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Beenext promotes Faiz Rahman as Partner for Indonesia, Hero Choudhary as Managing Partner

faiz

Faiz Rahman

Singapore-based VC firm Beenext has announced today it has promoted Faiz Rahman as Partner for Indonesia investments.

In the new role, Rahman will be heading tech investments in the archipelago, where the VC firm will largely focus on early-stage (pre-seed to Series A) startups. Besides, he will also be leading the expansion of the network in the region.

A graduate of the University of Indonesia, Rahman brings with him eight years of experience in a variety of fields spread across investment, growth, strategy and entrepreneurship.

In his previous role at Beenext, he built its community for founders/partners in the archipelago. Prior to joining the VC firm, he held the growth and product strategy roles at Lepaya and gojek. He also had a stint with Convergence Ventures.

In the past, Rahman has founded a company called GoodJobs.

“We are fortunate to have Faiz as a new partner and look for more opportunities of collaboration with fellow founders, co-investors and the experts in the local ecosystem and contribute to the growth of the digital economy to the Golden Age in Indonesia,” said Teruhide Sato, founder of Beenext.

Additionally, Beenext also announced that it has elevated its current partner Hero Choudhary to the position of managing partner. In this position, he will be supporting founders of its portfolio companies to scale their business toward the growth stage of their startup journey, including potential IPOs.

Also Read: 500 Startups promotes Ee Ling as Regional Director to spearhead innovation programmes in APAC

Launched in 2015, Beenext has invested in more than 80 startups in India and 51 across Southeast Asia so far. Among its notable investments in Southeast Asia and Japan are Zilingo, Sendo, Trusting Social, Ralali, Amartha, Dekoruma, Mekari, Zenius, Sentient, and Japan’s largest HR SaaS company, and SmartHR.

In total, it has invested in more than 200 startups, globally.

In 2019, Beenext launched a new early-stage focused fund worth US$110 million, which has invested in TrustMedis and Akseleran.

Indonesia is the most-populated country in Southeast Asia and has been a favourite of local and foreign VC firms. Prominent local VCs in Indonesia include East Ventures, Alpha JWC Ventures, Prasetia Dwidharma, and Convergence Ventures.

Image Credit: BEENEXT

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Bot MD snags US$5M Series A to expand its AI clinical assistant platform into Indonesia, Philippines, Malaysia, India

Bot MD

Bot MD, a Singapore-based Artificial Intelligence (AI) clinical assistant platform, announced today it has closed a US$5 million Series A funding round led by Monk’s Hill Ventures.

Also participated in the round were existing and new investors SeaX, XA Network and SGInnovate, besides angels such as healthcare professionals Yoh-Chie Lu and Jean-Luc Butel and Silicon Valley entrepreneur Steve Blank.

As per a press note, the fresh funds will bankroll Bot MD’s growth within the Asia Pacific region with the expansion of its platform into Indonesia, the Philippines, Malaysia, and India.

Besides, the healthtech startup will expand its design and engineering teams to develop new clinical applications and integrations for its platform

Launched in 2018, Bot MD is a clinical assistant which provided doctors with answers to their clinical questions. It allows hospitals and healthcare organisations to integrate their electronic medical records and hospital information systems within their platform for doctors to access.

Also Read: The changing face of healthcare in a post-pandemic world

Bot MD said its proprietary Natural Language Processing (NLP) technology has been used by over 13,000 doctors globally, including notable local medical institutions such as the Singapore General Hospital and National University Health System.

The company claims it grew its user base in Singapore from 20 doctors in January 2020 to over 5,200 clinical users by the end of 2020.

“We believe that we can help every doctor in the world save time and improve the quality of patient care by making it more convenient to access the clinical information that they need, wherever they are,” said Dorothea Koh, CEO and co-founder of Bot MD.

“The global pandemic has added tremendous pressure on healthcare systems around the world and reinforced the need for efficient operations and productive healthcare professionals. Unlike other pure SaaS enterprise players, the team’s extensive experience in the healthcare industry have given them deeper insights into the real pain points of doctors and hospitals,” said Michele Daoud, Partner of Monk’s Hill Ventures.

In January, the company launched a pilot with Parkway Radiology to enable its affiliate network doctors to use its AI assistant platform for clinical ordering and scheduling of radiology exams, as well as to view patient radiology reports and scans through integration with Parkway’s existing systems.

Image Credit: Bot MD

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OceanShield raises US$800K to safeguard the maritime industry from cyber attacks

OceanShield, a cybersecurity specialist firm for the maritime industry, has secured US$800,000 in a seed funding round from Masik Enterprise, angel investors, and grant funding.

The startup, which is based in Singapore, intends to use the funding to commercialise its solution.

