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從巴士到眼鏡:非科技類初創(chuàng)公司走紅硅谷

所屬教程:金融時(shí)報(bào)原文閱讀

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2020年02月10日

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從巴士到眼鏡:非科技類初創(chuàng)公司走紅硅谷

在硅谷,越來越多聚焦于傳統(tǒng)行業(yè)的初創(chuàng)公司受到了風(fēng)險(xiǎn)資本家的青睞。這些非科技類初創(chuàng)公司并不依賴于先進(jìn)的科技,但卻把早已為人所熟知的傳統(tǒng)領(lǐng)域玩出了新花樣,它們擴(kuò)展了人們對“初創(chuàng)公司”的定義。

測試中可能遇到的詞匯和知識(shí):

deluxe豪華的,高級的[d?'l?ks]

berth停泊處,臥鋪[b??θ]

disruptive破壞性的,制造混亂的[d?s'r?pt?v]

venture風(fēng)險(xiǎn),投機(jī)['vent??(r)]

mattress床墊['mætr?s]

optimize使……完美,使……完善['ɑ?pt?ma?z]

tardiness緩慢['tɑ?din?s]

lounge休閑室,長沙發(fā)[la?nd?]

differentiating識(shí)別,使差異[?d?f?'ren?ie?t]

From buses to glasses: Silicon Valley's love of non-tech start-ups(765 words)

By Leslie Hook

I recently sat down with two bright-eyed entrepreneurs in San Francisco. They had just raised funding for their new start-up, Cabin, from some of the Valley's best-known investors. They had the kind of ambitious faces that light up when discussing “the future of cities” or “self-driving cars”.

So what is their multimillion-dollar start-up idea? It is a bus. This “technology” start-up will operate a deluxe overnight bus with sleeping berths, carrying passengers between San Francisco and Los Angeles. The concept of an overnight bus will be familiar to any gap-year backpacker but is still considered somewhat novel on the West Coast, land of the passenger car and jet plane.

The 400-mile trip between San Francisco and LA has been a source of frustration for many techies. Elon Musk proposed boring an underground tunnel between the two cities, while others are working on a high-speed “hyperloop” system that would move pods of people through low-pressure tubes.

Useful as it may be to travel overnight in comfort at a relatively affordable cost (Cabin says it will charge $115 for the trip), it still begs the question: why are some of the Valley's finest minds trying to operate a bus company? Why is this a venture-backed start-up rather than just a regular company that sells bus tickets?

When I put this to Tom Currier and Gaetano Crupi, Cabin's founders, they point out that there are plenty of other start-ups focused on non-tech areas. “There is a new category of companies that are able to be well capitalised even though they are operating in more traditional industries,” says Crupi. In other words, tech start-ups can be disruptive to non-tech industries.

Some might argue that these start-ups — from mattress makers to eyeglass stores, juice companies to coffee roasters — strain the limits of what it means to be “tech” or a “start-up”. However, venture capital firms have been happy to support the trend. Take Casper, a mattress company that raised more than $100m from investors in May on the premise that it was revolutionising sleep (it sells foam mattresses, which are delivered in boxes). The company targets millennials with its advertising, and throws parties featuring lots of beds. There is also Warby Parker, which sells cheap eyeglasses online and raised more than $200m from investors.

Venture backers even tried to disrupt the grilled-cheese sandwich market, with the funding a few years ago of The Melt, a restaurant chain whose backers included Sequoia. Its founder was legendary entrepreneur Jonathan Kaplan, maker of the Flip video camera. But even he could not innovate the toastie, and was replaced as chief executive last year. (The Melt still has some 19 outlets.)

Part of the reason for the trend is that the role of venture capital in US business has changed dramatically. During the second half of the 20th century, venture funding helped to finance research-heavy tech companies — semiconductor manufacturers, for example. Today, it has become an alternative to bank loans for small, high-risk businesses whose strategy for “disruption” relies on access to cheap capital.

The areas where these businesses can do best are those where the incumbents have been slow to adapt. Take the mattress industry, where bricks-and-mortar stores have a vested interest in preventing people from buying mattresses online. Or the taxi industry in the US, which has been thoroughly disrupted by Uber and Lyft.

The founders of Cabin are hoping they can do the same thing for long-distance travel. Incumbents such as Greyhound have optimised for cost, resulting in a bare-bones service that is not quite enough to lure people away from the comfort of their cars. America's trains, after decades of under-investment, are nearly unusable because of their slowness and tardiness.

Cabin doesn't see itself as a bus company. “The first thing we need to do is have people not think about it as a bus,” Crupi insists. He calls it a “hotel on wheels”, with pressed sheets in its berths, an attendant and a lounge.

The pitch is that once cars and buses start driving themselves, the company will be well placed to offer the hospitality that will become a differentiating factor between competing autonomous transport providers, with passengers choosing their service based on the experience, as they would a hotel.

“Autonomous is going to be commoditised,” says Crupi. “People will pay for the guest experience.”

Autonomous cars and buses are not here yet, and it will be years before they are commonplace. But until then, Silicon Valley workers can try a deluxe version of a technology more than a century old, courtesy of the venture capitalists.

1.What is new start-up Cabin's idea?

A.An underground tunnel between San Francisco and Los Angeles.

B.A high-speed “hyperloop” system between San Francisco and Los Angeles.

C.A deluxe overnight bus carrying passengers between San Francisco and Los Angeles.

D.Low-pressure tubes between San Francisco and Los Angeles.

答案(1)

2.Which of the following statements about non-tech start-ups is true?

A.They can be well capitalised even though they are operating in more traditional industries.

B.Most non-tech start-ups are located in San Francisco and Los Angeles.

C.They are the new darlings of the venture capitalists after tech start-ups.

D.Most non-tech start-ups focus on transportation and catering industries.

答案(2)

3.Which startup company focuses on the grilled-cheese sandwich market?

A.Take Casper.

B.Warby Parker.

C.Sequoia.

D.The Melt.

答案(3)

4.According to the article, the new start-up Carbin ____?

A.provides a bare-bones service that is enough to lure people away from their cars.

B.strains the limits of what it means to be a “start-up”.

C.will charge $115 for each trip.

D.is a housing company rather than a bus company.

答案(4)

(1)答案:C.A deluxe overnight bus carrying passengers between San Francisco and Los Angeles.

解釋:這家“科技”初創(chuàng)公司將會(huì)經(jīng)營一輛豪華的夜間巴士,車上裝有睡床,接送舊金山和洛杉磯之間的旅客。

(2)答案:A.They can be well capitalised even though they are operating in more traditional industries.

解釋:Crupi表示非科技類初創(chuàng)公司盡管關(guān)注的領(lǐng)域相對傳統(tǒng),但仍能融到足夠的資金。

(3)答案:D.The Melt.

解釋:風(fēng)險(xiǎn)資本家甚至嘗試涉足烤奶酪三明治市場,幾年前,連鎖餐廳The Melt吸引了包括紅杉資本在內(nèi)的投資者。

(4)答案:C.will charge $115 for each trip.

解釋:Carbin稱他們每趟旅程的收費(fèi)是115美元。

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