Category: Austin (Page 97 of 317)

Facebook’s Sheryl Sandberg on How to Find Joy Again After Tragedy

AUSTIN, TX – NOVEMBER 02: Sheryl Sandberg speaks at the Texas Conference For Women 2017 at Austin Convention Center on November 2, 2017 in Austin, Texas. (Photo by Marla Aufmuth/Getty Images for Texas Conference for Women)


By LAURA LOREK
Publisher of Silicon Hills News

Finding joy, being grateful and helping others are key to being resilient and living a fulfilling life, said Sheryl Sandberg, Chief Operating Officer of Facebook.

One of the most important lessons Sandberg learned through adversity is gratitude.

“Reminding ourselves of gratitude is so important,” Sandberg said.

After the sudden death of her husband, Dave Goldberg in 2015 at the age of 47, Sandberg felt extreme despair and loss. But through that tragic experience, she also began to embrace gratitude. She turned 48 last August and instead of being upset about getting older and almost being 50, she instead felt a deep sense of accomplishment that she had made it to 48.

The only two choices in life are “we grow older or we don’t,” Sandberg said. “Every year is a gift.”

Sandberg, author of Lean In, joined Adam Grant, author of Originals, in writing the book: Option B: Facing Adversity, Building Resilience, and Finding Joy. On Thursday, they spoke during the keynote luncheon to more than 7,500 women attending the sold-out 18th Annual Texas Conference for Women.

Today, Sandberg is a profoundly different person, she said.

Sandberg wrote Option B with Grant to share her experiences on dealing with loss after devastating events to embrace life, rediscover joy and persevere.

“Even without the trauma, can you wake up every single morning grateful to be alive?” Sandberg asked. “Probably not. Can you wake up a lot more mornings being grateful for that gift of life? I think we all can and that’s what we’re hoping Option B hopes to do.”

Grant said there’s a self-help section in all bookstores, but there isn’t a help others section.

“Which is really sad,” he said.

In the face of tragedy, it is important for others to show up and show support, Grant said.

Before Dave’s death, Sandberg said when she had friends or family going through devastating events she would say something once.

“And then I would never mention it again because I didn’t want to remind them,” she said. “Someone walks up to me two and a half years later and says I’m sorry for your loss, I don’t think oh I forgot. How could you remind me of such an awful thing? I know Dave is gone. I know that every single day. And the woman sitting next to you who is going through Chemo, she knows that too.”

It’s hard to reach out and not everyone wants to talk about everything all the time, but it’s key to make the effort to say, “I’m here if you want too,” Sandberg said.

“The power of doing anything is better than the offer to do something,” Sandberg said.

Too often people think someone else is going to show up with a hug and a stuffed animal, but all of us can do a lot more to be there for others, she said.
It’s also important for people who have gone through traumatic events to recapture the joy in their lives, Sandberg said.

At a party one night, a friend asked her dance and Sandberg had a great time until she burst into tears. She realized she was happy and she felt a flood of guilt because Dave was gone, and she didn’t think she deserved to be happy again.

But Adam Grant told her she needed to do more things in her life that made her happy and brought her joy.

To recapture joy in her life, Sandberg writes down three moments of joy that occurred throughout the day before she goes to bed and they can be small things like “my daughter gave me a hug without being asked” or “my coffee tasted great this morning.”

Before Dave died, Sandberg went to bed every single night worrying about what she did wrong.

Now giving herself a moment at night to focus on joy, helps her focus on joy throughout the day, she said.

RAD Office Tour in Austin Takes Place on Nov. 4th

Courtesy photo by Laura Alexandra Photography

The RAD Office Tour is a one-day self-guided tour featuring 11 cool workspaces in Austin.

The RAD Office Tour takes place on Saturday from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. General admission tickets include tour stops at Bumble, Condé Nast Co/Lab, Favor, argodesign, Kammok, Handsome, GasPedal, and Soma Vida Wellness Coworking.

VIP Only tour stops include all of those spaces and tours of MF Architecture, Atlassian, and a special hard hat tour of Springdale General. RAD Office Tours created a map of all the locations.

“Each of these companies are thoughtfully designing and building around people and have meaningfully invested in their workplace as a long-term competitive advantage for attracting and retaining top talent,” said Royal Frasier, RAD spokeswoman.

