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WaveScan raises funding to develop infra inspection and maintenance drones

WaveScan Technologies, a Singapore-based smart sensors company, has raised seed capital in a round led by Silicon Solution Ventures (SSV), an investment fund managed by Silicon Solution Partners.

Joining the round were SEEDS Capital, Koji Ventures, she1K global, KK39 Ventures, Plug & Play Venture Group, Plug & Play Singapore, and Leave A Nest Singapore.

The company said in a statement that it will use the money to launch the first version of its modular scanner system. This system is designed to integrate with automated robotic platforms such as arms and crawlers.

A portion of the funds will also go into testing the drone version of the scanner for more focused applications and delivering on its committed full-scale projects slated for the year ahead, besides scaling the team.

WaveScan also disclosed its plans to collaborate with over 20 large infrastructure companies in Singapore, Malaysia, Hong Kong, Thailand, and the UK — in addition to currently conducting pilot trials in Europe and Japan.

Founded by Kush Agarwal, WaveScan focuses on a preventive, instead of a reactive approach, to infrastructure maintenance.

Also Read: Decacorn Capital backs Estonian startup Fyma that can turn your CCTV cameras into smart sensors

Its wireless scanners utilise electro magnetic (EM)-based microwave and millimetre waves that could penetrate a variety of structural materials, including wood and concrete. Capable of high-resolution four-dimensional sensing, the EM waves are sent and received back to indicate building and infrastructural defects.

“Today, inspection and maintenance is a slow, costly and inefficient process, inhibiting stakeholders from raising their proactivity. With our solution, we seek to bring unprecedented levels of automation in all aspects of the inspection and defect analysis processes of structural infrastructure elements,” explained Agarwal.

The startup claims to have received interest from over 50 multinational companies, including those in the transport (aerospace/railway) and oil & gas industries, besides infrastructure.

Additionally, WaveScan will also be embarking on projects that will impact the local domestic market by conducting water leakage inspections.

It will be engaging in full-scale deployment and test-bedding on various ages of buildings with a view towards larger island-wide adoption.

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Image Credit: WaveScan Technologies

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SEA-focused early-stage fund Investible hits first close of US$39M second fund

Investible CEO Rod Bristow

Investible CEO Rod Bristow

Investible, an Australian seed-stage investment firm with a focus on Southeast Asia, announced today it has surpassed the first close of its second fund at SGD35.9 million (US$27 million) in committed capital.

The first close comes less than three months after the VC firm announced plans to raise its second early-stage fund with a target of US$39 million.

“The speed and success of Investible’s second capital raise to date reflects the fact that more investors are seeking opportunities to diversify their portfolio and back high-potential tech companies early,” said Rod Bristow, CEO of Investible, which has offices in Australia and Singapore.

Also Read: Investible aims to raise US$38M fund targeting early-stage startups in SEA, Australia

Launched in 2014 by entrepreneurs-turned-angel investors Creel Price and Trevor Folsom, Investible invests in early-stage startups across Southeast Asia and Australia. The fund’s inaugural US$17.4-million fund, which was oversubscribed in late 2019, has to date made over 36 investments.

The first fund’s notable portfolio companies, representing 19 sectors across nine countries, include Filipino restaurant management company Mosaic Solutions and Indonesia-based agritech startup Eden Farm.

It has also created ‘Club Investible’, which provides investors with the opportunity to increase their exposure to startups they are especially confident in. Club members can then put greater resources behind and get more actively involved with particular startups at their discretion.

Investible claims that when combined with Club Investible, the firm has achieved an Internal Rate of Return (IRR) of more than 55 per cent and 3.9 times cash return on deals prior to 2015. Its failure rate sits at 16 per cent.

Given SEA’s enormous growth potential and the maturity of its startup ecosystem, Investible is optimistic about the prospects in Southeast Asia and is positioned to support cross-border startups.

As a result, Investible has increased the percentage of funding available to international businesses (based outside of Australia) from 20 per cent to 30 per cent.

Image Credit: Investible

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Aevice Health bags US$2M for its wearable smart stethoscope, expands to Japan

Aevice Health co-founders Adrian Ang (L) and Rex Tan

Aevice Health, a Singapore-based startup developing novel wearables for remote respiratory monitoring, announced today it has secured S$2.8 million (US$2.1 million) pre-Series A funding.

Investors are Toho Holdings (Japan), and Pureland Group Venture, Silicon Solutions Partners, AIP Ventures, and SEEDS Capital (all Singapore).

The medtech venture will utilise the capital to further develop its proprietary technology and expand its remote respiratory monitoring solution into Japan.

“With the support of our investors and partners, we will continue to accelerate our global footprint, advance our remote patient monitoring pipeline, and develop new ways of enhancing workflows of hospitals, pharmaceutical companies, insurers, and health systems to re-envision the future of respiratory care,” CEO Adrian Ang said.

