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Why Vietnam is going to emerge the strongest post-COVID-19?

vietnam

Vietnam is one of the first countries to ease social distancing measures and reopen its society as early as April 2020, where most countries are only starting to grapple with the severity and spread of COVID-19.

Also known as the land of the ‘Ascending Dragon’ (due to the geographical shape on the world map), it the first in Southeast Asia to emerge from the global pandemic, allowing for businesses and domestic travels to reopen. Vietnam is also identified as one of the first countries in Southeast Asia when Singapore reopened its borders for travellers.

The total number of COVID-19 cases in Vietnam stands at 349 (as of 22 June), with zero deaths. This stands in stark comparison with more than 42,000 cases in Singapore, 30,682 in the Philippines, and 8,587 in Malaysia.

The international community is stunned by Vietnam’s breakthrough during this COVID-19 pandemic. An Asahi Shimbun reporter assigned to cover Vietnam was intrigued by the following statement by a Japanese national who works in the country: “Even though I talked about the very few patients infected with the new coronavirus and the Vietnamese government’s tough measures to combat COVID-19, no one in Tokyo believed me.”

Following the outbreak of the coronavirus, the IMF’s 2020 GDP growth forecast for ASEAN-5 countries – Indonesia, Malaysia, the Philippines, Singapore, and Thailand – is cut to -1.3 per cent (and Singapore -4-7 per cent), but Vietnam is expected to still experience positive 2.7 per cent GDP growth, with a strong rebound of seven per cent projected in 2021. Prime Minister Nguyen Xuan Phuc sent a positive 2020 economic growth target of over five per cent, in spite of IMF’s projection.

Also Read: As a startup investor, here is why we aim to focus more on Vietnam in 2021

From this, we can see Vietnam is poised to emerge one of the strongest economies in Southeast Asia and these are the three reasons why:

Swift action and digital services

Vietnam’s ability to achieve such outstanding results due to the swift and decisive actions from the national government, followed by coordinated and dedicated efforts of the general population. Vietnam took action very early when there was minimal information about the virus.

Nationwide school shutdowns were implemented in January, travel restrictions and border closure followed quickly.  Vietnam also implemented aggressive contact tracing and quarantine people who are exposed to suspected cases for two weeks.

The Ministry of Health developed an app, NCOVI, health authorities disseminated warnings and orders through Zalo, a homegrown messaging app with more than 50 million users, and the internet spread a coronavirus public awareness pop song that went viral.

The swift action and digital services enabled transparency and collective and informed decisions in Vietnam’s battle against COVID-19, enabling them to emerge fast from the pandemic.

Resilient economy and startup ecosystem

The Business Times reports “Mobility metrics show the fastest recovery of activity in Vietnam, with movements to retail and recreation venues having rebounded to just 15 per cent below the baseline, compared to more than 60 per cent below baseline before measures began to lift.”

Also Read: How Vietnam’s e-commerce firm Tiki is tiding over COVID-19 crisis

People may remember Vietnam for their amicable people, natural wonders, and sometimes their fight for independence for over 30 years. Through this COVID-19 episode, the world now views them in a new light, as a resilient and stable country, and one of the hubs for innovation and entrepreneurship in Asia.

The innovation ecosystem in Vietnam is attractive to e-commerce, software outsourcing, AI, fintech, healthtech startups. With more than 3,000 startups in the ecosystem, total investment in Vietnam startups increased six-fold in the period of two years between 2017 and 2019.

Some of the tech startups have also contributed to the fight against COVID-19 in providing online medical consultations, medical deliveries, and on-demand access to healthcare services.

Strong cross-border collaboration

“Being ahead of the curve, the ASEAN chair is in good stead to lead and shape regional responses on the pandemic”, says Dr Huong Le Thu, senior analyst at the Australian Strategic Policy Institute told The Straits Times.

Vietnam works closely with the regional neighbours in COVID-19 response and also in terms of driving regional growth and innovation.

To drive regional startup ecosystem development and integration, Vietnam’s public and sector stakeholders have been actively partnering with international entities for two-way market access for startups expanding in the region.

Quest Ventures, in partnership with statutory boards under the Ministry of Trade and Industry of Singapore and Saigon Innovation Hub (SIHUB), supports Singapore startups entering Vietnam through Vietnam Global Innovation (VGI) acceleration.

