Posted on

How to unlock possibilities through data privacy enhancing technologies

With the exponential growth of digital services and solutions in the region, a proliferation of data sharing across industries is more present than ever. Riding on technological advancements such as machine learning, the Internet of Things (IoT) and artificial intelligence (AI), it is now possible to access and analyse large volumes of data to enable smarter business outcomes in a fast and effective manner. 

As organisations increasingly move data across sectors and borders, it is vital for all players to understand the risks of data sharing, ensure that data privacy is maintained, and explore ‘Data Sharing 2.0’ where data does not need to be shared in order to unlock the possibilities or insights sought after. 

In Singapore, data protection laws have been in place for over a decade, protecting customers’ interests while supporting economic growth under a progressive regulatory environment. To commemorate this milestone, The Infocomm Media Development Authority (IMDA) and Personal Data Protection Commission (PDPC) recently announced the launch of Singapore’s first Privacy Enhancing Technologies (PET) Sandbox to further its commitment to supporting businesses who wish to pilot PET projects that alleviate challenges with data sharing.

Unlocking ecosystems through PET

At Aboitiz Group, we see the value in operationalising Data Science and AI (DSAI) to allow businesses to tackle specific industry, environmental, social, and governance challenges. As the Group’s DSAI arm, our goal at Aboitiz Data Innovation (ADI) has always been to offer organisations across industries tried and tested DSAI frameworks and solutions that will benefit both the business and the customers they serve. While we see the opportunities that come with data sharing, we also acknowledge the growing concerns around data privacy.

Also Read: Growth and changing landscape of 5G and data

As part of the 100-year-old company’s transformation journey into becoming the Philippines’ first techglomerate, the Group launched Parlay, our own data exchange platform powered by ADI.

Aligned with PET’s goals, Parlay aims to unlock ecosystems allowing the sharing of data and insights while protecting customers’ interests. While many organisations are aware of the benefits of data sharing, the reality is that some are still apprehensive about adopting the practice due to concerns such as the loss of control of data shared. Parlay addresses these problems by giving users a secure platform to publish and access data.

Ensuring data exchange and data privacy is baked at its core

It’s natural for organisations to have reservations around data exchange, as data privacy and security are top priorities. Operating on the cloud with enterprise-level security measures in place, Parlay bridges that gap by granting users full granular control and transparency of access, enabling the safety and security of all those who choose to be on the platform. Further, standardised legal contracts are attached to the data sets on Parlay to ensure compliance for all users, saving on time and costs.

Building high-value products and DSAI solutions through Parlay

We want to ensure that all key players across industries and sectors have a secure PET platform that enables them to develop and deploy AI solutions for real-world problems. Parlay was developed to create a place for organisations to spark inspiration and visualise new creative ideas through exploring data from other sectors.

When you walk into a museum and sit in front of the Monalisa, when you leave, it is with the inspiration it had given, not the actual painting. This is what we want to seed and proliferate. The ability to be inspired.

By interacting with diverse data sets in a secure virtual workspace, users have the ability to utilise data science tools and endpoints integrated directly into the platform to develop high-value data products and relevant DSAI solutions.

Also Read: The data revolution: Innovation and evolution in APAC’s hospitality industry

Additionally, aggregating and analysing data from other sectors paves the way for organisations to visualise a myriad of possibilities in a way that was never this easy before and explore synergies with sectors you’ve never thought of collaborating with before.

Exploring infinite possibilities with data exchange

We see the possibilities of data exchange across industries such as manufacturing, where external data sources on weather and other factors can allow a full view of supply chain issues to mitigate risks early or even within the energy sector, studying data sets from smart homes to building management to drive operational efficiency and provide customers with advanced services.

These are only a few of the many examples of what cross-industry data exchange can help achieve for businesses and communities.

Data exchange also enables synergies and partnerships among private organisations, the public sector, other key strategic partners, and even consumers, especially in ensuring financial inclusion, environmental sustainability, clean and efficient utilities, and overall better services, among others.

Based on our own experience, we hope that organisations can start using PET such as Parlay to foster cross-industry and sector synergies and facilitate knowledge sharing on innovative solutions in a responsible manner.

Given what we have seen with Aboitiz Group, imagine all the possibilities we can unlock and challenges we can solve together in this digital economy with Data Sharing 2.0.

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

Join our e27 Telegram groupFB community, or like the e27 Facebook page

Image credit: Canva Pro

The post How to unlock possibilities through data privacy enhancing technologies appeared first on e27.

Posted on

Upturn shares investment philosophy as it debuts new accelerator programme

Indonesia-based accelerator Upturn has officially debuted its programme in May this year. Claiming positive milestones during its launch, Upturn Co-Founder and Partner Riswanto plans to deepen further his involvement in the startup ecosystem with a new investment vehicle.

In addition to Riswanto, Upturn counted Ayunda Afifah and Bharat Ongso as co-founders. Since April, the organisation has rebranded from its previous identity Tunnelerate, operating under new entity PT Upturn Akselerasi while halting the operations under the Tunnelrate identity. It is also important to note Upturn is operating as an accelerator programme instead of a venture capital (VC) firm.

In this interview with DailySocial, Riswanto reveals more details about the accelerator programme, its hypothesis and investment plan. He also reveals that the organisation is currently looking for a Managing Partner that can represent Upturn in the long run.

Accelerator programme

Instead of focusing on the reason behind the rebrand, Riswanto chose to highlight Upturn’s effort to accelerate the Indonesian startup industry. With its positioning, an accelerator programme is a suitable platform to connect founders to mentors and investors in Upturn’s networks.

As a visualisation, digital economy in Indonesia has reached US$70 billion in 2021 –a number that is also the biggest in Southeast Asia– and is expected to grow further beyond US$146 billion in 2025.

Upturn has launched its Upturn Scale Program Batch I in May 2022. It has selected 14 out of 200 applicants to participate in a 10-week programme with 15 VC being involved in the Demo Day. Through the demo day event, the programme intended to encourage its participants to prepare a pitch deck that will attract investment into its businesses.

The 14 participants are: Jaramba, Flash Campus, Broiler X, Wiseree, Cari Mobil, Bengkel Mania, Bintang Kecil, Goritax, Kibble, Psikologimu, Rakamin Academy, Sgara, Stellar X, and Belajar Lagi.

“We receive support from Sinar Mas Land and other traditional companies looking to do digital transformation. Through this programme, we help startups in doing their problem validation,” he said.

Thesis investment

Upturn sees itself as a sector-agnostic platform, but its co-founders have core expertise in several verticals. These verticals are still considered hot commodity in Indonesia: agriculture, aquaculture, and fintech.

Upturn Partners also have a combined background of having worked in both startups and traditional businesses. This provides an advantage in the matters of business fundamentals and unit economics. “We don’t want to invest because we fear missing out. In fact, many of the participants in Batch are already profitable on their own. For example, Belajar Lagi,” said Riswanto.

Riswanto is previously known as angel investor in agritech startup Eratani. He and Bharat Ongso has years long experience in the IT and fintech sectors. Meanwhile, Afifah has strong experience in people and culture.

“According to our thesis, in times of crisis, people are going back to basics. People need food, infrastructure for logistics, and working capital through fintech platforms. This is why Upturn offers value in product development [based on career experience] and network,” he added.

The firm is certain that there are still many potential founders with businesses that are operating healthily in Indonesia, but they may not have the necessary know-how in VC fundraising. Instead of focusing on trends, Upturn focuses on looking for startups with products that are needed by the customers, building a sustainable business.

“Not every shiny founder [with strong education background from top universities] can create a successful business. On the other hand, there are “non-shiny” founders who can build a successful business.”

Investment vehicle

Riswanto stresses that the organisation wants to play a role in the digital industry through two different platforms. This is why, following its debut, Upturn plans to set up a new entity that serves as its investment vehicle. It will also begin the second batch of its accelerator programme next year.

So far, there has been positive feedbacks for the accelerator programme. “We receive plenty of exposure so there are already offers for collaboration> This is a positive signal as it means there are many more who are vertical-focuses,” said Riswanto.

“We believe that startups that have undergone this programme may look for follow-on funding. In the first batch, we have connected several startups to investors, and some of them have closed a funding,” he said.

In the next months, Upturn will explore a business model that would suit its vision and mission. They are considering investments through partnership model with VCs or digital companies such as Grab Velocity Ventures (Grab) or Sembrani Wira (BRI Ventures).

The article was written by Corry Anestia in Bahasa Indonesia for DailySocial. English translation and editing by e27.

Image Credit: Upturn

The post Upturn shares investment philosophy as it debuts new accelerator programme appeared first on e27.

Posted on

7 drivers of Southeast Asia’s “golden hour of opportunity” for startup founders and investors

In the 2021 Tokyo Olympics 1500m event, Sifan Hassan, Dutch middle-distance Olympian, had good prospects for the race, and it went off to a good start. Just 380 metres left in the run, or less than a third of the race, and one of Sifan’s competitors just behind her tripped up, causing Sifan to take a fall as well.

