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Difficulty in finding suitable schedule to learn Mandarin inspired this founder to build his own education app

Coming home after a study abroad, Thiha Nyunt found himself struggling to find appropriate classes with the right timing and location in Myanmar

How often do you find yourself having difficulties in accessing language learning that works with your schedule? It’s hard to believe that in this digital, on-demand era this situation can still occur.

Thiha Nyunt, a Co-founder of MyanLearn, had a friend experience this problem when he was simply looking for suitable classes of Mandarin course in his area in Yangon, Myanmar.

“We experienced first-hand how difficult it was to find appropriate classes in Yangon. My friend, who’s now one of the co-founders, actually gave up learning Mandarin because he was not able to find the class with the suitable timing and location,” Thiha explained.

Also Read: Aiming to add 4 new startups, Mandiri Capital Indonesia targets insurtech, investment management sectors

Thiha, along with his two co-founders, then created MyanLearn app. “It was born out of our frustrating experience in finding appropriate classes. We believe finding the right class for education shouldn’t be this difficult in the modern world,” said Thiha.

Education in Myanmar

According to The Myanmar Times, Myanmar’s basic education curriculum is about 30 years old, with the last amendment made in 1985. Widely considered to be out-of-date, Myanmar’s education system is left behind compared with the international community.

Simply put, education in the country no longer fits in with this age of technology.

It was only in 2012 when the Department of Education Research Bureau started drawing up a new curriculum that is in accordance with the National Education Law. A new syllabus was introduced just two years ago for its academic year.

A teacher named Kyaw Wai Phyo was recorded in the article saying that the current education system in Myanmar needs lots of work. The fact that it takes 13 years to change the system if the curricula is changed gradually, year after year, reflects that the education in the country is still lacking access and efficiency.

How to use Myanlearn

“Myanlearn app was born with the intention of tackling disorganized information of fragmented private education market in Myanmar. We want to make learning simple, easy and accessible,” Thiha added.

Thiha then continued, “I would say that it is a classified platform for private education market.” He explained about the private tutor practice that we all have known and certainly have benefitted from with the change of technology.

With Myanlearn, students are able to search and discover classes from nine categories. In each category, they can find detailed information of all classes, accessible though Myanlearn’s app.

Besides options for private classes, students are free to utilise the app to facilitate learnings. The app also provides articles related to a student’s field of interest.

Tackling a specific management issue

As a platform for schools as much as it is for students, schools are able to update and make changes to class information in real time.

“We think it is very important as changes of class timing is a common thing in Myanmar,” said Thiha.

Another localised feature made available given the current class management in the country is the review system.

“Myanlearn has review systems for these classes. From them, students can make a more informed decision before choosing a suitable class tailored to their needs to avoid unnecessary and costly schedule changing that often become a nuisance of a set daily schedule,” he explained.

The same management issues are also faced by students from rural areas, and it is even more challenging for them.

“Finding classes information easily for students living in the rural areas are not easy. With Myanlearn, we hope these students can use it so they’re encouraged to make the trip to study in big cities. They are no longer hindered by information scarcity,” said Thiha.

Thiha highlighted that for students in the rural area, Myanlearn’s transparency is especially helpful. “They know exactly how much a class will cost using Myanlearn, and how long will a class take so that they are able to plan their trip accordingly,” said Thiha.

“It is really heartwarming to hear stories from our students that have benefited from using Myanlearn,” he added.

A fight for education

For Thiha, education has always been a critical tool to help people in Myanmar and in the rest of Southeast Asia to improve their living standard.

“We’ve seen the boom of startup innovations in e-commerce and service industries for the past decade. Now, I think it is edu startup’s turn to innovate and disrupt education sector in Myanmar. It is definitely a good trend to have,” Thiha shared.

He added that with the emerging trend for edu startup, the whole country will start to pick up technology as an enabler for education.

“We are optimistic that Myanmar will definitely catch up and even leapfrog, if possible, in some areas of education with the help of technology,” said Thiha.

