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Time to pivot, not panic: The startup advantage to dealing with a pandemic

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A 2020 Global Startup Ecosystem Report shows that the Asia Pacific emerged as one of the major beneficiaries of democratisation, as the region has gone from having 20 per cent of the world’s top startup ecosystems in 2012 to 30 per cent this year. But after the pandemic hit the startups, they are struggling on two fronts: capital and demand.

Coronavirus will lead to the worst recession since the Great Depression, the International Monetary Fund has projected in a recent world economic outlook. Volatility has spiked, in some cases to levels last seen during the global financial crisis, amid the uncertainty about the economic impact of the pandemic.

For all those startup founders and leaders who are dealing with the uncertainty of the pandemic, one thing is clear: this is the time to pivot and not panic.

While many startups have seen tightened purse strings of the investor, are regulating tighter cashflows and optimising resources, they are also eyeing government subsidies and resilience packages closely. Unforeseen challenges have been thrown into this mix, where the way we used to do business in the past, has been forced to change.

Movement restrictions and remote working culture have led to a boom in digital businesses – digital payments, e-commerce and logistics, telehealth, and short-form content platforms like TikTok have seen a spike in adoption, opening lucrative doors for tech startups from such sectors. But what about other businesses that might not be relevant or are in a paused state due to the pandemic?

Also Read: How to logically decide when it’s time to pivot

Especially the enterprise sector, for whom this can be a huge challenge. First, for any business, being in the pause state is an outright no-no. Though operations could come to a semi standstill, this is the time that these companies can spend on looking ahead and innovating for the new world order. This is an evident business imperative. Startups that can adapt and fine-tune their products to the market demand will see through this time.

From skyrocketing stocks to mass layoffs, B2B SaaS companies are having a wild ride. Software-as-a-service startups are not the ones grabbing the most eyeballs since digital banks and driverless cars tend to dominate the headlines. As large companies move towards being digital due to the coronavirus crisis, the SaaS companies like Zoom and Twilio have seen their valuations jump. The litmus test with the coronavirus crisis will be whether these B2B products or services are deemed as ‘essential’ or ‘good to have’.

For us at Sansan, after witnessing the highest IPO of 2019 at the Tokyo Stock Exchange we thought the road ahead for our regional expansion is clear. But in a short period, things changed. Like others, we are also having to wage this war with the pandemic, quickly navigate the shifts, and accelerate our innovation efforts.

The fact that we have been a startup has honed us long enough to deal with the new world order we will very soon see. I believe the same goes for many other startups as well. This is the time to use the nimbleness, your capability to innovate, operational flexibility, and fluidity to adapt to the market changes.

It is also essential to seek solutions to the pressing problems that your customers are facing. If you can successfully do that, you can turn your business around. That is what we are doing.

Also Read: How startups can tap community networks to pivot for growth amidst the pandemic

We provide a cloud-based contact management solution to our customers, which allows the company to visualise all the connections within their company. These records are fed into the Sansan interface by an employee by simply scanning the business card using the Sansan phone app.

In the advent of remote working though, how do these companies continue to maintain an accurate contact database? How can companies sell effectively remotely with sales pipelines softening, meetings cancelled and lengthening sales cycles? Also, with lockdowns, the business card culture is already fading away – do we need an alternate and if so, why? These are the questions that we are answering our customers.

One approach is to reshape our business priorities and look for opportunity areas, amidst the new reality that surrounds us.

The most recent Global State of Remote Work report by videoconferencing company Owl Labs, which polled more than 3,000 employees across six continents, found that Asia had 9% more companies that do not allow remote work than the global average. Now with coronavirus-imposed lockdowns, remote work, if possible, is being adopted by organisations across Asia, as the means for business continuity.

Across ASEAN, as remote working picks up, we are witnessing an unprecedented shift in business culture and rituals, and we want to be right at the centre of all of this, helping our customers adapt to this change. We are taking business card exchange online across the region and launching new functions like integration with Microsoft Teams to make it easier for people meeting remotely to exchange contact information.

Also Read: Why moving fast and pivoting is necessary for startups

The P-word has been dominating virtual boardroom discussions world over: in this case not ‘pandemic’ but’ productivity’. The use of productivity apps will play an even greater role in helping startups weather this storm.

Every crisis has a silver lining – you just need to look for it. With sales events, customer meetings, and industry conferences being cancelled and pushed, all businesses must approach this problem with a positive outlook and a three-pillared strategy: Reshaping for the new normal, looking inwards to re-energise and embracing digital communications.