That wasn’t game over for Sifan, however. In the remaining 44 seconds, she was able to pick herself up and go from being left trailing in the dust to zipping past the front runner (who had been 30 metres ahead of her when she fell), crossing the finish line and winning gold. Sifan had her 44 seconds, where she took what seemed to be a lost position and converted it into victory.

Every company has their 44 seconds or their “golden hour of opportunity”, and often it happens more than once, from pivots into larger businesses or leveraging crises into market leadership. And now, this “golden hour opportunity” extends to Southeast Asia’s growing startup ecosystems amidst the global turbulence and uncertainties coinciding with the continued growth of the digital economies in the region.

As we mentioned in the press release for our US$516 million third venture fund, we see today as the region’s golden hour opportunity because while the market fundamentals for digitalisation still remain strong, strains on spending and investments in the financial markets have made it so that the outliers and winners of this decade will become more apparent.

So it becomes more important than ever for early-stage investors to spot the “Sifan Hassan’s” of the technology markets before they even make it on the race track. For founders, in a capital-scarce environment, it becomes even more critical to shaping the business up to be like “Sifan Hassan” and stand out amidst the pack.

The first step is to understand the context in which these market creators and leaders will arise. For this article, we list seven market drivers behind Southeast Asia’s golden hour of opportunity. In discussing each of these, we also cover key, practical opportunities for both early-stage startup founders and investors to take advantage of.

The market drivers of Southeast Asia’s golden hour of opportunity

  • The influx of talent-bearing ideas and capital flowing into Southeast Asia, especially through Singapore, is driven by market uncertainty. 

This is a progressing trend a decade in the making, tracing its roots as far back as the initial efforts of the government to bring venture capital firms into the city-state. And at the turn of the decade, rather than slowing down amidst the pandemic and global uncertainty, the influx has only ramped up precisely because of the current market environment.

Also Read: How KKday saved for a rainy day when many travel startups called it a day during COVID-19

Dominated by big tech talent, unicorn founders, and HNW families and individuals looking for the next growth opportunity in technology and innovation, this talent bears with their ideas on company growth and the capital to make it happen.

How this influx has evolved over the years is that now this talent is more involved in company building than ever before as either operators or direct investors in startups. Geographically, this influx has also been increasingly dominated by an exodus from the Greater China Bay Area.

And Singapore remains a destination for this influx not just because of Singapore alone but because the country has long positioned itself as a commercial and financial gateway to the rest of Southeast Asia. Of course, the flows of tech talent and capital have diversified a lot more to countries like Indonesia, Vietnam, and the Philippines, but many will still find haven in Singapore as a base of operations, either to set up shop and/or live there, then just travel around the region.

  • Massive dry capital has been raised by venture capital funds in the last 12 months as deployment selects for capital efficiency.

This combination of supply accumulation (dry powder) and tightening distribution to an equally increasing demand pool (startups fundraising) is shifting the dynamic of startup fundraising where investors will have more leverage. However, this also has its potential downsides for investors that may not be able to deploy as actively with respect to their fund size.

But this shift in leverage will not apply to all companies. Those run by the more resourceful and capital-efficient operators will thrive in terms of fundraising relative to the rest of the market.

“In a climate like this where there’s a flight to the quality, you’re gonna get the best companies. The truth is that they still select who they partner with. It used to be the case where we decide who to partner with, but I think these [companies] have the privilege of choosing which venture investors choose to partner with. And we certainly hope to be the partner of choice in terms of what we can do for them,” Yinglan Tan, On Call with Insignia podcast.

  • ASEAN economies are posting near-term resilience to breakout inflation.

GDP growth for ASEAN-6 economies has, for the most part, remained above CPI, as illustrated in this Financial Times article, thanks to rejuvenated travel regimes, exports (e.g. Vietnam manufacturing), and economic policies (e.g. price controls).

  • The rise of the “entrepreneurial” middle class driving demand for a “producer-first” digital economy.

Alongside the resilience of the ASEAN economies is the continued rise of the middle class, with GDP/capita across ASEAN-6 countries having rapidly closed in on the US$4000-5000 mark of massive tech market creation.

Also Read: Founder of world’s largest wine app reveals key to building a strong global team

But more than just the rise of the middle class per se is how the rise is taking shape. In particular, with the increasing adoption of e-wallets or crypto wallets, there are more people taking ownership of their wealth growth and generation, whether through investments, starting a (side) business as an MSME, or even engaging in the creator and gaming economy.

This is not just driven by rising incomes and therefore “room” to invest, but also a mindset shift around what makes a career (e.g. linear, dependent progression vs experimental, independent growth), what brings income (e.g. single job vs one main job along with side hustles and other income sources), and what constitutes personal fulfilment (e.g. financial security vs financial stability + personal impact/ following passions).

That said, this evolution into an “entrepreneurial” middle class is not something without fundamental roots in Southeast Asian cultures. For instance, in Vietnam, the emergence of digital platforms to support wealth management like Finhay has tapped into the country’s deep-rooted culture around entrepreneurship and risk-taking.

Becoming an e-commerce entrepreneur or even a venture-backed startup founder as well is not as “taboo” as it once was a decade ago, with more tools, resources, and networks available.

  • Digitalisation is becoming independent of market cycles and rooting itself in the socio-cultural fabric of Southeast Asia’s societies. 

While there’s a lot of discussion around the sustainability of thin-margin, discount-subsidised business models, the reality is that regardless of business model sustainability, the impact of venture-back tech startups is not skin-deep. We wrote earlier in this piece about specific cultures unlocking ease of adoption for certain digital services; the reverse is also true.

This causal relationship between digitalisation and the socio-cultural fabric of societies is best observed as well in rural areas, where digitalisation is meant not just to fulfil conveniences but solve longstanding inefficiencies from excess costs and waste in the fisheries supply chain to access to equitable financing for MSMEs. Ultimately the nature of this dynamic is rooted in startups needing to localise their services precisely to the relationships and behaviours of their target users.

It’s also worth noting that this progression from purely transactional or economical to socio-cultural nature of digitalisation is also driven by regulation (i.e. release of licences, frameworks) and adoption by political institutions as well.

  • Opportunities for Southeast Asia’s three waves of founder talent are becoming more prominent.

The three waves of founders (big tech and unicorn mafia, foreign talent, and returnees) continue to evolve in Southeast Asia. These waves have existed for a long time, but the biggest difference today is that these waves are being drawn in by more obvious circumstances than before.

The sources of big tech and unicorn mafia are diversifying with more local growth-stage scaleups producing founder talent in Southeast Asia and the restructuring many big tech and unicorns have had to undergo recently. Foreign talent, as mentioned in the first point, is being drawn in by the region’s opportunities vis-a-vis other places.

Also Read: Pipefy CEO on why founders should prepare for international expansion since Day One

And finally, for returnee talent, often from foreign business schools, the opportunities to start a company back home are more evident than ever before, to the point that some may even forego going abroad in favour of developing their career locally or delaying it after building up local startup experience.

  • Emerging advantages of starting a global company in Southeast Asia driving more early-stage value creation in the region.

While the long-standing narrative for tech startup building in the region has been to take existing models and see how they might work for the region, startups coming out of the region are proving that there is merit to actually building first in Southeast Asia and leveraging strengths or learnings gained from that to scale globally. A prominent example here is in artificial intelligence-based SaaS solutions, where unstructured data in the region is able to make AI models and solutions fitter to deal with the demands of the global market.

Key to taking advantage of the golden hour: Unlocking founder-market fit

For investors looking to find the “Sifan Hassan” founders, those who are unstoppable enough to leverage the market drivers and opportunities we just covered above and build the next decade’s market makers and leaders, a good place to start is founder-market fit. Or more precisely, finding places where this fit is realised, catalysed, or created.

If there’s anything else Sifan Hassan’s story can teach us, it is that the answer to the question of what it takes to turn crisis into opportunity and growth is not capital, resources, or market forces. It’s people. It’s Sifan herself. It’s the founders themselves. So it’s important for founders to be able to operate in a space where they can turn dust into gold and not be limited by misalignment.

At Insignia, we’re building platforms and tools to catalyse this founder-market fit, from things as fundamental and simple as the market statistics page on our website to Insignia Ventures Academy, a VC education company bringing together the next generation of investors and founders in the region through its 12 week VC accelerator and other programmes.

For the full article, you can read it on Insignia Business Review. If you’re looking to build this platform with us, join our team! If you’re looking for your own founder-market fit or are already working on something, we’d love to see how we can work together

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

Join our e27 Telegram groupFB community, or like the e27 Facebook page

Image credit: Canva Pro

The post 7 drivers of Southeast Asia’s “golden hour of opportunity” for startup founders and investors appeared first on e27.

Posted on

How digital technology can transform the food and beverage industry

Even in the face of the pandemic, the food and beverage sector in this country has come a long way in recent years, and there are a number of technologies driving those advances through digital transformation.

These include solutions within guest experience, kitchen operations (including food safety), business intelligence, HR and staffing, and inventory and procurement management. Furthermore, there are systems that can combine all these data points to collectively help improve operations as a whole. 

