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How to win term sheets and influence investors: Notes from founders of NewCampus, Snapask and Flickstree

fundraising tips from founders

Fundraising can be a daunting task for most first-time founders. Unlike running the startup, which is oftentimes based on the founders’ expertise on a subject matter or an unfair advantage they may possess, fundraising is not a skill and requires a lot of work.

Any founder who has gone through the process of fundraising can vouch for how arduous a task it is. A quick Google search can tell you all about the process of fundraising, but this article talks about actionable steps that startup founders — first-timers and seasoned — have taken to raise funds themselves.

Stop fixating on the “Idea”

“Ideas are like a**holes, everyone has one. Execution is what matters,” says William Bao Bean, General Partner at SOSV and Managing Director at Chinaccelerator and MOX.

One of the biggest myths in fundraising is the founders’ belief that they have a million-dollar idea. However, that is not always the case, as Saurabh Singh, Co-founder and CEO of Flickstree, explains. Flickstree is an AI-powered video publisher network that enables content websites and apps to maximise their revenues and has raised Series A of US$3 million in 2019.

Flickstree Co-Founders Rahul Jain, Nagender Sangra, and Saurabh Singh (L-R)

Ideas are useful only in the very early stages of the business to strike conversations with angel investors. Talking from his experience, Singh explains that the idea only helped Flickstree in the early stages of the business when they were starting out. Early investors invest in the pedigree of the founders and the idea, but over time, the pitch needs to evolve, and the idea cannot be the central theme anymore.

“If you are not embarrassed by looking at your first business plan and pitch deck after six months or one year of execution, there is something wrong,” he says.

Also Read: Term sheets: What you need to know

Take the road less traveled

NewCampus co-founder and CEO, Will Fan, shares a very interesting and unique approach to fundraising. NewCampus, a modern business school that offers live masterclasses needed to build future careers, has raised over US$1.2 million in seed money.

Having a VC that understands the business is more important than having just a popular VC. Big and prominent VCs get thousands of investment proposals and invest in hundreds of those businesses.

NewCampus Co-founders Fei Yao (left) and Will Fan; (The Business Times/ Yen Meng Jin)

NewCampus Co-founders Fei Yao (left) and Will Fan; (The Business Times/ Yen Meng Jin)

In the long run, it is important to find investors who bring not only financial resources but also other strategic resources.

Hence, instead of following a herd mentality, do your own due diligence and look for the diamonds in the rough: investors who understand your vision for the company and believe in you. This approach has allowed NewCampus to evolve, pivot, rebrand, and expand to several markets.

There is always smart money out there but as a founder, you must find the right people that are synergistic to you and smart for the business.

Look beyond the superficial numbers

Timothy Yu is the Founder and CEO, of Snapask, an on-demand tutoring startup. He raised US$35 million in a Series B round in early 2020 and an impressive US$56-plus million over the edutech startup’s lifetime.

Snapask Founder Timothy Yu; (GenT/ Moses Ng)

Having pitched to numerous investors, Yu explains that market size is often an overrated aspect of fundraising. Investors care about the long-term sustainability and the opportunities that exist in the industry that the business operates in. Founders tend to inflate market sizes and potential opportunities to legitimise the investment.

Also Read: What early stage startups should know when fundraising with VC’s

Eventually, investors are only looking into how much of the total addressable market the startup can tap into or successfully acquire. Simply claiming that a market is worth billions makes little sense if you are not servicing a significant chunk of it. What matters is your achievement and what you can practically achieve in the future.

Yu added that Snapask has always emphasised on being sustainable, looking beyond the market potential, and having a clear roadmap to profitability.

Singh echoes Yu’s thoughts and adds, “During fundraising, founders need to be clear on the scalability of their startups, the problems they’re solving, the market size, competitors, and exit plans for investors. Investors love founders who’ve done their homework.”

Be specific with investment needs

A common mistake that most founders make is being vague about the sum of money they need. Fundraising can be intimidating as the fear of rejection or the investment coming short of expectations looms over.

Hence, it is important to be able to justify to investors that the company needs the exactly what the founder is trying to raise. Timothy believes that founders should not fundraise just because they need a longer runway. Instead, they should go into the fundraising round knowing how the money they’re trying to raise will help the business grow.

This exercise not only shows the investors that you’re prepared, but also helps to build long-term trust with investors, which may be useful in subsequent fundraising rounds. And while this does not guarantee funding, it eases concerns and instills confidence that leads to a higher probability of fundraising success.

