Let's get this clear up front: I am not a Twitter expert. I've used multiple accounts for different purposes; I enjoy following a ...
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Let's get this clear up front: I am not a Twitter expert. I've used multiple accounts for different purposes; I enjoy following a ...
Gousto, the UK recipe kit subscription service that competes with Rocket Internet’s HelloFresh, and Housebites (post-pivot), has raised $2 million in new funding. The investment was led by London VC MMC Ventures, with participation from existing backers, including Angel CoFund.
Gousto says the additional capital will be used to further strengthen its product, and to “fast track” the business — a business that I would imagine is quite capital intensive. Subscribers are sent three recipes per-week along with the required fresh ingredients so that they can get busy in the kitchen. Scaling the delivery of perishable goods isn’t quite the same as moving around bits and bytes.
The startup first pitched for funding on the BBC show ‘Dragons Den’, only for the dragons to declare themselves out. Shortly afterwards, however, Gousto announced it had raised around £500,000 from unnamed food industry folk and Angel CoFund. With today’s new round, it says its total funding now sits at “over $2.5m” (the sums get slightly muddy when currencies keep switching with each announcement).
To add some context, last December HelloFresh announced new funding, which TechCrunch pegged at $10 million, followed by another $7.5 million this September, though the service isn’t just targeting the UK, but has also launched in the U.S. and a number of other, mainly European, countries, so it obviously needs more cash to fuel its international ambitions.
Meanwhile, UK competitor Housebites, which has reinvented itself several times, looks like it’s raised significantly less funding, too, though its backing from EC1 Capital, Michael Birch (founder of Bebo), and Steve Pankhurst (founder of FriendsReunited) remains undisclosed.
In a canned statement, James Carter, Gousto Co-Founder, sums up the scaling challenges of a recipe kit business like Gousto: “Whether you have 100 or 100,000 customers, you need to have great infrastructure in place – from sourcing, logistics, product development, tech, to fulfillment. Building this infrastructure now puts us in the pole position to grab a sizeable share of the £18bn online food market.”
To that end, Gousto says it’s currently delivering 26,000 meals per-month, and that part of the new funding will be used to “build up Gousto’s team of chefs and nutritionists; improve the recipes; and strengthen relationships with the farm suppliers and producers.”
Gousto , the UK recipe kit subscription service that competes with Rocket Internet’s HelloFresh , and Housebites ( post-pivot ), has raised...
HealthLoop, the makers of a cloud-based platform that aims to automate the process by which doctors engage with their patients after visits, announced today that it has closed a $10 million round of Series A financing.
The round was led by Canvas Venture Fund, the new $175 million investment vehicle recently launched by three partners of Morgenthaler Ventures. The round is the first investment made by Canvas Venture Fund and includes participation from Subtraction capital, as well as others. As a result of the round, Canvas Venture Partner Rebecca Lynn will be joining the startup’s board of directors.
Founded by Dr. Jordan Shlain, a physician and commissioner of the San Francisco Health Service Systems Board, HealthLop was born out of the frustrations he witnessed every day from patients who experienced symptoms that went unnoticed and unreported between visits, often leading to emergency care.
To solve this problem, Shlain began methodically keeping track of patient visits via spreadsheets in order to help him remember to follow up between visits. Eventually, he hired a developer and turned his spreadsheet into a tool he could use for his practice, and from that, HealthLoop was born.
Today, HealthLoop aims to keep doctors, patients and care-givers better connected between visits by offering clinical information and peer-reviewed follow-up plans that aim to automate “the rotine aspects of care, while tracking patient progress and monitoring clinical areas of concern.” Through its analytics engine, HealthLoop parses reams of patient data in realtime to enable doctors and care givers to focus their attention on patients and medical issues who require the most attention.
The idea is to both save doctors time and improve the quality of outcomes for patients by helping to extend the doctor-patient relationship outside the exam room and by keeping all parties involved connected between visits.
Through its automated follow-up patient engagement and communication tools, HealthLoop aims to improve patient care, track outcomes across care venues and increase loyalty for doctors and practices while reducing costs inherent to unnecessary documentation and follow-up, in-office visits. And while EHR and PHRs focus on patient data and visits that have already happened, HealthLoop wants to focus on the realtime aspect of care, offering actionable data that can help doctors respond to critical issues as they arise.
With its new funding in two, HealthLoop will ramp up its hiring efforts and plans to expand the development of further patient engagement and follow-up tools, while working to raise awareness among doctors.
For more, find HealthLoop at home here.
HealthLoop , the makers of a cloud-based platform that aims to automate the process by which doctors engage with their patients after visits...
One of the recurring themes in the technology industry is that very successful companies become arrogant and start taking unnecessary risk...
Verizon is indeed going to acquire EdgeCast Networks, a content delivery network that has ground to be one of the fastest growing Internet companies in the world from a startup founded in 2008. TechCrunch’s Ryan Lawler reported the deal was in the works on Sunday, and a new press release from Verizon confirms it, with a projected finalization date sometime in early 2014.
