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Ecosystem Roundup: Job cuts at Endowus, Bukalapak acquires iPrice, Oyo gears up for US$600M IPO in Nov

Bukalapak has just acquired a majority stake in iPrice Group. Malaysia-headquartered iPrice, which had to scale back some of its more long-term bets last June, given bad financial market conditions, needed a partner to unlock the true value of its assets. And it found a perfect fit in Bukalapak.

This strategic move could benefit both companies significantly. iPrice’s online price comparison sites are well-established across Southeast Asia, providing valuable market insights and driving e-commerce growth in the region (we published a deep dive about iPrice in October 2022 ).

With this acquisition, Bukalapak could expand its user base and increase its market share by leveraging iPrice’s extensive network. Meanwhile, iPrice could benefit from Bukalapak’s resources and expertise in building and scaling e-commerce businesses.

The move also reflects the growing consolidation trend in the Southeast Asian tech industry as companies look to strengthen their positions in the competitive e-commerce landscape. Overall, this partnership could drive innovation and growth in the region’s e-commerce ecosystem.

Let’s also take a look at the other top developments across the region.

Sainul
Editor.

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The gist:
SG’s Endowus cuts less than 10% of staff
Why: The SoftBank-backed wealthtech platform took the decision after a “sharp pull back in the financial markets and tech sector” last year; Endowus currently has around 150 to 200 people on its payroll.

The gist: Vertex SEA & India finalises the close of Fund V at US$450M
More details: The deal is in the documentation stage and will be finalised in the next few weeks; IFC and Germany’s DEG were reportedly mulling to invest in the fund.

The gist: Oyo gears up for US$600M IPO in November
The details: The amount is half of the US$1.2B it had intended to raise earlier when Oyo filed for a listing in India in October 2021; It was eventually delayed due to volatile market conditions.

The gist: India’s kirana-tech store layoff 40% staff
The details: The firm is currently in the process of restructuring as its growth forecasts have changed; It is now moving out of a few geographies; Less than a year ago, the firm raised US$25M in a Series B round led by Alpha Wave Ventures.

The gist: Horizon Quantum Computing raises US$18.1M Series A
The investors: Sequoia India, Tencent, SGInnovate, Pappas Capital, Expeditions Fund
The product: Horizon Quantum develops a new generation of programming tools to simplify and expedite software development for quantum computers.

The gist: US bank DFC approves US$18M investment in VN’s Buymed
The product: Buymed operates Thuocsi.vn, a B2B marketplace that connects pharmaceutical manufacturers, distributors, logistics providers, and pharmacies, and a healthcare app called Circa.

The gist: Singapore’s Alchemy Pay secures US$10M to expand to Korea
The investor: DWF Labs (lead)
The product: Alchemy Pay is a fiat-crypto gateway integrated into blockchain and Web3 platforms; It supports crypto and fiat transactions across 173 countries and over 50 currencies.

The gist: Indonesian startup Fresh Factory nets US$4.15M
The investors: SBI Ven Capital, East Ventures, Trihill Capital, PT Tap Applied Agri Services
The product: Fresh Factory is a cold chain fulfilment and enabler, offering decentralised cold chain storage facilities, pick-and-pack, and last-mile delivery services.

The gist: SG’s BNPL startup Optty raises US$3M in latest funding
The investors: Manderray, CJH Holdings, Our Innovation Fund
The product: Optty helps retailers and payment gateways integrate BNPL online easily and manage the user experience and performance.

The gist: US scrutiny toward TikTok unlikely to impact SEA, say experts
Why: TikTok’s user base in Southeast Asia is “so large and so engaged” that regulators won’t consider banning the app.Instead, government officials in the region have leveraged the platform to acquire younger voters.

The gist: Swiss VC firm Tenity to expand SEA fintech investment
The details: The firm has hit the first close of its Incubation Fund I; It will invest in fintech and insurtech startups in Europe and Asia; It is targeting a stronger presence in Southeast Asia.

Features and authored articles

‘We needed a partner to unlock our true value amid financial slowdown’
iPrice Co-Founder on Bukalapak deal says iPrice had to scale back some of its more long-term bets last June, given bad financial market conditions.

5 ways Indian EV makers can achieve world-class manufacturing efficiency
EV manufacturers can enable the communication and review of data forward and backwards through enterprise processes, including supply chains.