Also Read: Singapore startup StretchSkin develops wearable sensors for the healthcare and gaming industries

A spin-off from Nanyang Technological University, Aevice Health develops non-invasive wearable devices that enable early detection of cardiopulmonary abnormalities remotely and in real-time, so that patients can receive fast and targeted care from the ease of their homes.

Clinicians can also gain insights into their patients’ health and track their responses to treatment plans easily from the Aevice analytical platform.

The firm has developed a remote patient monitoring solution AeviceMD. It is a wearable smart stethoscope that complements tele-health services to facilitate self-management of chronic diseases.

Powered by Artificial Intelligence, it listens to the patient’s chest sounds remotely, continuously and in real time, and detects cardiopulmonary abnormalities (such as wheezing) that are typical of chronic respiratory diseases, so that patients can receive fast and targeted care on time from the comfort of their homes.

With its system packed into a miniaturised sensor, the device can be placed on the patient’s chest for hours of continuous monitoring.

Overtime, the AeviceMD can help healthcare providers to understand how treatments uniquely impact patient symptoms, enabling them to personalise treatment to optimise patient outcomes.

Partnership with Toho

As part of the deal, Aevice has entered into an agreement with its strategic investor Toho Holdings — a wholesaler of medicine, and medical tools and equipment with over 700 pharmacies across Japan — to develop and commercialise AeviceMD.

The collaboration will provide patients with chronic respiratory diseases in Japan with a tool to stay connected to their healthcare provider, anytime anywhere.

“The pandemic has accelerated the growth and adoption of telehealth, transforming the way patients interact with their healthcare providers. The AeviceMD is a cutting-edge solution that provides patients with a continuum of comprehensive and personalised care remotely,” said Ang.

Chronic respiratory diseases remain the top few leading causes of death in Japan. In 2019, lower respiratory tract infection, lung cancer, and COPD (chronic obstructive pulmonary disease) rank fourth, fifth, and ninth in top causes of total number of deaths in the year.

Also Read: Indonesian wearable startup Zulu confirms investment by gojek, aims to expand team and launch projects

Many of these patients, particularly the elderly with higher co-morbidities, require regular check-ups and constantly monitoring. With the disparity in the number of physicians between urban and rural parts of Japan widening, many patients living in rural parts of the country may face difficulties accessing regular care for their chronic conditions.

“Aevice Health is a homegrown company providing a novel and relevant solution in today’s post-pandemic climate. It has the potential to help health systems deliver quality care to their patients from the comfort of their homes, and we are excited to support them in their journey in improving patient outcomes,” said Tan Kaixin, General Manager, SEEDS Capital.

Singapore hosts several smart wearable startups in the healthcare space. One of them is StretchSkin, which develops affordable wearables for different use cases in healthcare, gaming and smart clothing. Its products can be deformed into curvilinear shape to enable functionalities that are hard to achieve by traditional electronic devices.

AWAK Technologies is yet another local firm, which is focused on dialysis using regeneration technology for end-stage kidney diseases. In 2019, it raised US$40 million in an oversubscribed financing round.

Image Credit: Aevice Health

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Vertex Ventures, zVentures invest in SEA-focused crypto exchange Coinomo

Coinomo CEO Evie Zhang

Coinomo, the company behind the latest cryptocurrency exchange OMO which is focused on Southeast Asia, has secured an undisclosed amount in a new round of financing led by Vertex Ventures Southeast Asia & India.

The round was also joined by zVentures, the corporate VC of Razer; Spartan Group, a blockchain advisory and digital asset management firm based in Singapore and Hong Kong; and Leo Cheng, an investor with MetaCartel Ventures, a community-driven investment decentralised autonomous organisation consisting of founders and builders.

Existing investor Turn Capital, the family office of 17LIVE’s co-founder and non-executive chairman Joseph Phua, also participated.

This development comes just a month after Singapore-based Coinomo acquired Taiwanese crypto wallet Dapp pocket and yield aggregator Cappuu.

OMO merges Dapp Pocket Wallet and Cappuu into a single platform and is aimed at being the gateway for Southeast Asia’s new and mainstream adopters to the world of crypto.

Also Read: Joseph Phua’s Turn Capital acquires Dapp Pocket to create SEA-focused retail crypto exchange

As per a press statement, OMO offers a high-quality user experience and eliminate unnecessary details and confusion.

Coinomo also offers OMO finance, a platform that serves as a higher order product, catering to more seasoned crypto investors, to join and enjoy the raging waves of crypto movement on the main street. Diligently crafted investment-grade products will be offered exclusively on this platform.

The company has also announced the launch of OMO’s beta version that allows users to buy and sell cryptocurrency pairs and participate in yield products of various return profiles.

The crypto space has seen a strong resurgence in the last 12 months, and especially high levels of publicity and trading in the past months. New use cases for cryptocurrencies have breathed new life into the already booming industry, the division between main street and crypto is getting thinner and thinner.

