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Indonesian media and broadcasting startup SVARA raises pre-Series A funding

 

SVARA, a broadcasting and media startup, announced today, that it has secured an undisclosed amount of capital in a pre-Series A round, from corporate VC firm UMG Idealab, in a press release statement. With this, SVARA’s valuation has reached a total of US$10 million.

The capital will be used to develop products, strengthen marketing and development teams, expand strategic partnerships, and educate the radio industry on being more digitally focused.

Founded in 2017 by Hemat Dwi Nuryanto and Farid Fadhil Habibi, SVARA is a platform where users can stream live radio and listen to music.

SVARA also uses a cloud-based system in supporting media industry, such as professional radio station, on how they operate their end-to-end business process, such as scheduling pre-on-air, execution the broadcasting activity, and reporting after on-air. So that the radio crew, can handle all operational radio remotely.

It consists of an on-air platform (broadcaster automation) and an online platform. Users can enjoy various audio and non-audio content in the app, including radio, music, and podcasts.

Also Read: Leisure marketplace SelenaGO raises seed funding from UMG Idealab

SVARA has collaborated with various parties, including PRSSNI (Indonesian National Private Broadcasting Radio Association), Collective Management Institute (WAMI – Wahana Music Indonesia), Telkomsel, LPIK ITB (Innovation & Entrepreneurship Development Institute of Bandung Institute of Technology), and IDX (Indonesia Stock Exchange) Incubator.

The creative digital firm claims the platform is used by more than 100 AM/FM radio broadcasts in Indonesia.

Also Read: These later stage funding rounds of December are the perfect closure to the year 2019

UMG Idealab being one of SVARA’s first investors is a unit of UMG Group Myanmar and has actively been investing in nearly 30 startups in Indonesia.

Image Credit:  neil godding

 

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Today’s top tech news: PLDT exiting Rocket Internet by selling US$50M worth stake this year

PLDT exiting Rocket Internet by selling US$50M worth stake this year [DealStreetAsia]

Philippine-listed telecom and digital services firm PLDT is selling its remaining stake in German e-commerce investor Rocket Internet worth $50 million to finance its capital expenditures this year.

In a disclosure to the Philippine Stock Exchange, PLDT Senior Vice President June Cheryl Cabal-Revilla confirmed reports that the company is disposing some of its real estate assets as well as its about two million shares in Rocket Internet on opportunistic basis to bankroll its capex for 2020, which the company said is “slightly bigger than 2019”.

Chinese EV maker Byton debuts SUV with 48-inch dashboard screen at CES 2020 [KrAsia]

Beijing-based electric vehicle (EV) maker Byton debuted the production version of its M-Byte SUV model on Sunday at CES 2020, the annual tech trade show in Las Vegas, local media Tencent News reported.

The long-awaited M-Byte model features a 48-inch screen that spans the whole dashboard, offering content such as weather, GPS, media, and stock prices, among others. The firm has also announced a wide range of key partnerships to power various functions of the vehicle’s massive screen, including one with mass media conglomerate ViacomCBS and ACCESS, which will allow passengers to stream television programming and movies in the vehicle.

Ex-Coty Executive Venkatesh Babu Joins Blockchain Solutions Provider Aqilliz [press release]

Aqilliz, a blockchain-enabled digital marketing solutions provider, has announced the appointment of ex-Coty Regional Sales Director for Southeast Asia Venkatesh Babu as Chief Revenue Officer, effective January 1, 2020.

With an established career in the fast-moving consumer goods (FMCG) sector spanning almost 25 years, Babu has held roles at multinational cosmetics, fragrance, and skincare conglomerate Coty and leading global multinational FMCG corporation Procter and Gamble (P&G).

In his capacity as Chief Revenue Officer, Venkatesh will be responsible for all the go-to-market initiatives at Aqilliz across key geographies in the Asia Pacific region, in order to drive long-term growth and scalability.

With two decades of experience at Coty, Babu is a seasoned emerging markets expert with a proven track record in implementing market entry strategies and business development across diverse geographies spanning ten countries in Europe and Asia Pacific. Before Coty, Venkatesh began his professional career at P&G Prestige Beauty (formerly Cosmopolitan Cosmetics) as the Market Development Manager for Russia where he managed the business during the 1998 Russian Crisis, mitigating losses by over 50 per cent.

Super Surfaces raises US$500K funding

Super Surfaces, a design and delivery company that specialises in the luxury wall and surface finishing, has raised US$500,000 from Vishnu Reddy, a serial entrepreneur and an investor based out of Washington DC.

With the funding, Super Surface will scale up and grow its brand.

The company targets to achieve a delivery capacity of 10 lakh sqft per month by March 2023 and is also planning to enter the global market starting with Srilanka and Bangladesh by 2022 and the US and Australia by 2023.

