How to Find Your Seed Stage Investors

MOQIPEOPLE INSIDER:
#SeedFund #Fundraising #Investors

How to Find Your Seed Stage Investors!

It can be challenging to find the right investor to get your company off the ground when you are a startup.

Further complicating the process is finding an investor who is interested in your industry, vertical, geography AND round size. This post will provide tips to help you track down the proper investors for your first round of financing.

1. Pitchbook
Pitchbook has been a holy grail for us. We are able to sort investors by over 100 different preferences and fund characteristics such as AUM, dry powder (money left for investment), preferred investment amount, preferred investment stage, etc.

All of this information can then be exported directly to Salesforce or downloaded to an excel file for easy reference and personal filtering. The user interface can be tricky to navigate at times, but the major downside is the cost of the platform: >$5,000 per year.

If you are connected to an analyst or individual with access to Pitchbook, you might save some $$$. And what if you don’t? Here are some free ones!

2. Signal
Signal.VC is a powerful investor search engine. The value to using Signal VC is that they use your LinkedIn network to determine the strength of your connection to specific investors.

The home page by default shows the highest strength connection into specific VC firms. This page also lists the min, “sweet spot” and max check size the firms typically write.

Lastly, this home page shows VC geography preference and other companies they have invested in. All of this is shown without any sorting.

The biggest asset here is the filtering and advanced filter functions.

The basic filter can break down by firm or individual name, investment range, areas of interest and whether they lead rounds.

Using the advanced filter option, position, investment location, past investments, education, and work experience can be narrowed in too.

Finally, a third filtering option would be to select the round you are raising (seed, A, B, C+) within the industry search to ensure you will be finding the right VCs for your company.

VC lists can be populated, and intros can be requested here as well. I have found Signal.VC to be the most user-friendly platform on this list. The only downside is that as a free resource, some data may be limited.

3. VCWiz
VCwiz specifically focuses its efforts on helping startups find investors for their seed round financings.

Here you are able to filter investors by stage, sector, industries, cities, and related startups. Another nice feature is the ability to see each partner in the firm and their most recent news updates, urls, investments, and descriptions.

Similar to social media, you are able to track or follow specific partners so you are alerted when they strike a deal, write a new blog post, leave the firm etc. This is a great automation instrument for tracking investors and their new investments.

Additionally, you can search investors by topics, which has a broader focus than filtering for investor industries.

The last feature is the ability to request introductions and have the platform track and organize all fundraising efforts. This simple to navigate resource offers value to those funding or planning to fund a seed round in the near future.

4. Crunchbase
CB is a well known resource where you are able to gather more information on the investors you are interested in. Here you will be able to search for VCs or investors based on a variety of criteria options.

In its free version CB limits the filtering options to two parameters. While there are dozens of parameter options, the limit of two can be frustrating if you are searching for an investor who focuses on specific verticals, locations, and check sizes.

The premium version, Crunchbase Pro, allows for unlimited filtering parameters at a cost of $29 per month. CB Pro also includes a variety of other in-depth resources such as charts, analysis tools, advanced search options, custom alerts, and excel integration. CB Pro is one of the more reasonably priced resources on the market currently when you consider the astronomical price of platforms like Pitchbook and Capital IQ.

5. AngelList
This resource is more valuable on a personal rather than company level. Here you can sort and filter for specific VC partners and angel investors.
Again, you are able to sort by role, location, market, companies, number of investments etc. What’s most useful about Angel.co is that you are able to look through your primary connections, secondary connections, and everyone else. This is rather similar to LinkedIn but serves as a smaller and more focused investor portal.

These five websites are truly valuable when searching for investors. If you are connected to a VC firm or angel network already, have conversations with your contacts first to determine who they may know who a good fit might be. The resources above can be great research and outreach tools, but your personal connections will always be number one.

Last tip, this chatbot will find you seed funding 🤖💸
3,150 investors in one place:https://www.producthunt.com/posts/fundraising-bot

Happy fundraising!

Originally published at venturebeat.com on September 16, 2018.

Exclusively Interview With Jim Breyer the Founder and CEO of Breyer Capital on LIVE Davos 2019 – The World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland

 

Screen Shot 2019-01-24 at 9.50.19 PM

MOQIPEOPLE INSIDER:

Exclusively Interview With Jim Breyer the Founder and CEO of Breyer Capital on LIVE Davos 2019 – The World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland

Sara: Welcome back to Squawk on the street live CNBC from the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland.

Sara: Joining me now is Jim Breyer the founder and CEO of Breyer Capital, he was also an early investor and Facebook sat on the company board for a decade wears many hats talking about AI and much more.

Sara: Welcome Jim, nice to have you.

Jim: Sara, a pleasure…thank you!

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Sara: I actually wanted to start up of David was talking with Viacom. Earlier they made a deal today to buy a streaming service TV you’re on the board of 21st Century Fox. How can all of these companies have their own streaming services? How many streaming services can we have?

Jim: We have dozens of streaming services but there will be dozens that are highly unprofitable there’s no doubt Netflix and Amazon were very much at the forefront of my 21st-century, Fox and Disney decided that grade scale matters and whether it’s Comcast the parent company that course reported nice numbers today like your parent company. Absolutely, 21st-century, fox and Disney there will be a couple other major studios and it’s not unlike the technology business.

Screen Shot 2019-01-24 at 9.44.28 PM

Jim: My view is there are 3 to 5 very important worldwide media companies going forward. There are 3 to 5 technology companies that are going to be truly important. And it’s also great time to be a TV script writer, television producer, independent software AI developer building on the cloud services and some very optimistic about not only entrepreneurship and innovation, which is represented in today’s Viacom transaction but the opportunity to use a lot of the new technologies around cloud services to build wonderful businesses or nonprofit.