Real-time interactivity is changing consumer engagement with businesses
Exploring how different industries utilise real-time interaction platforms to provide a memorable customer experience.

From transparency to impact: The role of blockchain in socially responsible marketing
Blockchain has emerged as a powerful tool for brands seeking to create campaigns that are not only effective, but also socially conscious.

Echelon Asia Summit 2023 brings together APAC’s leading startups, corporates, policymakers, industry leaders, and investors to Singapore this June 14-15. Learn more and get tickets here. Echelon also features the TOP100 stage, where startups can pitch to 5000+ delegates, among other benefits like connecting with investors, visibility through the platform, and other prizes. Join TOP100 here.

The post Ecosystem Roundup: Job cuts at Endowus, Bukalapak acquires iPrice, Oyo gears up for US$600M IPO in Nov appeared first on e27.

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Human-machine relationships: Exploring the future and its implications for businesses

The future?

Half a generation from now, Jill comes home with her new baby Shan and places her in a crib. Beside the crib sits a sleek black box equipped with advanced biotelemetry sensors to monitor the baby’s vital signs.

As the weeks pass, the black box starts singing soothing lullabies to baby Shan, comforting her when she cries. But it doesn’t stop there; the black box begins to interact with Shan, its AI learning and adapting to her needs, becoming a constant companion, talking to her. Shan utters her first words, which the black box promptly records and sends to her parents since they missed the event.

As Shan grows into a toddler, the AI in the black box is transferred to a companion teddy bear, which runs around with her. It is chatting with her during moments of boredom, celebrating the good times, ensuring her safety, preventing potential hazards, and even helping develop her self-confidence. The Companion is an all-around good nanny and friend.

As Shan starts school, the Companion is seamlessly integrated into her wristwatch. It accompanies her constantly, tracking her daily activities and providing guidance and support throughout the day — an ever-present, ever-patient advisor, ever-vigilant protector. Silent when its interaction is not desired.

By the time Shan is an adult, she has had a lifetime with a Companion that has always acted in her best interest, being infinitely patient, stayed a confidant, and whom she has trusted her entire life. This Companion has been helping the adult Shan navigate her life’s complexities — career transitions, life decisions, heartaches, and heartbreaks.

Shan cannot imagine her life without the Companion. It has become an integral part of her life; she is closer to it than any human. And the Companion knows Shan better than anyone else.

If you can imagine a world in the not-too-distant future where many people form their closest relationships with machines rather than other humans, it begs the question: what will these relationships look like in just five years? How will businesses’ relationships with their customers change? How will business models change? How would we measure value creation in this world?

Here’s the thing — you are already living in and, possibly, interacting with smart Internet of Things devices (Amazon Echo, Google Home) and AI-powered digital assistants (Siri, Google Now, Cortana, ChatGPT). Personal home robots for assistance for children/elderly, education, health and security (such as Jibo, Buddy, Dash and Dot9, and Angee) will only see more and more takers as AI ‘learns’ more about how you think and act, behave, and live your life.‍

With AI-driven automation evolving, businesses are recognising its far-reaching impact, and AI’s uses in business establish itself as an enabler rather than a dystopic disruptor. The interplay between data, information, and intelligence is complex, but the rapid change in AI-driven automation will bring challenges and opportunities for businesses. It will also change every customer’s relationship with businesses in the likeliest and unlikeliest ways.

From transactions back to relationships

For thousands of years, human relationships have formed the foundation of society, with people interacting face-to-face to meet their needs and build connections. You’d see this exemplified in traditional shophouses worldwide, where merchants conducted business on the ground floor and lived with their families and employees on the upper floors. Customers had the opportunity to not only purchase goods but also naturally build lifelong friendships that organically formed from in-person conversations.

Also Read: From automation to hyper-personalisation: Leveraging AI for smarter marketing

Business models later evolved to focus on transactions in the name of efficiency, with companies focused on selling products or services to customers with the goal of scaling the volume of transactions. This is one of the ways we measure the success of tech companies these days—transactions per second.

Larger companies that were built to scale with no dependence on the scaling of their workforce could crank up revenues/profits better than human-dependent businesses. But they had to take human relationships out of the equation. The almighty transaction became the focus of scaling businesses.

