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The TechCrunch Top 3

Startups and VC

  • Imitating the real data: Singapore-based Betterdata took in $1.55 million to take a different approach to traditional data sharing methods by using synthetic data to keep real data safe, Catherine reports.
  • Driving toward something new: Autotech Ventures is venturing into new territory with a $230 million mobility fund that will add fintech and the circular economy to its investment strategy, writes Kirsten.
  • Taking the plunge: Founders Pledge, a charitable initiative in London, launched a venture capital arm called Pledge Ventures in what Mike writes is to “create a new ‘flywheel’ in philanthropy.”
  • Listen to this: Brian shares all the feels about first learning of headphone startup Nura, which he reports got acqui-hired by Masimo, the parent company of electrics company Denon.

Pitch Deck Teardown: Honeycomb’s $50M Series D deck

Image Credits: Honeycomb (opens in a new window)

Startups that raise Series D rounds might have hundreds of employees, tens of millions in ARR and other proof points that demonstrate they’ve reduced risk, but they still need pitch decks.

Honeycomb, which describes itself as a “debugger for live production systems,” shared its winning $50 million Series D pitch deck with TechCrunch:

  1. Cover slide
  2. Data summary snapshot slide
  3. Problem slide
  4. Solution slide
  5. Competitive landscape slide
  6. Product category overview slide
  7. Customer landscape slide part 1 (mostly redacted)
  8. Customer landscape slide part 2 (mostly redacted)
  9. Market positioning slide
  10.   Value proposition slide
  11.   History/product timeline slide
  12.   Go-to-market interstitial slide
  13.   GTM: Land-and-expand approach slide
  14.   GTM: Gaming vertical slide
  15.   Going Forward interstitial slide
  16.   Team slide
  17.   The Ask slide
  18.   Closing slide

Two more from the TC+ team:

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Big Tech Inc.

  • Lyft layoffs: Ride-hailing company Lyft confirmed it is cutting its workforce by 1,200 as part of a restructuring effort meant to “better meet the needs of riders and drivers,” Kirsten reports. The layoffs will affect corporate employees, of which there are about 4,000, because Lyft doesn’t employ its drivers.
  • We learn something new every day: The Linux Foundation launched a new organization to maintain TLA+, Kyle writes. If you’re doing one of those “learn one new term a day,” here’s your education for the day: TLA+ is a formal “spec” language, developed by computer scientist and mathematician Leslie Lamport, for designing, modeling, documenting and verifying software programs.
  • Strike that: Sarah reports that in an effort to find a faster resolution to its antitrust legal battle with Fortnite maker Epic Games, Match Group and state attorneys general, Google is asking the court to dismiss multiple claims, five to be exact, that “would seemingly be pivotal to the plaintiffs’ ability to prove anticompetitive behavior.”
  • Four corners of the globe, literally: The Internal Revenue Service is sending four investigators across the world to fight cybercrime, Lorenzo reports. Before you go, “Just four?” I’ll throw in there that the IRS previously only had one.
  • Denied: Meta was trying to have its content moderator case dismissed in Kenya, but now has to muddle through it. A court ruled that Meta can be sued over alleged unlawful sacking and blacklisting of moderators. Annie has more.





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