<h1>Archives</h1>
    World News

    Tuesday’s heat indexes expected to reach 105 in parts of DC region – WTOP

    July 6, 2021

    Tuesday’s heat indexes expected to reach 105 in parts of DC region  WTOPCT Weather: 100 Degree Heat, Severe Storms And Flooding Concerns  Patch.comHeat advisory goes into effect for much of central Pennsylvania  WGAL Susquehanna Valley Pa.Heat advisory in effect for most of CT Tuesday, Wednesday  CT PostDangerous heat, ‘severe’ thunderstorms forecast for Staten Island on Tuesday: NWS  SILive.comView Full Coverage on Google News

    World News

    Chicago shootings: 100 shot, 18 fatally, in weekend gun violence across city, CPD says – WLS-TV

    July 6, 2021

    Chicago shootings: 100 shot, 18 fatally, in weekend gun violence across city, CPD says  WLS-TVAt least 150 people fatally shot in more than 400 shootings over the Fourth of July weekend  CNN Bloody July Fourth weekend leaves 150 fatally shot in more than 400 shootings nationwide  Fox NewsMan with concealed carry license steps in, shoots gunman who shot 3, Chicago police say  The Pantagraph2 Chicago officers shot, wounded trying to break up crowd  The IndependentView Full Coverage on Google News

    World News

    New Jersey man who went on racist rant draws protests at his home – The Washington Post

    July 6, 2021

    New Jersey man who went on racist rant draws protests at his home  The Washington PostWhite man who pushed Black neighbor in racist rant arrested  Yahoo NewsRacist rant video New Jersey: Edward Cagney Mathews taken into police custody  WPVI-TVNJ Man Accused Of Harassing Black Neighbor In Video Gets Jeered By 100 Angry Protesters  Mahwah-Ramsey Daily VoiceMan Gives Out Address Amid Racist Rant, Pelted By Protesters During Arrest  TMZView Full Coverage on Google News

    World News

    The Capitol riot, 6 months on: Here are the missed warnings and failures that led to insurrection on US soil – Business Insider

    July 6, 2021

    The Capitol riot, 6 months on: Here are the missed warnings and failures that led to insurrection on US soil  Business InsiderFive big questions about the Jan. 6 select committee | TheHill  The HillHunt for Capitol attackers still on 6 months after Jan. 6  The Associated PressRobbins: GOP stance on Jan. 6 belies reality of Capitol footage  Boston HeraldEditorial: How low can they go? House GOP leadership runs fast from the insurrection truth  STLtoday.comView Full Coverage on Google News

    Startups

    Free Extra Crunch membership included with TC Early Stage tickets

    July 6, 2021

    TechCrunch Early Stage is coming up soon, and all attendees can get 3 months of free access to Extra Crunch as a part of a ticket purchase. Extra Crunch is our members-only community focused on founders and startup teams. 

    Head here to buy your ticket to TC Early Stage

    Extra Crunch unlocks access to our investor surveys, private market analysis, and in-depth interviews with experts on fundraising, growth, monetization and other core startup topics. Get feedback on your pitch deck through Extra Crunch Live, and stay informed with our members-only Extra Crunch newsletter. Other benefits include an improved TechCrunch.com experience and savings on software services from AWS, Crunchbase, and more.

    Learn more about Extra Crunch benefits here, and buy your TC Early Stage tickets here

    What is TC Early Stage? 

    TC Early Stage is a two-day virtual event where early-stage founders can take part in highly interactive group sessions with top investors and ecosystem experts. This particular Early Stage event has a focus on marketing and fundraising.

    The event will take place July 8-9, and we’d love to have you join. 

    View the event agenda here, and purchase tickets here

    Once you buy your TC Early Stage pass, you will be emailed a link and unique code you can use to claim the free 3 months of Extra Crunch.

    Already bought your TC Early Stage ticket?

    Existing pass holders will be emailed with information on how to claim the free 3 months of Extra Crunch membership. All new ticket purchases will receive information over email immediately after the purchase is complete.

    Already an Extra Crunch member?

    We’re happy to extend a free 3 months of access to existing users. Please contact extracrunch@techcrunch.com, and mention that you are an existing Extra Crunch member who bought a ticket to TC Early Stage 2021: Marketing and Fundraising.

