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There are few things that US political leaders can agree on these days, but one of them thankfully appears to be 5G. Manufacturing, transportation, agriculture, health care and many other industries are beginning to incorporate the fast, device-to-device connectivity provided by the fifth-generation wireless standard. But the key 3.5 GHz band of spectrum had been reserved for military and government use. Following years of congressional and most recently executive-branch action, it will now be auctioned off in early 2021. The marketing fluff will finally make way for the technologyâs promise(s). More analysis from Danny Crichton:
There has been growing pressure on U.S. government leaders in recent years over the plodding 5G transition, which has fallen behind peer countries like China and South Korea. Korea in particular has been a world leader, with more than two million 5G subscribers already in the country thanks to an aggressive industrial policy by Seoul to invest in the countryâs telecommunications infrastructure and take a lead in this new wireless transition.
The U.S. has been faster at moving ahead in millimeter (high frequency) spectrum for 5G that will have the greatest bandwidth, but it has lagged in midband spectrum allocation. While the announcements today is notable, there will also be concerns whether 100 Mhz of spectrum is sufficient to support the widest variety of 5G devices, and thus, this allocation may well be just the first in a series.
Nonetheless, additional midband spectrum for 5G will help move the transition forward, and will also help device and chip manufacturers begin to focus their efforts on the specific bands they need to support in their products. While it may be a couple of more years until 5G devices are widely available (and useful) in the United States, spectrum has been a key gating factor to reaching the next-generation of wireless, and a gate that is finally opening up.
Image Credits: Nigel Sussman (opens in a new window)
All sorts of IPOs
âToday, itâs nearly hard to recall the fear that took over startup-land,â Alex Wilhelm writes in a review of recent unicorn news for Extra Crunch. âSure, there are warning signs about cloud growth rates, but for many unicorns, we still live in boom times.â Indeed, two of the biggest names in pre-public startups appear once again track for IPOs. Airbnb could file to go public this month, despite pandemic losses to its business. Payments provider Stripe seems to be headed that way, too. The Valleyâs oldest unicorn, Palantir, may finally do that direct filing. In the meantime, Accenture spinout Duck Creek Technologies had its big liquidity event for its private equity owners yesterday, with a 50% pop â Alex did a closer look at the insurtech companyâs financials on Monday for Extra Crunch, and predicted events basically:
[T]o understand its revenue base, weâll need to annualize the nine-month period that ended May 31, 2020 (ew), and use that to extrapolate a (kinda) revenue multiple using a set of metrics that we donât tend to use for such things (yuck).
- Duck Creek nine-monthsâ revenue for period ending May 31, 2020: $153.35 million.
- That figure, annualized: $204.5 million.
- Implies revenue multiple at its two IPO valuations: 11.9x, and 13.2x.
Those seem somewhat reasonable? Maybe a little expensive given the companyâs slow aggregate revenue growth and lower-than-average SaaS gross margins?
By that logic, the company will raise its IPO range, price above the boosted interval, and quintuple on its first dayâs tradingâ¦
Want more zingers like this? Heâs busy covering the 2020 unicorn-to-IPO path through all its twists and turns over on The Exchange, which subscribers can get as a daily post and as a weekly newsletter coming out every Saturday.
Image Credits: Bryce Durbin / TechCrunch / Getty Images
Donât let a TechCrunch reporter accidentally crash your company meeting
Our security editor Zack Whittaker had a first-person situation this week with poor security practices at a startup. And not just any kind of startup:
I got a tip about a new security startup, with fresh funding and an idea that caught my interest. I didnât have much to go on, so I did what any curious reporter would do and started digging around. The startupâs website was splashy but largely word salad. I couldnât find basic answers to my simple questions. But the companyâs idea still seemed smart. I just wanted to know how the company actually worked.
So I poked the website a little harder.
Reporters use a ton of tools to collect information, monitor changes in websites, check if someone opened their email for comment, and navigate vast pools of public data. These tools arenât special, reserved only for card-carrying members of the press, but rather are open to anyone who wants to find and report information. One tool I use frequently on the security beat lists all the subdomains on a companyâs website. These subdomains are public but deliberately hidden from view, yet you can often find things that you wouldnât from the website itself.
Bingo! I immediately found the companyâs pitch deck. Another subdomain had a ton of documentation on how its product works. A bunch of subdomains didnât load, and a couple were blocked off for employees only. (Itâs also a line in the legal sand. If itâs not public and youâre not allowed in, youâre not allowed to knock down the door.) I clicked on another subdomain. A page flashed open, an icon in my Mac dock briefly bounced, and the camera light flashed on. Before I could register what was happening, I had joined what appeared to be the companyâs morning meetingâ¦.
Founders, lock up those docs!