Also Read: Vietnam’s F88 raises US$6M in funding to expand its lending platform

Leading venture capital in Southeast Asia, Quest Ventures supports startups through Quest Ventures’ wide network of mentors and domain experts. Startups will also have access to high quality and comprehensive online training module topics, and (if global health situation allows) an in-market immersion in Vietnam to maximize exposure and establish long-term partnerships between startups and ecosystem players.

It is no surprise that Vietnam emerged fastest during this health crisis and this winning strategy of swift action, resilience and cross-border collaboration is also the same one that will allow the economy and startup ecosystem to rise strongly in the region.

Register for our next webinar: How to pivot your growth strategy post COVID-19

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.

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Humanising customer experience is the best way to build loyalty in a post-COVID-19 world

customer experience

We know we are entering a “new normal” even after all lockdowns for COVID-19 ease. Those in Singapore have just eased into Phase 2 of our country’s reopening.

Most agree that the new normal, which some predict might last for a few years, will consist of intermittent lockdowns, more digital touchpoints, and more restrictions around physical spaces. Recently, Brian Halligan (CEO, Hubspot) shared an informative deck on what we might expect of the new normal.

What does this mean for customer experience (CX), especially when CX is the key to acquiring customers and the landscape has changed?

I believe there is a good opportunity for companies to rethink and reboot their CX strategies on a clean slate. Companies that succeed well in positioning their CX strategy from this point onwards, will also succeed well in differentiating themselves, acquiring customers and even building long-term loyalty. The key is figuring out the kind of CX strategy that works well for our world today, and I address it below.

Effective customer experience and how it builds loyalty

The first key is to think about CX as a whole: what makes it effective in peacetime, how strong brands build loyalty, and what changes the game now.

Customer loyalty starts with effective personal relationships between customers and companies. In the sales context, the most effective salespeople and advisors never sound “sales-sy”. They are customer-centric and often go beyond the call of duty, safeguarding client interests and focusing on creating value. Clients that have had experiences exceeding expectations stay loyal to such advisors even as these advisors move on to new companies.

Also Read: Customer is not always the king, says Tokopedia’s customer engagement expert

We know that an effective CX strategy puts itself in the shoes of the customer and considers the customer at all touchpoints. The main challenge in the new normal is that digital touchpoints and interfaces are by nature impersonal and there aren’t ways for companies to engage customers through events, so the key question is: how do companies show customer-centricity and build personal relationships despite this?

In-person customer experience

We can first analyse different touchpoints, especially with the rise of physical-digital fusions. Many retail companies, especially in the e-commerce space (such as Style Theory and Love, Bonito), are omni-channel.

Those with brick-and-mortar platforms could think about how social distancing and contact tracing measures change the way customers physically interact with their business. Do they pose “barriers to entry”, which discourage customers from patronising stores?

Customers might also hang around within these enclosed spaces for longer periods since signing in and out is inconvenient. If there are fewer people and they are hanging around longer, then there is an opportunity for companies to re-create customer interactions as experiential journeys. This can create enjoyment-associations and affection for the brand.

Pre-COVID-19, some e-commerce companies had already started shifting towards curating physical-digital experiences. Love, Bonito in Singapore had their latest store at Funan providing an eclectic space with digital catalogues and stocks updated in real-time. The space had an AR feature allowing shoppers to view the space using decorative filters.

There was an artful curation of visually stimulating displays and neon lights. Of course, there are further considerations for a post-Covid-19 shopping experience – surfaces should be touch-free, rather than be touchscreens.  Perhaps now, panels and screens showing animations and immersive art might be a new tactic.

Also Read: How startups can consistently acquire new customers post-COVID-19

A post-COVID-19 future might accelerate re-imagination of the immersive superstore or the experience hub.

There are other broader concerns to monitor in a well-rounded CX strategy that is beyond the scope of this article. Privacy might be an issue if customers become wary of being tracked.

Resistance and misplaced anger might also increase, as customers get annoyed with being told what to do and how to behave in these prescriptive environments. Businesses will have to manage these considerations with empathetic communication strategies.

Digital customer experience

Given the weight of digital engagement now, refining touchpoints on digital platforms is an important key.

We are all familiar that the amount of time it takes for a user (or customer) to achieve their objective on a platform influences the quality of their experience. A viral recent study by product expert Peter Ramsey (writer of Built for Mars) compares the amount of time (number of clicks and of days) it takes to open a bank account in the UK. Challenger banks perform better than most incumbents. Of course, it is more complicated than that as a faster experience is not the only factor determining a high-quality experience.