As for Myanlearn, being a new edu app in the market, the next immediate plan would be improving the information organisation for the private education market and expanding to all major cities in Myanmar.

“We’re at the stage of releasing one additional feature at a time. At the same time, we are striving to make our current features more efficient and effective for our users,” said Thiha about the focus.

Myanlearn’s students’ app was first launched three months ago with the intention to understand how our early users would adopt.

All three of its founders are graduates of Singapore Management University and two of them majored in Information Systems Management while the other majored in Finance and Economic.

Also Read: Singapore’s GBCI Ventures launches US$100M fund for Smart City development

“All three of us believe that education is the most important tool to bring Myanmar people to prosperity. We were lucky enough to be educated abroad. We returned to our home country to give back to the community and when we looked at where to start, we thought of our belief and decided to tackle information scarcity for a start,” Thiha continued.

“We sure hope that we can bring meaningful impact to Myanmar people using technology, closing the gap in education.”

Image Credit: Myanlearn

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CyberAgent Capital invests in Vietnam fintech TheBank.vn

CyberAgent (CA) Capital is joined by Korean VC Ncore for TheBank.vn’s first round of funding

TheBank.vn, the Vietnam-based fintech from SAMO company, has announced the completion its first round of funding from CyberAgent Capital and Ncore. The amount of the investment is undisclosed.

With this investment capital, TheBank.vn plans to improve customer experiences. This means launching registration forms for each loan service, improving the card opening process, helping people with insurance and selecting of financial products closest to their current needs. The company also seeks to improve the system to become a full stack solution provider of bid data, eKYC, chatbots, and credit scoring.

Also Read: Aiming to add 4 new startups, Mandiri Capital Indonesia targets insurtech, investment management sectors

TheBank.vn is a financial comparison app that was established in 2014, and it claimed to own the largest number of traffic, partners and consultants in the country. Using the platform, customers can compare and evaluate products such as credit cards, unsecured loans, mortgage loans, savings interest rates and insurance products.

The company also provides advice, connections, and a package of financial product distribution packages for banks and insurance companies using its technology.

Four years into operation, TheBank.vn claimed to have served more than 1 million customers. It says it has 1,300 financial products and 24,000 active financial experts registered on the website to interact with customers.

“We strive to understand the nature of customers to achieve the effectiveness of the service, so a quality connection is critical,” said SAMO’s General Director Nguyen Dat.

With 41 per cent of Vietnamese adults not yet using banking services and only 8 per cent of the population participating in life insurance, TheBank.vn is hoping to serve this emerging middle class; not only in Vietnam’s main cities but also in the key provinces.

Also Read: Singapore’s GBCI Ventures launches US$100M fund for Smart City development

Dzung Nguyen, Head of Vietnam and Thailand Office of CyberAgent Capital highlighted the untapped potentials. “With the spread of consumer behavior based on technology and interest in experiential consumption in recent years, potentials of services in fintech companies are enormous. The key now is an extensive investment and right implementation,” said Dzung.

Image Credit: CA Capital

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GCash and Qwikwire partner to innovate real estate industry in Philippines

GCash and Qwikwire want to work together to bring the payments process into the digital age

Philippine-based mobile wallet GCash has announced that it has signed a deal with Qwikwire,  a Philippines’ cross-border payments platform to innovate the local real estate payments transaction process.

Also Read: Google, Tencent, JD.com to inject more than US$900M in Go-Jek

In the Philippines, there has been a boom in the real estate industry over the last 5 years, but the problem is that people still pay their real estate dues through the traditional Post-dated checks (PDCs), Bank Deposits and over the counter payments directly to property developers or to their brokers.

The time-consuming methods also impose risks of fraud because of the lack of security in the payment.

With GCash, users can leverage on a mobile money service from the smartphones. The partnership has brought aboard clients of property developers — including DMCI, Century Properties, Double Dragon, Revolution Precrafted and more.

