Tuesday, August 31, 2021

Four things you must do to ensure your business survives

Alan Manly shares 4 tips for a business to survive 

You don’t  grow - you die! 
Not growing and setting yourself up for growth is actually more risky than investing for growth!

  • Have a USP - unique sales proposition

What is the magic formula why a client will come to you and stay with you? 
What is your purpose ? 
Be chrystal clear about why someone will do business with you rather than anyone else 
If you don’t have this Your business will be taken away by someone who has this nailed 

  • Make it scalable

You haven’t got a business if it revolves around you 16 hours a day - what you have done - is built yourself a job!
the relationships needs to be woth the business - not the owner - 
So that the value does not end when they founder leaves the business.

  • Have an exit plan

Even if you don’t plan to Exit!

This means that you will plan to grow your business into a sellable asset that will have a significantly higher value - than if you don’t plan for an exit! 

Friday, August 27, 2021

Wednesday, August 25, 2021

RDTI Research and Development Tax Incentives - can support your R&D efforts


If you are looking to innovate and explore ways of doing new things - through Research and Development -  the Government is there to support you through the RDTI (research and Development Tax Inventive)


There are however hoops to go through and paperwork and records to keep.


Mick Lynch - R&D Tax Specialist at BSI Innovation has said that the Research and Development Tax Incentive issues and audits - specifically as it relates to the aggressive  and adversarial approach that it had to technology and software - seem to be stabilising


The turbulence that was 


The Coalition was planning to make a $1.8 billion cut to the programme (which they have subsequently scrapped.)


In early 2017, software claims started to be reviewed following concerns advisory firms were encouraging companies to make claims that weren’t actually eligible. This led to a number of high-profile audits and clawbacks, with startup giant Airtasker ordered to pay back millions of dollars relating to RDTI claims in 2015 and 2016.


The programme is stabilising 

While this dispute is ongoing, Airtasker is now accessing the RDTI again, with its last years financials showing $1m  benefit over last few years!


Audits of companies are happenning - but  seem to be fair and reasonable


Compliance with the programme is key - said Lynch , with organisations claiming needing to hold contemporaneous records of R&D projects  and activity.


The view with Ausindustry is more of an educational approach than a crackdown approach.


Be sure to explore whether there is an advantage for a grant in your business! 


Mick Lynch suggests to innovative companies that are doing or keen to do R&D projects to come forward and explore the opportunity.


https://bsigrants.com.au

Tuesday, August 24, 2021

Vloggi seeking its next funding round


Justin Wastnage founder of Vloggi  is solving the problem of how to generate quality video content at scale and for minimal cost.


Video is poised to explode as the dominant vehicle for creating content to support brand messaging, and Vloggi is the best-placed platform in this space to capitalise on this save of video creation. 


He raised $700k at a preseed valuation of $3.3m and is now looking at raising the next round! 

AirTree cracks the $2B valuation mark




Craig Blair and Daniel Petre’s AirTree’s portfolio has grown from $60m to a whopping $2 billion! 


AirTree has invested in a host of companies, including CanvaGO1A Cloud Guru and Employment Hero, which have grown to the extent its holdings are now valued above $2 billion.


Classic comment from Craig Blair! 


“Breakout successes including the sales of Afterpay for $39 billion and A Cloud Guru for $2 billion has enabled the VC sector to go from a small outback village, to now being like a large country town,” Mr Blair said.

Sunday, August 22, 2021

Australian Not for Profit sells for $400m






Burnet Institute achieved this week dpun off its trial support company, 360biolabs, to US-buyer BioAgilytix. 

Chief executive, Brendan Crabb, says this win means the organisation can channel more funds into its important public health missions.

“Our philosophy is that answers to complex problems can be found in science, both in a technical sense but also social science,” 

Some of the things that they do

  • getting rid of hepatitis C in Australia, 
  •  preventing childhood stunting in countries such as Papua New Guinea and Myanmar, a risk factor for children’s cognitive development, and 
  • managing COVID-19 locally and abroad.

How did we get a covid vaccine so quick? Crabb gave the answer in 1 word - money!