Kumar Varma started his company with the main reason to offer design and delivery solutions of surfaces with primary focus on architects and interior designers. He holds 12-plus years of professional experience in the Amusement & Theme park industry and has worked with many reputed global amusement brands.

OVO launches crowdfunding campaign for flood victims of Greater Jakarta [e27]

Indonesia’s leading fintech firm OVO has launched a crowdfunding campaign to help the victims of the massive floods that devastated parts of Greater Jakarta since last Wednesday.

For aid distribution, OVO has partnered with Grab, Indonesian Red Cross, Baznas, Aksi Cepat Tanggap and Rumah Zakat. Online mutual fund marketplace Bareksa has also expressed its support for this movement as a corporate social responsibility act.

Users can donate by accessing ‘special donations home’ banner on the OVO app. Ride-hailing firm Grab has also pledged to match up to Rp1 billion for the donations thus collected.

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Antler raises US$50M from investors including Facebook co-founder to expand into new locations

Magnus Grimeland, CEO and Founder of Antler

Antler, a global startup generator and early-stage venture capital firm, today announced that it has raised additional US$50 million for its funds in Amsterdam, London, New York, Stockholm, Oslo, Sydney, Nairobi and Singapore.

Amongst the new investors are Facebook Co-founder Eduardo Saverin and Elaine Saverin, investor and philanthropist Christen Sveeas (through Kistefos), Canica International, and Japanese financial services company Credit Saison, amongst other independent investors, entrepreneurs and finance industry leaders.

Also Read: Use this eSIM wherever you go in the world, thanks to these 2 Turkish entrepreneurs

Magnus Grimeland, CEO and Founder of Antler, said: “Raising funds across seven geographies means that we can spread our impact across the world. We are looking forward to seeing our existing portfolio of exciting startups expand and launching further Antler programmes in 2020.”

Founded in Singapore in 2017 by Grimeland, who earlier co-founded Zalora, Antler identifies and enables exceptional people to build groundbreaking tech companies — regardless of gender, socioeconomic background or ethnicity — from the ground up through its programme.

Antler then provides pre-seed and later-stage capital to successful companies. In order to provide this funding, it has local funds in each geography.

Antler invests US$100,000-200,000 into select teams.

Since its launch in Singapore in 2018, it has invested in over 120 companies. The portfolio is diverse, with companies in 17 industries, founders from 36 nationalities and 52 per cent of companies having at least one female co-founder. Its portfolio firms Airalo and Cognicept have both raised investment from Sequoia, Sampingan from Golden Gate Ventures. Base, another Antler startup, secured money from East Ventures.

Antler already runs programmes in eight global locations and will soon launch in Jakarta and other locations globally in 2020.

“More than half of Antler’s portfolio companies have at least one female founder, which is above the industry average. We need to champion and back female leaders as an industry, and it’s great to see Antler doing its bit,” said Elaine Saverin.

Also Read: The Capture app enables you to track, reduce and offset carbon emissions from everyday life

In November, Antler announced a partnership with National University of Singapore (NUS) via its Graduate Research Innovation Programme to launch an executive programme to enable more entrepreneurs to build successful deeptech startups.

 

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Startups should work with corporates to achieve balance between social impact, sustainability: Arcadis

In October 2019, Arcadis, the Amsterdam-based global design and consultancy for natural and built assets, ran a roadshow in Singapore to introduce its Arcadis City of 2030 Accelerator –the result of its partnership with Techstars.

The roadshow aimed to search for the first Asian startup to join the second year of the programme, which is set to start in March in Amsterdam. The programme itself will peak in a demo day event in May.

“Arcadis is all about improving the quality of life and is always interested in people brave enough to bet their livelihood to that cause. We love that startups are more agile, flexible and willing to take risks. They also give us new perspectives on how to solve some of our cities’ challenges by looking for unconventional solutions,” says Stephen Uhr, Executive Director Asia Pacific – Clients, Innovation and Strategy, Arcadis.

“We are currently working with startups to deal with some of the most pressing issues in Asians cities such as mobility, resilience to climate change and dwindling resources,” he continues.

In this interview with e27, Uhr talks about the Southeast Asian (SEA) and European startup ecosystem –and why collaboration between startups and corporates are key to the balance between innovation and profitability.

Also Read: From coffee to dentistry: The top 10 funding news that rocked the Southeast Asian startup ecosystem in 2019

Can you tell us the most outstanding difference between the Netherlands and SEA startup ecosystem? In what ways can each ecosystem learn and work with each other?

