
TechCrunch Reports Startup Funding and Venture Capital News
Source: Techcrunch
TechCrunch Reports went live in 2005 when founder Michael Arrington traded his Silicon Valley law books for a WordPress template and a simple vow: cover startup with the same urgency the Wall Street Journal reserves for Fortune 500 giants. The first post landed at 9:14 p.m.; within a year the blog broke the news that Google had acquired YouTube, cementing its role as the default tip-sheet for venture capital hunting the next unicorn.
Today a rotating team of thirty editors spanning San Francisco, New York, London, Bangalore and Beijing publishes thirty-five posts per day, each optimized for speed and depth. When a term sheet circulates, reporters verify the amount, series and lead investor through two independent sources—usually a founder and a VC—before the story hits the homepage ninety seconds later. Funding round pages auto-populate with Crunchbase data, giving readers competitor analysis, employee headcount graphs and burn-rate projections without leaving the article.
Beyond breaking-news posts, TechCrunch runs four recurring franchises. “Equity” delivers a 20-minute daily podcast unpacking the latest deals; “Pitch Deck Teardown” invites founders to publish the slides that closed their Series A so the community can critique narrative arc and metric order; “Startup Battlefield” is a monthly livestream where eight pre-Series B companies pitch judges such as Sequoia partners and Zoom C-suite alumni; and “TC+” offers a subscription paywall packed with investor surveys, cap-table templates and S-1 line-by-line breakdowns.
The annual Disrupt conference part trade show, part hackathon, part gladiator arena draws 10,000 attendees to San Francisco’s Moscone Center every September. Past winners include Dropbox, Mint and Yammer; IPO-bound alumni return to mentor new cohorts, creating a feedback loop that keeps the editorial team plugged into tomorrow’s headlines before they happen. Satellite Disrupt events now run in Berlin, Shenzhen and Lagos, extending TechCrunch’s lens to global innovation hubs.
Every article, video and newsletter adheres to a conflict-of-interest policy that bars reporters from holding positions in companies they cover, while sponsored posts are clearly labelled “Partner Content.” The result is a living archive of more than 250,000 posts chronicling fifteen years of boom, bust, pivot and exit a real-time ledger of the technology economy trusted by founders, investors and curious readers worldwide.
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