Category: Austin (Page 101 of 317)

11 Startups Join DivInc’s Latest Accelerator Program

DivInc Cohort Three, courtesy photo

In 2016, Preston James, Ashley Jennings, and Dana Callender founded DivInc to bring greater entrepreneurial diversity to Austin’s technology industry.

The 12-week accelerator program, based at Capital Factory, has graduated two cohorts so far and made a big impact on providing women and minorities with greater access to mentors, funding, partnerships and the overall inner workings of the local tech industry.

To date, 18 companies and 24 founders have participated in the DivInc program. They’ve collectively raised nearly $600,000, according to a news release.

On Tuesday, DivInc announced 11 new startups, run by eight women and seven men, for its third accelerator program, which begins Sept. 5th.

The numbers are bleak for funding for diverse founders, with “only three percent of VC funding going to women founders and less than two percent going to African American and Latino founders,” according to a news release.

“Just think about the socioeconomic impact an inclusive, innovative tech startup ecosystem will have,” Preston James, co-founder, and CEO of DivInc said in a news release. “With the population shifting to 51 percent people of color by 2040, it’s not only imperative but essential that these demographic groups be major contributors to economic growth in the U.S. Imagine in Austin alone…with a potential backlog of 1,000 tech entrepreneurs of color and women, and if on average, one out of 25 became successful entrepreneurs that creates 100 jobs and $5 million of wealth. That would translate to 4,000 jobs and $200 million in revenue contributed back to the city.”

The third DivInc cohort includes the following:

● Dr. Jennifer Davis and Stephanie Cantú, founders of Data Bot Box (AI and psychology)

● Dion Jones, founder of enautics (B2B SaaS)

● Roman Gonzalez, founder of Gardenio (Marketplace for Gardeners)

● Shambrekia Wise, founder of FuzeU (Education Tech)

● Yogi Patel, founder of iuzeit (Mobile App)

● Wes Riddick and Cristina Rodgers, founders of Maximus Box (Retail Tech)

● Sara Brinton, founder of Penguino Travel (Travel Tech)

● Stephanie Labay, founder of Retreat Place (Travel and Wellness Tech)

● Anna Renery and Dan Driscoll, founders of Sponsorfy (MarketPlace)

● Ashley Behnke, founder of Spot Loc8r (Mobile App)

● Airion Watkins-Clark and Ethan Isaacson, founders of WutzGood Inc. (Mobile App)

At the conclusion of the program on Nov. 30th, the startups will pitch their startups at a Demo Day event.

Vyze Lands $13.1 Million in Venture Capital

Vyze, a cloud-based financial technology company, has raised $13.1 million in venture capital to accelerate its growth and expand into new markets.

Austin Ventures with additional investment from Fathom Capital and Starvest Partners led the Series C financing round. The company, founded in 2008, has raised $48.1 million including the latest funding round.

As part of the deal, Ken DeAngelis, Co-Founder and General Partner at Austin Ventures, will join the Vyze Board of Directors.

Vyze is focused on the retail industry. The company has seen its retail customers double during the past year and its finance volume through its platform increase 700 percent. Vyze works with lenders to provide consumer finance products like branded store credit cards, installment loans and lease to own payment plans. It is available in more than 2,000 stores throughout the U.S. It’s also available through online stores and call centers.

“Traditional retail financing relies on an outdated retail financing model, resulting in limited consumer choice, and credit rejection rates that average 50 percent in the store and up to 75 percent online,” Keith Nealon, CEO of Vyze, said in a news release. “In contrast, the Vyze platform connects retailers with a variety of lenders, boosting approval rates to upwards of 80 percent. Retailers using Vyze gain access to multiple credit solutions to better serve all their customers and drive continuous growth.”

“Vyze is bringing much-needed innovation to the retail financing market with a platform that optimizes the entire industry, similar to a service like Airbnb in the lodging industry,” Chris Pacitti at Austin Ventures, said in a news release. “Building out this type of optimization for a marketplace is not a trivial task, but Vyze is now at the point where network effects are starting to yield the exponential growth promised by the model.”

Vyze’s technology lets retailers offer their customers more options for paying for goods and services both in brick and mortar stores and online. That results in higher consumer satisfaction and increased retail sales.

Austin-based Press Raises $500,000 in Seed Funding to Expand On-demand Laundry and Dry Cleaning Service

Courtesy photo from Press

Nobody likes to do laundry.

But we all need clean clothes and many of us are too busy to fetch our dry cleaning and laundry.

