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Technology
The world of on-demand storage has seen someups and downs, with some of the biggest hopefuls pivoting into new areas, some as unrelated as cryptocurrency, in the search for better product-market fit. One that found its groove early on, however, is today announcing an acquisition to expand its existing business into a new market category. Clutter, the on-demand removals and storage company backed by SoftBank, is today announcing that it has acquired The Storage Fox, a startup that will spearhead Clutterexpansion in to self-storage services in urban locations, starting first in the New York metro area where The Storage Fox is currently active.
The deal is valued at $152 million, Clutter said. Ari Mir, Clutterco-founder and CEO, added in an interview that Clutter did not need to raise any extra funding to finance this acquisition, but said his company is likely to be taking on more financing in the future for growth.
To date, Clutter has raised $310 million, according to PitchBook, including a $200 million round earlier this year led by SoftBank that valued the company at $600 million post-money. Future financing is likely to come in the form of debt to acquire property, as well as equity to expand the businessplatform, hiring and more. Itcurrently active in 1,000 cities and towns across the US and the plan will be to stay domestic until it has wider penetration, before exploring how to grow internationally. The deal will bring the total amount of space that Clutter leases and owns up to two million square feet.
&Expanding into self-storage is something we have been discussing since ClutterSeries A pitch to Sequoia and we are excited to see it come to fruition,& said Omar Hamoui, partner at Sequoia Capital, in a statement. &The acquisition reinforces Cluttermarket leadership and expands Clutter services by offering a better experience for customers who need self-storage or on-demand storage.&
(Notably, too, is that Clutter had to actively bid for this business: &Portfolios like that of The Storage Fox are extremely rare, and this acquisition signals that Clutter is uniquely positioned to take on and succeed in the self-storage industry,& said Eliav Dan, Head of West Coast Real Estate Finance at Barclays, which acted as Clutterexclusive financial advisor, in a statement. &Clutter competed with multiple self-storage REITs throughout the bidding process to win the deal — a testament to the strength of the companymanagement team and its ability to execute on an innovative business model.&)
Up to now, Clutterbusiness has focused on extending the on-demand model — which has become a cornerstone for a huge wave of e-commerce startups that are tapping into new innovations for managing logistics, the rise of the gig-economy, the proliferation of smartphones, and consumer tastes for instant gratification — to the messy business of helping people move and store their worldly possessions, from which Clutter makes revenues by charging service fees.
Customers might typically be urban dwellers — for example moving to smaller digs or simply looking for a way to, yes, de-Clutter — but the storage centers themselves tend to be far outside city centers. On top of this, Clutter has largely operated on a long-term lease model with the facilities that it uses.
In that regard, this acquisition will be giving the company a couple of interesting new possessions of its own, to tap the self-storage market, estimated to be worth $40 billion annually.
The Storage Foxfacilities, like other self-storage businesses, are located in areas that are much closer to urban centers, since the model is predicated more on people being able to dip in and out of their storage units quickly and potentially very regularly. In its case, its facilities today are in Yonkers, White Plains, Queens and Brooklyn.
It will also give Clutter a trove of real estate that it will now own:The Storage Fox didn&t appear to raise any traditional VC funding, but it did have large finance agreements in placein order to buy property. That is a pattern that Clutter is likely to continue, Mir said.
Now that there will be more accessible space on Clutterplatform that it actually owns, it will also give the company a point of entry into a new range of business services alongside self-storage. Could that extend into something like office space, potentially pitting Clutter against one of its portfolio neighbors, WeWork? Mir declined to answer specifically but we&ve seen some outlier cases — such as this guy who lived out of his storage unit — that, while not exactly okay for a number of reasons, does underscore that there is a lot of potential there.
&There are over 52,000 self-storage facilities in the US alone,& Mir said. &If you take all that and add it up, there are more square feet in those storage spaces than there are in McDonaldand Starbucks in the US, combined. At the same time, inside of cities, we&re running out of space. So our vision is to apply all the technology that we&ve built in house to increase the value that these self-storage facilities provide across society.&
Clutter has already made some moves beyond simple storage in its existing business: italready actively advertising the option to rent, sell, donate and dispose of your items if you choose — although it seems that these four services are not yet actively live. Earlier this year, it acquired the storage business of Omni, which itself is currently focusing on rentals.
