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Pessimistic tactics for optimistic entrepreneurs

Sometimes, the truth hurts and it ain’t pretty

In 2018, AngelList, the world’s leading start-up directory, listed over 4.6 million start-ups, with only 0.4 per cent listed as seed stage businesses.

All this talk of hubs, incubators, accelerators, coworking spaces and launchpads can seem like everyone’s giving it a go. This is due, in part to greater access to public and private resources, and to a new culture of entrepreneurialism sweeping the globe.

With so many of us seeking independence, it’s an uncomfortable statistic to know most start-ups don’t make it past the three-year mark.

Why?

Put simply, turning an idea into its own commercially viable business is really difficult. It takes a lot of grit, but more importantly, it takes good strategy and tactics.

Here are six tactics to help you reach three years and beyond.

Learn the lingo and decide on yours

Even if you are not planning on raising capital or joining an accelerator, learn the lingo. The conversations you’ll need to have are likely with entrepreneurial enthusiasts and they speak start-up fluently.

Some words to start with — churn rate and exit strategy. This is particularly difficult if you are transitioning from an SME into the start-up space with the focus of the conversation now on scalability and growth rather than profit margins.

While you learn the newfound culture of start-up land, listen out for the differences in business activities and decide how you are going to explain what you do.

Decide if you are a small business, a start-up, an idea, a firm, a consultant or a freelancer. Whichever you decide to label yourself as, stick to it.

Don’t be afraid to find competitors

The idea of competitors is an inherently scary one.

Similar people with similar ideas and sometimes a thousand times more capital than you. It’s important to start by understanding the commercial landscape you are about to enter, and validating your place within it.

Find competitors from all over the globe, even if your business will only be local.

If there’s genuinely no competitors because your business idea is entirely unique or you are entering an emerging industry, then find businesses in industry verticals who have a similar model in another market. Grill them, their customers, wording, branding and pricing models. A great way to do this is through analysing available competitor data.

There is a fantastic book by Seth Stephen-Davidowitz ‘Everybody Lies’ where Seth highlights just how important search data is for uncovering human truths. When you apply this logic to your business idea you can form a clear idea of what your users want, and what your competitors are already offering.

Tools such as Semrush and Google Trends can let you see what people are really looking for and how they’re trying to find it.

Be a pessimist

Aspiring entrepreneurs always have an ongoing motivator and that’s their fan club. It usually consists of very close family and friends, perhaps a few ex-colleagues.

This initial network is your support group and sometimes your seed funding. They’ll likely tell you your idea is great and although it really might be, it’s really important to keep one eye on the potential pitfalls and not focus solely on opportunities.

Large organisations hire business analysts to find potential risks. In the beginning it’s unlikely your office will consist of more than yourself, maybe a co-founder or two and some Ikea furniture.

But, as a start-up, constantly assessing your risks is really important.

Also Read: CoHive to launch 18-story co-working building CoHive 101

This is especially true in your first year. It’s not quite the glamorous start-up life you see in the movies, the key to success is often a strong pinch of paranoia.

When we launched Hassl this purposeful paranoia showed itself in many ways — extra user-testing, additional legal scrutiny of our contractual arrangements and international tax planning before we’d even left Victoria.

These sorts of actions, driven by the fear of something going wrong, means you stay on top.
A good idea and hard work can take you far but it’s the risks that you didn’t see coming that will stop you passing that three-year mark.

For example, an uninspected increase in tax or an employment contract error.

Pitch it ugly

Branding is an invaluable part of a successful business. Especially in the consumer space, creating a brand personality that oozes into every inch of your user experience is effective, but it shouldn’t come first.

Why?

First, ideas change once you’ve had more time to think it through, research the market and speak to potential customers.

With Hassl, it wasn’t until we interviewed other teams that we realised they wanted a project collaboration tool designed for the team member, not the project manager.

This is the core of Hassl’s brand, down to every piece of microscopy in the app.

If we’d created the branding first, we’d inevitably have to either redo it or the product would have ended up being moulded by a brand not that did not speak to its purpose.

Secondly, good branding takes time and time is money. Whilst there’s the temptation to start with the fun stuff, just work with a really basic logo initially and put your funds to crucial business activities.

Lastly, good ideas and great leaders should be able to pitch it ugly. Reach out to potential users and investors armed with only a word document and your voice. If people like your idea without the frills, it gives more credence to your vision and confidence to take it the next stage.

One line business plan

There are on average 200,000 people in the US alone who search for ‘business plan template’ every month. There are lots of templates out there and they range from half-page diagrams to 50-page documents.
We have never made a business plan. Instead, we set six-month goals to achieve.

At the end of each six-month period, we reflect and then build on where we’re at. I have founder friends whose business plans are the size of a book and are referred to weekly.

Whether you prefer a high-level goal approach or a detailed plan, it is important to be able to communicate what your business is going to be and how in a sentence. This is your vision.

For example, our vision is ‘Hassl will be a leading project collaboration tool built entirely for the team member through exceptional user design’. Write it down and practice it over and over again.

In the future when you need to answer many quick-fire questions about your strategies and tactics, it’ll be very useful to have your underlying vision to refer back to.

Understand your technology

This one only applies to technologically led start-ups, of which there are many.

We have an ongoing joke that most start-ups at tech conferences are looking for a technical founder. While this is funny to joke about, we do have an international skills shortage when it comes to coding and engineering.

Also Read: Hanoi TOP100 winner shows the best Vietnam has to offer

If you don’t have a technical founder, it’s essential you take the time to understand the technology that fuels your idea. Ask for documentation and a run through of the languages, disciplines and proprietary tools used.

Spend a day doing a basic online course. It’s inevitable that a potential partner, investor or user will ask you technical questions along the way, so it’s best to have a broad understanding of how it works and what the technical limitations are.

Reach out for free, local advice

If there is one thing the start-up world has it is lots of friendly faces to reach out to.
While we haven’t taken on any investors, we have had absolutely great advice along the way. Who you reach out to is really dependent on the sort of advice you are looking for.

If you are looking for financial or logistical guidance, reach out to your local council or government small business department, most of whom have a dedicated business budget that goes to a wide range of free workshops, mentor programs and walk-in office hours.

If you are looking for product or service design guidance, there is no greater value than designing for your ideal customer. Try reaching out to them.

Where possible, invite your ideal customer to be a beta user, helping you to shape your product in exchange for discounted services into the future. This will set the groundwork for a loyal customer-base too.

Lastly, for growth advice find industry experts you admire and reach out to them. If possible, find an event they are going to be part of and meet them in person. Remember their inboxes are likely to be as busy as their schedules so pick several and don’t get disheartened if you don’t hear back.

Another avenue for industry advice is service providers. Google for Start-ups offers great online resources and their local teams regularly engage with entrepreneurs. For example, Google reached out to us when we first launched and offered us free digital strategists to work alongside us for 12 months.

Whether you’ve got an idea in the back of your mind, or you’ve set up shop in someone’s basement, it’s best you take these challenges head-on. Underlying all of these considerations needs to be perseverance and acceptance of rejection.

It’s going to be hard, but it’s also going to be really, really exciting.

Image Credits: saksit054

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EY to launch startup incubator EY Foundry in Singapore

Ernst & Young welcomes application for its early stage startup incubator program, EY Foundry

Professional services organization Ernst & Young now welcomes applicants into its incubator program for early stage startups in the accounting, tax, fintech, legal tech, and regulatory tech space in Singapore. The invitation is extended from now till 26 April 2019 here (www.ey.com/eyfoundr) for Singapore-based startups in the mentioned areas.

Also Read: CoHive to launch 18-story co-working building CoHive 101

The official launch of the program itself will be in June 2019. The participants will get a chance to win a six-month rent-free residency at the growth center of the company EY wavespace™ in Singapore, offered only to up to five selected startups.

During the residency, EY will provide a tailored learning program that is based on EY industry insights experience in helping startups accelerate their business growth and develop their technology. What’s interesting is that EY will take no equity in the startups and will give the startups S$120,000 worth of Microsoft Azure credits to further support the building of participants’ technology stack.

EY will also open the opportunity for participants to pitch their ideas to EY leaders and the supporting corporate community, as well as their technology, or products generated from EY Foundry’s residency time.

“By working with the smartest talent in the startup space, we are unlocking new markets and innovation, building new relationships, and ultimately better serving clients,” said Jon Dobell, EY Asia-Pacific Tax Innovation Leader.

Previously, EY Foundry had a successful run in Sydney, Australia in 2018. Singapore would make its second country.

Also Read: Cambodian internet startup company Groupin secures US$5M Series A funding

The criteria to qualify for EY Foundry program are as follows:

  • Must be an early stage (pre-series A funding) startup that is technology or product-related (not a service offering).
  • Must have a working prototype or working towards a prototype that is scalable and can be used internationally
  • Must have a headcount of four individuals or less, with demonstrated experience in the relevant industry
  • Must have a cash flow to sustain nine months of operations
  • Must be able to provide a business pack in the EY Foundry application

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Why SMEs should harness the power of analytics

Almost all business functions are turning to data-driven analytics to manage increasing complexity and market volatility

Despite the attention paid to multi-nationals, government-linked corporations and prominent local public companies, the fact is that the economies of ASEAN’s member states are dominated by small and medium enterprises (SMEs).

In fact, micro, small and medium-sized enterprises represent around 97-99 per cent of the enterprise population in most ASEAN countries.

Southeast Asia is, however, one of the fastest growing regions in the world and although small and medium businesses have an important window of opportunity, they must increase their competitiveness if they are to survive and grow in a highly competitive marketplace.

What SMEs must do is deploy the power of analytics.

Blending data across traditional silos

Global businesses of every size and in every sector are facing increasing complexity and market volatility.

In response, almost all business functions are turning to data-driven analytics and insights as a means to manage this increasing uncertainty, and pursue growth through a better understanding of their organisations’ customer bases.

Also Read: Cambodian internet startup company Groupin secures US$5M Series A funding

Responding to consumers’ demand to engage with their vendors, many SMEs are already using a variety of tools to support and track customers, manage social media, and run advertising campaigns.

However, when these tools are stand-alones — operating in silos — their value is diminished.

Combining them all in a dedicated analytics platform vastly increases the value of this data and the decisions it facilitates.

Analytics can draw on, aggregate and analyse data from marketing, sales, and customer service – and derive transformational insights into customer behaviour and preferences

The potential for growth through data and analytics

The sheer pace of change and the jargon that goes with digital transformation may be disconcerting to traditionally-run SMEs.

In fact, however, cutting through the jargon reveals basic business objectives and methods that any business owner will immediately understand and endorse.

Big data, for example, is not all about having unlimited amounts of information. It’s more a case of receiving high-quality, timely information that is specific, relevant and valuable to the business.

Putting analytics to work becomes easier all the time — new generation analytics tools integrate with third parties making the job of data scientist or business owner far easier, as the hard work of pulling all the data from disparate systems is done on their behalf.

Analytics at your fingertips

Data analytics produces numbers, and businesses that put numbers to work can expect to see numerous improvements, including better service level performance, better order fulfilment, improved supplier management, maximised customer value, lower costs and better product management.

They are more likely to outperform competitors in key performance metrics — including sales, sales growth, profit and return on investment.

Analytics tools also incorporate data mobility, aiding faster business decision making since the data is available, when and where it is needed.

AI and predictive analytics is redefining reporting

Every business runs on multiple apps depending on their own unique needs. A company might use a CRM to manage customer interactions, a support desk app to resolve customer problems, and so on.

In such cases, data is being constantly generated from multiple sources, which is why a unified data analytics platform is necessary to make sense of it.

Also Read: Pessimistic tactics for optimistic entrepreneurs

With advances in artificial intelligence (AI) and machine learning, today’s machines can read, have conversations, learn and analyse previously unmanageable amounts of data. By using such sophisticated analytics tools in conjunction with AI, the value that SMEs can extract from the vast amounts of data available to them is immense.

Beyond making day-to-day business tasks simpler and more efficient, and improving the quality of interactions with customers, analytics can provide businesses with important strategic support.

Analytics can help evaluate predicted outcomes to better understand the financial impact of key decisions, and can also be harnessed to better manage risks.

Conversational analytics tools improve user experience

With conversational interfaces in BI tools, the task of making sense of your data by querying the right segment of data that you need, in the right format becomes as easy as having a conversation with your personal assistant.

Improvements in natural language processing are taking the improvements right into data interpretation making it easier for business owners to make faster decisions without having to learn or unlearn complexities that are akin to data science projects.

The bottom line is that the right data analytics tool can combine and blend data from multiple apps to provide SMEs with end-to-end insights into their business, making sure they stay agile, relevant, and able to seize every opportunity for growth.

Image Credits: yuryimaging

e27 publishes relevant guest contributions from the community. Share your honest opinions and expert knowledge by submitting your content here.

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Today’s top tech news, March 18: Cambodia’s largest funding round and Tony Fernandes quits Facebook

Plus SC Ventures launches fintech bridge for startups and Tookitaki raises US$7.5 million

Cambodian startup-owner raises important funding round — [e27]

Groupin, a company that owns Little Fashion and Mediaload (famous for Khmerload) announced today it raised US$5 million from Belt Road Capital Management, a Mekong-focussed private equity firm.

