A $500K Richard Mille, a tech logistics startup and a story of fraud. [Read Online]( The New Theranos? A $500K Richard Mille, a tech logistics startup and a story of fraud. [Nicolás Cerdeira]( [like]( [fb]( [fb]( [fb]( [fb](mailto:?subject=Post%20from%20Failory&body=The%20New%20Theranos%3F%3A%20A%20%24500K%20Richard%20Mille%2C%20a%20tech%20logistics%20startup%20and%20a%20story%20of%20fraud.%0A%0Ahttps%3A%2F%2Fnewsletter.failory.com%2Fp%2Fnew-theranos) Hey â Itâs Nico. Todayâs issue takes 5 minutes to read. If you only have one, here are the five main things: - Slyncâs founder has been [convicted to 20 years]( in prison for committing fraud â read Slyncâs failure story below. - Uber #99 employee shares how the startup got [its first 1M drivers](. - AI startups Skild AI and Hayden AI raise [$300M]( and [$90M](. - Sequoia Capital [offers to buy Stripe shares]( from investors at a $70B valuation. - Failory almost fails this week â find below my thoughts on the trend of vendor lock-in. [Intercom is offering a 100% discount]( for early-stage startups. Most importantly, theyâre todayâs sponsor :) Letâs get into it. Get a 100% Discount on Intercom [Join Intercomâs Early Stage Program]( to receive a 100% discount. Get a direct line to your customers. Try the only complete AI-first customer service solution. [Apply Now â]( This Week In Startups ð Resources How Uber signed [their first 1M drivers](. Why A16z is [excited about AI scribes](. [Techniques to improve]( your startup's cash flow. How guided AI agents will [revolutionize the SMB sector](. Product lead at Stripe talks about [building product](. ð° News [SoftBank acquires]( AI chipmaker Graphcore. [Sequoia confirms $70B Stripe valuation]( and offers to buy shares back from investors. [Kearny Jackson secures $65M]( targeting B2B SaaS and Fintech infrastructure startups. [Intuit lays off 1,800 staff]( and labels many as underperformers. [Alpine Space Ventures secures $184M]( to invest in space startups. ð¸ Fundraising Defense tech startup [Helsing secures $487M]( at a $5.4B valuation. [Skild AI raises $300M]( to build an AI-powered brain for robots. Vision AI startup [Hayden AI secures $90M]( to enhance public transit efficiency. [Caliza raises $8.5M]( to enable money transfers in Latin America using USDC. Fail(St)ory 20 Years in Prison What does a $500K Richard Mille watch, a $16M private jet, and a $60M acquisition of the Derby County Football Club have to do with a tech logistic startup? Nothing. Christopher Kirchner, founder of Slync, thought otherwise â for that reason, 8 months after his companyâs shutdown, this week he was sentenced to 20 years in prison and ordered to pay $65M in restitution. Slyncâs Numbers: - ð
Founded in 2017. - ð Raised over $80 million and reached a $240M valuation. - ð° Misappropriated over $25 million by the CEO for personal use. What Was Slync: Slync was a startup building a platform for major logistic companies to track their shipments and streamline their various processes. Kirchner founded the company in 2017 and remained as Chief Executive until he was sacked by the board of directors in 2022. Throughout these years, he raised $80M from investors like Goldman Sachs and Blumberg Capital, valuing the company at $240M in their Series B round. What Went Wrong: In July 2022, a [Forbes investigation]( started uncovering what was going on with Kirchner and Sync. According to the report, Kirchner had fraudulently raised these rounds, based on false representations about its financials and customers and false promises on revenue projections. They found that while Kirchner had reported to the board that Slync had generated close to $30M in revenue in 2021 from about 20 customers, the real figure was close to $1M and fewer than 5 customers. The report also talked about Kirchnerâs incredibly high standard of living, playing golf with Saudi princes and flying to exotic places on his $16M private jet. He rode exotic vehicles, including a black Ferrari Superfast 812, and wore luxury jewelry, like a $500,000 Richard Mille watch. In late 2021, while Slyncâs employees were getting delayed or missed paychecks, Kirchner even tried to purchase the bankrupt English football team Derby County for $60M but the deal fell off. With the recent conviction, we came to know that Kirchner was using investorsâ money to fund this lifestyle. Kirchner did nearly 100 wire transfers to move money from Slyncâs SVB account into the companyâs JPMorgan Chase Bank account, which only he had access to. Additionally, he