The Unicorn is 10 Years Old – My Four Favorite Charts

Ten years ago, Aileen Lee, the founder of seed stage VC firm, Cowboy Ventures, studied the characteristics of VC-backed companies. In the 2013 report, “Welcome to the Unicorn Club,” Lee coined term “Unicorn” to describe those privately held startups with a $1 Billion or greater valuation. Unicorns were off to the races.

Now, ten years later Aileen Lee and her “Cow-lleagues” have taken another deep dive into VC-backed startups. They have just published, “Welcome Back to the Unicorn Club: 10 Years Later.” And, yes, after a pandemic and years of near-zero interest rates, things have changed. The slide version of the report is 54 slides long, mostly graphs. Here I provide a four chart teaser of the gems in “10 Years Later.”

The Unicorn Club in 2013

2013 – Cowboy Ventures

It all famously started in 2013 with 39 unicorns, out of thousands of companies analyzed. Consumer companies dominated at 80% of the value of analyzed companies. Facebook eclipsed the others at $121B valuation. Facebook was the sole Superunicorn, defined as over $100 Billion valuation. Watch this data point: Enterprise Capital Efficiency was stellar at (26X).

Unicorns Grew from 39 to 532 in a Decade

2023 – Cowboy Ventures

Fast forward to 2023. Unicorns grew by 14X to 532. Consumer flipped in value with Enterprise with Enterprise now at 78%. There are 15 Superunicorns, over $100B. OpenAI leads the herd. Ten years later only 7% of the pointy headed beasts have exited, down from 66% ten years ago. Enterprise Capital Efficiency went off a cliff, from 26X to 7X. There is much more about ECE to dig into in the report. Here’s a not-so-fun fact, “60% are what we call ‘ZIRPicorns’ – they were last valued between Jan 2020 and March 2022, when interest rates were near zero and multiples at peak.” ZIRP, refers to Zero Interest Rate Policy – money was low-cost and company valuations were high.

The Deeper Story: Papercorns and ZIRPicorns

2023 – Cowboy Ventures

While there are 14X as many Unicorns as in 2013, 93% of the Unicorns are “Papercorns,” which have not exited. That is, their value is on paper only, not substantiated in the recent marketplace.The chart shows that as the cost of money increased, the number of new Unicorns decreased precipitously. ZIRPicorns make up 60% of today’s Unicorns. ZIRPicorns were last valued between January 2020 and March 2022 when public multiples were at their peak and interest rates were near zero. Their challenge: raising funds or M&A, which in many cases will involve a down round. Cowboy Ventures writes that they expect abrupt shutdowns in 2024. They also write that there are many healthy Unicorns which will grow larger.

NYC Up, SF Down (As a Percentage)

2023 – Cowboy Ventures

While the SF Bay Area grew in number of Unicorns, it lost in percent of companies based there. NYC climbed from 11% to 19%. Cowboy Ventures offers that COVID effects likely played a role in the wider distribution of Unicorns.

What Did Not Change Very Much?

Take a wild guess. If you guessed gender diversity, you are correct. Cowboy Ventures generously says, there is “LOTS of opportunity to increase diversity in founding teams.” In ten years, the number of startups with a female co-founder has grown from 5% in 2013 to 14% in 2023.

“There are more founders named Michael, David and Andrew than there are women unicorn CEOs. At this rate, we won’t reach equal gender representation until 2063,” per Cowboy Ventures.

Fellow data-lovers there is much more in “Welcome Back to the Unicorn Club: 10 Years Later.” I recommend the further data on Enterprise Capital Efficiency.

Let me know which data appealed to you.

-Maureen

2021. It’s not farewell. Ransomware, Unicorns, Profits, and Work from Home

While we may be happy to wave au revoir to 2021, one midnight does not change world circumstances. I think that the following four trends that are not likely to go away in 2022.

