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How to build deep tech startups across borders

deep tech startups

The challenges associated with deep tech companies essentially stem from the complexities of the technology commercialisation process.

They can be placed into four broad categories: prolonged development timelines, complex value chains, limited availability of social and physical infrastructure, and high capital demand.

For Singaporean deep tech startups, this is no different. Every founder in the Little Red Dot also factors in the specifics of the local ecosystem, displaying both outstanding strengths — the quality of science, modern infrastructure, efficient government— and a fair share of shortcomings — small domestic market, limited depth of the local B2B market, large science to commercialisation gap.

If local entrepreneurs encountered barriers on all four fronts of building their venture (i.e. customers, value chain, talent availability and capital), then their chances to build a worldwide success story and win over competition would dwindle quickly.

For those Singapore-based founders embracing the arduous deep tech path, there is no choice but to build themselves a central position in a deeply interconnected mesh of global players.

Such a global mindset quickly becomes an asset by going after the most promising markets and forming strategic partnerships with world-class technology partners — rather than the “best in my own backyard” types.

In the US, EU, China or India, looking at an international presence early on may be seen as a risk of defocus by investors and advisors alike. But in many other cases — basically, the rest of the world — being competitive equates crossing national borders and target a major economy on at least one side of the business, be it go-to-market, hiring talents, or raising funds.

The challenges of building capabilities and doing business across borders are familiar to many venture founders chasing expansion and growth, starting with the last generation of key digital players, from the GAFA to regional unicorns such as Grab in Southeast Asia or Revolut in Europe.

In the case of hard tech, framing an international strategy is driven by market sizing, timing and scalability. The successive steps of the deep tech entrepreneurial journey require both short-term, dynamic, and medium-term, trust-building types of interactions with top-in-class industrial players looking for an entry ticket to the adequate spot on the value chain.

Because of the complexities of the productisation tasks at hand and the deep scientific background needed, the barriers to entry, maturation and scalability are extremely high — and the associated rewards in the case of a successful go-to-market equally attractive.

The risks inherent to developing or combining high technologies can be methodically and systematically mitigated by founders who are successful at striking those key cross-border partnerships: finding the right equipment manufacturer, prototyping workshop or international distributor, and developing long-standing collaborations.

While framed as client-supplier relationships, these collaborations are more complex and rarely purely commercial. The amount, typology and aggregated know-how of those industrial key players often hint towards North America, Europe and Japan as Tier 1 targets, together with Israel, South Korea, China and India as contenders.

Also Read: How early-stage deep-tech startups can attract and retain the right talent

While leapfrogging at tremendous speed — even leading in selected niche markets — Southeast Asia as a whole is still structurally considered as Tier 2 with regard to hard tech intensity, depth and maturity.

While the global technological and economic maps may be totally different in one to two decades, the scarcity of mature deep tech players in the region requires that young ventures focus on developing abroad early on.

Strategy amidst chaos

Deciphering those cross-border value chains constitutes both a strategic necessity and a schizophrenic element. In order to successfully create impact, founders need to navigate a moving network of stakeholder relationships. They must constantly assess and understand the ultimate users of their startup’s product or service as well as the intermediaries.

Decisions about how much time, energy, and resources they want to spend then drive how they approach the intermediaries — e.g., asset managers, corporate sponsors, advisors or investors — who sit between their venture and the future customers or partners. While intermediaries are a bridge, they can also create barriers. The expertise and willingness of an intermediary to work with the founders on the creation and evolution of a startup strategy can be critical for its success.

This very strategic mindset and the associated cross-border processes go hand-in-hand with better control of development timelines, go-to-market and funding in the long run.

Obviously, obstacles and pitfalls encountered during this cross-border journey are numerous. It means different legal systems to master, challenges to identify the right partners to initiate the dynamics, eventual push-back from the original entrepreneurial ecosystem or the local government.

The idea that national distances affect the conduct and performance of businesses operating across borders has been at the core of entrepreneurship for decades.

Here are three practical tips that founders can take to overcome some of those pitfalls:

Being default global vs default local

Future international success starts as soon as the venture is incorporated. Globalising a company doesn’t happen overseas at the beginning, but at the founders’ desks: they need to identify the right support in advanced economies, large markets and top industrial ecosystems, then convince them to be involved.

