Posted on

Beenext launches US$110M fund for early-stage startups in SEA, India

Singapore-based VC firm Beenext announced today that it has closed a US$110 million fund, which will be focused on “empowering early-stage startups and founders in India and Southeast Asia”.

This marks VC company’s 4th consecutive fund focused on the emerging markets in Asia.

The newly-launched fund, called Beenext Emerging Asia Fund, aims to back startups in the e-commerce, fintech, healthtech, agritech, edutech and AI/data-driven technology domains.

About 50 per cent of the fund will be allocated for the Indian startup ecosystem.

Also Read: Ecosystem Roundup: OVO, Dana in merger talks; gojek CTO Ajey Gore resigns; Fincy raises US$11M; Tuas Capital, The Hive to launch SEA startup fund

Additionally, the VC firm has announced the closing of a US$50 million fund, which will be exclusively invested in SaaS businesses in Japan to accelerate digital transformation in each industry.

Teruhide Sato, Founder and Managing Partner, said: “COVID-19 has impacted every aspect of global business, but we continue to see startup founders pushing the boundaries to not only survive but thrive in this environment. The relentless attitude of founders will mean that solutions for a post-COVID world will also come from them.

Now more than ever, we feel the need to nurture the entrepreneurial ecosystem to ensure we bounce back as a strong community of founders. Beenext has always believed in “building businesses together with founders and fellow local co-investors to have a lasting impact,” he added.

The backers of these two funds include major institutional investors in the US, along with Japanese corporations, global family offices and entrepreneurs.

Beenext has been active crossing the region since its inception in 2015 having invested in 72 Indian startups and 45 in Southeast Asia. In total, it has invested in more than 180 startups globally.

Some of its notable investments in Southeast Asia and Japan include Zilingo, Sendo, Trusting Social, Ralali, Amartha, Dekoruma, Mekari, Zenius, Sentient, and Japan’s largest HR SaaS company, SmartHR.

Image Credit: BEENEXT

The post Beenext launches US$110M fund for early-stage startups in SEA, India appeared first on e27.

Posted on

Grab CEO announces lay-off of 360 employees, addresses COVID-19 impact to business

 

Grab CEO and co-founder Anthony Tan said in a note sent to employees today that it would be laying off 360 people or “just under” five per cent of its total workforce.

He further emphasised that this will be the company’s last major jobs cuts for 2020 and that a major recession is expected in the future.

The ride-hailing giant promised the affected employees with severance payment, enhanced separation pay, a waiver of annual cliffs for equity vesting, laptop for keeps, medical insurance coverage until the end of the year, encashment of maternity and paternity leave, encashment of unused accrued annual leave and GrabFlex credits as well as emotional and career transition support.”

Recently, Grab had also publicly posted a LinkedIn note sent out to investors called ” Note to Investors on Addressing the Challenges of COVID-19 ” where he provided direct insights on how COVID-19 has impacted Grab and underlined the value of collaboration.

Below is the note:

Dear Grabbers,

From the moment we began navigating through this global health crisis, I hoped I would not have to send a note like this. It is with a heavy heart that I share with you today that we will be letting go about 360 Grabbers, or just under 5 per cent of our employees.

We understand this news will cause anxiety and dread. Please know that we did not come to this decision lightly. We tried everything possible to avoid this but had to accept that the difficult cuts we are making today are required because millions depend on us for a living in this new normal.

Also Read: Roundup: Grab launches initiative to boost small biz in SEA; Co-founder Miguel McKelvey exits WeWork

Every impacted Grabber has contributed to building Grab into the everyday app that it is today. We are deeply grateful for your efforts and we will do all that we can to help you get back on your feet.

We have always hired with the best of intentions for Grabbers to grow together with us. We are truly sorry for what’s happening today. To those who are impacted, we owe you an explanation.

Since February, we have seen the stark impact of COVID-19 on businesses globally, ours included. At the same time, it has become clear that the pandemic will likely result in a prolonged recession and we have to prepare for what may be a long recovery period. Over the past few months, we reviewed all costs, cut back on discretionary spending, and implemented pay cuts for senior management. In spite of all this, we recognise that we still have to become leaner as an organisation in order to tackle the challenges of the post-pandemic economy.

To achieve this, we will be sunsetting some non-core projects, consolidating functions for greater efficiency, and right-sizing teams to better match our changing business needs to be given the external environment. We are also doubling-down on our delivery verticals and have redeployed Grabbers to meet the increased customer demand for deliveries. We were able to save many jobs through this redeployment of resources and it helped limit the scope of the reduction exercise to just under 5 per cent. I assure you that this will be the last organisation-wide layoff this year and I am confident as we execute against our refreshed plans to meet our targets, we will not have to go through this painful exercise again in the foreseeable future.

Our Board and leaders continue to be bullish on our business outlook. We will focus on adapting our core verticals such as ride-hailing, deliveries, payments and financial services to address the challenges and opportunities of the new normal. At the same time, we will expand support for small businesses by enriching our merchant service offerings. We believe these steps will steady us on the path towards sustainability.

If you are affected by this layoff exercise, you will receive an email by today, June 16th, 1 pm SGT, with guidance on next steps. We want to make sure you can speak to your Business Manager and HR representative personally and have organized these discussions to take place as soon as possible over the next two days. Please bear with us as we strive to facilitate this process with a high degree of sensitivity, and with the utmost respect for your privacy. If you are not notified by 1 pm SGT, you are not impacted, and I encourage you to be there for Grabbers who are.

Also Read: Roundup: Nanox raises US$20M for Vietnam expansion; GrabMart now available in Cambodia

For Grabbers leaving us, I understand the mix of emotions and anxieties you will go through over the next few days, weeks and months, and we wanted to address that by providing financial, professional, medical and emotional support that includes:

Severance payment of half a month for every 6 months of completed service, or based on local statutory guidelines, whichever is higher. Enhanced separation payment equivalent to about 1.5 months of salary on top of the severance pays as additional assistance during this COVID-19 crisis and bonus for work done in 2020. Waiver of annual cliffs for equity vesting, so that more Grabbers can leave as shareholders. This means that your outstanding unvested equity will vest monthly until your last date of employment. Medical insurance coverage until the end of this year through existing medical insurance, or a stipend equivalent, so you can have peace of mind through these uncertain times. Maternity and paternity leave encashment for female Grabbers who are expecting and male Grabbers whose wife is expecting, as of the last date of employment. Encashment of unused accrued annual leave and unused GrabFlex credits under your Flexible Spending Account. Career transition and development support in the form of outplacement support from our Talent Acquisition team and the creation of a Talent Directory that allows recruiters and companies to reach out to impacted Grabbers for opportunities. We will also provide impacted Grabbers access to sessions with a life coach and half a year’s worth of online career development tools, so they can continue to grow in their personal and professional lives. Emotional support via the Grabber Assistance Program which you will continue to be able to access for 3 months after your last date of employment.

Finally, you can opt to keep your laptops to help you in the search for your next adventure.

In our eight years, we have faced numerous challenges, and we have always been able to survive – and thrive – because our commitment to our customers in Southeast Asia is unwavering. We are deeply rooted here and we continue to stay true to our mission of driving Southeast Asia forward.

Also Read: Ecosystem Roundup: OVO, Dana in merger talks; gojek CTO Ajey Gore resigns; Fincy raises US$11M; Tuas Capital, The Hive to launch SEA startup fund

This is a difficult time for all Grabbers, and I know that this is a lot to take in. If any of you have questions or need a listening ear, please feel free to ping me over email or Slack, and I’ll gladly receive your feedback and do my best to provide answers.

To the Grabbers who will be leaving us, each of you has made a lasting imprint on our region through your sacrifice, grit and determination. I am deeply grateful for your efforts and we are where we are today because of you. Thank you for sharing your talent and passion with us. Thank you for enriching the lives of Grabbers, our customers, and partners through your contributions. You will always be part of the Grab family.

Image Credit: Grab

The post Grab CEO announces lay-off of 360 employees, addresses COVID-19 impact to business appeared first on e27.

Posted on

Singapore’s visual recognition startup Gaze.ai snags US$830K in seed funding led by Anchorless Bangladesh

Gaze.ai, a Singapore- and Bangladesh-based Artificial Intelligence startup, announced today it has raised US$830,000 in seed funding.

Anchorless Bangladesh, a US-based VC firm investing in startups in the South Asian country, led the round.

Existing angel investor Mohammad Maaz also co-invested.

The firm was established in 2018 by Shehzad Noor Taus Priyo (CEO, co-founder), Motasim Rahman (COO, co-founder), Kevin Pierce (CTO), and Dr. Nabeel Mohammed (Chief of Research).

Also Read: Differences between AI and Machine Learning, and why it matters

Gaze offers an API for visual recognition technologies such as spoof-proof face recognition, product recognition, and multilingual OCR (Optical Character Recognition). The firm’s mission is to embed AI into everyday life by enabling others to easily build software powered by visual recognition AI.

The startup claims with its technology, online transactions will be safer, sign-up/in will be effortless, finding the product you are looking for will be easier, checking into the workplace will be contactless, and paying for the parking will be seamless.

Gaze currently has a team of 23 people across Canada, Singapore and Bangladesh.

“Our goal is to get any developer to ‘Hello World’ in under five minutes. The way we do that is by building the best developer experience and iterating on community feedback. We believe very strongly in the power of open source communities; they have, time in and time again, changed the world for the better,” said CEO Taus.

