Only 7 days left to save on TechCrunch Disrupt 2024 tickets

We’re entering the final week of discounted rates for TechCrunch Disrupt 2024. Save up to $600 on select individual ticket types until August 23.

Join a dynamic crowd of over 10,000 attendees, startup founders and VC investors at Moscone West in San Francisco from October 28-30.

Here are just a few big reasons to attend Disrupt 2024.

Gain insight from top industry leaders

Explore six industry-specific stages and learn from the best in the industry. Our speakers are cutting-edge innovators and recognized experts in their domains.

AI Stage presented by Google Cloud

Builders Stage

Fintech Stage

SaaS Stage 

Space Stage presented by Aerospace

Startup Battlefield 200

A highlight of Disrupt 2024 is the Startup Battlefield, where a few chosen startups pitch to a panel of top VC leaders. The winner will earn a $100,000 equity-free prize and the coveted Disrupt Cup.

The judging panel includes industry heavyweights like Sharon Winter, vice president at Atomic; Sangeen Zeb, general partner at Google Ventures; Jon Rosenbaum, managing director at Insight Partners; Victor Lazarte, general partner at Benchmark; and many more.

Their feedback offers valuable insight into what makes a startup successful. Get a front-row seat to this expert evaluation and discover the qualities that drive success, only at Disrupt 2024.

Roundtables and Breakout Sessions

Participate in a 30-minute collaborative conversation in an intimate setting, led by an industry expert.

You can also join a 50-minute Q&A session, offered on a first-come, first-served basis. This is your chance to dive deep with industry leaders, addressing the pressing challenges faced by today’s entrepreneurs.

Networking and Braindates

Building strong connections is crucial for the growth and funding of any startup. Disrupt 2024 offers numerous opportunities to network and expand your Rolodex.

ScaleUp Startup Exhibitor Program

Series A and B startups can showcase their brand at the heart of Disrupt’s bustling foot traffic. The ScaleUp Startup Exhibitor Program offers a prime opportunity to enhance your brand’s visibility and enjoy exclusive benefits. You get:

Four tickets for your team.

Access to lead generation and the Disrupt press list.

Exhibit for one day at Disrupt at a discount.

Branding on the Disrupt website and table signage.

10 Expo+ passes for your network.

And so much more.

Braindates

Access the exclusive Disrupt investor attendee list, comprised only of those who opt in, ensuring targeted and effective networking.

With the Disrupt event app, you can easily arrange 1:1 meetings or join small group sessions with like-minded founders, investors, and industry leaders.

Side Events

Amplify your brand’s presence during “Disrupt Week” by organizing a Side Event that we’ll help promote.

From industry meetups and VC office hours to workshops, happy hours, or fun runs, you can tailor the event to align with your brand. Applying is free of charge.

Secure your Disrupt 2024 discount

There are countless other reasons to attend one of the year’s most anticipated tech events, but it’s best to experience it for yourself.

Save on your tickets by registering for Disrupt 2024 before August 23. Grab your discounted tickets here.

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EliseAI lands $75M for chatbots that help property managers deal with renters

EliseAI, a company developing a suite of AI-powered property management tools for landlords, has raised $75 million in a Series D round that values the startup at $1 billion.

EliseAI is the brainchild of co-founder and CEO Minna Song, who met the company’s second co-founder, Tony Stoyanov, while the two were undergraduate students at Cambridge. After graduating, Song moved to New York City, where she took a job as an administrative assistant at a residential real estate firm.

At the firm, Song saw how inefficiencies in the rental and leasing industry — particularly inefficiencies around messaging current and prospective tenants — were contributing to management teams’ exhaustion and burnout, she says.

“Recognizing this challenge, Stoyanov and I began creating AI software to automate communication,” Song told TechCrunch, “and we founded EliseAI in 2017.”

Today, EliseAI employs an army of chatbots to text with, email and respond to calls from renters about things such as apartment tours, maintenance requests, lease renewals and delinquencies. Song says the chatbots are trained on renters’ questions and conversations — both people looking to lease apartments and current residents — and are designed to hand off requests to humans automatically where necessary.

Image Credits: EliseAI

“We only use data that we generated internally,” Song said. “We do not buy or use external data. This gives us control over the data we use.”