That’s where Austin-based Press comes in. The startup, based at Capital Factory, just raised $500,000 in seed stage funding to expand its business. The company, which began as a Longhorn Startup company at the University of Texas at Austin, raised the money from Rob Taylor, Jonathan Coon, founder of 1-800-Contracts, Chuck Gordon and Mario Feghali, co-founders of SpareFoot and Mike Bennett.

Press plans to use the funds to enter new markets.

“We’ve found that people really value their free time, and laundry is one of the first chores that can easily be eliminated,” Ryan Harmon, co-founder and CEO of Press, said in a news release. “The average person can spend up to eight and a half hours per month hassling with laundry, and that’s time you don’t have to waste.”

Founded in 2015, the company already provides service to Austin, Dallas, Fort Worth, San Antonio, Houston, Oklahoma City and Chicago.

“Our model allows us to expand quickly and efficiently, and the funding will allow us to ensure we continue to provide the quality of service customers demand,” Harmon said.

The company has web and mobile phone apps, available for download at the iTunes App Store and Google Play Store, that allow customers to schedule pick ups and deliveries from 6 a.m. to 8 p.m. All scheduling and payment is handled through the web and mobile apps so customers don’t have to be present for pickup or deliveries.

Press works with local dry cleaners and laundromats to handle order fulfillment.

“A big perk about our service is the fact that your clothes aren’t being exchanged between several hands,” Harmon says. “The people that pick up and deliver your clothes are the same people that are cleaning them, and that means less friction and a better customer experience.”

uShip Unveils Bright, Inviting New Corporate Headquarters

Mike Williams, CEO of uShip

By LAURA LOREK
Publisher of Silicon Hills News

Heather Hoover, executive vice president of operations at uShip, joined the company in 2005, a year after its founding.

At the time, uShip, the online shipping marketplace and freight automation software provider, didn’t have a formal office.

Nick Parker, chief technology officer at uShip, and the founders worked out of the business center of his apartment building.

They held company meetings at coffee shops around Austin.

“We’ve upgraded just a little,” Hoover said.

On Tuesday, uShip unveiled its new bright, open and inviting corporate headquarters at 205 E. Riverside Drive in a 45,000 square foot building, which dates to 1930 and was formerly an automotive trade and technical school.

A giant 15-foot-tall stool made the move to uShip’s new headquarters on Riverside Drive from its old office at Third and Brazos downtown. It was left by McGarrah Jessee
Advertising company, the old occupants of the building.

The unusual office décor is emblematic of the company, which prides itself on shipping everything from defunct Disneyland ride cars, llamas, horses, boats, cars, furniture and more, in the U.S. and 13 countries worldwide. uShip has shipped all kinds of strange items on its platform, Parker said. Many of the unusual items have been featured on Shipping Wars, a reality TV series that featured uShip independent truck drivers on the A&E Channel, he said.

Unique items included “A 90-pound life-sized evil doll,” Parker said. And giant replicas of the Simpson TV characters, Hoover said.

To date, the company has more than five million consumer shippers, 500,000 business shippers and 8.3 million shipment listings. It handles 15,000 bids per day by thousands of providers and has new listings on its platform every 15 seconds.

uShip’s top partners include eBay, Ritchie Bros. and DB Schenker, one of the world’s largest logistics companies owned by Deutsche Bahn AG. Last summer, the two companies struck a five year agreement to create Drive4Schenker, an online trucking platform using uShip’s software and technology.

uShip’s three-story building has an open floor plan on the first floor with lots of white boards and large smart TVs on the walls, couches and gathering areas. It also has a row of conference room on one side designed to look like shipping containers and wooden accent walls kind of like a shipping crate.

The architectural firm of Chioco Designs left the industrial feel of the building with exposed duct work on the high ceilings, large open areas and concrete floors.

The first floor also has a large professional kitchen. Chef Ella Adams and Sous Chef Denise Dawson, both French-trained pastry chefs, prepare and serve lunch to uShip’s 220 employees Monday through Thursday and breakfast on Friday.

During the early evening tour on Tuesday, employees were participating in a Yoga class just outside the kitchen. uShip’s offices also feature bike racks, showers, and dressing areas. Many employees bike to work. They are provided with a $50 bonus every paycheck for taking alternative transportation like biking, walking or taking the bus.

The first floor also has offices for engineers and other employees and a game room with arcade games, foosball, ping pong and more.