In the second instalment, he looks at his experience of sending payments, evaluating a comprehensive mix of factors with incumbents and challengers winning at different ones.

Also Read: Customer experience: The opportunity that growing businesses are failing to see

Generally, we all realise that ease of use and access to key functions are important. Customers find a lagging website or having too many steps a poor experience. For example, while chatbots are well-intentioned, an unresponsive chatbot is a poor experience, and so is a chatbot that is unable to provide answers even after a user has spent time typing their questions.

While we have talked about functional websites and apps, an interesting tactic that has fared well now is using AR in digital apps. This is another take on the digital-physical fusion, with an emphasis on assimilating the physical into the digital. This article gives an example of Singapore physical-first furniture retailer Castlery adapting well by re-creating their physical showrooms in AR, enabling customers to enjoy virtual tours of living spaces.

It’s impressive that they have tagged all the items and enabled true-to-scale capability for its furniture pieces, so that users can visualise in real-time how the furniture would look against the real-life dimensions and appearance of their rooms. Chinese retail also shows us the future of e-commerce experiences ahead – they sell products through livestreaming by showing viewers how products – from clothes to make-up – look in real-time and has actually resulted in increased sales. This could be the standard for customer engagement using digital platforms.

The last factor to consider is the use of personalisation to tailor any recommendations, advice, products to specific customer needs. Data analytics and machine learning are commonly discussed as tools to extract deep insights from user data to build products and strategies. One issue here is privacy, data protection and consent, but that is also a broader topic outside of this article.

How to shape the customer experience and build a connection 

Most know that the key to winning customers and preventing them from disengaging lies in reducing friction throughout their interactions with the business. As many digital products are easily substitutable, some marketing strategies also aim to create customer and product stickiness through loyalty and reward programmes.

However, it’s fair to say that such campaigns can become undifferentiated gimmicky races-to-the-bottom driving price wars. So, how else can companies differentiate themselves through their CX strategies?

I suggest that we have to start from first principles and understand why some salespeople and advisors retain clients more than others do. Companies must build “personal” relationships and the brand is an important medium to achieve that.

Also Read: Authenticity first: 5 tips for effective customer communication post-COVID-19</a>

A brand goes beyond just aesthetics. It comprises all messaging communicated through tangible and intangible displays, such as visual design, content, actions. Even the quality of the digital user experience affects brand perception – poor quality denotes an untrustworthy or sloppy brand.

The brand is a fabric of what the company stands for, from their mission to their values and impact. Customers feel engaged with a brand when the brand is empathetic, the company values resonate with them and are values they care about. They may even learn new insights about the world that they wouldn’t have known.

The deeper question to ask that is rarely explored in-depth amongst all UX/ CX, marketing and brand strategies is: what is the kind of brand that is inspiring of loyalty in a world like this today, and what characterises this world now? That will inform what customers need from a brand today.

Branding that inspires loyalty

We live in polarised times, driven by multi-directional tensions, with COVID-19 exacerbating these. There are geopolitical, economic, socio-political tensions between society, government, business and financial markets. Customers now have baseline expectations for how companies respond, whether they add value to the public good, and whether they walk their talk. Any good brand strategy in these times gets to the core of stakeholder capitalism.

Types of indicators include: how do brands respond to ESG concerns; do they employ equitable practices in their supply chains; are employees, contractors, workers down the supply chain fairly compensated; is the work culture toxic or exploitative; do they step up in a global crisis; do they respond to societal issues. Empathy has also become a key criterion: does the company genuinely care about their customers and their stakeholders?

A recent example includes the widespread socio-political discussion on systemic racism sparked by the unjustified death of African-American George Floyd by a police officer. This has rocked the world and everyone, from the average person to big business, is weighing in. During these sensitive times, people observe how brands react.

Also Read: Between data and gut feeling, which one do Singaporean customers trust to make decisions?

Many have expressed that any systemic silence is being noticed, while others call for actions over words. Big tech such as Netflix, Amazon and Microsoft have issued public statements expressing regret and solidarity. VC firms and networks such as a16z and SoGal have prepared funds, grants and programmes targeted at Blacks, Latinx and other minority entrepreneurs.

CEOs of global brands have also personally spoken out through public or company-circulated statements. Now that some time has passed, companies have also taken the time to write out concrete action plans (such as Microsoft and Crunchbase).

