Moving a startup from South Korea to Silicon Valley represents one of the most challenging transitions in the global tech ecosystem—Korean startups face a 70% failure rate within 18 months of arriving in Silicon Valley, not because of inferior technology, but due to invisible cultural translation barriers. The journey from Seoul’s Gangnam district to Sand
Most investors are still evaluating companies as if software and hardware exist in separate universes. Cyberphysical data — the information generated when digital systems interact with physical processes — represents the next frontier of investable innovation, projected to reach $255.3 billion by 2029. Yet the majority of VCs lack the frameworks to recognize which companies
Picture this: A professional basketball team generates 50TB of biometric data per season from heart rate monitors, GPS trackers, and motion sensors—yet pays almost nothing for most of the analytics tools trying to process it. Biometric data for sports teams is the systematic collection and analysis of physiological metrics like heart rate variability, muscle oxygen
Data quality drives 80% of model performance while algorithm choice accounts for only 20%. Yet most founders obsess over the wrong 20%. Why data beats algorithms comes down to a simple truth: better data with basic algorithms outperforms sophisticated algorithms with poor data every time. This insight fundamentally changes how growth-stage startups should allocate their