“Fundraising is not a milestone; it’s not an achievement. It’s just a necessary evil,” says Yu. Founders must understand that the long-term viability of the company depends on the sustainability of the business than on its valuation.

Founders’ pedigree matters

This point holds more truth to early-stage startups than it does to startups who have operated for a relatively longer period. Early-stage startups must make it a point to focus on their founders’ experience when pitching to investors.

Talking from his own experience building Flickstree, Singh talks about how they managed to establish authority with their background. He and his cofounder started a media company and were trying to build a content platform, where they could leverage their background of working in media and marketing.

Also Read: Early stage fundraising: What it takes to win over investors that best fit your team

This helped them build credibility with early investors as they could then answer any questions posed by the investors without being second-guessed, allowing them to raise the seed round, as well as subsequent rounds.

 Don’t bank on a single investor

Like investors looking to minimise risk by diversifying their portfolio, founders must also diversify their risk in fundraising by talking to multiple investors and not basing everything on a single investor.

One of the mistakes that Singh said he made early-on with fundraising was basing the round around one investor. While raising an angel round, the company received a deal from an investor who was meant to be the lead investor.

They made the mistake of announcing the lead investor and started collecting follow-on commitments from other investors. However, after negotiations with the lead investor fell through, the round went bust as all other investors pulled out of the deal.

“Once the lead investor pulls out, others start thinking that there must be something wrong with the company,” recalls Singh. This is when they realised that that banking on a single investor can be risky. “The round is never over until the money is actually in the bank account”, he adds.

Follow your own playbook

“There is no rulebook for startups operating in a blue ocean market,” says Fan. With billions of dollars being poured into the edtech industry today, edtech startups may be the hottest commodity in 2021 but it was not the case in 2015 when NewCampus was founded.

Attracting investors was challenging and so he says that founders must be willing to challenge the status quo and write their own playbook.

If it takes US$5,000 each from 50 investors to raise their angel round, they must be willing to do that. Founders must be willing to do what is right for the company. Especially in situations where the market is new.

Editor’s note: e27 aims to foster thought leadership by publishing contributions from the community. This season we are seeking op-eds, analysis and articles on food tech and sustainability. Share your opinion and earn a byline by submitting a post.

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Malaysian fintech startup Finology wins Seedstars World Competition

Malaysian fintech startup Finology has been adjudged the global winner of Seedstars World Competition 2021.

Finology enables seamless access to financial products via the use of proprietary technology and digital distribution channels.

The company will receive US$500,000 in equity funding from Seedstars, Switzerland-based VC firm.

Other companies that reached the finals were Fulfillment Bridge (Tunisia), Pegasi (Venezuela), IMAN (Uzbekistan), and Ladda (Nigeria).

The jury comprised Salman T. Jaffrey, CIO of Wa’ed VenturesShannon Kalayanamitr, CEO of 5G Catalyst Technologiesand Charlie Graham-Brown

“Finology showed us a lot of promise in their mission to bridge together financial institutions and individuals by making financial products accessible for everyone. The Seedstars team believes that they will effectively help lead the way forward in the ever-increasing digitisation of the financial sector,” said Seedstars co-founder Alisée de Tonnac. 

Launched in 2012, Finology is a platform that enables users access to financial products and services like banking, property and insurance. Its technology has been deployed in four countries and its APIs are used by multiple large companies that include GHL, iProperty, and Tropicana.

“We’re all about using technology to deliver financial services to people in ways that are more meaningful to their lives. We look forward to rolling out more product offerings in Emerging Asia that have been designed around a seamless delivery experience,” said Finology CEO Jared Lim.

Also Read: Meet the 15 Asian startups that will advance to Seedstars World Competition 2020

Since 2013, Seedstars has organised world startup competition in emerging markets. This year, pandemic forced the event to be hosted online.

Seedstars received around 5,000 applications from 94 countries across Latin America, Africa, the Middle East, Eastern and Central Europe and Asia.

The full event can be accessed here.

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Image Credit: Seedstars

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Microsoft’s VC arm infuses US$6.25M into hyperlocal solutions startup NextBillion.ai

NextBillion.ai co-founders Gaurav Bubna and Ajay Bulusu (R)

NextBillion.ai, an Artificial Intelligence-powered hyperlocal solutions startup in Singapore, has extended its Series A financing round by adding US$6.25 million more to its war chest from Microsoft’s venture fund arm M12.

This follows a US$7 million round led by Lightspeed Venture Partners and Falcon Edge Capital last year.