Europe is a well-developed and accessible market with a wide talent pool. The European Union (EU) offers tax incentives to facilitate investments in startups. It is a desirable market, not only for European-based startups but for Asian startups looking to expand. The Dutch startup culture, along with the rest of Europe, is mature and its success lies in its ability to attract talent with the Netherlands being one of the largest startup hubs in Europe.

SEA has an emerging startup scene backed by government interest and driven by the rapid growth in digital adoption. Indonesia has one of the largest growth in digital adoption rates in the world – 99 per cent increase between 2013-2018 and global players are scrambling to expand capacity in infrastructure such as data centres to meet this demand.

It can be more difficult for companies in Southeast Asia to attract international talent which is why many countries have taken to appealing to their overseas communities to return to their home countries with promises of investments in their startups.

Of course China leads the way in the full integration of digital services into everyday life as anyone who has tried to pay cash in a taxi in mainland China will know.

When it comes to dealing with the challenges of climate change, how far along have startups in SEA come? What are the opportunities that we can tap into, and the challenges we need to overcome?

Many startups are focussed on dealing with climate change. We’ve seen how technology can be used to clean plastic from the oceans, create zero-carbon vehicles, make buildings more energy-efficient and much more. The challenge now is to make this technology scalable and make it in the norm rather than the exception.

Also Read: Top 5 appointment news that rocked the Southeast Asian startup ecosystem this year

We have been working with BlueSG, which provides a new environmentally friendly EV sharing service in Singapore. With plans for 500 charging stations and 2,000 charging points by 2020, BlueSG is different from existing car-sharing services as drivers need not return the car back to its original location. This flexibility reduces the need for citizens to own a physical car. BlueSG’s charging stations require specialised civil engineering work for connecting to local electrical grids and telecommunications networks that are critical for EV deployment.

Arcadis’ project management expertise ensured that this development met the technical guidelines of Singapore’s utility providers as well as BlueSG.

Europe is further along on issues regarding sustainability and decarbonising its economy and we are seeing many interesting startups in this area.

One example of a startup we have been working within this space in Asia is Sensity, a startup dedicated to collecting real-time climatic data through the use of IoT sensors. This technology is well suited to asset owners wishing to understand the actual environmental impacts of their operations.

As a business, how can startups balance between creating a sustainable company and creating social impact?

Startups are often quick to evolve and innovate and create social impact because they are smaller, but as they become successful and grow rapidly, their internal operations struggle to catch up.

This is where larger businesses can support startups by giving them access to markets, clients and scale whilst remaining focused on the core mission.

It’s important not to lose that innovative mindset and ‘can do’ bootstrapping attitude – which has happened to many startups as they’ve grown.

Also Read: 5 real-life obstacles that startups face and tips to overcome them

The SEA startup ecosystem is getting increasingly popular among global investors and accelerator programmes, even for social businesses. What do you think is the strength of this market, that leads the world to be interested in it?

In Southeast Asia, we see thriving economies and so the investment opportunities are very tempting to global investors. In Thailand and Vietnam, a young population and a growing middle class have become key to global growth. Governments are increasingly startup-friendly too – in Singapore, for instance, the government is actively trying to encourage startups with tax incentives.

The flip side of this rapid growth and urbanisation mean that cities are facing different challenges from those they faced ten or twenty years ago, so they are looking for new ways to meet those challenges, and this inspires a startup culture.

How do you envision your positioning in SEA tech ecosystem in the next five years?
The challenges we face as citizens continue to evolve and multiply and our lives have become increasingly digitalised. Arcadis is changing the way it does business to meet that new digital reality through automation or its core business and the growth of new technologies to improve the quality of life for SEA.

As an industry, construction has been relatively slow to adopt new technology compared to other sectors. We are starting to see this change. Not only will we be able to offer new solutions to our clients, but we are engaged in various initiatives to help strengthen our digital transformation.

We are continuously expanding our digital and data expertise; a recent example is through the acquisition of the software and analytics firm SEAMS. We are also activating digital leadership throughout the company through a knowledge partnership with Vlerick Business School. All these initiatives will spur on Arcadis’ city-centric vision and strategy of continued digital innovation and growth.

Image Credit: Mike Enerio on Unsplash

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Accelerating Asia unveils new cohort of 10 startups with over 40% female co-founders

Singapore-bases startup accelerator-cum-early-stage VC fund, Accelerating Asia, has unveiled its second cohort of ten startups.

The startups hail from six countries, including Australia, Bangladesh, Malaysia, Myanmar, Indonesia and Singapore.

The new cohort features three female-led ventures, with 40 per cent of the startups having female co-founders.

These 10 startups have together raised over S$2 million (US$1.48 million) in funding already. Each of them will now receive an additional S$100,000 (US$74,000) in growth funding from Accelerating Asia’s venture arm.