“In the next 2-3 years, I firmly believe that there will be a significant change in how we do payments here in the Philippines. In the same way that most Filipinos skipped having a landline in their households and went straight to owning mobile phones, I think we can go from a society where most doesn’t have a bank account to turn their smartphones into a mobile wallet,” said Ray Refundo, CEO of Qwikwire.

The partnership will also let transactions from Qwikwire’s clients to be handled and processed by GCash. For the first month, the facility is available only for association dues but later will be adding with the handling of reservation fees and payments for the monthly repayment process of the loan principal.

GCash is owned by corporate giants Globa, Ant Financial, and Ayala Corp. Qwikwire is a Philippines-based cross-border billing and invoicing startup for enterprises. Back in February last year, it secured funding from local VC firm First Asia Venture Capital and incubator Cerebro Labs.

Also Read: CyberAgent Capital invests in Vietnam fintech TheBank.vn

A signing ceremony was held at the Mynt office in Taguig last December 6, 2018 with Mynt’s VP of Merchant Solutions, JM Ajuero, and Head for Online Acquisition, Ferdie Perez, and Ray Refundo, CEO of Qwikwire, along with the rest of the Qwikwire team to officially launch the partnership.

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Today’s top tech news, January 28: Singapore wants ride-hailing licensing update

Plus, Didi makes electric vehicle push and TheBank.vn raises fresh funding

Grab_Singapore_RD

Singapore ride-hailing drivers may soon need licenses — [Land Transport Authority]

The Singapore government wants Grab and Go-Jek drivers to be licensed under a separate entity than traditional taxis, the Land Transport Authority (LTA) has proposed.

The proposal would split taxis into a street-hail license while ride hailing drivers would be under a Ride-Hail Service Operator Licence. Theoretically, it would allow the LTA to be more nimble in updating licensing rules for companies like Grab and Go-Jek.

Part of the motivation for the move may have something to do with rider safety. A couple of weeks ago, Yoolim Lee of Bloomberg published a long essay describing the time she almost died in a Grab-ride accident. It drew a lot of attention to the fact that there is not a ton of oversight over who can become a Grab or Go-Jek driver.

On the flip side, forcing people to get licenses may reduce the supply of drivers and make it more challenging for users to book a ride.

Vietnamese fintech nabs funding from CyberAgent Capital — [e27]

TheBank.vn, the Vietnam-based fintech from SAMO company, has announced the completion its first round of funding from CyberAgent Capital and Ncore. The amount of the investment is undisclosed.

With this investment capital, TheBank.vn plans to improve customer experiences. This means launching registration forms for each loan service, improving the card opening process, helping people with insurance and selecting of financial products closest to their current needs. The company also seeks to improve the system to become a full stack solution provider of bid data, eKYC, chatbots, and credit scoring.

Didi Chuxing continues electric vehicle push — [TechCrunch]

Didi Chuxing, the Chinese ride-hailing giant, has partnered with BAIC, a state-owned car maker, to pursue electric vehicles in China, according to TechCrunch.

The deal is meant to develop a “next generation” fleet of vehicles, but it was a vague announcement so further details are pending.

Both companies have placed a lot of priority on becoming environmentally friendly so the partnership makes sense.

GCash and Qwikwire partner to innovate real estate industry payment process — [e27]

Philippine-based mobile wallet GCash has announced that it has signed a deal with Qwikwire, a Philippines’ cross-border payments platform to innovate the local real estate payments transaction process.

In the Philippines, there has been a boom in the real estate industry over the last 5 years, but the problem is that people still pay their real estate dues through the traditional Post-dated checks (PDCs), Bank Deposits and over the counter payments directly to property developers or to their brokers.

The time-consuming methods also impose risks of fraud because of the lack of security in the payment.

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“General awareness about entrepreneurship in Malaysia needs to go beyond selling food at stalls”

In this Q&A, Ashran Ghazi talks about his journey as the former CEO of MaGIC, the confusion over the agency’s disbanding, and the entrepreneurship scene in Malaysia

Former CEO of MaGIC Ashran Ghazi

Since its launch in 2014, Malaysian Global Innovation & Creativity Centre (MaGIC) has been the backbone of the country’s startup ecosystem, and has been aggressively encouraging and promoting entrepreneurship in the country by way of launching new initiatives. Ashran Ghazi, who held the CEO’s position from early 2016 to December 2018, played a vital role in making the organisation more popular among young entrepreneurs.

