New Straits Times

The next wave of start-ups

Uber and Airbnb were part of an early generation of tech start-ups that quickly reached US$1 billion in value. The up-and-coming generation is looking very different, writes Erin Griffith

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TECHNOLOGY start-ups worth US$1 billion (about RM4 billion), once as rare as unicorns, are now plentiful enough and old enough that there’s a new generation behind them — one that looks very different. Silicon Valley’s current crop of highly valued tech start-ups, which include now household names like Uber and Airbnb, all benefited from the spread of smartphone­s and cheap cloud computing.

Many of these companies built global empires by simply taking existing businesses — like taxis, food delivery and hotels — and making them mobile.

Some of the start-ups became giants: Uber, for instance, may reach a US$120 billion valuation this year.

But as those companies matured and prepare to go public, the easy opportunit­ies for disrupting old-line industries are drying up.

Now, many of the up-and-coming startups that may become the next unicorns have names like Benchling and Blend. And they largely focus on software for specific industries like farms, banks and life sciences companies.

That’s according to an analysis for The New York Times by CB Insights, a firm that tracks venture capital and start-ups. CB Insights used a variety of data — including financial health and the strength and size of the market a company serves — to identify 50 start-ups that may be on a path to achieving a US$1 billion valuation (though there is no guarantee they will get there).

POTENTIAL UNICORNS

Software start-ups may seem boring. But many of them are growing fast because industries like agricultur­e require more software tools as they adapt to the tech era, said Jason Green, an investor at Emergence, a venture capital firm that invests in cloud software companies.

“Maybe it’s not as sexy as the companies in the first wave,” said Kirsten Green, a venture capitalist at Forerunner Ventures. “A lot of those industries are big giant industries that we need in our lives and in business, and they need to be modernised,” she said.

Other potential unicorns, such as Checkr and Earnin, are building businesses off the last generation of unicorns by offering services to them.

CB Insights also pinpointed three startups that are popular with millennial women — Glossier, Zola and Faire — as unicorn candidates.

Some of these companies may reach the US$1 billion threshold quickly, as unicorn start-ups are created more quickly than ever, said Anand Sanwal, chief executive of CB Insights.

Funding rounds of US$100 million or more — a once eye-popping sum of capital — have become common. Today, there are 315 unicorns, compared with 131 in 2015.

“If you are one of those high-momentum companies, investors are going to be beating down your door because there is so much interest in investing in the next big winner,” Sanwal said.

SOFTWARE FOR SCIENCE, FARMS, FINANCE AND MORE

In 2012, Sajith Wickramase­kara founded Benchling. His goal: To solve some of the personal frustratio­ns he had with the outdated technology tools that he used in the molecular biology labs of the Massachuse­tts Institute of Technology when he was a student.

Benchling, based in San Francisco, began providing software that allows lab scientists to replace their paper notebooks with searchable records stored in the cloud. That way, scientists could more easily use the records to collaborat­e with one another, Wickramase­kara figured. Younger researcher­s were also increasing­ly asking for such tools.

“Software has touched a lot of different sectors of the economy, but it has not kept up in the field of science,” said Kaiser MullaFeroz­e, Benchling’s chief marketing officer.

Today, 140,000 scientists use Benchling’s software, including academics at Harvard and M.I.T. who use a free version, and paying customers like Pfizer and Regeneron.

Benchling charges smaller companies US$15,000 a year, while large customers who use more advanced features pay millions of dollars a year, Mulla-Feroze said.

Benchling has raised nearly US$30 million in funding. Last year, the start-up tripled its revenue and number of customers, Mulla-Feroze said.

The company is a representa­tive of a new class of software start-ups as different industries adopt more technology. Green, the venture capitalist, said it’s become clear that software aimed at niche sectors offers larger opportunit­ies than previously expected.

Other fast-growing start-ups that fit this descriptio­n include Farmers Business Network, which was founded in 2014 by Charles Baron, a former Google program manager, and Amol Deshpande, a serial entreprene­ur and venture capitalist.

The company charges farmers US$700 a year to share and analyse data about their farms, buy supplies and sell crops. Baron said the start-up counts 7,700 farms as customers and has raised nearly US$200 million in funding.

A company like Farmers Business Network wouldn’t have been possible 10 years ago, before the proliferat­ion of cloud computing and the “digitisati­on” of farming processes, Baron added. Now, farms produce a lot of data, which Farmers Business Network is helping them to process and use to make decisions.

“Agricultur­e is going through a digital revolution,” he said.

SERVING MILLENNIAL WOMEN

In 2013, when Shan-Lyn Ma’s friends began getting married, she noticed that most digital tools for wedding planning were outdated, poorly designed or cost money.

So Ma, who previously worked at a site that held flash sales for designer merchandis­e, Gilt Groupe, started Zola, which offers a streamline­d place to create free wedding registries.

Zola now sells 70,000 gift items in its registry. It has also developed tools like online guest lists and RSVP tracking, all designed to lure more couples to its registry product. The site has been a hit with millennial­s, allowing the company to raise US$140 million in funding and reach a valuation of US$600 million.

NEXT-GENERATION GIG ECONOMY

The rise of companies like Uber and Airbnb has created its own mini-economy of startups.

One of those is Checkr, which was founded in 2014 by Daniel Yanisse and Jonathan Perichon, who worked as software engineers at Deliv, a delivery start-up.

Both had become frustrated at the slowmoving background checks for the delivery drivers they wanted to hire for Deliv, so they created their own business to expedite the process.

Now Checkr works with Uber, Lyft and Instacart. It has also added other types of customers like the insurance company Allstate.

Checkr is selling “picks and shovels” to the gig economy, said Rich Wong, a partner at Accel, a venture firm that invested in the start-up.

Another potential unicorn that serves gig economy workers is Earnin, founded in 2012 and based in Palo Alto, California. Earnin, which makes an app that provides free cash advances to workers, has a partnershi­p with Uber that lets its drivers cash out immediatel­y after a ride.

Ram Palaniappa­n, Earnin’s founder, said the app has been downloaded more than one million times and its users open the app 25 times a month on average.

AND THE REST

Notably, 17 of the fast-rising start-ups are dispersed internatio­nally.

CB Insights identified five companies in India, four in China, and three in Latin America as possible candidates to reach US$1 billion in valuation. They ranged from CargoX, a Brazilian start-up using technology to make trucking companies more efficient, to Deputy, an Australian company that provides tools to businesses to manage their hourly workers.

 ?? PHOTOS BY ERIN DYBEDAHL AND HANNAH MENTZ ?? Seventeen of the fast-rising start-ups are dispersed internatio­nally. Illustrati­on by Tyler Comrie.
PHOTOS BY ERIN DYBEDAHL AND HANNAH MENTZ Seventeen of the fast-rising start-ups are dispersed internatio­nally. Illustrati­on by Tyler Comrie.
 ?? PICTURE FROM FREEPIK ?? Today, 140,000 scientists use Benchling’s software.
PICTURE FROM FREEPIK Today, 140,000 scientists use Benchling’s software.

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