“The tour is a unique opportunity for business leaders, HR and operations professionals to tour nearly a dozen culture-forward offices in Austin,” Frasier said. “The event also caters to companies looking to buy, lease, or design new spaces in Austin, plus job seekers wanting to get an inside peek into the culture and workplace of any of our featured tour stops.”

“Many Austin companies are leaders in supporting innovative, healthy and inspiring workplaces, and RAD is all about spotlighting them and uncovering design solutions and tips/tricks for everyone in the community concerned with developing company cultures that are happy and productive,” Frasier said.

The event also includes a VIP opening party. For more information or to buy tickets, please visit RAD Office Tour’s Eventbrite page.

Favor Runner Clubhouse

Contract Simply’s Will Mitchell on Pivoting and Building the Business, on Ideas to Invoices

Will Mitchell, co-founder of Contract Simply, courtesy photo.

In this episode of Ideas to Invoices, Will Mitchell, co-founder of Contract Simply, discusses how his startup pivoted from a consumer marketplace called Renovate Simply to a business to business enterprise software company for the construction and banking industry.

The co-founders of Contract Simply spent last summer in Mountain View, California in the Y-Combinator program. Mitchell and his co-founder, Andrew Latimer, moved to California, rented an apartment and furniture and spent three months in the accelerator program.

The company initially got rejected when applying to the Y-Combinator program as Renovate Simply. So they re-examined their business and decided to focus directly on the construction contracting market. With the new concept, they got into the program.

Y-Combinator invests $120,000 in the startups for a seven percent equity stake.

The program was worth it, Mitchell said.

“It’s great at giving you a stamp of approval,” he said.

The network of folks for sales, marketing and product development and fundraising is incredible, Mitchell said.

“The program is very good at focusing the company and its objective,” he said. The focus is on revenue, customers and traction, he said.
“They do a fantastic job on emphasizing what’s important,” he said.

Contract Simply, founded in 2013 as Renovate Simply, raised a round last summer from the Central Texas Angel Network. The company recently closed a round of financing, which it will be announcing soon, Mitchell said.

Contract Simply has five employees. The company is hiring engineers and sales people, Mitchell said.

The cost of living and laid-back lifestyle are attractive features for being based in Austin, Mitchell said. The company has raised money from both coasts and has investors in 15 states and the geographic restriction of fundraising hasn’t been limiting for Contract Simply, Mitchell said.

Contract Simply is based at Link Flex, a co-working space in North Austin.

For more information, listen to the full interview below and please go to iTunes to subscribe, rate and review the Ideas to Invoices podcast.

Why Austin is a top contender for Amazon’s HQ2

Dave Manzer, ‎Founder of Manzer Communications in Austin


By DAVE MANZER
‎Founder of Manzer Communications in Austin
Guest Post

Let me just state for the record that I am not an economist nor an economic development professional with a chamber of commerce. Nor am I familiar with the different economic incentive packages (tax breaks and otherwise) that nearly 250 communities across the U.S., Canada, and Mexico have put together to win the Amazon HQ lottery.

I do know that Amazon will consider a wide variety of factors when deciding where it should build its HQ2. In my own view, Austin is on a very short list of cities that Amazon is actively considering, despite the city’s inherent growth challenges like traffic, zoning, and cost of living. Here are some obvious, and some not-so-obvious, reasons why:

Talent pool

There’s no question that Austin has become one of the few cities in America where there’s an abundance of tech talent. I know. I know. There is still a talent shortage for some jobs, and there has been upward pressure on wages because of it according to recent surveys by Dice and Hired. Still, Austin has proven adept at attracting new blood in order to meet the constant demand. Very few communities have the ability to absorb the number of startups and existing technology companies that call Austin home. Plus, with UT here and Texas A&M and Texas State University both within a 90-minute drive, you have no shortage of new graduates ready to enter the workforce.

Existing operations

Amazon caused quite a stir in the media when it purchased Whole Foods. The e-commerce giant has been quietly working to bring Austin’s iconic brand into the fold without any major disruptions. There’s a rumor that Whole Foods is ramping up hiring to beef up its software development team, including many operations the grocery chain used to outsource. Let’s not forget that Amazon also has a major distribution warehouse in San Marcos with plans to fill 1,000 openings. That gives Amazon a major workforce cluster in Central Texas that would make it easier for it to leverage as it looks to grow and integrate human resources across its disparate parts.

