SoftBank to raise $100b fund every 2-3 years, spend $50b annually

September 27, 2018

SoftBank Group Corp plans to create a new $100 billion fund every two to three years and spend $50 billion annually, its Chief Executive Masayoshi Son told Bloomberg Businessweek in an interview published on Thursday. Son has attracted more than $93 billion to his Vision Fund technology investment vehicle, and has flagged his intention to raise further financing. The comments reflect Son’s dealmaking ambitions that have shaken up the world of venture capital investing as he looks to accelerate his vision of a future driven by artificial intelligence. SoftBank did not immediately comment.

Read more at: https://www.dealstreetasia.com/stories/softbank-son-100b-fund-107522/?utm_source=DealStreetAsia%3A+The+Daily+Brief&utm_campaign=048c3de548-EMAIL_CAMPAIGN_2018_09_28_01_02&utm_medium=email&utm_term=0_0fa50e40c1-048c3de548-246561397&mc_cid=048c3de548&mc_eid=bba68709e3

 

Four Steps to Take Before Scaling Sales Hiring

Growth at All Costs is Perilous – This is How to Scale Sales Sustainably

Earlier in her career, Karen Rhorer was rising through the sales ops leadership ranks and working with her team to come up with an aggressive hiring plan, trying to reverse engineer the sales team capable of delivering the equally aggressive bookings numbers that their startup had set.

At the time, this move seemed in-line with conventional thinking, which was steeped in hypergrowth and the triple triple double double double mantra that drove startups to sell more, faster. But that pressure to hit those top-line growth numbers created blinders that left one side of the equation out entirely: sustainability. Like many other companies, Rhorer’s startup didn’t realize early enough that the math wasn’t supporting the sheer amount of cash they were burning in a quest for growth. And just a few years later, it all came home to roost — and nearly 40% of the staff had to be laid off.

http://firstround.com/review/growth-at-all-costs-is-perilous-this-is-how-to-scale-sales-sustainably/?utm_campaign=new_article&utm_medium=email&utm_source=newsletter

 

Steve Blank: The Difference Between Innovators and Entrepreneurs

I just received a thank-you note from a student who attended a fireside chat I held at the ranch. Something I said seemed to inspire her:

“I always thought you needed to be innovative, original to be an entrepreneur. Now I have a different perception. Entrepreneurs are the ones that make things happen. (That) takes focus, diligence, discipline, flexibility and perseverance. They can take an innovative idea and make it impactful. … successful entrepreneurs are also ones who take challenges in stride, adapt and adjust plans to accommodate whatever problems do come up.”

The Difference Between Innovators and Entrepreneurs

 

 

Zero to $50M – A Roadmap of the Key Stages, and How to Win at Each Stage

There are seven key stages in a startup’s evolution from $0m to $50m in revenue. Understanding where you are in that evolution, and how to act at each stage is critical for success, as what is appropriate at one stage is not appropriate at another stage. In my talk at SaaStr 2018, I will lay out the roadmap, and detail the keys to success at each stage. The talk is aimed at technical/product founders plus their sales, marketing & product executives who are responsible for the go-to-market strategy for their company.

https://www.forentrepreneurs.com/saastr-2018/

 

 

Blockchain In Healthcare

Led by Senior Intelligence Analyst Nikhil Krishnan

Blockchain has risen to prominence in the last year, with more than $18B raised over the past year. Several companies are attempting to apply the technology to the healthcare space, some with stronger use cases than others.

We’ll talk about several applications, their feasibility, areas of opportunity, and which companies should be worried.

 

https://www.cbinsights.com/research/briefing/blockchain-in-healthcare/?utm_source=Digital+Health+Newsletter&utm_campaign=00eaeab874-DigitalNL_3_16_2017_COPY_01&utm_medium=email&utm_term=0_8f02c12568-00eaeab874-89237717

 

The Complete List of Unicorn Companies

The Global Unicorn Club

(including whisper valuations)

Current Private Companies Valued At $1B+

Total Number of Unicorn Companies: 276

Total Cumulative Valuation: ~ $846B

What is a Unicorn Startup?

A unicorn startup or unicorn company is a private company with a valuation over $1 billion. As of August 2018, there are more than 260 unicorns around the world. Variants include a decacorn, valued at over $10 billion, and a hectocorn, valued at over $100 billion.

https://www.cbinsights.com/research-unicorn-companies?utm_source=CB+Insights+Newsletter&utm_campaign=8cbc95d6d4-ThursNL_09_20_2018&utm_medium=email&utm_term=0_9dc0513989-8cbc95d6d4-87406845

 

Tesla, software and disruption

“We’ve learned and struggled for a few years here figuring out how to make a decent phone. PC guys are not going to just figure this out. They’re not going to just walk in.” – Ed Colligan, CEO of Palm, 2006, on rumours of an Apple phone

“They laughed at Columbus and they laughed at the Wright brothers. But they also laughed at Bozo the Clown.” – Carl Sagan

When Nokia people looked at the first iPhone, they saw a not-great phone with some cool features that they were going to build too, being produced at a small fraction of the volumes they were selling. They shrugged. “No 3G, and just look at the camera!”

When many car company people look at a Tesla, they see a not-great car with some cool features that they’re going to build too, being produced at a small fraction of the volumes they’re selling. “Look at the fit and finish, and the panel gaps, and the tent!”

