Saturday, September 3, 2016

Readability Bookmarking Service Will Shut Down

 

The Readability bookmarking service will shut down on September 30, 2016.

After more than five years of operation, the Readability article bookmarking/read-it-later service will be shutting down after September 30, 2016.

If you’d like to save your bookmarks, please follow these directions before September 30, 2016. You can export your bookmarks by visiting your Tools page, scrolling down to the Data Export section, and clicking the Export Your Data button. You’ll receive an email soon after that contains your bookmarks. Similar services like Instapaper will allow you to import your bookmarks into their service.

The Readability Parser API for developers will continue to be supported and will continue to function as always. We plan to put new energy and focus on the Readability parser, and further announcements will follow. If you’ve requested an API key in the past, you will have received an email with additional details.

Since it launched as a simple bookmarklet in 2009, the Readability project’s impact on reading on the web and beyond is undeniable. We appreciate your loyalty and support for the platform over the years.

Wednesday, August 31, 2016

AskMe Shuts Down, Thousands Of Employees Laid Off

 

In yet another sad chapter in the Indian startup ecosystem, e-commerce site and consumer internet search platform AskMe has shut down and is in the process of laying off its 4000 odd staff. The reason behind the shut down is being stated as severe cash crunch according to a report in The Economic Times.

While the AskMe.com portal is still live, none of the orders placed there are being accepted. According to sources who have spoken to ET, one of the reasons for the shut down is also being speculated as the unplanned exit of one of its principal investor Astro Holdings.

Astro Holdings, which held a 97 percent stake in AskMe Group exited after making its last cash investment of Rs 150 crore. AskMe had even written to the Ministry of Corporate Affairs and Registrar of Companies to prevent Astro Holdings from leaving without meeting its liabilities and commitments, but it was all in vain.

In recent times, around 650 employees had also resigned from AskMe. The site was formed in 2010 and it launched its online shopping site called AskMeBazaar in 2012 with small and medium enterprises. AskMe is associated with around 12,000 merchants in 70 cities. It also offered next-day delivery.

Recently, Ola also shut down its TaxiForSure division thanks to the latters integration with Ola Micro service. This has lead to around 700 to 1000 people losing their jobs as well, while some employees from TaxiForSure have been absorbed into Ola.

Friday, August 12, 2016

OneReceipt is shutting down

 

OneReceipt will be shutting down August 24, 2016. You may not know it, but the OneReceipt team is made up of a very small dedicated and passionate group of engineers who have worked tirelessly to give you a free, intuitive service to organize your purchases. We’re glad you found us and hope our service was valuable.

Tuesday, August 9, 2016

SpoonRocket Closed, Future Uncertain

 

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Sweet potato and black bean chili from SpoonRocket, which has not been in operation for several days. Photo: SpoonRocket

SpoonRocket, the food delivery service headquartered on Ninth St. in West Berkeley, has halted operations. A former employee and a contracted driver were both told by the company over the weekend that the business has closed down for good. No meals have been delivered since Friday, and SpoonRocket’s commercial kitchen, at 1725 University Ave., appears to be shuttered.

Anyone trying to order food for delivery over the weekend or on Monday was met with a notice on the SpoonRocket website that the site was “undergoing maintenance.”

On Sunday, Berkeleyside received an email from a tipster who said a friend, a SpoonRocket employee, had been let go. She was told that by management that SpoonRocket had gone under. Berkeleyside has not been able to confirm this. Several emails sent to SpoonRocket and to its PR representative, beginning on Sunday morning, have not been answered. The company is not answering phone calls.

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The SpoonRocket website is showing a notice that it is undergoing maintenance. The food delivery service has not operated for an estimated three days. Image: SpoonRocket

A man who asked not to be named and who has worked as a delivery driver for SpoonRocket on and off since May 2014, was expecting to work this weekend. He said a manager at SpoonRocket told him on a phone call that the company was closing and that he should look for other work. Shortly afterwards, however, he received a text from the same manager saying things had changed and that they might not be closing. The driver said he wondered if the company was preparing an official statement and did not want the news to leak out prematurely.

SpoonRocket was launched in 2013 by UC Berkeley graduates Anson Tsui and Steven Hsiao with a mission to deliver cheap meals to customers rapidly via their smartphones. A typical entrée might cost $6 and be in the customer’s hands in under 10 minutes. Food is delivered by a fleet of contracted drivers whose cars often sport the company’s signature red flag. Drivers keep the food warm in special packaging and then respond to orders via an app and deliver until their supply runs out.

Tsui and Hsiao already had two startups to their names when they started SpoonRocket — Phở Me Now and Munchy Munchy Hippos, both of which came under umbrella company LateNightOption.com.

The Y Combinator-backed SpoonRocket raised $2.5 million in seed money in September 2013, and $11 million in venture capital in May 2014, according to CrunchBase.

