Greatest Hits Episode: Daniel Undurraga: The Story Behind the Cornershop Acquisition, Ep 164

​​For this week’s episode of Crossing Borders, we’re revisiting one of our greatest hits episodes featuring Daniel Undurraga, CTO and co-founder of Cornershop.

Daniel Undurraga never thought he would sell even one company from Chile to the US, but with the recent US$225M acquisition of Cornershop, a grocery-delivery app, he has officially sold two startups to US companies. His first startup, Needish, was the basis for Clan Descuento, a Chilean Groupon clone that was acquired by Groupon in 2010, before anyone in Chile had even heard of startups. Daniel is a lifelong entrepreneur with his share of failed projects, but ever since he and his business partner Oskar Hjertonsson found their niche in Latin American e-commerce, they’ve become an example for the whole ecosystem. 

I sat down with Daniel on this episode of Crossing Borders to talk about the Latin American startup ecosystem, living and working across borders, and advice for founders who are launching and scaling in Latin America. We also discuss the backstory behind Cornershop’s decision to not raise capital in Chile and their experience raising money from funds across in Latin America. 

See yourself as a global company from the start

Daniel Undurraga knows what it takes to scale a company from a small country like Chile to the rest of Latin America, and even North America. Cornershop actually launched in Chile and Mexico simultaneously because the founders realized dominating only the Chilean market wouldn’t create a company with scale. Rather than consolidating in their first market, then expanding, Cornershop took a global approach from the first day by creating processes that were “multi-currency, multi-language, and multi-time zone.” 

For startups just starting to consider scaling, Undurraga suggests incorporating outside your home countries, such as in the US, UK or Cayman Islands. It can make expanding easier, plus make you act like a global startup from the beginning. Check out the rest of Daniel’s tips for scaling in the Latin American market in this episode of Crossing Borders

You haven’t sold the company until you sell the company

Having already closed an acquisition from Groupon in 20010, Daniel knew how complicated selling Cornershop could be. The whole process took almost a year and they couldn’t tell anyone about what was happening until they closed the deal. 

However, Daniel can be sure of one thing; being incorporated in the US helped streamline the Cornershop acquisition. Find out how Daniel handled the Cornershop acquisition, and why the team continues to operate independently, in the rest of this episode. 

Why didn’t Cornershop have any Chilean investment?

Both Cornershop founders took to Twitter after the exit to discuss the role of Latin American funds in supporting Cornershop. In particular, many people speculated why Chilean VCs hadn’t invested; their only Latin American VC investor was Mexican firm ALLVP. To learn more about ALLVP, you can listen to my recent podcast with the fund’s co-founder, Federico Antoni.

Daniel’s explanation for the lack of Chilean investment is one that we discuss frequently at Magma Partners. Between timing, CORFO restrictions and mandate, most Chilean funds were not able to get into the deal. However, Cornershop’s and Clan Descuento’s first angel investors were all Chilean friends and family of the founders. Learn more about how Cornershop’s founders have handled this controversy since the acquisition in this episode of Crossing Borders. 

Daniel Undurraga, along with his co-founder Oskar Hjertonsson and Juan Pablo Cuevas, has achieved something few Chilean entrepreneurs have done. After having two startups acquired by US corporations, Daniel has moved his family to Silicon Valley to continue running Cornershop. Check out this episode of Crossing Borders to learn the inside story of one of Latin America’s most influential deals of 2018. 

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