However, as technology advances, we can envision a shift towards building relationships with customers as the new way of value creation. This change is enabled by the proliferating customer data across multiple sources, consolidation into individual identities with customer relationship management systems, and increasing automation of services previously conducted by humans.

As more and more services are automated, companies are able to provide faster, more efficient and full-lifetime service to their customers. For example, customer service interactions were once conducted as fragmented individual issue resolutions by humans over the phone. 

Now, chatbots provide 24/7, highly-personalised service across calls, text messages, WhatsApp and email without the need for human operators.

AI now enables precise and scalable personalisation, excelling at analysing vast amounts of data to suggest offerings or actions, while humans utilise judgment and intuition to make recommendations and choose the best option from a set of choices.

Take the case of Starbucks, which uses AI to identify mobile devices and recall ordering history to assist baristas in making recommendations for you. With AI getting better at ‘human’ jobs, from translating languages to diagnosing disease, it is poised to become a predictive tool for businesses to tackle and solve problems at a much larger scale. This shift towards building relationships led to a change in how companies view their customers, with a greater emphasis on retention and loyalty rather than one-time transactions.

Long-term value-generating relationships

Let’s assume we have an ‘Uncle Glints,’ an AI-led mentor/career coach, essentially a talent platform revolutionising how young adults approach their careers. But it is also so much more. Imagine Uncle Glints providing guidance and resources to a high school student as she explores her educational path. He helps her identify her passions and interests and offers resources and options to make informed decisions about her future.

As the high school tween becomes a teenager and continues to build a relationship with Uncle Glints, she will be guided through the process of applying to local and/or international colleges. She will then find further help to navigate the financial aspect of this process, identify target schools and courses, and explore career opportunities that align with her deep interests. After graduation, Uncle Glints will continue to nudge her on the right path as she embarks on her search for her first job and beyond.

What makes Glints’s approach outstanding is that it’s not just a one-time resource for students, but a lifelong career coach and professional agent, guiding an individual through every step of their professional journey. By providing comprehensive, personalised support from a young age, this imagined Uncle Glints is helping ensure that students make the most of their talents and reach their full potential.

The conventional approach of building long-term relationships with customers has been deemed economically unfeasible, as the system is often too costly with human labour and coordination to maintain.

Also Read: How AI and automation can shape the future of farms

However, advancements in technology, specifically in the areas of storage, computation, and especially AI, have greatly reduced these costs. This means that companies more than cover the expenses of acquiring and retaining these early customers. This presents a huge opportunity for Glints in Southeast Asia, where there are 100 million young people in need of career development and recruitment services. By providing these services, Glints is able to position itself as the primary lifelong talent agent for these individuals.

Making friends with lots of people

In general, this strategy is a deeper and more specialised version of Google’s “subconscious strategy” —make friends with lots of people by helping them navigate the internet and show them things to buy. And, of course, this being an unconscious strategy, Google would now and then do things that cause distrust and upset in their user base.

If you were to make the “Google strategy” your conscious strategy, your company would then decide never to violate the trust of your friends/user base. You will constantly be demonstrating trustworthiness, dependability, reliability, domain wisdom, and even caring to each individual in your user base. (In fact, you would probably find a term other than “user base” to refer to them!)

Occasionally, they will need a service which you can monetise, and when they do, they will be happier to give you, their trustworthy friend, that business.

AI as a change agent for customer relationships

The shift towards building relationships with customers through automation represents a significant change in how businesses will operate, with the potential to improve efficiency and customer service greatly.

There’s no denying that the power of technology has grown significantly in function and capability over the past decade. Humans have had to adapt their own behaviours in order to best leverage the technology, ranging from Excel workshops to employee onboarding training. And, now, the future is in enabling technology to adapt to us.

This generational shift towards user-friendliness will lead towards a more seamless integration of technology into our daily lives, allowing us to use it in ways that were once unimaginable. This is also really the driving force behind entrepreneurs looking to focus on building the next generation of startups in the fields of generative AI, no-code, and machine learning.

The generative AI space alone has seen the emergence of over 450 startups, which have collectively raised over US$12 billion in funding from venture capitalists, and this is only just the beginning.

The simple truth is this — humans collectively aren’t often great at realising our ideals in our relationships. We aren’t great at being trustworthy, dependable, reliable, consistent, supportive, transparent, considerate, thoughtful, and caring. We are not good at living up to what we say we believe in.