Thursday, August 19, 2021

3 Australian Cloud Companies in Forbes top 100



Australia celebrates its Entrepreneurs as tjis emerging Asset Class starts to come into its own! 

Canva has been listed as #3 in the best private cloud companies annual Forbes 2021 Cloud 100.

Airwallex  came in at 58 and Culture Amp  at 99.

Stripe, returned to the top of the list, having previously been no. 1 in 2019. It is the highest-valued startup in the US at US$95 billion.

Number two, Databricks, is valued at YS$28 billion.



Sunday, August 15, 2021

Green Hydrogen opportunity




Green hydrogen is the renewable energy source to watch in 2021.

"President Biden will ensure that the US market can access green hydrogen at the same cost as conventional hydrogen within a decade" (read more here: https://lnkd.in/gfrjM4g)

Here's a Plug and Play report highlighting startups and other trends related to the Hydrogen economy:
https://lnkd.in/g3eyRKw

Thank you, Noreen Brar, Alberto Pascual Virué, and Milad Malek for creating this e-book!
Look forward to working with more hydrogen startups in the new year!

#energytransition #hydrogen #electrolysis

Saturday, August 14, 2021

$800m fund for Climate Tech Startups



(Bloomberg) -- Venture capitalist Chris Sacca is launching four climate tech funds worth about $800 million in total through his new firm Lowercarbon Capital LLC

Sacca says “Let’s fund the unfundable, What’s the stuff where the business case isn’t there yet, but with relatively small dollars there might be a super high leverage opportunity?”


 VC money flowing into climate tech startups has grown 40-fold between 2013 and 2019, from $400 million to $16 billion, according to a 2020 PwC report.


So who is Chris Sacca


Sacca made his name and lots of money with early bets on companies such as Twitter, Instagram, Uber, Stripe and Kickstarter. But in a surprise move in 2017, at the age of 42, Sacca walked away from traditional venture investing.


Sacca thinks climate tech is at a tipping point, especially because of the pace at which talented people are entering the space. 


“Covid created this reflective moment and so did being drowned in fire smoke,” he says. “A lot of these folks are hearing from their kids: ‘Hey, what are you doing to save our future ?’”


The Saccas funds will be joined by more than 250 other limited partners. The smallest capital commitment is $15,000 and the largest they declined was for $150 million. The Limited Partners ( LPs ) include not just rich individuals, but also foundations, non-profits, universities and pension funds.


The Climate VC Model


“When you’re building a new social network, you spend a couple of years coding it all towards launch day. Then you put it out and no one cares,” he says. With climate tech companies, “we seed the science and we get to prototype. Then we find that first customer willing to pay for it, because what we’ve made is cheaper, better, faster, easier to use, more delicious or requires less maintenance. And we see that first incremental revenue faster.”



The Goal


Like other climate-tech VCs, Sacca wants his startups to reduce or remove emissions ideally at the scale of billions of tons each year. Many of Lowercarbon’s 50 investments to date—not all of which are public yet—have been for startups that remove carbon dioxide from the air using a variety of technologies.

Wednesday, August 11, 2021

Australia’s Tech Council funded by a Stable of Unicorns

Afterpay co-founder Anthony Eisen wants Australia to become the “head office for global tech companies” and compete with Silicon Valley and Tel Aviv, joining Atlassian boss Scott Farquhar and Tesla chair Robyn Denholm in a push to drive the fast-growing sector above one million jobs by 2025.

The nation’s leading tech companies – including Afterpay, ­Atlassian, Canva, Google Australia, Airtasker and Microsoft Australia – will launch Tech Council of Australia on Wednesday, bringing together tech ­moguls and start-up pioneers to position the country as a ­global hub.

With the industry already pumping $167bn into the economy and employing 861,000 Aus­tralians, fuelled by a 65,000 jobs boom during the pandemic, the Tech Council has set a target of ­increasing economic output to $250bn within a decade.

Monday, August 09, 2021

Tony Jacobson - A Legendary BBG Foundation Member

 Tony, thanks for all that you do!!