Logistics & Cost

Amazon is already in the farthest northwest corner of the lower 48 states. It makes a great deal of sense that it looks to locate somewhere other than the west coast or northeast corridor if only from practical perspectives like logistics and cost of living. Locating somewhere in the south or southeast of the U.S. comes with the advantage of lower cost of living and easy access to a different part of the country. The cost of doing business in California and New England is far greater than the south and central part of the country. What gives Texas an advantage is that it has a business-friendly climate. It’s also one of the few states with no personal income tax, which would allow Amazon to either give its employees a 3-8% raise or lower its salary structure for HQ2. DFW may have an edge on Austin when it comes to logistics owing to its airport being a hub for several airlines. That said, I feel confident that Austin’s bid included a promise to incentivize major airlines to add more direct flights to and from the Austin-Bergstrom airport, which would effectively negate DFW’s advantage.

Don’t forget politics

We are living in a highly polarized time in American politics. Right now, Amazon has its roots and global HQ in Seattle, Washington, a location known for progressive ideals and liberal politics. Seattle was one of the first and only cities to vote in a $15 minimum wage to help lower income earners enjoy a livable wage. Setting up shop in Austin would be a very shrewd move for Amazon in that it would instantly become a major employer in a red state with a powerful congressional block. Austin would allow Amazon to keep true to any ‘goodwill’ it has earned relative to being a progressive technology company based in the northwest. At the same time, Amazon can lobby Texas’ powerful Senators and Representatives to defend its business against a wide variety of legislation aimed at curbing Amazon’s influence. A long-term impact of Amazon locating in Austin would be to grow Austin’s power base in Texas, allowing it soften the rough edges Texas politics has developed over the past decade.

So, if you are a Machiavellian business mogul like Jeff Bezos with Libertarian leanings, an affinity for tech-friendly culture and a growing footprint in Central Texas, wouldn’t you put Austin on your shortlist, too?

Dave Manzer is the founder of Manzer Communications and PR Over Coffee in Austin. (Manzer Communications also an advertiser with Silicon Hills News)

Google Demonstrates its new Hardware Products at its Austin Office

Kayla Conti from Google shows off its latest line of hardware, made by Google.

Earlier this month, Google introduced its second generation of consumer hardware products, all made by Google.

On Friday at its downtown Austin office, Google showed off its new Pixel 2 phone, Google Home Mini, Google Clips hands-free camera, Google Pixel Buds, and an updated Daydream View headset. The products harness advanced artificial intelligence to assist consumers. Google also had a mobile truck parked at the Rainey Street District on Saturday that showed the products to the public and gave away Voodoo donuts to visitors.

Google showcased the following products: the $649 Pixel 2 with the best camera of any smartphone and augmented reality capabilities, $49 Google Home Mini with the artificial intelligence Google Assistant, $159 Pixel buds that lets users connect easily to the Google Assistant, the updated $99 Daydream View, a mobile virtual reality headset, and $249 Google Clips, a tiny mobile camera.

“Across all these devices, you can interact with the Google Assistant any way you want—talk to it with your Google Home or your Pixel Buds, squeeze your Pixel 2, or use your Pixelbook’s Assistant key or circle things on your screen with the Pixelbook Pen,” Rick Osterloh, senior vice president of hardware at Google, wrote in a blog post. “Wherever you are, and on any device with the Assistant, you can connect to the information you need and get help with the tasks to get you through your day. No other assistive technology comes close, and it continues to get better every day.”

In the video, Kayla Conti from Google shows off some of Google’s latest hardware products at Google’s office in downtown Austin.

SailPoint Files to Raise $100 Million in a Public Offering

SailPoint Technologies, founded in 2005, filed papers with federal regulators on Friday to raise $100 million in an initial public offering.

The Austin-based cybersecurity firm has raised $26 million to date in venture capital and private equity funding.

The company plans to use the proceeds of its offering to expand operations and add additional customers.

SailPoint creates and sells security software that manages and monitors which employees have access to various programs and platforms online for companies.

The company sells an open identity platform available both on-site and in the cloud to manage access to information for a company or government agency.

The company had more than 750 customers across a variety of industries nationally and worldwide, according to the IPO registration statement. It primarily sells to large companies with 7,500 or more employees and mid-market companies with more than 1,000 employees.

SailPoint’s revenue was $132.4 million in 2016 and $74. 7 million for the first six months of 2017. It reported a net loss of $3.1 million for 2016 and $6.5 million for the first six months of 2017.

Mark McClain co-founded the company with Kevin Cunningham and Jackie Gilbert.

