Berkeley Haas startup founders raise record funding
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2021.06.08 5:45
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A sustainable, space-saving vertical strawberry farm that produces
ultra-sweet berries without pesticides and an online bank for “free
thinkers, rebels, and entrepreneurs” were among the new companies that
propelled Berkeley Haas to No. 4 for fundraising on the Poets &
Quants Top 100 MBA startups list this year.
Annually, Poets & Quants ranks b-school startups
with at least $5.5 million or more in funding. To be considered,
founders must have launched their startups within the five prior years
(2015-2020) and have at least one founder enrolled in an MBA program
within that time frame.
This year, five Haas companies founded in that period raised a record
total of $125 million. Two Haas startups made it into the Top 20,
including Oishii, founded by Hiroki Koga, MBA 17, ($50 million) and Oxygen, founded by Hussein Ahmed, EMBA 18, ($33 million).
Also on the list were Kyte, a car-sharing startup co-founded by Ludwig Schoenack, MBA 19, ($18 million); Time by Ping, a timekeeping automation company co-founded by Kourosh Zamanizadeh, EWMBA 18, ($17.3 million); and healthcare startup Twentyeight Health, cofounded by Amy Fan, MBA/MPH 19, ($6.08 million). Twentyeight Health also made Poets & Quants’ 2020 “Most Disruptive Startups” list.
Stanford, Harvard, and Columbia Business School had seven startups on
the 2021 list, while Haas, the University of Pennsylvania’s Wharton
School, and France’s INSEAD all had five.
“We’re so proud of what these startup founders have accomplished,” said Rhonda Shrader, executive director of the Berkeley Haas Entrepreneurship Program,
noting that founders from four MBA degree programs–full-time MBA,
evening & weekend MBA, MBA/MPH, and executive MBA—are represented on
the P&Q list. “Their ongoing success is proof of the depth and
breadth of our entrepreneurship programs across campus, and a testament
to the drive that so many of our students have to build world-changing
startups.”
More proof of that drive came this week as Ryan McQuaid, MBA 08, announced that he’d sold his startup, virtual primary care platform Plushcare, to Accolade for $450 million. McQuaid, who started Plushcare at Haas, made previous Poets & Quants Top MBA startup lists.
Entrepreneurship is one of Dean Ann Harrison’s top three priorities
for the school, and Haas continues to invest in new resources, recently
announcing three new professors in its Entrepreneurship & Innovation group
and a plan to build a new entrepreneurship hub on campus. “It’s
gratifying to see so many Haas founders on this list who are solving
important problems that impact everything from the environment to
healthcare,” Harrison said.
Validating the business model
Jersey City-based Oishii, ranked No. 14 on the list, runs a vertical
farming operation, raising top-quality strawberries that are tested to
ensure two to three times the sweetness of conventional berries.
Founder Koga arrived at Haas in 2015 after working as a consultant in
the vertical farm industry in Japan. Realizing that agriculture was no
longer sustainable, he decided to tackle the problem by growing crops
indoors, which allowed him to use 90% less land and water, eliminate the
use of pesticides, and cut down on food transportation distances.
The MBA program provided two years to assess his hypothesis and
validate the business model in the U.S., something he said he could
never have done from Japan. During Koga’s second year, he entered the LAUNCH accelerator program—and won the competition, “which gave us more credibility and recognition as we were raising our seed round.”
Oishii’s strawberries, coveted by chefs, sold out pre-pandemic, Koga
said. But as more people started cooking at home over the past year,
they became increasingly aware of what they were eating and more willing
to pay for higher-quality produce. As a result, many vertical farm
companies have grown quickly and experienced a significant increase in
revenue and funding, Koga said.
Filling in missing pieces
Startup Oxygen, No. 19 on the P&Q list, offers banking to
freelancers, consumers, and small businesses, with no monthly fees,
marketing itself as a new kind of bank account for “free thinkers,
rebels, and entrepreneurs.”
Ahmed said he founded Oxygen out of personal experiences with banks.
“Living for a big part of my life as a “solopreneur,” consultant, and
business owner, it was always a struggle to work with banks and
financial institutions because I didn’t fit the typical molds they
have—either a 9-to-5 full-time employee or a corporation—nothing in
between,” he said.
The pandemic, while horrible, was “a blessing in disguise” for
Oxygen, he said. With stay-at-home orders, digital banking suddenly
became the only way to bank “without having to drive down to a branch
and wait in line masked up,” he said. There was also a massive boom in
new business formations in the U.S., which significantly accelerated
Oxygen’s small-business banking growth.
Ahmed, who has an engineering background and started companies before
he arrived at Haas, said the MBA program helped fill in missing pieces.
“With an engineering background and product focus, along with scars
and wins and street smarts, I was still missing the academics and
business tactics from economics, finance, and accounting,” he said.
“Having those subjects, great professors, and class discussions gives a
lot of perspective on how to think about all those different angles and
perspectives—while being at the helm dealing with everything on a
day-to-day basis.”