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Why a16z, Sequence, and Thomson Bike Tours Are Bringing CFOs to Central Park During TECH WEEK NYC

a16z, Sequence, and Thomson Bike Tours are bringing startup CFOs together in Central Park during TECH WEEK NYC 2026.

Startup networking used to resemble speed dating with pitch decks. Founders bounced between rooftop mixers, demo nights, and sponsored happy hours collecting LinkedIn connections like airline miles. That era is fading fast in New York City because capital got tighter, AI accelerated faster than management teams could operationalize it, and CFOs stopped being background characters and became survival infrastructure. That shift sits at the center of a16z + Sequence + Thomson Bike Tours Group Ride: Watts & Multiples, scheduled for June 4, 2026, in Central Park during TECH WEEK by Andreessen Horowitz. The invite-only event brings together startup CFOs, finance operators, founders, and venture leaders for a structured cycling ride built around conversation instead of conference stages. TECH WEEK NYC itself has evolved into one of the largest decentralized technology gatherings in the startup ecosystem, spanning hundreds of founder, fintech, AI, and venture events across the city.

The setup is deceptively simple: 2 cycling groups, multiple laps through Central Park, and a room full of finance leaders operating inside one of the strangest market environments in modern startup history. AI adoption is accelerating, venture funding remains selective, and efficiency has become cultural currency. Every finance operator in tech is being asked to move faster while making fewer mistakes. That combination explains why events like Watts & Multiples matter before they even happen.

About Watts & Multiples

Watts & Multiples is part of TECH WEEK NYC 2026, the large-scale decentralized technology gathering organized by Andreessen Horowitz. Unlike traditional conferences, TECH WEEK functions as a distributed ecosystem of operator-led events spread across New York City. The June 4 ride is co-hosted by a16z, Sequence, and Thomson Bike Tours. According to official event materials, the ride includes 2 pace groups: a training-focused ride averaging 18+ mph over 3 laps and a social pace group averaging 15+ mph over 2 laps.

That distinction matters more than it sounds because startup culture spent the better part of a decade rewarding visibility over durability. Watts & Multiples feels calibrated for a different market psychology built around smaller groups, shared physical effort, extended conversation windows, less theater, and more signal. Nobody rides laps through Central Park before work for passive networking.

Why Startup CFOs Suddenly Matter More

The startup ecosystem spent years romanticizing founders while quietly outsourcing operational discipline to finance teams cleaning up after growth-at-all-costs behavior. Then the market corrected. Interest rates climbed, IPO windows narrowed, venture firms pushed portfolio companies toward efficiency metrics instead of pure expansion, and AI simultaneously increased both operational opportunity and execution pressure. That changed the role of the CFO almost overnight.

Modern startup finance leaders are now expected to understand treasury strategy, revenue operations, AI tooling, billing infrastructure, forecasting, compliance, and capital allocation simultaneously. The modern CFO increasingly resembles a wartime systems operator with spreadsheet privileges. That broader transition explains why Andreessen Horowitz has invested heavily in startup finance infrastructure and finance operator communities across its portfolio ecosystem. Ivan Makarov , Partner focused on portfolio finance at Andreessen Horowitz, has emerged as one of the more visible connectors inside that ecosystem. Before joining a16z, Ivan Makarov held finance leadership roles at Webflow, Flickr, and SmugMug. His positioning matters because startup founders increasingly want operators who have experienced scale pressure directly instead of advisors speaking exclusively in frameworks.

Why Sequence Fits This Moment

Sequence occupies a strategically important position in the current AI-finance infrastructure cycle. The fintech infrastructure company develops AI-native revenue automation software spanning CPQ, billing, invoicing, accounts receivable, and revenue recognition workflows. Sequence has raised $38M across seed and Series A financing rounds backed by Andreessen Horowitz, 645 Ventures, Salesforce Ventures, and other investors. The company says its platform automates more than $1B in annual invoice volume.

That matters because revenue operations have become one of the least glamorous but highest-stakes areas inside modern software companies. Every startup wants AI productivity gains while finance leaders want operational accuracy without creating accounting chaos 3 quarters later. Sequence sits directly inside that pressure point. Riya Grover , Co-Founder and CEO of Sequence, represents a newer category of startup operator increasingly shaping enterprise infrastructure markets through a combination of operational realism and AI-native product architecture. The market has become deeply skeptical of companies presenting AI as decoration, while infrastructure platforms solving expensive operational friction still command attention.

Why Thomson Bike Tours Makes Sense Here

At first glance, Thomson Bike Tours appears like an unusual co-host for a startup finance event. In practice, the pairing makes perfect sense. Thomson Bike Tours built its reputation around endurance, pacing, logistics, and elite cycling experiences connected to events like the Tour de France. Those same themes increasingly define startup operations in 2026.

The venture market no longer rewards pure acceleration detached from sustainability. Operators are being evaluated on pacing, resilience, and execution consistency because startup leaders spent years optimizing for top-line growth while assuming capital markets would remain permanently forgiving. That assumption expired. Watts & Multiples quietly reflects that broader cultural shift. Even the name works on multiple levels through cycling power metrics, venture return multiples, energy expenditure, financial pressure, and performance sustainability.

What This Signals About New York Tech

New York’s technology ecosystem has matured into a more operator-heavy market compared to earlier startup eras dominated by pure founder mythology. The city increasingly attracts finance infrastructure companies, enterprise AI platforms, fintech operators, and B2B software leaders who care less about social media attention and more about execution density. That evolution changes how influential networking happens.

The highest-value conversations increasingly occur in curated environments where operators can exchange tactical insight without performative conference behavior contaminating every interaction. Walking meetings replaced coffee chats, run clubs replaced cocktail panels, and group rides replaced generic networking mixers. Movement creates conversational honesty because people reveal operational stress faster when breathing gets heavier. That’s partly why events like Watts & Multiples matter. The event itself is relatively small. The signal behind it is not.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is Watts & Multiples?

Watts & Multiples is a startup finance networking ride hosted by Andreessen Horowitz, Sequence, and Thomson Bike Tours during TECH WEEK NYC 2026.

When is Watts & Multiples taking place?

The event is scheduled for June 4, 2026, in Central Park, New York City.

Who is organizing Watts & Multiples?

Confirmed organizers include Andreessen Horowitz, Sequence CEO Riya Grover, and a16z Partner Ivan Makarov.

What does Sequence do?

Sequence develops AI-native revenue automation software for billing, invoicing, CPQ, accounts receivable, and revenue recognition.

How much funding has Sequence raised?

Sequence has raised $38M across seed and Series A financing rounds backed by Andreessen Horowitz and 645 Ventures.

Why does TECH WEEK NYC matter?

TECH WEEK NYC has become one of the largest decentralized technology ecosystem gatherings for founders, investors, operators, fintech companies, and enterprise AI startups.

Smaller operator-focused gatherings create higher-value conversations and strategic relationships than traditional conference networking formats.