wired $20M directly from the SVB account into his personal checking account. Why It Matters: - The sentence is among the harshest for a fraudulent tech founder â Elizabeth Holmes of [Theranos]( only got 11 years. - Kirchner's case has sparked calls for better governance in both the tech and sports industries. - Slyncâs story is a cautionary tale about the critical importance of ethical leadership and transparent operations in the tech industry. Go Deeper: - [Read the Forbes investigation]( to find more about Kirchnerâs lifestyle and management of the company. - [Read the recent Forbes news]( about Kirchner being sentences to prison. - [Read the BBC news]( to learn more about Kirchnerâs attempt to buy the Derby County football team. Trend Vendor Lock In This week I tweeted about a situation I was going through with Webflow, the tool I use to design Failoryâs site and publish content. The tweet got out of control: [tw profile: Nico Cerdeira (Failory.com)] Nico Cerdeira (Failory.com) @nicocerdeira [tw] WTF is wrong with @webflow? They're forcing me to pay $15,000/year, up from $468! A 32x price increase overnight! And they gave me 1 week to decide if I want to upgrade or move the whole Failory site to another CMS!! 6:31 PM ⢠Jul 15, 2024 1.65K Likes 85 Retweets 405 Replies Whatâs Going On: Iâve been a Webflow user and advocate for 8 years. I love the tool and have recommended it to an uncountable number of people. A few weeks ago, they launched a new feature â a âbandwidth usageâ dashboard, which shows how much bandwidth your website uses. Since Failoryâs traffic is high and the website contains many images, my bandwidth was high â way higher than the bandwidth limit of my âBusinessâ plan (the most expensive plan before the custom-priced âEnterpriseâ plan). Note 1: Itâs important to say that the bandwidth limit is a new thing. It was not in the planâs limits when I decided to use Webflow to create Failoryâs site. Last week, a Webflow sales representative reached out to me telling me I had to upgrade to Enterprise. On Friday, I had a call to learn more about the plan. The price, she said, is $15,000/year â a x32 increase from the current $468/year price tag. The worst: I had one week (which maybe could be extended to two) to decide if I wanted to upgrade or move to another CMS. Note 2: I didnât need any of the Enterprise features. I just needed bandwidth. What Happened Next: The Webflow team contacted me immediately. They explained that the one-week limit was a mistake and that theyâd not enforce the Enterprise upgrade. They have also been working on launching a series of fixes on the platform, as well as changes on Failoryâs site, oriented to reducing bandwidth consumption. Iâm currently evaluating a few different options. There might be a few solutions to reduce bandwidth significantly and stay with Webflow. But Iâm not discarding migrating to other open-source no/low-code solutions ([WordPress](, [Webstudio]() or building something custom. I love the Webflow product (not their pricing model) and the cost of migrating to something else is very high. Changing to another CMS wonât provide value to Failoryâs users, which is how I think I should spend my time. But the risk of this situation happening again in the future worries me a lot. A Bigger Trend: What happened to me is part of a bigger trend going on â call it â[vendor lock-in](â. The events are frequently the same: - SaaS company surges, with a great product and affordable prices. - People start using it â they move in their data, create components, integrate it with the rest of their tools. They build a business on top of it. - The SaaS decides to abruptly increase prices (in this case, x32). - The company doesnât have much to do other than pay, since the cost of leaving the platform is very high. [Bubble]( and [Cloudflare]( are only two other SaaS that have gone through similar price increases and customer complaints. After many years of not caring, open source technology starts to make a lot of sense to me. Have You Suffered From Vendor Lock-In? I'm interested in learning from which vendor! [ð Yes, it's common nowadays](
[ð Not yet and I hope I don't]( Help Me Improve Failory How Was Today's Newsletter? If this issue was a startup, how would you rate it? [ð Launches to the moon!](
[ð¤ Room for a pivot](
[ð Crashes and burns]( That's all of this edition. Cheers, Nico Update your email preferences or unsubscribe [here]( © 2024 Failory 1309 Coffeen Avenue
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