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Robotic Automations

Restaurant365 orders in $175M at a $1B+ valuation to supersize its food service software stack  | TechCrunch


The restaurant industry in the U.S. is expected to pass $1 trillion in sales for the first time this year, despite wider economic pressures on consumers. Now Restaurant365, a startup building tech to manage those businesses, has raised a hot round of $175 million to capitalize on that growth.  The funding is being led by […]

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Software Development in Sri Lanka

Robotic Automations

Jumia is back, growing total sales and orders in Q1 2024 | TechCrunch


Jumia’s revenue and gross merchandise volume showed growth despite a decrease in quarterly active customers, according to its Q1 2024 report. Revenue increased by 19% year-over-year (57% in constant currency) to $48.9 million, while GMV surged by 5% year-over-year (39% in constant currency) to $181 million.

The quarterly active customers of the African e-tailer, on the other hand, declined by almost 5% from 2 million to 1.9 million due to cost-cutting measures such as reduced customer incentives and free shipping expenditures. However, this exercise led to a stickier and higher-quality customer base with increased repurchase rates. The average order value rose by 3% compared to Q1 2023, reaching $39.6 million. Interestingly, despite the decline in customer base, Jumia’s quarterly orders saw a 1.9% increase to 4.6 million. Jumia attributes this growth to continued improvements in its supply and product assortment.

“This quarter is special because we finally turned back to growth on GMV and orders. For a year and a half, very few people outside believed that we would be able to get Jumia to grow again with that level of cuts on marketing, staff, and everything. But it turns out we can with lower marketing and logistics costs and G&A,” CEO Francis Dufay said on a call with TechCrunch. “I mean, there are much fewer people at Jumia today who operate the business. We’ve lost about 40% of the workforce since late 2022. And still, we’re still growing. So that’s a very important achievement, and we believe we still have a lot of market potential to capture in our markets.”

The e-commerce company says its revenue increase was because of sales of larger ticket items, such as electronics and home and living items, alongside higher commissions and corporate sales. Similarly, GMV growth reflects efforts to enhance its product assortment, more efficient marketing spending, and reductions in customer incentives, with marketing expenses dropping 30% from Q1 2023.

In addition, this disciplined expense management and further streamlining of its logistics network reduced Jumia’s quarterly cash burn to $19.1 million from $22.0 million in Q1 2023. Consequently, its operating loss and adjusted EBITDA loss for the quarter dropped 71% year-over-year and 83% year-over-year to $8 million and $4 million respectively, showing a continuous effort from the company to significantly reduce costs and improve its gross margins until it reaches profitability.

A big driver in Jumia’s quest to reach profitability continues to be JumiaPay (the ratio of JumiaPay orders on physical goods went up from 20% to 32.5% in Q1 2024). The continued rollout of JumiaPay on delivery in Nigeria and Kenya to increase cashless orders positions JumiaPay as a stronger enabler of its overall e-commerce platform; JumiaPay saw its transactions reach 2 million, an increase of 52% year-over-year while recording a 10% year-over-year growth in total processing volume (TPV) at $45.4 million in Q1 2024.

Jumia, whose share price has increased 26% to $6.90 since its earnings call, reported that its liquidity position in Q1 2024 totaled $101.5 million, with $28.6 million in cash and cash equivalents and $72.8 million in term deposits and other financial assets. The company emphasized that 79% of its liquidity was denominated in USD, providing protection against fluctuations in local currency valuations (it incurred a $5.9 million cash loss due to currency translation related to devaluations in Egypt and Nigeria, two of its largest markets, during the quarter).


Software Development in Sri Lanka

Robotic Automations

NASA orders studies from private space companies on Mars mission support roles | TechCrunch


Mars exploration has been always been the exclusive purview of national space agencies, but NASA is trying to change that, awarding a dozen research tasks to private companies as a prelude to commercial support for future missions to the Red Planet.

It’s the second time in a month that the agency has shown its desire for commercial support in Mars missions, having more or less scrapped the original Mars Sample Return mission in favor of a to-be-determined alternative likely by private space companies.

A total of nine companies were selected to perform twelve “concept studies” on how they could provide Mars-related services, from payload delivery to planetary imaging to communications relays. While each award is relatively small — between $200,000 and $300,000 — these studies are an important first step for NASA to better understand the costs, risks, and feasibility of commercial technologies.

The companies selected are: Lockheed Martin, Impulse Space, and Firefly Aerospace for small payload delivery and hosting services; United Launch Alliance, Blue Origin, and Astrobotic for large payload delivery and hosting services; Albedo, Redwire Space, and Astrobotic for Mars surface-imaging services; and SpaceX, Lockheed Martin, and Blue Origin for next-gen relay series.

Nearly all the selected proposals would adapt existing projects focused on the moon and Earth, NASA said in a statement. The twelve-week studies will conclude in August, and there’s no guarantee that they would lead to future requests for proposals or contracts. That said, it’s similarly unlikely that future contracts would appear without a study having previously been done by a company vying for it.

The companies were sourced from a request for proposals put out by NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory earlier this year. According to that solicitation, the idea is to develop a new paradigm for Mars exploration, one that delivers “more frequent lower cost missions” via partnerships between government and industry.

The plan is similar to the agency’s Commercial Lunar Payload Services program, which provides large contracts to private companies to deliver payloads to the moon. And like CLPS, which helped bankroll the first successful private lunar lander (among others), these latest awards also show that the agency is increasingly comfortable working with smaller, earlier-stage startups working on unproven tech.


Software Development in Sri Lanka

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