“As this is a solution for the protection of vessel Operational Technology (OT), the commercialisation process is key for the company to generate awareness that this type of solution now exists,” Brian Worning, Head of Commercial at  OceanShield, said.

OceanShield was founded in 2o20 by Dr Dmitry Mikhaylov, a scientist, serial entrepreneur and private-equity specialist in the deep tech industry.

The platform offers patented cybersecurity solutions to protect the OT systems of vessels, ports and maritime and offshore infrastructure.

Its patented core Intrusion Detection System (IDS) is a hardware/software complex trained to read and analyse the industrial protocols in vessel OT networks and provide real-time intrusion alerts.

On being asked why this solution was so essential for the maritime industry, Worning said that vessel OT’s have some of the most critical systems which can result in disastrous incidents, if not taken care of. For example, false data in navigational systems can cause loss of location and navigational control which in turn causes rerouting or collision.

Also Read: BeeX wins Singapore’s Smart Port Challenge 2020 for its innovative autonomous maritime solutions

While multiple marine IT protection solutions exist, the OT side has largely been ignored due to the specialised knowledge and technology required to offer functional OT protection, the company said.

“OceanShield is uniquely positioned to carve a niche in this nascent market. We are especially encouraged by the fact that we are
successfully engaging top maritime players and institutions and receive positive feedback on both the quality and unique technological approach of our IDS,” Mikhail Zeldovich, Managing Director of Masik Enterprises, said.

OceanShield told e27 that as of now its clients include a mix of maritime operators, regulators and Original Equipment Manufacturer (OEMs). It also has a pipeline of installations and deployments coming soon.

The company plans to expand its services globally but is currently focused towards building its presence in Asia, which it says is the shipbuilding centre of the world.

The maritime tech sector in Singapore has seen a rise since 2019 about the same time PIER71 (Port Innovation Ecosystem Reimagined @ BLOCK71) launched a programme to build a maritime entrepreneurial and innovation ecosystem in Singapore.

SEEDS Capital, the investment arm of Enterprise Singapore also invested US$36 million into maritime tech startups last year to give the growing sector an added boost.

Image Credit: Andrey Sharpilo

 

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Grab raises US$2B term loan to strengthen liquidity and diversify financing sources

Grab

Southeast Asian tech giant Grab announced today it has raised US$2 billion from its first term loan, after securing commitments from international institutional investors. According to a press release by the Singapore-based giant, this marked the largest institutional debt in Asia’s technology sector.

Grab shared the five-year senior secured loan was upsized from the original principal amount of US$750 million after strong interest from investors. It also noted the interest rate on the loan was lowered by 100 basis points from the original launch guidance to 450 basis points over LIBOR (the benchmark interest rate at which major global banks lend to one another).

The ride-hailing and food delivery giant commented proceeds from the term loan will enable it to “strengthen its liquidity” by further enhancing its “well-capitalised position”. This comes as Grab made clear of its intention to continue strengthening its super app ecosystem within Southeast Asia.

Also Read: Grab-gojek or Tokopedia-gojek: which merger will make better business sense?

Besides, the term loan serves to diversify the company’s financing sources and “establish a long-term, diversified capital structure”.

Anthony Tan, group CEO and Co-founder of Grab noted the trust investors have placed in Grab as they “continue making consistent progress in achieving our growth and sustainability milestones.”

Valued at over US$16 billion, Reuters reported Grab is looking at a potential US IPO this year, amidst an increased appetite of investors for tech companies. Last month, the group’s fintech arm raised US$300 million in Series A funding, led by Korean asset management company Hanwha Asset Management

In conjunction with the term loan, Moody’s Investors Services and S&P Global Ratings issued to Grab ratings of B3 and B-, with a stable outlook, respectively. The ratings made Grab the first independently-rated technology company in Southeast Asia.

JP Morgan served as the lead bookrunner on the loan facility while Barclays, Deutsche Bank, HSBC, Mizuho, MUFG and Standard Chartered acted as joint bookrunners.

Recently, Grab also became one of the companies that have secured the digital banking license approval in Singapore.

Image Credit: Grab

 

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The social dilemma: How Feed Flow AI is shaping the future of app engagement

feed flow AI

Using algorithms to drive user engagements is fairly run-of-the-mill for tech companies today. If you look at Facebook, YouTube, Instagram, TikTok, and Bigo Live, you’ll see that they share a common feature: a personalised feed.

This feed is powered by an AI-driven algorithm that analyses and predicts the type of content users would like to see and engage with. We internally have been calling this type of algorithm the “Feed Flow AI”— software that controls the content users see on a feed, based on certain optimising criteria.  In Southeast Asia, companies and startups we’re seeing are increasingly adopting Feed Flow AIs.