    World News

    New York’s ‘head-swirling’ mistake puts harsh spotlight on ranked-choice voting – POLITICO

    July 6, 2021

    New York’s ‘head-swirling’ mistake puts harsh spotlight on ranked-choice voting  POLITICOMany red states’ new voting laws stirred outrage. Louisiana took a ‘more measured approach’  The AdvocateHere’s a different way to fix gerrymandering  The Washington PostThere’s Good Election News—Except in New York  The Wall Street JournalVoters liked ranked choice voting in NYC mayor’s race, and it could come to Florida | Editorial  South Florida Sun SentinelView Full Coverage on Google NewsNew York’s ‘head-swirling’ mistake puts harsh spotlight on ranked-choice voting  POLITICOMany red states’ new voting laws stirred outrage. Louisiana took a ‘more measured approach’  The AdvocateHere’s a different way to fix gerrymandering  The Washington PostThere’s Good Election News—Except in New York  The Wall Street JournalVoters liked ranked choice voting in NYC mayor’s race, and it could come to Florida | Editorial  South Florida Sun SentinelView Full Coverage on Google NewsRead MoreTop stories – Google News

    Startups

    TravelPerk buys UK-based Click Travel in latest pandemic purchase

    July 6, 2021

    Business trip booking platform TravelPerk has bagged another rival — picking up UK-based Click Travel. Terms of the deal are not being disclosed but we’re told it’s the third — and largest — acquisition for TravelPerk to date.

    The Barcelona-based startup has been on a bit of a shopping spree since the pandemic crisis hit Europe last year, picking up risk management startup Albatross in summer 2020 to bolster resilience to COVID-19’s impacts, before going on to acquire US-based NexTravel in January to expand its presence in the US market.

    The latest acquisition deepens TravelPerk’s UK and European business, adding Click Travel’s 2,000+ SME clients (which includes the likes of Five Guys, Red Bull and Talk Talk) to its customer base — which will total just over 5,000 post-acquisition.

    The UK company handles some £300M in business travel for its client base, which will bolster TravelPerk’s revenues going forward. The latter now bills itself as the “leading” travel management platform for the SME market globally and the UK as a whole.

    “We are a global travel management platform but our core markets are the US and Europe and we expect both markets to be our primary growth areas this year,” said CEO and co-founder Avi Meir. “At the current moment, the US is our largest market due to the covid restrictions in the EU & UK.”

    “Assuming travel restrictions won’t be imposed again, we expect to grow by 200% in 2022 with strong growth in our core markets in the US & EU,” he added.

    Click Travel, which is based in Birmingham, was founded all the way back in 1999 — and appears to have raised relatively little venture capital over the years, per Crunchbase. However, in 2018, the veteran player participated in the government-backed Future Fifty scale-up program — and also took in a “multi-million pound” investment from the UK-based Business Growth Fund.

    Whether there will be any domestic hang-wringing over a high growth UK business being sold to a European rival remains to be seen.

    In a statement on its sale to TravelPerk, CEO James McLean omitted to mention the pandemic’s impact on the travel sector — choosing instead to highlight what he couched as the pair’s shared “mission” to reduce the cost and complexity of business travel.

    “Those shared objectives, combined with the natural cultural fit between our two companies, means we are incredibly excited to bring our teams together. Combining TravelPerk’s industry-leading knowledge, technology, experience and first class customer support with our own is a powerful proposition and we can’t wait to get started,” McLean added.

    While Click Travel has focused on serving the UK market, TravelPerk has had a global focus from the start.

    It has also attracted a large amount of external investment (totalling just under $300M) over its shorter run (founded in 2015).

    Back in April, for example, it raised a $160M Series D round. It had also topped up its Series C round in July 2019 before the pandemic hit. So TravelPerk hasn’t been short of funds to ride out the COVID-19 revenue crunch — and as well as shopping for competitors it has also been able to avoid making any layoffs over the travel crisis. 

    Per a press release, capital to fund the Click Travel acquisition was provided by Boston-based investment manager, The Baupost Group.

    TravelPerk’s Meir remains bullish about the near-term prospects for growth in the business travel sector, despite ongoing concerns in Europe and the US about the more infectious ‘Delta’ variant of the virus which is contributing to surging rates of COVID-19 in some markets (including the UK) — claiming it’s already seeing green shoots of recovery in “key markets”.

    “TravelPerk is outgrowing the market pace and is already at above 2019 revenue figures,” Meir told TechCrunch. “When it comes to the rest of the industry, the recovery of travel is well underway but moving at different speeds in different markets. For instance in the US, according to TSA Checkpoint figures, at the current rate of recovery the US travel market is expected to reach pre-pandemic volume at the end of August 2021.

    “We anticipate the global market may take a little longer but are optimistic we will see close to pre-pandemic levels in 2022.”