Without the founders’ quasi-obsession to build a global player, the future expansion is at risk. Mistiming of the internationalisation strategy, forgetting the root causes of global success, hiring the wrong leaders and over-delegation of the international developments by the founders are typical mistakes to be avoided.

Also Read: Meet the new batch of 8 Vietnamese startups joining VSV Capital’s accelerator programme

Capitalising on international play books

The path to becoming a cross-border firm is a series of iterations and humbling experiences. Obviously, each business model requires a different playbook.

Founders should spend some time preparing their own version that serves as the single source of truth, covering the latest learning on how their venture can grow effectively at the global scale.

The reality is that few Singapore-born deep tech organisations are actually multi-geography, therefore not that many people have been actually confronted with the challenges of growing a business across borders. As a result, that knowledge is a scarce resource because so few people have been there, and so it’s difficult to seek expertise when you decide to go down that road.

Empowering the right executives

When a deep tech company hires an executive, the business essentially hires the executive’s network. Great executives will staff a team quickly. The converse is also true: executives with weak networks burn time to build their teams.

In the first years of work, deep tech ventures mostly need to find a Sherpa working with the core team, someone who knows the market very well and has a pre-built international network. This Sherpa will allow gaining knowledge about markets, prospects, the capacity of competitors at a global level.

Over time, the founders can bring in more and more talented professionals, a winning combination being to combine senior local hires in targeted markets with long-time company employees.

Hiring the right persons is the first step, setting them up for success is the next: the organisational structure of the venture is to be adapted continuously to give key executives the freedom to operate efficiently.

This article was originally published in a longer form on Medium on July 30, 2021 and is accessible here.

Editor’s note: e27 aims to foster thought leadership by publishing views from the community. Share your opinion by submitting an article, video, podcast or infographic

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The changing face of gamers and what it means for e-sports startups in SEA

e-sports

The COVID-19 pandemic has impacted all of our lives in many different ways. Lockdown restrictions meant we were suddenly unable to spend time catching up with friends, family, and colleagues. We explored innovative ways to explore the virtual side of social activity due to the unprecedented circumstances. As a result, many turned to video games, taking e-sports and the entire industry to the next level.

Recent research conducted by Accenture suggests that the global gaming industry is currently valued at US$300 billion. To put this figure into perspective, it exceeds the music and movie industries combined.

For example, summer blockbusters such as Avengers: Infinity War and Avengers: Endgame or Star Wars: The Force Awakens movies all famously generated over US$2 billion individually.

However, when Grand Theft Auto V (GTA) was initially released, it earned more than $800 million in its first 24 hours.

More recently, the pandemic has led to the increased adoption of virtual social interactions as many found gaming to be an engaging distraction from the pandemic and its frustrating restrictions. But who represents the average gamer in 2021?

The changing demographic of gamers

According to NewZoo, over 80 per cent of Southeast Asia’s urban online population are gamers. This has led to publishers and gaming firms seriously looking into capitalising on the growth potential found in this region.

According to an IDC report, a 75 per cent pandemic-driven increase in mobile gaming activity is expected to remain indefinitely. Predictably, this surge of interest is generating a particular focus on the rise in mobile gaming availabilities.

As a result, it’s time to retire the lazy stereotype that only adolescent boys play video games. From the dad who lives and breathes GTA, to the mum who plays Candy Crush, to grandparents playing Wii, in a digital age, we are all gamers.

Also Read: Will Robinhood’s IPO lead to more short squeezes like GameStop?

In the past three years, the gaming industry has seen an additional half a billion players enter the space, which has increased the global figure to 2.7 billion. In addition, an influx of older gamers means that the average age of a typical gamer is now 35.

Women currently represent 60 per cent of new players on the scene, while 61 per cent of men are long-time gaming veterans. But how do these changing demographics and unique preferences lead to the changing faces of icons in today’s world?

New gaming platforms and changing demographics are pushing business boundaries away from product-centric to more experience-oriented platforms.

Gamification is becoming a standard for brands. Many household names are also embracing the concepts of gaming to educate and market their products.