Image Credits: TechCrunch (opens in a new window)
Studying up on diversity
Megan Rose Dickey, who has started writing weekly column about tech labor called Human Capital, put together a quick set of resources for companies including a glossary of terms and key organizations, as well as key issues and data points for context. Hereâs more:
After Minneapolis police killed George Floyd and the subsequent racial justice uprising, many people in tech shouted from the rooftops that âBlack Lives Matter,â despite having subpar representation of Black and Latinx folks at their companies. In some cases, these companiesâ proclamations of âBlack Lives Matterâ felt especially performative in contrast to their respective stances on Trump and selling their technology to law enforcement agencies.
Still, this has led to an increased focus on diversity, inclusion and equity in the tech industry. If youâre wondering things like, âWhere do I find Black and brown talent?â or saying, âIâd invest in Black and Latinx people if I could find them!,â then this is for you.
Below, youâll learn about some of the issues at play, some of the key organizations doing work in this space and access a glossary of frequently used terms in the realm of diversity, equity and inclusion in tech.

Minimum viable email and other growth marketing tips
Lucas Matney took a look through three growth marketing talks at early stage to glean key tactics for those who didnât attend. Along discussions around SEO and landing pages, hereâs a big presentation from Sound Ventureâs Susan Su about growing a business through email marketing in 2020. Hereâs an excerpt:
âThe first role email plays in growth is as a tool to help you accelerate your reinforcing feedback loops. For example, email growth can help you expand LTV if youâre building a consumer e-comm or it can help you shorten your sales cycle if youâre a B2B, or enterprise SaaS business. Itâs also really powerful for reducing attrition or churn, which is key, obviously, and sometimes itâs an overlooked way of actually increasing growth.â
The second role that [email] plays in growth is as a two-way channel connecting your product and your user, and that channel can carry information either about your product value from your brand out to your user, or it can carry information about your users needs and preferences from them to you.â
Check out her full talk, which was moderated by your faithful correspondent, for advanced topics like how to improve the credibility of your domain with spam filters.
Around TechCrunch
Save with group discounts to TC Sessions: Mobility 2020
Ready, set, network: CrunchMatch is open for Disrupt 2020
Weâre exploring the future of SaaS at Disrupt this year
Waymo COO Tekedra Mawakana is coming to TC Sessions: Mobility 2020
Rep. Zoe Lofgren to talk privacy and policy at Disrupt 2020
Across the week
TechCrunch
Facebook launches support for paid online events
The robots occupying our sidewalks
Kamala Harris brings a view from techâs epicenter to the presidential race
Extra Crunch
Building a fintech giant is very expensive
Minted.com CEO Mariam Naficy shares âthe biggest surprise about entrepreneurshipâ
IoT and data science will boost foodtech in the post-pandemic era
Whatâs different about hiring data scientists in 2020?
No pen required: The digital future of real estate closings
#EquityPod
From Alex:
Hello and welcome back to Equity, TechCrunchâs venture capital-focused podcast (now on Twitter!), where we unpack the numbers behind the headlines.
This week we had the full crew around once again â Natasha Mascarenhas, Danny Crichton, Chris Gates and myself. And as always, it was key to have the full crew as there was an ocean of news to get through. Before we get into the show, make sure youâve checked out Dannyâs latest work on the TechCrunch List⦠now, letâs get to it:
- The TikTok saga continues: This week we spent a few minutes discussing why bankers are incentivized to make the proposed TikTok-Microsoft deal as competitive as possible. Or at least make it look as competitive as possible. And, thereâs some data from inside Microsoft about how the deal is being viewed.
- Airbnb could file to go public this month! It might go public before the year is out! Thatâs way better than we expected. (Bloomberg got its Q2 finances.)
- Palantir could file for a direct listing next month! Thatâs great. We wanted to know what Palantir really is, namely a consultancy or a tech company. And then we played valuation bingo so we can look back later and mock ourselves.
- I was very excited about the Duck Creek IPO. Few of my friends joined me in being excited.
- The three of us also took a minute to riff on the latest Pinterest news, namely that itâs poorly run and is sexist per its now-former COO. Weâd love to stop covering these stories, but they keep happening so, on we go.
- Danny had some neat SPAC data to share, helping illustrate that SPACs are not merely a meme, they are a real, driving force of public company action this year. As was Teslaâs announced stock split, which led us to ask why a few times.
- Next up, Natasha walked us through her latest work digging into how Gen Z is shaking up the funding world. We framed the changes in some historical context, and decided that really in the end the kids are alright.
- Danny brought us to a close, with a note on Conduit (connecting founders and early-stage investors) and Circle (creator software). Both are worth your time.
And that was our show! We are back Monday morning. Stay cool!
Equity drops every Monday at 7:00 a.m. PT and Friday at 6:00 a.m. PT, so subscribe to us on Apple Podcasts, Overcast, Spotify and all the casts.
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from #Bangladesh #News aka Bangladesh News Now!!!
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