Top Banner
500 Startups Tour April 12, 2013 Ray Grieselhuber CEO, Ginzamarkets, Inc.
25

500 Startups Tour

Jan 25, 2015

Download

Business

An overview of 500 Startups for a Japanese audience, as well as my experience starting GinzaMetrics in Japan and getting funded by 500 Startups. I close with some comparisons between Japan and Silicon Valley and provide some advice and observations to Japanese entrepreneurs.
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: 500 Startups Tour

500 Startups TourApril 12, 2013

Ray GrieselhuberCEO, Ginzamarkets, Inc.

Page 2: 500 Startups Tour

• $60m+ under management

• 20 people, 10 investing partners

• Silicon Valley incubator

• Presence in SF, NY, MEX, BRZ, IND, CHN, SE Asia

• 800+ Founders, 200+ Mentors

• Focus: Design, Data & Distribution

About 500 Startups

Page 3: 500 Startups Tour

500 Startups Investment Thesis

Lots of small bets + quantitative approach

Page 4: 500 Startups Tour

• Wildfire

• Twilio

• SendGrid

• TaskRabbit

• MakerBot

• 9GAG

Notable Companies / Global Coverage

Page 5: 500 Startups Tour

• LESS Capital Required

• Cloud drives down data center costs

• Crowdfunding

• More Customers via Online Platforms

• Search

• Social

• Mobile

• Media

• Networking

• Lots of Little Bets

• 500 Startups, Y Combinator, Angel List

Recent, Big Changes in VC

Page 6: 500 Startups Tour

Venture Funding Ecosystem

Page 7: 500 Startups Tour
Page 8: 500 Startups Tour
Page 9: 500 Startups Tour
Page 10: 500 Startups Tour

Risk Mitigation Through Diversification

Page 11: 500 Startups Tour

Lots of Little Bets

Page 12: 500 Startups Tour

• Growth of global languages

• Mandarin, English, Spanish, Arabic

• Smart device proliferation

• Internet Adoption

• More Bandwidth = more social, more cloud, more mobile, more video

• Wealthy Chinese & Indians

• Global Payment Platforms

• Reduce Startup Costs

• Global Distribution Platforms

Global Trends

Page 13: 500 Startups Tour

GinzaMetricsTeam size: 10 people

Offices:- San Francisco- Tokyo- NYC coming soon- Moscow coming soon

Raised: $1.7m from Y Combinator, 500 Startups & more

Page 14: 500 Startups Tour

Coming to Japan

• Read a book when I was 9 about feudal Japan called Shogun

• Studied Japanese in college

Page 15: 500 Startups Tour

Toyama

Page 16: 500 Startups Tour

• Moved to Japan again in 2008

• Quit my job to start my own company

• Started Firewatching Media in Tokyo

• Starting building Ginzametrics in my pajamas. Almost ran out of money.

• Learned about the Japanese enterprise market

Tokyo

Page 17: 500 Startups Tour

Getting into Y Combinator

Page 18: 500 Startups Tour

GinzaMetricsHistory:

• Launched August, 2010

• Struggled to raise money initially because I was alone and B2B was not sexy

• Mostly Japanese customers until late 2012

• Growing quickly now

• Startups take a long time. Most people give up too soon.

• Our goal: to be the leading SEO & Content Marketing platform in the world.

Page 19: 500 Startups Tour

Differences / Comparisons Between Silicon Valley & Japan

Page 20: 500 Startups Tour

http://www.flickr.com/photos/paulnichol/2056630217/sizes/z/in/photostream/

In Both Japan and SV, Reputation is Everything

Page 21: 500 Startups Tour

In Japan, People (Media, Companies, Event Organizers) Respect Investors More than Entrepreneurs

Page 22: 500 Startups Tour

In Silicon Valley, those who can create are taking power

Page 23: 500 Startups Tour

Advice to Japanese Entrepreneurs (and VCs)

• Start thinking bigger!

• Unsexy businesses are sexy

• Focus on revenue, especially because investment in Japan is still weak

• Choose big markets

• Don’t underestimate difficulties of living / working in the US

• Build in Japan + Asia

• Learn how to be a global Asian, not just Japanese.

Page 24: 500 Startups Tour

Advice to Japanese Entrepreneurs (and VCs)

• Create stronger Japanese networks abroad. Look at Chinese and Korean networks.

• There is no longer any excuse for not speaking English well. It is hurting growth.

• Invest in building native Japanese IT / Software global powerhouses. Software is eating the world and Japan is still made out of things about to be eaten.

• You are not safe. The young people of Meiji knew this and completely transformed their country in less than 30 years.