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The warlord in the park: how ex-Googler Andy Cheng used constant problem-solving to deliver better products and grow his startup

 

First attempts at startup products usually fall short. This can be really frustrating, but early-stage founders don’t often realise that these false starts are real opportunities.

Why? When founders give this product to new users, they are trying to help a new customer fare better than those “normal” people who do things in what founders consider the “old way.”

Most people using a new feature or a product for the first time are used to doing business or experiencing something in what they consider the normal way. They are not like the founder, who has dreamed up a vision of how things should be done. When a founder gives this new product to a potential customer, she is trying to do three things: 1. Sell the product! 2. Integrate this new vision into the customer’s reality. 3. Solve a problem that often a potential customer didn’t even know they had.

This new approach takes time to understand and appreciate. It’s almost like taking someone and plopping them down in a new culture, or in a different era somewhere far into the future.

By giving these potential customers something very new, they will approach it with some scepticism, some doubt, and some reasons why it won’t work.

As a result, it’s inevitable that a first trial will end in incremental data and not much customer acquisition.

But this new confrontation with tech is a chance to seek feedback. This feedback creates a cycle of improvement. This is why founders who struggle with their own problem first usually have a better chance of finding product-market fit.

I will tell you a story about a founder who went through the AppWorks Accelerator and launched his own product successfully to demonstrate this point.

The park

It was a spring day in Taipei around the year 2011 and then-Googler Andy Cheng was looking for a house to buy. Married and with a young son, Andy wanted a property his family could grow into. A real estate agent showed him a house in a desirable neighbourhood. A stretch of the park just behind the house meant this was exactly what he was looking for.

Andy nearly made an offer. Then he found out that the park was slated for school construction. Rushing to close, the broker hid this from Andy. The seed of an idea was planted in Andy’s mind.

“I thought, ‘Man, what else have you not told me,’” says Andy, as he looked back at how he developed foundi (AppWorks #8), a real estate listing platform.

The first thought Andy had had when he set to work was not: How could he solve the problem of a culture of manipulation and secrecy that seemed endemic to real estate brokers?

He only sees that his startup could make an impact in that area in retrospect. Like many founders, Andy’s MVP alone didn’t help the real end-user — at the time, house buyers — but it started a process that eventually got him there. And this is really important for early founders to understand.

Also Read: The perks of using YouTube to take your startup marketing to the next level

A new product alone is never enough to create scale and customer growth. You have to do a whole lot of digging to get there.

How it started

From Andy’s perspective, there were so many houses to choose from, so wouldn’t trust and honesty be the winning factor for an agent closing a contract?

Andy learned that relatively low-paid real estate agents live off of commission, and in doing so, they often worked in ferocious competition against each other, even in the same agencies. In contract bidding — even before negotiations — the potential future sale of a home often goes to the agent that creates the most perfect too good to be true contract. House sellers want a good return, so agents will find ways to make their pitch of the future contract as lucrative as possible.

It doesn’t matter if the price is true, or if it accurately reflects the true conditions of the house. It’s every man for himself.

It gets worse!

Since every agent is motivated by commission, agents who are first to find the listing will also try to hide the listing info from other agents, making it nearly impossible for other agents to pitch a contract.

This unethical weirdness became more than an engineering puzzle for Andy, who was quite proficient with software programming and maps. Previously, he had worked as one of Google’s first hires in Taiwan, managing a team of engineers in the maps division.

Code and problem-solving are in his wheelhouse. “I always go to the computer to code, to figure things out,” he says. But to tackle this problem, he had to go beyond the screen.

He created an early version of foundi. House sellers and buyers would use that version to find information about listings. But they took this info back to agents and used it to try to haggle

better deals. This put burdens on the buyers of houses, though; this was exactly the position Andy was in before and didn’t want.

He booked meetings with influential agencies and set up face-to-face consultations. He discovered that real estate agents were typically not the best performers in school. They are also technology-averse. It explained a lot.

With the right technology, they wouldn’t have had to be dishonest to compete. By sitting down and walking through foundi features with early adopter agents, Andy finally got to a point where he was able to convince more of them to use the product.