“There is increasing interest and continued innovative applications in the crypto space. Coinomo is putting in place a platform to enable retail investors to easily participate in the ecosystem according to their return profiles. It provides significant value by abstracting away the complexity and perplexity for the general public retail users, while also mitigating risks away from many projects,” said Genping Liu, Partner at Vertex Venture SEAI.

“Vertex sees this as an infrastructure play to facilitate further development of the cryptocurrency ecosystem,” Liu added.

“We want to bring our expertise in consumer products into Coinomo and make this a fun and vibrant community. Investing with Coinomo is fun, our customers would love to open our app and to stay in the app. Easy-to-use and fun are the foundation for consumer products. We keep that in mind in every detail and product feature in our design,” said Evie Zhang, CEO of Coinomo.

Image Credit: Coinomo

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How Mosaic Solutions was able to increase its addressable market at the height of the pandemic

As a startup that is working closely with the F&B and retail sector, one might imagine that the pandemic must have hit Mosaic Solutions hardly. But surprisingly, in 2020, the Philippine-based company recorded its highest revenue in December –exactly at the height of the pandemic.

According to Mosaic Solutions CEO Brett Doyle, the number was even higher than their pre-pandemic ones. It is also continuing to grow.

“We were impacted last year, obviously, but we were able to make some shifts … where we were able to increase our addressable market,” he explains in an interview with e27.

“We have moved into the cloud kitchen [segment] in a pretty big way, and have the top three providers of cloud kitchens in the Philippines as clients now … We have also moved into retail and have some clients in the retail side as well.”

Doyle acknowledged that the most challenging part of the situation was the unknown nature of the factors that are involved in it. But looking back into March 2020, when the lockdown measure was being announced in Metro Manila, Doyle recalls seeing the massive change coming.

“We moved our employees to work from home before everything got shut down. Because we wanted to be able to control the process and make it as easy as possible for everybody,” he says.

“I said [to the team], ‘Listen, we have two choices, right? Now we can hunker down and hope for the best and see what happens. Or we can get out there … and do what we need to do to help our clients and the community in general,’” he continues.

This impressive milestone has led Mosaic Solutions to exciting new progress such as its latest funding round: An additional US$1 million in its Series A funding round which Doyle says has enabled the company to further continue its growth.

Also Read: Mosaic Solutions raises US$1.5M to provide data analytics, inventory management solutions to SEA’s F&B industry

In addition to that, it has landed Mosaic Solutions in the list e27 Luminaries companies, a new initiative by e27 that is meant to celebrate the unsung heroes Southeast Asia’s tech startup ecosystem.

In their participation in this programme, Mosaic Solutions nominated Aziel Salve, Director of Client Onboarding, for her contribution in ensuring the company’s continuous growth and fostering clients’ trust during the pandemic.

In this opportunity, e27 also speaks to Salve to understand more of her background and how she managed to achieve the milestones that she had made in 2020.

Putting the clients first

Salve starts the conversation by explaining that she graduated with a Bachelor’s Degree in Information Technology, so building a career in the tech industry has always been an aspiration for her. Prior to joining Mosaic Solutions, she worked in a company that builds a hotel management system, where she did support implementation and training.

“We make sure that the hotel staffs … know how to use your system and deploy it properly,” she describes her responsibilities in more details.

This experience provides a background for the next steps in her career. After meeting Doyle, Salve joined Mosaic Solutions in 2016 when the situation was completely different than today. Apart from the company having a different set of products, she started out as a senior analyst and training head.

“After a few years, the products evolved, and now I am handling the training, onboarding and support for the POS and the purchasing products,” she says.

When asked about her approach in handling clients, Salve begins by saying that most of Mosaic Solutions’ clients discovered the products through word-of-mouth as the company did not have massive marketing campaigns before.

Once these clients are onboard the solutions, Salve believes in providing a service with empathy as its foundation.

“I always believe in making sure that the client receives the support that they need, and make sure that the support is always there, that Mosaic will always be there for any concerns that they have … We have to make sure that on my end, I am always available for them,” Salve elaborates.

Also Read: Mosaic Solutions raises US$1.5M to provide data analytics, inventory management solutions to SEA’s F&B industry

“We always put the customer first … by putting ourselves in the customers’ shoes. How would I like to be served if I were the client?” she continues, stressing that this is where her past work experience plays a role.

For people who would like to enter the tech industry, Salve shares a piece of advice: Believe that one person can do whatever they want as long as they put their heart in it. She also brings a gentle warning about the nature of the tech industry.

“Technology is ever-changing, so you must have a heart for learning. Always welcome new learning [opportunities],” she stresses.

The e27 Luminaries is an initiative by e27 to celebrate the unsung heroes of the SEA startup ecosystem. Discover these notable companies and individuals here.

Image Credit: Mosaic Solutions

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Singtel-owned HungryGoWhere shuts down amidst COVID-19 crisis

Singtel-owned restaurant reservations and dining deals & rewards portal HungryGoWhere is shutting down.

“HungryGoWhere will be ceasing operations, and our last day of service is 11 July, 2021”, the company said in an announcement on its website.