In fact, consumers are noticing when there’s incongruence between the public stance of a company and their actual actions – such is Facebook’s case, where they are mired in a controversy due to their lack of regulation towards the US president’s incendiary and racist posts. They have been criticised as being inauthentic although they have announced a donation towards anti-racism efforts.

Right now, more than ever, consumers see that “what you do is who you are” (borrowing the title of Ben Horowitz’s book). All statements by tech companies are being logged by The Plug through crowdsourced insights and made public. Although nobody can escape the question of authenticity or performative allyship, it is obvious when a brand is making a genuine effort to step up (even if they hadn’t succeeded before) or when they are paying only lip service.

On the local and regional front in Asia, responses towards socio-political matters, whether global or local, are usually more muted. This might be due to cultural differences; I believe the tech community shouldn’t shun these topics, but that is a broader topic outside of this article.

Also Read: Coping with consumer behaviour during the COVID-19 crisis

There have been other actions (or inaction) through which tech brands in Asia illustrate their values.  Jack Ma and Alibaba donated masks and COVID-19 test-kits around the world, regardless of region. Alibaba also started providing supplier credit to US small businesses.

Razer set up face mask production to produce five million free face masks for Singapore. These are steps that show a strong social awareness of public duty to step up in a global crisis – that they care enough about public solidarity to leverage their resources to help the community. These can bolster consumer confidence and trust in these brands, especially amidst trying times.

Again, there is always the question whether all these actions are sincere or mere PR exercises, but eventual consistency in value-creating efforts speaks for itself. A good example of branding and authenticity arose recently. When Nike released an anti-racism marketing campaign with a twist on its signature tagline ‘Just Do It’, it sparked discourse split between praise and disdain for the sports giant.

While some praised Nike for speaking up in a prominent manner through the eyebrow-raising twist, others criticised them for taking advantage of a serious matter to spin an opportunistic marketing campaign. Although the public may never come to any agreement on this, Nike then followed up with actions by working with Michael Jordan to donate US$10 million towards anti-racism efforts over the next 10 years.

No matter anyone’s final verdict on these matters, we can generally agree – better that there are actions done for the public good than there are none, as we remember those that showed up for us in bad times than not. The same applies to how we experience brands.

Right now, what customers need and expect from brands have exceeded textbook requirements of good UX and good customer service. Our experience of brands sits within our larger experience of the world. Our experience of the world shapes what we need as people and hence what we expect of brands.

Also Read: Pepfuels’s IoT-RFID device ensures smart delivery of motor fuels at customers’ doorsteps in India

We connect with a brand that is human during trying times. We remember if they were empathetic towards their customers and the community when people went through hardships and polarised conflicts divided us. We look to them for moral authority and support when the world struggles to find its footing.

While we are amid a great reset, seizing this opportunity to re-imagine and execute a strong CX strategy can build long-term loyalty. A holistic CX strategy is customer-centric when it walks in the customer’s shoes, integrating strong UX strategy and a brand strategy that is well-fit for current times.

In a trying period where people must swap in-person engagement for digital and fault lines are rupturing, being able to be personal, human and authentic is a strong differentiating factor. Right now more than ever, society expects brands not to turn away but to speak up on things that matter to everyone. When customers find your brand sincere and empathetic, they will remember you and help you on your path.

Register for our next webinar: How to pivot your growth strategy post COVID-19

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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Indonesia’s beauty-tech startup Social Bella raises US$58M Series E from Temasek, Pavilion, Jungle Ventures

Social Bella founding team

Social Bella, a company that runs a string of internet properties in the e-commerce space in Indonesia, including e-commerce platform Sociolla, has secured US$58 million in additional funding as part of its ongoing Series E round from Temasek, Pavilion Capital and Jungle Ventures.

As per an official statement, the company will use the capital to further boost its growth in the local beauty and personal care market, which, according to Euromonitor, is expected to grow to US$8.5 billion by 2022.

A portion of the money will also be used to scale up its technology infrastructure.

John Rasjid, Co-founder and CEO of Social Bella, said: “We recently launched our new business line, Lilla by Sociolla (lilla.id), specifically for young and sophisticated mothers who are looking for the best-curated products for children and themselves too. There are growing needs for good quality products by this customer group and we will strive to deliver our best to serve their needs.”