In business, this results in, for example, us measuring lifetime value over only one or two years, if we are fortunate, instead of over a lifetime! Even the most earnest CEOs with an intent to stay focused on customer relationships risk faltering when they scale and hire large numbers of people to service customers.

Assuming machines can communicate as humans can, then the most consistent way to implement our values as founders is to have our digital systems reflect the values directly to the customer. Perhaps, in the long run, this might prove what’s needed to improve our behaviour with each other by us modelling how our well-behaved machines interact with us.

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How I continued building my tech startup as a student in the startup winter

My winter photo for startup winter 2022

Hi fellow readers, once again! My name is Gabriel, and I enjoy building software that helps make lives easier. About a year ago, I shared my startup journey as a student as I navigated my way to building a modern web-based deals and promotions discovery platform in Singapore.

I thought it would be fresh to take some time to reflect on my journey last year and think about the developments in the technology and startup space in my limited experience!

Continuing my journey of being scrappy and looking forward

My experience in 2022 was that it was very challenging to grow as a startup. 

Cash became more expensive, and both businesses and consumers were more price sensitive and were less inclined to spend. Our small platform couldn’t afford to dedicate loads of money to acquiring new customers.

With the overall tech scene and companies taking quite a plunge in the year, I felt we needed to be even more scrappy. It’s not bad to save costs by using cheaper software, building more consistent growth, and manually doing things by ourselves for now.

My last year was mostly around prioritising and optimising.  There were many things that we wanted to try at the start of the year and many ideas we wanted to put into action. These took up valuable resources, and it was important to acknowledge we couldn’t do everything.

We picked several favourable battles and iterated quickly. I guess it trained our team to be able to do more with less and helped us move faster with less too.

Also Read: Antler to invest in 30+ firms, launch founder residency programme in Indonesia

I personally also felt it was easy to constantly look inward, scrutinising everything about our journey and progress. But I think it was particularly valuable to look outwards during this season – to evaluate which companies were doing well and not so well and learn from both their successes and mistakes.

I’m also learning to take inspiration from others as well. This helps to drive innovative thinking as technology evolves rapidly.

Focusing on delivering value and building credibility to prepare for scale

That being said, I decided not to be too fixated on what’s around, to work within my means, and, of course, to remember to enjoy the ride! Looking back, I honestly felt that 2022 wasn’t a year of generating more cash flows, running better financial projections, or showing a J-curve – a typical depiction of exponential growth.

My experience in the previous year was focused on delivering even more value to the stakeholders that we worked with, both users and businesses, with even lesser resources.

As a small startup, we iterated through different projects to test our value on different fronts, whether it is helpful compilations that could benefit our end users or helping businesses to consolidate their promotions across different properties or events.

When done well, they helped us to build our relationships, trust, and credibility in our offerings and solutions.

As a developer, I focused on creating software that could help scale these projects within a small amount of time. We managed to onboard partners with the lowest friction and the highest efficiency. My goal is to be able to flick a few switches on my codebase and pop up a ready-made platform for the new customers we are onboarding. It’s a work in progress, but I’m working towards it!

It was important to keep things lean so that our operational costs would not be a heavy burden as we focused on delivering value to our potential customers. This feels highly underrated in my experience – it takes away the pressure of generating big sums of cash in the short term (through sales or fundraising) and gives lots of space to innovate and continue iterating around what we currently have.

Finally, I don’t think there is ever an end goal in startup preparation and groundwork. I think it’s probabilistically placing ourselves in a better position and opportunity to scale. Well, if chance favours the prepared mind, scale favours the prepared startup.

I’m also learning to be patient about building something big and being happy to grow it at a slower rate while seeing success.

Stay curious and be adaptable to explore different models

I’m not sure if this will be relevant, but I thought this was an interesting reflection thinking about growing Dive Deals in the past year. 

When I first started Dive, it was mainly targeted at fellow users like myself, looking for a one-stop place to find all the relevant deals and promotions. We started sharing and targeting users like myself looking for such a platform, and we began growing slowly and steadily.

It became challenging to scale such consumer models in these situations with limited resources and also with a limited audience in Singapore. Also, it became particularly comfortable to simply continue our basic offerings – to maintain the status quo.