“All the ventures coming into cohort 2 are catalysts for positive change, for example, Joni.ai is transforming education, delivering AI-powered platforms that are customising learning according to student needs,” Accelerating Asia Co-founder Amra Naidoo said.

Also Read: V3, EZ-Link-led consortium, BEYOND joins Singapore’s digital banking license race

The accelerator said that it had touchpoints with over 2,000 startups and selected ten from over 200 eligible applications. Its last cohort had raised a combined amount of over US$3 million in funding.

Accelerating Asia is a partner of Enterprise Singapore’s Startup SG Accelerator programme.

The cohort’s Demo Day will take place in May 2020.

A sneak-peek at the 10 companies:

Hellotask: An app-based platform that upskills domestic workers and connects them to employment opportunities as on-demand, verified maid services to households.

iFarmer: Delivers innovative financing for agriculture and farming by enabling secure investing for individuals and institutions and ensures a return on investment by providing market access and support services for partner farmers.

IZY.ai: Uses the latest mobile and machine learning technology to deliver concierge services that customise the guest experience to elevate hotel stays, digitises hotel services and improves internal hotel productivity.

Joni.ai: An AI-powered adaptive assessment platform that personalises education and helps students to make sense of their learning data.

Moovby: A car rental marketplace or the Airbnb for cars, where travellers can rent any car they want, whenever they want it, from a vibrant community of local owners.

Nitex: Connects businesses to streamlined overseas production and standardised apparel sourcing for remote buyers by providing transparency and process optimisation.

NumuWorld: An app that enables brands to reward customers who promote their business on social media. Numu offers brands flexible promotional opportunities tailored to social media activity as well as visibility over who and when someone posts.

Priyoshop: An e-commerce platform enabling small town micro-entrepreneurs to sell a wide selection of authentic products to customers without having to invest in working capital stock and get access to affordable financing.

Recyglo: A waste management platform, which provides circular economy, zero-waste management, traceability, monitoring and analytics and recycling solutions in ASEAN.

Romoni: A one-stop destination of beauty and lifestyle needs of women and a credit facilitation platform for micro and small women entrepreneurs in Bangladesh.

Image Credit: Accelerating Asia

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Tokenisation, time vouchers, and achieving sustainable development goals

The central banking monetary regime is the dominant form of economic exchange

The world runs on fiat currency; this is a fact of life. Although the last decade has seen an exponential increase in digital and cryptocurrency adoption, we are at the very beginning of the process of building a global digital economy.

That process has begun, though, and there are now several major urban areas such as Hong Kong, Bristal, and Tokyo – where the very concept of “money” as we’ve come to understand it is being re-defined. 

One of the best examples of using an alternative money system in Hong Kong who implemented a “time voucher” tokens system. 

An alternative way to exchange value: time banking

What is a time bank?

“A time bank is a banking institution that runs on-time credit exchanges. Time banking works on the principle that after retiring, people can spend some time taking care of the elderly voluntarily, and the services provided will be recorded as time credits.

Community time banks give the volunteers a time banking card, and if needed they can one day exchange their time credits for an equal amount of free nursing services. The services provided include chatting with the elderly, doing their housework and shopping for them.”

According to Professor Chen Gong from the Institute of Population Research of Peking University, “time banks in China have developed significantly since 2008 due to the release of regulations on voluntary services and the increasing demand for elderly service care.”

In Hong Kong, they primarily use “time coupons” to promote the exchange of community residents services and goods. In Hong Kong, they recognise time coupons in various increments: one hour, a half-hour, a quarter-hour, and five minutes.

These time voucher systems keep the economic activity local and enable people who don’t actively participate in the economy a chance to trade services.

For a simple example, elderly people could do some basic work in exchange for the healthcare services they need. By enabling the elderly to “earn some of their services,” it frees up capital to invest in higher-growth areas of the economy.  

The concept of time being a unit of value is not unique to Hong Kong. Both mainland China and Japan implemented a similar system of “care vouchers.” 

“The number of people aged between 55 and 59 has now surpassed other age groups in Hong Kong”– Law Chi-Kwong, labour secretary of Hong Kong 

Time vouchers and care vouchers are especially beneficial for countries with populations heavily weighted towards the elderly, as we’ve seen in both Hong Kong and Japan. 
Incentivising on climate change can assure people to behave much more efficiently

One man’s trash is another man’s tokenised asset

Dense urban areas and remote rural villages may have little in stock, but tokenisation and non-fiat currencies have the potential to be equally effective in both situations. Take waste management, for example – there’s no more “local” issue than that. 

In densely populated urban areas, trash piles up fast and needs to be sorted, collected, likely sorted again, processed, and then recycled or disposed of in some other way.

In villages with just a couple of roads and vast distances between them and anything resembling a city, the challenge is in the collection and processing. It’s hard to get out there, expensive, and the environmental effects can be catastrophic. 