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Sara: But you said you see the big players really owning the world is streaming so what does that mean is there’s room for new fox to start streaming services?

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Jim: My view though is 10 years from now as an investor. The top 20 companies in the world by market cap will be in the US and China, 18 of the 20 will be technology oriented, but that also means AI first or technology first whether it’s Comcast or Disney or Facebook, Netflix, Google, Tencent others what really matters is building a great customer and enterprise software experiences and I do believe I am two years in to an AI 10 year investment strategy. I made six investments AI last year after receiving approximately 10,000 AI business plans and they run the game from cancer research to helping police forces do a better job to helping our troops all around the world have better information.

Sara: Who’s winning? The US or China on AI it’s running that race?

Jim: It’s never a soundbite but it makes the space race look tame in certain areas like facial recognition China is far ahead, in security solutions sold into governments, the US is catching up but we need to move faster, in areas like devices are of those Korea and Japan on the display devices but in semiconductors, the US has at least a five-year lead which is why I love Nvidia and Intel so many of the semiconductor stocks long-term. There will be slowdowns but the US far away has at least a five-year lead when it comes to semiconductor technologies.

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Sara: How you played out in the public market as explosion of growth of AI?

Jim: I like it with some of the great software companies Salesforce, Microsoft many of the enterprise software companies that are selling into businesses and commercial accounts. I would buy Microsoft again and again and hold it and I do really like what would be the FAANG stocks, forgetting about valuations for a moment because I’d like to spend 2 to 3 years on public equity holdings. And then for private companies that I’m investing in many of them partnering with salesforce and Microsoft Oracle and others it’s a 7 to 10-year bet.

Jim: Facebook in 2005 Mark was 20 and I was there, and I helped navigate very treacherous public offering as we all remember that piece fundamental business is long-term are so important and Instagram may be even with all the accolades the most underrated application in the world.

Sara: Well, 2018 was another turbulent period for Facebook, loosing public trust, what does 2019 hold tight?

Screen Shot 2019-01-24 at 9.49.20 PM

Jim: I’ve heard. I just hate to throw darts and pile on when a lot of people are, but Facebook and I sent this to Sheryl, and I said this to Sheryl and Mark and others we as Facebook should’ve been much more transparent much more out front and I hope, and I believe 2019.

Sara: So, do they get it?

Jim: I believe Mark really gets it, but I have a long-term buyer. I feel Mark Zuckerberg is a genius.

Sara: Does he deserve to be CEO and Chairman, or should they split that?

Jim: He deserves to be CEO and chairman and Sheryl Sandberg deserves president and they’re terrific and they’re a great team and this is one of the idiosyncrasies of the world we live in. I really believe in chairman and CEO for founders and young companies being in charge and whether it’s media companies whether it’s the best technology companies whether it was of the emerging AI companies where I’m spending a lot of time very often with Chairman and CEO.

Sara: Even when that company is going through the turmoil that Facebook is going for what’s the real execution and leadership questions?

Jim: There been terrible decisions in many cases and I really believe that it’s not a function of the chairman CEO being in the same position up but then again, it’s a venture capitalist my big successes and is a technology investor the biggest successes is open the chairman and CEO in the same spot.

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Sara: Very quickly want to ask about China because you have been in China for more than a decade and very bullish on it cross-border deals and dried up completely can you invest in China right now during this trade war?

Jim: And the answer is yes, and I’ve been investing in China for 15 years. The team I’ve worked with investors series A Tencent and Baidu another we continue to make significant investments in China and will continue to do it. But the Internet and a lot of the opportunities in China and US diverged. But I’ll remain very active.

Sara: They don’t get approval to work together.

Jim: They do not get any approvals to work together cross-border investing for now is dead. But 3 to 5 years from now, I’m still very optimistic up. It’s really helpful for US companies in Chinese companies to build often together in different parts of the world. India will be the next show then for the market.

Sara: We can talk to you for hours about all these big topics. Thank you for sharing some of your time here.

Jim: Thank you.

Sara: Thank you so much for Jim Breyer, Breyer capital.

Originally published at www.iqmediacorp.com on Aired: January 23, 2019 at 10 am EST.

Breyer Capital is Leading the Series A Financing of Paige:AI

MOQIPEOPLE INSIDER is Honored to Announce that Breyer Capital is Leading the Series A Financing of Paige:AI 

#VC #Startup #AI #Pathology #MedicalTech

JB-Vest-Seated-Wall-Background

A true visionary – prominent investor in the world, Mr. Breyer and his firm, Breyer Capital, are leading a $25 million Series A round for Paige.AI , a New York-based startup applying AI to pathology to improve diagnosis and treatment of cancer. 

Introducing Paige.AI

Paige.AI has signed a comprehensive license with the Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center (MSK) to gain exclusive access to its intellectual property in computational pathology, as well as exclusive rights to its library of 25 million pathology slides. The de-identified data set is one of the world’s largest tumor pathology archives, the company said.

The company will be fully integrated into lab information systems by using the library to develop machine learning applications which is developing computational programs across diagnostic pathology and clinical annotations and anonymized genomic sequencing results such as starting with breast, prostate and other major cancers, according to a company press release.

“Over the next decade there will be several companies in the fields of artificial intelligence and medicine that will provide enormous investment returns and at the same time make fundamental differences in patients’ and doctors’ lives,” Mr. Breyer said.Screen Shot 2018-02-28 at 7.25.38 AMPathology is at the cornerstone of most cancer diagnoses, yet most pathologic diagnoses rely on manual, subjective processes developed ages ago. While slide digitization has been around for over a decade, it has failed to gain traction because digital slides alone have done little to improve workflows.