The closure is “due to the competitive pressure in the industry which has been exacerbated by the COVID-19 pandemic”, a spokesperson of Singtel told Channel News Asia.

Most of the HungryGoWhere team will be deployed to other roles within Singtel Group, and the rest will be provided with re-employment assistance.

“We hope that we’ve helped make dining out a better experience for you and that you will continue to support the awesome restaurants, eateries, and hawkers in Singapore. Thank you for being with us all these years and we are really proud to have served you,” the company said in a Facebook post.

Also Read: HungryGoWhere Co-founder Dennis Goh joins Wavemaker, now hungry as VC

HungryGoWhere was launched in 2006 when the restaurant reservation industry was still in its early stages but was growing in Singapore.

It first launched as a food review site but gained popularity and expanded its offerings to provide restaurant reservations, dining deals, and dining rewards to users.

After six years of operations, it was acquired by Singtel for S$12 (US$9) million.

Singapore recently imposed a month-long aggressive restrictions, including on dining inside restaurants, due to an increase in the number of COVID-19 infections.

The F&B industry globally has been hit as uncertainty wavers around when the situation will improve.

Restaurants continue to face lower demand and decreased sales due to closures or declining traffic. Many customers are showing signs of caution about dining out with COVID-19 cases still on the rise in many areas of the world and the fear of another wave.

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Image Credit: HungryGoWhere

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In brief: Grab to complete SPAC merger by year-end

Grab

The story: Grab CEO Anthony Tan has said he is confident its merger with a US-based blank-cheque company will be completed by the end of the year, following a delay caused by a review of its financials, reports Bloomberg.

According to Tan, Grab wanted to be proactive and transparent in reporting the financials of special purpose acquisition company (SPAC) Altimeter Growth, hence the delay.

It is considering a secondary listing in Singapore as one of its options, but it’s currently focusing on the Nasdaq listing.

Vistas Media Capital to expand footprint in MENA

The story: Homegrown media investment holding company Vistas Media Capital (VMC) will expand its footprint in the Middle East and Africa (MENA) across the media and entertainment sector.

Also Read: Vertex Ventures, zVentures invest in SEA-focused crypto exchange Coinomo

VMC founders have set up alternative investment fund management business, Vistas Media FZ-LLC, within the Abu Dhabi Media Free Zone’s “twofour54” for content creation and entertainment events production services in the region.

Under content production services, Vistas Media FZ-LLC will focus on creating original local content along with providing and facilitating pre-filming, production and post-production services for Arabic, Bollywood along with other Indian regional languages and Hollywood films in Abu Dhabi.

This announcement follows the announcement of special purpose acquisition company (SPAC) merger of Anghami with Vistas Media Acquisition Company on Nasdaq New York

About VMC: It is the parent of the sponsor for Vistas Media Acquisition Company, a SPAC that is taking Anghami, a music streaming platform in MENA, public on the Nasdaq exchange.

VMC also plans to set up a US$150+ million multi-strategy investment fund, leveraging its expertise across SPACs and content specialty financing within the Abu Dhabi Global Market (ADGM) to invest across the:

1. The entire ecosystem of SPACs (from funding sponsor capital, investing in a portfolio of SPACs as an IPO investor and for PIPE financing) and pre-IPO financing for companies across key focus sectors in MENA and across the globe.

2. Structured finance in the content space across films, web series, music in India and the MENA region.

Malaysian state-owned accelerator opens applications for fourth cohort

The story: The Selangor Accelerator Programme (SAP) announced it has opened applications for the fourth edition of its startup incubator.

The accelerator is a three-month programme that aims to prepare 30 early-stage startups and help them become investment-ready businesses.

Focus sectors: Agritech, fintech, greentech, ecommerce, and smart-city solutions.

Also Read: Singtel-owned HungryGoWhere shuts down amidst COVID-19 crisis

About SAP: It is an initiative of Sidec (the Selangor Information Technology & Digital Economy Corporation), a company created by Malaysia’s Selangor state government.

German fintech Moonfare plans Singapore foray

About Moonfare: It runs an online platform for individual investors to bet their money on a curated portfolio of private funds.

Goals: The plan is to ramp up its Asia operations, says a DealStreetAsia report. Moonfare forayed into Hong Kong early this year. It is now looking to launch its second office in Asia with the establishment in the city-state as early as the end of the third quarter.

It is in the process of applying for Capital Market Services License from the Monetary Authority of Singapore.

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Carro raises US$360M Series C to be the first automotive marketplace unicorn in SEA

Carro team

Malaysia-based Carro has raised US$360 million in a Series C funding round led by SoftBank Vision Fund 2, making it the first automotive marketplace unicorn in Southeast Asia.

This news follows Carro’s US$110-million raise in debt financing last year.

The company plans to use the fresh capital to strengthen its market position and expand the retail offering across Indonesia, Thailand, Malaysia, and Singapore.