As a generally privacy-conscious person, I would be wary of texting chatbots like EliseAI’s any personal information — and volunteering chats for the company’s AI training. So I asked Song about EliseAI’s data retention policies. She said that the company lets users request that their data be deleted, opt out of providing their info for training and, in compliance with laws like the California Consumer Privacy Act, receive a copy of any data that EliseAI has on them.

“We do not sell, re-license or otherwise share any consumer data for any purpose,” Song added. “Consumer data is the exclusive property of our relevant customer — a property manager or owner — and we only use that data for limited purposes as expressly permitted by our customer contracts, our privacy policy and applicable law.”

Some reviews of EliseAI’s chatbots are critical and suggest that nuance isn’t the AI’s strong suit. According to one reviewer, the chatbots — which don’t clearly identify themselves as AI — sometimes fail to loop in managers and agents when they should, and book tours of properties without key info such as a move-in date or phone number.

Song, however, asserts that EliseAI’s chatbots “continuously improve their ability to anticipate renter needs,” and on average boost lease tour bookings by 125% while decreasing overdue payments by 50%, according to the company’s internal data.

Image Credits: EliseAI

“Our technology is designed for multifamily and single-family rental owners, operators and third-party property management companies to enhance operational efficiency, reduce tech stacks and costs associated with single-point solutions, increase occupancy, reduce delinquent payments and improve the renter experience,” Song said.

In addition to the chatbots, EliseAI offers a dashboard where property managers can keep tabs on prospects’ and residents’ requests (e.g. work orders), generate reports on operations and track the progress of renewals. The dashboard comes free with any of EliseAI’s AI products, which the company offers as modules priced according to a software-as-a-service model.

EliseAI competes with vendors including Colleen AI, Funnel, Knock and LeaseHawk. Song says that the company has more than 350 customers, including 70% of the top 50 rental housing operators in the U.S.

“We did not pursue hyper-growth in headcount, instead focusing on controlled hiring and sustainable burn management while continuously investing strategically in revenue growth,” Song said. “We have observed that funding has remained strong for companies like EliseAI that effectively address enduring enterprise challenges such as operational efficiency, particularly in foundational markets like housing, which are always in demand.”

With another successful funding round under its belt, EliseAI, which employs around 150 full-time employees out of its NYC offices, plans to further expand into a rather unexpected market: healthcare. Song thinks that much of the company’s tech stack can be adapted to serve health clinics’ administrative needs, like appointment scheduling and billing and payments.

Indeed, EliseAI launched a healthcare solution in 2023 called HealthAI, and Song says that several providers are already using it.

Image Credits: EliseAI

It’s a crowded market, though; EliseAI will have to compete against startups like Hyro, which similarly use AI to handle text and voice conversations between healthcare organizations and their patients.

Sapphire Ventures led the round with participation from Point72 Private Investments, Divco West, Navitas Capital and Koch Real Estate Investments. Bringing EliseAI’s total raised to $140 million, the new capital will be put toward hiring, AI R&D, product development and supporting EliseAI’s go-to-market efforts, Song said.

“Our primary focus was bringing in an excellent partner for the business; that is why we chose Sapphire,” Song added. Sapphire partner Cathy Gao will be joining EliseAI’s board of directors.

“While EliseAI is currently the most widely adopted AI platform in this space, the residential real estate market is still in the early stages of leveraging AI to its potential,” Gao said in a statement. “I believe the company is well-positioned to lead the charge in housing and deliver similar results in new verticals like healthcare.”

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Enhance your brand: Host a Side Event at TechCrunch Disrupt 2024

Elevate your brand’s presence at TechCrunch Disrupt 2024 in San Francisco by hosting a custom Side Event during “Disrupt Week,” taking place October 26 through November 1.

Engage face-to-face with over 10,000 Disrupt 2024 attendees, your network, and the Bay Area’s dynamic tech community. You can host any activity that resonates with your brand such as industry meetups, VC office hours, workshops, fun runs, cocktail parties, and happy hours — the event possibilities are endless!

Don’t miss out on expanding your brand visibility during one of the most iconic tech events of the year. Applications close September 6.

How do we support your Side Event?