The Netflix documentary The Social Dilemma highlighted the fact that a number of Silicon Valley tech companies are using Feed Flow AIs to monetise attention with many users being unaware.

For some companies, it is for the sake of corporate interests. Take a look at the social media platforms from the US, which tend to optimise for engagement to drive ad revenues. Meanwhile, platforms in China tend to drive direct revenues through methods like virtual gifting.

Indeed, the Feed Flow AI is a powerful lever for user engagement but this brings up the question of transparency. Are companies respecting users’ attention, privacy, and most of all, their free will?

Several companies have already figured out how to use algorithms successfully to solve complex problems, but it’s not used for consumers’ good (yet). Society is now beginning to understand how social media impacts their lives, and startups using Feed Flow AIs have the potential to disrupt the market, if they start thinking critically about how to use it for users’ benefit.

Also Read: ELSA to expand its AI English pronunciation assistant globally with a US$15M Series B financing

The need for transparency to consumers in Feed Flow AIs

There is general concern over the impact of the Feed Flow AI optimising the user experience for corporate revenues. As users, we may seem fine with that because we get entertainment or informational value from the experience. But would we feel the same way if we were aware of just how effective the Feed Flow AI is at capturing and directing our attention, not to mention our time?

Take TikTok, for example. Digital safety app maker Qustodio found that people spend an average of 52 minutes a day on the app, with younger users spending as much as 80 minutes. If the user was consciously allocating time and attention, would they really allocate 52 minutes a day to watching amateur videos?

I suspect that if users would consciously examine these social media habits, the answer would be no. In the long run, getting people to do what they wouldn’t otherwise want to do would not bode well for either the company or the consumer.

Companies need to focus on improving Feed Flow AIs specifically for the user’s benefit, and also to implement it with transparency so that users will understand the optimisation criteria. As many platforms are doing now, apps can offer users the ability to opt-out of having certain behaviours tracked.

The bottom line is simple. Entrepreneurs using the Feed Flow AI to solve complex problems for consumers’ goodwill reap the rewards. Instead of relying heavily on ads, companies can think of how deeper engagement in the app will translate into better results and customer experiences, and perhaps higher virality.

Content is king. Feed Flow AIs ensure its reign

Today, many companies continue to struggle to drive consistent and deep user engagement. Globally, 25 per cent of apps are used only once after being downloaded, according to Statista. The situation is more dismal in Southeast Asia where app engagement rates are lower compared to the rest of the world, according to a study by marketing and retargeting company Liftoff.

Also Read: Taiwanese app developer uses AI and AR technologies to build beauty apps

Feed Flow AIs can change this. As app users generate content, the Feed Flow AI shows the content to the people who will potentially care about it and engage with it. By putting personalised content into users’ hands, the Feed Flow AI allows apps to increase user engagement and longevity. It can also hide or bury sub-par user-generated content (UGC) that might lead to negative user experiences.

In 2019, WeChat launched a new news feed algorithm to boost recommendations of high-quality UGC. The personalised feed takes into account the media consumption habits of both the user and their friends in the network.

This use of the Feed Flow AI enables users to discover and engage with relevant and higher-quality content. Users who worked hard to produce top-notch content also receive more exposure.

The Feed Flow AI also serves to prevent their experience on an app from going sour. Bigo Live, for example, uses AI-driven image recognition, facial recognition, video intelligence, and voice processing capabilities to moderate content on the platform. One could argue that the moderation is not strong enough, but at least they have that capability.

Yes, content is king!  But we also should recognise that random content will most likely cause the user to disengage. It is the purpose of the Feed Flow AI to ensure the reign of content by ensuring the most engaging content shows up for the most relevant users.

Focus on people, not algorithms

In using Feed Flow AIs, companies need to strike a balance between AI and people. In the future, people may have personal AIs to serve their needs, not companies’. But for now, companies can start figuring out how to use this tech to help improve customers’ lives.

Think of these possible scenarios of positive, “for good,” applications of feed flow AIs:

Using feed flow AIs for education

An app that teaches English might use the Feed Flow AI to learn about the topics that interest each user, and then offer customised vocabulary lessons based on those interests. It could encourage users to interact with their friends in English by offering topic prompts and content templates. Encouraging competition between groups of students could increase engagement, and thus learning. By tailoring content that would capture the customer’s interest, the app can help to ease boredom while at the same time encourage study habits and persistence. Ultimately, Feed Flow AIs can shift learning to a fun and highly engaging process, resulting in much higher learning rates.

Also Read: MDEC joins hands with 11 ECF platforms to provide funding to Malaysia’s micro companies with cash-flow problems

Optimising feed flow AIs for financial inclusion and literacy

What if a finance app’s feed showed each user all the financial news and tutorials they need for their particular situation at that moment? It could provide courses contextualised to each user’s country’s investment scene and to cultural nuances around money.