In a free-wheeling chat with e27, Ghazi shared his experience as MaGIC’s CEO, his new initiatives, views on the Malaysian startups ecosystem, and his new role as the chief of Dattel.

Edited excerpts from the interview below:

The common trend is that serial entrepreneurs turn venture capitalists after gaining good experience building ventures. However you, despite being a serial entrepreneur, took a different route by taking on the role of CEO of MaGIC. Any reasons for this?

MaGIC is not like any usual organisation. It’s a government agency that has a mandate in building the ecosystem within the country and beyond. You would also know that while I am a serial entrepreneur, I have also been a community person leading many NGOs that relates to entrepreneurship.

When the opportunity at MaGIC presented itself, I took it as an  opportunity to be part of a system that is attempting to make a difference. It had been an awesome journey for me, and now I am back in the entrepreneurial path with Dattel Asia.

Who knows, maybe somewhere down the line, there will be Dattel Ventures — a VC fund that is data-centric.

You took over the CEO’s role in April 2016 after its founding CEO Cheryl Yeoh stepped down in January that year. What are your contributions to the organisation, and the startup industry as a whole, as its CEO? 

As the head of the organisation, I took a few new initiatives. They are

  1. Corporate Entrepreneurship Responsibility Programme — A programme designed to bring startups and corporates for mutual benefits. Fundamentally it’s a corporate innovation programme.
  2. Impact-Driven Enterprise — Reframed the landscape of social entrepreneurship for impact-driven enterprises to ensure a more holistic way of creating more impact. It allowed and gave opportunity for even existing business to shift in order to create societal or environmental impact.
  3. Global Entrepreneurship Community Summit — A summit that would position Malaysia as the centre for creativity and innovation towards entrepreneurship.
  4. PUSH (Great Social Entrepreneurship Programme) — This is a systemising and scaling programme for social enterprises/impact-driven enterprises via a micro franchising model.
  5. Corporate Open Innovation Programme — A platform to allow corporates to crowdsource solutions from startups.
  6. Mentorship Platform — A pilot programme for entrepreneurs to get access to mentors.

You stayed in MaGIC only for less than 18 months, which is a relatively short period for bringing in any significant changes. Why did you move out very soon?

To be frank, it was a tough decision on my end. But the opportunity that Dattel presented was too tempting to resist. Firstly, Dattel’s idea of a holistic consumer intelligence platform for Southeast Asia was intriguing enough. Secondly, it was exciting to be a partner and CEO of a regional firm that has immense potential. Thirdly, the Dattel Vision to be the standard for consumer data in Southeast Asia is challenging.

MaGIC has been the backbone of the Malaysian startup industry. But immediately after Mahathir Mohamad came back to power in 2018, there was a controversy and confusion over the winding up of the organisation. Would you mind sharing with our readers what actually happened behind the scenes? 

Yea. MaGIC, like many other agencies, was in a pretty unique situation then. True there was some intent as a whole to tighten the ship within the government. In most conversations happened around that time, there was a sentiment that many agencies were overlapping. This seemed to be the case at a macro level, but if you closely analysed things, you will get a different picture. Indeed, all these organisations are doing different activities.

Also Read: Malaysia has all ingredients to be a startup hub, but lacks ‘Michelin Star Chefs’ to mix them well: Ashran Ghazi

There were naturally many views during that time. So, before MaGIC stabilised and landed as an agency under the Ministry of Entrepreneur Development (MED), I had to educate and inform relevant stakeholders about the work MaGIC has done, its impact, as well as its future aspirations. We were meeting with different people in the new government.

Finally, we got an audience in the form of the MED. He immediately saw the value of the organisation and thought about how MaGIC fits in his aspirations in driving the entrepreneurial community to be future ready.