As Stephen DeMeulenaere from the Qoin Foundation explains in this Blockchain Beyond Hype episode produced by Blockchain Zoo, local services like waste management are as crucial as they are neglected (Note: the embedded clip below starts at the portion of the discussion on this topic, but please feel free to watch the whole thing!).  

 

(Embed the above video at the timestamp 6:50)

The key is to use tokens to incentivise and reward certain behaviours – much like Swachhcoin, and ECO Coin do for sorting trash and recyclable materials. 

Rather than complicating a relatively-uncomplicated concept with fiat currency and bank-based payments, projects like these provide simple, easy-to-use rewards for behaviours that may help us save our oceans. Gather recyclables, sort them correctly, bring them to a recycling centre, and get paid out in tokens instantly – it’s really that simple. 

Plastic Bank partnered with IBM to do something similar with the aim of helping people in some of the poorest parts of the world – and the places most affected by climate change and pollution – get out of poverty and clean up the environment while they do it. 

Plastics are widely-regarded as both one of the worst of forms of pollution and the most-solvable. 8.3 billion metric tons of plastic have been produced since the middle of the 20th century – 60 per cent of this has ended up in landfills. 

Here’s how David Katz, Founder and CEO of Plastic Bank, puts it: 

I realised we had to challenge our perception of plastic, and make it too valuable a commodity to throw away into a river or stream simply. At Plastic Bank, we encourage citizens to collect plastic waste and deliver it to our local processing centres.

In return, they earn life-changing rewards like schooling for their children, food or phone top-ups. We then grind the plastic into pellets and sell this back to manufacturers to re-use as an ethically-sourced raw material.

This approach can be scaled up or down depending on the use case, and it’s likely the future of waste management, utility allocation, and perhaps the money itself. 
Incentivising on climate change can assure people to behave much more efficiently

Money… but without the money

The regulatory environment around some of these ideas is fluid – at best. Fiat currencies are still how business is done, and are the lens by which policymakers make decisions.

What Stephen DeMeulenaere at the Qoin Foundation is trying to do – along with many forward-thinking people in governments and businesses – is to bring communities together around a central concept of value that may be separate from money in its current form.

The Time Voucher system in Hong Kong is a great example of how this can work. However, it’s not a silver bullet for our economies. These alternative voucher systems should be viewed as a method to incentivise very specific goals in an economy

The reality is, the central banking monetary regime is the dominant form of economic exchange.

Hopefully, as the technology and regulatory infrastructure catch up to the big ideas such as cryptocurrency and moneyless society. 

Luckily the entire world seems to be waking up to the idea that money doesn’t have to come from your government. Look no further than Bitcoin, which is emerging as a hedge to the global macro uncertainty. There is no telling where this movement might take us. 

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

Join our e27 Telegram group here or our e27 contributor Facebook page here.

Image Credit:Murray Campbell

This article was first published on September 4, 2019.

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2020 essentials: A minimalist guide on how to survive a startup winter

startup_winter

We’ve read predictions and comments on startup winter for 2020. For example, we have seen commentaries regarding there will be a “big chill” approaching the startup ecosystem –and it is natural for us to feel concerned about this prospect.

Actually, I’ve been reading about that possibility since the teenage years. Yet, many more startups have thrived and grown. And even more venture capital firms have been set up, with many have gone on to raise various rounds of funds.

So don’t fret the buzz if you are a new startup.

Here are some tips to survive a startup winter:
1. Build something that people want
2. Show the value of what you’re creating
3. Scale without funding
4. Do startup for the right reasons; the hype is really not worth the efforts

Also read: Funding news is not public relations: Building your startup’s story world

5. Work for a startup to learn more
6. When you do, think like a founder
7. Chase the glory of impact, not the glory of funding
8. Always be three steps ahead of your competition
9. Do not succumb to complacency
10. Your startup is not your baby. It’s a business. No one is losing sleep if you don’t succeed; neither should you

Have a great 2020 and may your success be the success of everyone that stands by you!

Editor’s note: e27 aims to foster thought leadership by publishing contributions from the community. Become a thought leader in the community and share your opinions or ideas and earn a byline by submitting a post.

Join our e27 Telegram group, or like the e27 Facebook page.

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Startup of the Month, December: Bambooloo by The Nurturing Co.

e27 gathers seed-stage startups every month to find out which one our Telegram-based community thinks worthy to be the Startup of the Month.

For December, it is Bambooloo who was voted to win, a plastic-free home goods product by The Nurturing Co., the sustainable products e-commerce startup based in Singapore.

