HAX Accelerator

HAX accelerator (formerly HAXLR8R) is an early stage investor and seed accelerator focused on hard tech startups. HAX has offices in San Francisco, Shenzhen, and Tokyo.

HAX
TypeSubsidiary
IndustryVenture Capital
Founded2011
FounderCyril Ebersweiler
Sean O'Sullivan
Headquarters,
Number of locations
3
ServicesInvestment
ParentSOSV
Websitewww.hax.co

History

Founded in 2011 by Cyril Ebersweiler and Sean O'Sullivan, the roots of the HAX Accelerator were another accelerator program, CHINA-AXLR8R started in Dalian, China in 2009.[1] The first HAX Accelerator program ran in Shenzhen from March to June 2012.

HAX, focused on hardware development, includes both a cash investment and product development support in exchange for equity. Startups that are accepted into the program spend 180 days with the HAX team at their locations in Shenzhen and San Francisco. The startups get access to the supply chain and factory ecosystem available in Shenzhen.[2] At the end of the program the startup presents the final product to investors and raise further capital both HAX and investor network.

As of June 2020, over 250 startups participated in the programs. Among them are:

  • Makeblock, a Shenzhen-based STEM robotics company
  • Robotics companies such as Simbe Robotics (inventory robot), Dispatch (delivery robot) and Rovenso (all-terrain rover)
  • 11 startups who raised over one million dollars on Kickstarter including CHIP, Kokoon, Prynt
  • M5Stack, a Shenzhen-based company making stackable product development toolkits based on ESP32, targeting applications such as STEM Learning and IoT. In 2017, the founder of M5Stack, Jimmy Lai, received a seed round investment from HAX and officially founded M5Stack.[3]

References

  1. Biggs, John. "Haxlr8r Is Looking For A Few Good Hardware Start-Ups To Be Close To The Action". TechCrunch. Retrieved 22 November 2013.
  2. "China-Axlr8r and the Chinese Startup Scene". Popular Industry. Retrieved 12 August 2013.
  3. "M5Stack - About Us". M5Stack. Retrieved 22 February 2020.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.