The fresh funds will be used by the company for hiring, building vertical-specific AI-first capabilities, and expanding into new domains like neuro-linguistic programming and facial recognition.

NextBillion.ai was co-founded last year by Gaurav Bubna, Ajay Bulusu, and Shaolin Zheng — all former tech-leadership members of Grab who developed Grab Maps.

The AI startup is focused on building hyperlocal solutions, particularly in emerging markets where language and geospatial infrastructure challenges are significantly complex and unique.

Among its product is nextbillionmaps, which provides customisable features, such as routing and navigation, matrix calculation, and map data curation.

The second product currently under-the-making is nextbilliontasks, where AI is used for decoding of data to simplify multilingual texts, image classification, sentiment analysis and video annotations.

The idea hit the trio when they realised that there was no one map-fits-all solution and the future of location is decentralisation, Bulusu told Singapore Business Review in a recent interview.

Also Read: NextBillion.ai, a 6-month-old startup founded by the brains behind Grab Maps, raises US$7M Series A

They noticed that especially in a region like Southeast Asia where infrastructure and language barriers exist, challenges like losing a parcel or not being able to deliver things on time are common.

This motivated them to create nextbillionmaps, a service that provides customisable features such as routing and navigation, matrix calculation and map data curation, especially targeted at emerging markets.

The company said that it has scaled to support 15 customers across 20 countries and helped enterprises map over 2.5 million miles of roads and handled over 20 billion API calls.

As of today, the startup has 60-plus employees working from its offices in San Francisco, Bengaluru, Hyderabad, and Beijing.

NextBillion.ai is currently making deep-tech investments across AI, Machine Learning and computer vision as they expect to drive a lot of new technology innovation in the mapping industry.

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Image Credit: NextBillion.ai

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Connect with 3 investors active on e27 Connect today

In today’s edition of “Active Investors of the week”, we have Cathay Innovation, Endeavour, and Accion Venture Lab as our top three most active investors in our e27 Connect Program. The following are some details on who these investors are and what are their investment criterias:

Cathay Innovation
Based in: Singapore

Straight from Cathay Innovation: Cathay Innovation is a global venture capital partnership, created in affiliation with Cathay Capital, investing in startups at the center of digital revolution across N.America, SEA, China and Europe. They recently expanded their activities to Africa with their partner AfricInvest.
Investment range: Series A, Series B, Series C & above

Latest Investments:
Coherent (Hong Kong), Series A, $14M, Nov 2020
Axinan (Singapore), Series A, Undisclosed, Apr 2020
Kredivo (Indonesia), Series C, $90M, Dec 2019

Verticals: Agritech, Artificial Intelligence, Big Data, E-commerce, Education and more

e27 Admin/Investment Partner: Nicolas du Cray, an investment professional with 12-years experience in venture capital and overall 20-year experience in business development and innovation in the TMT sector.

Endeavour
Based in: Singapore

Straight from Endeavour: Endeavour Ventures is an emerging sector agnostic venture capital firm that invests in seed to series-A rounds in Southeast Asia, focusing on early-stage businesses in the FinTech, Big Data/AI and Digitalisation industries.

Investment range: USD 50K – USD 500K; Seed, Series A

Latest Investments:
Fabelio (Indonesia), Series C, $9M, Jun 2020

Verticals: Agritech, Artificial Intelligence, Big Data, E-commerce, Education and more

e27 Admin/Investment Partner: Sam Gibb is a managing partner at Endeavour Ventures. He has a deep understanding of the challenges that all businesses face throughout their private-to-public lifecycle, he helps early-stage businesses get off zero. Taking the role of a cheerleader or coach depending on what the situation requires, he is willing to sit shotgun with founders and help with recruitment, scale-up strategy, exit negotiations, and fundraising where required.

Accion Venture Lab
Based in: United States of America

Straight from Accion Venture Lab: Accion’s seed-stage investment initiative Accion Venture Lab provides capital and extensive support to innovative fintech startups that improve the reach, quality, and affordability of financial services for the underserved and have the potential to scale

Investment range: Not Specified; Seed, Pre-Series A / Bridge

Latest Investments:
Pintek (Indonesia), Venture Round, Undisclosed, May 2020
First Circle (Philippines), Venture Round, $1.3M, Apr 2017
Aye Finance (India), Series B, $10.3M, Nov 2016

Verticals: Agritech, Finance, Insurtech, Logistics/Supply Chain
e27 Admin/Investment Partner: Paolo Limcaoco is the Southeast Asia Investment Officer for Accion Venture Lab, Accion’s seed-stage impact investment initiative in fintech for the underserved.