As one example of digitalisation within guest experience, it’s already hard to imagine a world without the option of online ordering and food delivery. Of the total number of meals consumed by Filipinos in 2021, one-third were ordered from restaurants. In 2020, subscriptions to food delivery aggregators increased by 61 per cent.

A more holistic digital approach

The sector has embraced and adopted new technology offerings to help improve operations and profit margins, driven by new solutions related to contactless ordering and payment, automated inventory replenishment and depletion, software used to schedule staff, improvements to loyalty programmes, and even food safety.

To streamline their offering and indeed save time and money for their businesses, food and beverage groups are now recognising the need for a full-suite solution to keep track of multiple vendors and apps via one platform.

Having worked with restaurant groups, as well as with the technology companies servicing these groups for many years across multiple geographies, I have long been a believer in the need for a fully-centralised restaurant management system.

The correct use of data, readily available to both management and employees alike, can help businesses make more informed decisions and thus maximise profits. Moreover, ask anybody in the industry, and they will agree that anything that makes restaurant operations simpler (and more profitable) is definitely a big step in the right direction. 

Platforms like that of Mosaic Solutions help streamline both front and back-of-house operations by bringing together POS (Point of Sale), purchasing and inventory management capabilities, while reporting and analytics dashboards bring it all together.

As the central nervous system of operations, we are able to create an ecosystem of other related products and apps around our core “operating system” and bring clients’ data together in one holistic view.  By using the software as the central hub for other restaurant technologies and apps, the inevitable end result is improvements in efficiency, a simplification of operations and better margins.

For example, imagine having an accurate dashboard of a customer’s preferences, favoured table, a popular dish, which dishes typically get ordered together, etc., and that this data is tied to the restaurant POS.  The server and kitchen can cater specifically to that customer quickly and efficiently to make a more memorable experience and build a loyal relationship while also helping to drive increased check size. 

Also Read: Why continuity plans for F&B businesses is a must

This customised customer experience will heavily influence future return visits, an invaluable boost in an ultra-competitive marketplace. It is well-known that margins within the food and beverage sector can be tight, while operations also can be pretty complicated. This next wave of restaurant technologies can help improve both.

Driving significant economic improvement

All across the globe, many industries were severely affected by the COVID-19 pandemic, and the food and beverage industry was no different. Revenue from the food service sector in the Philippines totalled just over US$8.5 billion in 2020, a significant decrease on 2019’s figure of more than US$15 billion.

Rapid adaptation to an omnichannel sales model was vital during this period, and a variety of revenue streams, from delivery to pick-up to ready-to-eat, were the keys to survival. Food and beverage companies adopted technologies to support this omnichannel approach as well as to optimise operations and improve margins, which had become particularly tight due to the pandemic. 

I believe the adoption of these technologies will continue as the industry recovers from the unforeseen and unprecedented losses of recent years. This already can be seen in the rebound of the industry within the Philippines in 2021 to US$10.3 billion and its projected annual growth of 7.8 per cent from 2021 to 2026, which should outpace the growth of the overall Philippine economy during those years (projected to grow at six per cent per year by the Asian Development Bank).  

The relative value and importance of the Filipino food service market to the overall economy are simply staggering. The Philippines is set to experience the highest consumption growth in ASEAN by 2030. At the centre of this consumer spending is food and beverage (F&B), which will account for up to 40 per cent of consumption, according to the WEF

If the food and beverage sector is to achieve such lofty rates of growth, continued investment in technology and internet infrastructure must play a significant role. This will enable efficiency-driving, cloud-based solutions such as mobile point of sale and contactless payments to thrive while also supporting the ability to provide insights and data anywhere, anytime.

By embracing more advanced cloud technology and supporting improved connectivity, as the country continues to recover post-COVID-19, the Philippine food and beverage market can undoubtedly reach its full potential in the months and years ahead.

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

Join our e27 Telegram groupFB community, or like the e27 Facebook page

Image credit: Canva Pro

The post How digital technology can transform the food and beverage industry appeared first on e27.

Posted on

Does investing in Bitcoin still make sense?

2022 has been rough on Bitcoin, to say the least. This is in marked contrast to the crypto market’s enthusiasm just a year ago, when Bitcoin hit two record price highs: surpassing US$60,000 in April 2021 and peaking at nearly US$65,000 in November. Remember, these prices are for one Bitcoin!

But as we rang in the new year with a distinctly gloomy global economy, the Russia-Ukraine war, surging inflation, and interest rate hikes, to name but a few, investors lost their nerve, and Bitcoin’s price began to quake.

By June 2022, Bitcoin (and other cryptocurrencies) fell about 68 per cent from its previous highs. Today, the price hovers around US$23,000, a mere shadow of its former glory.

So, does it still make sense to buy Bitcoin? We believe so. Let’s talk about why this market crisis can actually be a good opportunity for investors to increase their exposure to Bitcoin, provided you have the ability to stomach significant volatility ahead.

Here’s why Bitcoin will not go to zero

During the crypto crash of 2022, the price of Bitcoin fell below US$19,000. For investors who entered this market during the bull run of 2021, this unprecedented low triggered fears of a free-fall down to zero.

But experts believe there is virtually no chance of this happening. While the market has undergone upheavals, the fundamental investment thesis for Bitcoin hasn’t changed a single bit, namely:

  • Bitcoin is increasingly seen as a store of value, similar to a form of digital gold.
  • Bitcoin is limited to 21 million and programmed into its code, and with its governance decentralised, it is next to impossible to change. Increased demand and acceptance and fixed supply will drive Bitcoin price and value over the medium term.
  • Bitcoin has become part of the financial infrastructure, being used for payments by companies like PayPal, and accepted by regulatory authorities such as the Bank of International Settlements and the El Salvador government. It is now even offered as a retirement savings plan option in the US.
  • Bitcoin is different to other cryptocurrencies in that it is the most secure and decentralised, making it better suited as a store of value. The other cryptocurrencies are more technology investments, which could also be very lucrative investments but have a fundamentally different investment thesis compared to a scarce store of value like Bitcoin.

With such widespread adoption and institutional acceptance of its value, it’s extremely unlikely for Bitcoin to plummet to zero.

In fact, Bitcoin’s price appears to have bottomed out. Following its US$19,000 low in June, the price rallied to about US$23,000 at the end of July. This uptick appears relatively stable and could develop into a steady climb, prompting some investors to rejoice that the crypto winter is beginning to thaw.

Also Read: 13 years on since the birth of Bitcoin, it’s now blockchain’s time to shine

This sentiment is echoed by experts, who believe that Bitcoin is undervalued at the moment. Analysts at JPMorgan Chase, Fidelity Investments and D.A. Davidson estimated Bitcoin’s value to reach between US$38,000 and US$50,000 in the next two years, that’s about double its current price.

Existing Bitcoin holders: Is it time to accumulate more?

If you have been holding on to your Bitcoin throughout the crypto crash of 2022, you deserve a salute. It takes a will of iron to hang on to Bitcoin in the current market environment, especially if you have significant paper losses.

It’s worth noting that nothing about Bitcoin’s fundamentals has changed this year. All signs of 2022’s crypto winter point to a swing in investor sentiment and, very likely, loss of access to easy money as interest rates shot up this year and not to the investment case of Bitcoin itself.

As the grandfather of all crypto assets, its key strengths are:

  • Its technology: The immutable blockchain ledger provides security and confidence that it cannot be manipulated and is expected to disrupt diverse industries.
  • Potential as a store of value: Due to the hard cap of Bitcoins that can be mined and increased mainstream acceptance that it is a store of value.
  • Institutional adoption: Not only businesses and individuals but regulators and governments are also coming on board.

Despite the recent market correction, we believe Bitcoin’s long-term impact remains. It is the crypto asset that has already kicked off massive changes in the way we think about and use money, and it’s here to stay.

Bitcoin’s true believers and holders can view 2022’s crypto crash as an opportune time to purchase more Bitcoin with the intention to hold it for the long haul.

New to Bitcoin: Why is it an excellent time to enter the market?

During the crypto craze of 2021, some investors shied away from dabbling in Bitcoin because of its high price. But since the recent crypto crash has caused the coin to plummet to previously unheard-of lows, the same investment can net you nearly three times the amount of Bitcoin as compared to its peak.

In addition, analysts from the likes of JPMorgan Chase and Fidelity Investments believe that the price of Bitcoin should more or less double in the near term. If they are correct, there’s a chance that a well-timed investment into Bitcoin now (at its current low price) will result in significant returns.

However, new investors should thoroughly understand the case for investing in Bitcoin for the long haul and the risks before taking on this exposure.

Also Read: Are we prepared to embrace the possibilities of Web3 beyond crypto?

Crypto is an incredibly volatile asset. Investors need to be both financially and mentally prepared for wild swings in prices, especially around major events like Federal Reserve interest rate hikes. Coinrule founder Oleg Giberstein has a good rule of thumb: invest an amount you are comfortable with and try not to worry about crypto prices for the next two years or so.