Like an arms dealer selling his weapons to different cartels, Andy started to spread his tool to different agencies. Whereas previously agents in the same agencies would be pitted against each other, teams began to perform at a higher level. Other agencies saw agencies doing better, and wanted the same tool.

“I felt like I was a warlord,” Andy jokes.

Has he made the market more transparent? It’s hard to say this early in the game. But according to Andy, this counterintuitive outcome holds promise.

By taking away the old things that made agents competitive — their secrecy and manipulation — he has actually made real estate agents more competitive. Therein lies a fundamental concept of startup building, and the core reason why data drives product development. Early-stage founders might take note of this technique.

Now, Andy’s customer’s number about 12,000 agents of the total 40,000 in Taiwan, who rely on foundi to serve their customers better and in turn maximize their income. Andy takes a long-term approach to this door-to-door sales effort.

If a founder has a good head on his shoulders and is passionate about what he’s doing, he will eventually build something that people need, in a market people didn’t know could exist. No newly launched product can do this immediately. It’s always a process, and it involves founders stepping away from the computer and even leaving the building, to get it right.

Answers and your product exist in people’s heads and hearts, whether they know it or not. As a founder, you are quite simply the enabler that will help them experience that by delivering a

“For [what will be] a hundred-year-old tree, I will say we are now at the stage of ‘small tree,’ but strong and healthily growing up,” says Andy.

Tangible good that unlocks a mental model. Think of it as a game, with a constant state of going on side quests. Without quests, you cannot complete the journey.

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Why should universities teach blockchain to students?

 

Blockchain – there is very little chance you did not hear about this technology. It can certainly be dubbed one of the most innovative and useful latest technological advancements of the XXI century. According to the data from Statista:

“Worldwide spending on blockchain solutions is expected to grow from 1.5 billion in 2018 to an estimated 11.7 billion by 2022.”

Blockchain brought a wave of decentralization with it, which was not around before – and while some have jumped on the bandwagon of innovations that came with blockchain, there are so many people in the world that still have very limited understanding of what blockchain really is. 

Why learn about blockchain?

Thanks to the numerous unique and extremely useful features of blockchain, including decentralization, this nascent technology are here to stick. Already, hundreds of thousands of modern companies are working on blockchain-fueled solutions that are going to improve our way of living in one way or another. 

With the abundance of real-world use cases, blockchain has surprisingly low adoption at the moment – barely any governments have deployed blockchain-based solutions for the public sector.

One of the key reasons this happens is the low level of knowledge about blockchain among the general public. As a result, some of the world’s leading nations are lagging behind due to the inability to solve some of the lingering issues with the power of blockchain. 

Luckily, many governments started looking in the right direction. The first step towards a wider blockchain adoption in countries comes with changes in the education program. In fact, according to the Coinbase, currently, around 56 per cent of the world’s top 50 universities offer at least one course that focuses on blockchain or cryptocurrencies. This figure went up from 42% in 2018 – this shows slow but steady progress.

Another piece of data that shows the demand for this kind of initiatives is also presented by Coinbase:

“Twice as many students report having taken a crypto or blockchain course than they did in 2018”

Today, universities all over the world are introducing blockchain courses to their students as they realize the importance behind the technology. Some of the countries that have universities with courses on blockchain include Switzerland, the USA, Canada, Denmark, Singapore, Cyprus, Spain and more. 

One of the first universities to introduce blockchain-focused courses to its curriculum is Cornell University in the US. Many Cornell alumni are leading successful blockchain and cryptocurrency projects. 

Demand for blockchain education is rising

Blockchain statistics from Coinbase show that 70 per cent of blockchain and cryptocurrency classes are taken outside of computer science – including economics, humanities, and law.

This signals that the majority of modern students are interested in learning about blockchain irrespective of their key focus of studies. The increased interest in decentralized technology comes from a distrust in the modern financial system. 

Data from a survey of 735 students from the US unveiled that they believe that the current financial system is “inefficient”, “unstable”, and “slow-moving”.

Another big factor that contributed to the growing interest in cryptocurrencies is the rising price of virtual currencies in 2017. Aside from a monetary point of view, students are interested in knowing the value and features of blockchain and cryptocurrencies. They are particularly interested in real-world use cases. 