Computational pathology will provide the missing link in the adoption of digital pathology, moving this vital field forward with support tools to help pathologists make decisions with greater speed, accuracy, objectivity and reproducibility — and at a lower cost. Armed with AI enabled systems, pathologists will spend less time compiling data and more time interpreting data. They will better understand how a patient’s diagnosis affects treatment and recovery.

viewer1

In 2018 PAIGE’s slide viewer was rolled out institution-wide at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center and is the single entry point for pathologists and cancer researchers.

“I believe we are entering the market with three core assets: better data, better expertise, and better people.” Mr. Breyer said.

Data: Successful AI systems rely on a massive amount of data to train robust, reproducible algorithms. Paige.AI has a partnership with Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center (MSK) and has exclusive access to all of MSK’s intellectual property in the field of computational pathology as well as exclusive rights to their library of 25 million pathology slides.

Domain Expertise: Raw image data is not enough to excel in complex pathology tasks. A successful AI must be trained on the highest quality (clinician-generated) domain-specific annotations. Paige.AI is innovating the annotation process, not only by developing dedicated annotation tools, but also by incorporating de-identified clinical data, treatment data, genomic analysis and survival data into comprehensive deep learning models.

Exceptional Talent: Paige.AI’s ML team of PhDs and computation experts is led by the founding father of Computational Pathology: Thomas Fuchs. Fuchs is the director of Computational Pathology in The Warren Alpert Center for Digital and Computational Pathology at MSK, and professor at Weill-Cornell, where he teaches Machine Learning. Dr. Fuchs published the first Computational Pathology paper in 2008, a review of the field in 2011 and more than 90 publications in machine learning and medicine.

MR JB

THE FUTURE OF AI: NEW WORK SUMMIT 2018 [VIDEO]

NEW YORK TIMES CONFERENCES

From health care and financial services to mobility and cybersecurity, start-ups that utilize artificial intelligence are some of the world’s hottest VC bets. Where do investors see AI’s greatest potential — and its potential shortcomings — today and far into the future?

Jim Breyer, Founder and C.E.O., Breyer Capital & Deep Nishar, Senior Managing Partner, SoftBank Vision Fund In conversation with Rebecca Blumenstein.

Read more info via:

Home

Breyer Capital is Leading the Series A Financing of Paige:AI

MOQIPEOPLE INSIDER is Honored to Announce that Breyer Capital is Leading the Series A Financing of Paige:AI 

#VC #Startup #AI #Pathology #MedicalTech

JB-Vest-Seated-Wall-Background

A true visionary – prominent investor in the world, Mr. Breyer and his firm, Breyer Capital, are leading a $25 million Series A round for Paige.AI , a New York-based startup applying AI to pathology to improve diagnosis and treatment of cancer. 

Introducing Paige.AI

Paige.AI has signed a comprehensive license with the Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center (MSK) to gain exclusive access to its intellectual property in computational pathology, as well as exclusive rights to its library of 25 million pathology slides. The de-identified data set is one of the world’s largest tumor pathology archives, the company said.

The company will be fully integrated into lab information systems by using the library to develop machine learning applications which is developing computational programs across diagnostic pathology and clinical annotations and anonymized genomic sequencing results such as starting with breast, prostate and other major cancers, according to a company press release.

“Over the next decade there will be several companies in the fields of artificial intelligence and medicine that will provide enormous investment returns and at the same time make fundamental differences in patients’ and doctors’ lives,” Mr. Breyer said.Screen Shot 2018-02-28 at 7.25.38 AMPathology is at the cornerstone of most cancer diagnoses, yet most pathologic diagnoses rely on manual, subjective processes developed ages ago. While slide digitization has been around for over a decade, it has failed to gain traction because digital slides alone have done little to improve workflows.

Computational pathology will provide the missing link in the adoption of digital pathology, moving this vital field forward with support tools to help pathologists make decisions with greater speed, accuracy, objectivity and reproducibility — and at a lower cost. Armed with AI enabled systems, pathologists will spend less time compiling data and more time interpreting data. They will better understand how a patient’s diagnosis affects treatment and recovery.

viewer1

In 2018 PAIGE’s slide viewer was rolled out institution-wide at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center and is the single entry point for pathologists and cancer researchers.

“I believe we are entering the market with three core assets: better data, better expertise, and better people.” Mr. Breyer said.

Data: Successful AI systems rely on a massive amount of data to train robust, reproducible algorithms. Paige.AI has a partnership with Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center (MSK) and has exclusive access to all of MSK’s intellectual property in the field of computational pathology as well as exclusive rights to their library of 25 million pathology slides.

Domain Expertise: Raw image data is not enough to excel in complex pathology tasks. A successful AI must be trained on the highest quality (clinician-generated) domain-specific annotations. Paige.AI is innovating the annotation process, not only by developing dedicated annotation tools, but also by incorporating de-identified clinical data, treatment data, genomic analysis and survival data into comprehensive deep learning models.

Exceptional Talent: Paige.AI’s ML team of PhDs and computation experts is led by the founding father of Computational Pathology: Thomas Fuchs. Fuchs is the director of Computational Pathology in The Warren Alpert Center for Digital and Computational Pathology at MSK, and professor at Weill-Cornell, where he teaches Machine Learning. Dr. Fuchs published the first Computational Pathology paper in 2008, a review of the field in 2011 and more than 90 publications in machine learning and medicine.

MR JB

THE FUTURE OF AI: NEW WORK SUMMIT 2018 [VIDEO]

NEW YORK TIMES CONFERENCES

From health care and financial services to mobility and cybersecurity, start-ups that utilize artificial intelligence are some of the world’s hottest VC bets. Where do investors see AI’s greatest potential — and its potential shortcomings — today and far into the future?

Jim Breyer, Founder and C.E.O., Breyer Capital & Deep Nishar, Senior Managing Partner, SoftBank Vision Fund In conversation with Rebecca Blumenstein.

