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Equity

Cataclysms are a growth industry

Equity

TechCrunch

Entrepreneurship, Business News, News, Business, Technology

4.2372 Ratings

🗓️ 26 May 2021

⏱️ 23 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

For this week’s deep dive, Alex and Natasha dug into Danny's latest mega-project: A long, fascinating, and deeply-reported series into the world of disaster tech. It's all about the market, startups, and their backers, so it was perfect fare for our Wednesday episode, in which we dive deep into a single topic. Part 1: The most disastrous sales cycle in the world Part 2: Data was the new oil, until the oil caught fire Part 3: When the Earth is gone, at least the internet will still be working Part 4: The human-focused startups of the hellfire We were super curious why Danny had picked disaster tech to niche into, as we hadn't heard that much about it, frankly. But past the fact that it's a world where sales cycles can last as long as House Congressional tenures, there was quite a lot to get into: Consumer: Dorothy wants to to provide bridge loans to folks who get rekt by a hurricane. As government, and insurance money can take ages to arrive, the startup could be onto something. and Perimeter wants to take data, and help folks actually know where to go when there is am emergency. Data: Danny's deep dive into the world of data in the disaster space came with a provocative headline, but the market backs him up. In this space we took a look at Cornea, which just raised $15 million to help firefighters better understand conflagrations, and Gridware raised $5.3 million to install boxes on power lines. Very smart boxes, we should add. Mental health: We end with a riff on how companies are preparing humans to better handle disaster before and after it strikes. Alto Neuroscience, which is a stealthy startup founded by Amit Etkin, is looking to solve PTSD with brain-wave data, while NeuroFlow uses polling, and savvy collabs with practitioners to monitor emerging symptoms. Psychedelic therapeutics also might have some opportunity to shine thanks to Osmind. The series was fun to mine through, and expect Danny's byline to be all over the topic in the coming weeks. Talk soon, unless - actually especially, if - all of hell breaks loose! Credits: Equity is produced by Theresa Loconsolo with editing by Kell. Bryce Durbin is our Illustrator. We'd also like to thank the audience development team and Henry Pickavet, who manages TechCrunch audio products. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Transcript

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0:00.0

Hey everybody. The Extra Crunch crew is building out a list of startup

0:05.0

badasses for our TC Experts project. We are first looking for the best email

0:09.4

marketers in the game, so if that is you or you know who that is please head to

0:13.9

Tech Ranch.com slash experts fill out the survey will compile the list and

0:18.2

shared out to everyone in the EC community and just from us a big shout out to

0:21.8

Miranda and Eric for all their hard work on this project.

0:24.0

As always, if you want to support the show and see who we find,

0:28.0

subscribe to Extra Crunch for all of our best stuff every day. Hello and welcome back to Equity. Tech Runches Venture Capital focused

0:50.0

podcast where we unpack the numbers behind the headlines.

0:52.6

My name is Alex Wilhelm and this is our Wednesday show.

0:55.1

We are going to dive deep into the interesting niche of disaster response technology

1:00.0

and helping me kind of poke away at this.

1:01.7

I have Natasha Moskarenis here.

1:03.5

Natasha how are you? I'm doing great I am excited to get into Danny's disaster dynamics to use

1:10.7

alliteration to start the show. I thought we weren't going to talk about Danny's

1:14.0

dating life on the show.

1:15.2

And Danny, we're making jokes a little bit

1:18.1

at your expense because you have put together

1:20.1

an epic series of articles over on Tech Crunch, not Extra Crunch critically, so everyone out there can read these, about

1:26.0

disaster tech. And first and foremost, my man, I read them all, good work, but I didn't even know disaster tech was a startup niche. And so to kick things off, can you tell our friends why you decided to write 48,000 words on this actually relatively interesting niche.

1:43.5

I mean, it ended up being great,

1:45.0

but I just, you know, for me, a little bit out of left field.

...

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