    “We’re one of the few players in the travel industry that continued scaling and growing since the beginning of the pandemic with a strategy that didn’t involve any layoffs,” he also told us. “Since March last year, our strategy has been not to sit back but to be aggressive and invest massively in our product offering and in our global reach, so that we are in the best position possible to capitalise when travel makes its full recovery. Today’s news is a major part of that plan.

    “We will aim to continue being aggressive in our growth strategy and we are open to more acquisitions if they make strategic sense and are aligned with our vision and culture.”

    Per Meir, Click Travel and TravelPerk will initially continue to run as two independent platforms but he confirmed that an “eventual full integration” is planned — with both set to operate under the TravelPerk brand in time.

    The startup also says it will retain all Click Travel’s staff — denying it has plans to axe any jobs. It also intends to hold onto the company’s Birmingham base — having the city as another UK hub for its business (in addition to its existing London office).

    “The 150 amazing people working for Click Travel were a big reason why we wanted to acquire the company, and were priced into the deal,” said Meir. “We have no plans of redundancies. We rather aim to integrate the entire team into the TravelPerk Group.”

    Asked if TravelPerk might consider expanding its focus to also target the enterprise segment, he noted that it’s seen interest from larger businesses — and said he’s “open” to the idea — but for now Meir said TravelPerk remains fully focused on the SME market: “where we think there is the biggest need, and the biggest growth potential”.

    “That’s why this acquisition is so exciting for us; it makes us undoubtedly the leading travel management platform for SMEs globally,” he added.

    Flexibility and sustainability

    Discussing how the pandemic has changed business travel, Meir highlighted two “important trends” he said TravelPerk will continue to invest it: Namely flexibility for bookings; and sustainability so environmental impact can be reduced.

    TravelPerk plans to invest more than $100M in two key products in these areas (aka: FlexiPerk and GreenPerk), per Meir.

    “We’ve noticed on our platform that travellers are booking closer to their departure date: Before the pandemic, trip searches were usually conducted between 7 and 30 days prior to the selected departure date,” he said, elaborating on the importance of flexibility for the sector. “Now we are seeing most trip searches are for trips less than 6 days away. Flexibility is therefore one of the most in-demand perks in business travel. Travellers will rely on flexible fares to give them the peace of mind that they won’t lose money if they need to change or cancel a trip on short notice.”

    On sustainability, Meir said businesses are already looking for ways to reduce their carbon footprint and general environmental impact, while consumers are also wanting to make conscientious decisions to reduce carbon emission — suggesting that train-based travel is set to gain ground (vs flights) as a result. (That might, ultimately, require some creative retooling of TravelPerk’s logo — which prominently features an airplane icon… )

    “We expect to see significant interest in our carbon offsetting product, GreenPerk, as a result but we also expect to see changes in how people are choosing to travel,” he said.

    “For instance, rail is undoubtedly the more environmentally-friendly travel option. In fact, taking a train over a domestic flight can reduce an individual’s carbon emissions by about 84%. We have been building out our rail inventory for a number of years now and we expect train travel to be an increasingly popular business travel option for customers this year and next.”

    As for the changing mix of business-related travel in a pandemic-reconfigured world of remote work, Meir continues to argue that more businesses providing employees with remote working options will sum to more business travel overall.

    “This might be bad news for the daily commute but it will result in more business travel,” he suggested. “Whether they are going fully remote and ‘working from anywhere’, or operating on a hybrid model, distributed teams will need (and want) to come together. We believe there will be a new type of business trip — one where team members will travel from different working hubs to get together for teambuilding and brainstorming sessions, for meetings with clients and colleagues, and even for ‘bleisure’ (business and leisure) trips.”

    World News

    Republicans’ effort to deny the Capitol attack is working – and it’s dangerous – The Guardian

    July 6, 2021

    Republicans’ effort to deny the Capitol attack is working – and it’s dangerous  The GuardianFive big questions about the Jan. 6 select committee | TheHill  The HillFBI is still searching for 100s of Capitol rioters 6 months after insurrection  The Week MagazineRobbins: GOP stance on Jan. 6 belies reality of Capitol footage  Boston HeraldEditorial: How low can they go? House GOP leadership runs fast from the insurrection truth  STLtoday.comView Full Coverage on Google News

    Startups

    ManoMano raises $355 million for its home improvement e-commerce platform

    July 5, 2021

    French startup ManoMano has raised a Series F funding round of $355 million led by Dragoneer Investment Group. The company operates an e-commerce platform focused on DIY, home improvement and gardening products. It is currently available in six European countries. Following today’s funding round, the company has reached a valuation of $2.6 billion.