Carro has plans to enhance its portfolio of financial services by expanding beyond in-house loan financing, as well as accelerate the development of its AI capabilities.

Launched in 2015, Carro is a subscription-based service that allows customers to drive a car without the hassle of owning it.

The service is currently available in four plans: Daily, Roomy, Fancy, and Luxury. With the service, subscribers can pay a flat monthly fee that includes all costs associated with car ownership — such as insurance, road tax, warranty, 24-hour assistance, and maintenance costs. At the end of the term, customers can return the car.

Also Read: Carro raises US$110M funding as contactless car buying boosts its revenues

During the pandemic, it launched a contactless car purchase service in Singapore that allows customers to purchase pre-owned vehicles without any face-to-face interaction.

Carro claims to have closed its financial year ending March 2021 with over a 2.5x growth in revenue and continues to be EBITDA positive for the second year running.

Its group of companies include Genie, myTukar and Jualo.

As of June 2021, Carro has raised over US$470 million from SoftBank Vision Fund 2, EDBI, Mitsubishi Corporation, MS&AD Ventures, Insignia Ventures Partners and B Capital Group.

“We are grateful for the strong support from our investors, which reaffirms our belief in the transformative power of AI in the automotive industry to deliver an exceptional customer experience. As digitalisation shapes the global landscape through new consumer habits and business practices, it is a very exciting time for an end-to-end online car marketplace like Carro,” said Aaron Tan, founder of Carro.

“Carro is transforming the automotive industry in Southeast Asia by providing a seamless buying and selling experience for both consumers and car dealers. Powered by AI, its technology platform provides consumers with full-stack services and transparency throughout the car ownership process,” said Greg Moon, Managing Partner of SoftBank Investment Advisers.

Carro is Southeast Asia’s 14th unicorn. Other companies belonging to the coveted club are Sea Group, Razer, Trax, Grab, Lazada, and Patsnap (all Singapore); and Gojek, Traveloka, Tokopedia, and Bukalapak (all Indonesia); Revolution Precrafted (Philippines); VNG (Vietnam); and Flash Group (Thailand) which recently made to the club after raising US$150 million.

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Image Credit: Carro

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Ecosystem Roundup: Why SEA’s exits market looks bright

Exits in SEA slowed down in 2020 but next years look promising; A Golden Gate Ventures and INSEAD report said there were 107 exits in 2020, down from 115 in 2019 and 124 in 2018; The average M&A deal size in 2020 stood at US$74.7M and Singapore topped the chart with ~3.66B raised; The report forecasts the number of exits in 2020-2022 will total 468.

The Alibaba of SEA? How GoTo is shaking up fintech in the region; The group claims it has a total gross transaction value (GTV) of US$22B and 100M+ MAU, creating a digital ecosystem encompassing 2% of Indonesia’s GDP; The all-encompassing nature of GoTo’s ecosystem makes it a fertile ground for providing digital financial services, as seen from Ant’s success in China.

In a post-COVID-19 world, Vietnam is SEA’s latest hotspot for VC investment; Total value of investments poured into local startups in Q1 2021 reached US$100M+, increasing by about 34% YoY; The country’s startup ecosystem has been transformed from the second-least active to the third-most active among ASEAN countries, trailing only Indonesia and Singapore.

Thai food delivery startup Line Man Wongnai seeks funding, IPO; In July, Line Man, the delivery unit of Japan’s messaging company Line, merged with Thai restaurant aggregator Wongnai, and raised US$110M from BRV Capital; The firm believes its valuation would exceed US$1B and realistic target for IPO is within 2-3 years.

Beryllium secures US$3M to introduce trading systems to fantasy sports; Investors are Bullpen Capital (lead), Genting Ventures and Velo Partners; The Singaporean startup recently launched Sixer, a fantasy game where you can buy and sell fantasy stocks in cricket players.

Flipkart in talks to raise US$700M from SoftBank; Mint said citing sources that the proposed investment from SoftBank’s Vision Fund 2 is part of a US$1.2-1.5B round; The transaction is expected to value Flipkart at $28-30B; The deal is expected to close in 3-4 months.

Bukalapak to raise US$300M from domestic IPO; A DealSteetAsia report said citing sources that the amount is likely to increase if the demand from investors is high; According to a Bloomberg report in March, the e-commerce giant is also exploring potential US listing via a SPAC merger at US$4-5B; Bukalapak is understood to be currently valued at US$3.4B.

Fintech SaaS firm Rapyd creates venture arm to invest in early-stage fintech startups; Rapyd Ventures will largely work with startups after their seed round and through Series B funding that have unique market and customer insights and are expanding on existing market traction.

Medtech startup Prixa raises US$3M; Investors are MDI Ventures, Trans-Pacific Technology Fund, and Siloam Hospitals Group; The startup builds an AI-based healthcare management platform that includes basic medical services such as telemedicine; It also includes features to support healthcare services payers, both individuals and corporates.