We’ll boost your Side Event by promoting it across multiple channels, reaching thousands of our audience:

Disrupt 2024 Side Event page

Disrupt 2024 Agenda

Disrupt 2024 Mobile App Agenda

Disrupt 2024 attendee emails

Disrupt 2024 articles

Plus, you’ll receive a discount code on Disrupt 2024 passes to share with your team and network.

Get started before applications close

Don’t miss out — Side Event applications close on September 6. Applying and participating is entirely free.

Simply submit a proposal that describes your event’s vision, goals, and logistical needs. Once approved, the TechCrunch Disrupt team will help ensure your event’s success.

As the event host, you’ll lead the planning, execution, and management of your event, including covering costs and handling registrations and communications. 

Apply now to make your mark during Disrupt Week and boost your brand’s presence.

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How CNH’s ‘black belt’ M&A head makes deals

Heavy equipment manufacturer CNH Industrial has a long history of mergers and acquisitions, at times supervising legendary brands like Ferrari. But five years ago, as agtech was booming, the global giant was struggling to tap into the startup scene. 

The conglomerate turned to one of its longest-tenured executives, a swashbuckling Italian businessman named Michele Lombardi.

Lombardi had come up through CNH’s business development group, part of what he describes as a “black belt team” that forged corporate alliances at the highest levels. When the company came to him in 2019 with this new task, he was essentially starting a new chapter “from scratch.” 

“They got stuck, and they couldn’t really build a pipeline of successful transactions,” Lombardi told TechCrunch. “When we started, we knew we had very limited reach. We had no network.”

The way to build one? Just start talking, Lombardi explained. In particular, he went right to the venture capital firms, knowing many would be looking for exits for their investments in startups building things like autonomous farm equipment or precision farming data. 

Those conversations led to more connections and in just a few years his growing team — which now sits at around 14 employees — had built that missing pipeline to interesting startups and founders. 

That work has led to 12 deals over the last five years, split between six acquisitions and six mostly minority investments. They run the gamut technologically, ranging from farm management software and to AI-powered drone imaging to satellite navigation and even tractor companies. 

The success of Lombardi’s team has matured at a time when, like many other sectors, venture investment in agtech has been hard to come by. Valuations, total amount invested and exits are all down from the highs a few years ago, according to data from PitchBook.

This drought has proved a ripe opportunity for companies like CNH, creating a sort of investment and acquisition arms race as they try to corner the market on new technologies. 

“Now is actually a great time” to be in corporate venture capital, he said. “Now is when you can really help, where you can really come in and be a good partner. There’s phenomenal opportunities out there, a lot of worried entrepreneurs. And it’s a great time to identify good ideas that maybe are more affordable.” 

Similar to other industries, Lombardi said agtech went through “a euphoric phase” three to four years ago, which he says inflated valuations “a bit too much.” 

“This downturn will be painful, but we’ll clean up a bit [of] the landscape from both investors that maybe don’t have the knowledge and experience to be in this space, and startups that probably never had a sufficiently articulated idea, or something that would end up being a competitive advantage that made them a sustainable enterprise,” he said. “The entire landscape will come out much, much stronger. And I think it will be great to be in that space with the experience we have developed in this period.”

A career he was built for

To build out his network, Lombardi leaned on his two decades of experience at CNH operating various arms of the multinational company’s sprawling agriculture and construction equipment business. 

He came into the company at a time when it was going through an enormous restructuring that involved the combination of the companies Case and New Holland (hence the modern consolidated name). His early days were spent inside CNH’s business development group in Italy, which he describes as a holding company that sat atop a wild cornucopia of companies that included Fiat, Ferrari and even a newspaper.

Over the next 20 years, he managed parts of CNH’s businesses in Switzerland, Thailand, China, Australia and New Zealand. With each post, Lombardi garnered fresh skills. While in Thailand, for instance, he oversaw the conglomerate’s entire Southeast Asia operations as it grew from a $40 million business to a $400 million affair.

That expansive experience directly informed the work he’s done since 2019 when he says he was “poached” back to Chicago to pilot CNH’s investment and M&A team. 

On the investment side, Lombardi stresses the key difference between being a VC and running a corporate venture shop. “Our job is not simply to do the investment and get a return,” he explained, while juking left and right a bit at his standing desk. “My lens is different, yeah? I invest in companies when I think that they can accelerate my technological roadmap.” 