For those that study law, the blockchain challenges traditional legal terms and categories, which can be extremely relevant in the coming years. For students from economy and business schools, blockchain and cryptocurrencies are a subject of interest from the perspective of the nature of money. Some even see Bitcoin as the next step in the evolution of money. 

In addition, some schools’ classes focus on how decentralization can aid data storage and decision making processes in the future. 

Considering the abundance of blockchain use cases in the current market, students are guaranteed to have a lot of learning material. The below graph shows blockchain technology use cases throughout global organizations in 2019.

Statista, 2019.

Emerging economies show progress

Despite lagging behind developed countries in terms of some parameters, emerging economies show a lot of potentials when it comes to the adoption and development of innovative technologies, such as Blockchain. 

One of the developing countries that have been increasingly active in regards to blockchain and cryptocurrency adoption in Indonesia. Being the most populous Southeast Asia (SEA) nation, Indonesia offers a wide area of opportunity to introduce blockchain technology to the market.

One of these initiatives took place back in April 2018, when the Indonesian government launched the Making Indonesia 4.0 Roadmap in efforts to prepare the country for Industry 4.0. 

This project has provided a solid ground for successful blockchain adoption in Indonesia. In fact, one of the Indonesia-born blockchain projects, Tokoin, decided to step forward to introduce the technology to students through its Campus Meeting Event series. 

The key message and focus of the event series are to educate the young generation about the ins and outs of blockchain technology and increase cryptocurrency adoption rates among students.

As a part of the Campus Meeting, Tokoin is introducing Tokoin BITS (Blockchain Integrated Transaction System). This useful feature helps users split the bill or pay the bill partially by card and cash – a situation that is faced by the majority of the global population on a daily basis.

In the course of its Campus Meeting Events, Tokoin has been visiting a number of universities across Indonesia in November as a way to build a strong foundation for blockchain education in the country. 

On November 6, Tokoin visited Perbanas Institute in Jakarta. Following this, on November 16, the team paid a visit to the University of Indonesia (UI). Tokoin has collaborated with the Student Executive Board of the Faculty of Economics and will take part in the event “EXCITE 2019” with the theme “Get ready to be active, adaptive and successful in the era of 4.0 industrial revolution and digitalization”. 

The Executive Vice President of Sirclo, Rhinaly Tjhin, Head of Business Development at GrabFood, Rizkie Maulana Putra and The General Manager of Tokoin, Ignasius Michael will all take part in presentation for students, highlighting the unique use cases of cryptocurrency and blockchain technology.

In another episode of its Campus Meeting Events, Tokoin team has paid a visit to the Sepuluh Nopember Institute of Technology in Surabaya, East Java. This university is known for its strong focus on scientific, engineering, and vocational education system.

Tokoin plans to continue its journey across Indonesian educational venues in an effort to make a change and bring blockchain technology closer to the students.

Final words

With Tokoin leading blockchain education initiative in Indonesia, the level of blockchain technology adoption in the country is set to rise, prompting a wave of innovative projects. 

As more universities and projects invest in getting the young generation familiarized with blockchain principles, uses, and benefits, we can be sure that the future of the global economy is in safe hands. 

Who knows, maybe soon enough, the majority of nations will accept blockchain technology as something that is worth including in the mandatory education system.

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How to optimise adtech for the next decade

adtech

With digital media advertising spending expected to account for nearly half of global advertising spend this year, adtech’s importance for any business has never been greater. For companies to leverage the latest advertising technology, they must first understand the trends and why the industry is moving towards various advancements.

As a leader in adtech, I’ve outlined below movements I am seeing in the industry to help marketers better capitalize on their ad spend.

Moving to mobile

As desktop internet usage falls and mobile use outperforms TV for overall time spent, marketers are utilizing their resources to adhere to their target audiences’ medium of choice: mobile. As such, marketers are looking to break into mobile apps’ untapped potential and hope it serves as the next gold mine of previously untapped revenue and potential customers for advertisers.