Fundamentally, Bitcoin should be a part of a diversified portfolio, and only a tiny proportion of it at that. Financial experts like Paul Tudor Jones recommend allocating five per cent of your total investments to Bitcoin, but do assess your own risk tolerance and goals before deciding on how much to invest.

Investing in Bitcoin still makes sense in 2022

Let’s recap: The crypto market underwent a major crisis this year, and the price of Bitcoin has fallen to about a third of its peak in 2021.

While the crypto crash has left many shaken, the fundamental case for investing in Bitcoin has not changed in the least. Bitcoin still remains the world’s most accepted cryptocurrency and is already highly entrenched in our financial systems.

At its current low price, Bitcoin is attractive to both investors looking to enter the market as well as existing investors looking to increase their Bitcoin holdings. That said, investors must be able to stay the course as the current climate is no doubt a turbulent one for crypto in general.

This article is not intended to be and does not constitute investment advice. It is for general purposes only and does not take into account your individual risk appetite and financial circumstances.

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

Join our e27 Telegram groupFB community, or like the e27 Facebook page

Image credit: Canva Pro

The post Does investing in Bitcoin still make sense? appeared first on e27.

Posted on

How payment networks are crucial to the rising fintech movement

This series is produced in collaboration with the Fintech Association of Malaysia (FAOM), a national platform that supports Malaysia in becoming the leading hub for fintech innovation and investment in the region.

The tale of fintech, like that of the wider technology industry, is often one told of daring entrepreneurs, burgeoning startups, and long-shot bets by venture capitalists. Yet, little attention is paid to the infrastructure builders of tech, the sinews that link the private and public sector, that act as nervous systems that make it possible for frictionless payments to take place. 

With such systems in mind, I spoke to Khairuan Abdul Rahman, the Director of Retail Payments Services at PayNet, the national payments network for Malaysia’s financial markets, to garner his thoughts about the state of the payments industry, the role of agencies like his, as well as the increasingly dynamic future of digital finance. 

PayNet is the coordinator and mediator between many interests: national and local, public and private. It has an unenviable task of navigating bureaucracy to achieve its goals. 

“We have a clear objective, which is to aid Malaysia’s transition to a sustainable digital economy. We act as a catalyst for innovation, to provide a system that is more data-rich than its previous iteration, and to bridge that gap between cash, check, and payment.

“It’s more than just services, there’s a lot of communication and coordination involved. Building a national infrastructure requires public-private cooperation, as well as an all-of-government approach. We bring in the ecosystem,” said Rahman.

The role of government in paving the path

In Silicon Valley and the US, there has been a long history of private actors moving first, building the infrastructure before the government. Such was the case for railways when tycoons like Cornelius Vanderbilt went ahead to construct train tracks via private money; the parallel today is Tesla which took on the gargantuan task of expanding EV charging networks before any federal body regulated them.

Also Read: The future of fintech: The latest trends in the industry

Even then, we are beginning to see the limits of purely private plays, especially in the payments space, where we saw Meta attempt to create its own ecosystem via Libra, only to be met with a tepid response from customers and hostility from regulators.

In our part of the world, however, it is often necessary for the government to put in a significant effort in developing infrastructure before private actors are willing to enter the space. In this context, entities like PayNet are crucial to creating an environment where fintech can survive and thrive.

According to a report recently published by ACI Worldwide, Malaysia is the fifth fastest-growing real-time payments market globally, with a CAGR of 26.9 per cent. It’s not an exaggeration to say that PayNet has been at the forefront of enabling such an environment, having provided essential services such as account-to-account credit transfers, national bill payments, Malaysia’s domestic debit card scheme, and more recently, DuitNow QR, the national QR standard. 

How PayNet is enabling innovation

The pandemic has been a massive catalyst for the industry, giving PayNet an increasingly important role. “During the first year of the pandemic, we saw more than 100 per cent growth in e-payment volumes, and even in this endemic phase, we’ve seen a huge uptick for QR payments. It has clearly changed consumer behaviour, not just for e-commerce, but even for face-to-face transactions,” said Rahman.  

Despite the immense strides in digital payments, there have also been growing concerns that digitisation has not benefited everyone. A 2020 report by Khazanah Research Institute raised issues of digital inequality, where the urban poor and rural with less access to the internet are falling behind, cut off from the payments revolution. That’s where agencies like PayNet come in, bridging the divide, especially in areas where there is little commercial incentive for profit-maximising firms. 

Rahman lights up upon mention of this. “Based on observation, participants tend to go after big cities first due to the larger market and tech savviness of the population, and then secondary cities after that. So we need to create alternative avenues. For instance, we recently worked with Bank Islam to onboard the traders at Pasar Siti Khadijah in Kota Bharu (the capital of the state Kelantan) to accept DuitNow QR.”

“We take a holistic approach to these matters. We’ve also cooperated with universities, ministries, and telcos to set up internet infrastructure. After all, you can’t have digital payments without internet access. At the end of the day, it’s about building the foundations; it will take its time, but it will not be overnight. When we do these programmes, it’s not just about having a glamorous launch today, but about continuous education resulting in long-term changes in consumer behaviour.”

Also Read: How this startup is leveraging fintech, HR tech and service tech for changing the FDW industry

To this end, PayNet, in collaboration with the Fintech Association of Malaysia (FAOM), launched its Fintech ePayment Accelerator Programme in February earlier this year to support innovative solutions that can cater to the underserved population and encourage digital adoption.

Thus far, PayNet has received 25 proposals from a diverse array of use cases, including property, accounting and inventory management; the successful applicants will receive up to MYR500,000 in grant funding and access to PayNet’s extensive network.

“One of the core problems we identified for startups was a lack of funding, weak connections to the financial industry, and a lack of understanding of the current services available in the payments infrastructure. We wanted to provide not just a grant, but also an opportunity to work with PayNet’s ecosystem and platform.”

“It’s incredibly important for fintech to understand the real-time payments platform. What is unique about this is we allow non-banks direct access to it, which is rare in the region. This gives fintech opportunities for much richer customer data and superior integration. Of course, we have to manage the risks and processes, but it is part of our strategy to open this up to non-banks as well.”

This strategy of closer integrations, seamless transactions and a tightly intertwined global system is the heart of the payments industry. Yet, recent geopolitical rifts, whether it be Russia’s exile from the global financial infrastructure or the US-China trade war, have raised concerns that the trend towards frictionless payments is not inevitable. 

Rahman provides a measured response, “As a national entity, we have to mitigate that risk. We have to emphasise the local switch and data sovereignty, continuously think of backups and work on building resilience. But all these developments don’t change our goal. In the end, it’s about creating as robust a national payments infrastructure as possible.”

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

Join our e27 Telegram groupFB community, or like the e27 Facebook page

Image credit: jippu2498

The post How payment networks are crucial to the rising fintech movement appeared first on e27.

Posted on

Book excerpt: Singaporean tech leaders on the high and low of their entrepreneurial journey

Koh Shiyan is the Co-Founder and Managing Partner at Hustle Fund, a venture capital fund that invests in pre-seed software startups in the US, Canada and Southeast Asia. Prior to that, she was VP Business Operations and Corporate Development at NerdWallet, a fintech startup that helps users with a range of financial decisions through content, community and tools. Over the course of six years at NerdWallet, she led product teams, ran business operations and corporate development, and helped grow the company from US$1 million to US$150 million in revenue.

Knowing how to learn is incredibly important because there’s just so much in the world you’re not going to know. You just have to have a prepared mind to go figure it out. In startup land, people want to index on credentials or experience, but the fact of the matter is that a startup is either inventing a new market or having a different approach. The team that learns and implements the fastest will win, not the team that started off with the most experience or the most capital.

Jeremy Au: How would you describe your personal journey?
Koh Shiyan: If we start from college, I had the opportunity to go to Stanford for undergrad. In many ways, that was a dream come true. My parents were Asian parents that really wanted me to go to Harvard, so I early-decisioned Stanford to hopefully not have to do that. I was like, “I grew up in a tropical country! I like being warm.” Boston winters just didn’t sound like a great time.

When you grow up in Singapore, you think that because you’re fluent in English, going to school in the US will be really easy. You’ve watched American TV, you listen to American music, and then you show up on campus and you realise, “These people are super different.” The first year of college is just figuring out what was going on and being blown away by the quality, and the ambition of the people, but also feeling, “I don’t know anything that they’re talking about. I don’t watch Seinfeld, I don’t watch the Simpsons or South Park or any of these things.” Just tells you how old I am.

I majored in economics and, a little bit unusually, biomechanical engineering. If I had been smart, I should’ve majored in computer science. I really loved building things. I had always played sports through my life so I really loved the idea of learning how to build things that could help people, whether it was new knees, new ankles, pieces of body that I would probably need when I get older and retire from all my physical activities.

Also Read: Book Excerpt: Why successful fundraising begins with understanding your company’s needs

Fate has many funny twists and turns. I wound up doing an internship in college for JP Morgan, at the investment bank arm. I didn’t really know what an investment bank was. I had a friend who had interned for Credit Suisse the year before and said, “I think you would like this. It’ll be good for you, and it’s only for 10 weeks. You can do anything for 10 weeks.” I replied, “I guess that’s true.” I read a bunch of books and it seemed like you had to learn how to create discounted cashflow models and do math or whatever. I was like, “Okay, I think I can do these things.”