Bambooloo managed to snag an angel seed funding through its green e-commerce parent The Nurturing Co. (TNC) from a small group of investors in Singapore and the US. TNC focusses on creating and distributing products under sustainable plastic-free home goods brand Bambooloo.

It is reported that the startup plans to use the funding to expand Bambooloo in the domestic market and also overseas as well as strengthen its team. It also stated that it will create additional marketing and brand licensing support materials.

Founded in 2018 by David Ward in the United States, TNC’s Bambooloo’s product started off as a luxury toilet paper made from 100 per cent sustainable bamboo launched online on Redmart, Honestbee, and Lazada.

In January 2019, Ward told Eco-Business that it was planning to enter Cold Storage and will be the very first no plastic packaging brand the retailer has decided to stock.

Also Read: Here’s how global businesses could drive sustainable development

Along with its seed funding, it had also launched CanO water brand in Singapore to help curb plastic-bottle water consumption.

TNC claimed it has already supplied key businesses across various sectors in Singapore, including hotels, F&B outlets, and retailers. Its clients today include Cold Storage, Redmart, BoxGreen, Salad Stop, Speedy Vending, Unpackt, and Scoop Wholefoods Singapore.

It seems like the future of sustainable startups is bright while the world is watching closely the environmental moves made by the likes of Greta Thunberg and other youth activists who hit the headlines almost every week. The trend is not slowing down anytime soon as we began to see and be affected by extreme climate changes, and Bambooloo is in the middle of it all.

Congratulations to TNC.

Picture Credit: Bambooloo

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E-commerce trends: What to expect in 2020

ecommerce_trends

Survival of the fittest– the only way you can win is if you adapt to the environment around you. The e-commerce industry is no different.

It’s a rapidly changing and highly competitive sector. You constantly need to be tracking the latest developments and staying ahead of the curve if you want your products and brand to have prominence in front of your customers.

Of course, experimenting with the hottest trends can sometimes be risky. But, as long as the steps you are taking are in the best interests of your customers, the odds of success will always be in your favor.

Let’s look at some of the emerging e-commerce trends that we can expect will catch on in 2020. Note that it’s important to analyse these in conjunction with your e-commerce business before you decide to take a crack at any of them.

Google shopping

Unless your brand is extremely popular or you are already a well-known shopping destination, most users will land on your site by relying on search engines (we can restrict our discussion to google because all others are far behind).

There are two ways of marketing your products to users who are searching for them. You can either rank organically for the search terms and draw traffic from the click-throughs, or alternatively, you can sponsor search ads and product listing ads (PLA) on google that will help leapfrog your products to the top of the search engine results page.

Also read: Why brands fail on e-commerce and what they can do about it

While building up organic traffic to your site is an elaborate and long-drawn process, getting featured on google shopping is relatively easy and straightforward. The more niche your product, the better are the results with this form of marketing.

Social commerce

Social commerce is an upcoming trend that is on the verge of blowing up in the coming year. A large amount of time that consumers spend on social media can easily be monetised by offering shoppable products on social platforms. For instance, you can leverage Instagram shopping (which involves taking a customer from Instagram to your shopping site) and the new checkout feature (which allows customers to buy directly from within Instagram) to increase sales and boost revenue. Underscoring the potential of this trend, it would be useful to know that few companies have built their entire business models around the concept of social commerce.

Companies such as Meesho and Glowroad have leveraged the vast reach and influence of WhatsApp to create a virtual self-reliant community-based shopping network.

You too can cherry-pick aspects of social commerce that are relevant and apply them to your business.

Dynamic pricing and personalisation

Businesses are realising that undercutting prices is not the best way to beat the competition. It can be detrimental to your brand and result in the devaluation of your products.

Optimisation holds the key to healthy sales, brand reputation, and profit margins. It’s advisable to study competitor prices, gather data-driven insights from historical data to act on the challenge of real-time pricing. Intelligent use of AI/ML and data science can ensure that you are always offering the most competitive price vis-à-vis the competition, while at the same time making sustainable gross profits on every sale.

Adding an element of personalisation with customer-specific pricing can further ensure strong customer loyalty and repeat purchases in the future. Creating and maintaining individual user profiles can enable you to offer highly relevant user-based recommendations which in turn can boost your cross-sells and up-sells.

Progressive web-apps

Progressive web-app mimics the features of a native web app. Online commerce space has witnessed an increase in the usage of PWA (Progressive Web App). Social media giants such as Twitter have been using PWAs for quite some time, and this trend has caught the imagination of e-commerce players.

Also read: Singapore: The new “place to be” for e-commerce in Asia?

Implementing PWA technology enables you to ensure optimal usability of your website across mobile devices and form factors. PWAs will help you manage a seamless omnichannel experience for your users. As customer journeys continue to be less linear and more fluid across various platforms and devices, businesses need to acknowledge the need to be omnipresent to attain efficiency across multiple channels.