As soon as the Minister got convinced and appreciated the context, he decided to move MaGIC to the MED family. It was indeed an exciting time for the agency. So it wasn’t so much about the government changing mind but, from my perspective, various ministries needed to get clarity on what they wanted to do and ensure that they had the right agencies under them. I must say that we had a nerve-wrecking experience during those four to five months due to the uncertainties.

But all is well now and the team, as I know, is getting ready to execute big things in 2019.

Do you think a lot of politics are gone into the administrations of MaGIC. A section of the believes that MaGIC has not done much to promote local entrepreneurship. What is your view?

Actually, on the contrary, unlike some other agencies, MaGIC has been sheltered from politics. And I must say that its Chairman then did a pretty good job of ensuring MaGIC focuses on what is needed to be done. This has definitely made my journey in MaGIC more bearable.

I cannot agree with the opinion of several people that MaGIC has not done much. I think we have done quite a bit, but I wish I could do more. I feel there are naturally certain things that the agency can be done well, but there are certain things that can be done better as a private entity. MaGIC is in a transition to scale its impact, and this is what I have been instilling since day one of joining MaGIC. I think MaGIC under the new leadership will be able to see the results of this as the seeds of scale has been planted over the last 2.5 years.

Malaysian startup scene has registered a tremendous growth in the past 3-4 years. Do you think it has the potential to grow as big as Singapore or Silicon Valley? What are the key strengths of the Malaysian startup industry?

Thank you for acknowledging the tremendous growth that we have been experiencing. Malaysia has always had the potential. One can even say that the country is quite ripe for huge growth within the region.

However, it needs to still churn new ways of thinking from the bottom up. We need to have raw entrepreneurial spirit that is resilient in the open market and also need to build more creative and innovative thinking people. People who cannot stand status quo. We have the ingredients, but sometimes what we lack is enough “Michelin Star Chefs” who can mix these ingredients in right proportion.

As per our research, fintech and e-commerce are the two sectors that recorded higher number of VC deals in 2018. What other sectors do you think will accelerate the growth of the ecosystem? Do you think new-age tech like AI, IoT, robotics, blockchain etc. have the potential to contribute to the future growth of Malaysia?

There are definitely lots of conversation around new-age technologies for Malaysia. You literally hear the conversation of Industrial Revolution 4.0 (IR4.0) everywhere. But if you observe, the conversation of IR4.0 in Malaysia stems a lot from the manufacturing sector, meaning it is more for encouraging existing technologies in manufacturing plants.

But I feel there are not enough conversations or initiatives that look into catalysing new businesses that leverage IR4.0 in their service delivery. Not many people grasp the concept of IR4.0. The MED’s National Entrepreneur Framework has an element of developing entrepreneurs towards future industries. While this is awesome, the ministry cannot work alone. I think the Ministry of Energy, Science, Technology, Environment and Climate Change (MESTECC), and Ministry of Agriculture, amongst others, work together towards this goal.

Personally, I hope they can form a cross-ministerial council for future industries. Only then can the country be navigated to contribute to the future growth of Malaysia. Otherwise, Malaysia will always remain a country that could have been.

What, according to you, are the key qualities and limitations of Malaysian entrepreneurs? Do you think the fear of failure is still a major issue?

Generally, there is a lack of exposure for entrepreneurs, and most of them still want to be “me-too” (copy-cat products). There is no self-confidence in them. I think self-confidence and exposure are two of the few ingredients required for entrepreneurs to go farther.

If they get a good exposure, they can connect the dots and make new innovations more effectively. If they have self-confidence, they would be able to articulate things better with clarity and conviction. They will go out and seek information and not complain that they did not get the information.

Also Read: MaGIC or no MaGIC, Malaysia’s startup ecosystem is bound to flourish!

This is why I feel the general awareness about entrepreneurship needs to go beyond selling food at stalls. In Malaysia, entrepreneurship is often confused with self-employment. In reality, these are two different things. Entrepreneurship needs to be framed from a problem-solving point of view. One needs to possess creative thinking skills to be a good entrepreneur. Without this, we will not see a game-changing Malaysia in future. We need the masses in Malaysia to also think that way.