Having said this, within a short period of time, we could also look at gaming as a means to connect and communicate with any audience across various industries from consumer brands to financial institutions.

We are on the cusp of a new wave of behaviour that is set to go global, and there is a growing urgency to understand and contribute to this new system.

The opportunity: Gaming as an ecosystem of super platforms

The impact of gaming on entertainment and our culture has shown upward trends leading to a more digital lifestyle. As the streaming wars gather pace, Amazon Prime is creating a TV series based around Bethesda’s Fallout, and HBO is making similar moves with an adaptation of The Last of Us for TV.

Now content with TV shows such as The Witcher, Netflix is also adding video games to its service next year as cloud gaming prepares to enter the mainstream.

During the height of the pandemic, empty sports stadiums worldwide removed much of the passion and atmosphere that attracted global audiences.

By contrast, gaming platforms are now transforming into digital social platforms where players can meet, communicate, watch live-streamed events and make purchases. All of which is fuelling the growth of e-sports.

Having said this, Ampverse became one of the fastest-growing e-sports companies in the East, setting out to play a different game by fusing data, technology, performance management, and monetisation. It’s this unique combination that is enabling major players to create a competitive advantage in a thriving market.

We have recently made acquisitions in Thailand, Vietnam and India and its winning team, Bacon Time, garnered a staggering peak viewership of 175,502 online viewers during the 2021 Arena of Valour Pro League Championship in Thailand.

The new sports heroes, celebrities, and rock stars filling sporting stadiums and attracting millions of online viewers are gamers.

According to Statista, by 2024, viewers of e-sports tournaments are expected to reach 577.2 million people worldwide.

In addition, gamers and e-sports teams are widely regarded as icons and influencers by consumer lifestyle brands and audiences alike.

Upholding the integrity of the e-sports industry

With an increasing amount of attention and investment in the industry, one of the biggest challenges is how the e-sports industry can be more effectively regulated.

With third-party involvement needed to ensure that teams and stakeholder’s needs are continuously being met, blockchain tech could be the solution to many of the challenges in the gaming industry.

In a digital world where we are all gamers, e-sports presents a long-term growth opportunity and a chance to extend the experience in traditional sports. E-sports initiatives are providing companies with attractive options to grow their international fanbase.

Also Read: “Zombeast” parent Storms to take its hyper-casual games to Indonesia, Africa with Series A financing

In particular, Southeast Asia’s games ecosystem is booming, with a US$5 billion game market expected to grow to US$8.3 billion in 2023.

These are just a few examples of why strategising efforts to focus on specific market segments and target audiences is becoming imperative in the industry.

It’s time to connect the dots by building hyperlocal ecosystems that connect teams, fans, platforms and brands. Many are only just beginning to understand the potential of e-sports, and the opportunities that are waiting in the world’s fastest-growing gaming region.

Editor’s note: e27 aims to foster thought leadership by publishing views from the community. Share your opinion by submitting an article, video, podcast or infographic

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AppWorks closes US$150M Fund III targeting AI, blockchain startups in Greater SEA

AppWorks

Taiwan-based VC-fund-cum-accelerator AppWorks announced today that it has made the final close of its third fund oversubscribed at US$150 million.

The new fund brings AppWorks’s total assets under management (AUM) to US$212 million.

Investors of Fund III include Taiwan Mobile, Axiom Asia Private Capital, Fubon Life, TransGlobe Life, Hongtai Group, Wistron, Cathay Life, Phison Electronics, and Taiwan’s National Development Fund.

It will continue to focus on investing in companies operating in Artificial Intelligence and blockchain in the Greater Southeast Asia region (Southeast Asia+Taiwan).

As per a press statement, the new fund is in the process of constructing a portfolio of roughly 40 deals, including 20 investments starting at US$2 million in Series A to Series C companies and 20 in the seed stage.

Additionally, the VC firm will recruit new investment associates and analysts to scale up the investment activity of Fund III. It aims to create an ecosystem encompassing 1,000 active startups with a collective value exceeding US$100 billion and generating 50,000 employment opportunities in the next 10 years.