Near-instant machine learning

Adtech companies provide data that help marketers properly A/B test and determine what resonates with a target audience. However, with the increase in competition, speed is a close second to data in terms of importance. AI and Machine Learning’s presence in the industry is quickly increasing as technology can outpace humans and more efficiently optimize ad campaigns to ultimately increase revenues.

A native ad experience

The rise of the “super app” is point-proven that users seek a seamless online experience; they don’t mind ads, as long as it doesn’t interrupt their in-app user experience. As such, marketers are relying more heavily on programmatic advertising to create more refined and user-specific targeting. Spamming users with unrelated, clunky or invasive ad placements can become detrimental to a brand’s reputation.  It is not about the number of impressions; it is about reaching the correct users and integrating ads seamlessly onto apps.

Mobile data, coming soon

Web-based advertisers had decades to perfect measuring the success of ads on their platforms. At the moment, mobile doesn’t have the capabilities to compete with the data that web ads provide. The good news, however, is that adtech companies are pushing to create these tools and create a more measurable experience for marketers on mobile platforms. Moat— an analytics and measurement company that offers viewability, attention, and brand safety solutions— was developed to help provide a solution to mobile’s lack of ability to measure viewability on the screen, and companies are pushing to create more advanced technology to provide advertisers the proper tools to better address various methods of ad fraud.

Rise of Walled Gardens

The rise of consumer privacy concerns is leaning towards a cookie-less industry, opening the door for large publishers to maximize their value through walled gardens. A walled garden in advertising allows large publishers to build an entire marketing infostructure around their platform, utilizing their data and services, and empower small and medium-sized businesses to customize this walled garden for their own marketing efforts. By allowing anyone with a publishing position to transition into their own walled garden, more companies can maximize the monetization and the value that they propose. Before referring to the traditional adtech structure and finding supply partners, they can create their own network operations and monetize their data from within.

Transparent sourcing

Agencies are seeking more transparent platforms as ad fraud continues to remain a top-of-mind concern for publishers. As such, companies are building their own audience networks, utilizing premium, first-party data sources, such as e-commerce platforms and mobile apps with engaged audiences. The first-party data allows advertisers to leverage reliable audience insights and alleviate data privacy concerns.

Super Apps becoming super

Large apps have a lot of potential to grow into “Super Apps,” but aren’t yet tapping into that potential. Apps with large audiences typically start off making money on their technology that connects a consumer to something – a driver, a delivery service, a product. And once they receive investors and the opportunity to grow, they begin floundering; we’ve witnessed it with both Uber and Lyft. To ensure profitability, these apps need to turn to other revenue streams, such as advertising. Apps can make money from media buys, both from inside and outside their app. Apps can provide ad space within their platform, like Amazon, or they can remove themselves from the front lines and simply be used as a powerful source for data. Many major apps are sitting on an incredible amount of data that can help them grow.

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5 growth hacking tips you must consider for your business

“A growth hacker is a person whose true north is growth.” – says Sean Ellis, the growth hacking guru. 

Here are 5 growth hacking tips that you must consider for your business’s success and thank me later!

Your product must be perfect

The only way to grow your business is to have more people use or talk about your products and services and that can only happen when you whole-heartedly meet up with the needs and preferences of your targeted market/audience.

A product-market fit must be your first and foremost priority as a growth hacker whilst having a strong analysis of your competitive-market research. If you are able to fight off that competition, it will work as a catalyst for the growth of your business.

Also Read: 3 types of hobbies every growth-minded individual needs to cultivate

To make your product perfect, go out on the ground and be receptive to your customer’s feedback. Let them criticise, object and compare your product with your competitors – you instead, must be an active listener with an intention to improve your product.

Set actionable goals

A growth hacker’s only focus is growth. As Neil Patel says, “the power of a growth hacker is in his obsessive focus on a singular goal. By ignoring almost everything, he can achieve the one task that matters most early on.”

Hence, it is extremely important for your business that you set precise and focused goals, that will help you achieve growth with maximum time investment and through effective approach refinement. Make sure your goals are practical, actionable and realistic.

Keep a log of your day-to-day progress.

