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The weekly top 10 for B2B tech operators · Every Friday

Top 10 in Tech - What to know for Week ending March 1 2019

Friday 09:00 NZT Curated by Jon Davies
Top 10 in Tech - What to know for Week ending March 1, 2019

WOMEN IN TECH

Gender diversity trends in Venture Capital funded startups paint a dismal data point in 2018, with women founders representing a mere 2.3% of all Venture Capital deployed. But taking a closer look, the data has a more positive forward looking narrative. Even though the number is low, US VC funding for female-founded or co-founded companies has been trending up in recent years, and 2018 saw the creation of several women-led funds, incubators for female founders, and more new companies. Pitchbook take a deep dive into what’s been happening with US investment trends for women in VC over the last 11 years.

SaaS LTV:CAC RATIOS

There are some shortcomings with historic LTV to CAC calculations (due to modern growth focused businesses deploying cross-sell and up-sell strategies), Webflow offer an updated measurement formula.

AWS SPEND

In previous newsletters I mentioned Amazon Web Services (AWS) is bigger than McDonalds. This growth is reflected, in-part, by many businesses (including some big brands) getting carried away and hit with mega bills. The Insider take a look at this challenge. What is evident is that while Public cloud offers flexibility and cost savings, it’s also very easy to go overboard on spend if businesses don’t pay attention or precisely forecast their computing needs.

NO-CODE

Introducing this word into you tech-vocabulary, Welcome to the world of no-code. Technology infrastructure is becoming so commoditized and abstracted that we have now reached a point in time where web services, apps and integrations can be provisioned visually with zero amounts of code needed. A great example is the new ecommerce site, Webflow, who is competing against Shopify, BigCommerce and the like and requires no developers/engineers to stand up and manage a web store.

FAANG

(this is an acronym for Facebook, Apple, Amazon, Netflix and Google). These big tech players are attracting more scrutiny from governments and regulators, in the U.S. and Europe (as well as NZ). Because of the rapid pace of investigations underway this year, The Information have built out an Investigations Tracker to monitor all of the global activity taking place for these high profile companies. Google is currently in the lead, with Facebook taking a close second. (NOTE: Netflix may seem like an outlier company but is included in the acronym as it consumes over 15% of the worlds internet traffic).

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