb co-founder Joe Gebbia made waves today, announcing that he was stepping back from his role after 10 years to spend some time with family and see what else sparks his interest, Kyle reports. Gebbia will stay on the company's board in an advisory role.

Disrupt: Where Founders Go to Grow

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Startups and VC

Today has been a cavalcade of robotics. The articles that caught our eye in particular were Brian‘s story, asking whether universities are doing enough to foster robotics startups, and Kirsten's piece on Agility's next Digit robot, which will have a face and hands. Also, don't miss Brian's Actuator newsletter, which covers what's happening in Robotics world. The most recent issue came out yesterday.

We were delighted to see TextExpander — who've been around for a hot minute but have been bootstrapping to date — raise a $41 million round of financing, as Ingrid reports. The company makes business communications faster by creating modular extendable text macros.

The other not-to-be-missed story today is Anita and Natasha M's WTF is a 409A — a crucial piece you need to understand if you want any hope of understanding startup valuations in the U.S.!

Growth cheat code: Use fractional hiring to stay on plan when cutting costs

As winter winds begin to blow, major tech companies like Google, Microsoft and Lyft have each instituted hiring freezes.

Likewise, early-stage startups are under pressure to reduce burn while preserving forward momentum, but “fractional hiring is a growth cheat code” when used strategically, says Teja Yenamandra, co-founder and CEO of Gun.io.

“There is now way less competition for the talent you're hiring, and you may be able to lock in a hire who was unaffordable a few months ago.”

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

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Growth cheat code: Use fractional hiring to stay on plan when cutting costs image

Image Credits: Henrik Sorensen / Getty Images

Big Tech Inc.

If you've come here for Tesla news, you're in luck. The mobility, climate and even crypto crews were in full-coverage mode of the electric automaker, giving you lots of news to rev your engines.

Harri and Kirsten dove into the company's quarterly earnings, writing, respectively, about Tesla's success in the solar game and its quarterly decline in profits. Over to crypto, Lucas reports on how Elon Musk not only discloses that Tesla owns Dogecoin, but also that the company dumped 75% of its Bitcoin holdings. And finally, Rebecca writes that Tesla is increasing the cost of its self-driving software, while at the same time Jaclyn writes the company is on track to launch its battery-electric truck in 2023.

Now for some non-Tesla news. First up, Jagmeet reports that Amazon is looking at India as the next place to bring its Project Kuiper satellite internet business.

Meanwhile, so many companies are hitting the pause button on a number of different things. One of the top stories sticking around from yesterday was Andrew's piece on Google taking a two-week hiatus from hiring and then slowing down for the rest of the year.

And it is not alone: Kyle covers GitHub's hiring pullback, while Paul writes about Just Eat Takeaway scaling back in FranceRebecca covers both Lyft's layoffs amid a closure of its in-house car rentals program and the U.K.'s App Drivers and Couriers Union putting their vehicles in park to strike in response to files that were leaked about Uber. Finally, Catherine reports on Zipmex pausing withdrawals from its digital assets exchange.

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