Lombardi can focus less on returns because CNH has hauled in around $20 billion in revenue each of the last three years. That frees him up to think more strategically about who his team hands money to — something that other investors may not have the luxury of, especially as the funding market dried up.

On the M&A side, Lombardi says he likes to bring in people from all of CNH’s different organizations when evaluating a startup. It’s those employees who will tell him: “Yes, I like that technology team, I like their solution, I like the product, we think it will make a difference in our industry,” he says.

Lombardi says his team often goes beyond investment and M&A as it looks to supercharge CNH’s abilities. And he exploits the company’s global reach to track developments in all types of different markets. 

“We have a mapping of the existing startups at different maturity levels before any advisor would come to us and propose us anything, and we spontaneously reach out to entrepreneurs and chit chat with them, understand what they’re doing,” he said. “Often we build collaborative opportunities that don’t necessarily lead to an investment, but help the startup, help our industry around us develop with more confidence and it educates us.” 

Lombardi likes to look these entrepreneurs in the eye, so he prefers in-person or video calls when possible. Lombardi said he needs to look someone in the eye — and watch how they respond to questions — to determine whether he wants to work with that person.

“I learn a lot from that, more than from the speech,” he mused. “Entrepreneurs are very, very good at giving me the 10-minute speech. I’m not very interested in that. I mean, I can sell you anything. It’s not what I want. I’m not going to learn anything from that. I’m not going to understand if I can help.”

He added that it’s more important for him to see the person, how they react, if they open up and show their vulnerabilities. 

“And through that I then build that sense if I want to spend more time with that person or not,” he said. “I mean, super important. And there’s so many out there, right? So how do you select? I select out of the smarts I see and how ready they are to collaborate.”

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AI founders play musical chairs

Welcome to Startups Weekly — your weekly recap of everything you can’t miss from the world of startups. Want it in your inbox every Friday? Sign up here.

This week we are looking at AI founders who are playing musical chairs, a massive defense tech investment, and more issues at Techstars. Let’s get into it.

Most interesting startup stories from the week

Image Credits: TechCrunch

Founders and senior executives of the hottest AI startups have been leaping around this week.

OpenAI shuffle: John Schulman, one of the co-founders of OpenAI, left the company for rival AI startup Anthropic, following in the footsteps of Ilya Sutskever, the former OpenAI chief scientist who left the company in May and launched a new startup a month later. In the meantime, OpenAI president and co-founder Greg Brockman announced this week that he decided not to find a new “chair,” opting to take an extended leave to “relax and recharge” from his duties at the AI giant. Read more

Character development: Founders of Character.AI also did some seat switching this week. The a16z chatbot startup’s CEO, Noam Shazeer, has returned to Google to join the tech giant’s DeepMind team. Character.AI co-founder Daniel De Freitas is also joining Google with some other employees. In a deal that resembles a pseudo-acquisition similar to the one Microsoft struck with Inflection in March, Google agreed to use Character.AI’s technology on a non-exclusive basis. Read more

Mega ammo: Defense tech startup Anduril has armed itself with $1.5 million in fresh capital at a massive $14 billion valuation. The 7-year-old company, building autonomous military systems, has its sights set on becoming a top-tier defense contractor, rivaling the likes of Lockheed Martin and General Dynamics. The deal was co-led by returning backers Founders Fund and Sands Capital and was joined by new participants, including Fidelity Management & Research Company and Baillie Gifford. Read more

GrubMarket cracks Good Eggs: B2B produce and logistics company GrubMarket, which is now valued at $3.5 billion, has acquired 13-year-old Good Eggs, a fresh food delivery startup that was valued at $365 million in 2020. But the high-end grocery delivery startup that was backed by top investors, including Benchmark, Sequoia and Thrive, was marked down by 94% to $22 million after COVID-19 tailwinds faded. Read more

Most interesting fundraises this week

Image Credits: Jackie Niam (opens in a new window) / Getty Images

Chipping away: Groq, a startup that is manufacturing chips for running AI models, has raised $640 million at a $2.8 billion valuation from investors, including BlackRock, Neuberger Berman and Cisco. The 8-year-old company competes with Nvidia, which is estimated to control 70% to 95% of the AI chip manufacturing market, as well as Amazon, Google and Microsoft, all of which are working on developing their own AI chips. Read more  