SailPoint has global innovation centers in Austin, Pune, India and Tel Aviv, Israel and it has 228 employees in its research and development teams. Overall, SailPoint has 741 employees.

SailPoint recently “entered into a lease for a new 164,818 square-foot corporate headquarters” and plans to move in during the second quarter of 2019. It currently occupies 44,633 square feet.

Austin Bids to Become Amazon’s Second North American Headquarters

Jeff Bezos, founder and CEO of Amazon

“That’s right, you’re not from Texas, but Texas wants you anyway” to quote Lyle Lovett.

And Austin wants the second Amazon headquarters.

City leaders officially submitted Austin’s bid to Amazon on Wednesday, a day before the deadline.

On Sept. 7, Amazon announced the Seattle-based tech giant was looking for a second North American headquarters, Amazon HQ2. The company expects to invest more than $5 billion in construction for the second headquarters and it plans to create as many as 50,000 high-paying jobs.

Amazon then asked cities to submit bids for the project.

And since then Amazon has seen an outpouring of interest. Mayors have submitted videos. Members of Congress have written letters. And Tucson, Arizona even sent a 21-foot Saguaro cactus to Amazon’s headquarters in Seattle with a note “Amazon Can Grow in Arizona,” which the company politely declined, according to a story in Geekwire.

Amazon expects its HQ2 to “be a full equal to our Seattle headquarters,” Jeff Bezos, Amazon founder, and CEO said in a news statement.

Amazon’s criteria for choosing the second headquarters includes a metropolitan area with more than one million people, a stable business-friendly environment, urban or suburban locations with the potential to attract and retain strong technical talent and communities that think big and creatively when considering locations and real estate options.

Austin meets all that criteria.

Moody’s Analytics crunched the data and came up with Austin as its first place contender for Amazon HQ2. It cited Austin’s reputation as a tech hub and home to Dell, the largest Samsung facility outside South Korea, the second biggest Apple facility and a large IBM campus.

“Complementing these large IT employers are smaller IT companies that have either started in Austin or relocated,” according to Moody’s Analytics. Austin also has an educated workforce with 43 percent of its workers have completed college or graduate training, compared to about 30 percent nationally. It also cites the strength of the University of Texas at Austin’s Computer Science Department.

“Austin has a much lower cost of living than places such as Silicon Valley,” Moody’s Analytics reports. “Even though house prices have been rising and are high for Texas or the South, they are well below those in California or the Northeast. Anecdotally the quality of life is high, and many want to live in the “Silicon Hills.” Further, being in Texas, Austin resides in a business-friendly state that seeks to attract and keep companies. Amazon’s recent acquisition of Whole Foods, which is headquartered in Austin, is another factor in the metro area’s favor.”

In addition, Austin has good transportation facilities and is the Central Time zone with an international airport that makes it easy to travel nationally and internationally.

In the Moody’s Analytics report, Atlanta came in second followed by Philadelphia, Rochester, New York, and Pittsburgh.

Amazon launched operations in Texas in 2013 and already has a big presence here with humongous warehouse fulfillment centers located in Schertz and San Marcos in the Austin to San Antonio corridor. Amazon has other centers in Coppell, Haslet, Dallas, Fort Worth, Houston, and Katy. It has more than 10,000 employees in those centers.

Amazon also has a software development center in Austin.

In addition, Bezos owns Blue Origin, a privately-held aerospace company based in Kent, Washington that has a suborbital launch facility located in West Texas, near the town of Van Horn.

Another factor in Texas’ favor is its robust renewable energy market, particularly its wind farms in West Texas. On Wednesday, Bezos tweeted a picture of himself smashing a bottle to christen the company’s largest wind farm in Synder, Texas. Bezos is standing on top of the wind turbine in the video.

Amazon is also looking for an urban or downtown campus with a similar layout to Amazon’s Seattle campus.

“Amazon HQ2 will be a complete headquarters for Amazon – not a satellite office,” according to the company. “Amazon expects to hire new teams and executives in HQ2 and will also let existing senior leaders across the company decide whether to locate their teams in HQ1, HQ2 or both.”

Dallas and Houston plan to submit bids for Amazon HQ2. San Antonio’s city leaders already stated publicly that San Antonio would not be bidding for the project.

Amazon is expected to announce the new headquarters site in 2018.

