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Hello and welcome to Daily Crunch for June 30, 2021. Itâs the last day of the quarter. Itâs the last day of the first half of the year. Itâs the halfway mark for your New Yearâs resolutions. The kickoff of Q3 means that we are heading into yet another earnings season. To close the second quarter, a number of companies went public including Didi and SentinelOne. The TechCrunch take is that weâre seeing some interesting pricing differentials between companies from the United States compared to China. — Alex |
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The TechCrunch Top 3 - Robinhood fined ahead of IPO: While we count down to Robinhoodâs IPO filing, long expected after a strong first quarter, the company was hit with $70 million in fines and penalties today for what the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority (FINRA) described as âwidespread and significant harm suffered by customers.â
- Venture capital drama: TechCrunchâs Natasha Mascarenhas scooped that SF-based Hinge Health booted a board member after they invested in what the company considered to be a competitor. The news is notable by itself, but also underscores how founder-friendly the market truly is today; this might not have happened back when venture capitalists held more power.
- Byjuâs leaks student data:Â Todayâs breach involves a startup called Salesken.ai, an exposed server, and Byjuâs user data. Byjuâs is an Indian edtech company, and a very highly valued one at that. Salesken provides what TechCrunch describes as âcustomer relationship technology,â which helps explain why it might have had the other companyâs data. No excuse, however.
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Startups/VC Letâs start our startup coverage today with three space-related stories: Next up, the creator economy: But that wasnât all. Hereâs more from todayâs critical startup coverage: - $5M for a LGBTQ+ neobank: While many neobanks are targeting the population at large, others are taking a more targeted approach. Such is the case with Daylight, which wants to provide banking services to the queer community. It joins startups like Fair and others in taking a slightly more niche approach to the popular fintech model.
- $250M for drone logistics:Â Remember that startup that was using drones to deliver medical supplies in Africa? It was called Zipline. And it has since expanded its goals, technology, and, today, capital base.
- And then there was news from Gusto that the HR-tech unicorn is breaking out pieces of its core technology so that other companies can embed payroll services and the like. While this is cool, what we really want is a Gusto S-1.
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One perennial problem inside startups: Because no one on the founding team has significant marketing experience, growth-related efforts are pro forma and generally unlikely to move the needle. Everyone wants higher click-through rates, but creating ads that “stand out” is a risky strategy, especially when you don’t know what you’re doing. This guest post by Demand Curve offers seven strategies for boosting CTR that you can clone and deploy today inside your own startup. Here’s one: If customers are talking about you online, reach out to ask if you can add a screenshot of their reviews to your advertising. Testimonials are a form of social proof that boost conversions, and they’re particularly effective when used in retargeting ads. Earlier this week, we ran another post about optimizing email marketing for early-stage startups. We’ll have more expert growth advice coming soon, so stay tuned. (Extra Crunch is our membership program, which helps founders and startup teams get ahead. You can sign up here.) Read More |
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Big Tech Inc. From techâs biggest companies, we have three stories for you today. Letâs proceed in descending order of market cap, shall we? - Amazon doesnât want to be regulated:Â And it may be worried to boot. Thatâs our takeaway from news that the company is trying to sideline the current FTC chair. Tough, is our first read of the companyâs complaints and demands.
- Instagram wants in on paid following: Following in Big Tweetâs footsteps, Instagram is âbuilding its own version of Twitterâs Super Follow with a feature that would allow online creators to publish ‘exclusive’ content to their Instagram Stories thatâs only available to their fans.â So it would be stuff, only available for fans? How interesting. Thereâs another service that has a similar effort. And Twitter allows for adult content. Instagram does not. Hmm.
- Twitter makes NFTs, because why not: Want to know when something jumps the shark? When a major social network buys in, right? Major social networks are the boomers of the technology world — extending the analogy, Oracle is a ghost that haunts your attic — meaning that they are inherently uncool. And now Twitter has NFTs. Yay, or something.
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TechCrunch wants you to recommend growth marketers who have expertise in SEO, social, content writing and more! If youâre a growth marketer, pass this survey along to your clients; weâd like to hear about why they loved working with you. Read More |
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