This shift has enabled Soundtrack Your Brand, which plans a U.S.
launch this year, to secure $11 million to back its tailor-made
music playlists for companies with deep pockets like Starbucks and
McDonald's.
Investors are buying into the Spotify-backed Swedish company's
theory that piping the right music into such food outlets or retail
stores will encourage coffee drinkers or shoppers to linger longer
and spend more.
Soundtrack Your Brand says businesses pay about five times what
consumers pay for their tunes, which strikes a chord with investors
seeking more stable earnings.
"There is a trend away from consumer unicorns and valuations,"
Andreas Liffgarden, the company's chairman and co-founder, told
Reuters.
"I can feel it when we're out fundraising. Investors want real
steady cash flow and proven business models," he added.
This shift reflects a combination of market volatility, high
valuations and growing fears of another tech bubble which have led
venture capitalists to reassess risk and back more
business-to-business (B2B) start-ups over those aimed at consumers.
Venture capital funds are also seeking a clearer way to cash in
their investments. Tech.eu, which analyses tech data, said B2B made
up 60 percent of all European exits last year.
"Investors are shunning non money-making companies. Monetisation has
become a really big deal," said Tim He, a partner at venture capital
firm Northzone.
Funds invested in B2B start-ups rose by 40 percent to $11.9 billion
year-on-year to the end of March, figures from venture capital
database PitchBook show.
And although funding for business-to-consumer (B2C) start-ups
remains larger, investment in this area fell 9 percent to $24
billion over the same period.
Philipp Leutiger, a partner at management consulting firm Roland
Berger, describes B2B as "very hot" with investors hunting for capex-light
business models with the potential to be profitable at a very early
stage.
One of Europe's most highly valued tech start-ups, Swedish payments
firm Klarna, which support merchants and competes with the likes of
Paypal has shown this is possible. It turned a profit in only its
second year.
Global investment on start-ups: http://tmsnrt.rs/1Q6oBtf
BACK TO BASICS
Dave McClure, founder of a venture capital seed fund and startup
accelerator called 500 Startups in Silicon Valley, said that while
60 percent of his investments are in consumer-oriented companies,
probably a bigger proportion of B2B start-ups are having greater
success.
[to top of second column] |
"For a lot of consumer start-ups, it's not always obvious how you
are going to monetize and there is a lot of competition for
eyeballs," he said. "For a lot of B2Bs, as long as you are able to
get the initial customer in place there is a lot of potential for
making money and continuing that business."
Messaging software firm Slack, which is just three years old,
already has almost one million paid users and customers including
Samsung Electronics Co Ltd and the U.S. State Department. This
month, Slack raised $200 million, giving it a $3.8 billion
valuation.
Jonathan Userovici, an analyst at Idinvest Partners in Paris, is
betting other B2Bs will grab venture capital money more easily than
B2Cs this year as investors seek out recurring revenue-generators.
Human resources is attracting particular interest and Zenefits,
whose software automates things like stock options and vacations,
raised more than $500 million in the biggest U.S. B2B funding round
last year, according to PitchBook data. It ran into regulatory
troubles this year, a reminder that there are still risks involved
in B2B investments.
And while B2B investments are considered more predictable than the
hits-driven consumer business, the allure of consumer start-ups
remains. In the past decade, the biggest consumer successes have
produced far bigger returns than B2B firms.
That means not everyone is abandoning the consumer.
Sweden's Kinnevik, a major investor in Europe's biggest dedicated
online fashion firm Zalando, is keen to keep its money in B2C
investments. It just invested $65 million in Betterment which offers
users automated investment advice.
McClure at 500 Startups is keeping a foot in both camps: "I don't
think we feel any less optimistic around consumers. I think we feel
more optimistic about potential for B2B now that it's starting to
globalise and grow and have a greater reach."
(Additional reporting by Sven Nordenstam; Editing by Alistair
Scrutton and Alexander Smith)
[© 2016 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2016 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. |