The backside of the property features an outdoor patio that backs up to the E. Bouldin Creek greenbelt with giant Cottonwood, Elm and Hackberry Trees providing shade. The outdoor area has tables with umbrellas. It also has greenspace for the 30 plus dogs of uShip to run around.

On the second floor, the attic with exposed wooden beams has been converted into office space for the commercial sales team.

The third floor features a view of the Austin skyline. It has more open space with tables and stools and houses customer operations and marketing. They’ve also got room for expansion on the third floor. The company is hiring 15 people right now, primarily developers, quality assurance, product management and member support. The building has the capacity for 400 employees.

“We’re actively recruiting,” said Mike Williams, CEO of uShip.

“We have some really ambitious goals,” Williams said. “We’re working on innovative technology. The products we get to work on and deliver are cutting edge mobile technology for consumers and businesses, innovative payment technologies because that is always changing and adapting. And believe it or not, logistics is a mainstream business topic these days. There’s so much opportunity there for innovation and digitization.”

uShip employees like the new space, Williams said.

“It’s an office that is easy to get to no matter where you live around town,” “But it’s also an office that once you are here, you really don’t need to go anywhere. You’ve got lunch. You’ve got space like this to get fresh air and talk to a coworker. It helps breed creativity.”

Dean Jutilla, Mike Williams, Heather Hoover and Nick Parker with uShip on the third floor balcony of the company’s new headquarters.

Indeed.com Acquires Interviewed

Indeed, a global job site based in Austin announced it has acquired Interviewed, a human resources technology company based in San Francisco.

“Indeed’s mission is to help people get jobs, and today we make it easy for millions of job seekers to find and apply to jobs all over the world,” Chris Hyams, president of Indeed, said in a news release. “Interviewed’s technology is a natural extension, allowing job seekers to demonstrate their skills, and enabling employers to quickly and easily identify the best candidates for their roles. We are excited to have the Interviewed team join us to help make hiring more efficient for the millions of employers hiring on Indeed.”

Interviewed, founded in 2015, Has created a series of online skills-based tests as well as personality assessments and other programs to test job candidates for particular jobs. Its customers include IBM, Clara Labs, Zillow, Thumbtack.

“We are thrilled that Indeed, the leader in online hiring, will be integrating our platform with their extensive service offerings that work to bring the right candidate to the right opportunity,” Darren Nix, CEO of Interviewed, said in a news release. “Indeed’s relentless commitment to helping people find jobs makes it a great home for Interviewed’s tools that strive to cut hiring time in half and create a better experience for both job seekers and hiring managers.”

“All of Interviewed’s employees, including Nix and co-founders Daniel O’Shea and Chris Bakke, will become Indeed employees as part of the acquisition,” according to a news release.

Indeed, founded in 2004, is the world’s number one job site and reaches more than 60 countries in 28 languages with more than 200 million visitors monthly. The company moved into new headquarters last year and is on a hiring spree itself.

True Wealth Ventures’ Sara Brand and Kerry Rupp Seek to Change the Landscape of Venture Capital Investing

Sara Brand and Kerry Rupp, general partners of True Wealth Ventures

The general partners of True Wealth Ventures want to see more female led companies get venture capital investment.

And they want to see more female venture capitalists making investments in the industry.

The $20 million True Wealth Ventures fund invests in women led companies in the sustainable consumer and consumer health industries.

Sara Brand and Kerry Rupp, general partners of True Wealth Ventures, founded the VC firm after identifying problems in the VC industry. They recently sat down with Silicon Hills for an interview for its Ideas to Invoices podcast.

Brand, who has three degrees in mechanical engineering, spent 20 years in the semiconductor industry and owns a brewery, (512) Brewing Company with her husband. She spent time in venture capital, in technical roles, operational roles and management consulting.

“Looking back, I was pretty much the only woman,” Brand said. “Mechanical engineering, beer, semiconductors, VC at my last role at Advanced Micro Devices I was asked to be the executive sponsor of the global woman’s forum. It was at that point that I realized that I was the only vice president that was a woman that had any technical or operational background and I had not realized that and was very surprised to find that out because I had been so used to being pretty much the only woman. But I couldn’t believe that that was the case.”

That’s when Brand began considering the numbers behind what it means to have more women in leadership positions. She documents an extremely high correlation between women in leadership positions and outstanding financial performance, Brand said.

“So, I started getting really interested in what companies could do to improve or increase the number of women in leadership positions,” Brand said. “And then knowing I wanted to get back into venture capital already, I started looking at the venture capital space and saw that it was a humongous gap in the venture capital space.”