“From a humble beginning, AppWorks is now one of the region’s leading investors, working together with other prominent venture capital firms to cultivate the startup ecosystem in fast-emerging Southeast Asia. On the AI and blockchain front, we have become a major player on the global stage,” said Jamie Lin, chairman and partner at AppWorks.

Also read: AppWorks raises US$114M for fund III to back Series A and B startups in SEA, Taiwan

Currently, AppWorks Fund III has backed more than 20 startups, including its accelerator alumni Pickone, WeMo Scooter, Omnichat, XREX, Blocto. It has also invested in companies led by a handful of AppWorks mentors, including Carousell, Dapper Labs/Flow, Tiki, Dcard, Yummy Corp, and Animoca Brands. Among them, Dapper Labs and Animoca Brands have both crossed the unicorn threshold.

Since its founding in 2009, AppWorks’s ecosystem now encompasses 414 active startups and 1,396 founders, who have collectively raised US$4.3 billion and it boasts an aggregate valuation of US$17.4 billion.

Capitalising on Taiwan market’s distinct advantages in talent and manufacturing capabilities, AppWorks offers founders a direct pipeline to talent via the AppWorks School as well as access to Taiwan’s world-leading hardware manufacturing resources to hone the competitive edge in critical areas in the future.

The firm also deploys a local seed fund strategy in the Southeast Asia market to secure proprietary deal flow. This broadens AppWorks’ exposures in the region to gain meaningful insights and access to promising deals without concerns about regional travel restrictions during the pandemic.

Image credit: AppWorks

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Ecosystem Roundup: GIC invested US$94M into Bukalapak before its IPO; All about the cloud kitchen industry in Indonesia


How millennials and the pandemic are driving the growth of cloud kitchens in Indonesia
The country started seeing some interest in cloud kitchens in late 2018, and it became a full-blown topic in 2019, and now the pandemic is accelerating it; Now there are quite a few players, such as GrabKitchen, GoFood, Hangry, Yummy Corp., and Everplate, among others.

AppWorks closes US$150M fund III
Investors include Taiwan Mobile, Axiom Asia Private Capital, Fubon Life, TransGlobe Life, Hongtai Wistron, and Cathay Life; The fund is in the process of constructing a portfolio of roughly 40 deals, including 20 investments starting at US$2M in Series A-C companies and 20 seed-stage investments.

GIC invested an additional US$94M into Bukalapak before its IPO
The transaction, which was done through GIC’s subsidiary Archipelago Investment, increased GIC’s stake in Bukalapak to 11% from 9.45% earlier; In April, GIC, Microsoft and Emtek co-led the US$234M fundraise of Bukalapak.

Pintu adds US$35M to its Series A kitty, aims to build Indonesia’s ‘largest crypto exchange’
Investors include Lightspeed (lead), Alameda Ventures, Blockchain.com Ventures, and Castle Island Ventures; The platform currently supports 16 different dynamic cryptocurrencies for trading and intends to add more coins such as NFT tokens.

Tiki raises US$20M Series E from Taiwan Mobile
The transaction values the e-commerce firm at US$740M; As per a DealStreetAsia report, Tiki has secured US$94M in Series E this month alone; The firm is also mulling an overseas listing to secure additional capital.

Ex-Zalora CEO’s delivery experience platform for e-commerce businesses Parcel Perform lands US$20M
Investors are Cambridge Capital (lead), SoftBank Ventures Asia, Wavemaker and Investible; Parcel Perform enables modern e-commerce enterprises to optimise logistics operations with data integrations, parcel tracking, delivery notifications and logistics performance reports in real-time.

Synqa acquires SaaS platform for event creators Eventpop in an “8-digit USD” deal
According to a well-placed source, early-stage investors got more than 5x returns, and the late-stage investors also got some returns; EventPop is backed by the likes of KK Fund and InVent.

Fuse closes Series B in a GGV Capital-led round to grow its insurtech platform beyond Indonesia
Investors include GGV Capital (lead), EV Growth, Golden Gate Ventures, and Emtek; According to a DealStreetAsia report of June, Fuse raised US$30M in this round; Fuse has partnerships with more than 30 insurance companies, 300 insurance products, and 50K+ agent partners on its platform.

27 Singapore tech startups that have made us proud this year
These achievements and milestones range from securing unicorn status, confirming plans to go public, and raising more than US$15 million in a single funding round.