Techstars Launches an Impact Accelerator Based in Austin

Techstars on Wednesday morning announced the launch of the Techstars Impact Accelerator, its first program aimed at for-profit startups that are tackling social and environmental problems.

The accelerator will be based in Austin. Applications open in December. The program kicks off in June of 2018. Zoe Schlag, the program’s Managing Director. Since 2014, Schlag has run UnLtd USA in Austin as its founder and CEO. The accelerator program backed entrepreneurs on a similar mission as the Techstars Impact Accelerator.

The accelerator is focused on financial services, healthcare, education, agriculture, and energy.

“UnLtd USA will join forces with Techstars to bring its global network in the impact space to the Techstars Impact Accelerator,” Schlag wrote in a blog post. “Meanwhile, since Techstars launched 10 years ago, we have had a deeply held belief that some of our biggest global challenges also represent some of our biggest opportunities, so investing in world-class, mission-driven founders is deeply embedded in our DNA.”

The Techstars Impact Accelerator fund is backed by Morgan Stanley, Impact America Fund and Cotter Cunningham, CEO of RetailMeNot.

Techstars has seen an average of 50 percent growth in startups tackling social impact issues over the last three years.

“Over the last several years, we have made several investments into impact companies, including category leaders such as Zipline, which builds drones to deliver crucial medical supplies in Africa; Aunt Bertha, the #1 ranked social service search and referrals platform; and Connxus, a supplier management solution that allows buyers to achieve their goals of responsible and sustainable sourcing,” according to Schlag.

Austin Game Maker Certain Affinity Lands $10 Million Investment from Hong Kong Firm

Max Hoberman, founder of Certain Affinity. Photo by John Davidson.

Certain Affinity announced Monday Leyou Technologies Holdings Limited of Hong Kong has made a $10 million investment for a 20 percent stake in the Austin-based game development company.

The international investment follows a $5 million investment in Certain Affinity by Capstar Partners, an Austin-based private investment firm.

Under the agreement with Leyou Technologies, Certain Affinity will develop and produce an original game and will share in revenues from the game, according to a news release. Leyou will also provide up to a $15 million loan for costs and expenses related to the game’s development. Leyou also has the option of buying all of Certain Affinity’s remaining shares in 2021 for a valuation not to exceed $150 million.

Certain Affinity, founded in 2006, develops both original titles and it has codeveloped on multiple games in the Call of Duty and Halo franchises, DOOM, and Left 4 Dead.

“I have enormous respect for Alex Xu, Leyou’s CEO, and the team that he’s assembled,” Max Hoberman, Certain Affinity’s President and Founder, said in a news release. “This agreement launches a partnership to create an ambitious and exciting new game together, while the additional investment allows us to continue developing our own original IPs. Certain Affinity has a history of co-development on some of the biggest action franchises in the industry, and we will continue this work in parallel. Our commitment to growing the company and expanding our presence in Austin has never been stronger.”

“With its proven track record producing high-quality video games, Certain Affinity possesses the technical capability and talent to create highly successful titles, which in turn will assist Leyou in further diversifying its video game portfolio and enhancing its revenue streams,” Alex Xu, CEO of Leyou Technologies, said in a news release. “This strategic investment into Certain Affinity is consistent with the growth strategy of our Company as we continue to look for opportunities to invest and increase our market share in the video gaming industry.”

MassChallenge Texas Kicks off in Austin

MassChallenge Texas team kicking off the accelerator program.

By LAURA LOREK
Publisher of Silicon Hills News

MassChallenge Texas kicked off Monday evening with a big crowd at the Bullock Texas State History Museum in downtown Austin.

“I want Texas to be the place where startups come to innovate,” said Mike Millard, managing director for MassChallenge Texas.

The global accelerator is now accepting applications for its 2018 Texas cohort that will be hosted at WeWork coworking spaces. The Austin-based nonprofit accelerator will work with up to 100 startups that will compete for up to $500,000 in equity-free cash awards.

All MassChallenge staffers based in Texas will have an office at WeWork and next year all 100 MassChallenge Texas startups will have office space at WeWork, said Cody Julian, regional marketing director at WeWork, based in Austin. WeWork has three locations in Austin right now and other locations throughout Texas, the U.S. and the world.

MassChallenge works with entrepreneurs and corporations to drive innovation, Millard said. The nonprofit organization has a network of accelerators in Boston, the UK, Israel, Switzerland, Mexico and now Texas is the latest, he said.