Because of the state of where things were and the opportunity, Brand co-founded True Wealth Ventures with Rupp.

“At the time, I had been the CEO of DreamIt Ventures, a startup accelerator operating in multiple cities with a $20 million fund,” Rupp said. “They had done a program specifically focused on woman entrepreneurs because there was an underrepresentation of women, compared to men in all the accelerators.“

“I had some really strong woman entrepreneurs that had gone through my Dream It programs, but had struggled to get funding,” Rupp said. “And I know it was explicitly in some cases because they were female because they had instances where they met with venture capitalists who told them we don’t invest in women.”

Overall, True Wealth Ventures will invest in 12 companies during the next four years with initial investments ranging from $250,000 to $500,000.

So far, True Wealth Ventures has looked at hundreds of companies and has invested in two: UnaliWear and BrainCheck. UnaliWear is a smart watch for seniors created by Jean Anne Booth, a serial entrepreneur, in Austin. BrainCheck is a mobile brain health tracking solution that was the result of 20 years of research at Baylor College of Medicine and later spun out of the TMCx Innovation accelerator in Houston. Yael Katz is the CEO of BrainCheck.

“One of the things that is pretty fascinating about our investors is that 80 percent of them to date are women and that is really pretty unexpected and unheard of in the venture capital industry,” Rupp said.
Somewhere between four to six percent of venture capital partners today are women, but if you look at who is making investment decisions is might be closer to one percent of the venture capital investors, Rupp said.

“We are bringing a different audience to VC investing,” Rupp said.

A lot of the investors are women in a couple or family office or foundation that made the investment decision, Brand said. Today, women are said to hold 40 percent of the U.S.’s investable assets, but that is projected to go up to two-thirds of all U.S. investable assets by 2030, Brand said.

“Women haven’t been investing very much in venture capital or even as angel investors – having those numbers increase is really exciting on making sure we’re sustaining the innovation economy in this country,” Brand said.

True Wealth Ventures’ isn’t promoting a feminist manifesto, but its investing strategy is rooted in a deep statistical analysis that shows businesses and startups with women in leadership positions outperform ones that don’t have women.

A McKinsey & Co. study called “Women Matter” showed that in their database of Fortune 500 publicly traded companies, the top quartile of companies in that database with women in leadership positions saw 41 percent higher return on equity and 56 percent higher return on earnings, Brand said.

Looking at the venture capital industry, Brand saw there was a massive disconnect even more than the corporate world, she said.

“If you look at who is getting the money in venture capital, less than 3 percent of all VC backed companies are women led and women CEOs and about two percent of overall VC dollars are going to companies with women CEOs,” Brand said. “Yet there are similar studies that show similar outperformance for women led companies.”

Kaufmann Foundation did a study that showed women-led VC backed companies saw 35 percent higher returns and 12 percent higher revenues using a third less capital, Brand said. Yet if you look across the entire country, there are very few funds that have women general partners that have any kind of gender diversity strategy, Brand said.

“There are about a half dozen,” she said. “And they are generally in New York and California so we’re the whole strategy for the central part of the country.”

Unconscious bias exists in the venture capital world in the pitch process, Brand said.

There are crowdfunding platforms like Kickstarter in which 35 percent of the successful deals are led by women, compared to 2.7 percent of venture backed VC companies are led by women, Brand said.
There’s been a bro culture in the technology industry for a long, long time and it still exists, but the reactions to it are changing, Brand said.

“A year ago, the Ellen Pao trial to now where firms are taking investors out of leadership positions within 24 hours of alleged harassment accusations becoming public,” Brand said. “That is unprecedented.”

Pao, a female venture capitalist, filed a gender discrimination lawsuit against her former employer Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers. She lost the lawsuit but the case did draw massive attention to the lack of women in the venture capital industry. Earlier this year, a former Uber Engineer, Susan Fowler, wrote a blog post outlining alleged sexual harassment at Uber during her time there. Recently, Uber’s board fired its CEO Travis Kalanick stemming from allegations of a workplace hostile to women. And an Uber board member also resigned in June after making a sexist comment during a board meeting.

“We need more women in VC firms,” Rupp said.

“There are so many all men VC firms, why can’t there be some more all women VC firms?” Rupp asked.

The lack of female VCs and the lack of female led companies getting funding is a systemic problem that we need to think about more broadly, she said.

For more listen to the Ideas to Invoices podcast and please rate and review us on iTunes.

