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Startups & Ventures

Startups & Ventures

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A hub for startup news, trends, and insights, covering the global startup ecosystem for founders, investors, and innovators. Community: @startupdis Buy Ads: @strategy (this is our only account).

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📈 Analytical overview of Telegram channel Startups & Ventures

Channel Startups & Ventures (@tech) in the English language segment is an active participant. Currently, the community unites 2 691 134 subscribers, ranking 22 in the Technologies & Applications category and 49 in the International region.

📊 Audience metrics and dynamics

Since its creation on невідомо, the project has demonstrated rapid growth, gathering an audience of 2 691 134 subscribers.

According to the latest data from 28 June, 2026, the channel demonstrates stable activity. Although there has been a change in the number of participants by -178 556 over the last 30 days and by -5 928 over the last 24 hours, overall reach remains high.

  • Verification status: Verified (Officially confirmed by Telegram)
  • Engagement rate (ER): The average audience engagement rate is 0.22%. Within the first 24 hours after publication, content typically collects 0.11% reactions from the total number of subscribers.
  • Post reach: On average, each post receives 5 868 views. Within the first day, a publication typically gains 3 063 views.
  • Reactions and interaction: The audience actively supports content: the average number of reactions per post is 566.
  • Thematic interests: Content is focused on key topics such as claude, openai, gemini, insider, developer.

📝 Description and content policy

The author describes the resource as a platform for expressing subjective opinions:
A hub for startup news, trends, and insights, covering the global startup ecosystem for founders, investors, and innovators. Community: @startupdis Buy Ads: @strategy (this is our only account).

Thanks to the high frequency of updates (latest data received on 29 June, 2026), the channel maintains relevance and a high level of publication reach. Analytics show that the audience actively interacts with content, making it an important point of influence in the Technologies & Applications category.

2 691 134
Subscribers
-5 92824 hours
-36 7957 days
-178 55630 days
Posts Archive
​​Current trend: Oximeter Pulse oximeters are small devices that use light to measure blood O2 saturation. Like face masks and hand sanitizer, Oximeter sales have surged due to the current crisis. Quartz reports that Oximeter sales have increased more than 5x since January. The spike is so sudden that many Amazon sellers and brick and mortar stores have run out of inventory. Why the bump? Despite statements from the American Lung Association that Oximeters are only helpful for people with certain health conditions, people are using them as a way to self-diagnose. Or, for those that have the disease, as a way to measure lung function at home. Oximeters are just one of many devices that people are using for the “self-care” movement, a group that monitors their health without interfacing with a health care pro.

Some news: Oil is almost down to $1/barrel So, startupers, prepare your ideas to explode the market with innovative energy resources. Why this is happening: The May contract expires tomorrow. Oil traders that still have contracts are selling at whatever price they can get because they do not (all) have the ability to take physical delivery. Storage and refiners are not buying. The $1/barrel is a trading dynamic when there are many sellers and limited buyers.

Today’s project idea: Random knowledge chats It’s hard to learn cool topics directly from experts (unless you listen to a podcast, which is not very interactive). My favorite feature on Wikipedia is the “random article” button, which sends you to a random Wikipedia page. This company would take this same idea and similar to Omegle places you in a random 1:1 video conversation for 15 minute conversations for $5 each. The platform would allow you to learn random things from random people who are an expert in their subject and all you would have to do is pay them with coffee/tea/pastries. Perhaps it could be called, "Teach for a Coffee". Get rated after the end of each interaction and become more of an expert. Perhaps, eventually, the platform would create partnerships with media companies to give people a foot-in-the-door to become talking heads on programs like CNN, Fox, MSNBC, and more.