Invest in your team

Investing in your startup requires you to have the right skills and expertise on -board to make it work in the longer run. Most startups, overlook the idea of hiring a team with sharpened skills and actual, practical knowledge of their areas of interest – however, with those skills, you can hit a dynamic customer base filling your cup of advantages not just internally, but outside as a growth hack. Investing in a good team today will bring you a long-lasting outcome tomorrow.

Having inexperienced, enthusiastic employees will require an internal effort to first, train them and make them capable of the work that is required from them, and testing whether they would be fruitful or not. As a growth hacker, you are not here to test, you have to perform and raise the competitive bar with tangible results.

Leverage social media as a go-to strategy

Social media is the perfect platform for start-ups to get in progress with their marketing campaign especially for targeting millennials as they are the largest consumer demographics and are available readily on social media.

The best way to leverage social media for your small businesses and startups is to join relevant groups and build up a network for rapport-building among your targeted customers.

With that, you will be able to analyse the needs and wants of your target markets. Make sure, once you have your own representation on social media through a page or a group, you engage your audience and target customers to help build a community for your business that would stay loyal to you for long-term.

Keep a track of your progress

When you have just started climbing the stairs of growth, it is very important to keep track of your foot-steps. One of the ways to measure your effort is through effective monitoring sales channel, future predictability of revenue streams and the consumer engagements through marketing campaigns.

Through this tracking procedure, you would be able to make better decisions for yourself in the future and having a data-driven approach will help you create sustainable and measurable outcomes.

Also Read: Can social impact be growth hacked?

Taking the first step of launching a start-up is daunting but beyond that, it is an effort, which can be surrounded by risks and failures, but leveraging the available opportunities whole-heartedly will help your business grow in the long-run. 

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Productivity: What’s expected in the office vs what really happens

 

If you’re a fan of Shark Tank and Kevin O’Leary, you would have probably seen this video on CNBC. Also known as Mr Wonderful, O’Leary is a tough investor, persistent with a go-getter attitude that has gotten him global recognition as a trust-worthy entrepreneur. 

So it’s no surprise when O’Leary told CNBC Make It – “I work every day”. And he expects his employees to do the same. 

How employees see it

While it’s understandable, even acceptable on some levels for entrepreneurs, business owners and highly paid executives to be constantly tuned-in to work, most if not all employees aspire a work-life balance.

Employees are people and people are driven by different things, and those drivers aren’t necessarily money, fame, or accolade. On the other hand, flexible hours, options for remote working, commitment to health and wellbeing are just some of the findings revealed from the 2018 Global Talent Trends study by Mercer

No matter what drives you or the type of workplace culture you find yourself in, expectations are almost always to achieve more, with less. 

Meetings: by numbers

This doesn’t simply mean meetings, emails or phone calls are work-place hazards. In fact, it can be productive when applied in the right doses. Overdoing any of these, however, is significantly counterproductive. A Verizon Business  whitepaper reveals some startling discoveries about business meetings: 

Also Read: The millennial force: changing the workplace and its culture

1. Meetings dominate life in America. 37 per cent of employee time is spent in meetings.

2. Busy professionals attend over 60 meetings each month. However, most say they cannot attend all meetings to which they are invited due to the tremendous demands on their time. 

3. Most of the respondents (over 90%) admit to daydreaming, missing meetings or parts of meetings. 

4. Over 70 per cent say they have brought other work to meetings.

5. Almost 40 per cent say they have dozed off during meetings.

6. USD 37b in salary cost for unnecessary meetings for U.S businesses. 

Despite the existence of thousands of productivity and collaborative apps available at our disposal, the question remains – why are businesses struggling to improve employee productivity? How do we stop this madness?  

It’s not doom and gloom 

The truth is, no two businesses operate in the same way. What works for a start-up in Silicon Valley may not necessarily work for another located in Kuala Lumpur, nor the gridlocked city of Jakarta or the exuberant Ho Chi Minh.  

Asian businesses are unique. So are the people managing these businesses. Messaging apps like WhatsApp, Telegram, Line, and WeChat are widely used by employees to communicate with suppliers, colleagues, customers, etc. on a daily basis blurring the lines between work and personal messaging. 

