“It’s been crazy out there. Venture capital has been deployed at unprecedented pace, surging 157% year-on-year globally […]. Ever higher valuations led to the creation of 136 newly-minted unicorns […] and the IPO window has been wide open, with public financings up +687%”
Well, that was…last year. Or more precisely, 15 months ago, in the MAD 2021 post, written pretty much at the top of the market, in September 2021.
Since then, of course, the long-anticipated market downturn did occur, driven by geopolitical shocks and rising inflation. Central banks started increasing interest rates, which sucked the air out of an entire world of over-inflated assets, from speculative crypto to tech stocks. Public markets tanked, the IPO window shut down, and bit by bit, the malaise trickled down to private markets – first at the growth stage, then progressively to the venture and seed markets.
We’ll talk about this new 2023 reality in the following order:
- MAD companies facing a new recessionary era
- Frozen financing markets
- Generative AI, a new financing bubble?
- M&A
MAD companies facing a new recessionary era
It’s been rough for everyone out there, and Data/AI companies certainly haven’t been immune.
Capital has gone from abundant and cheap, to scarce and expensive. Companies of all sizes in the MAD landscape have had to dramatically shift focus from growth at all costs to tight control over their expenses.
Layoff announcements have become a sad part of our daily reality. Looking at popular tracker Layoffs.fyi, many of the companies appearing on the 2023 MAD landscape have had to do layoffs, including, for a few recent examples: Snowplow, Splunk, MariaDB, Confluent, Prisma, Mapbox, Informatica, Pecan AI, Scale AI, Astronomer*, Elastic, UIPath, InfluxData, Domino Data Lab, Collibra, Fivetran, Graphcore, Mode, DataRobot, and many more (to see the full list, filter by industry, using “data”).
For a while in 2022, we were in a moment of suspended reality – public markets were tanking, but underlying company performance was holding strong, with many continuing to grow fast and beating their plans.
Over the last few months, however, overall market demand for software products has started to adjust to the new reality. The recessionary environment has been enterprise-led so far, with consumer demand holding surprisingly strong. This has not helped MAD companies much, as the overwhelming majority of companies on the landscape are B2B vendors. First to cut spending were scale-ups and other tech companies, which resulted in many Q3 and Q4 sales misses at the MAD startups that target those customers. Now, Global 2000 customers have adjusted their 2023 budgets as well.
We are now in a new normal, with a vocabulary that will echo recessions past for some, and will be a whole new muscle to build for younger folks: responsible growth, cost-control, CFO oversight, long sales cycles, pilots, ROI.
This is, also, the big return of corporate governance: