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PolicyStreet raises US$1.8M from KK Fund, Spiral Ventures to grow its millennial-centred insurance platform

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The PolicyStreet team

Malaysia-based insurtech platform PolicyStreet announced today that it has raised US$1.8 million in Series A investment, led by existing investor KK Fund.

Singapore-based Spiral Ventures also participated in the new round and the rest of the funds was raised via Malaysia’s Equity Crowd Funding (ECF) platform PitchIN, according to a press statement.

The startup will use the capital to enhance its product, increase sales, expand into other regions, and also for marketing.

PolicyStreet allows customers to buy insurance policies directly from its platform. It mainly targets millennials with its products, and the goal is to make the insurance industry fun and relevant for its young users.

In order to do this, the startup promotes simple insurance products that it claims demystifies normal industry jargons in a 3-step approach.

In 2019, the insurtech firm received approval from Malaysia’s central bank BNM to become a financial advisor. This allows PolicyStreet to work with over 35 insurers and offer more than 1,000 insurance products.

As of now, the company serves large conglomerates and SMEs.

Also Read: Malaysia’s PolicyStreet gets central bank approval for financial advisory

“Aggregation will not enable us to advise the right products to different target customers, but financial advisory will. We want to advise customers without prejudice, and we will marry technology and innovation to remove ‘fats’ in the ecosystem by driving transparency and simplicity in insurance,” PolicyStreet CEO Lee Yen Ming, previously commented.

Previously, PolicyStreet had raised US$500,000 in seed funding from KK Fund and received grants from Cradle Fund.

Image Credit: PolicyStreet

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DrinkPrime tackles India’s drinking water crisis with its subscription-based IoT smart purifiers

DrinkPrime Co-founders Manas Ranjan Hota (L) and Vijender Reddy

Access to drinking water is a problem in most parts of India.

Less than 50 per cent of the population has access to safely managed drinking water. Chemical contamination of water is present in 1.96 million dwellings.

Access to drinking water is a problem in many parts of India.

About 35 per cent of the nation’s urban population obtains and stores drinking water in bubble-top water dispensers, which are popular among people in the 22-40 age bracket, living in rented homes.

However, more than half of these cans in circulation do not meet the safety standards set by the government. Plus, ordering water is a cumbersome process.

Testing the waters

As flatmates, Manas Ranjan Hota and Vijender Reddy also faced difficulties in accessing potable water in 2015. The water available was dirty impure. Traditional water purifier was an option, but recurring service costs made it less desirable for the duo.

“Frustrated, we started thinking of a solution. Our first idea was to develop an app for home delivery of good quality water cans. We received a good response, and within six months reached 6,000 active users in just two suburbs of Bangalore,” recalls Hota.

However, unit economics was didn’t make sense; their business lost money on every order. This is when the two realised that a point-of-use water purification solution would be a better approach to tackle this problem.

“We studied several water purifiers available in the market and reached out to many experts to understand their detailed functioning,” Hota says. “Our research showed that the core problem is the prohibitive cost, both upfront and maintenance of each device. This was the motivation for us to design DrinkPrime.”

Making the most of IoT

DrinkPrime is a subscription-based smart water purifier with an integrated Internet of Things (IoT) device. The product, claim the founders, can measure and track the quality of water, filters and consumption.

Also Read: How to introduce innovations without scaring customers away

According to Reddy, a direct-to-consumer sales approach, coupled with the use of IoT, which reduces the maintenance cost, helps DrinkPrime make the purifier affordable for costumers. “We have built a smart product and an ecosystem to deliver safe and affordable drinking water to our subscribers.”

For a monthly subscription fee, DrinkPrime takes care of everything — from logistics to installation to regular proactive maintenance.

The pricing plans are customised to different segments, taking into account the water quality in the area and consumption volume.

The subscription fee starts from INR 350 per month (under US$5).

“During installation, we help the customer download the DrinkPrime app and sync it with the purifier. Subscribers can check the status of the purifier, the water consumed, pay their monthly subscription fees, and request services easily on the app,” Reddy explains.

In addition, DrinkPrime monitors the status of the purifier from its backend and sends alerts to the customer when the maintenance is due. When the customer selects a convenient time, DrinkPrime’s technician partner will come and do what’s needed.

DrinkPrime’s early adopters are mostly working professionals, aged 22-40 years.

A US$50B opportunity

Currently, DrinkPrime operates in Bangalore and Hyderabad, with plans to start operations across the top 10 Indian cities in the next 18 months. The company is also receiving interest from Southeast Asia, South Asia, the Middle East, Africa, and Latin America, but for now, the prime focus is India.

The market size is over US$5 billion in India alone. If other developing countries are included, it is a US$50 billion opportunity and is growing at a CAGR of 20 per cent.

Right from the start, DinkPrime faced several crises: “Our initial challenge was product development. Getting the right IoT sensors and the right filter technology that would work in varied field conditions was a long and tedious process. We were able to achieve a stable product only after 12-plus months of rigorous testing,” reveals Hota.

“When we started, we with a GSM (cellular connectivity) connectivity as we wanted an ‘always-on’ connection to monitor the water quality in real-time. But when we deployed the solution, we noticed that in many Indian homes, the kitchen was housed behind thick walls, which disrupted the connectivity leading to improper functioning of the device,” says Hota, an MBA graduate who has previously worked at Sonata Software.

To overcome this, the company went with the Bluetooth mode of connectivity and had to develop computation capabilities inside the purifier. Now, the data can be monitored real-time, and it gets transmitted whenever the purifier is synced with our mobile app.

Managing the blue-collar workforce, inducing technicians and delivery partners, was another major challenge. As it was a completely new product, DrinkPrime had to put in a lot of efforts to train and up-skill the team, the founders disclose.

A D2C company, DrinkPrime manages end-to-end solutions — from hardware, production, marketing, installation, to resolutions. “Drinking-water is a segment where trust plays a big role in customers’ decision-making. This is the reason why companies resort to huge advertising campaigns and celebrity endorsements.

However, we don’t have a budget for this, so we tried to build trust through the use of data. For example, as we get more installations in a particular city, we have an up-to-date map on area-wise water quality,” shares Reddy.

DrinkPrime uses this information to change the filter composition according to a customer’s input water quality. It takes this a step further by suggesting other products — from tap and shower filters to hair and beauty products, each customised to the customer’s input water quality.

“We feel that such a personalised approach can only be achieved by taking a D2C route,” says Reddy, an ex-AMD researcher.

DrinkPrime was part of the Sequoia India’s recently-concluded Surge programme in Singapore and raised an angel round of funding from investors that included FirstCheque and Snapdeal Co-founder Kunal Bahl.

Also Read: A look into the future: How a global pandemic changed the way we buy and sell

“The best part of Surge is the power of the community of entrepreneurs and the peer group learning that comes with it. We feel like whatever questions or dilemmas we have, someone in the group has already been through the same and we just need to ask and learn from their journey,” the co-founder-duo says.

Lessons learned over the past 4 years of your existence?

“We went through many near-death experiences while building DrinkPrime. It is important to persist and believe in yourself. It is equally important to finding a support network of mentors, advisors, and well-wishers who back you in difficult times,” says Hota.

Never be too attached to your solution or creation but be passionate about the problem you are trying to solve, he warns. This will help you objectively analyse if the solution is working or not and be able to pivot when the right time comes.

“For example, we pivoted twice before landing up with our current business model. Although are still solving the same problem, the solution is different.”

Image Credit: DrinkPrime

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Roundup: Singaporean accelerator Iterative debuts 8 startups in first cohort

Singaporean accelerator Iterative debuts eight startups in its first cohort

Singapore-based startup accelerator Iterative has unveiled eight startups in its first cohort, according to TechInAsia. The accelerator programme provides each startup with US$150,000 in exchange for 15 per cent equity.

This year’s portfolio includes eight companies from a variety of sectors, including logistics, healthcare, clothing, food delivery and finance.

Become
Offers affordable invisible braces at the customer’s doorstep

Bungkus
Provides exclusive halal food items to merchants

Haulio
Tech platform which connects hauliers and shippers to speed up cargo process

PropSeller

A platform that connects real estate agents in Southeast Asia with property owners or sellers

Also Read: DrinkPrime tackles India’s drinking water crisis with its subscription-based IoT smart purifiers

Sendhelper

A home services app that connects Singaporeans with blue-collar and non-executive workers to aid in daily chores

Starboard

Allows businesses to import paper filings and data into a cloud-based platform

Tendopay

A financial services platform that enables Filipinos to make online shopping purchases in instalments

Outside Voice

Builds data collection layer “on top of WhatsApp in the form of video surveys.”

Oppo, T-Hub partner to bolster India’s digital startup ecosystem

China-headquartered smart device brand Oppo has partnered with India’s innovation ecosystem T-Hub to support the startup ecosystem in India, according to a press statement.

Through the partnership, selected companies will receive incubation support from OPPO along with technical mentorship and access to new markets.

Startups will be selected based on their prototypes and strategic fitment with OPPO products.

“The cutting-edge startups and their technologies will be the driver of competitive advantage and creative disruption in the telecom industry. To fuel this growth, T-Hub is collaborating with OPPO India in multiple ways to nurture and support their solutions and bolster the startup and innovation ecosystem,” said Ravi Narayan, CEO of T-Hub.

Image Credit: Mario Gogh

 

 

 

 

 

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T. Fuad leaves WeWork Southeast Asia & Korea

T. Fuad speaking at Echelon Asia Summit 2018

Turochas “T” Fuad, Managing Director at WeWork Southeast Asia & Korea, announced in a LinkedIn post on Monday night that he is leaving the company.

He cited the desire to pursue entrepreneurship again as the reason for his departure.

In details, he wrote:

“It has been an amazing ride for the past four years at Spacemob and WeWork. From WeWork’s acquisition of Spacemob, personally interviewing the first 150 employees who joined us, scaling our business from three to 34 locations across Southeast Asia to spearheading our business transformation across South Korea.

It was so important to me that we have the right culture, and tribal mindset to achieve what we set out to do. With that foundation and an amazing team, I have decided to put my attention back on my next entrepreneurial path.

Also Read: Singapore Budget 2020 and what it means for the tech ecosystem this year

It is something I’ve mulled about for a while now and I can feel my entrepreneurial spirit calling again. I will be forever grateful for the lifetime memories, amazing friends I’ve come to know and the difference we’ve made. It is now time for my next adventure.”

e27 is reaching out to WeWork to find out more details about the company’s plan after Fuad’s departure.

Throughout his career, Fuad had founded three startups and all of them had met its exits.

In August 2017, coworking space giant WeWork acquired Spacemob, the coworking space chain he founded and have it rebranded to WeWork.

In January, Fuad spoke to Channel News Asia about the company’s plan to continue on expanding in the Southeast Asian region despite the challenges that its parent company had faced in the previous year, where it saw its valuation fell from US$50 billion to US$8 billion. This had led to a roadblock for their IPO plan, followed by other controversies.

In addition to their operations in Singapore, Fuad was quoted saying that WeWork’s businesses in Bangkok, Ho Chi Minh City, Jakarta, Kuala Lumpur, and Manila, are “definitely on the right track.”

“… We expect them to hit the same kind of trajectory as in Singapore,” he said.

e27 Pro membership will further empower you with insights, tools, and opportunities that help you solve the problems that hold you back. Begin your company’s journey to success here.

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Top e27 contributed posts from May that you should not miss

contributions_May

Its been two months and I have (like most of you all) have not stepped out as much as I would have liked. From restricting mobility to transforming businesses and deteriorating economies, the pandemic still rules the top of our minds.

Thanks to our amazing contributors from the Southeast Asian (SEA) ecosystem, we were able to reimagine the future and use their views and tips to better equip ourselves to fight the impact of the pandemic on our lives.

Dealing with the crisis

The one thing we cannot underestimate right now is the power of the community. While our agility and speed are essential to the way we work and has given birth to lots of great online content and new ways of interacting with our communities virtually, this blog post by Techstars’ Oko Davaasuren is about (the often slower process of) recovery — it is about re-investing in us, and our communities.

By now, most of us are settled in this new, “not-so-normal” phase, where all our worlds have merged into one space and all we have is a window of talking heads on a screen as our communication to reach the outside world and our different spheres of life. Antler’s Puja Bharwani shares the four main areas for a leader to consider as a CEO or founder during times of crisis.

Much has been said that technology companies are the true winners, but the question is: who are the winners and losers in the new world order driven by COVID-19? Ranise Teo spills the beans…

However tempting it may be to jump at short-term fixes, stopping there would be dangerous, warns innovation strategist, Philipp Kristian Diekhöner. If we are to return to normal anytime soon and prevent such in time to come, it is in our hands to be the change we ought to see, globally. Here’s how we can do that.

Also Read: AMA with e27 and Cocoon Capital

Preparing for the post-pandemic world

Advisor, entrepreneur, and investor; Paul Meyers is positive about “impact investing”. It is everywhere these days – outside of COVID-19, it has become this year’s must-have investment strategy, he adds. Unleashing the power of money for good has suddenly become the rage. Read on to capitalise on this wave.

With various innovations taking place across the globe, many are wondering who is leading the cryptocurrency revolution: East or the West? As it stands, Asian economies appear to lead the crypto race, although the West is showing that it has no plans on being left behind. The crypto asset space is a fast-moving one and only time will tell who will truly win this race, but one thing is for sure – crypto assets are here to stay, says MD of eToro, Jasper Lee.

Will VC funding dry up? What are the top verticals? Is this a good time to expand a startup? As an entrepreneur and angel investor, William Klippgen has invested in more than 24 companies, including PropertyGuru, Tickled Media, and ReferralCandy. Today, as the Managing Partner and co-founder of Cocoon Capital, he shared some words of wisdom on what to expect ahead.

Register for our next webinar: Meet the VC: Qualgro Partners

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

Image credit: Guilherme Stecanella on Unsplash

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