Also Read: Sex in the office stairwells: the importance of company culture

While these apps were never built with true collaboration in mind (except for group chats perhaps?) more and more Asian businesses and startups have adopted various team messaging applications (Slack, Microsoft Teams, etc) to complement other productivity tools (Trello, Asana, Google Calendar, Monday, Click Up, HubSpot, etc.) over the last several years. 

Bottom line

Of the 2,319 knowledge workers using JANDI surveyed, the biggest problem cited at the workplace in relation to communication and effective collaboration is the use of personal or consumer messaging apps

When you put unproductive meetings, consumer messaging apps and emails in a typical work environment it’s no surprise there is a massive gap between expectation and reality in terms of productivity. 

Whilst emails and meetings won’t go away anytime soon, it’s in the best interest for start-ups or enterprises to look at ways to improve efficiencies and productivity. The future of work is here and now. 

A good place to start is looking at communication and collaboration tools that fits your team. Don’t let outdated messaging apps confuse busyness with productivity for your business. 

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Today’s top tech news: ex-Carousell executive joins xto10x Technologies, Youtube popularity surpasses Spotify in India

appoints ex-Airbnb & Carousell exec, Chai Jia Jih as CEO- Press release

SE-AsiaTech startup xto10x Technologies announced that it has set up its Singapore office to serve Southeast Asia startups, with Chai Jia Jih (JJ) leading its SE-Asia business as CEO, SE-Asia.

Founded by Saikiran Krishnamurthy (former McKinsey director & ex-Ola, Flipkart executive), Binny Bansal (Flipkart co-founder & former CEO), Neeraj Aggarwal (ex-Flipkart, Curefit executive), the Bangalore headquartered startup provides software, knowledge, and capabilities across several critical areas of scaling up, such as translating strategy to execution, hyper-growth, operations, data science, HR, strategic business finance, and putting in place operating systems for effective governance.

“After startups have found product-market fit and created serious business momentum, there is still significant work to scale into large, profitable, world-class companies,” said Mr. Krishnamurthy, xto10x Co-founder, and CEO. “There are many more SE-Asia startups now at the scale-phase and we see the opportunity to help them with significant 10x opportunities. We’re excited to have JJ onboard to deliver our solutions to startups in this region”

“After working through 10x growth at both Airbnb and Carousell, I’ve seen that startups face unique challenges in the scale-up phase that they hadn’t needed to solve in earlier stages. I am thrilled to take up this role to help more startups in SE-Asia, bringing expertise from experienced practitioners like Saiki, Binny, and Neeraj to founders in this region” said Chai.

Delivery Hero to buy S Korea’s Woowa Brothers for US$4b- Reuters

German food delivery company Delivery Hero has agreed to acquire its South Korean rival Woowa Brothers for US$4 billion, said a Reuters report.

Woowa Brothers said the companies will also create a joint venture in Singapore to tap into the booming food delivery market in Asia and compete with Grab, UberEats and Gojek. The deal comes as Woowa Brothers Corp, which owns South Korea’s biggest food delivery service “Baedal Minjok”, faces growing competition from rivals such as e-commerce firm Coupang, backed by Japan’s SoftBank Group.

Delivery Hero ranks second in South Korea’s food delivery market. Delivery Hero will acquire an 87 per cent stake held by investors such as Goldman, GIC, Hillhouse Capital and Sequoia Capital, while the remaining 13 per cent owned by Woowa’s management will be converted into the German company’s stake. Reuters

Singapore-based Acronis acquires software firm 5nine to bolster cloud services- DealStreetAsia

Singapore-headquartered cybersecurity firm Acronis has acquired 5nine, a global provider of Microsoft Hyper-V and Azure cloud management and security solutions, for an undisclosed sum as per a DealStreetAsia report. Following the deal, 5nine will become a wholly-owned subsidiary of Acronis, per a company statement.

Also read: Goldman Sachs invests US$147M in cybersecurity startup Acronis, gearing up for acquisitions

Acronis will integrate 5nine’s technology into the Acronis Cyber Platform. Founded in 2009, 5nine helps manage and secure workloads across the Microsoft Cloud – public, private or hybrid. Its software is designed to reduce costs, increase productivity, and mitigate security risks. Acronis provides cyber protection, catering to areas such as safety, accessibility, privacy, authenticity, and security (SAPAS).