They didn’t want to do any of these things that I had practiced for. Twenty years later, you’ve been that person who’s had to interview tons of kids and you had to read hundreds of resumes. He didn’t actually want to ask me any questions about whatever fake preparation I’d done. He was just like, “Oh, so you play rugby?” And like, “Yeah, I play.” And he’s like, “Oh, I played soccer in college.” We literally spent the whole time talking about sports.

Then the interview ends and I said, “Actually, my team bus is going to pick me up from outside this JP Morgan office in San Francisco and we’re going to go play a match.” He’s like, “That’s so amazing!” There’s more reminiscing about trips. Then I get on the bus and all my teammates were like, “Did you get the job?” I was like, “I don’t know! I’m so confused! He didn’t even ask me anything that I’d prepared for. We just talked about rugby the whole time.”

I wound up getting the job. My friend was right. I really enjoyed 10 weeks there. It was the summer of ‘03, so we were in the run-up to the first boom and crash. It was intoxicating to be 21 and working on transactions at companies that you heard of, used their products. It could be eBay, it could be Cisco, all of these things.

I wound up going back there full-time after I graduated. I spent two years in the investment bank covering tech and healthcare out of San Francisco. Because it was the boom, I did 19 transactions in two years. I don’t remember all that much about the two years. I drank a lot of Diet Coke and coffee, and I didn’t sleep very much. What I learned was a lot about how businesses get financed, because I worked on IPOs, followons, converts, high-yield, investment-grade. I also learned that I didn’t want to be an investment banker.

I just caught up with my old boss from that period. He’s now a vice chairman at JP Morgan, a long-time guy. When I told him I was leaving, he said, “You don’t want to grow up to be like me?” I said, “No. I’ve seen how you live your life. You’re on a plane 15 days a month.” He had a six or seven-year-old daughter, he had a stay-at-home wife. I said, “I don’t know what’s going to be my future but I’m pretty sure it’s not a stay-at-home wife, so I don’t think this is going to be particularly sustainable.”

JP Morgan San Francisco is interesting because it’s actually built from the old Hambrecht & Quist teams, which were part of the four horsemen of those boutique investment banks that took a lot of the startups public.

Also Read: Book Excerpt: What Google, Facebook did to grow from zero to 1,000

The practice on the West Coast was much more growth company-focused than the East Coast. They covered a lot more like the IBMs of the world. What I found was, I really like that part of it. I don’t need to go sell another revolver or credit facility. That’s not that interesting. I am much more interested in smaller companies.

I wound up working for a late-stage venture fund called Institutional Venture Partners. They are old-school, founded in 1978. Reid Dennis, the founder, is one of the original grand old men of Silicon Valley in Sand Hill Road and got to work on deals like Twitter and Zynga, and all these enterprise software companies that you’ve probably never heard of. That was a fantastic education because you evaluate thousands of deals a year. You end up making six to 10 investments a year. It’s a very thorough process to whittle that down.

After a couple years there, I wound up going to Harvard Business School. For women, business school is like an insurance policy, a place to mark your career in case you ever do take time out or work for smaller companies that people hadn’t heard of. I realised that I had no formal business training. I’d learned a lot from the financing side but I hadn’t really thought about businesses all that much. I didn’t really know anything about marketing, sales, or all these functions. I knew a lot about financial statements.

I go to business school, and this is a great reminder of how narrow my view was. I remember very clearly the practice case. HBS teaches lessons through the case method, so every case has this expository essay about the founder and the problems they were considering in their head.

At the end, there’s always financial statements. This practice case was about an ice cream distributor business. I flip to the back and I look at the financial statements and I was like, “Two per cent net margin? Why do these people even get up in the morning? What kind of business is this?” I had just been so brainwashed by software businesses that it was actually really hard for me to think about non-software businesses.

Business school was a great widening of my field of view, both in terms of types of businesses and also types of people. You meet people from all over the world who you never would have met in any more standard professional capacity – people who had served in the military, people who worked in more traditional industries, you name it, someone had done it.

There was a girl in my section. She was Polish. She had trained to be a professional musician, came from a family of professional musicians, and then decided she was bored. She became a professional competitive ballroom dancer, and then consultant. Super crazy bundles of skills and experiences. That was just fascinating. Of course, you go for the network and whatnot.

Also Read: Book Excerpt: In this digital age, customer journey as we know it may no longer exist

The fun fact about business school is, I wound up living off-campus and my apartment wound up being super startup-y and entrepreneurial. The first year, one of my roommates was Kat Lake, the founder of StitchFix. The second year, one of my roommates was Justin McLeod, the founder of Hinge. Any of you who are using Hinge, it started in our living room in Cambridge, Massachusetts. That’s funny to think about. It’s crazy to think about where StitchFix and Hinge started, and how those businesses have grown.

I thought I was going to come back to Singapore after business school. This was 2011. There wasn’t as much venture capital then and I figured it’d be pretty hard to try to get a venture capital job. In a very strange series of events, I wound up getting a hedge fund job because I thought, “there will be more finance jobs in Singapore.” I wound up working for a hedge fund in Connecticut called Bridgewater, one of the world’s largest hedge funds. The founder & CEO, Ray Dalio, is pretty well known for his writing. First, many asset managers read Bridgewater’s daily notes. Ray has written a lot about his management philosophy, which was encapsulated in the book Principles. I was there for a year. I was on the investment team. I worked on FX trade strategy.

What I learned was I didn’t like public markets much. I didn’t like living in Connecticut and I really just wanted to be back with smaller companies, closer to the action, things that felt more tangible to me.

We were living in New York at the time. Katharine, my now-wife, was working at a startup, so I was like, “Okay, I’m going to find a startup job in New York.” I started networking, doing some small consulting projects for people, trying to find teams or businesses that I liked to work with. I was really struggling. I did a bunch of projects and realised, “I don’t really care about fashion. I don’t really care about jewellery. I don’t really care about advertising technology,” which is a lot of what was in New York at the time.

I wound up chatting with an old friend. He had been in New York ever since college. I said, “You’ve been here for a while, tell me some interesting startups that you recommend that I go reach out to?” He said, “I don’t really pay attention to anybody else’s company. I’m too busy working on my own business. You should come work with me.” I was like, “What do you do?” We were social friends. He said, “Well, let me show you.”

This was Tim Chen of NerdWallet, which at that point was him and Jake Gibson, the co-founder, and a couple people they’d hired off of Craigslist. They had just made the decision that they were going to try to build and scale it. They’d been running it, just the two of them, for a while. I’m like, “Okay, well, tell me more. That’s interesting. Show me the books. Show me what you guys have been doing.”

Also Read: Book Excerpt: How chatbot threatens to upend an entire industry in the Philippines

I don’t really know how to explain it. As he was talking, and walking me through the business, and explaining how it worked, I just had this feeling, “There’s something there. I don’t really know what it is, but there’s something there.” I said, “Okay. Well, theoretically, suppose I did come work with you. What would I do?” Tim says, “What do you want to do? There’s so many things to do.” And me, being the idiot MBA, was like, “Would you let me be a product manager?” That was the pinnacle, right? And he’s like, “You want to manage the engineers?” I was like, “Yeah! Can I do that?” He said, “Sure. Whatever. So much to do. Whatever you want.”

I was like, “Okay, make me an offer.” He makes me an offer. I call Katharine. I was like, “Hey, I just got this offer to be a product manager at my friend’s company.” Small detail, they’re in San Francisco, because he’d just moved the business to California. I said, “I can commute.” Katharine’s like, “We just got here. We just moved to New York a year ago. I like it here. I’m not moving.”

I take this job. And it’s very funny, because I always get calls or questions from fresh grads or MBA grads. They’re like, “How do you make the decision to join an early-stage startup? What’s in your framework? What metrics?” I was like, “Look, it was pretty basic. The way I thought about it was, this is a big market. Tim is a high-integrity person. I believe the thesis, because there’s early signs, but it’s super early. I’m going to give it a year. If it works, I’m a genius. If it doesn’t work, I’ll get another job. If it doesn’t work, it won’t be because someone screwed me or there wasn’t a market. It’ll have not worked because we didn’t do a good job. We didn’t execute properly, which is a bet I’m willing to take. I’m betting on myself and this team.”

The first year I was at NerdWallet, 2012, I commuted back and forth between San Francisco and New York. I would do three weeks on, three weeks off. In San Francisco, I slept on people’s couches for the whole year. I slept on every single one of the management team’s couches. As we grew the team, I slept over at everyone’s house. Then I also had a home-couch with some business school friends, which included Russ Heddleston, the founder of DocSend, that just got bought by Dropbox. I paid them US$400 a month to have the right to sleep on their couch. I would buy booze periodically for their fridge, and I thought this was a real steal because, if you can imagine, a one-bedroom in San Francisco at the time was US$2,800 per month, and we were already paying rent in New York. I wasn’t going to be paying rent in two expensive cities on a startup salary.