In its official release, Verizon makes no mention of the price attached to the deal, but TechCrunch has heard from a source with knowledge of the deal that it will be worth in excess of $350 million – a good return for EdgeCast investors which has around $74 million raised in funding.
EdgeCast brings with it a profitable business and a client base of over 6,000 customers, including Twitter, Pinterest and Hulu to name just a few. Bringing those partners into Verizon’s enterprise business has benefits both in terms of shoring up its bottom line on that front, and in terms of giving it access to a number of potential high-profile targets to help it upsell them on its other corporate services as well.
Verizon even alludes to the fact that it’s building an end-to-end Internet and digital media services play, and this marks the most significant and independent attempt it has made so far to become a provider of CDN tech on its own, rather than as a reseller for other corporate partners.
Verizon is indeed going to acquire EdgeCast Networks , a content delivery network that has ground to be one of the fastest growing Internet ...
Last week, it came out that China Mobile and Apple had finally penned a deal to bring the iPhone to China’s largest mobile network, and now the Wall Street Journal reports that iPhone 5s pre-order sales begin this Thursday, with China Mobile’s new 4G services going live on Dec. 18.
The pre-order listing and advertisement for 4G and the iPhone 5s is already live on China Mobile’s official website, and China Mobile confirmed to the WSJ that it will indeed kick off pre-order sales officially starting this Thursday. There will also be an event on Dec. 18 at which the carrier intends to reveal its 4G network to global partners in Guangzhou, which should cover Beijing, Shanghai, Guangzhou, Tianjian, Shenzen and Nanjing before 2013 is out, with plans to expand coverage further in the new year. This would be the official launch building off of its existing 4G trial distribution.
China Mobile represents a massive potential new customer base for Apple, as it has a ridiculous 759.3 million users on its network. Only 23 percent of those are on 3G, however, according to Forbes, and a smaller percentage will be eager to upgrade to 4G and invest in an iPhone. Still, analyst predictions for how many additional iPhones Apple could sell in 2014 with China Mobile on board seem to begin at 10 million, and extend up to nearly 40 million. Either way, it’s nothing but upside growth for Cupertino, from a client pool that’s increasingly important to its bottom line.
China Mobile has been losing subscribers to its rivals China Unicom and China Telecom since they both offer the iPhone, and have for years, in a scenario that’s similar to what happened in the U.S. when AT&T had iPhone exclusivity for multiple years before it came to other U.S. carriers. Both it and Apple should benefit considerably from this new partnership, and for Apple in particular, this should help stave off critics who say it’s running out of market in general.
Last week, it came out that China Mobile and Apple had finally penned a deal to bring the iPhone to China’s largest mobile network, and now ...
Phone Warrior, a New Delhi-based startup that blocks mobile spam calls and text messages, is announcing A seed round of around $550,000 from Lightspeed Venture Partners.
The money raised will be used for bolstering marketing efforts to increase Phone Warrior’s user base from one million currently to 10 million, the startup’s founder Chandan Gupta tells me.
So far, Phone Warrior has seen over a million downloads of its app in the markets of India, Indonesia and UK without any formal marketing campaign. The startup got registered as a company only three months ago, and is currently available as an app on Android and BlackBerry. By January next year, Phone Warrior plans to launch on iOS platform.
The closest rival for Phone Warrior is a call-filtering app called WhosCall, which was developed by Taipei-based Gogolook. Gupta says that unlike WhosCall, which is primarily focused on Taiwan and other Asian markets, Phone Warrior is seeing huge potential to grow in India. The country’s smartphone market grew by 229% annually in the third quarter with vendors shipping a total of 12.8 million smartphones during the period. Sweden-based Truecaller is another rival for Phone Warrior.
“WhosCall is big in China, Taiwan. We have a better database in India, U.S. and Indonesia,” says Gupta. He adds that Phone Warrior has blocked over 27 million spam calls and messages to date.
Phone Warrior currently has 300 million numbers in its database and it’s adding around 10 million new numbers every week.
For now, the basic Phone Warrior app can be downloaded for free, but Gupta tells me that it could change after the app hits 10 million users mark. A premium version of the app is also available for annual subscription of $3 on BlackBerry phones.
Lightspeed Ventures’ Anshoo Sharma says the seed funding will be enough to help Phone Warrior scale its user base over next 12-18 months, after which a subsequent round of funding may be explored.
Going forward, Phone Warrior plans to launch directory search services similar to what Truecaller offers. But for Phone Warrior to really take on established rival such as Truecaller, it will need to first match in terms of database. Both Truecaller and WhosCall already have over 600 million numbers in their database.
Phone Warrior , a New Delhi-based startup that blocks mobile spam calls and text messages, is announcing A seed round of around $550,000 fro...