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The future of information. Shopping in 2030. Need a Lyft?

Adolescence is hard

Hi there,

In 2014, CB Insights was around 30 people. We are now at ~250.

Not a lot is written about the challenges of scaling a company in its “teenage years,” so a couple weeks ago I asked our very smart newsletter readers for some recommendations.

And as always, readers were generous with their ideas. Many recommended books, which I haven’t had the opportunity to read yet — but one article recommended was pretty solid.

I’ll get to that below. But first, some data.


Reading tea leaves

At last week's Future of Fintech, we discussed the future of information. 

We also dug into 9 data-driven predictions for financial services, including:

  • Banking's next battleground
  • Where Goldman Sachs will make its next big move
  • The hottest future fintech market

Check out all 9 predictions in the keynote presentation here.




 The year is 2030...

The future of retail will likely build on today's nascent technology. Imagine, for example, using an augmented reality mirror in a store dressing room. Maybe an in-store drone flies around retrieving items.

From shopper emotion detection to in-store robotic warehouses, we highlight the technologies and trends that will impact store innovation in the next 10+ years. Clients can download the complete report here.




Evolution & revolution

One article recommended by a newsletter reader (thanks, Paul Martin) was “Evolution and Revolution as Organizations Grow,” by Larry E. Greiner. (Check it out in today’s Blurb.)

It’s from 1972, but still highly relevant. Lots of good ideas in it.

The premise is that “management problems and principles are rooted in time,” and as a result, “the critical task for management in each revolutionary period is to find a new set of organizational practices that will become the basis for managing the next period of evolutionary growth.”



It also highlights a challenge, which we’ve observed, where we “experience the irony of seeing a major solution in one period become a major problem in a later period.”

So this requires recognizing the limited range of solutions — i.e., nothing works forever.

These revolutions can be jarring. We’ve felt them at CB Insights, and we’re probably always on the verge of feeling them as we grow.


Lyft-off

Ride-hailing unicorn Lyft went public on March 29 at a price of $72/share and a $24.3B valuation. Since then, the value of some of its top investors' stakes has fluctuated by as much as $1B.

We take a look at Lyft's top stakeholders at the time of its IPO and how they're doing now. Check them out here.




Growing and changing

Greiner’s article also talks about implications for managers. This table summarizes the management practices that characterize each growth phase:



While terminology has likely changed since the article was published in 1972, the principles remain quite solid (with tweaks, of course).

BTW, if you’re someone who would love the challenge of optimizing the evolutionary phases and navigating through the revolutionary phases, we’re hiring an SVP of People Strategy.


Billion-dollar idea

Juicero should have pivoted to this. Gargantuan opportunity.




 Call security

To keep up with growing cybersecurity threats, many organizations dealing with sensitive data streams are turning to a "DevSecOps" approach to IT and software development.

We break down what DevSecOps is, how it works, and which companies are using it. Expert Intelligence clients can read about it here.




To your health

Our Future of Health conference (October 2-3) will focus on the consumer health journey and the key trends driving its future. 

Here are a few topics we'll cover:  

  • consumerization of healthcare
  • the future of aging
  • big tech's impact on healthcare

Register today! Prices go up July 1.




The Industry Standard

CB Insights data is the most trusted by those in the industry and the media. A few recent hits.

Forbes. Gil Press (@GilPress) writes about what lessons CVCs can learn from Intel Capital and refers to CB Insights research.

Morning Brew. The newsletter discusses “how to win clients and influence fintech” and shouts out CB Insights’ Future of Fintech conference.

Axios. Dion Rabouin (@DionRabouin) mentions CB Insights’ Future of Fintech event in the Axios newsletter.


I love you.

Anand
@asanwal 

P.S. We're hiring customer success managers. Check out the full job description here. If this sounds like you, we'd love to chat.

The Blurb

A curated mix of articles worth sharing.

Ch-ch-changes. Larry E. Greiner’s 1972 article about how companies evolve is still highly relevant today.
HBR

Take to the woods. A new study shows that spending 2 hours per week in nature improves health and well-being.
Fast Company

Maybe it’s for the best. The world’s population is projected to virtually stop growing by the end of this century, largely due to declining global fertility rates.
Pew Research Center

I’m a Libra. Facebook is launching a new cryptocurrency called Libra.
The Verge

How do I choose? Recommendation sites have become a key part of the online economy — and they might be changing the way we shop.
The Ringer
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