Singapore-based Mighty Jaxx raises US$10M
Investors include Aceville of Tencent Cloud and KB Investment; Mighty Jaxx designs and manufacture collectibles and lifestyle products in partnership with global brands such as Hasbro, Cartoon Network, and Warner Brothers;  It claims to have shipped millions of products to collectors in 60+ countries.

Fintech startup AwanTunai secures US$11.2M
Investors include Insignia, BRI Ventures, and OCBC NISP Ventura; AwanTunai is a POS financing solution aimed at digitising Indonesia’s vast economy; It offers services including affordable inventory purchase financing, integrated online ordering, and inventory management to wholesalers and micro-merchants.

Vietnamese paediatric chain Nhi Dong 315 completes Series A
Investors are BDA Capital, Thien Viet Securities, and Qatalyst Ventures; Nhi Dong 315 operates a hybrid model integrating its app into the brick-and-mortar system; The firm currently operates 14 paediatric clinics in HCMC.

Indonesian payments solution Durianpay raises US$2M
Investors include Sequoia India’s Surge (lead), AC Ventures, Kenangan investment fund and angels; Durianpay is an end-to-end payments provider that enables businesses to grow and scale through a one-stop solution for frictionless checkout and easy-to-integrate modern APIs and dashboard.

500 Startups rebrands its SEA-focused 500 Durians fund
Called ‘500 Southeast Asia’, the VC firm will continue to focus on seed-stage investing, offering up to US$500K to founders; It is also now open to provide follow-up funding up to US$5M and to potential investments via special purpose vehicles.

Singapore-based VC firm Antler launches in South Korea
The company is looking to invest in 100 startups over four years from its new office in Seoul; The operations will be led by new partner Jiho Kang, who co-founded service marketplace Soomgo; Antler will begin investing in local startups early next year.

How Singapore is leading banking-as-a-service adoption globally
Singapore fintech scene is booming because the nation is embracing technology and trying to create digital solutions for its citizens; One such area is in open banking, whereby banks share customer data with third parties to allow customers or other financial institutions to access this information for various uses.

A close look at Singapore’s thriving startup ecosystem
As of 2019, Singapore had over US$19B in PE and VC AUM, more than twice that of neighbouring Indonesia, Philippines, Vietnam, Malaysia, and Thailand combined; In that same year, the country was home to an estimated 3,600 tech startups; Start-up Genome priced Singapore’s ecosystem at over US$25B, five times the global median.

Image Credit: Bukalapak

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AC Ventures, Kenangan Fund join Durianpay’s US$2M round led by Surge

Durianpay co-founders

Durianpay, an Indonesia-focused payments solution startup, has secured US$2 million in funding led by Sequoia India’s Surge, with AC Ventures, Kenangan Fund, and unnamed angels joining the round.

The startup was founded in September 2020 in Jakarta by Antara Sara Mathai, Kumar Puspesh, and Natasha Ardiani.

Indonesia’s payments industry is fragmented, manual, and not mobile-optimised. It often leads to high cart abandonment rates at checkout due to time-consuming, error and fraud-prone manual steps. Durianpay aims to address this problem by providing small e-commerce merchants with a one-stop solution for “frictionless checkout and easy-to-integrate modern APIs and dashboards”.

The firm offers businesses and developers access to a broader range of payment options and a no-code interface. Companies can create workflows that put the merchant’s payment infrastructure on autopilot through a single integration. Checkout and payment are customisable.

Also Read: Kopi Kenangan founders launch angel fund to support Indonesian startups

It claims its solution works across multiple payment gateways and providers, solving complex integrations, manual reconciliations, and high costs. Businesses can now connect third-party solutions for fraud, Know Your Customer (KYC), CRM, or Business Intelligence directly into the system without creating additional burden on their product, finance, or tech teams.

Since its launch, Durianpay has won more than 15 business clients in Indonesia, utilising innovations such as split payments and multi-branch settlements.

Durianpay is part of Surge’s fifth cohort of 23 companies that have developed new digital solutions to help companies and individuals live, work and learn better in a rapidly evolving Southeast Asian landscape.

Image Credit: Durianpay

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