We wish you all the best in your fundraising journey and hope our e27 Connect Program will assist you to secure quality conversations with the top investors in Southeast Asia in the quest to attain your fundraising goals. Find out more about how it works here. If you are a startup looking to fundraise, sign up here now for a free trial to get connected with the abovementioned investors. If you are an investor looking to get listed on our platform, here is how you can join our Connect Program!

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TaniHub lands US$65.5M Series B to empower Indonesia’s 40M small farmers through tech, financing

TaniHub Group, which operates e-commerce and P2P lending platforms for farmers in Indonesia, has closed its US$65.5 million Series B round of financing, led by MDI Ventures.

New and existing investors, including Add Ventures, BRI Ventures, Flourish Ventures, Intudo Ventures, Openspace Ventures, Tenaya Capital, UOB Venture Management, and Vertex Ventures, also joined the round.

In January this year, the group announced in a virtual press conference that it was currently finalising a massive funding round.

Also Read: A comprehensive guide to Indonesia’s agritech ecosystem

The company will use the financing to expand the business by ramping up harvest collection and processing facilities while boosting exports for Indonesian agricultural goods.

In a press statement, the firm said these initiatives will enhance local farmers’ access to domestic and international markets.

The group is working closely with the government, including the Ministry of Trade, Ministry of Agriculture and the Ministry of Cooperatives and SMEs, to boost exports of local farmers’ produce and improve the competitiveness of Indonesian agricultural goods on the global market.

“TaniHub Group aspires to narrow the gap between the prices that Indonesia’s 40 million small farmers receive for their produce and the price that consumers pay for the same food,” said Pamitra Wineka, CEO of TaniHub Group.

“With the support of our investors and partners, we plan to strengthen our presence in every region of the country to ensure close proximity with farmers and communities. We will strive to help increase the competitiveness of Indonesia’s agricultural sector and make a difference in the lives of our farmer partners throughout the country,” he added.

Indonesia’s agricultural markets have traditionally been highly fragmented, with farmers restricted to selling in their local area and a long, inefficient supply chain of middlemen and traders. This reduces profits for farmers, increases prices for buyers, and leads to massive food waste.

TaniHub Group meets this challenge with an integrated business-to-business e-commerce, logistics and financing platform for the agricultural sector.

The startup offers a range of agriculture value chain services through TaniHub, TaniFund and TaniSupply.

TaniHub is an e-commerce platform, which aims to narrow the supply chain by giving farmers direct access to a broader range of buyers, mainly small businesses, restaurants, caterers, street food vendors, warungs, fruit and vegetable vendors, and households.

Also Read: Raising new funding round, TaniHub Group claims 600+ per cent gross revenue growth in 2020

TaniSupply is a logistics platform, which operates six warehousing and processing facilities around the country. Through a shorter supply chain and better handling of the produce, TaniSupply improves the durability of produce and reduces food wastage and carbon footprint.

TaniFund is its embedded fintech platform. This uses data-driven credit scoring to allow farmers in the TaniHub network to borrow money to fund cultivation—and pay off their loans once their produce is sold via the platform.

The group claims its gross revenue grew by more than 600 per cent year-on-year in 2020, as it strategically adjusted to shifting market dynamics to meet increased consumer demand for fresh, high-quality produce during the COVID-19 crisis.

In tandem, TaniHub Group has provided strong support for farmers to weather the pandemic by creating new markets for their produce and positively impacting rural communities as a trusted partner for farmers.

“Tanihub Group has an important role in transforming the agriculture sector and has proven that its presence can deliver positive impact to the quality of life of farmers. We hope our investment can help them continue their work and expand their coverage to more and more farming communities in Indonesia,” said Sandhy Widyasthana, Director of Portfolio Management at MDI Ventures.

Also Read: Indonesian agritech startup TaniGroup raises US$10M in Series A funding round

“TaniHub Group’s business model is a unique combination of sourcing network, demand aggregation, and embedded finance that is a win-win proposition for all stakeholders, including small farmers, street vendors, small business owners, and household consumers,” said Smita Aggarwal, Global Investments Advisor at Flourish Ventures.

In the past, the group has raised multiple rounds of investments in the past. In April last year, it closed a US$17 million Series A+ round of investment, co-led by Openspace Ventures and Intudo Ventures.

A year earlier, it secured US$10 million in Series A round led by Openspace.

Image Credit: TaniHub

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