“When we look at the incredible engineering and technical talent in Bangladesh today, it seems obvious to us that a few standout companies will be able to rally the troops and build an indispensable product utilized by people around the world. We see that potential clearly in Gaze, led not only by a long-term global vision, but also backed up with world-class technology offering practical value for its users,” Rahat Ahmed, Founding Partner and CEO, Anchorless Bangladesh.

Image Credit: Gaze.ai

The post Singapore’s visual recognition startup Gaze.ai snags US$830K in seed funding led by Anchorless Bangladesh appeared first on e27.

Posted on

Roundup: E-commerce enabler iPrice Group names new CEO

iPrice Group CEO Paul Brown-Kenyon

Paul Brown-Kenyon is the new CEO of iPrice Group

Product discovery and comparison platform iPrice has appointed Paul Brown-Kenyon as its new CEO, according to a press statement.

In the current position, Kenyon will be responsible for scaling the organisation successfully and helping consumers, merchants and partners looking to tap into the e-commerce market. He will be involved in strategy building, operations, corporate governance, performance management, as well as helping iPrice become an attractive workplace for talents.

“Paul’s experience in building tech companies in Asia is a perfect match for the growing demand for operational excellence at iPrice. We are convinced that in this new role, Paul will help bring iPrice to the top league of SEA startups,” shared David Chmelař, the group’s former CEO, who now assumes the title of Executive Vice Chairman and co-founder.

Also Read: Ecosystem Roundup: OVO, Dana in merger talks; gojek CTO Ajey Gore resigns; Fincy raises US$11M; Tuas Capital, The Hive to launch SEA startup fund

Singapore startup BasisAI launches new platform Bedrock

BasisAI, a Singapore-based Artificial Intelligence startup, announced today the launch of Bedrock, a new machine learning platform that aims to empower data-driven enterprises to deploy AI in the real world responsibly.

According to a press statement by the company, the new platform will enable users to have faster time-to-impact for machine learning in their enterprise and achieve AI governance-by-design.

“In the last year, we’ve been told repeatedly by enterprises that they often have to tread a balance between speed and governance. We have built Bedrock so that ambitious enterprises who want both rapid time-to-market and reliability don’t have to compromise. If you rush a machine learning software build and it’s not robust, it can fail silently in unintended ways, leading to bottlenecks down the line. Likewise, if governance is just a matter of filling in compliance paperwork, rather than built into the workflow, it’s simply going to stifle innovation,” said Feng-Yuan Liu, CEO and Co-Founder, BasisAI.

Image Credit:carlos aranda

The post Roundup: E-commerce enabler iPrice Group names new CEO appeared first on e27.

Posted on

How do you raise VC funding as a student entrepreneur? Find out the answers here

No matter what you read in a textbook, there are still some questions that can only be answered from experience.

In this special feature by e27, we give student entrepreneurs and aspiring founders the chance to get their burning questions answered by the some of the most eminent VC investors in Southeast Asia: Michael H. Lints, partner at Golden Gate Ventures, and Binh Tran, partner at 500 Startups Vietnam.

Golden Gate Ventures is a Singapore-based firm which was founded by three Silicon Valley entrepreneurs in 2011 with currently over 45 portfolio companies across Asia.

500 startups is a San Francisco-based accelerator which also manages venture investments across 74 countries. Its most notable investments in Southeast Asia include Bukalapak, Grab and Carousell, to name a few.

Here is how it goes down:

What are some qualities you look for in a student entrepreneur if you were to invest in them?  (Felix Tan, founder at Skilio)
Lints: We don’t make a difference between student entrepreneurs and other entrepreneurs. They must share similar values. Before investing, we want to understand if they can be a future leader of their company? Are they humble and willing to learn? Are they focused, and do we believe they have what it takes to execute on their vision?
What advice would you give a founder who is still in the development phase of their product to persevere through the pandemic? (Vaibhav Sen Malla, Pennsylvania State University)
Tran: If you still have a day job, keep it. Don’t quit until you’ve released and seen some early validation that your solution is working. No one can read the future, and during a downturn, investors are not just looking for great ambitious ideas, but also for lots of traction.
Expect fundraising to be more difficult now than before the pandemic so the more you can execute without dependence on outside capital, the more options you’ll have.
Even if you’ve dedicated yourself to your startup, my advice is similar except that you should have a heightened sense of urgency. Release what you have, learn from observing your users, make necessary changes, and repeat.
If after a few iterations you’re finding that your changes are not helping you find traction, don’t be afraid to make bolder changes and even consider a product or business model pivot. Seeing the process of how founders execute, learn, and adapt, especially during a crisis such as COVID-19, is a significant factor when investors evaluate deals.
If I want to start a company, what is the ideal path after completing graduation? (Shubham Raut, University of East London)
Lints: Just start. When it comes to entrepreneurship, there is no ideal path because things will change all the time. Most important is just to start. Once you have clarity around your idea, it comes down to execution and the willingness to throw the idea in the bin if it doesn’t work out.
The good thing about getting started is that it gives you the best feedback ever. If your consumer doesn’t like the idea, they will let you know immediately. It allows you to iterate and improve.
Which aspects of a business model are most important to a VC considering from a long term investment point of view? (Smit Ojha, University of Newcastle)
Tran: Founders must be reminded that not all successful businesses need venture capital and that other sources of capital exist outside of venture capital. That said, not having a scalable business model in a rapidly growing market is the most common reason for rejections by VCs.
Ask yourself, “In five years, can my company reasonably make US$100 million in annual revenue?”. If your answer is yes, but your plan to achieve that goal depends solely on execution or only by offering better pricing, that would not be an ideal strategy for most VCs.
In that case, angel, strategic, or private equity investors might be a better match for capital sources. In venture capital, the path to growth and scalable revenue often depends on uniquely differentiated advantages such as new technology or early mover advantages.
If you can demonstrate those advantages while showing a path to rapid growth and scalable revenue, you’ve cleared a couple of the many hurdles in unlocking venture capital.
How can a student entrepreneur display their credibility while raising funds as a student? (Zhi Hui, founder at Skilio )
Lints: No different than regular entrepreneurs. Show the willingness and capacity to win the market your in. Provide insight into why your idea is more valuable than other ideas. Show investors, you have done your homework properly when it comes to the tech you’re building or the industry you’re trying win over. It’s not always about traction. Some entrepreneurs raise money at a really early stage because they were very diligent about presenting their idea and doing research on the market.
What are some actionable ways I can build my network to reach out to VCs while still studying? (Diyanne Kassim, Singapore Management University)
Tran: First, build a list of VCs that you care about. You’ll have a better chance connecting with seed stage investors than with Series A and beyond. This is because investors focused on Series A rounds and beyond typically are looking for companies that have revenues north of US$4 million and tend to be less engaged with new and inexperienced founders. Find a list of funds whose AUM is under US$100 million as most seed investors have funds well under that amount.
Here is one list and another to get you started. Go to the websites for each fund, look at the profiles of the investors, and find tidbits of information that might connect you. This might be a shared alma mater, hobby, or belief. Curate a list of VCs you want to connect with but limit it to less than ten because the quality is better than quantity when it comes to relationships.

Second, ask if anybody within your network is connected to these people. For those without common connections, you’ll need to cold email. Craft a personal and sincere email for each investor and forward to your common connection, asking for an intro or send a cold email.

Be concise and very specific about what you’re asking for in your email, whether it be simple career advice or an invite to talk to the school’s entrepreneurship group and include specific next steps. For example, if the next steps involve a call, give the investor several 30 minute times that you’re available for them to choose from in the timezone that is friendly to the investor. Be respectful of their time and make it easy for them to accept, and you’ll have a VC network in no time.

Also Read: Why should universities teach blockchain to students?

Does dress code matter while pitching? (Arbaaz Iqbal, SP Jain)
Tran: Within that first 60-minute meeting, investors are trying to understand your mindset, values, and motivations quickly, so it’s essential that you’re as authentic as you can be.
Your dress code should closely represent your default setting, whether it be a suit or jeans and a T-shirt. You’re not selling a product or service but rather a version of yourself and investors want to meet the real you. So no, the dress code doesn’t matter.
What are some behavioural differences between VCs in different regions? For example, Southeast Asian VCs compared to American VCs? (Victor Han, National University of Singapore)
Lints: The most significant difference for me is the ecosystem they operate in. The US is way more mature when it comes to tech investments. The ecosystem, therefore, is more competitive. Southeast Asian VC is still very collaborative.
If a student with no credible background wanted to catch up with a VC over coffee, would he be willing? (Jovan Lee, Nanyang Polytechnic)

Lints: Ha! Define credible? To me, it’s about how you approach a VC. Asking someone for a  coffee without a clear plan is a waste of everyone’s time. Don’t immediately ask the coffee question but try to gauge if there is a sincere interest in a conversation.
Tran: Contrary to popular belief, most VCs I know work a ton of hours and have very little work-life balance. Aside from talking to new founders, VCs have to spend time with their team, limited partners, and the founders with whom they have already invested. This leaves very little time for anyone else.
However, I believe experienced professionals from all industries, not just venture capital, should take the time to mentor juniors and give back to their communities. So don’t hesitate to reach out to VCs.
Image Credit:  Harrison Kugler

The post How do you raise VC funding as a student entrepreneur? Find out the answers here appeared first on e27.