In a world of talking points and corporate jargon, opinions are refreshing — and Expensify CEO and founder David Barrett is full of them. One of his earliest lessons in life, for example, was that basically everyone is wrong about basically everything. If instilling that at a young age doesn’t force you to become an entrepreneur, I don’t know what does.
Barrett’s ethos has, as reporter Anna Heim puts, led to Expensify having “its own take on almost everything” from hiring without job titles and resumes, to going distributed before it was cool, to having an almost non-existent sales team.
And before you roll your eyes at the unconventional, here’s a factoid for you: Today, the 130-person expense management business has reached more than 10 million users and hit $100 million in annual revenue.
Heim has spent months working on the Expensify EC-1 to connect dots and give us a full picture into an anything-but-conventional company as it heads toward an IPO. The final installment published this week so you can read the whole series in one straight shot:
- Part 1: Origin story “How a band of P2P hackers planted the seeds of a unique expense management giant” (2,400 words/10 minutes
- Part 2: Culture: “How Expensify got to $100M in revenue by hiring ‘stem cells’ and not ‘cogs in a wheel’” (3,120 words/12.5 minutes)
- Part 3: Expansion and remote work: “How Expensify shed Silicon Valley arrogance to realize its global ambitions” (3,250 words/13 minutes)
- Part 4: Engineering and technology: “How Expensify hacked its way to a robust, scalable tech stack” (3,300 words/13 minutes)
- Part 5: Business model: “How bottom-up sales helped Expensify blaze the path for SaaS” (4,200 words/17 minutes)
In the rest of this newsletter, I’ll walk you through a refresh of some new investment vehicles and two fintech mega-rounds to know. I also want to give a shout out to our mobility team, with transportation editor Kirsten Korosec and reporters Aria Alamalhodaei and Rebecca Bellan, who led efforts to put on a fantastic event at TC Sessions: Mobility this week.
Ok, into the news!
More money, more representation?
Image Credits: Black_Kira / Getty Images
As I discussed last month, venture capital is going through yet another unbundling process. But, for every savvy fintech syndicate out there, I don’t see the same level of explicitness when it comes to the tools that help the communityless, undernetworked and underestimated access opportunities.
Here’s what to know: Two new efforts this week give me hope. Ten venture capitalists teamed up to launch Screendoor, which Forbes reports is a $50 million fund-of-funds to back emerging fund managers from diverse backgrounds. The partners, which include Charles Hudson, Kirsten Green, Aileen Lee and Hunter Walk, will not take any fee or carry in the fund.
Speaking of cross-fund collaboration, Utah-based startup incubator Altitude Lab had similar news to share. The incubator, which spun out of Recursion and the University of Utah, has launched a 13-investor coalition to back underrepresented health tech founders. This week, it announced a $50 million commitment in funding and mentorship.
And if you want to have more fun(ds):
- Seven Seven Six, the new venture firm from Alexis Ohanian, closes $150M fund
- Todd and Rahul’s Angel Fund closes new $24 million fund
- Supply Change Capital, founded by Noramay Cadena and Shayna Harris, had its first close for its $40 million fund.
The Fintech twins
Image Credits:Janet Kimber (opens in a new window) / Getty Images
Three is a trend, but two means twins, and that matters too! Riddles aside, we saw two fintech giants raise massive tranches of capital within days of each other.
Here’s what to know: Klarna raised $639 million at a $45.6 billion valuation, and Nubank raised $750 million at a $30 billion valuation. Both fintech companies are based outside of the United States, but Klarna attests some of its rapid growth to a growing consumer base in the United States. More than 18 million American consumers are now using Klarna, which is up from 10 million at the end of last year’s third quarter. Meanwhile, Nubank is staying focused on its primary market of Brazil, with some expansion in Colombia and Mexico.
Demystifying mega-rounds:
- The fintech endgame: New supercompanies combine the best of software and financials
- As buy now, pay later startups keep raising capital, a dive into Klarna, Afterpay and Affirm’s earnings
- Visa takes a swipe in fintech, builds new online marketplace
The huge TAM of fake breaded chicken bits
Image Credits:Simulate (opens in a new window)
Another week, another spicy Equity episode for you. And this week, we mean it literally: Simulate, the company behind those sometimes spicy fake chicken nuggets, raised a ton of money.
Here’s what to know: Beyond fake meat, topics in this week’s episode include worker empowerment, culture in startups, eldercare and a $900 million exit.
Around TC
- A big theme of this year in tech? Figuring out how to break through the noise. Sure, there are millions of marketers out there, but only a slice of those have actually had experience helping grow startups to success. So, TechCrunch is here to help! We’re making a list of the best growth marketers for startups. You can help us by nominating your favorites into this survey.
- Also, TechCrunch is coming to Pittsburgh! We want to know the best local talent out there, so if you or someone you know might be a good fit, pitch us.
Across the week
Seen on TechCrunch
- SoftBank, Uber, Tencent set to reap rewards from Didi IPO
- Does what happens at YC stay at YC?
- The imbalance landscape of hormonal health
- Here’s everything Apple announced at the WWDC 2021 keynote
Seen on Extra Crunch
- Don’t panic: ‘Algorithm updates’ aren’t the end of the world for SEO managers
- Toast’s Aman Narang and BVP’s Kent Bennett on how customer obsession is everything
- What do these 4 IPOs tell us about the state of the market?
- How to start a company in 4 days
- Dear Sophie: What is a diversity green card and how do I apply for one?
Talk next week,