Location, location, a bump in valuation: The 13-year-old location analytics startup Placer.ai shows that knowing where the customers are is still very valuable for retailers, banks and healthcare companies. Placer quietly secured an additional $75 million in funding, valuing the company at $1.45 billion, a 50% increase from its previous valuation of $1 billion just 18 months ago. Read more

why?! not: Maya Watson and Lexi Nisita, who met while working at Netflix and later moved to Clubhouse, where they were employees 13 and 20, decided that the world needs another social networking startup to help people combat loneliness. The duo started a new app called why?! that’s part conversation app, part networking app and part dating app. why?! raised $1.65 million in a pre-seed round, led by Charles Hudson, managing partner and founder of Precursor Ventures. Read more

AI for little ones: Tired of your child begging you to watch another cartoon? Perhaps you can interest them in playing with an AI bot instead. Heeyo, a startup that offers children between the ages of 3 and 11 an AI chatbot that offers over 2,000 interactive games and activities, has just raised a $3.5 million seed round from OpenAI Startup Fund, Alexa Fund, Pear VC and other investors. TechCrunch reporter Rebecca Bellan tried out Heeyo and found it to be perfectly safe for kids. Read more

Most interesting VC and fund news this week

Image Credits: Bryce Durbin/TechCrunch

Falling stars: Techstars has been shining less brightly recently. The global startup accelerator laid off 17% of its workforce this week. Techstars will also wind down its $80 million Advancing Cities program by the end of the year. Launched in 2022 with J.P. Morgan’s backing, the program aimed to support diverse founders in cities like Oakland, New York, Miami, and Washington, D.C., through accelerator programs. Read more

Flint Capital sparks funding: Boston-based Flint Capital has raised a $160 million third fund. The 11-year-old firm’s limited partners include primarily tech entrepreneurs, including successful founders that Flint backed previously. Flint’s investments include identity verification startup Socure, last valued at $4.5 billion, and Flo Health, which was recently valued at $1 billion. Read more

Last but not least

Image Credits: Bryce Durbin

Funding may still be hard to secure, especially for late-stage startups, but it doesn’t mean investors aren’t minting new unicorns. In fact, we counted 38 new ones that were created this year. Find out who grew a horn in 2024.

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First look at the Startup Battlefield judges at TechCrunch Disrupt 2024

The Startup Battlefield is the crown jewel of Disrupt, and we can’t wait to see which of the thousands of applicants will be selected to pitch to panels of top-tier VCs at TechCrunch Disrupt 2024, taking place on October 28–30 in San Francisco. It’s always epic, and every contender is on the road to making a huge impact on the world.

We’re thrilled to reveal our first group of investors who will assess the startups and follow up each pitch with an intense, revealing Q&A. Be on the lookout for more names being announced soon!

The judges’ feedback provides insight into the criteria they use to determine whether a company is viable or not. Watch and learn what investors look for, what motivates them and what pushes them to schedule a meeting.

Here are the first five VCs ready to help decide the champion of Startup Battlefield 2024.

Erin Harkless Moore, Managing Director, Pivotal Ventures

Erin is the Managing Director of Investment for Pivotal Ventures, a Melinda French Gates company created to accelerate social progress. Erin leads the organization’s fund and direct investment decisions, overseeing a diverse portfolio of investments that drive breakthrough innovations. With nearly 20 years of investment experience in building and managing customized portfolios for endowed institutions and family offices, Erin’s commitment to discovering and cultivating relationships with leaders, entrepreneurs, investors, and founders has been a driving force behind her success.

Eylul Kayin, Partner, Gradient Ventures

Eylul is a partner at Gradient Ventures. Prior to Gradient, Eylul was an investor with NEA and SoftBank, where she supported a number of category-defining companies, including Brex, Cato, Chime, Claroty, Digits, Eargo (NASDAQ: EAR), Ethos, Flexport, Material Bank, Neotract (acquired by Teleflex) and Revelle Aesthetics (incubation).

Victor Lazarte, General Partner, Benchmark

Victor is a general partner at Benchmark, where he focuses on a variety of investment areas, including AI, gaming and fintech. Victor co-founded Wildlife Studios in 2010 and built it into one of the largest mobile gaming companies in the world, engaging billions of players around the globe. From 2010 to 2023, Victor served as the co-founder and CEO of the company, before transitioning to chairman of the board in June of 2023. Victor has also served as a board member of Brex since 2018.