Digital banks could also consider the user’s feed as a channel to educate customers on saving money for an emergency fund, planning how to pay back loans, and preparing to take out a mortgage. As customers engage with these types of content, they become more financially literate and more prepared to use various banking products and services.

While this allows the digital bank to drive revenue, it’s an approach that focuses on educating users instead of just advertising financial products they may not fully understand.

Staying fit and healthy with feed flow AIs in fitness apps

Fitness apps’ feeds could help users discover people who have the same training method and goals, allowing them to share tips. They could help find advanced users who could potentially provide guidance, as well as exercise buddies to join within their vicinity. In general, the Feed Flow AI will help focus users on getting fit and staying healthy.

Capturing a bigger slice using feed flow AIs for good

In a transactional world, companies will try to milk the user base as much as possible to generate revenues. When a business starts to look at the user base as a group of people with whom the company can build long term relationships, the focus turns to how to benefit the user in the long term. Once the company brings value to the users, there will be many opportunities to transact in a win-win manner over the months and years to come.

Over the next decade, businesses will figure out how to make the Feed Flow AI a core component of their user retention and virality strategy, to build those long term relationships.

Those who do it sooner, and in a transparent, trust-enabling way, are more likely to have more engaged, loyal customers, and eventually capture a bigger slice of the market.

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Image credit: Priscilla Du Preez on Unsplash

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In Brief: Global Sadaqah raises US$111K, Wildcats appoints ex Carro COO as Global Head of Innovation

Global Sadaqah Team

Global Sadaqah raises US$111K+ to help charity campaigns match with donors

The story: Global Sadaqah, a Malaysia-based fintech firm, has raised US$111,317 (MYR450,000) via an issuance on Shariah-compliant equity crowdfunding platform Ethis Malaysia.

Investors: Azmi Muslimin, Khaled Fouad, Awaiz Patni and some other undisclosed investors

What the funding will be used for: Product expansion and growth outside of Malaysia

About Global Sadaqah: Founded in 2018, GlobalSadaqah is a crowdfunding platform that matches charity campaigns to donors.

The company claims to have doubled its growth since 2019, with Malaysia and Singapore as the top 2 donor-countries on the platform.

The startup facilitates donations through 11 channels including e-wallet providers in Malaysia, bitcoin, and digital gold.

Also Read: Ecosystem Roundup: Filipino fintech Mynt nears unicorn status; EVs in Singapore: how much is just hype?

“It is more important now than ever to enhance the distribution, impact and especially the sustainability of large donors and corporate zakat. We seek to provide a one-stop service for Muslim-owned companies and business owners to distribute their social funds,” said Ifran Tarmizi, Global Sadaqah’s Country Manager for Malaysia.

GlobalSadaqa has recently partnered with Alliance Islamic Bank.

Binance invests in Furucombo to accelerate the decentralised finance ecosystem

The story: Blockchain company Binance has made an undisclosed investment in decentralized finance (DeFi) aggregator Furucombo. The details of the deal remain undisclosed.

More about the story: The strategic investment will further enhance the decentralized finance ecosystem by enabling easy DeFi loan and trading experiences, the company said.

“We see Furucombo as a game-changer for DeFi. The service makes it easy for the layperson to leverage DeFi composability to string together sophisticated transactions. In particular, the service lowers the barrier to use flash loans, one of the more unique innovations in DeFi but previously only accessible to developers,” said Teck Chia, Head of Binance X.

In the future, Furucombo aims to further collaborate with Binance X and the Binance Smart Chain.

About Furucombo: Furucombo is a tool built for users to rearrange or rewrite their DeFi strategy by simply dragging and dropping. For those who do not know what to do the platform also offers them with pre-built combos.

WildCats appoints new Global Head of Innovation

The story: WildCats, a US-based talent matching firm, has appointed former Carro COO Andy Choi as its new Global Head of Innovation.

More about the story: In his new role, Choi will be responsible for connecting corporations and budding entrepreneurs to further grow the company’s presence.

Prior to his new role, Choi led Carro’s growth in Southeast Asia and grew the platform’s wholesale business into a key revenue driver for the company. In addition to that, he also brings expertise from working in several large organisations like StarHub, Whispir and Great Eastern.

Also Read: In brief: Crypto startup Bonded raises US$2.25M; Vinasun lays off employees

“There are millions of bright, resilient and creative people all around us from mom-and-pop shops to factory workers, teenagers to taxi drivers. Wildcats unites established businesses with the dreamers and doers of the world in a shared vision of success, boosting equality, diversity and inclusion as well as corporate growth and competitiveness,” said Choi.