I did this for a whole year. Later, that spring, my mom flies in for the engagement party, which is in Sonoma at Katharine’s aunt’s house. She lands at the airport and she’s like, “Where’s your apartment?” I was like, “Oh, I don’t have an apartment.” She’s like, “What do you mean you don’t have an apartment?” I was like, “Well, we have an apartment in New York but I don’t have an apartment here.” She’s like, “What are you talking about?” I was like, “Oh, I just sleep on people’s couches.” She’s like, “This is unacceptable.” The whole time we’re driving to Sonoma, she’s on the phone with realtors setting up viewings.

Saturday’s the engagement party. Sunday, we drive around the city and look at apartments. Sunday night, she’s at the lounge at SFO flying out, and she’s calling me. She’s like, “Did you sign a lease yet? Did you sign a lease yet? Did you sign a lease yet?” So, I signed a lease and we moved full-time to San Francisco.

Also Read: Meet Facebook Community Accelerator 2022’s additional funding recipients who are turning impactful ideas into action

I was at NerdWallet 2012 through 2018. We bootstrapped that business the first three years I was there. We didn’t raise money externally until 2015. IVP, my old fund, led the round. It was a US$69 million series A, so it was a pretty big series A. At that point we were probably doing about US$52 million revenue run rate. I don’t even know what that would be in today’s market. I shudder to think about that.

Tim kept his promises. In the early days, I managed engineers in Russia, Pakistan, Vietnam, Brooklyn. The first two years, we ran outsourced teams because as a bootstrap business, we couldn’t really afford Bay Area engineers. After we raised, we really pushed hard to bring engineering in-house, so I ran a couple product teams. My last
couple years there, I ran business operations and corporate development. We acquired a couple businesses, integrated those.

As most people in startup life know, you do whatever you need to do at the time that you need to do it. I make the joke that I have done almost every job at the business. When I left, NerdWallet was over 400 people. I think I knew the first 300 employees all by name. Then I had maternity leave, so there was a four-month period where people arrived and I never met them. When I came back from maternity leave, there was a big catch-up to try to learn all those new names.

It was an incredible crazy ride. Business continues to do well. It’s growing, it’s profitable. They’ve done another couple acquisitions this year, so it’s really cool to see that and to remember where we started.

What’s even cooler is to see all the people we hired as fresh grads who’ve grown up in the business, who’ve left, either to start their own companies or to take really good jobs at other neat businesses.

We decided we were going to move back to Singapore in 2018 and I had to figure out what to do. The choices were: start a company, join a company, start a fund, join a fund. I spent a few months traveling in the region, meeting with entrepreneurs and VCs. Where I landed was I felt like I was at a point in my life that I wanted to found something.

If I was going to work my ass off, I wanted to work with a little bit more control.

Then, this opportunity with Hustle Fund came along. My partners, Eric and Elizabeth, are actually old friends from college. Elizabeth and I have known each other since we were five, so we have a long history together. We’ve all tried to hire each other. I tried to hire Eric at NerdWallet, I tried to buy Elizabeth’s company at NerdWallet. Liz tried to hire me the startup before. We’ve always tried to do stuff, and this was our chance to work together.

Also Read: CrediBook’s CrediMart: A case study on compound product-market fit

I feel like with Hustle Fund, I get the best things. I get to start something. Emerging management funds are just like startups. You are constantly raising money and constantly figuring things out. I get to give back to a nascent ecosystem, share some experiences, and build an institution that endures. If you really think about the great funds of Silicon Valley, they’re institutions. They survived generational transition. That’s something we aspire towards.

Jeremy Au: You talk about your career journey in terms of learning what you like and learning what you don’t like. Is that how you think about life?
Koh Shiyan: When I take a job, I think about optimising for learning. I think about what I want to learn. I tell fresh grads: you don’t really know how to be at a job, so your first job should be a place that maximises teaching you how to be a professional and then exposing you to a wide range of things.

Traditional paths, whether it’s investment banking or consulting, have that feature where you can see lots of stuff. Then you’re like, “Oh, wait. Do I like this or do I not like this? Which do I prefer? What am I good at?” I’m sure kids today are much more sophisticated than we were back then. When I graduated college, I knew that I was good at school, and that’s not actually the same as being good at life or good at work. At least in your first role, finding an opportunity to be exposed to what high-quality professional work looks like and then either different functions or different industries, is super useful.

Early on in your career, you’re often primed to optimise for optionality, where you’re like, “I could do anything!” At some point, you only get compounding returns when you focus on something. Then you have to think about, “How do I pick that something?” You can only get a better decision when you have more data. The only way to get data is to do more stuff. I think about it that way, which is, my early jobs were very intense, but I got to do more stuff in a smaller period of time, which then meant you could actually, really reflect on what are the things you’re good at, what do you enjoy, what gives you energy, what doesn’t feel like work, which sounds like a very privileged take on work. That’s how I think about it.

With venture, I love the intellectual exercise of figuring out a business. That’s what I really like. I am a nerd about business and business models. What I learned in the startup world with NerdWallet is that I also really like figuring out people and where they sit in an organisation and how to make them do great work. How to create the conditions to do great work, on one hand, and then how to think about how that intersects with the actual business you’re building. Those are things that I’m very interested in and enjoy spending time on.

Jeremy Au: You were not only learning about optimising for learning. You’re also learning about the business. You kept mentioning the people you were working with. You’re learning about your boss, learning about the founder, learning about your boss’s lifestyle. How do you learn who’s someone you want to work with? You mention big market and early signs on the business side. You mentioned high integrity on the personal side. You talk about one year as a time gate.

Koh Shiyan: I think of life as a repeated game. I often tell people, “Life is long but the world is small, so act accordingly.” That governs how you want to operate with people and what kind of people you want to operate with. When you say high integrity, do they make the right decision even if it comes at personal cost to them? Do they have a sense of right or wrong? That’s important to me because life’s too short to work with people that make you feel icky. If you don’t feel great about having them come over for dinner and meet your family, that’s not a good sign. All the money in the world doesn’t change that. If you went to college, you have a pretty decent life. Adding 10x more money doesn’t make it 10x better. Those are personal values and trade-offs that you have to think about.

Also Read: Three books I loved reading in 2021 and the lessons they provided

I look for people who make me better. Ideally, they’re good at things that I’m not good at. They are self-aware human beings. This is a hard one, because everyone thinks they’re self-aware, but they are not emotionally mature enough to have hard conversations. They are passive-aggressive. If you think about most human drama, it’s because Person A wants to tell Person B something but can’t find the way to say it. Person B senses something is wrong with Person A, but Person A says nothing is wrong. So, Person B makes up stories in their head about what could possibly be wrong. Meanwhile, no work is getting done. You want to work with people who are like, “Hey, it’s the classic formulation, when you do X, it makes me feel Y. I would prefer if you did Z.” Then you get over it, and you move on.

This sort of emotional maturity, self-awareness, has become increasingly important as I get older because I just don’t have the energy to deal with that anymore. In this remote world, strong communications and strong communicators are really important to high-quality work situations. It’s not just tooling, although tooling matters. It’s not just process. People actually need to understand and value high-quality communication. That can be written, it can be spoken. When I look for people to work with, that’s what I index on. I like people who are a little bit weird, who don’t take themselves too seriously, because for this business, you have to be a little bit weird.

Jeremy Au: What’s interesting is that you became more sophisticated. You’ve learned more about learning over time. You learned about bosses, you learned about companies, you learned about different industries, you learned about yourself. You think quite a bit about learning, which shows that you’ve been learning about learning. Do you have thoughts about that?

Koh Shiyan: That’s why it’s so funny when people are like, “Oh, what should somebody major in?” It’s like, “Well, I don’t know.” Influencer is a job now. That was not a job when I was in college. How could you ever have majored in that? You wouldn’t have. If you are good at learning, you would’ve figured it out.

Knowing how to learn is incredibly important because there’s so much in the world you’re not going to know. There’s no way you can prepare for it. You just have to have a prepared mind to go figure it out. In startup land, people want to index on credentials or experience. The fact is, a startup is either inventing a new market or taking a different approach. It’s not knowable, so you’re going to have to figure it out. The team that learns and implements the fastest will win, not the team that started off with the most experience or the most capital.

When we look at entrepreneurs, we think about, “What is this person’s pace of learning? What is the ramp?” You can see it. I have this company. They send us an update every week and it is incredible because you can see the progress. Every week, they’re like, “Here’s how many people we talked to. Here’s what we learned. Here’s what we implemented into the product. We shipped this feature.” Then, the next week, they’re like, “From the feature we shipped last week, here’s what happened.” Rinse and repeat, rinse and repeat, rinse and repeat. You can see the business taking shape.

Conversely, there are people who never send you updates. You have to call them or text them, be like, “Hey, let’s catch up. Tell me what’s happening.” They’ll be like, “Well, we’re thinking about these things.” I was like, “What would make you do something? What would change your mind?” In the early stage, at least for software, I’m a big believer that good plans violently executed now, better than perfect plans executed later. That is all about pace of learning. How do you teach yourself that? It’s really hard, because the more experience you accumulate, the more the tendency is to be like, “In my day, this was how we did things.”