Ana Leyva, General Partner, Pear VC

Ana leads the go-to-market team at Pear VC. With a rich background in enterprise sales from companies like Vanta, ServiceTitan, and Box, she is passionate about helping early-stage founders build high-performing sales motions. An entrepreneur herself, she founded and served as the CEO of the edtech startup Lelu.

Corinne Riley, Partner, Greylock

Corinne partners with early-stage founders who are creating data and AI products at the infrastructure and application layers. She works with companies like Adept, Baseten, Braintrust, Common Room, Opal, and WarpStream.

Corinne built Greylock’s Edge program, which is a company-building program that seeks out promising founders and ideas at the earliest stages and works with them to get those ideas off the ground. She also launched Greylock’s Scout program, which invites top angel investors to form a special relationship with Greylock.

Don’t miss it!

The winner of Startup Battlefield, who will walk away with a $100,000 equity-free prize, will be announced at Disrupt 2024. This is your chance to see the future of tech unfold — don’t miss it! Grab your tickets now.

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Archer to set up air taxi network in LA by 2026 ahead of World Cup

Los Angeles is notorious for its back-to-back traffic. Three events that promise to bring in millions of spectators from around the world — the 2026 World Cup, the Super Bowl in 2027 and the 2028 Olympics — have LA officials searching for a range of new mobility solutions to address its congestion problems. But they’re already behind; most of the city’s planned transportation infrastructure initiatives for the Olympics won’t be completed until after 2028.

It’s in this gap that Archer Aviation sees an opportunity. 

The startup, which is developing electric vertical takeoff and landing vehicles (eVTOLs), hopes to leverage the public sector’s slow pace with a private sector solution: an air taxi network in LA that will replace a two- to three-hour car journey with a 10- to 20-minute air taxi ride, starting in 2026. 

Ahead of Archer’s second-quarter earnings call Thursday, the company announced the locations for its network of vertiports, or takeoff and landing locations, including Los Angeles International Airport, the University of Southern California, Santa Monica, Hollywood Burbank, Van Nuys and Long Beach in Los Angeles County, as well as Orange County.

Archer is also building a new vertiport at SoFi Stadium — which will host the World Cup, Super Bowl and some of the Olympics games — in partnership with Kroenke Sports & Entertainment and the LA Rams football team. While that vertiport won’t be operational by 2026, Archer hopes to complete it in time for the Olympics.

The LA announcement comes a few weeks after Archer signed a memorandum of understanding with Kilroy Realty Corporation, identifying Kilroy Oyster Point, a 50-acre waterfront campus in South San Francisco, as a critical hub in the company’s planned SF Bay Area urban air mobility network. 

Nikhil Goel, Archer’s chief commercial officer, told TechCrunch that most of the vertiports the company announced Thursday for Los Angeles have already been built. 

“LA has got, I think, the most unused aviation infrastructure in the entire country, so it’s got airports all over the city. It’s got a number of helipads on top of rooftops that just aren’t used today,” Goel, noting that all Archer has to do is set up charging infrastructure and passenger facilities. 

Archer Aviation plans to launch an eVTOL air taxi network in Los Angeles in 2026.Image Credits: Archer Aviation

Archer’s team chose the locations based on data on how people move around Los Angeles today. Archer recently partnered with Southwest Airlines, a deal that includes giving Archer access to the airline’s customer data that it’s using to identify good locations for vertiports. 

The planned LA launch in 2026 will be gradual, according to Goel. He said the first year would probably look “like a handful of aircraft” operating one or two routes that offer the most value while Archer learns how to implement its tech effectively, build good customer service and integrate with communities in which it operates. 

Archer wants to launch commercially in limited pilots starting as early as 2025 in six cities: San Francisco, Miami, Los Angeles, New York City, Abu Dhabi and Dubai. In the meantime, the company is racing to build out enough of its Midnight aircraft to launch a service and get the necessary certifications from the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA). 

The Midnight eVTOL is a piloted, four-passenger electric aircraft that travels up to 150 miles per hour and is designed for back-to-back flights of 20 to 50 miles. The company has said that charging in between rides takes less than 10 minutes. 