“By adding 5nine’s solutions to our portfolio of cyber protection products and services, we’re giving our partners and customers an easy way to adopt the Microsoft hybrid cloud platform,” said Acronis founder and CEO Serguei “SB” Beloussov. Founded in Singapore in 2003, the company claims that it has 5 million consumers and 500,000 businesses worldwide.

YouTube’s Music App Outpaces Spotify and Local Rivals in India- Bloomberg

YouTube has signed up more than 800,000 subscribers for its paid services in India since debuting in March, according to people familiar with the matter, said Bloomberg in an article.

The services are growing faster than rival paid music offerings in India, including Spotify and local players Gaana and JioSaavn, according to the people, who asked not to be identified because the subscriber data hasn’t been released. The one paid service that could have more users than YouTube is Apple Music, which has been tight-lipped about its subscriber figures.

YouTube has long struggled to gets users to pay for its services, especially since the company’s main website is synonymous with free videos. But the Google division has started to gain traction, and the numbers out of India suggest it’s having particular success in the world’s second-most-populous country.

YouTube sells two paid services in India: YouTube Music Premium and YouTube Premium. The music service offers a library of songs on-demand, much like Spotify, as well as the ability to download tracks, listen to music without ads and play tunes while using other apps. YouTube Premium offers the traditional YouTube video service without ads — and the ability to play clips offline. But music is the driving force behind YouTube’s appeal, especially in India.

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Infographic: Should your business accept cryptocurrency?

With its rising popularity, it is understandable that your business might want to include cryptocurrency as one of the available payment options –assuming that it is legal in the market that you operate in, of course.

But before you decide to jump on the bandwagon, there are some points that you need to consider.

Let this infographic by Fundera be with your guide in making that decision.

Pros and cons of businesses accepting cryptocurrency

Image Credit: Stanislaw Zarychta on Unsplash

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KB Investment, TelkomGroup launch joint investment fund Centauri, to invest in growth-stage startups

Centauri Fund, a new growth-focussed venture capital fund jointly established by KB Investment, a business unit under Korea’s financial institution KB Financial Group and MDI Ventures, the corporate venture capital initiative under Indonesia’s state-owned telecommunication company TelkomGroup with headquarters in Jakarta and Seoul.

The fund is set to close at US$150 million, and it will begin investing in January 2020 managed by Managing Partner of MDI Ventures Kenneth Li alongside CEO of KB Investment Jong Pil Kim, both act as Centauri Fund’s General Partners.

Centauri Fund is said to be focussed on startups that cover financial technology, e-commerce infrastructure, software-as-a-service, big data, and “digitally native vertical brands”.

Centauri Fund aims to invest between US$1 million and US$5 million in rounds that range from pre-series A to series B stage in tech startups throughout ASEAN, with an emphasis on its largest market, Indonesia.

Li of MDI Ventures joined the fund right after being able to generate seven exit events within three years of its first investment.

Also Read: Meet the VC: How Indonesia’s MDI Ventures managed 3 overseas exits within a month

Meanwhile, Kim joins Centauri Fund after cultivating multiple investment exit scenarios for KB Financial Group.

“The launch of Centauri Fund is a commitment by both TelkomGroup and KB Investment with the aim of expanding their horizons deeper into the Southeast Asian tech ecosystem, as well as supporting Indonesia and the regional startup space,” explains Achmad Sugiarto, Director of Strategic Portfolio of TelkomGroup.

The fund’s thesis revolves around a principal issue of solving for low success rates and the inability of many startups to transition to the next phases of maturity. Therefore, the fund proactively seeks to mitigate this effect by providing direct support from corporate partners.

Kim adds, “By partnering with Telkom on the Centauri Fund, KB is showing how serious it is about further expansion into ASEAN. We believe beyond a shadow of a doubt that by placing a greater focus on Indonesia, we will be able to effectively realize this mission. We see Centauri Fund as the culmination of two industry powerhouses collaborating to forge a new path of discovery.”