Also Read: Want to strengthen your communities? Facebook and e27 are here to help

Sometimes that works, and then sometimes it makes you miss the big things. How do you stay constantly open to that, tune that balance between what matters and what is new information that really is a paradigm shift? How do you prepare yourself for that?

Jeremy Au: You asked people and said, “What would change your mind?” That’s a really interesting question. Have you seen that question be effective? Does it actually wake people up? How have you used that phrase?

Koh Shiyan: It sometimes accelerates conversations, where you can feel like everyone’s going around in a circle and you just have to make a call. Talking more doesn’t actually give you more information. Either it’s, “Okay, I’m not having more information, but I think this is a reasonable hypothesis, I will try.” Or, “I don’t have more information. Therefore, I don’t feel comfortable acting.” At least when you ask the question, what you have to see to act, then you know. “Okay, we don’t need to talk about this anymore. Move on.” When I do see this thing, whatever it is, I’ll know I’m going to go do this. I think about meetings. It’s like trying to score a goal in soccer. I’m not a big soccer fan. The thing that irritates me most about soccer is that you can play to a draw. Even more irritating is when you watch people just pass
the ball back and forth, back and forth, and it doesn’t move down the field.

Every conversation, you want it to go somewhere. You want it to move down the field. It’s the same thing with these decision-making things. Either we’re going to score the goal or we’re going to stop playing, but we’re not going to run around in the middle of the field and do nothing. That seems like not a great use of time.

Jeremy Au: You can be learning eternally but if you’re not communicating it well, you can’t work as a team and therefore can’t learn as a group. When you were talking about your startups, you’re talking about teams debating. You’re talking about working with that person, founder or teammate. You’re also talking about the investor updates that startups are giving to you. How important is communication as part of that learning loop?

Koh Shiyan: It’s huge. I’ve been thinking about this a lot, because in the remote world, if you don’t deliberately make an effort to communicate, then there isn’t that serendipity of running into someone in the pantry and being like, “Oh, hey, how’s that thing going?” Or, “Oh, you look excited,” or, “You look down. What’s happening?” You have to initiate effort to communicate this thing.

If you think about it, we all operate with each other based on our prior experience with the person. You emit a series of dots, like data points, over time. In my mind, I am like, “Oh, Jeremy. He has this pattern of dots.” When I first meet you, I have no dots. I only have this first impression. Then, imagine that we didn’t hang out for five years. I have no intermediate dots except random things that I saw on social media. Then Jeremy’s like, “Shiyan, I’m raising US$10 million. Will you back me?” And
it’s like, “Oh, well…” It’s almost like having no dots. I would just evaluate it separately.

It’s also with people. If you or your company doesn’t emit dots at a regular cadence that lets people update their picture in their mind then they have to cast back their minds to that last dot they had about you and be like, “I seem to remember the business was struggling with X, Y, Z thing.” Then the founder’s just like, “Oh, we fixed all those things and that’s why we’re raising money,” or, “That’s why we need you to bridge us,” or whatever the case may be. It’s just more work to get there than, “Oh, I’ve been receiving steady reports on progress. I understand how they’re thinking about this problem. It makes total sense to me. Okay, maybe the data’s not that great, but because I’ve seen all this progress, I trust the process.” That’s ultimately what you’re trying to build with people. Whether it’s human beings, one-to-one, we’re trying to build trust with each other, companies to investors, companies to their own employees, you’re trying to build trust with each other.

Also Read: Restaurant booking app Chope reveals the secret sauce to its profitability in home market Singapore

That’s something we haven’t touched on, which is, as companies grow, one thing they systematically under-invest in is employee communication. Everyone is so used to, “I’ve got 10 people, I stuff them all in a room, and we’re jamming.” Then suddenly, “The business is doing great.” Now we’re at 25 people or 30 people. You can’t stuff 30 people in a room. In a remote world, you definitely can’t do that. How does everybody know what’s going on, and what is the cadence by which they are constantly reminded, this is where the business is going, here’s how we’re going to get there, this is your role in getting us there. It feels like you’re repeating yourself over and over. You’re like, “How can no one know my strategy by now? I say it all the time.” The bigger your company gets, the more you have to repeat it. High-quality communication is such a superpower. It is systematically under-invested in.

Jeremy Au: A lot about what you said is about trusting the process. You’re not only absorbing all this information. You also practice what you preach. You do regular writing, and you work very hard to communicate with your teammates and founders. How have you improved your communication practice over time?

Koh Shiyan: There’s some professional training around it. When you work on a project team in a bank, you’re on a deal team. There’s always people you have to keep apprised of what’s happening because you’re on a deal timeline. It’s always like, “This is what’s happening. This thing is in motion. We need this.” It’s the same thing with venture. You have this weekly meeting cadence. You’re always like, “What deals am I looking at? What am I evaluating? Who do I need introductions?” It’s very regular. Bridgewater took it to the next level. Bridgewater has this thing called the daily update. Everyone has to write a daily update and they have a whole internally-developed software system to do that. I actually found it most helpful when, at NerdWallet, I implemented it when we were 10 or 15 people. We were already starting to feel that strain where you have people running around and you have no idea what they’re doing. It was end of the week, everyone writes an email that just says, “Here’s what I did this week and here’s what I learned, and here’s where I need help.” We actually did that. It evolved a little bit.

At one point, the company got too big. You can’t just send an email to 50 people. No one’s going to read 50 update emails, so it’s just by team. You send it to your manager and then the manager rolls it up to the manager’s manager, and then if you’re the CEO or the management team, you can see updates from every business unit on Sunday night. When you head into the office Monday morning, you know, “What fires do I need to go fight?”

Actually, it was Bridgewater, plus Diane Greene from VMware who talked about how she ran this. I was like, “We need to do this.” I have to check in with Tim. When I left, we just did a version that was CEO’s reflections that went out to the whole company. We alternated between the CEO, the COO, the CFO. They would alternate reflections that went out to the company. That was incredibly useful, separate from our allhands meetings or whatever it was, because you basically could just see, “Oh, this is what’s on Tim’s mind.” It gave that intimacy and that communication channel.

It’s a lot of practice. It’s a lot of fine-tuning. Some of it is the forcing function. Last year, I said I was going to write a note every week to the portfolio. I did, and that was just a forcing function. I still don’t do it enough. My business partner, Elizabeth, is really good at it. In the spirit of learning from people who are better at things than you, I am constantly learning from her on how to get even higher-quality, higher-frequency.

Jeremy Au: Where were you 10 years ago? And if you could travel back in time, what advice would you give?

Koh Shiyan: Ten years ago, I would be in my final semester at HBS. I had this job. I was starting at Bridgewater in the summer. It probably would’ve been to do more self-care. In the first three years at the startup, and even at Bridgewater, I didn’t feel particularly healthy. In the spirit of things that compound over time, sleep, exercise, good diet. All those things are useful to invest in over time.

Jeremy Au: Thank you so much for sharing your journey. I love what you said, learning what you like and don’t like, startups learning faster, what would change your mind, communication and learning. My favourite phrase still, is, you can do anything for 10 weeks.

Koh Shiyan: That’s true. The human body is incredibly adaptable. It’s good to push yourself early because then you know what you’re capable of. It gives you more confidence for subsequent period.

This is an excerpt from the book BRAVE10: The Singapore Edition by Jeremy Au. You can buy it here.

Image Credit: © inspirestock, 123RF Free Images

The post Book excerpt: Singaporean tech leaders on the high and low of their entrepreneurial journey appeared first on e27.

Posted on

Techstars, Crestone VC join Filipino HR-tech startup Betterteem’s financing round

Betterteem Co-Founders Leonard Dumasig and Bo Discarga (R)

Philippine HR-tech startup Betterteem has secured an undisclosed sum in funding from Techstars, Crestone Venture Capital, 1337 Ventures (Malaysia), and Suresh Thiru (ex-CEO of JobStreet).

The fresh funding will be used to launch its mobile app and expand its service offerings while further developing the AI capabilities of its platform, said Founder and CEO Bo Discarga.

Discarga and Rey Leonard Dumasig (CTO) co-founded Betterteem in Metro Manila in 2021 with a mission to find out and define the specific drivers of employee experience in the BPO sector in Asia Pacific.

Also Read: Betterteem is Slack, Microsoft Teams, SharePoint, Intranet all rolled into one

It is a predictive workplace app focused on the overall employee journey. It uses machine learning to predict churn, provides on-demand mental health support, and is a digital community platform to influence their experience positively. Betterteem does this by sifting through volumes of data coming in and out of the app after its daily use by employees.

In simple words, Betterteem amalgamates the features of several HR apps like Slack, Microsoft Teams, HRIS, SharePoint, and Intranet. This allows the app to collect usage data and create predictive analytics of a team member’s experience. It alerts people leaders/HR executives about their experience and attrition possibility using its predictive analytics.

