Daily Crunch: Fairly stagnant since April launch, Coinbase NFT sales volume is under $700K

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Friday, May 6, is here. The only thing important about that is the “Friday” part – and we are eager and curious to see what this weekend has in store for us, because this week had many of our colleagues using expletives in their reporting, case in point this report by Natasha and Amanda describing all of the tech layoffs we’ve seen this week.

Meanwhile, in the TechCrunch Slack today, Amanda, after some pushback with minimum context, asked: “Ron, are you implying that Britney Spears didn’t single-handedly create more American jobs?” We will have more national job market analyses coming soon. – Christine and Haje

The TechCrunch Top 3

Startups and VC

In what has to be one of our favorite articles on TechCrunch in recent memories, Brian joins Tony Fadell – the man behind the iPod, iPhone and Nest Thermostat – in his garage to see what prototypes and curiosities the longtime product maestro has kicking around. It’s a deeply fascinating tour of the products that could have been and a must-read for any gadget aficionados out there.

We also loved this piece from Carly discussing whether you should delete your period-tracking apps if Roe v. Wade turns out to be a thing of the past, pointing out that many of the app developers are already sharing details with third parties. “It’s unlikely the sensitive data you share with your period-tracking app is going to end up in the hands of those seeking to outlaw abortion,” she writes. “That’s not to say these tools don’t have extensive privacy problems.”

A smattering of tenuous musical puns and great stories:

6 places where investors look for problems when you’re fundraising

Image Credits: Andrey Popov (opens in a new window) / Getty Images

According to Bill Petty, a partner with Tercera, these are the six questions investors are most likely to ask while conducting due diligence:

  1. How is your historical business performance?
  2. How are you thinking about and planning for growth?
  3. What is the ownership breakdown?
  4. Who are your key clients and what is the nature of the work you are completing for them?
  5. How are you managing the business? What is your attrition, utilization, bill rates, etc.?
  6. Are there any outstanding risks?

If you can’t answer these off the top of your head, you’re probably not ready to fundraise. Investors have higher expectations than the friends and family who may have helped you get this far.

“It’s the difference between inviting a friend over for dinner and preparing for an open house,” says Petty.

“With a friend, you might tidy up and shove a few things in the closet. If you have buyers coming to look around, they’re going to open that closet.”

(TechCrunch+ is our membership program, which helps founders and startup teams get ahead. You can sign up here.)

6 places where investors look for problems when you’re fundraising

Big Tech Inc.

Since it’s about to be the weekend, let’s kick it off with some drive time: China electric vehicle company Nio is pulling into a Singapore stock market parking space. The company was said to be seeking a secondary listing of its Class A ordinary shares to match one in Hong Kong as the company awaits news on whether its shares will be delisted from the New York Stock Exchange. Meanwhile, Lucid, the maker of the luxury Air sedan, said demand is so good that it will be raising prices on its line of vehicles.

Regulators, mount up: The U.K. is cracking down on what it perceives as Big Tech’s unfair advantage, and Natasha has read all the long documents about some new regulations so you don’t have to. The tl;dr — the government is laying down some rules for Big Tech companies that it says will be necessary to boost competition and let consumers more easily and safely do things like swap between Android and iOS, switch social media accounts without losing data (ouch!) and have more control over who has access to their data.

Meanwhile:

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