There are many startups in SEA whom I see pivoting or re-energising themselves with the current times:

  • Saas startups accelerate growth amid digitisation – A Barcelona based survey provider, Typeform said that their monthly recurring revenue has gone from 1% weekly growth pre-lockdown, to 6 per cent during quarantine. Work from home is too, driving their demand, and they’ve seen more usage across education and other sectors that weren’t using them so much.
  • Manoeuvring through disruption in the events industry – Spurred by the coronavirus crisis and on-ground event cancellations, Eventhub, an event technology company based in Japan has released in April, EventHub online, which can hold large scale conferences and webinars, as the future business growth avenue.
  • Logistics and food deliveries space heats up – The ride-hailing sector has seen emerging startups like the social carpooling app, Ryde and ride-hailing app TADA innovate by venturing into food delivery and courier services or accelerating their existing efforts in the space. TADA Fresh is offering drivers the means to keep earning and helping wet markets to keep a steady flow of income.
  • Mapping newer growth areas under healthcare – Given COVID-19, the Singaporean company WhiteCoat, a telehealth company, part of MOH’s regulatory sandbox, has been attracting a lot of patients to take online video consultations for their health problems. According to media reports, their traffic has been increasing by 25% every week, encouraging the startup to plan for expansion to other markets outside Singapore over time.

Some 3D manufacturers are now firing up printers to create personal protective equipment for healthcare workers, and startups used to making phone booths for offices are now producing coronavirus testing booths for healthcare facilities.

An EY report from March found that more than three-quarters of executives said they were either re-evaluating or already taking steps to push through automation and digital transformation.

In short, we cannot go back to the way we were. Instead, we must become a more adaptable, learning organisation competing through speed and innovation to stay relevant. It can be helpful to apply a technology mindset when rethinking the business and the roles of people.

Every decision you make signals to people and customers whether you will emerge from this crisis as the winner. Remember to send the right signals.

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Image credit: Tonik on Unsplash

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After his savings struggle, this founder is helping “ambitious teens” become financially responsible

Walrus Cofounders – Nakul Kelkar, Bhagaban Behera, Sriharsha Setty

 

In India, there is a growing problem of adults becoming financially dependent on their parents. As per a recent HSBC report, 55 per cent of parents still provide financial support to their adult children.

This practice is viewed as common because most adults in India only learn to become financially responsible in the later stages of their lives.

“When you are young, a lot of your decisions get taken by the parents which leads to a lot of problems, especially in India. For example, when you get your first job and start earning, you don’t know what to do with your salary. People also really think about financial planning only in their late 20’s,” said entrepreneur Bhagaban Behera.

“A 15-year-old today is quite independent and ambitious. He or she wants to follow his or her own career choices and make own decisions. He/she no longer wants to be under the parents and we feel that money plays a big role in this independence,” he added.

Behera sensed an opportunity here and he, along with Sriharsha Setty and Nakul Kelkar, started Walrus, a neobank that helps teenagers manage their pocket money.

The startup’s mission is to build a system where a child can get his/her financial independence at a very young age through savings and investment.

From banking to entrepreneurship

Behera realised the importance of good money management skills only after he switched his lucrative banking job to become an entrepreneur.

“I started my career as a banker in Singapore. Since I was earning considerably, I was not concerned about saving, investing and budgeting because there was enough money for everything,” he shared.

“When I made the shift to become a founder, my income naturally decreased and expenses increased, and there was a need to manage the business savings. So when I ran out of savings, it occurred to me that I didn’t plan well for it,” he said sharing the story behind the startup.

Also Read: Going big? Then Go e27 Pro.

Prior to Walrus, Behera has already been the startup founder of an AI-based Virtual Digital Assistant solutions called Monk.

How it works

Walrus operates as a payments platform where parents can add money on app for their children and put certain controls like spending limit. There are functionalities to set budgets. For example, a child can budget for his food and  transport.

Behera says that by setting budgets, children do not need to constantly go to their parents and ask them to buy them what they want.

“For example, if a child wants to buy a camera, he can save up for it and then plan to use the savings to purchase it within a certain period. When you are using cash, you don’t have an account of how much money you are spending. But when you are using a digital platform, you know how much money you spend and on what. This helps develop a habit of financial accountability,” he said.

Other than that the founders are also planning to add a feature in the future to help users invest in mutual funds.

Also Read: Riding the irony: Can Indonesian GO-JEK afford supporting LGBTQ rights in a country that condemns it?