Read more info via:

Home

Startup “Ziroom” – Chinese Apartment Rental Service Provider has raised 4 Billion Yuan ($621 Million USD) in a Series A Funding Round Led by Warburg Pincus

 MOQIPEOPLE INSIDER:

#Startup #VC #SeriesAFundJAN2018

Startup “Ziroom” – Chinese Apartment Rental Service Provider has raised 4 Billion Yuan ($621 Million USD) in a Series A Funding Round Led by Warburg Pincus

Sequoia Capital and Tencent also invest in the apartment rental service provider

BEIJING— Ziroom, a Chinese Apartment Rental Service Provider. Founded in 2011, Beijing-based Ziroom leases apartment units, renovates them and subleases them to long-term tenants. It manages 500,000 rooms and serves 1.2 million tenants in nine cities around China. It also operates eight service apartment buildings.  The company plans to increase the number of rooms under its management to 800,000 this year.

Ziroom has raised 4 billion yuan ($621 million USD) in a Series A funding round led by a group of investors including private-equity firm Warburg Pincus, Tencent, and Sequoia Capital China, according to a statement released by Warburg Pincus, as Beijing pushes the growth of a rental market to curb skyrocketing home prices in large cities.

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“Ziroom is China’s biggest professional asset management firm, and has advantages in customer acquisition, big data application and rental management,” said Julian Cheng, managing director and co-head of China at Warburg Pincus. “After interviewing hundreds of tenants, we found Ziroom’s reputation is higher than the industry average.”

Proceeds from the funding will be used to expand the company’s existing businesses in Beijing, Shanghai and Shenzhen, as well as adding new operations in cities such as Hangzhou, Wuhan and Guangzhou. It will also upgrade its services to include maintenance and house moving as well as invest in technologies such as smart furniture and big data, according to its CEO Xiong Lin.

This is the third investment made by Warburg Pincus in China’s institutional apartment rental sector. It invested in Mofang, China’s first and leading centralized institutional apartment developer-operator, in 2012, and co-founded Nova to focus on the acquisition of aged and distressed properties in urban infill locations in 2015. The Chinese government has been pushing for the development of the country’s home rental market to address urban newcomers’ housing demand.

With government backing, the sector is attracted increased investments. Last September, Warburg Pincus committed a US$183 million follow-on investment into Nova Property Investment Co. Ltd, a Chinese rental apartment operator and asset manager. Last July, IDG Capital and Chinese hotel management company Huazhu Hotels Group Ltd. led a US$50 million pre-A round in Chengjia Apartment, an apartment rental start-up.

The Chinese government has been pushing the development of the home rental market to address housing demand from urban newcomer. Last August, 12 major cities in China introduced pilot programs that allows tenants of rental properties to enjoy the same access to public services as property owners.

“We strongly believed in the growth potential of apartment rental sector since six years ago and remain committed. We are actively responding to the government’s policy to promote apartment leasing by providing more and better rental properties to the market,” Ziroom chairman Hui Zuo said.Screen Shot 2018-01-23 at 3.31.49 AM

The Chinese government has been pushing for the development of the country’s home rental market to address urban newcomers’ housing demand.

Read more info. via:
https://www.crunchbase.com/organization/ziroom

http://www.ziroomapartment.com

http://www.ziroom.com

Announcing the $150 Million “Rise Of The Rest” Seed Fund

MOQIPEOPLE INSIDER:
Heads up!!! Entrepreneurs and Startups!
Announcing the $150 Million “Rise Of The Rest” Seed Fund

The rest shall rise, this is so great for founders outside of Silicon Valley @Revolution – A Bevy Of Billionaires Join Steve Case’s $150 Million ‘Rise Of The Rest’ Startup Fund

“MY TAKE: Why we launched #RiseOfRest seed fund?” said Steve Case.

37C8DC04-DE68-4F29-A4E9-A816E41C6764

At Revolution, we believe that some of the most compelling investment opportunities in the next decade will emerge from startups in cities all across the United States — not just in Silicon Valley. With the addition of the Rise of the Rest Seed Fund, Revolution is now positioned to support startups at every stage of their lifecycle. More on our new $150M Fund…

Via Steve Case

Read and watch more via:

https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/announcing-150-million-rise-rest-seed-fund-steve-case

Famed VC Jim Breyer on finding the next Mark Zuckerberg (and much more)

MOQIPEOPLE INSIDER:

Famed VC Jim Breyer on finding the next Mark Zuckerberg (and much more)

Connie Loizos
TechCrunch November 8, 2017

Jim Breyer

Yesterday, at the Web Summit conference in Lisbon, we caught up with Jim Breyer, among the most famous venture capitalists in Silicon Valley thanks to a decades-long track record of smart bets, most notably in Facebook.

Yesterday, at the Web Summit conference in Lisbon, we caught up with Jim Breyer, among the most famous venture capitalists in Silicon Valley thanks to a decades-long track record of smart bets, most notably in Facebook. Breyer was the managing partner at Accel Partners, which invested $12.7 million in Facebook in 2005 when the company was priced around $100 million, and that returned many billions of dollars to its investors after the company went public in 2012.

In 2013, Breyer segued out of the firm, opening up his own family office, called Breyer Capital, where he has continued to make bold bets. Breyer has also partnered over the years with the Chinese firm IDG Capital Partners, which formerly collaborated with Accel Partners and where Breyer Capital has since become an anchor investor in a series of funds that now manage more than $4 billion.

Breyer will be taking the stage today, but he also sat down with us behind the scenes yesterday to talk about Facebook, Softbank, and ICOs, among other factors playing an outsize role in the startup ecosystem. You can find much of that conversation below, edited for length.

TC: You’ve just come to Lisbon from China. How much time do you spend there?