Also Read: Indonesian beauty platform Social Bella embraces O2O with the launch of physical store

Launched in 2015, Social Bella has evolved from being beauty e-commerce to a complete ecosystem that seeks to unlock Indonesia’s growing beauty and personal care market. The company claims that it has created several business units and is estimated to serve around 30 million users in 2020.

So far, it has built add-ons that complement its overall beauty and care ecosystem, such as:

  • SOCO, an online consumer review platform for beauty and personal care products
  • Beauty Journal, an online beauty and lifestyle media with O2O marketing service
  • Sociolla, a beauty and personal care e-commerce in Indonesia, which now also has an offline store with the OmniChannel concept
  • Lilla by Sociolla, a beauty and personal care e-commerce service specifically designed for Indonesian mothers

Also Read: Sociolla’s parent secures US$40M to develop its community platform SOCO

  • Brand Development, the business unit that offers end-to-end distributor service for beauty and personal care brands.

According to its Co-founder and President Christopher Madiam, the COVID-19 pandemic has massively challenged almost all businesses globally. However, Social Bella is adapting quickly to the challenge and continue to serve our consumers’ needs.

“With our integrated ecosystem backed by technology and based on a deep understanding of Indonesian consumers, we can still serve our consumers in a relevant way while remaining competitive,” Madiam added.

Last year, Social Bella completed its ecosystem as an integrated beauty-tech and end-to-end brand distributor in Indonesia by launching a flagship omnichannel store in Lippo Mall Puri.

At present, Social Bella owns six physical stores across the country.

Previously, Social Bella secured a Series D investment of US$40 million in September 2019. The investment was led by East Venture Growth, Temasek, Pavilion Capital, and Jungle Ventures.

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Meet the first batch of e27 Pro Perks partners

e27 pro perks

We’re happy to announce a new feature for e27 Pro, Perks!

Perks is designed to give pro members access to top-class products and services with over US$10,000 worth in savings.

To be able to do that, we have partnered with these amazing companies for these e27 Pro exclusive perks:

Airtable ($2,000)

In a nutshell, Airtable is a crossbreed between a spreadsheet and a database, combining their flexibility and power. Users of Airtable are entrepreneurs who use it to build MVPs, fill in the gaps between other tools, and develop custom workflows to manage processes like product launches, user research, content marketing, even fundraising outreach.

Pro member perks:

  • $2000 Airtable credit
  • One credit redemption per company (Existing Airtable customers are also eligible)

Access this Pro perk here.

AWS Activate ($5,000)


Amazon Web Services is an infrastructure platform that provides startups with low cost, easy to use infrastructure needed to scale and grow businesses of any size. AWS Activate is a programme with resources designed to help startups get started on AWS.

Pro member perks:

  • $5,000 in AWS Activate Credits valid for 2 years
  • 1 year of AWS Business Support (up to $1,500)
  • 80 credits for self-paced labs

Access this Pro perk here.

Hotjar (3 months)

Trusted by over 550,000 websites worldwide, Hotjar is on a mission to help companies better understand how users behave on their website so they can make the right changes, improve UX, and increase conversions.

Pro member perk: 3 months on Hotjar Business Plan (20,000 Pageviews) for free

Access this Pro perk here.

Hubspot (90%)

HubSpot offers a platform that lets your entire company work together — from marketing, sales, and customer service among many others. The Hubspot for Startups programme is designed to help startups grow and scale better via education resources, tailored training, professional software at startup pricing, and access to an integrated platform that supports startup business growth.

Pro member perks:

  • Up to 90% off Hubspot software in the first year for startups with under US$2 million in funding
  • Up to 50% off Hubspot software in the first year for startups that have raised over US$2 million in named funding up to and including Series A

Access this Pro perk here.

Segment ($50,000 USD)
Segment
Segment is an analytics platform used by 20,000+ companies to collect data from their web & mobile apps and integrate 250+ analytics & growth tools. Integrating with best-in-class tools is as easy as flipping a switch.
Segment now has a special partnership with e27! Each early stage e27 Pro startups can get $50,000 in Segment credits per year.

They’ll teach you how to set up your analytics stack — they have worked with Y-Combinator to develop a talk called Analytics for Startups. Signup for the next office hours over Zoom. Co-workers and teammates welcome!

Pro member perks:

You can qualify if your company is:

  • Less than 24 months since founding
  • Raised less than $5M USD

Access this Pro perk here.

Stripe ($25,000 SGD)

Stripe is one of the best software platforms for companies running internet businesses. They handle billions of dollars every year for forward-thinking businesses around the world.