Vietnam’s HANET bags Series A from G-Group to take its AI camera to global market; The cameras boast of high-speed facial recognition feature that could detect people even when they are on a face mask; G-Group is a leading technology corporations in Vietnam, focusing on investments fintech, media-tech and cybersecurity.

Indonesia’s goKampus raises pre-Series A; Investors are Sovereign’s Capital, SALT Ventures, Azure Ventures and angels; goKampus is an edutech firm providing services that include college programmes enrolment, virtual courses to scholarships and jobs marketplace.

Genesis Alternative Ventures partners Aozora Bank to support Japanese startups expanding into SEA; This follows Genesis’s announcement of the final close of its US$80 venture debt fund in April this year; A private lender to venture- and growth-stage firms, Genesis has backed startups like TaniHub, Hmlet, Horangi Cybersecurity, and Deliveree.

Swiss insurtech startup Riskwolf attracts funding, to launch ‘outage benefit product’ in SEA; Investors are Swiss angel network SICTIC, and unnamed angels and professional investors in Europe, the US and Asia; Riskwolf’s platform is capable of detecting internet outages, modelling the insurance risks, and making payouts in real time.

Digital banking continues to gain traction in Philippines; A research found over 8 in 10 Filipinos are aware and interested (81%) in using digital banking services; Filipinos interested in banking with digital banks are keen to use services such as paying bills (84%), transferring money locally (78%), making deposits and withdrawals (76%), and making payments for purchases at local retail locations (71%).

The next level of e-commerce payment processing; From a merchant’s viewpoint, three levels of optimisation are needed for a seamless checkout experience — improvements to checkout, integration, and issuer responses; Checkout optimization reduces the number of steps a consumer needs to take when paying for goods online; Fewer steps mean less frustration and fewer abandoned baskets.

5 promising agritech startups in Vietnam; They are Demeter, MimosaTEK, Hachi, Zero.ai, and Naturally Vietnam; Statistics show that the Vietnamese agricultural sector accounted for 14.85% of the country’s GDP in 2020; The sector also provides 39.45% of the total employment in the country.

Photo by Yan Otson Unsplash

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Check out this comprehensive list of 46 startup resources and opportunities for women

opportunities for women

“Define success on your own terms, achieve it by your own rules, and build a life you’re proud to live.”

— Anne Sweeney, formerly co-chair of Disney Media

According to PitchBook, female-founded startups continue to gain a greater percentage of venture investment in 2019, with VC dollars committed to US female founders rising by 8.1 times over the last decade. However, the share of VC dollars that flowed into startups founded by a woman or a group of women is only 2.7 per cent of the total investment in 2019.

Will we be able to work towards increasing that percentage in 2021?

With this list of resources, we hope that all women founders, innovators, and change makers can step up to start building their dreams to help create a better world for all.

From competitions and initiatives to accelerators and incubators and female-focused investors, this list has resources catered for female founders at any stage of their startup idea!

Competitions, initiatives and networks

Amplify is a Girls in Tech startup competition for women founders. The competition has helped to provide funding, exposure on a global stage, and a community of investors and change makers committed to supporting women entrepreneurs.

The Cartier Women’s Initiative is an annual international entrepreneurship programme that aims to drive change by empowering women impact entrepreneurs. Founded in 2006, the programme is open to women-run and women-owned businesses from any country and sector that aim to have a strong and sustainable social and/or environmental impact.

H.E.R Entrepreneur is a platform where it inspires, educates, empowers and connects entrepreneurs, leaders, government, and investors across Asia through its online resources, meet-ups, workshops, and conferences.

In June 2015, Intel Capital announced the venture industry’s largest-ever commitment to invest in technology companies led by women and underrepresented minorities (African Americans, Hispanics, and Native Americans).

All Intel Capital investments cover a broad spectrum of innovative industries, including artificial intelligence, autonomous mobility, data center, and cloud, 5G communications and next-generation computing.

Also Read: Levelling the playing field: How to build a home for women in tech

She Loves Tech is a global platform committed to building an ecosystem for technology, entrepreneurship, and innovation that creates opportunities for women. The company houses a tech startup competition focused on women-led or women-impact businesses.

SoGal is the largest global platform for the education and empowerment of diverse entrepreneurs and investors. Its mission is to close the diversity gap in entrepreneurship and venture capital.

SoGal Foundation is bringing the top 150 women & diverse founders to Silicon Valley to participate in the final round of the largest global pitch competition for underrepresented entrepreneurs, as well as participate in a three-day immersive startup bootcamp.

WEConnect International is a global network that connects women-owned businesses to qualified buyers around the world. WEConnect International identifies, educates, registers, and certifies women’s business enterprises based outside of the US that are at least 51 per cent owned, as well as managed and controlled by one or more women, and then connects them with multinational corporate buyers.

WSC’s signature is a yearly startup competition series across Europe with the mission to give early-stage female-founded or female-led startups brand exposure, pitching opportunity, and presenting semi-finalists from each country at a Final Event (London) to a panel of international investors, press, corporate executives and angel investors.