Austin Tech Alliance Hosts its First Tech Town Hall at WeWork Domain with District 7 Council Member Leslie Pool

Austin District 7 Council Member Leslie Pool with David Edmonson, executive director of the Austin Tech Alliance, at the organization’s first tech town hall meeting at WeWork at the Domain.

The biggest challenge for Austin and the Texas Legislature is tackling school finance, according to Austin District 7 Council Member Leslie Pool.

“More than half of the property taxes that are paid by Austin homeowners, commercial properties and businesses go back to the state under recapture,” Pool said.

That’s more than $400 million this year and $536 million next year that goes back to the state under the Robin Hood Law, passed in 1993 that redistributes money from “wealthy” districts to poorer ones, according to Pool.

“The school districts here are suffering from that,” Pool said.

Pool spoke Tuesday night at WeWork at the Domain during a Tech Town Hall organized by the Austin Technology Alliance.

About 40 people turned out for the event which featured Austin Technology Alliance Executive Director David Edmonson asking Pool questions along with audience members. Pool is also concerned with the anti-sanctuary city law, Senate Bill 4, that the Governor signed earlier this year. THe law, which goes into effect September 1st, allows state law enforcement officers to ask about immigration status and residency when they detain someone and to work with federal immigration authorities.

Adam Wacenske, general manager of WeWork South Region.

WeWork hosted the event because it’s important to engage its 1,200 plus members at the Domain location with local government and issues that related to them, Adam Wacenske, general manager of the WeWork South region said. WeWork at the Domain opened in December of 2016. Overall, WeWork has 3,000 members at its three locations throughout Austin.

“WeWork’s mission is to help people create a life and not just a living,” Wacenske said. “Part of that is to get away from only work and to connect people with the issues that matter to them. Council Member Pool talking about what affects their day to day lives is really important to members and the community.”

Council Member Pool said it’s important to reach out to the tech community to get them engaged.

“I would meet with any group to help them understand what we do and to demystify the workings of municipal government,” she said. “I help people negotiate and navigate and get involved.”

Pool has also seen explosive growth in the tech community in her district.

The Austin Tech Alliance was formed last year as a nonprofit organization focused on forging relationships between the tech community and policy makers, said Edmonson. The organization has several hundred members including companies as well as individuals, he said. Its company members include Data.World, WP Engine, Silicon Labs, BazaarVoice, Google and others, he said.

The event Tuesday was the first in a series of town hall meetings designed to bring the technology community face to face with policy makers, Edmonson said.

“There is always something to be said for meeting someone in person, and hearing them talk about what they are working on and what’s important to them,” he said.

The tech community, traditionally, has not been civically engaged, he said. The next meeting is August 24th at Capital Factory with Mayor Steve Adler.

One of the major issues the tech community is concerned about is the so-called Bathroom Bill being considered in the special Texas Legislative Session that began last week. The Austin Tech Alliance put together a letter in opposition to the legislation with 433 people signing it and presented it to the Gov. Greg Abbott and Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick, Edmonson said. The bathroom bill would regulate what public and government restrooms people could use based on the gender listed on their birth certificate or another form of government ID.

“This is legislation that will make it harder to recruit the best and brightest and most talented individuals to Austin,” Edmonson said.

The Texas State approved the bathroom bill early Wednesday morning, according to the Dallas Morning News. It is now in the hands of the Texas House, and House Speaker Rep. Joe Straus is reported to be in opposition to the bill, according to the Dallas Morning News.

CodeNext, the rewriting of Austin’s land development regulations, is another big issue on the agenda for Austin Tech Alliance, Edmonson said. It sounds boring, but it’s really important because it regulates who gets to build what and where he said.

“That is going to have a huge impact on Austin’s tech sector’s ability to compete with other tech hubs,” he said.

Affordability for real estate and mobility for efficient transportation are other big issues, he said.

Five Events to Attend in Austin This Week

It may be the heart of the summer and the Texas heat is going strong, but that doesn’t mean technology activity has slowed down in Austin. Silicon Hills News has highlighted five events to attend in Austin this week.

TUESDAY– WeWork and the Austin Tech Alliance will host a tech town hall meeting with Councilwoman Leslie Pool on July 25 at WeWork Domain. The discussion will focus on the Texas State Legislature’s agenda and its impact on Austin, her priorities for the city, and how Austin’s tech community can best engage on neighborhood and policy issues. The event starts at 5:30 p.m. at WeWork Domain, 11801 Domain Blvd., 3rd Floor, Austin. RSVP here.