  1. Our most popular blog post in 2021, by a factor of 10, was this post by our CEO, Seth Hallem, on the REvil vulnerability and the ensuing ransomware. Many IT and security people were kept busy over the July 4th weekend with the Kaseya VSA exploit. More law firms and more businesses overall were hit with ransomware than the public is aware of. At the risk of stating the obvious, this will only grow going forward.
  2. Unicorns, IPOs, M & A, and healthy funding rounds were undefeated by the pandemic. We covered the capital infusion in #legaltech here.
  3. Early in 2021, we learned from Thomson Reuters that Big and Mid sized Law had been very profitable in pandemic burdened 2020. Work from home meant more billable hours. Legal IT departments got attorney up and running from home in quite literally a weekend. In early 2021 the question was, would work from home end as quickly as it had begun? The profits lead one to conclude that it would not. The Delta and Omicron variants in 2021 ensured no quick ending.
  4. Finally, in the fall of 2021 companies such as Apple and Big Law firms were gearing up for early January or February 2022 “return to the office” dates. Then Omicron swept through the globe. Now all bets are off for when, and if, companies will return to the office.

Some good, some not so good. Overall, we can be grateful for the healthy demand for legal services and that so much of legal work can be done remotely.

I wish you the best for 2022!

-Maureen

🔥 Legal Tech: Tracking 12 Months of IPOs and Funding Rounds

A post by Artificial Lawyer provides a clear summary of the trend in the first half of 2021, “Legal Tech Funding Hits $1.4BN, While M&A Soars.” Here, James Goodnow writes about “The Insider’s View On Legaltech VC Funding,” with some salient funding insights from Kira CEO and co-founder, Noah Waisberg. Kira was recently acquired by Litera.

But the reality is that investments are clipping along at fast pace. It’s hard to keep up. I could not find a post which captured the current rounds, so I created a spreadsheet of the past 12 months of legal tech IPOs and funding rounds (Series A and higher). I’m not claiming that it is comprehensive. I’m sure that I’ve missed a few. If you have any to add or any corrections to offer, please let me know via: contact at mobilehelix dot com.

Legal Tech iPOs and Funding Rounds - 12 Months, 2021-November

On November 23, 2021, transcription company Verbit announced that they had closed $250 million in a Series E round that values the company at $2 billion. That’s after raising $157 million in a Series D in June 2021 at over $1 billion valuation, making it one of the first unicorns in legal tech. (To be accurate, Verbit serves more than the legal tech market.)

Also in November, Grammarly, another company with business in legal and beyond, raised $400 million at a valuation of $13 billion. I had to double-check that. Wow. Grammarly has a tool which corrects and improves writing.

Here’s my earlier post on unicorns in legal tech, “We have FOMO in legal tech!”

-Maureen

We have FOMO in legal tech! 🦄

What is FOMO?

Fear Of Missing Out

Today’s legal tech headline:

“Litera secures further investment from Hg”

Terms of the deal were not disclosed. But we know that:

  • May 2019: Hg purchased Litera investment firm K1 Investment Management. At the time Hg Capital Trust stated that as part of the acquisition, it would lead an investment of $39M in Litera.
  • Litera has trebled in size, per CEO, Avaneesh Marwaha.
  • And from the same press release:
  • Litera is approaching more than 1,000 employees across 17 different countries
  • Litera also has gained over 10 times the number of users since Hg first invested, now serving over 15,000 customers
  • Since 2019, Litera has acquired twelve companies.

And there are 🦄 unicorns in legal tech!

November 2021: Everlaw raised a $202M Series D round at a valuation over $2B.

June 2021: Verbit raised $157 million in Series D funding at a valuation of over $1B.

April 2021: Clio raised a $110M Series E round at a valuation of $1.6B.

December 2020: Ironclad raised $100M in Series D funding at more than $950M valuation.

Ah, FOMO…

To quote investor Kjartan Rist on FOMO, “The fear of missing out on the next billion-dollar opportunity is one feeling that never really goes away.

FOMO is nothing new in Silicon Valley VC-land. But it’s new and exciting in the world of what is broadly referred to as “legal tech.” Legal tech has been known for slow adoption and conservative processes, including mainly using software which is deployed on-premises at the law firm or business entity. In many cases this changed with the pandemic. The overnight necessity to support attorneys and staff working from home catalyzed adoption of cloud-hosted software throughout legal.

My short summary of the phenomenon in legal tech:

☁️ Cloud scales = hyper growth potential

💉 Accelerated by the pandemic

⚖️ Legal (law firms, corporate legal) finally accepts Cloud/SaaS

💰 Capital wants in

🙌 Win / Win / Win

There’s more to this story. For example, FOMO leads to frothy valuations.

But for today…

🥳 Congratulations to the unicorns, the parties to M & A, the newly funded, and the rapidly growing companies in #legaltech! It’s an exciting time to be in legal tech.

-Maureen