In the world of startups, the allure of venture capital often overshadows the virtues of bootstrapping, writes guest author Itay Sagie who highlights the power and potential of staying self-funded.
U.S. venture funding has ticked higher this year, led by the AI investment boom. But not all geographies have shared equally in the gains. We take a look at where the money went.
In the final installment of a three-part Post-ZIRP survival series, Bryan House, president at Elastic Path, shares some ...
Over the years, startup investors have poured billions of dollars into DNA testing companies. To date, the results have ...
Today, the focus for most SaaS companies is on profitable revenue rather than growth, writes Bryan House, president at ...
The biggest round that went to a U.S.-based chip startup this year was the $640 million Series D that Groq, an AI ...
Last week, defense and critical infrastructure tech startup Chaos Industries raised $145 million in a Series B — more than ...
Five companies joined The Crunchbase Unicorn Board in October 2024, across sectors spanning AI, energy, robotics, fintech and ...
What’s the best bet when the pressure shifts in your business from growth to profitability? Guest author Bryan House, ...
While overall venture funding to U.S. real estate-related startups is down, there are still areas popular with investors.
After a slow week last week, big rounds saw a good rebound with seven startups raising $100 million or more. While food ...
So far this year, roughly $758 million has gone to rounds for startups tied to AR, VR and the metaverse, per Crunchbase data.