Photo by Fikri Rasyid on Unsplash

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Is the gig economy taking over?

gig economy

What is the gig economy and why is everyone talking about it? Gig work has been around since the beginning of time, but as far as the modern era goes it hasn’t been quite as standard in the employment landscape until very recently.

“Gig” is a term that was coined by Jazz musicians around the turn of the last century that referred to their performances. It was around that time that organized labor was also pushing for more regular work schedules, and by the postwar era, one-income households with 40 hours a week jobs were considered the norm. By 1995 in the United States, only about 10% of workers were in nontraditional jobs and working arrangements.

During the time of the industrial revolution the economy was changing in very noticeable ways, and workers needed to fight for reasonable work hours and working conditions. Labor and employers agreed upon the 40-hour workweek, which gave people greater predictability in their lives.

But now the economy is changing again and workers need greater flexibility in order to participate to their fullest. The gig economy is taking over, and in just a few years gig workers are expected to outnumber traditional employees.

Worldwide, however, there is a different story. The global gig economy is worth US$4.5 trillion as of last year. The prevalence of smartphones and internet access worldwide are making it much more attractive to people who may lack access to traditional employment.

Apps like Airbnb, which was created to help roommates make rent, can help people rent out extra rooms in their house or extra properties on their land to tourists and business travelers. Lyft and Uber can help people afford vehicles who might otherwise not be able to by putting that vehicle to work. Postmates and Instantcart type services can help people who are lacking in employment options find work delivering food to those in traditional employment who need assistance with day-to-day tasks.

In the United States, gig work is still mostly seen as harmful to the workers, and there are constantly new legal challenges to it, mainly because of issues of liability and workers’ rights. But the system is helping many people in most cases. The average gig worker is someone who works in addition to their regular job, and they can expect to add US$1122 a month to their income because of it. Only 16 per cent of gig workers are working in the gig economy as their only source of income, even though they would prefer traditional employment, and 13 per cent are using gig work to cover all their monthly living expenses. The majority are involved in gig work in order to increase their spending power a little more.

By 2025, the gig economy is expected to add US$2.7 trillion to the global economy while increasing employment worldwide by 72 million full-time equivalent positions. An estimated 10 per cent of the global labor force will be impacted. Learn more about the history and future of the gig economy from the infographic below!

Future Of Gig Work Infographic

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Financial comparison platform SingSaver launches instant digital comparisons, with a nod from MAS

SingSaver.com.sg, Singapore’s financial comparison platform, has launched instant digital insurance comparisons and secured a brokerage license from the Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS).

With the license, the platform is now able to offer its instant digital insurance comparisons for its travel, home, and main categories insurance products ranging in over 100 policies by 12 providers.

The insurance providers include AXA, Allianz, FWD, HL Assurance, Ergo, MSIG, NTUC Income, Tokio Marine, Ergo, Sompo, Allied World, and Etiqa TIQ.

The platform’s new license as an insurance broker in itself is a milestone for the business as it diversifies beyond credit cards and personal loans. With it, SingSaver’s broking team are able to advise consumers applying for a range of insurance products.

Also Read: SingSaver’s parent CompareAsiaGroup raises US$20M funding led by Experian

Rohith Murthy, Founder and Country Manager at SingSaver said: “It used to be the case that banks and insurers sold you a product; now that model has been flipped upside down. As we become more digital savvy and less loyal to brands, a new generation of shoppers spearheaded by the Millennials and Gen Z’s want to instantly compare and apply for financial products like insurance online — and increasingly on mobile.”

SingSaver investors include Goldman Sachs, IFC World Bank, Alibaba, and Experian.

In 2019, SingSaver parent CompareAsiaGroup (CAG) secured US$20 million in Series B1 funding from Experian, a global provider of data and analytical tools, in August. The group is backed by institutional investors including Goldman Sachs, IFC World Bank, Alibaba, and Experian.

Founded in 2015, SingSaver’s mission is to empower people to lead healthier financial lives through increased financial literacy, helping them save money while becoming more financially independent. SingSaver provides financial comparison tools that allow users to quickly and easily compare credit cards, personal loans, and insurance for free.

Picture Credit: unsplash.com/nitin_mathew

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