JB: I’m there four times a year. I probably have 100 partners who are part of IDG China, where Breyer Capital is a sponsor and I’m a general partner on the investment committee and we cover 10 cities in China.

TC: Meanwhile, you’re also overseeing Breyer Capital, your family office. How active is that, and is its focus exclusively on U.S. companies?

JB: We make six to 10 new investments a year, investing in artificial intelligence and deep learning mostly, and how it applies to finance, healthcare, publishing, and other large verticals, and yes, [the investments are stateside].

Breyer Capital, it’s a family office, makes six to 10 new investments a year, starting in 2013. Still a partner in historical Accel funds, investing in AI mostly and deep learning and how it applies to finance healthcare publishing and other large vertical. Breyer stateside investments.

TC: Before sitting down today, I’d seen a CNBC interview you’d given, where you said you expect to see a number of big companies focused around artificial intelligence that are even bigger, much bigger, than Facebook and its ilk today. I think of Google and Facebook and Amazon and Apple as having an insurmountable lead, given the monopoly they have on these huge data sets. Why are you so sure that’s not the case?

JB: Mark Zuckerberg, Tim Cook, [Alibaba founder] Jack Ma, [Tencent founder] Pony Ma, [Baidu founder] Robin Li — these are phenomenal founder-driven companies and I expect the Apples, Facebooks, Amazons, Alphabets, and Baidus will only get stronger in many ways. But the early stages to apply deep learning and true artificial intelligence to large verticals [is immense].

For example, doctor recommendations around cancer research — both in the U.S. and China, where we can pull together data from hospitals, analyze that data in ways that have never been possible before, and provide better potential advice to doctors and nurses — those are just great opportunities for startups.

TC: That sounds great. At the same time, I’m still confused as to how nascent AI teams get very far. It seems that most are either getting pulled into these bigger companies before their companies can really prove themselves, or else they’re having to focus on very small verticals — like assessing the health of cabbages — and building a data set around them. Can AI teams still build big defensible businesses?

JB: I’m no longer on the board of Facebook, but I have these conversations with Mark Zuckerberg and Sheryl Sandberg all the time, and it’s interesting. Facebook continues to grow dramatically but they’re also optimistic about startups and building new companies than ever before. Yes, there are strong founder-driven companies, but I don’t think it’s about fringe opportunities.

TC: You mentioned AI in healthcare. Where else do you see these bigger opportunities?

JB: I’m an investor in [the publicly traded video distribution platform] Bright Cove, and out of Brighcove came Circle Internet, which is a four-year-old blockchain company that’s applying AI to financial services to address how to deliver better payment services around the world, who should receive some lending, and should whether they should receive it it in euros, pounds, dollars, or different coins. A lot of that is AI applied to the blockchain and to digital currencies.

TC: You think we’ll see giant AI companies. Do you think you’ve met the next Mark Zuckerberg yet?

JB: I don’t think I’ll ever find a Mark Zuckerberg. And the combination of Mark Zuckerberg and Sheryl Sandberg, who I helped Mark hire in 2008 – I don’t think I’ll ever find a team like that again. Sheryl’s opportunities to make Mark better, Mark’s opportunities to make Sheryl better – that combination is the best single leadership combination in the world. In fact, they’re two of the key references on so many of the new deals that I do.

TC: You’re getting their advice on potential investments?

JB: Absolutely — and reference checks on people who might be from Google or Apple or Amazon. Not a day goes by when I’m not in contact with Facebook executives about a potential new deal or recruiting. They’ve been a wonderful source of both references on new deals in AI, specifically, or in talent management and referrals of executives who I meet who are potentially future founders or future executives of these AI companies.

TC: Does that put the company or executive or founder on the watch list of Facebook and — for good or bad — does it increase the likelihood that Facebook will try and gobble them up at an early stage?

JB: The experience I have is that when I’m meeting with the top talent, the ability at some point – say 12 or 24 months from now – to speak with Sheryl Sandberg or Mark Zuckerberg or some of the senior people at Facebook, they view it as a big positive.

TC: Are Sheryl Sandberg and Mark Zuckerberg de facto venture partners of yours, or is that overstating things?

JB: That would be too much. But they are very much part of almost every due diligence process that I’ve done.

TC: Do you help them with their diligence? Do either of them make private investments?

JB: They don’t make too many private investments, but I certainly offer them advice and sometimes they listen on either people or opportunities or . . . different elements of Facebook and its global opportunities.

TC: Speaking of Facebook, can you comment on these newly revealed ties between early Facebook investor Yuri Milner and the Kremlin? He’s very well-regarded in Silicon Valley circles. Does this development change anything?

JB: I’m a fan of Yuri. I’ve known him since 2010. I just don’t know more than that. He’s a very good investor. Would it affect your dealing with Milner right now?
[Shrugs.] I just don’t know [what’s going to happen].

TC: I’ve heard you say that according to experts you’ve talked with, AI will have the same self-learning ability as humans by 2050. How does that impact how you proceed as an investor?

JB: I take a 20-year view on investing. With AI, I’m firmly in the camp that the benefits for the next couple decades far outweigh the negatives. Based on the very best computer scientists who I routinely meet with, at Stanford, MIT, Berkeley, Tsinghua, Oxford and Cambridge – there is a belief that the pace is extraordinary. But it’s likely not before 2050 where we reach a point of singularity and the robots and the machine learning is potentially more intelligent than what is today human intelligence.

TC: And then? Are you worried about the world your grandchildren will be navigating?

JB: I absolutely believe that philosophically, we should be thinking about the ethical implications long term of artificial intelligence and how it’s applied, and that should be part of what we do as investors and entrepreneurs and academics. Those are discussions that I love being a part of. I don’t think that we can just push that aside and not have those discussions.