WEDNESDAY – The Human Capital Series at Galvanize kicks off at 6:30 p.m. and runs until 8:30 p.m. The free event features Kay Oder of Insperity, a human capital firm, talking about good processes for recruiting, onboarding employees as well as productivity, retention and employee engagement. At Galvanize, 119 Nueces St., Austin. Register here.

THURSDAY-Austin Founder Institute Information Session at Galvanize. The free event kicks off at 6:30 p.m. and is for people to meet local directors, ask questions and get information on launching a startup in Austin. At Galvanize, 119 Nueces St., Austin. Register here.

FRIDAY – An event put on by the Technology Advisors Group (TAG) for hardware entrepreneurs focused on the enterprise Internet of Things platform. This breakfast meeting kicks off at 7 a.m. and runs until 8:30 a.m. on Friday at Tech Ranch at 183 and Mopac. Eric Simone, CEO of ClearBlade is the featured speaker. The event costs $17.50 in advance or $20 at the door. Get your ticket here.

SATURDAY and SUNDAYExpedition Hacks – a two-day hackathon that kicks off at 9 a.m. on Saturday and focuses on design solutions that use GIS, imagery information, and other big data sources. “Develop an application, platform or process that represents useful ways you envision technology will have a real world impact in Austin, and beyond.” The grand prize is $5,000. The event costs $10 and requires registration. It takes place at Gather Ventures, 5540 North Lamar Blvd., Austin. Get your ticket here.

ExpeditionHacks Austin promo 2 from Blue Compass on Vimeo.

Austin-based Telestax Lands $4.7 Million in VC Funding

Telestax announced this week it has raised $4.7 million in funding.

Austin-based LiveOak Venture Partners led the funding round. The company plans to use the money on product development, customer support and marketing.

“We are thrilled to bring Telestax into our portfolio of promising companies. The exceptional team, high-value technology and resulting customer adoption of Telestax’s offerings made this a compelling investment for us,” Krishna Srinivasan, General Partner at LiveOak Venture Partners, said in a news release. “We look forward to helping Telestax with their market and product expansion.”

The Austin-based company makes a communications platform called RestcommOne, which blends telecommunications applications with enterprise applications to “deliver real-time communications business solutions that scale,” according to a news release.

Telestax, which launched its RestcommOne platform in 2011, has more than 170 commercial customers including Avaya, MetTel, Ping An Bank, T-Mobile, Unifonic and NTT-AT. The platform supports 900 million calls daily and 200 million messages.

“The last 12 months have been remarkable for Telestax,” Ivelin Ivanov, Telestax CEO and co-founder, said in a news release. “We launched RestcommONE, our CPaaS enablement platform, and our RestcommONE Marketplace; and today we have added another business partner with strong proven expertise in telecom and infrastructure software”.

Telestax, founded in 2011, has raised $5.9 million in two rounds to date, according to its Crunchbase profile.

Seven Austin Entrepreneurs Win Big at WeWork Creator Awards

AUSTIN, TX – JUNE 27: WeWork Creator Awards Austin at ACL Live at The Moody Theater on June 27, 2017 in Austin, Texas. (Photo by Rick Kern/Getty Images for WeWork)

In the first ever Austin WeWork Creator Awards, seven Austin entrepreneurs won $845,000 in financial grants and now head to New York City fo the final event.

The biggest winner, GrubTubs, took home $360,000 in the scale category, the top prize at the event held at Austin City Limits Live at Moody Theater Tuesday night.

Other winners included re:3D Inc., CatSpring Yaupon, Kwaddle, Freehand Arts Project, Rancho Alegre Radio and Successful Smiles of Texas. In all, 34 finalists pitched before a live audience.

Winners from the scale and launch category will compete for additional financial grants at the global finals at Barclays Center in New York City on November 30.

SCALE: Businesses/nonprofits with proven success, ready for next level

Robert Olivier, GRUBTUBS – $360,000
Samantha Snabes, re:3D INC – $180,000
Abianna Falla, CATSPRING YAUPON – $180,000

LAUNCH: Businesses/nonprofits launched and still learning

Deven Hariyani, KWADDLE – $72,000

INCUBATE: Ideas/projects that need funding

Murphy Anne Carter, FREEHAND ARTS PROJECT – $18,000
Piper LeMoine, RANCHO ALEGRE RADIO – $18,000
Roberto Rivera, SUCCESSFUL SMILES OF TEXAS – $18,000

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