Twice a year, Women Who Tech recruits women founders who are creating innovative tech products to solve big problems to the Women Startup Challenge, an 8-week virtual programme.

Grants and Funds

Amber Grants began in 1998 in honour of Amber Wigdahl, who died before fulfilling her dreams. An Amber Grant of US$4,000 is awarded every month, and one of their 12 monthly recipients receives an additional $25,000 Amber Grant at the end of the year.

Businesses operating in the US or Canada are eligible for the grants.

Also Read: How women in tech can navigate the 2021 business landscape

Global Fund for Women is one of the world’s leading foundations for gender equality, standing up for the human rights of women and girls. It works to advance rights by getting money and support to organisations led by women, girls, and trans people who are fighting for justice in their own communities.

It supports organisations led by historically marginalised groups who are working to build strong, connected movements for gender equality, justice, and human rights

The Tory Burch Foundation Capital Program powered by Bank of America provides women entrepreneurs in the United States the opportunity to access affordable loans through Community Lenders.

At the core of SWEEF’s investment framework is a women-centred strategy focusing on Southeast Asian investments in primarily Vietnam, Indonesia, and the Philippines.

The Fund will invest in women entrepreneurs as well as businesses operating in sectors where women comprise a large portion of the labor force, those delivering products and services meeting the unique and unmet wants and needs of women and girls, and those where the leadership demonstrates a strong commitment to gender equality and wider diversity.

We-Fi allocated US$249 million over two financing rounds in 2018 and 2019 to implementing partners for work in sub-Saharan Africa, Asia, the Middle East and North Africa, and Latin America and the Caribbean.

The programs aim to benefit 115,000 women-owned SMEs. Projects are implemented in over 50 countries with over half of the funds going to low income (IDA-eligible) countries, including many facing fragile and conflict-affected situations. It has mobilised US$2.6 billion in public and private funds.

Women’s Fund Asia is a regional women’s fund, committed to supporting women and trans people led interventions to enhance and strengthen access to women’s and trans people’s human rights. It envisions a peaceful and egalitarian region in which women’s and trans people’s participation, leadership and enjoyment of all their human rights are ensured and secure.

Geographical Scope:

South Asia: Afghanistan, Bangladesh, Bhutan, India, Maldives, Nepal, Sri Lanka, and Pakistan

Southeast Asia: Cambodia, Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, Myanmar, Philippines, Thailand, Timor-Leste, and Vietnam

East Asia: Mongolia

Also Read: Women in tech: A global evaluation

Astia was founded in Silicon Valley in 1999 as a non-profit organisation dedicated to identifying and promoting best-in-class, high-growth ventures that include women leaders.

Astia levels the investment playing field by cultivating a trusted global ecosystem of engaged male and female investors and advisors, who offer crucial resources, including capital, networks, and expertise.

Aviatra Accelerators aims to empower female entrepreneurs. It enables women to start and sustain businesses by giving them the resources they need to be successful. Through its expertise in business basics, guidance from mentors and coaches, and access to capital, Aviatra Accelerators continuously encourage its members to move forward, and it embraces them when they return, helping to refuel and reignite their passions.

They currently serve markets in Northeast Ohio & Cincinnati/Northern Kentucky.

CRIB aims to empower women by providing the support they need to achieve their entrepreneurship dreams. This will benefit women as they achieve personal fulfilment; their families, as women gain financial empowerment and work-life balance; and society as a whole, as it creates businesses with a social impact, raise diversity in the workplace, and contribute to positive economic impact.

Founded in 2012 by tech pioneer, Kathryn Finney, Didtechnology, Inc (d.b.a digital undivided), is a social startup with 501 status that merges data and heart to develop innovative programs and initiatives that catalyzes economic growth in Black and Latinx communities.

The Get Sh!t Done Accelerator is an industry-agnostic virtual accelerator for female entrepreneurs who want the power to choose their path to scaling profitable US$1million+ business.

Halo Incubator is a New-York-based incubator founded by two Chicago Booth alumnae. Their core and only focus is helping imaginative, passionate women solidify business plans, shape strategies, and raise capital, while amplifying their voices along the way. It guides founders through every stage from ideas to seed round.

Her Corner runs The Accelerator, the first in-person programme focusing on business growth and scalability specifically for women business owners in New York City, Washington, D.C and Philadelphia.

Headquartered in the United States with locations in Boston, Israel, Mexico, Rhode Island, Switzerland, and Texas, MassChallenge strengthens the global innovation ecosystem by accelerating high-potential startups across all industries, from anywhere in the world for zero-equity taken.

NewME is an entrepreneurship education program, serving early-stage business founders and their teams through mentorship, specialised curriculums, and for those companies chosen — capital investment. Its program enables founders to completely reevaluate product, sales, and marketing strategies, prepare for investment pitches and connect them to its network of partners. As the first underrepresented founder focused program in the United States, NewMe has led founders to more than US$47million in funding.