TC: Do you think there will be a limited number of companies and jobs? Will people be relying on a basic income? What do you see beyond 2050? What about 100 years from now?

JB: I love that, that’s real long term! [Laughs.] I think the pie will get bigger for almost everyone, [with] the right implementation of technologies. I’m on the board of Harvard University and I’m part of the president’s search, and I’ve been spending a lot of time with presidential candidates. And these are questions I ask many of the academics I’m talking with, and I think we’ll see universities, colleges and education very positively affected by these technologies, because I think we can educate students around the world. Teaching will improve. Most importantly, learning will improve if we all take a long-term view, and I believe many jobs will be created that we can’t predict right now.

TC: Do you think we’ll need to regulate artificial intelligence, as Elon Musk has suggested time and again needs to happen?

JB: I think it would be a huge mistake to actively regulate artificial intelligence and artificial intelligence technologies. I do think there’s a role for government officials to be thinking about jobs as they related to artificial intelligence. But in terms of regulation, it would be a mistake because we’re just at the beginning of innovation [and because] it’s global. In many ways, we’re in a race with other economies – whether China or some of the European centers that are trying to recreate Silicon Valley-like hubs – so I think it would be a mistake to regulate research at this point.

TC: Where are we going to see the most growth in coming decades? In the states? In Europe? In China? Do you think Silicon Valley will lose its place as the power center of tech?

JB: I would never bet against Silicon Valley, having done this for a couple of decades. Silicon Valley and China will remain so much at the center.

TC: And on a par with one another?

JB: I think so. China has five million graduating engineers every year. That’s 10x [the number of engineers graduating each year from U.S. schools]. We have the very best universities in the world. At the same time, China is developing a phenomenal group of technologists, engineers, and mathematicians.

TC: We haven’t talked about Japan, but how does Softbank change the landscape, in your opinion? Does the capital at its disposal change everything?

JB: It does. I know the SoftBank leadership. We’ve co-invested together. We compete at times. The late-stage venture capital business is forever changed by what Softbank is doing.
For the earliest-stage companies, where there might be a group of brilliant scientists and engineers, 20 to 30 people, and they aren’t looking to raise $50 million; they’re looking to raise $10 million. It’s very competitive still and it’s where I love to partner and compete. The opportunity to scale and build a global business is still very high.

TC: Do you think SoftBank is a kingmaker? I suppose there’s a chance they’ll actually drown some companies in capital, but I’d be worried if they funded a competitor of mine.

JB: In certain segments where capital and scale make such a difference, Softbank is going to change the nature of the game. For a lot of industries in a lot of segments, such as AI, you’re trying to find 10 or 20 of the very best medical AI researchers in the world, and that’s where it’s the talent scarcity more than a capital scarcity that plays a central role. But for certain other businesses, SoftBank is making a very big difference.

TC: Before you go, ICOs. Here to say? Short-term phenomenon?

JB: I think they’ll be a part of the overall financing landscape over the next five to 10 years, and that we’ll see ICOs and different coins. It’s very hard to predict: Does Ethereum win? Which other coin might it be? But for sure, the nature of fintech and digital finance will result in more fundraising options for entrepreneurs at all stages. I just don’t think it will change overnight.

TC: You own bitcoin. Have you participated in any pre-sales of ICOs?

JB: Not yet, but I’m looking closely and globally. There are a lot of opportunities that I’m evaluating but I haven’t decided are compelling at this point.
This article originally appeared on TechCrunch.

via TechCrunch.com

G-Summit in Pebble Beach on August 23-25th, 2017!

MOQIPEOPLE INSIDER:
G-Summit in Pebble Beach on August 23-25th, 2017!

Make high-level connections and get the inside scoop on AI’s current state from G-Summit Pebble Beach.

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AI’s role in healthcare, autonomous driving, finance, and logistics, we’ll cover hard science perspectives from multiple disciplines to find common ground. Some examples:

In a discovery that concludes an 80-year quest, Stanford and University of California researchers found evidence of particles that are their own antiparticles. These Majorana fermions could one day help make quantum computers more robust.

Nanotechnology is rapidly entering the world of smart materials and taking them to the next level. Will artificial photosynthesis secure a sustainable future? Can we create a real-life invisibility cloak? Two top scientists from UC Berkeley will show you the amazing discoveries by using nanotechnology.

The physical origin of dark energy, which makes up about 70% of the contents of the Universe, may be the most important unsolved problem in all of physics, providing clues to a unified quantum theory of gravity. Learn more from astrophysicist, Alex Filippenko.

These RoundTable topics include:
The Future of Learning in Intelligent AI Assistants (Carnegie Mellon)
Understanding Video (Facebook)
AI, A Curse or Blessing for Cyber Security (Didi)
Deep Learning Isn’t Magic – Assessment of Technology, Research, and Opportunities (Allen Institute for AI)
Autonomous & Connected Cars (Tesla)
AI in Human-Human and Human-Machine Interactions (Amazon)
AI Building AI – Automatic Design of Deep Networks (Sentient)
The Democratization of AI at Google (Google)
The Partnership on AI – Coming Together Around Best Practices in AI (Microsoft)

Guests & Speakers Include:
Chief Scientist, Salesforce
Chief AI Officer, Citadel
Chief Architect, VP of Cloud, Xiaomi
Founding Head of Machine Learning Department, Carnegie Mellon University
Chairman, Mail.Ru Group
Partner, Hillhouse Capital
Professor of Physics, Stanford University
Chief Executive Officer, Allen Institute for Artificial Intelligence
Chief Strategy Officer, Softbank Robotics NA
Director of AI Research, Apple

The ten companies participating in the AI Startup Top 10 at G-Summit Pebble Beach.