Rental and re-commerce market

The market for used products has been growing significantly thanks to an increased focus on sustainability and the need to purchase products at low prices. The demand for used goods will continue to grow and spread to different categories in the future. Flipkart, for instance, launched the 2gud platform to cater to the high demand for refurbished electronic goods and appliances. Similarly, the rental and pay-per-use market has seen steady growth in recent times.

If your products are expensive or of repetitive nature, it might make business sense to start offering them on a rental or pay-per-use basis. This could open up your products and services to a much wider audience than what would have otherwise been possible.

Editor’s note: e27 aims to foster thought leadership by publishing contributions from the community. Become a thought leader in the community and share your opinions or ideas by submitting a post.

Join our e27 Telegram group here, or like e27 Facebook page here.

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‘The challenge for new startups lies in how to commercialise and commoditise products’

China TH Capital's

China TH Capital’s Vice President Renchuan Chen

China TH Capital is a boutique investment bank, which focuses on primary markets growth-stage TMT (tech, media and telecom). It does primary market fund-raising for a cheque size of US$50-100 million in China, starting from Series B and to pre-IPO.

With China in relative saturation, TH Capital expanded to India and Southeast Asia in 2018-2019, where it is looking for more opportunities and trying to expand further in emerging markets.

In this interview, China TH Capital’s Vice President Renchuan Chen talks about its activities and plans in Southeast Asia and India.

Excerpts:

While India and Southeast Asia are fast-emerging markets, China is still the fastest-growing and presents massive investment potential. What are the reasons for your gradual shift to Southeast Asia and India?

China market will still be the fundamental market for us. We’re leveraging the resources/experiences in the local market. But emerging markets such as Southeast Asia, India, Africa, South America, East Europe as a whole are parallel strategic markets for us to focus on. The new strategy is to become a world-class financial advisor/ investment bank for the entrepreneurs in the TMT industry, globally.

You are primarily an investment bank. Do you also double up as an investor as well?

The core business and significant revenue still come from financial advisory/investment banking. We do participate in investment if the companies that we’re helping are quite good assets and are early-stage with great potential. But still, those are the subset business for TH capital. The financial advisory is the main focus.

Chinese companies have a presence in India and Southeast Asia since the turn of the current decade. Don’t you think you are late to the party and why so?

There are two actual push and pull reasons for that. The push reason is that the whole Chinese economy, especially on the consumer internet segment, is sort of slowing down. The mobile penetration rate in China is relatively high level; the recent mobile penetration rate in China is dropping a little bit as compared to the fast growth in the emerging markets. The birth rate and the population dividend are the other push reasons. We can hardly find many great opportunities in the consumer internet segment in China.

Also Read: TMT industries in Indonesia, Vietnam are fast-growing, says China TH Capital Renchuan Chen

In Southeast Asia and India markets, too, similar things are happening, but their TMT infrastructure is still in the early stages of development. If you look at Indonesia and Vietnam, these two countries have registered dramatic improvement in the past three to four years. The overall underlying GDP or economic development in those countries are growing fast, but there is still room for improvement.

If you look at China, the overall PE/VC investments in 2018 were US$200 billion. But this year it is less than US$100 billion, which is still huge but has dropped significantly.

As for PE/VC volume or frequency in emerging markets, the overall size of these five to six regions (Southeast Asia, India, South America, East Europe, the Middle East and Africa) are relatively small. In 2018, the total volume of the emerging market was only one-seventh to one-fifth of China. However, as China has dropped to half, these markets are growing. What is happening is that the overall volume for emerging markets becomes around one-third of China.

The whole TMT industry in the emerging markets is growing fast. We are indeed early comers for the financial advisory business. If you look at the Chinese market, I don’t see any other financial advisors that have put in such dedication and resources into a new market. We are the first dedicated to those emerging markets and consider them strategic paralegal market to China in the past six to seven years.

We are relatively late compared to other Chinese traditional business or early tech companies going abroad. Still, we are early comers compared to a lot of our peers in the similar market financial advisory industry.

The Southeast Asian markets are fundamentally different from that of China in terms of languages, culture, and customer behaviour, etc. How do you tackle these challenges in these markets?

It’s an exciting topic. There are quite a few cultural differences. We have quite a good foundation in India, which is that we have leading clients in the different segments in the TMT industry in the market. We are the long-term partners with those entrepreneurs, leading companies in their segments.

So we know what happened in their early stages, in what they did well, what mistake they committed, or what they are doing in their Series B and Series C rounds. We also know what strategy they should have taken, but didn’t.

Southeast Asia is a group of developing countries with high-density population and social structure like China. We’re talking to the entrepreneurs in Southeast Asia who can benchmark with Chinese companies. We are more similar compared to local companies. That’s our entry point to overcome cultural and language issues.