About Wildcats: Wildcats is an open innovation platform that connects organisations with people that they cannot typically reach as they may be limited by finances, location or education.

Image Credit: Global Sadaqah

 

 

 

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Why a robust digital insurance distribution system is the future in APAC

With the ever-increasing internet penetration and usage disrupting all aspects of business across the world in the past decade, technology has slowly and steadily reshaped how we live. In the past year, however, this trend has been catapulted amidst the COVID-19 pandemic and subsequent lockdowns when even the sceptics were forced to embrace digitalisation in an almost overnight fashion for business continuity and survival.

With every aspect of business transforming, distribution channels are no exception. These events have significantly altered how services and products are delivered, affecting consumer expectations and behaviour, and impacting businesses all over the region and beyond.

According to a Bain and Facebook study, 47% of consumers decreased offline purchases with 30% increasing their online spending. For this study, the buying patterns of 8,600 digital consumers in six Southeast Asian countries were analysed for six months in 2020. The study also found that the region’s digital consumers are expected to spend more time at home even after restrictions are lifted. Consumers are increasingly buying essentials online, delaying splurge spending and favouring value for money and trusted brands. The study concluded that consumer goods companies are responding by swiftly increasing product availability and visibility online, targeting digital engagement across platforms and optimising pricing and value perception.

The role of insurance distribution in an increasingly digital world

While digital distribution was an emerging trend even before the pandemic, there is no doubt that global lockdowns have spurred this further. These developments have now opened up unique opportunities for key stakeholders to fortify their operations with digitalisation efforts and one of the best ways to achieve robust digital transformation in any given industry is through partnerships and collaborations as evidenced by several studies and reports. However, it is important to note that these new trends also expose businesses to unique risks in terms of security and protection. This is where insurance distribution becomes key.

Also read: Witness Malaysia’s newest digital solutions at the MYHackathon 2020 Finale & Showcase

McKinsey Partner Sumit Popli said in an interview, “there is a lot more data available, a lot more computing power available. This allows banks and insurers to really understand customers deeply by using analytics. And we know, in insurance, the best time to have the initial conversation is at life moments—childbirth, marriage, things like that. Banks and insurance companies can now find out, using data and analytics, which is the right time. There are a lot of attackers who also realise this shift and have started to go after this opportunity. They are going after the customers and they are getting a lot of traction, so banks and insurers need to change.”

The digitalisation of insurance distribution becomes even more pertinent with the shifting consumer expectations.

“Customer experience is becoming a key competitive weapon — and insurers need to make sure they keep up with customers’ expectations,” says Evangelos Avramakis, Head Digital Ecosystems R&D, Swiss Re Institute.

Tapping into a well-developed digital insurance ecosystem

This ongoing drive toward digitisation has put the insurance industry on the verge of a paradigm shift. Before the pandemic, companies that digitised were at the forefront but now, digitisation has permeated every level of the competitive landscape. It is no longer a mere choice but a necessity. The world’s growing reliance on digital technologies is redefining boundaries across industries and insurers need to hop into this phenomenon.

As traditional business models become obsolete and conventional borders fall apart, the future of insurance lies in collaborative ecosystems where different cogs of the digital world, such as IoT, AI, machine learning, fintech, and Big Data work together collaboratively. Hence, digital ecosystems are the way forward as we usher into an era without sectors. According to a McKinsey report, ecosystems will account for 30 per cent of global revenues by 2025.

Also read: Are cyber attacks more life-threatening than we think?

This benefits insurance seekers and providers alike. According to an Accenture study, 76% of insurers agree that their competitive advantage will be determined not by their organisation alone, but by the strength of the partners and ecosystem they choose. With digital partners that help fuel the insurtech industry enabling easy onboarding, quick deliveries, and smooth payment gateways while ensuring data security and integrity, providers will see unprecedented growth and customer acquisition. While on the other hand, customers get excellent experience, access to all relevant and important information at fingertips, plus personalised services such as promotions, discounts, and more.

To achieve this, the key thing is to effectively expand digital distribution channels. AXA, for example, has bought a stake in and secured a distribution agreement with simplesurance — software that integrates into online stores’ checkout process, allowing customers to buy product insurance with a click. However, simply placing their services in the right distribution channels won’t be enough for insurers. They need to focus on creating quality and relevant products.

Key things to consider for existing and aspiring ecosystem players

The rise of ecosystems is one of the greatest opportunities, but it comes with its set of challenges and risks. Not all industry players are equally suited to pursue this, and companies that dive in might not be able to capture all of the value at stake. Leading, at-scale insurers are somewhat better suited to evolve into orchestrators. However, this emerging trend does create an avenue for local as well as regional players to realign priorities and beat the competition in the process.