Archer is working with automaker Stellantis to build out its Georgia production facility, where it’s on track to build 650 aircraft a year, starting in the fourth quarter of 2024. The startup is also building six pre-production aircraft out of its small production factory in California.

Archer also needs to get Type Certification and Production Certification from the FAA before it can go to market. The former verifies that the eVTOL’s design meets all regulatory safety standards, and the latter ensures that Archer’s production processes can reliably produce aircraft that conform to the approved design and are safe to operate.

“All of this is becoming very, very real. The aircraft is flying nearly every day,” said Goel. “Not only did we do our first transition flight, but we’ve done 233 flights to date, and so that puts us well on track to exceed 400 flights for the year. Everything is starting to come together. This is no longer Blade Runner. This is about making it real, launching as soon as 2026, and then scaling up from there.”

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Techstars is laying off 17%, ending its J.P. Morgan-backed programs

Techstars is laying off 17% of its workforce and will end its $80 million J.P. Morgan-backed AdvancingCities program once the fund is completely deployed at the end of this year, TechCrunch has learned.

The AdvancingCities program, which launched in 2022, saw the launch of accelerator programs across the nation in cities like Oakland, New York, Miami and Washington, D.C. with the goal of backing more diverse founders. 

J.P. Morgan sponsored the program with a commitment through December, but the relationship between the bank and Techstars soured almost immediately, as TechCrunch previously reported. The bank was supposed to commit to continuing the program last summer so Techstars could start fundraising for another round with the hope of deploying capital from the second round in 2025. But it didn’t commit by that earlier deadline. As of our earlier report, the fate of around 20 Techstars employees who worked on the program was unclear.

“In 2022, J.P. Morgan announced the $80MM Advancing Cities Fund, raised as a private placement to invest in a Techstars accelerator program focused on advancing equitable access to funding among diverse founders across the U.S,” a J.P Morgan spokesperson told TechCrunch. “The fund is expected to be fully deployed by the end of this year, as planned. JPMorganChase remains committed to supporting across the country through the expansion of its diverse manager network, private investments platform and engagement capabilities.”

The news that the program was officially shut down was reported on Wednesday by The Information.

In an email about the layoffs, Techstars co-founder and CEO David Cohen told staff that the startup accelerator “overbuilt and over hired.” He said that most of the layoffs would come from engineering, support services and those working on sales and partnerships. He promised that those running most accelerator programs would not be impacted with the exception of the J.P. Morgan programs, specifically the AdvancingCities program. 

The news comes during a transformative year for Techstars. Techstars’ now-former CEO Maëlle Gavet stepped down in May, with Cohen stepping back into the role upon her departure. Wednesday’s layoff also follows a 7% headcount reduction in January, as TechCrunch previously reported. 

Techstars’ strategy under Gavet was to scale into more programs and back more startups, but it was met with criticism from those in the investment community as the organization began earlier this year to restructure itself. Cohen somewhat addressed the criticisms in that email to staff today, saying that the firm would now “stop focusing on scaling and shift all of our focus to being better for founders each and every day.” 

Techstars declined further comment but pointed to Cohen’s email which it published on its website.

Note: This story was updated to add a statement from J.P. Morgan.

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Database startup Neon nabs a Microsoft investment

In a sign that big tech companies are ready and willing to shell out cash for database tech, Neon, a startup building an open source alternative to AWS Aurora Postgres, on Wednesday announced that Microsoft’s venture arm M12 led a $25 million strategic investment in its business.

The capital will go toward R&D, Neon co-founder and CEO Nikita Shamgunov says, fueling Neon’s expansion into Microsoft Azure and the development of new database capabilities to support both existing and new customers.

“We’re not looking to raise — this is not a new round,” Shamgunov told TechCrunch. “We are well-capitalized with more than $100 million in funding. But this is Microsoft. We couldn’t pass up the opportunity to strengthen Neon’s relationship with Microsoft and Azure, their role in the future of developer tools is only growing.”

Added M12 managing partner Andrew Smyth: “Postgres is quickly becoming the database of choice for developers and we are investing heavily in that ecosystem. Neon is a leading Postgres platform and this strategic investment emphasizes our commitment to deeply integrate Neon into Azure.”