    In addition to Dragoneer Investment Group, Temasek, General Atlantic, Eurazeo, Bpifrance’s Large Venture fund, Aglaé Ventures, Kismet Holdings and Armat Group are also participating.

    “We operate in Europe and we are the industry leader in online sales,” co-founder and co-CEO Philippe de Chanville told me. In France in particular, the company has been profitable for a couple of years already. In 2020 alone, the company’s gross merchandise volume doubled to €1.2 billion ($1.42 billion at today’s rate).

    So why did the company raise given that it’s already in a strong position to replicate the same model in other European markets? Because they could and because they didn’t need to. With a high valuation, ManoMano could raise quite a bit of money without having to sell a significant chunk of its equity.

    In addition to France, the startup operates in Spain, Italy, Belgium, Germany and the U.K. With today’s funding round, the company wants to develop its activities in the U.K. and Germany in particular — they are Europe’s two biggest markets for home improvement and gardening.

    ManoMano sells products to hobbyists and also targets the B2B market with ManoManoPro. It’s already working well in France with very small teams (1 to 5 employees) and the company is expanding this offering to Spain and Italy.

    The startup will also invest more heavily in its product and build a better logistics infrastructure. “For the logistics part, we work with third-party logistics companies — we are a tech company,” co-founder and co-CEO Christian Raisson told me.

    ManoMano doesn’t have its own warehouses and doesn’t own any inventory. That’s why ManoMano plans to recruit 1,000 people over the next 18 months and most of them will be tech profiles.

    While ManoMano has 7 million clients, sales of home improvement and gardening items still mostly happen in brick-and-mortar stores. The startup is well aware that it’s not just a matter of having the best products at good price points.

    ManoMano works with advisors (or Manodvisors) so that experts can give advice whenever customers need some tips. Overall, customers have initiated 2.3 million conversations with advisors in 2020. Recommendations and advice will be key to gain market shares. And the company is now well capitalized to innovate on this front and differentiate itself from other e-commerce platforms.

    Startups

    E-commerce logistics startup Locad gets $4.9M seed round led by Sequoia Capital India’s Surge

    July 5, 2021

    E-commerce is booming in Southeast Asia, but in many markets, the fragmented logistics industry is struggling to catch up. This means sellers run into roadblocks when shipping to buyers, especially outside of major metropolitan areas, and managing their supply chains. Locad, a startup that wants to help with what it describes as an “end-to-end solution” for cross-border e-commerce companies, announced today it has raised a $4.9 million seed round.

    The funding was led by Sequoia Capital India’s Surge (Locad is currently a part of the program’s fifth cohort), with participation from firms like Antler, Febe Ventures, Foxmont, GFC and Hustle Fund. It also included angel investors Alessandro Duri, Alexander Friedhoff, Christian Weiss, Henry Ko, Huey Lin, Markus Bruderer, Dr. Markus Erken, Max Moldenhauer, Oliver Mickler, Paulo Campos, Stefan Mader, Thibaud Lecuyer, Tim Marbach and Tim Seithe.

    Locad was founded in Singapore and Manila by Constantin Robertz, former Zalora director of operations Jannis Dargel and Shrey Jain, previously Grab’s lead product manager of maps. It now also has offices in Australia, Hong Kong and India. The startup’s goal is to close the gap between first-mile and last-mile delivery services, enabling e-commerce companies to offer lower shipping rates and faster deliveries while freeing up more time for other parts of their operations, such as marketing and sales conversions.

    Since its founding in October 2020, Locad has been used by more than 30 brands and processed almost 600,000 items. Its clients range from startups to international brands, and include Mango, Vans, Payless Shoes, Toshiba and Landmark, a department store chain in the Philippines.

    Locad is among a growing roster of other Southeast Asia-based logistics startups that have recently raised funding, including Kargo, SiCepat, Advotics and Logisly. Locad wants to differentiate by providing a flexible solution that can work with any sales channel and is integrated with a wide range of shipping providers.

    Robertz told TechCrunch that Locad is able to keep an asset-light business model by partnering with warehouse operators and facility managers. What the startup brings to the mix is a cloud software platform that serves as a “control tower,” letting users get real-time information about inventory and orders across Locad’s network. The company currently has seven fulfillment centers, with four of its warehouses in the Philippines and the other three in Singapore, New South Wales, Australia and Hong Kong. Part of its funding will be used to expand into more Asia-Pacific markets, focusing on Southeast Asia and Australia.

    Locad’s seed round will also used to add integrations to more couriers and sales channels (it can already be used with platforms like Shopify, WooCommerce, Amazon, Shopee, Lazada and Zalora), and develop new features for its cloud platform, including more data analytics.