The world economy is in the doldrums, especially in India, where private consumption has come down. Don’t you think you got the timing of your entry into the region wrong?

If we look at India and the emerging markets as a whole, the overall capital market is heating up, instead of cooling down. This is the fundamental reason for our entry into the country. Plus, as I pointed out earlier, the TMT infrastructure is improving quite fast. This will bring quite a good dividend for new technology companies.

Sure, the window period will be shorter when compared to China. But still, there’s quite a difference between how global investors, global institutions and investors look at India currently.

If we draw a parallel, ten years ago, global players and investors were hesitant to invest in China because it was a different market then, and they didn’t understand its culture. They were not familiar with the regulations. Some of them, however, held on to while some others left. People who chose to hold became successful.

India and Southeast Asia are also going through this phase. The India market hasn’t been developed much, but people who chose to invest are making good returns. For investors looking at India, the only choice is to invest because this is the prominent single largest market with a vast population and huge potential. This market is relatively early stage, from the underlying economy side or the TMT segment side.

The Chinese market is stagnated because it is already tapped into its potential. What does the future hold for Chinese startups and investors?

The biggest trend we see in the startup investments space in China is that there is a big shift from consumer internet to industrial internet segment. Not many investors are looking at consumer startups anymore. A lot of them have shifted to enterprise technologies (B2B).

The overall industrial internet segment currently in China is under development; it is only 5-10 per cent v/s 50 per cent in the US.

We are the most developed or one of the most developed consumer internet economies in terms of e-commerce penetration, third-party mobile pay penetration and online population penetration. Still, we’re one of the least developed industrial internet economies in the world in terms of those metrics.

My understanding is that Chinese entrepreneurs have a higher risk appetite than their counterparts in emerging markets. What other qualities do Chinese entrepreneurs have that entrepreneurs in emerging markets can learn from?

There are two differences, I would say. One of them is the background of entrepreneurs. If you look at the kind of entrepreneurs who are doing well in China, you will come to know they are those who come from a less-privileged background or even from the bottom of the pyramid/grass-root level.

These entrepreneurs built multi-billion dollar companies from scratch and broke through a lot of social class during their startup journey. That’s the major characteristics have been seeing over the past seven to eight years. But that is changing and has changed. A lot of today’s entrepreneurs are from the upper class. They are from a more diversified background.

Look at the Southeast Asian and Indian market. Most entrepreneurs are from a pretty good and diverse background. A lot of them come from the Ivy League in the US or an investment banking background. They have a much better education background and a much broader global perspective which is quite important because that’s another difference between the entrepreneurs in China and Southeast Asia.

China is relatively protected or is a closed economy; it is sort of independent from the rest of the world. You don’t see much competition coming from the global giants, but in India and Southeast Asia, giants such as Amazon Facebook and Netflix are posing a big challenge to local players. So, entrepreneurs with much more diversified, global background have a competitive advantage in a more open economy compared to China.

At a time of the global economic slowdown, what core competencies should startups acquire to come out of this?

I think the core competencies that you are talking about should be different for different markets. In China, until recently the so-called core competencies used to be technology compatibility, management etc. Right now, it is about a relationship with the government, understanding government policies.

Also Read: Why 2020 is the year for tech startups in Vietnam

Given the current underlying TMT infrastructure development, we find that companies who can cut into the market with a very localised method will advance.

New-age technologies such as AI and robotics are arising VC’s interest recently and have become hot in Southeast Asia. How do you look at these sectors?

We served leading companies in China such as Geek+. The business logic and momentum should be similar.

The demand for robotics, “the muscle”, starts with demographic change. When we look at countries like the US and Japan where robotic workers are widely adopted, the install base tends to be positively correlated to the peak of the percentage of the working-age population.

We believe China is on the verge of this growth cycle of robotics-driven automation, as China’s working population peaked in 2010 and average annual salary doubled in the past seven years. The demand for higher productivity across all sectors has led to a boom in entrepreneurship in the technology sector in the past few years. India and many SEA countries are still enjoying demographic dividends and mobile penetration growth, so business model innovations are likely to precede technology ones, just like what happened in China.

Besides the demand to “replace” human workers, corporates in China are also gradually realising the advantages of AI, “the brain”, in human-driven workplaces. In many circumstances, technology like AI is more accurate, more efficient, more stable, thus a good assistant to human. That enlarges the addressable market for technology startups, as enterprises are more willing to allocate budgets to software, compared to a long-lasting favourite of physical assets.

Technology helps in improving productivity. We see the challenge of new technology startups lies in how to commercialise and commoditise the products and their value.

Image Credit: TH Capital

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