In 2014, SpoonRocket expanded from the East Bay to SOMA in San Francisco. It launched in Seattle in February 2015 but shut that service down just four months later in June of that year. It also launched and closed a San Diego operation in 2015.

The food delivery market has bloomed in recent years, making for a highly competitive field. Other companies in the same broad market that operate in the Bay Area include: PostMates, Eat24, Blue Apron, Caviar, Munchery, DoorDash, Instacart, Amazon Fresh, Good Eggs and UberEATS. All deliver prepared food, whether from kitchens, restaurants or grocery stores.

According to the driver, SpoonRocket operates different pay structures for its drivers — who are all independent contractors — depending on the time of day. The breakfast shift pays $11/hour not including tips, with a guaranteed minimum of $15, he said. Lunch and dinner on weekdays pays $2/delivery not including tips. And, on the weekend, drivers earn $6 an hour plus $2.25 per delivery, not including tips.

On Monday, speculation was beginning to be voiced on Twitter, with SpoonRocket fans bemoaning the lack of service and wondering what was going on:

Not least because of its competitive pricing, SpoonRocket has proved popular among the local student population. But SpoonRocket was keen to stress that it had expanded its market beyond its core student market. In 2014, it contacted Berkeleyside Nosh to say it had “come a long way since serving pho and burritos to Cal students at 4 a.m.” It introduced organic and paleo dishes, and other demographics did indeed appreciate the service. Road-testing food delivery services last October on Berkeleyside, Heather Flett, co-founder of parents and kids website 510Families, reported that her “favorite service for the fastest food in town” was SpoonRocket.

Berkeleyside will update this developing story as we source more information.

Sunday, July 17, 2016

This.cm shutting down

 

 

 

This

, the awkwardly named share-one-link-per-day platform, is shutting down at the end of the month, founder

Andrew Golis

announced over email to users and

in a Medium post

. The site,

launched in 2014

, had generated

some significant interest among media types

, having been invite-only for most of last year. It opened to everyone last fall and began offering automated,

curated email newsletters

. It recently added a commenting option, and had been exploring sponsorships as well as premium membership options; a new version of its app was

featured in the App Store

just last month, and Golis was

giving it a promotional push

just 10 days ago.

Golis explained in his announcement that the lack of funding and any indication of sustainability prompted the decision:

I’m tempted to make the explanation for that complicated, but it’s pretty simple: we worked ourselves to the point of exhaustion, struggled to raise money and just ran out of time. The site, newsletter and app are beloved by tens of thousands of people, including many of the writers and publishers I most admire. But we never got big enough to raise long-term capital or begin to build a sustainable business.

In the last few weeks and days, we’ve entertained a few very flattering conversations with other companies about bringing our work there. But none have come with the scale of commitment that would allow us to attack this huge opportunity with new energy.

And so we’re going to wrap this up in a way that’s best for our community and our team.

In the coming weeks, we’ll offer This. members a tool to export the links they’ve shared to the site. We’ll send around a list of companies and products and people who are building things we think This. fans should keep an eye on.

And I’ll finally give the mobs of people who have tried to poach them from This. the opportunity to snatch up Zeb Young and Mayukh Sen, our brilliant Directors of Engineering and Editorial.

The site was just last month announced as part of a

class of seven NYC startups in Matter’s accelerator

, and won’t be completing the program. As Golis writes:

In particular, I’m grateful to the folks at Matter VC, the incredible accelerator that has helped us in so many ways. One of our biggest disappointments in the timing of this is that we won’t be able to finish their extraordinary program and work closely with the impressive companies they do so much work to build. I would highly recommend this program to all media entrepreneurs and just wish the timing worked out better for us to take full advantage of this opportunity.

The platform found some market penetration among media types, and a number were distraught at the news, even though the demise of a consciously artisanal sharing platform wasn’t much of a surprise for some.

Tuesday, July 5, 2016

Six Mistakes Of TinyOwl, The Blue-Eyed Start-Up Child

 

 

TinyOwl, a Mumbai-based food technology start-up, is staring down the barrel of a gun.

The numbers tell the dismal story. Burning through Rs 2.5 crore a month on an average, it was only left with Rs 18 crore at the end of January. In the past 18-odd months, it had raised Rs 152 crore from various marquee investors and has now run out of options.

No investor is keen on funding the company, and no one wants to buy it. So, it has until June for its final hurrah - unless it can get funding or sell.

But how did the blue-eyed child of the start-up ecosystem get here?

The slide started in September 2015 when it fired 300 employees after over-hiring - a common mistake for start-ups.

The cracks were obvious when one of the employees, in her 30s, took a deep breath, composed herself and marched into a cabin, threw open the door and announced herself in a loud voice.

"How much money did you save when you fired me?" she asked Harshvardhan Mandad, the founder and chief executive officer of TinyOwl.