The key to MassChallenge’s success is its corporate partners, said Bob Metcalfe, professor of innovation at the University of Texas at Austin, inventor of Ethernet and co-founder of 3Com.

Already, more than 1,200 MassChallenge alumni have raised more than $2 billion in funding, generated $900 million in revenue and created more than 65,000 jobs.

Texas is the ideal next location for the MassChallenge accelerator, Millard said. Texas has 28 million people, 50 of the Fortune 500 companies, 40 plus venture capital firms and growing, 40 accelerators and growing and 18 angel groups, he said.

“Those ingredients allow us to be the best in the world,” Millard said.

Texas has deep expertise in energy, petrochemicals, healthcare, defense, financial services, cybersecurity, enterprise software, advanced manufacturing, food and agriculture, Millard said.

The crowd included hundreds of entrepreneurs and advocates of the technology industry including Joshua Baer with Capital Factory, Bill Blackstone with Galvanize, Kerry Rupp of True Wealth Ventures, Claire England with the Central Texas Angel Network, Jan Ryan with Women@Austin and UT Austin, Steve Guengerich with the Institute for Innovation and Entrepreneurship at UT Dallas, Pike Powers, Austin Mayor Steve Adler, San Antonio Mayor Ron Nirenberg and U.S. Congressman Lloyd Doggett.

The founding partners of MassChallenge Texas include Southwest Airlines, USAA, Upstream and TMAC.

Southwest plans to work with MassChallenge Texas by matching its executives with startups to learn from them, said Heather Figallo, senior director of innovation and labs at Southwest Airlines.

USAA, based in San Antonio, is about service to the community and its members, said Zachary Gipson, Chief Innovation Officer of USAA.

“So, when I think of MassChallenge I think of the opportunity to continue to work with entrepreneurial and creative people to think about what service looks like in the future,” Gipson said.

Upstream is looking forward to driving new projects with global impact, said Jeff Mulhausen, founding partner of Upstream.

Texas Manufacturing Assistance Center, TMAC, reports working with MassChallenge can increase innovation, job creation and innovation, said Ron Lehman, TMAC state director.

The MassChallenge Texas inaugural board of advisors includes Metcalfe with UT Austin, Figallo with Southwest Airlines, Gipson with USAA, Pike Powers with the Pike Powers Group and Larry Peterson with the Texas Foundation for Innovative Communities.

At the event, Millard gave special recognition to Powers, who has been a pioneer in Austin’s technology industry.

Millard called him the “Godfather of Austin’s semiconductor industry.” Powers helped Austin and Texas foster a technology industry which laid the foundation for Austin’s vibrant tech industry, Millard said.

Also at the event, Austin Mayor Adler and San Antonio Mayor Nirenberg shared the stage to talk about how their cities are collaborating to drive innovation in the regional technology industry.

“The demographers say the next great metroplex in the country is going to be Austin and San Antonio,” said Mayor Adler.

“The Texas miracle is the Austin-San Antonio corridor,” Nirenberg said. “The future is bright in Texas if you look at it through Austin or San Antonio.”

The two cities are stronger when they work together, Nirenberg said.

“In every way, we can, we need to build momentum for the region and the future metroplex that we’re going to be and that’s what MassChallenge Texas is doing for us now,” Mayor Adler said.

MassChallenge kicked off a statewide roadshow on Tuesday with 35 events in 10 cities in coming weeks, Mayor Adler said. The organization is on a mission to recruit 1,000 startups and 350 mentors, he said.

Robyn Metcalfe, founder of Food+City in Austin, is working with MassChallenge to build a strong network for food startups.

“This is the breakout moment for food entrepreneurs in Austin,” she said.

Food+City is running a food Challenge Prize which is open right now and it’s sending its submissions to MassChallenge, Metcalfe said. It’s the fourth year for Food+City’s Challenge Prize.

At the event, MassChallenge Alumni company, Spoiler Alert, highly recommended the program. It plugged the company into funding, partnerships and mentors, said Emily Malina, chief product officer with Spoiler Alert, which created software to manage food inventory to eliminate waste.

Hydroswarm, based in Boston, which creates smart drones for underwater exploration, is also a MassChallenge alumni company and the program helped bring the project to life, said Sampriti Bhattacharyya, its founder.

“You can’t do it alone,” she said. “You need the support system.”

« Older posts Newer posts »

© 2025 SiliconHills

Theme by Anders NorenUp ↑