Cleantech startup Moxion Power lays off a third of its workforce
I simply want to make some observations and comments. I was merely a rank and file employee so some of my perspective and facts may not be accurate. But I think I saw enough to write an effective post-mortem of sorts.
Lack of fiscal discipline. While this is a capital intensive business, if you cannot create a path to profitability after being handed 100 million I don't see how raising more money could help. I understand that founders are always seeing things through rose colored lenses but we had a seasoned finance team. How could the CFO allow this kind of spending, which put the company on a path to crash and burn unless the stars aligned perfectly.
Too eager to scale. Instead of "doing things that don't scale" Moxion was incredibly ambitious, building a giant factory in Richmond, CA to produce hundreds of battery units a day when they hadn't actually yet designed and manufactured a reliable and highly sought after product. I don't understand why the company was so eager to expand when even the few hundred battery units that had already been produced were not selling. I believe most of the company's cash was burned by the effort to build a new factory.
Questionable economics: The main motivation for purchasing a Moxion BESS seems to come down to customers wanting to offset their carbon footprint. The cost of a unit is incredibly high and getting the same amount of electricity (in kwH) is way more expensive than the diesel powered generators that Moxion is trying to replace. Much like many renewable energy projects, once the tax and other incentives dried up, the unit economics are incredibly dicey.
company website: https://www.moxionpower.com/ last fundraise: https://news.crunchbase.com/clean-tech-and-energy/venture-rounds-power-moxion/
7 comments
[ 3.2 ms ] story [ 25.2 ms ] threadThe past few years have proven this wrong. A lot of companies raised far more than that and just recently (relatively) became profitable. Uber, Tesla, and even going back a bit, Facebook.
100 million was a tiny amount of what was needed for them to become profitable.
The rest I agree with though.
Because nothing here seems out of the norm for startups. Most of them are sketchy strategically, just that some figure it out before running out of runway.
Product-led growth strategies allow companies to focus on developing a product that is inherently valuable and sells itself. By creating a user-centric design and seamless onboarding process, companies can attract and retain customers more effectively. Moxion Power, a cleantech startup that manufactures battery energy storage systems, exemplifies the potential challenges and lessons of product-led growth. Despite raising over $100 million, the company faced financial struggles that necessitated significant layoffs. Overspending without a clear path to profitability, scaling too quickly, and questionable economics contributed to Moxion Power's downfall. To succeed with product-led growth, companies must prioritize fiscal discipline, navigate scaling challenges strategically, and ensure their product's cost justifies its benefits.