How to brainstorm great business ideas, part 2 If you find yourself trying to think up product ideas, then you're putting the solution first. Not only is that backwards, but it's harder! How exactly are you supposed to think up good product ideas out of thin air? It's impossible to design a great tool for a job before you even know what the job is. You'll make your life easier and your business ideas better if you put the solution last and the problem first. What makes for a good problem? The first step is to recognize a good problem when you see one. A good problem is one that many thousands of people have. Otherwise you won't have enough customers. For indie hackers, this number doesn't need to be too big. Usually a few hundred thousand is enough. In some cases, much less. You want these to be people you genuinely like talking to, because they'll be your customers for years. And ideally you have the same problem as them, too, so you can empathize with what they're going through. It's best if the people who have this problem hang out together and identify as a named group. For example, "developers" or "teachers" or "NBA fans" or "YouTubers." That means they're likely to make all sorts of recommendations to each other, including product recommendations, which makes word-of-mouth growth possible for your business. It also gives you juicy channels to target, which will come into play later. It helps if the problem is a growing one, meaning more and more people have it every year. This sets the stage for your business to grow. And you want it to be a problem that people encounter frequently, so they'll seek the solution on a regular basis. Finally, and arguably most importantly, you want it to be a valuable problem. In other words, you want it to be a problem that people pay money to solve. Preferably lots of money.

How to brainstorm great business ideas Part 1 It's been said that ideas don't matter, execution does. I wholeheartedly disagree. You need both to succeed, but you can only get so good at execution. A great idea gives you much more leverage. Most people equate product ideas with business ideas. That's wrong. Your product is only one part of your business. There are at least four parts in total: - the problem you're solving (aka the market) - the distribution channel to reach customers - the monetization model you use to make money - the solution to the problem (aka your product or service) Great business ideas are strong in all of these areas. Problem First, Solution Last The #1 rule is to put the problem first and the solution last. Your product/service should be the last thing you think about. Why? Because it's the most flexible. You can build anything. But the other three aspects are constrained. You have to choose from a limited set of viable problems, channels, and models. Always start with the constraints.

Today’s app idea: Is it worth to read an article? A browser extension that shows the amount of words in an article, so you know whether it’s worth your time to read.

Drone Dog-Walker Not a side project, but a whole startup idea. To walk my dog, I have to go outside. A drone or robot that can automatically walk my dog. This concept would be similar to Wag (which raised $361M, was valued at $1B+, and was backed by Softbank; however, Softbank eventually parted ways in late 2019). However, instead of paying humans to walk people’s dogs, this company would use drones.

Museum virtual tours A website gathers as many virtual museum tours as possible to watch all of them online.

​​Trend: Posca This brand of paint marker pens was already gaining momentum before coronavirus. But demand has exploded now that millions of parents are homeschooling their children every day. Posca pens are great for kid's painting. As a bonus, they can be used on windows. And they easily wipe off of any glass surface. Perfect for the new parent turned teacher who lacks a whiteboard.

An app to report large social gatherings.

Auto suggested hashtags Twitter should auto-suggest hashtags based on what you’re tweeting about. It can be a browser extension.

I’m from
Anonymous voting

An app that randomly sends you a notification every week to take a photo within 60 seconds. The app compiles your photos into a montage.

Map-based social network When you travel to a new city, it’s tough to know if you have friends who live there. Current social networks don’t offer a good way to know your friends’ locations in real-time and/or aren’t very socially engaging.

A shopping list location app that sends you a reminder notification when you’re nearby a place where you can buy a list item.

Audio photos An app that allows to capture a sound when talking a photo to help memorize the moments better.

Company in a e-book The tool that creates a playbook with the company processes, flows, any other info. So employees should read it at their first working day and it will be more efficient than "here is our documentation, and there too. And there, and in the Google Docs. Also, contact John to explain you how our processes work".

Self-hosted photo storage A cross-platform app that stores photos, encrypted. Available from all devices. For people who don't want to change their photo cloud provider every year or two.

Biometric Charge Card A system similar to credit cards that rather than charging via plastic or credit card, utilizes biometric charges. Why: The credit card is outdated: it’s easy to forget at home and extremely easy to hack or forge.

Code explainer The tool explains what your code does by parsing it. In human readable format.