“Our goal is to get all these employee data in one place and harmonise them to support HR transformation and digitalization,” added Discarga.

Since its launch in January this year, Betterteem claims it has onboarded over 14,000 BPO employees on its platform, representing a month-on-month average user growth of 34 per cent.

The startup reported an improvement in HR services efficiency by 12 per cent and employee retention by an average of 9 per cent compared to the same time last year before its existing clients used Betterteem.

Betterteem intends to launch its iOS and Android app by Q4 of this year.

Also Read: How machine learning really impacts us in our daily lives

Aside from its ongoing service offerings in the Philippines, Betterteem is also piloting its HR offerings in South Korea through the K-Startup Grand Challenge 2022.

Betterteem is one of the two Filipino startups selected to participate in the fifth cohort of the Ernst & Young Foundry programme.

The firm earlier raised undisclosed funding from local angel fund Buko Ventures and IdeaSpace, a non-profit, local startup accelerator.

Fundraising or preparing your startup for fundraising? Build your investor network, search from 400+ SEA investors on e27, and get connected or get insights regarding fundraising. Try e27 Pro for free today.

The post Techstars, Crestone VC join Filipino HR-tech startup Betterteem’s financing round appeared first on e27.

Posted on

How to meet your customer expectations fluently with the power of business messaging

A few months ago, I wrote about our first global Business Messaging event, Conversations, which brought together our business, partner and developer communities. We shared vital product announcements and the investments we’re making to help businesses use messaging to start conversations with customers, achieve scale, and deliver a seamless experience. You can read a useful recap here.

We continue to see Business Messaging gain momentum across industries, especially in the Asia Pacific. This is why I’m excited to share the results of a recent study by Meta and Boston Consulting Group (BCG), which surveyed 6,500 respondents across Australia, Indonesia, Korea, the Philippines, Taiwan, Thailand and Vietnam.

According to the study, over 40 per cent of people surveyed said they were messaging with a business more frequently than compared in the pre-pandemic period, with one in three consumers chatting with businesses at least once a week. The trend was similar across all age groups, especially among Millennials and Gen Zs, who are messaging businesses up to eight times every month.

Changing trends

The study, Business Messaging: The Quiet Channel Revolution Across Tech, packs a lot of insights, but here are the ones that stand out to me.

Messaging is an integral communication channel for businesses and consumers:

  • 90 per cent of businesses recognise that messaging apps are essential for success
  • 80 per cent of consumers plan to continue using messaging to interact with businesses

Financial Services (FinServ) is emerging as a high-potential vertical for Business Messaging:

  • Across APAC, consumers said it was vital for them to message a business before they signed up for a financial product

Use cases for Business Messaging continue to expand across industries such as CPG, retail, FinServ and e-commerce, ranging from basic enquiry, lead generation, one-to-one consultation, customisation, gaining feedback, re-marketing and signals collection:

  • More than half of businesses say that they use Business Messaging for after-sales services
  • 61 per cent of retail and e-commerce businesses use it to process pre-sales enquiries
  • An average of 50 per cent of businesses said they use messaging to process orders and transactions

The power of business messaging

So what should a business do if they want to become more conversational? Here is a clear pathway we’ve defined to help businesses start, scale and delight customers with business messaging:

Start

Define clear objectives for messaging. Evaluate the potential of messaging throughout the whole customer journey and see where it can help solve unique pain points in each phase depending on business context and challenges.

Also Read: How small businesses can boost brand visibility via videos and messaging

Take the case of Philippine-based courier company LBC express, they saw an opportunity to automate common queries for customer service while providing live service for more complex queries. By using proactive package notifications on Messenger, they received 4.5x more loyalty programme sign-ups compared to traditional methods.

Scale

Adopt third-party messaging technology solutions and providers to scale messaging capabilities rapidly. Meta has a vast ecosystem of Meta Business Partners specialised in messaging solutions.

Our messaging partners are expert developers who build messaging experiences at scale. They can help solve specific challenges, from building a chatbot through messaging automation to handling payment and logistics. They provide simple and affordable solutions to help a business manage a high volume of conversations and personalise the experience at the same time for each customer. You can find a complete list of our partners here.

Delight

Delight customers with a seamless experience. Customers want to hear from businesses when the information is timely, personal, and relevant.

era-won, a Thai menswear brand, had customer queries around the clock and found they could not respond to customers in real-time. The brand decided to try an automated Messenger solution that could respond to messages and also update customers about tracking numbers and order delivery status.

To achieve scale, they worked with Meta Business Partner Zwiz.ai to set up a Messenger-powered digital assistant to help manage a large volume of customer queries. They saw an 8x return on ad spend, which they attribute to delighting customers with a smooth shopping experience.

The future looks bright

The conversational future is here, and businesses need to start now. Certain verticals such as financial services, beauty, apparel and automotive should definitely explore how to incorporate business messaging in their marketing strategy, given the nature of their customers’ path to purchase.

To learn about the report and unlock the power of business messaging, you can find more information here.

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

Join our e27 Telegram groupFB community, or like the e27 Facebook page

Image credit: Canva Pro

The post How to meet your customer expectations fluently with the power of business messaging appeared first on e27.

Posted on

Ecosystem Roundup: Dana raises US$554M, turns unicorn; Atome banks US$100M debt facility; Emtek mulls IPO for Vidio

Atome

Indonesian e-wallet Dana raises US$554M from Sinar Mas, Lazada
This brings DANA’ valuation to US$1.3 billion; Dana said that it has acquired more than 115M users and processed over 10M daily transactions; According to its CEO Vincent Iswara, the presence of new investors will help add more services and improve its tech scalability.

Emtek mulls IPO for OTT platform Vidio
Emtek holds 79.37 per cent stake in the OTT platform through its subsidiary SCM in Vidio; The Indonesian conglomerate is also a top shareholder of IDX-listed Bukalapak.

Atome banks US$100M HSBC debt facility
It will support the fintech company’s efforts to expand and strengthen its presence in Asia; Atome is a buy now, pay later platform that works with over 15,000 retail partners across 10 Asian markets.

Aramco’s VC arm leads US$35M round of HK’s Insilico Medicine
Besides Prosperity7 Ventures, Warburg Pincus, B Capital Group, and Qiming Venture also joined; Insilico uses AI to discover and develop drugs for cancer, fibrosis, central nervous system diseases, and ageing-related diseases.

Indian crypto firm CoinSwitch Kuber launches US$10M Web3 fund
It aims to incubate up to 100 Indian early-stage startups building blockchain solutions; The crypto firm said it has over 18M users: In April 2021, CoinSwitch raised US$25M Series B led by Tiger Global.

Indonesian digital pharmacy Lifepack raises US$7M
Investors include Golden Gate Ventures; Lifepack aims to provide quality and affordable medicine for patients. Besides OTC drugs and general supplements, the company also offers medication for chronic diseases.

Expedock banks US$13.5M to allow supply chain brands to transform paper docs into data
Investors include Insight Partners, Neo and Pear, and angels; Expedock uses AI to transform paper documents into data, quickly classify them, and bring them into existing freight forwarder tools.

‘DAOs aren’t different from community-building efforts seen in Web2’
Anyone can start a DAO; all you need is a group of people with a shared bank account, explains Web3 expert and Menyala executive Siddharth Krishnan.

Traveloka ex-CMO’s healthtech startup Diri Care closes US$4.3M seed round
Investors include East Ventures, Sequoia India, Surge, and Henry Hendrawan; Indonesia-based Diri Care is an on-demand, one-stop digital clinic for skin, hair and intimate health conditions.

Singapore pet care startup ZumVet closes US$3.7M Series A
Investors include Quest Ventures, Pine Venture Partners, and Pentepebble; Aimed at making pet care accessible and affordable, ZumVet offers remote care options and self-administered diagnostics and treatment programs across SEA.

ProfilePrint adds food supplies giant Cargill to its cap table
ProfilePrint predicts the quality and profile of a food sample “within seconds”; Over the last six months, Cargill has completed pilots with ProfilePrint’s solutions across its portfolio of ingredients.

Techstars, Crestone VC join Filipino HR-tech startup Betterteem’s financing round
Betterteem predicts employee churn, provides on-demand mental health support to them, and is a digital community platform to influence their experience positively.

Social finance platform Ethis relaunches angel investor group
The ESA Syndicate is by invitation only for angel investors who aim to back startups focusing on the Muslim world and halal sectors; It’ll have a “special interest” for the fintech, agritech, and halal food distribution industries.

Gobi-backed startup Avana’s co-founder Luqman Adris passes away
It is understood from a former colleague and investor that Adris had been suffering from a severe illness; Avana helps businesses automate transaction processes on social media and instant messaging platforms.

GoTo launches food delivery service on Tokopedia
Currently, the service is available in the Greater Jakarta area; The rollout of this service will allow users to search for food options on Tokopedia, while GoFood merchants can reach a wider audience.

The post Ecosystem Roundup: Dana raises US$554M, turns unicorn; Atome banks US$100M debt facility; Emtek mulls IPO for Vidio appeared first on e27.