You Get A Router! And You Get A Router! Meraki Is Giving Startups $15K In Free Wi-Fi Gear | TechCrunch

3 min read Original article ↗

Meraki wants to celebrate 150 percent revenue growth and its 10,000th customer by bringing Oprah’s generosity to networking infrastructure. Now any company with angel, seed, or Series A funding can apply for a free Meraki Startup Kit with wireless access points and five-year license. The “gift” will help Meraki lock down future customers and make sure entrepreneurs have extra cash to strap up their boots.

Meraki, which sets up wireless networks for companies and schools, was a good sport to hook TechCrunch up with the early news on the Startup Kit program that’s open now but officially launches tomorrow.

Back in July I published a leak of Meraki’s secret $40 million funding round, roadmap, and financial details that revealed its plans to dominate enterprise Wi-Fi. It pulled in $20 million in Q2 2012, raised without giving away much equity, and is on a hiring spree in an attempt to box out competitors like Cisco and Aerohive.

Now Meraki’s ready for press. It was just an MIT dorm room project in 2006, but today it has 330 employees, 10,000 customers, and serious revenue growth. So it’s sharing the wealth. Social marketplace Copious and cloud infrastructure builder Vline got the beta version of the Meraki Startup Kit, and now other angel, seed, or Series A-backed startups in the U.S. or Canada can apply to get their own.

The kit would retail for around $15,000 and includes:

  • 2 top-of-the-line wireless access points
  • 1 enterprise-grade security appliance
  • 1 Ethernet switch (24-port)
  • A 5-year license and 24/7 Meraki tech support

“We’ve received some fantastic support along the way and want to give something back to the tech community to help the next generation of startups disrupt their industries,” Meraki says. And if the startups who get the kits grow, they might be inclined to buy more gear from Meraki. Clever girl.

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Josh Constine is a Venture Partner at ~$3 billion AUM early-stage VC fund SignalFire where he invests in pre-seed startups with a focus on consumer. He teaches startup pitch writing and fundraising strategy as a recurring lecturer at the Stanford Graduate School Of Business, and with accelerators like Z Fellows, Inception Studios, and Stanford ASES. Previously, Constine was Editor-At-Large for TechCrunch where he wrote 4000 articles and was ranked the #1 most cited tech journalist in the world from 2016-2020 by Techmeme. Constine has led 300+ on-stage interviews and keynotes in 18 countries with luminaries including Mark Zuckerberg and the CEOs of Shopify, DoorDash, Snapchat, Instagram, and more. Constine graduated from Stanford University with a Master’s degree he designed in Cybersociology, and wrote his thesis in 2008 on why remixable memes would be the future of marketing. He has been quoted in the NYT and WSJ, is regularly featured on CNN for his thoughts on AI and Silicon Valley, and advises startups on PR, fundraising, and organic growth.

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