Also read: Why Taiwan Matters: local and international initiatives in Taiwan startup ecosystem

There are several important factors to consider before embarking on the path of becoming an ecosystem player. It not only requires technology investments but calls for a 360-degree view of the business operations across various dimensions to ensure that the investments align with the requirements. From talent to culture and target audience to strategies — everything needs to be carefully evaluated and strategised if needed. Other crucial aspects are partnerships and collaborations.

Building an insurtech ecosystem requires aligning with partners from outside the insurance industry, and stakeholders need to be ready to do that.

Deep diving into digital distribution and ecosystems

In line with these emerging trends in the insurtech industry, Insurtech Connect Asia is bringing an APAC-focused virtual summit “DIGITAL DISTRIBUTION & ECOSYSTEMS: VIRTUAL SUMMIT” on 25th February (1 pm to 4 pm SGT). From the distribution of micro-insurance to embracing technologies to support digital sales forces and the relevance of bancassurance today to insights on how to effectively expand ecosystem and distribution partnerships, the summit covers a wide range of relevant topics in the form of panel discussions and solo presentations involving industry leaders and key experts. 

If you are curious to learn more about digital ecosystems and platforms, and seeking to ride the insurtech digital distribution wave, register for the virtual summit here asia.insuretechconnect.com/summit

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This article is produced by the e27 team, sponsored by 
ITC Asia Summit

We can share your story at e27, too. Engage the Southeast Asian tech ecosystem by bringing your story to the world. Visit us at e27.co/advertise to get started.

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Kollective Ventures and Joseph Phua’s family office acquire SoundOn, a Taiwanese startup with 35M monthly podcast downloads

SoundOn

Likai Gu, Founder and CEO of SoundOn

Singapore-based investment firm Kollective Ventures (KV) and Turn Capital (the family office of Joseph Phua, Co-founder and Non-Executive Chairman of 17LIVE) have jointly agreed to fully acquire Taiwanese podcast platform SoundOn.

The details of the deal were not disclosed.

As per a press note, SoundOn will continue to operate under its current brand and its services remain unaffected. KV and Turn Capital will look to continue to “accelerate” the growth of the company and the industry in the near future.

Also Read: How 5-year-old live-streaming app 17LIVE acquired 60M users globally

Founded in late 2019 by Likai Gu, SoundOn produces its own content shows featuring Taiwan’s top influencers, besides connecting podcasters to advertisers. The platform also manages its own podcast player app and website, which it claims has been the go-to source for discovering new podcasts in the Taiwanese market.

SoundOn said it has grown to become the largest podcast hosting platform in Taiwan, with over 35 million monthly podcast downloads. This number is projected to grow to over 500 million downloads in 2021.

The Taiwanese podcast industry has grown exponentially since SoundOn’s entry in 2019. The number of podcasts produced for the local audience has grown from less than 50 before 2019 to over 10,000 today. SoundOn claimed its own traffic has grown over 20x in the past year.

“With the growth in market size and SoundOn’s strong product-market fit, the company has achieved over 70 per cent market share and looks to drive further domination in 2021. Kollective Ventures and Turn Capital see massive potential in the podcast and audio space in Taiwan, and this acquisition allows us to further invest and develop the podcast ecosystem,” said Phua.

Also Read: Kollective Ventures acquires Paktor Group from M17 Entertainment

“Recent global success stories in the space, like Clubhouse, have shown the explosive potential of the social audio entertainment space. We look forward to exploring synergies between our audio-related portfolio companies to create an Asian beachhead in this space,” opined Khenglian Ho, Managing Partner at Kollective Ventures.

Last May, KV had acquired Paktor Group, which was founded by Phua, from M17 Entertainment. Paktor is the umbrella that owns a few dating assets, including its namesake app available in Taiwan, Korea and Southeast Asia, and Goodnight, a voice-dating app.

On Monday, Podcast Network Asia, a Philippine-based podcast network agency, announced raising of US$750,000 in seed funding from Foxmont Capital, Venturra Discovery, Kumu and Lisa Gokongwei, President of Summit Media.

Image Credit: SoundOn

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How to set up your business processes for scaling your growth

 business process

If you’re tired of the buzzwords, you’re not alone. The idea of a “digital transformation” or digitalisation or any other kind of coined version of “change” drives many in business to the brink. The reason is that seasoned professionals know that embracing every buzzword doesn’t guarantee success.

You need more than buzzwords. You need results.

An already popular study from the Harvard Business Review pegs the fail rate at around 70 per cent for most digital initiatives. Seventy per cent. Two-thirds. What’s worse is that McKinsey surveyed several businesses, asking them if they thought their businesses would stay “economically viable” if the trend towards digitalisation continued.