The company claimed that the funding is the largest in the history of Cambodian tech startups.

Little Fashion and Mediaload are now squarely one of the most important startups in Cambodia, a country that has a small-but-burgeoning startup ecosystem.

Mediaload had previously raised financing from 500 Startups.

SC Ventures launches programme to match fintechs with Standard Chartered — [Press Release]

SC Ventures, a corporate VC arm of Standard Chartered, announced today it has launched a new programme called the ‘Fintech Bridge’ which aims to connect fintech companies with the bank.

The goal is to bring startups into Standard Chartered and have the fintechs pitch solutions that may help fix problems at Standard Chartered.

The programme is making four commitments to help improve the relationship between startups and corporates. They are:

  • Connecting the the correct people
  • No time wasted
  • Funding guaranteed for proof of concepts
  • Exposure to our markets

Tony Fernandes quits Facebook after New Zealand terror attack – [CNN]

Tony Fernandes, the Founder and CEO of AirAsia, quit Facebook after the platform was used to spread a video of the New Zealand mosque attack, according to CNN.

He said that the platform needs to clean itself up and that the harm of social media can outweigh the benefits.

According to the article, Facebook removed 1.5 million instances of the mosque attack video.

OVO acquires P2P lending startup Taralite – [KrAsia]

In a bid to start making marks in online lending sector, Indonesian conglomerate-owned e-wallet OVO has bought Indonesia-based P2P lending service Taralite, as first reported by KrAsia.

The acquisition is said to be finalised in February, but no terms from the deal are revealed.

“For the larger part, the decision to join OVO is because the link-up will help Taralite diversify the types of loans and credits we offer and reach a bigger scale,” said Abraham Viktor, Taralite’s founder, who will remain Taralite’s CEO after the buyout.

Singapore regtech startup raises US$7.5 million — [e27]

Singapore-based Tookitaki, a regulatory tech company that aims to enable financial institutions to develop sustainable compliance programmes, today announced that it has raised a US$7.5 million in Series A funding round.

The funding round was co-led by Illuminate Financial, a London-based early stage enterprise fintech investor, and Jungle Ventures, a Singapore-based Southeast Asia-focussed venture capital (VC) firm.

Enterprise Singapore, Supply Chain Angels, and VWX Capital also participated in the funding round.

In a press statement, Tookitaki Founder and CEO Abhishek Chatterjee said that a “large portion” of the funding will be used to strengthen the company’s R&D capabilities.

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Entropia forms JV with Rudra Labs, launches B2C IoT services

Marketing consultancy platform Entropia has launched IoT service called Aladdin through the joint venture it forms with Rudra Labs

Entropia, Malaysia-based marketing consultancy has formed a joint venture (JV) with Rudra Labs and launched an Internet of Things service called Aladdin.

Aladdin seeks to bring IoT opportunities to consumer businesses to help them drive growth.

Also Read: EY to launch startup incubator EY Foundry in Singapore

Entropia is based in Kuala Lumpur and Manila. It says to be specialised in evolving customer value proposition (CVP), customer experience design, data, and UI/UX.

Bringing expertise in designing and producing IoT firmware, hardware, IoT cloud and native, and IoT security device platforms, Rudra Labs was launched in 2016 with offices in Singapore and Hyderabad.

Joining together, the two companies will operate Aladdin, which seeks to deliver end-to-end from value mapping to concept development to prototyping to final production. It will also close the full customer data-to-sales loop once usage begins.

Aladdin will be led by Rajeev Bala, CEO of Rudra Labs along with a team of 22 people spread across Hyderabad, Kuala Lumpur, Manila, and Singapore.

“An IoT based brand value can establish a more meaningful value exchange between people and brands. Aladdin aims to do exactly that, supporting brands to go beyond merely campaigns and content and offer IoT utility that creates a new level of value for customers and higher margins for businesses,” Bala, who’s the Chief Inventor of Aladdin, commented.

Also Read: Cambodian internet startup company Groupin secures US$5M Series A funding

According to the companies’ joint announcement, Aladdin is aimed at innovators, marketers, and businesses with its Aladdin’s Smart Artefacts that create interconnectivity and interoperability to sense, predict, and respond to consumer’s way of life. Moreover, it also builds new revenue and margin streams for brands across industries.

Image Credit: Aladdin

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