Here Is The Pitch Deck That Secured Clearbanc $300m in Series B Financing Less Than A Year After Its First Funding Round

Clearbanc funding

Less than a year after its first round of venture funding, the Canadian Clearbanc, a startup which provides funding for other startups to spend on marketing and customer acquisition, has secured $300 million Series B financing round on Wednesday. This is record-breaking for a startup that just raised $70 million in December 2018. 

  • The round was led by Highland Capital and existing investors Inovia and Emergence Capital.
  • Canada-based Clearbanc, which was pitched as an alternative to traditional venture capital funding, last raised $70 million in December.
  • See the pitch deck the Clearbanc team used to get traditional venture investors on board with its unconventional sales pitch.

Clearbanc is betting that venture capital is the next in line for disruption, and they just raised $300 million in venture funding to prove it.

Clearbanc funding

The Canadian startup, which provides funding for other startups to spend on marketing and customer acquisition, announced Wednesday a $300 million Series B financing round led by Highland Capital, Inovia, and Emergence Capital. The financing portion of the round was led by Arcadia Funds with participation from Upper90 Ventures.

Clearbanc pitches itself as an alternative to venture capital for startups spending heavily on things like Facebook and Google ads, and this is its second venture funding round in less than a year. According to Pitchbook data, the company closed a $70 million Series A in December.

Clearbanc claims to automate the pitching process using a machine learning model that can supply companies with anywhere from $10,000 to $10 million in funding instead of giving up a portion of the company to an investor just to turn around and spend the funds on ads. This model works particularly well for e-commerce startups that need to get in front of new customers to grow, according to Gary Vaynerchuk, CEO of VaynerMedia and Clearbanc investor.

So how was the Clearbanc team able to sell traditional venture investors on a model that is in direct competition with their own? Here’s the pitch deck that convinced investors that disruption could be worth $300 million.

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Source: Click here to see the complete deck and full article

 

Charles Rapulu Udoh

Charles Rapulu Udoh is a Lagos-based Lawyer with special focus on Business Law, Intellectual Property Rights, Entertainment and Technology Law. He is also an award-winning writer. Working for notable organizations so far has exposed him to some of industry best practices in business, finance strategies, law, dispute resolution, and data analytics both in Nigeria and across the world.

Facebook: https://web.facebook.com/Afrikanheroes/

This Kenyan Startup Has Just Secured $330k In Debt Finance

Kenyan Startup

Optimetriks, the Kenyan sales force automation startup has just defied odds and gone after debt finance. A whole $330,000 debt facility (loan) to grow its customer base and add new features? For a startup that was founded in 2016, this appears a life-saving option. But then, why not fund-raising?

Kenyan Startup
 

Here Is The Deal

  • Debt financing came from French commercial banks.
  • The startup intends to use finance to grow its customer base and add new features.
  • Optimetriks currently serves more than 25 companies across 16 countries in Africa, with its clients operating in sectors such as beauty, telecommunications, food, and professional services. Last month, it took on EUR300,000 (US$335,000) in debt financing from commercial banks in France to fund its growth, with Langlois-Meurinne saying this will go towards product development.

Why Debt Financing?

Although debt financing is an option for fundraisers, so much remains to be said about the strong terms under which loans are given. Optimetriks does not appear to be desperately resorting to borrowing as the nearest funding alternative to remaining in business, however. 

The Kenyan startup has previously received grant funding from the GSMA in 2017 and took part in the Francophone Africa-focused L’Afrique Excelle accelerator program earlier this year and has bootstrapped until now. It could also take on Series A investment soon.

“As our company has matured, and based on our existing traction, we are now considering fundraising in the coming months, to benefit from strategic investors, knowledge of East Africa, and consumer goods distribution,” said Langlois-Meurinne.

Types of Debt Financing for Startups.

About Optimetriks

Founded in 2016, Optimetriks has developed a sales force automation platform that helps consumer goods companies and distributors digitize their workflows and operations. 

“Typical use cases are route management, defining where the sales representatives need to pass, checking on visits and productivity, providing guidance and background information on the retailers they engage with, outlet management, checking on stock levels, and things like that,” said Paul Langlois-Meurinne, the startup’s co-founder and chief executive officer (CEO).

Optimetriks, which makes money from license and service fees, was launched in a bid to solve key problems in African distribution.

“First, the lack of reliable market information and the costs and limitations that exist when trying to collect and analyse data at a large scale,” Langlois-Meurinne said. 

“Second, the fact that there are information asymmetries and sometimes misaligned interests between the actors of the ecosystem. Finally, the fact that middlemen take unnecessary margins at the expense of retailers, and distort the value chain.”

The Optimetriks platform aims to bring more transparency and visibility to the distribution space, and help companies better understand how their resources are being employed.

“We help our clients implement scientific distribution that is data-driven, where every action is logged in the system, and can be tracked. Our clients access our platform either through the mobile app for the field users, or the web app, for office users who need to navigate in the reporting dashboards and configure the deployment.,” said Langlois-Meurinne.

“Our ambition is to be the reference platform that connects directly and on a daily basis consumer goods brands with the millions of African retailers that distribute their products on several key dimensions.”

 

 

Charles Rapulu Udoh

Charles Rapulu Udoh is a Lagos-based Lawyer with special focus on Business Law, Intellectual Property Rights, Entertainment and Technology Law. He is also an award-winning writer. Working for notable organizations so far has exposed him to some of industry best practices in business, finance strategies, law, dispute resolution, and data analytics both in Nigeria and across the world.

Facebook: https://web.facebook.com/Afrikanheroes/