27.05.24|Sophie ShulmanAt a round table on the AI revolution, held as part of the business delegation to Paris, Erez Shachar, Managing Partner at Qumra Capital, estimated: "The medical field will be the fastest beneficiary of the adoption of AI capabilities." Israel Country General Manager at Microsoft, Alon Haimovich: "Through AI we enable each person to achieve more, and today we do this with the help of CoPilot, which is already implemented in almost all Microsoft technology"
10.05.23|Meir OrbachIn the last 8 months, the local and foreign growth funds made almost no new investments in Israel. "Investors made it clear to me that during this period they were not investing and I had to fire dozens of additional employees," said one senior entrepreneur
24.01.23|Meir Orbach"High-tech is not cut off from the state as they have said about us over the years. The state is important to us," said the leaders of the demonstration
04.12.22|Erez Shachar"If 'cash is king' for businesses, 'DPI is king' for LPs. In order to best predict the success of the current generations of funds, you should take a close look at their current DPI," writes Erez Shachar, Managing Partner at Qumra Capital
05.07.21|Erez ShacharQumra Capital's Erez Shachar: "Talkspace is the first and only publicly traded virtual behavioral health company and will stay true to its mission of being exclusively focused on behavioral health"
13.08.20|Erez Shachar "In the six years on board, I have seen Fiverr grow from a young start-up to a mature and inspiring company," writes Shachar
18.03.20|CTechErez Shachar, managing partner at Tel Aviv-based venture capital firm Qumra Capital, answered seven questions about the Covid-19 crisis and its effects on the Israeli tech sector
18.06.19|Adi Pick Venture capitalist Erez Shachar, partner at Qumra Capital, spoke Tuesday at Calcalist's investors' event It Tech Two to Tango, held in Tel Aviv
09.01.18|Amarelle Wenkert and Orr HirschaugeTel Aviv-based Qumra Capital raised a first $100 million fund in 2014. Late stage investments in Israeli startups jumped from $300 million in 2013 to over $1.5 billion in subsequent years