Prosper Women Entrepreneurs (PWE) was created to advance women-led companies. The Prosper Women Entrepreneurs Startup Accelerator is a for-profit organization focused on increasing women entrepreneurs’ access to growth capital and the number of women investing in early stage capital markets.

Ready Set Raise is an industry-agnostic national startup accelerator, consciously created by and for women and non-binary founders. Their goal is to find, support, and advance high-growth, pre-seed startups across North America.

Also Read: How women in tech can navigate the 2021 business landscape

Simona Ventures is a platform that provides access and opportunities to empower businesses and initiatives that solve gender gap challenges.

In early 2019, Simona Ventures presented its first APAC Women Founders Accelerator. The goals of the programme are not only to support gender equality by showcasing inspirational women leaders but also to build a community of women entrepreneurs across Asia Pacific.

Springboard’s accelerator program serves as the pipeline into its community of world-class entrepreneurs, investors and business development professionals. Springboard hosts programmes annually in industry verticals such as Life Science, Digital Health, Fashion Tech and Digital Media/Technology. It has partnerships with affiliates in Israel and Australia where it also co-produces programs in Life Science and Technology. Each accelerator class includes between 8–12 companies that are recruited, qualified and advised by its world-class expert network.

The Refinery, an early-stage accelerator program designed to assist innovative women-led ventures in becoming scaleable and investable businesses. The Refinery engages local intellectual and financial capital to participate in the growth of new businesses while leveraging community resources.

Women Accelerators, formerly de la Femme, is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit Massachusetts organisation. It is passionate about promoting the advancement of women and bridging the gender gap. This can be seen in the wage gap and under-representation of women in senior-level positions, and the boardroom and in the government, from Corporate 500 to startups.

Women of Startup Nation (WOSNA) is a four weeks programme, dedicated to accelerating the success of female-founded companies in Israel. The accelerator accepts teams that have at least one female founder.

Women’s Startup Lab is a Silicon Valley-based startup and leadership accelerator for women entrepreneurs globally who have the bold vision to lead the wave of innovation and change that is required for growth and competitiveness in today’s economy.

VC Funding

All Raise is a nonprofit formed by 34 senior female investors and has committed to doubling the number of female partners in the next 10 years.

BBG Ventures is an early-stage fund focused on consumer tech startups with a female founder.

Backstage Capital has directed over US$4million in investments towards underrepresented founders, almost exclusively backing women, people of colour, and LGBT founders.

Also Read: 3 leadership lessons for women in tech

Chloe Capital is a seed-stage venture capital firm that invests in women. It catalyses solutions to the gender and diversity gap in entrepreneurship by offering investors the opportunity to Do Well by Doing Good. The company recruits women-led technology and tech-enabled companies and uses its national network to drive business after its investments. Chloe Capital is excited to advance the next generation of inspiring leaders as it continues to build a community that supports women entrepreneurs.

Female Founders Fund makes small, supporting investments in companies sourced by its Venture Scouts but operating in sectors or stages that are currently outside of its focus on institutional seed-stage opportunities.

An early-stage investment firm focused on vibrant opportunities for women-led businesses.

Jane VC is an early-stage venture capital fund that invests in high-growth female-led startups. It invests globally in visionary founders.

MergeLane is a VC firm that invests in high-potential startups and venture capital funds with at least one female leader.

Next Wave is a movement driving impact, diversity, and inclusion in early-stage investing and the entrepreneurial ecosystem. Its global fund has 99 women investors, 25 of them women of color, which is led by an experienced investment committee of ten women.

Startups can pitch to she1K to get connected to a network of corporate executive women, angel investors, and partners. worldwide, from all industries, to empower innovative entrepreneurship with high growth potential. Applications are reviewed on a rolling basis so you can apply anytime you want!

The first female-led millennial venture capital fund investing in diverse entrepreneurs in the U.S. and Asia. Powered by the SoGal Ecosystem across 40+ cities around the world, SoGal Ventures is galvanising a brand new demographic — millennial and GenZ women and minorities — to take centre stage in entrepreneurship and creation.

XFactor Ventures is focused on making pre-seed and seed-stage investments in companies with billion-dollar market opportunities that have at least one female founder.

Also Read: Women in tech: Carman Chan’s Click Ventures is one of the most consistent VC funds globally

Kiva is a nonprofit organisation that crowd funds small, zero per cent interest loans for entrepreneurs, often prioritises funding women-led ventures.

IFundWomen is a startup funding platform providing access to capital through crowdfunding and grants, expert business coaching on all the topics entrepreneurs need to know about, and a network of women business owners that sparks confidence, accelerates knowledge, and ignites action.

Women You Should Fund is a rewards-based crowdfunding platform brought to you by Women You Should Know, a leading digital hub of women’s and girls’ empowerment.

Do you know of any other initiatives, funds, investors and/or resources catered for women entrepreneurs?

Let us know in the comments so that we can update this list to empower all females for a gender-equal world even further!

This article first appeared here.

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