For a full list of guests and speakers attending G-Summit, click here:
http://www.thegsummit.org
http://www.thegsummit.org/agenda

A New Startup –BRANDLESS™, an Online eCommerce Platform for Everything You Want to Buy for Just for $3 Raised $50 Million in New Funding Round

MOQIPEOPLE INSIDER:

Heads Up!!!#Entrepreneur #Startup #Aug2017

A New Startup –BRANDLESS™, an Online eCommerce Platform for Everything You Want to Buy for Just for $3 Raised $50 Million in New Funding Round from New Enterprise Associates, Cowboy Ventures, Redpoint Ventures, and Google Ventures

BRANDLESS™ – Based in San Francisco and Minneapolis, BRANDLESS™ was brought to life on July 11, 2017. They’re a group of thinkers, eaters, doers, and lovers of life with big dreams about changing the world. Their mission is deeply rooted in quality, transparency, and community-driven values. Better stuff, fewer dollars. It’s that simple.

Tina Sharkey is the Co-founder and CEO at BRANDLESS™. She is is passionate and curious. The intention for the year that she shared with the team is “WHOLE.” 
Ido Leffler is the Co-founder and Chairman at BRANDLESS™. He is audacious and passionate. The intention for the year that he shared with the team is “LIVE.”

BRANDLESS™ business model acts as the opposite of a model employed by eCommerce giants like Amazon and Jet.com, where the price varies considerably based on an algorithm and whether you choose free return shipping, respectively. Instead, everything is a reliable, fixed price regardless of when you’re shopping and what experience you’re looking for. Starting today, customers will find everything from dish soap to olive oil for sale on the site. Therefore, BRANDLESS™, pitching itself as the “Procter & Gamble for millennials,” offers a host of essential consumer items for a single low price of $3. Instead of a big logo emblazoned on a product, the actual attributes of the product are listed on the package instead.

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BRANDLESS™ was created in 2016 by Sherpa Capital venture partner Tina Sharkey and entrepreneur Ido Leffler. The brand just closed a $35 million Series B round led by New Enterprise Associates, which brought the startup’s total venture funding to $50 million. Investors include Cowboy Ventures, Redpoint Ventures, and Google Ventures

The idea, in a nutshell, is “democratizing access to awesome stuff at really fair and affordable pricing,” according to Sharkey.

The name of BRANDLESS™ game is simplicity. There are only two real choices to make on BRANDLESS™ website: What do you want, and how much of it do you want?

BRANDLESS™ Blog- Awesome Strangers

“You might be thinking BRANDLESS™ sounds too good to be true. And trust us, we spoke to lots of skeptics when we shared the stealth BRANDLESS™ story early on. The response was so remarkable we wanted to capture it on film.”

“So, on June 28, 2017, we invited a group of Awesome Strangers to our lab for a blind taste test. They knew nothing about Brandless. As predicted, the responses did not disappoint. Seeing really is believing.” You may want to try this at home and tell us how it went at community@brandless.com

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BRANDLESS™ is also offering a subscription service called “B.More.” The membership, which runs $36 a year, lowers the free shipping threshold from $72 to $48. For all other orders, a flat shipping rate of $9 is charged. The founders promised more benefits for B.More members, including a donated meal to the nonprofit Feeding America, in addition to the donation that is already made after eachB RANDLESS™ transaction.

Ultimately, Sharkey says that Brandless is about reclaiming one’s identity through “the freedom to allow people to define themselves as who they are, and not what a brand or a society is projecting onto them.”

The future of grocery shopping is online—and incredibly cheap. On the heels of the news that Amazon is buying Whole Foods for $13.7 billion, a new company is selling hundreds of pantry staples for $3 or less on its new site, Brandless. The online store, launching today, July 11, is removing most of the markups across food, beauty, and household items, and co-founder Tina Sharkey hopes that you’ll replace your favorite brands with their “products of similar quality.”

“There’s an average savings of 40 percent across our whole Everyday Essentials assortment, but in many cases it’s much higher—up to 360 percent,” Sharkey tells Bon Appétit of the initial 200-plus item collection. They call this price difference “brand tax,” which is essentially paying more for a name you recognize. This doesn’t just apply to the Heinz ketchups and JIF peanut butters of the world—generic brands also have price markups. Customers also won’t be paying a premium for food values with BRANDLESS™. Most of their foods are organic, and all are fair trade, non-GMO, free of any artificial preservatives, flavors, and colors, and fully against animal testing.

Read more info. via:

https://brandless.com

Artsy – Visual Art Online Platform Has Raised $50 Million at $275 Million Valuation in New Funding Round

MOQIPEOPLE INSIDER:
Artsy – Visual Art Online Platform Has Raised $50 Million at $275 Million Valuation in New Funding Round

New York startup that helps broker art sales online has picked up funding and board members

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Artsy has raised $50M to support their goal of creating a larger, more vibrant and diverse art ecosystem. This is a major step for the company and validation of Artsy’s model of partnering with and empowering the art industry–rather than competing with it.

“Artsy excited to use these funds to expand the art market and support a world with more art, artists, and the institutions that support them–a world where art becomes as ubiquitous as music” said Carter Cleveland, Artsy’s chief executive and original founder.

The market for buying, selling and learning about visual art online is getting a significant boost today. Artsy, the New York startup that has positioned itself as the go-to place for all things arty — a platform for people to learn about visual art online as well as explore opportunities to buy and sell work — has raised $50 million in funding.

The company is not disclosing its valuation but deal intelligence service Pitchbook notes that it is $275 million post-money (and $225 million pre-money).

The global art market is currently valued at around $44 billion annually, and about $3.75 billion of that was spent online in 2016, according to The European Fine Art Foundation, a rise of about 15 percent over 2015.

New York startup Arsty charges galleries a subscription fee for connecting them to buyers. It charges auction houses a commission to connect buyers with art work.