You have an ability to soak in information , and share it in such a beautiful way!!



Wednesday, August 04, 2021

Australia is coming into its own as a Global Tech Hub




Great post by Lisa Wood of Austrade 

Exciting news with Square acquiring Afterpay in what will be the largest M&A deal in Australian history!

Afterpay CEO Anthony Eisen says Australia is rapidly becoming a major global technology and financial services hub.

“We have the talent, infrastructure, location and lifestyle necessary to be among the best in the world. As an Australian company, Afterpay is proud to play a role in making that happen.

Find out more at: www.globalaustralia.gov.au

Global Business & Talent Attraction Taskforce Australian Trade and Investment Commission (Austrade) 
Australian Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade
Peter Verwer AO David Tony Michael Susan Stan Brendan Jodette Sandaldeep Brooke Bel Rob Tom Zenia Sarah Pip Stephanie




Tuesday, August 03, 2021

TechLend nabs $50m from Partners For Growth




Exciting times ahead for Aaron Bassin’s TechLend as they secure an additional $50M in funding, from Partners For Growth! 


What TechLend does

 Theymake bridging loans much simpler in the housing market - disrupting the traditional property finance market


Some of the people 


Nick Jacobs Amber Johnston Aleisha Smith Adam Borowsky Maximilien Penel Jason Georgatos Richard Osborne Karthi Sepulohniam (Subramaniam)) Matt Leibowitz 


So who is Partners for Growth

Partners for Growth (PFG) is a Silicon Valley based VC firm that invests in emerging growth companies across the innovation economy, and has invested more than $450 million in over 60 Australian startups and scale ups to date.  PFG has partnered with leading ecommerce furniture and mattress company Koala; small business loan specialist Prospa and rewards platform Cashrewards.


Jason Georgiatos, Managing Director of Partners for Growth, said: .. Techlend’s vision is in line with PFG’s strategy to support global fintech disruptors. “

Monday, August 02, 2021

Square intends to acquire Afterpay


Nick Mnar and Anthony Eisen  cofounders of Afterpay

Afterpay announced Square intends to acquire Afterpay for $39 billion - the largest corporate transaction in Australian history. 

Congrats Nick Molnar and team 👏 #startupaus #auspol #entrepreneurship

Square and Afterpay are two of the fastest growing fintech companies with a shared mission of economic empowerment and financial inclusion, and together, plan to deliver an even more attractive platform for consumers and merchants across geographies, categories and segments.

This partnership marks a huge milestone for the Australian technology sector and our growing profile on the world stage.

Congratulations on this wonderful moment to the entire team

You can read all about it here: https://lnkd.in/gZMGiCXy

Sunday, August 01, 2021

A new animal has come to Australia - the Unicorn


Nick Crocker, general partner of Blackbird, says now “is the best time to be a founder in Australian history”.

Here are some of Australia’s “unicorns” valued at $1bn or more, after a spate of raisings as venture capitalists and wealth investors have piled in and spent billions in

  • Culture Amp hits a $2 billion,
  • Canva - a $19 billion 
  • Airwallex - $3 billion - founders created their own find
  • Safetyculture- $2.2 billion 
  • Judo - $1b
  • Zip - $5b
  • Afterpay - 80b
  • GO1
  • Rokt
  • Redbubble
  • Atlassian
  • Aconnex
  • Redbubble
  • Envato
  • Nearmap 

Who else ?

Who in the next 10 years?

Circle In raises $2.275M for global expansion



Jodi Geddes and Kate Pollard  startup “Circle In”a “fam tech” has secured.seed funding of $2.275m funding from the VC Community including Our Innovation Fund , Leigh Jasper and Carol Schwartz and has a host of big name clients including Medibank Private, Atlassian and Culture Amp, EY, GAP and Estee Lauder.


The money used is to expand into USA and UK.


https://www.smh.com.au/business/small-business/parental-support-startup-circle-in-raises-1-5-million-20190813-p52gr4.html


https://www.afr.com/street-talk/carol-schwartz-leigh-jasper-back-circle-in-20210729-p58e00