Pro member perks:

  • Waived Stripe fees on a startup’s first $25,000 SGD in core processing that they do on Stripe (Applies to Stripe users who have yet to receive free processing credits. Twelve-month expiration.)
  • Custom processing rates once startup company processes over $350,000 SGD per month for more than two months with in their first 12 months of working with Stripe
  • Priority betas and special event access

Access this Pro perk here.

Typeform (30%)

Typeform is a platform that helps make collecting and circulating information seamless, comfortable, and conversational. It’s a web-based platform you can use to create anything from surveys to apps, without needing to write a single line of code.

Pro member perk: 30% off annual Typeform Professional or Premium plans for your first year

Access this Pro perk here.

Zendesk (6 Months Free)

Zendesk is a service-first CRM company that builds software designed to improve customer relationships. As employees, they encourage each other to grow and innovate. As a company, they roll up our sleeves to plant roots in the communities they call home.

Pro member perks:

  • Six months of access to Zendesk Support Suite, Guide, Explore and Sunshine at no cost (full program coverage details)
  • Online office hour sessions with their startup customer success team
  • Access to their Startups Community including events, content, and resources

Access this Pro perk here.

Join e27 Pro

If you want to enjoy these exclusive perks available only with Pro, be a part of the Pro community and sign up for an e27 Pro membership today! You may visit here for more details.

Stay tuned to find out what other Perks we have in store!

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In brief: Decentro raises funding from Y Combinator, Plug & Play

Decentro Founder Rohit Taneja

Full-stack API platform Decentro raises funding from Y Combinator, Plug & Play

Decentro, an automated API-based platform that enables financial integrations with just a few lines of code, announced today it has closed its first round of funding from YCombinator, Plug & Play Ventures, and a group of angel investors from the Asia Pacific.

Founded in 2020 by serial fintech entrepreneur Rohit Taneja, Decentro offers a full-stack API banking platform where you can come, select your desired modules, play in the sandbox, and launch your product with just a few lines of code. The firm also takes care of all upcoming fixes, iterations, and updates without breaking any flow.

The startup is currently working with three leading banks in India.

“This unified approach not only simplifies your product launch but also the subsequent development cycles and upgrades. One of the biggest hidden challenges in working with legacy institutions directly is the number of touchpoints that you need to coordinate with after completing your integrations,” said Taneja.

Taneja has earlier founded Mypoolin, which was acquired by a leading Califonia-based global payments player in 2017, which in turn got acquired by Naspers backed PayU in 2019.

Part of Y Combinator’s summer batch of 2020, Decentro is also backed by Upsparks VC.

Taneja’s partner Pratik Daudkhane was previously a venture capitalist at Guild Capital.

Blue Ashva Capital hits initial close of its maiden startup fund in India

India-based Blue Ashva Capital has announced the initial close of its maiden SME and startup focused fund in India with commitments of INR 454 crores (~US$60 million).

Investors include family offices and high net worth individuals.

Blue Ashva proposes to raise a sum of INR 400 crores with a greenshoe option of INR 200 crores. It has exercised a part of the greenshoe option at the initial close.

The fund will invest in businesses across sectors including financial services, technology, healthcare, consumer, manufacturing etc. through equity, debt or any combination thereof.

The fund will also back professional-turn-entrepreneurs and partner with global companies to invest in India.

Vaniday relaunches as beauty and wellness platform

Vaniday, an online platform providing booking solutions for beauty salons and services in Singapore, announced today the official relaunch.

The comeback sees the roll out of its new website www.vaniday.com.sg, together with its revamped app.

The firm also added new features, including an online marketplace of beauty and wellness products VaniMall, digital beauty and lifestyle magazine VaniZine, and revamped loyalty programme.

Since its soft launch in February 2020, it claims to have on-boarded 10 per cent more merchants to 1,000 with plans to further grow this pool by 300 per cent in the next 12 months.

“This is the start of a new chapter for Vaniday. I see a huge potential in amplifying the original focus on just beauty and wellness to comprise other areas such as providing relevant wellness, F&B and health offerings for users,” said Ruth Teo, CEO of Vaniday.

“Merchants being made available on the platform have also been expanded to include fitness studios such as gyms, chiropractic services, and acupuncture therapy. We want to help the beauty-conscious community in Singapore discover a wide selection of services and products and connect them with fellow like-minded individuals,” he added.

Image Credit: Decentro

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