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The weekly top 10 for B2B tech operators · Every Friday

Top 10 in Tech - What to know for Week ending May 23 2025

Friday 09:00 NZT Curated by Jon Davies
Top 10 in Tech - What to know for Week ending May 23, 2025

CASH MANAGEMENT

Part 1 of a 3-part Guide to Cash Management for Startups highlights bank account strategies at different Stages. The startup phase needs basic checking and savings accounts for operational expenses and emergencies, maintaining liquidity, managing cash flow, and keeping financial controls strict. It prioritizes simplicity and security in banking structures.

SECONDARIES

Secondaries (selling private startup shares before exit) were quite recently seen as pretty taboo, but now they are becoming critical for seed funds managing longer timelines and shifting LP expectations. Hunter Walk's post nails the why.

VENTURE

The Q1 2025 PitchBook NVCA report is out, and the overall VC mood looks complicated. On paper, the $91.5B in deals (thanks to a few giants like OpenAI) masks weak liquidity, stalled IPOs, and just $10B in new fundraising. Tariffs and uncertainty have investors sitting tight, and early-stage deals remain depressed.

LEAN STARTUP

Provocative blog post - but maybe not wrong. The Lean Startup world is gone? AI now writes most of the code—so the bottleneck is no longer dev; it's user attention. Time to rethink how we build.

FOUNDER OWNERSHIP

Carta's Spring 2025 SaaS report confirms the dilution game: VC money comes at a steep equity cost. Each round chips away—pre-seed, employees, co-founders, SAFEs, and traditional VCs. By IPO, founders often hold much less than they think. Dilution isn't a bug; it's the whole game.

QUANTUM

Late last year, I noted that Google had a new quantum chip, Willow, which marked a bonkers leap in compute power (completing a computation in under five minutes that would have taken the world's fastest supercomputer 10 septillion years - older than the known universe). Quantum cracking isn't hypothetical sci-fi anymore - it's an inevitability.

CASE STUDY

Crunchbase crunched the Venture numbers over the past 10 years, and global VC has nearly tripled in a decade ($158B in 2014 to $433B in 2021's peak), then cooling to $285B in 2023. Deal count? Doubled. The US leads as always, but China has pulled back. This is a data-rich look at a wild decade in VC.

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