I live in San Francisco, but I work an East Coast schedule to get a jump on the news day. So Iâd already been at my desk for a couple of hours on Wednesday morning when I looked up and saw this:
What color is the sky this morning pic.twitter.com/nt5dZp5wWc
â Walter Thompson (@YourProtagonist) September 9, 2020
As unsettling as it was to see the natural environment so transformed, I still got my work done. This is not to boast: I have a desk job and a working air filter. (People who make deliveries in the toxic air or are homeschooling their children while working from home during a global pandemic, however, impress the hell out of me.)
Not coincidentally, two of the Extra Crunch stories that ran since our Tuesday newsletter tie directly into whatâs going on outside my window:
As this guest post predicted, a suboptimal attempt I made to track a delayed package using interactive voice response (IVR) indeed poisoned my customer experience, and;
Sheltering in place to avoid the novel coronavirus â and wildfire smoke â is fueling growth in the video-game industry, perhaps one factor in Unity Software Inc.âs plan to go public ahead of competitor Epic Games. In a two-part series, we looked at how the company has expanded beyond games and shared a detailed financial breakdown.
We covered a lot of ground this week, so scroll down or visit the recently redesigned Extra Crunch home page. If youâd like to receive this roundup via email each Tuesday and Friday, please click here.
Thanks very much for reading Extra Crunch; I hope you have a relaxing and safe weekend.
Walter Thompson
Senior Editor
@yourprotagonist
Bear and bull cases for Unityâs IPO
Image Credits: Nigel Sussman (opens in a new window)
In a two-part series that ran on TechCrunch and Extra Crunch, former media columnist Eric Peckham returned to share his analysis of Unity Software Inc.âs S-1 filing.
Part one is a deep dive that explains how the company has grown beyond gaming to develop multiple revenue streams and where itâs headed.
For part two on Extra Crunch, he studied the companyâs numbers to offer some context for its approximately $11 billion valuation.
10 Poland-based investors discuss trends, opportunities and the road ahead
Image Credits: Edwin Remsberg (opens in a new window) / Getty Images
As weâve covered previously, the COVID-19 pandemic is making the world a lot smaller.
Investors who focus on their own backyards still have an advantage, but the ability to set up a quick coffee meeting with a promising investor is no longer one of them.
Even though some VCs are cutting first checks after Zoom calls, regional investorsâ personal networks are still a trump card. Tourists will always rely on guide books, however, which is why we continue to survey investors around the world.
A Dealroom report issued this summer determined that 97 VC funds backed more than 1,600 funding rounds in Poland last year. With over 2,400 early- and late-stage startups and 400,000 engineers in the country, itâs easy to see why foreign investors are taking notice.
Editor-at-large Mike Butcher reached out to several investors who focus on Warsaw and Poland in general to learn more about the startups fueling their interest across fintech, gaming, security and other sectors:
- Bryony Cooper, managing partner, Arkley Brinc VC
- Anna Wnuk-BÅażejczyk, investor relations manager, Experior.vc
- RafaÅ Roszak, investment director, YouNick Mint
- Michal Mroczkowski, partner, Market One Capital
- Marcus Erken, partner, Sunfish Partners
- Borys Musielak, partner, SMOK Ventures
- Mathias à sberg, partner, Nextgrid
- Kuba Dudek, SpeedUp Venture Capital Group
- Marcin Laczynski, partner, Next Road Ventures
- MichaÅ Rokosz, partner, Inovo Venture Partners
Weâll run the conclusion of his survey next Tuesday.
Brands that hyper-personalize will win the next decade
Image Credits: cnythzl (opens in a new window) / Getty Images
Even for fledgling startups, creating a robust customer service channel â or at least one that doesnât annoy people â is a reliable way to keep users in the sales funnel.
Using AI and automation is fine, but now that consumers have grown used to asking phones and smart speakers to predict the weather and read recipe instructions, their expectations are higher than ever.
If youâre trying to figure out what people want from hyper-personalized customer experiences and how you can operationalize AI to give them what theyâre after, start here.
VCs pour funding into edtech startups as COVID-19 shakes up the market
Image Credits: Nigel Sussman (opens in a new window)
For todayâs edition of The Exchange, Natasha Mascarenhas joined Alex Wilhelm to examine how the pandemic-fueled surge of interest in edtech is manifesting on the funding front.
The numbers suggest that funding will far surpass the sectorâs high-water mark set in 2018, so the duo studied the numbers through August 31, which included a number of mega-rounds that exceeded $100 million.
âNow the challenge for the sector will be keeping its growth alive in 2021, showing investors that their 2020 bets were not merely wagers made during a single, overheated year,â they conclude.
How to respond to a data breach
Image Credits: WhataWin (opens in a new window) / Getty Images
The odds are low that someoneâs going to enter my home and steal my belongings. I still lock my door when I leave the house, however, and my valuables are insured. Iâm an optimist, not a fool.
Similarly: Is your startupâs cybersecurity strategy based on optimism, or do you have an actual response plan in case of a data breach?
Security reporter Zack Whittaker has seen some shambolic reactions to security lapses, which is why he turned in a post-mortem about a corporation that got it right.
âOnce in a while, a companyâs response almost makes up for the daily deluge of hypocrisy, obfuscation and downright lies,â says Zack.
Shiftâs George Arison shares 6 tips for taking your company public via a SPAC
Image Credits: Eric Burger/EyeEm (opens in a new window) / Getty Images
Thereâs a lot of buzz about special purpose acquisition companies these days.
Used-car marketplace Shift announced its SPAC in June 2020, and is on track to complete the process in the next few months, so co-founder/co-CEO George Arison wrote an Extra Crunch guest post to share what he has learned.
Step one: âIf you go the SPAC route, youâll need to become an expert at financial engineering.â
Dear Sophie: What is a J-1 visa and how can we use it?
Image Credits: Sophie Alcorn
Dear Sophie:
I am a software engineer and have been looking at job postings in the U.S. Iâve heard from my friends about J-1 Visa Training or J-1 Research.
What is a J-1 status? What are the requirements to qualify? Do I need to find a U.S. employer willing to sponsor me before I apply for one? Can I get a visa? How long could I stay?
â Determined in Delhi
As direct listing looms, Palantir insiders are accelerating stock sales
Image Credits: Patrick T. Fallon/Bloomberg (opens in a new window) / Getty Images
While we count down to the September 23 premiere of NYSE: PLTR, Danny Crichton looked at the ârobust secondary marketâ that has allowed some investors to acquire shares early.
âGiven the number of people involved and the number of shares bought and sold over the past 18 months, we can get some insight regarding how insiders perceive Palantirâs value,â he writes.
Use âproductive paranoiaâ to build cybersecurity culture at your startup
Image Credits: JakeOlimb / Getty Images
Zack Whittaker interviewed Bugcrowd CTO, founder and chairman Casey Ellis about the best practices he recommends for creating a startup culture that takes security seriously.
âItâs an everyone problem,â said Ellis, who encouraged founders to promote the notion of âproductive paranoia.â
Now that the threat envelope includes everyone from marketing to engineering, employees need to âinternalize the fact that bad stuff can and does happen if you do it wrong,â Ellis said.
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from #Bangladesh #News aka Bangladesh News Now!!!
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