The government has taken a lot of initiatives for the startup community. Do you think it has a much bigger role to play to accelerate the growth of the ecosystem?

Well, it’s a bit unfair for me to make a statement about new key initiatives, as I am no longer part of the government. Having said that I think the government does have a bigger role to be more catalytic. The government is doing many right things for sure, but it needs to quickly translate them into something that reach the beneficiary. I mean entrepreneurs.

If I may refer to the National Entrepreneur Framework, the National Open Innovation Platform, coupled with the Regulatory Sandbox will be able to bring in a revolutionary change. Based on my understanding, it is designed to be a platform for the government, corporates, universities and startups to solve and deploy challenges in innovative ways. Imagine a situation where the government doesn’t specify how things are done as per its tender specifications, or imagine the government only expresses its desired outcome and intent and the parameters that become guiding principles. Open it up and let the public find creative ways to solve it with new business models.

Also Read: Registration is now open for Echelon Asia Summit 2019

Public private partnerships are no longer the game of big boys, it can also be done with startups. The government needs to walk the talk and embrace this. Such an initiative will definitely be catalysing and will strengthen the Malaysian startup ecosystem and perhaps even attract foreign firms to join because the framework creates equal opportunities.

Most of Malaysia’s startup activities are centred around Kuala Lumpur. Do you see other cities and regions catching up fast?

Well, Penang via @acat and Johor via StartupJohor are making waves in their respective states. I see lots of other states cashing up, but I do hope they do it for the right reasons and not because it is deemed sexy, so to speak. The intent must be very clear and it needs to be a partnership with the community, and not state-led.

In your view, what role should the private/corporate sector play in order to promote entrepreneurship? Are they doing enough? Do you believe there should be more corporate VCs to speed up the growth?

I think the private sector has a huge role to play. I spoke about corporate entrepreneur responsibility earlier. We are still in the infancy with regards to this, although it is very heartwarming to see efforts being done by corporates.

But if it progresses in the current pace, this kind of thinking will only be mainstream in three years. Education and some government intervention are needed to accelerate this. We don’t have time. Things are moving fast. CVCs and family funds are coming into the scene quite a bit too.

There is a need to capture this information and aggregate them, so that we know what impact it does to the economy. And from a government lens, if there is better visibility of private funding, it can create better policies to support more players onboard.

You quit MaGIC to join Dattel Asia. What is your mandate at Dattel? Do you have plans to return to the startup scene and start a new company in the recent future?

Dattel is in a very unique position if you ask me. While it is a 4-year-old data services company, it is currently embarking on a new business that will be looking at disrupting how consumer behaviour research is done. It wants to democratise consumer behaviour data, so that everyone can make meaningful decisions based on data.

I keep telling Dattelites that Dattel is as a matured company with a startup philosophy — and that we have got to leverage this as a strength. We may be only 120-man strength, but have aspirations to be the standard of consumer behaviour data for Southeast Asia.

We now have three offices in the region and by mid this year, we will be releasing a platform that would give business a new way of handling consumer data. A new way of driving innovations that is data driven. A new way for the government to create data driven policies. A new way of driving marketing and communications that is data driven.

I believe that its aspirations will create an impact to societies and countries. That is why with a heavy heart I decided to leave MaGIC to assist Dattel in achieving its mission. If it wasn’t for the aspirations of Dattel, I wouldn’t have left MaGIC. I think I can do more and use this as a platform to do more.

You asked me earlier why I didn’t go and create a VC firm. My simple answer is keep an eye on Dattel, as it will be the platform for many things including the one that you asked me earlier. Data is a means to an end. In short, I consider Dattel as a player in the startup scene, and I am not looking at any other new ventures at the moment, but only expanding those via Dattel.

Grab took birth in Malaysia and later moved to Singapore, and is now a Unicorn. Do you see any companies in the country which could emulate Grab’s success?

Dattel (laughs)

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