The results? Only eight per cent believed they would…

Only eight per cent of businesses think they could survive the changing tides that technology and innovation bring. That’s shocking.

If your business wants to do more than survive, it needs a different approach to optimise processes in your business. It needs to take control. And doing isn’t as difficult as you may think, provided you make the right choices at the start.

How to successfully transform your business

Before you can understand what works, you need to realise what doesn’t. While there’s no one-size-fits-all approach to transforming your business, there are mindsets you can and should avoid. 

Luckily, the right solutions can help you overcome the common problems that plague scaling your business. This is your roadmap to scale your business successfully.

Problem: Lacking clear expectations

When you ask many executives and department heads what their goals are for their company, you often hear generic responses, “Improve customer service, grow sales, and stay competitive.” 

Also Read: Ecosystem Roundup: Grab considering US IPO this year; Turochas Fuad unveils his new BNPL venture; Tesla scaling its S’pore team

But generic mantras won’t get you far. And tacking on “digital transformation” to every initiative doesn’t constitute change.

Businesses aren’t clear cut, black and white processes with concrete, established boundaries. They’re organic entities with a lot of moving parts. If you shift one area of your company without respect to how it will affect another, you risk doing more harm than good. 

New processes need to flow across all areas of your organisation. Without that, they’ll fall apart before they even get off the ground.

Solution: Clearly defined business goals

The solution is to have clear business strategies. Rather than have generic goals, discuss and create specific, reachable ones. Once you define those goals, you’ll be able to easily backward design a roadmap to get you there. 

During this process, you should listen to input from all departments so that you can have an understanding of how each area of your business evaluate success. You’ll also see the obstacles that stand in the way of that success.

Delegating a single approach will not work. Successful business transformation rests in having a holistic strategy. It should keep in mind the focus of the goals, how to implement them, and how to balance change with growth. It should also be dynamic and run from the top-down, back up again, and throughout the business as a whole. 

Remember, without clearly defined goals, your strategy will lose momentum before it even sets sail.

Problem: Choosing the wrong beginning

There are most likely clear strategies you can put to work right now that would reduce costs and keep your business competitive. But are they the right strategies? And how do you know? And which order should you implement them? 

While it may seem commonsensical to implement quick, simple solutions, that may not be the best approach. Quick fixes can be like patches that take up time and resources but only slow the problem temporarily. To really make a change, you need to think bigger.

Solution: Prioritise strategies for change

While creating the strategy for your company’s future success, begin listing needed changes to workflows and processes in your business. 

Once you know what changes your business could benefit from, see how other processes would be affected by implementing these changes. 

Also, look at what problems remain after putting them into practice. You’ll quickly find that some quick fixes may be unnecessary. Or worse, you may discover that they slow down progress.

Problem: Having a “set-it” and “forget it” mindset

With the ease of access to information these days, it doesn’t take much effort to find out what kind of tactics successful companies used to grow and stay competitive. 

Certain workflows may, again, seem commonsensical at first. And requiring rigorous review and oversight before adding them as solid stepping stones toward progress may seem excessive.

Also Read: How understanding culture can drive digitalisation of payments in Myanmar

Except there’s a problem with that way of thinking. Every business is different. One strategy and roadmap may work well for one company. But it could fail to bring results for your business. Expecting solutions to work because they worked for other organisations is a recipe for disaster. You need to take a different approach.

Solution: Create a custom roadmap for digitalisation

You need a strategy that reflects your company culture, brand, and mission. And more importantly, you need one that caters to your employees’ needs. Any new processes won’t succeed if employees don’t advocate for them. 

Designing a roadmap specifically for your business with company culture in mind is a great way to avoid irritating issues. Looking at the data to back up any decisions while using KPIs to further evaluate performance before augmenting initiatives is key.

It’s better to think of business transformation as a continuous process. One that must be constantly evaluated, adjusted, and tested before its full value is realised. 

And once your new systems take hold and yield results, more employees will aid in championing them on their own. With your company behind new initiatives, successful business transformation is more likely to occur.

Problem: Underestimating the power of disruption

Often, important tasks get pushed aside. Even though executives know the value in successfully digitising your business, they may not fully understand the consequences of putting it off. True. Digital innovation now happens at a far more rapid scale than ever before.

Advancements, data, and analytics mean that more companies are working harder to provide services customers expect. Some changes need to happen quicker than others. And some can be avoided altogether. 

This results in a kind of “analysis paralysis” where companies believe it’s better to hold off and wait because something better is on the horizon.

Solution: Prioritise agility

Rather than waiting for a “better” system, create both a business and company culture that values agility. The key to any successful attempt at digitisation in your company is to have champions behind it. But for that to happen organically, you need a system that clearly improves the experience of those interacting with it.