The Nokia people were terribly, terribly wrong. Are the car people wrong? We hear that a Tesla is ‘the new iPhone’ – what would that mean?

This is partly a question about Tesla, but it’s more interesting as a way to think about what happens when ‘software eats the world’ in general, and when tech moves into new industries. How do we think about whether something is disruptive? If it is, who exactly gets disrupted? And does that disruption that mean one company wins in the new world? Which one?

The idea of ‘disruption’ is that a new concept changes the basis of competition in an industry. At the beginning, either the new thing itself or the companies bringing it (or both) tend to be bad at the things the incumbents value, and get laughed at, but they learn those things. Conversely, the incumbents either dismiss the new thing as pointless or presume they’ll easily be able to add it (or both), but they’re wrong. Apple brought software and learnt phones, whereas Nokia had great phones but could not learn software.

However, not every new technology or idea is disruptive. Some things do not change the basis of competition enough, and for some things the incumbents are able to learn and absorb the new concept instead (these are not quite the same thing). Clay Christensen calls this ‘sustaining innovation’ as opposed to ‘disruptive’ innovation.

By extension, any new technology is probably disruptive to someone, at some part of the value chain. The iPhone disrupted the handset business, but has not disrupted the cellular network operators at all, though many people were convinced that it would. For all that’s changed, the same companies still have the same business model and the same customers that they did in 2006. Online flight booking doesn’t disrupt airlines much, but it was hugely disruptive to travel agents. Online booking (for the sake of argument) was sustaining innovation for airlines and disruptive innovation for travel agents.

https://www.ben-evans.com/benedictevans/2018/8/29/tesla-software-and-disruption?utm_source=Benedict%27s+newsletter&utm_campaign=4f0e75adc0-Benedict%27s+Newsletter_COPY_01&utm_medium=email&utm_term=0_4999ca107f-4f0e75adc0-70556957

 

Hollow ICOs: Five Ways To Tell If A Crypto Token Has Merit

 

Many initial coin offerings (ICOs) were tickets to quick riches in 2017. Take a token called Status—it was issued in June, raised about $100 million and soared 1,200% within six months. It’s easy to get excited by crypto’s surging prices. But now that the market has corrected somewhat and it’s clear that tokens both rise and fall, it’s prudent to determine whether the virtual asset you’re buying has merit and utility in the real world.

1. Who’s the team behind the coin?

Much like the venture capital world, the founding can make or break a crypto asset. When evaluating a coin’s developers, look beyond education to find out what projects they’ve built, says bitcoin investor and researcher Tuur Demeester. He likes to see that developers are “respected in the fields of cryptography, memory compression, peer-to-peer networks and large open-source projects.” The more knowledge and experience they have, the less likely they’ll be to repeat past mistakes that have plagued other crypto coins.

And try to evaluate the team’s integrity. Chris Burniske, co-author of the book “Cryptoassets”and a partner at crypto investment firm Placeholder Ventures, tells Forbes it’s important to “get to know the developers. If not in person, through podcasts, videos or talks.” Do they explain their project clearly, or do they seem evasive when answering questions? Do their motivations seem sound?

2. Read the white paper and ask what problem the coin is trying to solve

Developers typically publish a white paper that explains the software and economics behind a coin, and investors should read it with a critical eye. Cryptocurrencies’ main reason for existence is decentralization—they’re controlled by many people instead of a single, central authority. In crypto theory, that’s good because central authorities are more susceptible to incompetence and corruption. The white paper should clearly explain why the digital asset benefits from decentralization, Chris Burniske and Jack Tatar write in “Cryptoassets.”

https://www.forbes.com/sites/jeffkauflin/2018/02/19/hollow-icos-five-ways-to-tell-if-a-crypto-token-has-merit/#78b46e031b7e

 

 

4 books every aspiring startup founder should read

To be a successful entrepreneur, you need to be able to juggle several hats at the same time. Identifying a problem and developing a scalable solution is the easy bit. Your initial days as a founder may be spent coding and refining the technical architecture, but then comes a concerted effort on streamlining operations, drumming up sales, and executing a marketing strategy.

In an ideal scenario, founders already have experience in what it takes to build a company. They might have worked different jobs in the past or have a fancy college degree which will, at the very least, point them in the right direction. But startups are tricky; be prepared to dig deep and get your hands dirty. Fortunately there’s a wealth of advice out there from people who’ve achieved brilliant things and want to give their knowledge to others like them. In no particular order, here are four books every aspiring tech founder should read.

1. Zero to One – Peter Thiel

Peter Thiel needs no introduction. As the co-founder of PayPal and an early investor in Facebook, the American entrepreneur has done and seen it all. In his book, which Forbes says “makes you feel superhuman”, Peter outlines how great companies are born out of nothing. Zero to One urges founders to look at areas which are underserved and where they can carve out a niche – building a loyal base of customers which you can use as a foundation to scale.

Peter knows what he’s talking about – after all his net worth is approximately US$2.2 billion. Other chapters in his book talk about the nature of competition, the essence of building products investors will be interested in, and how it’s essential to have a great team.

 

https://www.techinasia.com/4-books-aspiring-startup-founder-read