To say it’s been a rough year for tech startups would be an understatement.
WeWork, once worth $47B, filed for bankruptcy. Convoy, the Bezos-backed trucking company valued at $3.8B, shut down. Health startup Olive AI shuttered after peaking at a $4B valuation.
And many other startups followed suit by selling for a fraction of their valuations or closing up shop:
Nearly 3.2k private venture-backed startups went under in 2023 after raising a combined $27.2B in funding, according to data compiled by PitchBook for The New York Times.
All the turmoil has made VCs more selective, putting a squeeze on the funding that once flowed so freely in Silicon Valley.
This makes it even harder for startups to survive, meaning we might see even more closures in 2024.
And when a startup goes under, it’s not just the investors who get burned. Startup founders have long struggled — often in silence — with their mental health; investors predict this funding shortage will only magnify the issue.
Behemoths like Uber and Slack were founded just after the 2008 recession — some experts say tough economic times can actually be good for business.
And with 262k+ tech workers laid off in 2023, there will likely be more talented minds diving into entrepreneurship.
Plus, there are plenty of other reasons it could be a good year for startups, per TechCrunch:
And, of course, there’s AI, which could help businesses be more efficient and profitable.