Competitors of Arsty include Berlin-based online auction house Auctionata Inc. and New York-based ArtBinder Inc.

Carter Cleveland, Artsy’s co-founder and CEO, said in an interview that the plan is to use the investment to dive deeper into auctions, which today are the fastest-growing part of the site after the company secured partnerships with Christie’s, Sotheby’s and Phillips, the three leading brick-and-mortar auction houses.

Cleveland said Artsy has seen auctions quadruple in number on the platform in the last year, and now Artsy accounts for one-third of all received bids for auctions it hosts, and 9% of all sales.

Mr. Cleveland was joined at Artsy by co-founders Dasha Zhukova and Wendi Murdoch after the two had made contributions to the seed round, he said.

Artsy enables more than $20 million worth of art sales per month from a user base of 2 million unique visitors per month (who also visit it for its content, which includes an in-house magazine and other informational content) across its businesses that include its more than 1,800 commercial galleries as a member network of art gallery partners spanning more than 90 countries, according to the company.

The Series D, which brings the total raised by Artsy to around $100 million, was led by Avenir Growth Capital, a new firm out of New York, and includes a very long list of investors of 56, according to the Form D we spotted (TechCrunch). They include investment firm Avenir Growth Capital and included Mr. Kushner’s Thrive Capital, L Catterton and Shumway Capital. Mr. Kushner is brother to Jared Kushner, President Donald Trump’s senior adviser and son-in-law. New individual investors in the art destination include Mr. Gebbia and Liberty Media Chief Executive Greg Maffei. The art dealer Larry Gagosian (founder of Gagosian Gallery), Airbnb co-founder Joe Gebbia, members of the Rockefeller and Acquavella families, Greg Maffei of Liberty Media, Dasha Zhukova (Artsy co-founder, founder of Garage Museum of Contemporary Art and partner of Russian oligarch Roman Abramovich), board members Wendi Murdoch (also an Artsy co-founder), Sky Dayton (Earthlink, Boingo), and new board members Rich Barton (Expedia, Glassdoor, Zillow) and Bob Pittman (MTV co-founder, iHeartMedia CEO), and “such a proud seed investor” said Jim Breyer founder and CEO of Breyer Capital.

New York-based Artsy, incorporated as Art.sy Inc., features images of paintings, photography and sculptures, and it enables people to contact sellers. Artsy partners with museums, galleries, art fairs and others behind artists’ work.

 

IMG_3224Pablo Picasso, “Nature morte au verre sous la lampe” (“Still Life with Glass under the Lamp”), 1962. Auction house Phillips sold this painting via Artsy, a marketplace for art. PHOTO: IMAGE COURTESY OF PHILLIPS / PHILLIPS.COM

“Technology is the next big frontier in the art market,” said art dealer Larry Gagosian, an early and returning investor in the company.

Under the deal, iHeart Media Chief Executive Bob Pittman, Benchmark Capital venture partner Rich Barton and Avenir Growth Capital co-founder Andrew Sugrue have agreed to join the board.

Founded in 2009, Artsy features art offered from galleries, auction houses and art fairs that can be accessed via its website and app. In 2016, Artsy began offering bids in live auctions, in a partnership with auction houses Christie’s, Sotheby’s , Phillips and Heritage.

The funding signifies an interesting shift in the relationship between art and the internet.

Art was one of the early movers when it came to early e-commerce efforts, with startups in the 1990s building portals to sell work from established dealers and artists, and companies like eBay and Amazon partnering with the auction houses to bring lots and their auction ethos to the web.

Much of that never really went anywhere, though, partly because of skepticism about whether it was possible to be able to authenticate work well enough on digital platforms, partly because the majority of buyers and sellers were not digitially-oriented, and, in the case of services like live auctions, whether the infrastructure was there to make it work. But the art market has evolved. Galleries and artists now directly use the internet to spread the word about their work, buyers are more digitally savvy, the quality of networks and devices has vastly improved; and the infrastructure that goes into making the art market run has caught up with the times: if you look at pictures of works of art on Artsy, you can zoom in to get very granular detail, and there is a long vetting process by way of the dealer connection, much like the relationship clothing site Farfetch provides between high end fashion houses and boutiques and buyers.

Artsy has been one of a group of startups that has reaped the benefits. (Others include Catawiki and Auctionata in Europe.)

“Art is one of the last consumer verticals that has not gone online,” Cleveland said today. “When we first started out, a lot of people asked us, ‘Will you ever be able to convince the industry?’ Well, we did that and then we were asked, ‘Would anyone actually ever bid on expensive artworks on there?’ Now we can definitively say Yes.” Fun fact: Artsy was part of the first-ever Disrupt lineup of startups back in 2010 (its old Art.sy URL no longer directs to the site, though).

Going forward, there are plans to add in more features as well. One of the sticking points so far has been that Artsy doesn’t have video for their auction streams. The reason, Cleveland said, is because of the transaction distance on its platform: it attracts a global audience and so buyers can be up to 3,000 miles away from where the sale is originating, “one of the furthest of any streamed e-commerce site online,” Cleveland said. That means offering video would have too high a latency and so real-time bidding would not work.

Another is to push more sales, of course, as a way to bringing more turnover and activity into the market.

“Despite an estimated $3 trillion of art assets in the world, only $44 billion trades in a given year—and less than 2 percent of qualified buyers participate in this market due to high transaction costs, long lead times, and limited transparency on pricing and value,” said Sugrue, in a statement.

“We believe Artsy will bring this last major consumer category online and thereby substantially expand the size of the global art market. We look forward to working with Artsy to make a larger, more connected art market a reality.”

Artsy is not disclosing its valuation except to say that it is definitely higher than before. We’re still trying to find out what it is.

Read more info via:
www.artsy.net