Storage overall has not been an easy area to tackle for a lot of reasons: on top of the usual issues of needing to ensure that movers — the face and engine of your business (and in Cluttercase, W2&d employees) — are responsible and good at their jobs, the cargo can be unexpectedly large or fragile, and the movement of it might be tied up in all kinds of backstories that make getting from A to B and eventually back to the owner again very complicated.
Mir concedes that the customer satisfaction aspect has been challenging, not least because itone of those areas that people are quick to publicly complain about when something has gone awry. He also insists that Clutterratings and efforts are generally improving. Frankly, itgreat to hear him be honest about this and not deny that criticism is a challenge and that the company is always working to make this better.
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Read more: Clutter acquires The Storage Fox for $152M to add self-storage to its on-demand platform
Write comment (95 Comments)Hey there and welcome back toEquity, TechCrunchventure capital-focused podcast, where we unpack the numbers behind the headings. Today Kate and Alex were back at TechCrunchSan Francisco head office to talk the news with Kleiner PerkinMamoon Hamid. Hamid is best referred to as a previous member of the Social Capital group, and for driving generational modification at Kleiner Perkins, a decades-old venture capital company. While we were prepping our notes, Airbnb revealed that it is certainly going public next year. The firmterse statement released 1,000 blog posts (here is one, here is another), while instigating a few jokes. The IPO market is hot now. Saying that you are going to try your finest to get out next year isn & t extremely outstanding from a company with as many billions as Airbnb is today. Italso not unexpected. Still, ita near-promise. And that indicates eventually we & ll get to see what the popular home-sharing and lodgings company spends all its gross margin on. Moving along, we talked about the recent WeWork revelations. If you sanctuary & t read the Wall Street Journalpiece on the matter, you must.It is chock-full of vibrant anecdotes with WeWorkco-founder and CEO Adam Neumann front and center. Next, we entered into the news concerning a split at Aspect Ventures, which TechCrunch covered here. We had heard reports about the split, first reported by The WSJ, for a couple of weeks now and were interested to discuss what drives these sort of shake-ups with our visitor. Running ahead, we turned to the early-stage market where several of you, our lovely buddies, have asked us to spend more time. So, we talked at length about D2C startups, consisting of the brand-new, and we think cool Thingtesting company. You can have a look at their Instagram, the centerpiece of their organization, here. Despite enjoying Thingtesting, Kate and Mamoon are bearish on the D2C movement. All that and we had a good time. Sorry about the lack of donut continuity in the video. We & re back next week with more, and we & ll see everyone at Disrupt in 2 weeks!
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A security researcher has discovered four VPN apps that serve ads while running in the background and also on the home screen of Android smartphones in the latest case of adware found on the Google Play Store.
While researching suspicious Android VPN apps, Andy Michael found that Hotspot VPN, Free VPN Master, Secure VPN and Security Master by
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Hollywood actors appearing in videogames is not something new. From voice-overs to celebrity cameos, plenty of acting elite have dipped their toes in the pool of gaming over the years.
However, it's only been in recent years that we've seen Hollywood's elite beginning to take front and center stage in games: lending not only their voices or
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Read more: Where Kojima meets Keanu: star studded titles mean Hollywood has finally invaded gaming
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After a multi-year partnership, HP has announced that it will acquire Bromium in an effort to bolster its endpoint security capabilities.
California-based Bromium was found by former Citrix executives back in 2011 and the company specializes in deploying virtualization to provide endpoint security.
HP currently licenses Bromium's technology to power
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The AMD Ryzen 9 3950X was a surprise reveal at E3 2019, coming right after AMD unveiled the AMD Radeon RX 5700 XT and RX 5700. Initially, it was supposed to come out in September 2019, but it has been delayed to November 2019 instead, along with some new Threadripper processors.
The AMD Ryzen 9 3950X, when it launches in November, will take its
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Read more: AMD Ryzen 9 3950X drops this November, along with new Threadripper chips
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