Mandad stared back, followed by moments of silence. "You know what? I don't care and neither do you," she said and marched out.

As the door closed, onlookers say Mandad was back to looking at his phone, as if nothing had happened.

It was one of those rare moments when Mandad was actually in the office. The IIT-B alumnus' primary job is fund raising. Operations, finance, marketing, human resource and technology are the jobs that are split between the other four co-founders - Shikhar Paliwal, Gaurav Choudhary, Tanuj Khandelwal and Saurabh Goyal.

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The woman was one of those hired, interviewed personally by Mandad, after the company peaked at 2,500 orders in July 2015. The founders and investors were excited. For context, here's an example: India's biggest food tech brand, Zomato, does about 3,000 orders a day now.

The uncoordinated hiring, and subsequent retrenchment, meant TinyOwl's burn skyrocketed to Rs 8-10 crore a month. The discount game meant most customers kept coming back but there were no loyalties.

Money was running out.

Mandad approached investors from across the world. A few Germans were flown in. Everyone refused. Mandad then started approaching competitors to buy out a portion of the company in October.

Business Standard, at the time, had sent an email asking if the company was on the block. Mandad and Gautam Mago from Sequoia Capital, the company's lead investor, said no.

"Oh yes. Harsh approached everyone he could,'' said a former employee who was part of the "inner circle".

Sequoia, Nexus Venture Partners and Matrix Partners agreed to give the company Rs 52 crore but that was it, they said.

Make it last 12 months, the investors are learnt to have told the company.

TinyOwl had gotten a second lease of life. But how would Rs 50 crore or last 12 months when the burn rate was Rs 10 crore a month?

That is when TinyOwl made its second mistake.

In November 2015, it initiated a second round of cuts. Mandad was advised not to retrench so close to Diwali. But the cuts were announced.

Only the Mumbai and Bengaluru divisions were kept alive. The co-founders were sent to various locations. The hostage drama and the breakdown in the relationships between the employees and the founders are well documented.

Where was Mandad? No one is sure. Through the meltdown, he did not come to work. He communicated only through his phone.

The burn was now down to under Rs 4 crore. The money would last seven months, give or take.

But the orders, thanks to the bad press, were down to only 1,000 a day and TinyOwl wasn't discounting any more. Swiggy had taken over from TinyOwl.

Sources at Bengaluru-based Swiggy said they are currently processing more orders than Zomato.

That is when TinyOwl committed its third mistake.

In the first week of December, Mandad announced to his team that the company was going to launch a new version of TinyOwl. "Everyone was caught off-guard," recalls a former employee.

It was now going to do a dish-based aggregation system. If you open the app, it will tell you the dish for today is dosa.

The app would then give you options of where you could order from.

"There was hardly any artificial intelligence used. There was no data analytics," said an employee who helped develop the system. The listing business was to go on but the focus would be dishes. The pivot tanked with just about three orders a day as of two months ago.

Then, just before Mandad went on a three-week break in December, he made mistake number four - he hired a chief technology officer. Akash Saxena is learnt to have joined as CTO at Rs 1.5 crore a year and a joining bonus of Rs 50 lakh.

The investors, who had so far been hands off, were counting every penny now. So, around 10 from the tech team got fired, to convince investors that cost had not risen, said another employee.

At its peak, the tech team had 200, working on just the app. Now, it has 20. The total staff strength - once 1,100 - is now under 200. This is when Mandad remotely asked the Bengaluru office to be shut down. When Mandad returned in January he began preparation for mistake number five.

He started discussing another pivot: an area-based food aggregation, similar to what Grofers runs in grocery.

"In this, let's assume, you ordered roti, sabzi and dal. TinyOwl would get all three from different restaurants and deliver it to you," said an employee who recently quit. He had raised serious doubts over the scalability of the model.

In this business model, TinyOwl had to pay for the logistics of gathering the food from various restaurants. It would cost TinyOwl dear.

For the area-based food aggregation plan, more cash was required and all head of the departments were told to find new jobs.

"We asked him (Mandad) to make Homemade (TinyOwl's amateur chef aggregation business) the key focus. The only competitor was HolaChef and we could take them on," an employee said. Instead, Homemade, the only arm of TinyOwl that breaks even, was dissolved. That's mistake number six. Mandad and the investors initiated a valuation audit, which confirmed that the company was on sale. The hope, among the founders, is that the company will be absorbed by Zomato as Sequoia is a common investor. A few former employees said that Mandad had hinted Ola may be interested as well.

But these talks, too, failed. Reports emerged that TInyOwl maybe in talks with Roadrunnr in an all-stock deal. But the reports could not be confirmed.

Zomato refused to comment on the reports that TinyOwl had approached them looking for a buyout. Emails sent to TinyOwl, Ola and Roadrunnr did not elicit a response.