The best way to do this is to create workflow processes that are easily adaptable. The beauty in business optimisation is that many software solutions are cloud-based. 

They also promote the use of automation and integrations. And as a result, new systems can be far more easily connected to existing ones. These types of workflows reduce processes, handling menial tasks that often bog down employees’ time.

By making digitalisation easier for your company, you’ll greatly reduce pushback from implementing new systems.

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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10 lessons on building a great team  by a marketing employee

team building

The story is based on my five years of experience working with amazing team members in content marketing at iPrice Group. Here are my 10 key learnings from this journey:

(Really) Teach what you preach

People will directly or indirectly replicate how their leaders behave. If we want people to read, we need to read. If we want people to be creative, show what creative behaviour looks like. If we want people to put their heart into their work, put ours.

“Monkey sees, monkey do”.

Build, develop, and reward a learning behaviour

Learning is one of the biggest factors for people to join or leave a team company. It’s also one of the most crucial skills in any organisation. If it’s done well, the team can be really-really effective and performs really well.

Everyone wants people to learn. But to learn we need to have a supportive environment. We need to build + continuously develop + reward the behaviour of learning.

Give people a chance to learn something new or level up their understanding of a certain topic. And when people learn, reward their behaviour. As simple as saying “good learnings!” or until the extent of asking them to do a sharing session with the rest of the team.

Also Read: Making offline marketing cool again: How this AI startup is changing the future of B2C advertising

Put extremely high standards on the hiring

“People are the foundation of any company’s success”
Trillion Dollar Coach

  • Make an easy to digest + compelling job description in any openings in your team
  • Do a passive search and ask for a recommendation from “high performers”
  • Provide pre-screening questions in the application form. This is to help you to do an early check of the applicants. Highly recommended as this saves a lot of your time.
  • Prepare a set of questions to check all aspects from the candidate: behavioural + technical
  • Form a case study to understand more detail about their understanding of the topics and ability to produce something
  • Give chance + encourage the candidates to ask you questions
  • (If possible) Ask other team members to have a chat with the candidates

The process might be slightly longer, but it’s really worth it.

Genuinely care with your team and invest time to coach them

One of our main responsibility as a manager is to develop our people. Spending time with them so they can learn the most important skills they need to have to be really successful in their role now (technical and behavioural).

To do this effectively, we need to genuinely care about their personal and career growth. Always ask questions and clarify what areas they really interested in + need to learn at their stage now. Never assume.

Whenever you see progress, congratulate them and let them know they are progressing. It’s important because people want to know whether they are progressing or not.

Create a safe environment for people to discuss, debate, and disagree

“High-performing teams need psychological safety”

–  HBR

Be super-super explicit to everyone in the team that it’s totally okay to openly share their opinion (even if it’s different); it’s okay to disagree (as long as they have a strong reason), and it’s okay to debate on a topic (as long they are being respectful to each other).

As a manager, continuously remind people about this. Show an example of how to do it right, and reward people that promoting this value.

Also Read: Epsilo raises US$2M to expand its SaaS e-commerce marketing platform across Asia

Proactively ask for feedback from team members + act on it

Naturally, people hate feedback. But at the same time, we know it’s super valuable.

Make people understand why it’s extremely valuable to have this mentality in the team (Why?). Once they understand the why give them a regular example (day-to-day basis) on how to give good feedback + how to openly receive one.

The top recommendation when it comes to this is the book by Kim Scott, Radical Candor.

Encourage and trust your team to try and do an experiment

Most of you who read it probably works on tech companies, or if not working in a company that wants to be successful. So one of the keys is to continue innovating. Coming up with new ideas + test them out.

Observe any problem or challenges you have in your team and ask people “So do you guys think we can do about it?” Really listen to all the ideas and let them own it and test their solution.

Be very clear and explicit with what we expect from the team

Never ever assume people know what’s in our minds. They are not a mentalist. Want people to be punctual in a meeting? Tell them.

Want people to be respectful with each other? Tell them. Being explicit sometimes is not easy. But it’ll save a lot of time for everyone.

Celebrate wins and learnings

Whenever people learn something new or achieve something (small or big) celebrate in a team. Let people know that their hard work is important and people aware of it. Especially you as their manager.

Also Read: Why team-building exercises won’t make your staff more productive

Few ideas (during this COVID-19 period) 

  • Create a chat group to “celebrate wins and achievements”,
  • Publicly mention the work + the person on social media (LinkedIn/ Twitter)
  • Send small gifts (food)
  • Have a dedicated session to thank other people

Learn to tell jokes

The rationale is to bring fun elements into your team. You don’t need to be a stand-up comedian. Just learn to tell few jokes and be fun in the team!

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, FB community or like the e27 Facebook page

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