Shamgunov started Neon in 2021 alongside software engineers Heikki Linnakangas and Stas Kelvich. Prior to Neon, Shamgunov founded MemSQL, now SingleStore, where he was CTO and then became CEO.

While at SingleStore, Shamgunov says that he noticed just how much Postgres, the relational database management system, was out there in the world, and sensed an opportunity to build an alternative to Aurora (if only to counter an AWS monopoly).

Postgres has grown massively in popularity over the past few years. According to a 2023 Stack Overflow survey, just over 45% of developers said they use Postgres — ahead of MySQL and SQLite, the previous top choices.

“Neon is a Postgres database company,” Shamgunov said. “We take Postgres and tease apart the internal components into a platform designed to help everyone from individual developers to large enterprises build applications.”

Neon’s managed cloud-based database platform, which offers a free tier as well as paid plans with usage-based pricing, allows developers to clone databases for development environments and preview changes before they go to production. The platform scales up processor, memory and storage with usage automatically, minimizing the need for customers to do so themselves.

“Engineering teams at scale-ups and enterprise typically adopt Neon for one of two reasons: Using Neon to manage fleets of Postgres without overhead and increasing development velocity,” Shamgunov said. “Migrating a production database is risky, so scale-ups that want to ship faster will move only non-production work to Neon to take advantage of the developer productivity increases that come from Neon’s database branching workflow.”

Neon has benefited from the generative AI boom, which is fueling the demand for databases to power AI apps. Shamgunov says that hundreds of thousands of developers are using the company’s free tier and that thousands of startups and small- and medium-sized businesses are paying for Neon’s premium services.

“Today, more than 3,000 projects are created on Neon daily,” Shamgunov said. “Technology spending is constantly evolving, but every business, every software-as-a-service product, every application, every mobile app and every AI tool needs a database. Neon sees an acceleration in growth as software — and now AI — continues to eat the world.”

With $130.6 million total in the bank, Neon now has “many years” of runway, Shamgunov says. The San Francisco-based company plans to grow its 100-person workforce to 120 by the end of the year, investing predominantly in engineering.

Abstract Ventures, General Catalyst, Menlo Ventures and Notable Capital also invested in the strategic round announced today.

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Bluesky adds Techdirt founder Mike Masnick to its board

Decentralized X competitor Bluesky, a startup offering a social network where users can choose their own algorithm and moderation services, announced on Monday the addition of a new board member, Mike Masnick. Best known as the founder of tech blog Techdirt, Masnick is also credited with inspiring the Bluesky project through his paper titled “Protocols, not Platforms.“

According to a company blog post, the team was already leaning on Masnick for advice, so adding him to the board is a “natural next step” in formalizing their relationship.

Originally incubated within Twitter under founder Jack Dorsey’s leadership, Bluesky later spun out of Twitter (now rebranded as X under Elon Musk) and has charted its own path as an independent company. That includes raising a seed round last year and rolling out its first paid service for helping people set up custom domains on the decentralized platform.

Though Bluesky had the support of Dorsey in its earlier days, the former Twitter CEO later came to publicly criticize the startup for making the same mistakes he and others made at Twitter, especially in terms of how it handled some of its earlier moderation issues.

In May, Dorsey left his position on Bluesky’s board, and he now devotes more of his energy to Nostr, another decentralized network popular with Bitcoin proponents like himself.

With the addition of Masnick, Bluesky fills its board opening as the now 6-million-user-strong social network continues to develop its platform and policies, as well as the technology that powers its efforts, the AT Protocol.

The company says it will tap into Masnick’s expertise as a reporter, editor and publisher, in addition to gaining insights from his familiarity with policy, technology and legal issues it may face as it grows.

“Mike’s work has been an inspiration to us from the start,” said Bluesky CEO Jay Graber in a statement. “Having him join our board feels like a natural progression of our shared vision for a more open internet. His perspective will help ensure we’re building something that truly serves users as we continue to evolve Bluesky and the AT Protocol.”

“I’m excited to join the Bluesky board and to support its vision of building an open social network,” Masnick said. “Over the last few years, I’ve been thrilled to see how the Bluesky team has turned these ideas into reality, and I look forward to helping the company continue to build a better internet.”

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