But it does not want to be just a payment and banking app, which is why the founders have built a community around teens who, the founder terms, as “the aspirational children who want to go one mile more than the normal child”.

The app does this by organising events where they bring in successful investors, counsellors and entrepreneurs to help children benefit and build a perspective around becoming financially independent.

The teen-centred app even has an exclusive community page where it lets users create campaigns and designs for the application.

Behera recalls the idea of Monday quizzes which was suggested to them by the users and is now a popular feature within the app. By taking ideas from Gen Z’s themselves, Walrus manages to keep its customers more engaged.

Right now, the app is only available in India on the Google Play Store and plans to launch the iOS version in October this year.

Image Credit: Walrus

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In Brief: GoBear names new CFO, Anderson Tan joins Woodstock Fund

Kent Huang, CFO, GoBear

GoBear appoints Kent Huang as new CFO

The story: Singapore-based fintech startup GoBear announced that Kent Huang is set to join the company as CFO effective August 24, from fintech startup Funding Societies. He will be replacing outgoing GoBear CFO Frank Stevenaar.

Who is Kent Huang? He has held senior finance positions at companies such as GE, PayPal, and Intuit and most recently served as Group Head of Finance for APAC at Funding Societies.

What is GoBear? Starting off in Singapore in 2015, GoBear is a financial services “supermarket” that aims to empower its customers in improving their financial health. Available in seven markets in Asia

Woodstock Fund names Anderson Tan as Managing Partner

The story: Woodstock Fund announced the appointment of Anderson Tan to manage its Woodstock Capital Fund II.

Who is Anderson Tan? According to a press statement, as a serial investor and entrepreneur, Tan has a success rate of over 12.5 per cent for startup equity investing and over 30 per cent for investments in DLT and blockchain space.

As a partner at Philippine-based Launchgarage, he believes that decentralised and distributed technologies will be the soundest and most sought after technologies post-COVID-19. After a series of exits which includes companies such as Lyft, Pinterest, Docusign, Anaplan, Wave, Nanorep, Palantir, and Snapchat, Tan refocused his efforts to building and nurturing the blockchain and distributed ledger technology space. In this space, he has achieved success through popular projects such as Holochain, Zilliqa, Algorand, Tezos, Digitex, Bancor, Ontology, and Omisego.

What is Woodstock Fund? Founded in 2019, Woodstock Fund is a multi-asset global investment fund that is currently focused on investments in public Distributed Ledger Technology (DLT), Decentralised Finance & Tokenisation, and Web 3.0 protocols.

Singapore Games Association is officially launched

What is the Singapore Games Association (SGGA)? Supported by Enterprise Singapore (ESG), Infocomm Media Development Authority (IMDA), and the Singapore Tourism Board (STB), SGGA aims to develop and support a sustainable gaming and esports ecosystem locally while placing Singapore’s name on the world map.

What does it do? Initiatives include network, capacity development, and ecosystem.

What is next? It is set to host an Industry Day on August 7-8.

Image Credit: GoBear

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[Updated] Report: Grab is raising US$200M at a US$14.3B valuation from South Korean private equity firm

Updates: We added a comment by Grab spokesperson.

Singapore-based ride-hailing giant Grab is raising US$200 million from South Korean private equity firm Stic Investments Inc., according to a Bloomberg report.

Despite a layoff caused by the pandemic’s effect on the business, the funding round indicated that investors continue to pour in support to the tech giant.

Seoul-based investor Stic Investments Inc –whose portfolio companies also include Big Hit Entertainment, the company behind worldwide K-pop sensation BTS– has been planning its Southeast Asian expansion and has set aside US$100 million to invest in this region.

What Grab aims to do with the funding has not yet been revealed.

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

The company is currently valued at US$14.3 billion, according to CB Insights. Early this year, it also managed to raise more than US$850 million in funding from Japan’s Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group Inc. and TIS Inc.

This year’s pandemic has given the various impact on the Southeast Asian tech startup ecosystem. While several verticals are seeing a rise in popularity, such as health tech and e-commerce, others are finding themselves in a difficult position as investors become more careful.

An example of such company is fellow Southeast Asian unicorn Traveloka, which saw its valuation decreasing with its latest funding announcement, in what it called a “historic” drop. As a travel tech startup, the company is hit hard by the downturn faced by the travel and tourism industries in general, due to lockdown and border closure measures implemented in many countries.

A Grab spokesperson has declined to comment on the story.

Image Credit: Grab

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