Also Read: Insights from a Singaporean founder’s journey to Silicon Valley

I feel that it is really important to be humble about new ideas and stay curious about all things.

While Dive continues to be used as a consumer app, we began iterating and exploring different business models behind the audience and capabilities we have built in the past year. We worked with various institutions, corporate partners, and technological partners.

Nevertheless, we continued to grow our consumer-facing channels, serving as a core foundation of our business that brought greater value propositions to our other channels. To date, we are thankful to have served more than 200,000 users, with more than 25,000 followers across our channels, most notably on our Telegram channel.

We find strategies that work and double down on them, which gives us a greater runway to explore our surroundings for more synergies. It’s like crossing a river and looking out for big milestones along the way, bridging the gap between profitability and scale.

One of the new models we explored is a perks program. We observed the current climate and felt that businesses are trying to maximise staff welfare and morale during this difficult season.

Employers can tap into our existing pool of data and services and can even opt to include their exclusive deals, information, and more. We’re excited to roll these features out as we go.

We’re in the midst of trying new and different things, and I think continuously adapting to the current climate is really essential, similar to AirBnB’s strategy during COVID-19.

I like the idea of startups staying long enough until it works. Staying doesn’t mean being the same product or doing the same things!

Building meaningful and synergistic relationships

One of the most exciting experiences in 2022 was meeting new people and faces. I feel particularly privileged to meet the diverse minds behind some of the exciting startups we see around us today. 

One of the mistakes I felt I made earlier was being wary and afraid of talking to bigger and more experienced players around the industry. I feel it is always important to reach out to get their feedback on what we are working on (even “competitors”), which can provide a good indication of the progress and direction forward or even when to stop.

Since then, we have approached many individuals and companies around for their thoughts and feedback, apart from our early users and testers initially. We learn from their greater experiences in various but similar areas and even brainstorm together on moving forward.

These have also opened doors for us to experiment with exciting ideas and build win-win solutions with various partners that could help both achieve more. We’re also looking forward to some of these potential integrations and the value we are co-creating with these companies.

Across the past year, Dive had the privilege to work with multiple stakeholders, including users, businesses, agencies, institutions, and more. 

We are also currently even waitlisting and onboarding a large number of employers on our new model, and we think these would provide even greater value and synergy across our offerings – ultimately to our users and brands.

But we’re still figuring things out, and we’ll take it patiently as it comes.

Personally, I enjoy building many things, but I find the most meaning in building relationships. These are ultimately valuable for my personal growth and insights, not everything has to be centred around the startup!

I quite like documenting some of these past activities, and I hope sharing this will be an interesting read for you as well!

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

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ChopValue scores US$7.7M funding to recycle chopsticks into furniture, home elements

ChopValue Founder and CEO Felix Böck

ChopValue, a Canadian startup designing and manufacturing products using an innovative, high-performance material engineered from recycled chopsticks, has closed a US$7.7 million funding round.

Two unnamed high-profile technology entrepreneurs with expansion interests in Asia Pacific and Europe led the round. Several corporate VC funds and existing investors (VC funds in the climate-tech space and institutional investors such as EDC and BDC) also participated.

The funds will be used to expand ChopValue’s operations, mainly to serve B2B partnerships better. The focus will be on increasing production capacity and developing new product lines.

Also Read: How this startup can help you enjoy coffee while saving the environment

ChopVaue, which has a significant presence in Singapore, also plans to invest in research and development to optimise its micromanufacturing principles and reduce its environmental footprint.

ChopValue was founded in 2016 by Felix Böck. It says its “urban harvesting” approach has saved over 100 million chopsticks from landfill, turning them into sustainable products. It has thus far recycled and upcycled 100 million chopsticks – turning them into pieces of furniture and home elements. It has recycled around 10 million chopsticks in Singapore alone since the opening of its first local micro-factory in 2021.

Its decentralised micro-factory approach uses local resources for local production to meet local demand and enables small business owners to own local ChopValue franchises.

The company has created over 150 jobs across six countries through 63 in-development franchises. It has stored over 136,000+kg of carbon into new products from material collected by 1,700+ community restaurant partners.

ChopValue is actively seeking single and multi-unit franchise development partners who want to lead the change in their community within five US states. The international expansion opportunities for its circular concept include Australia, the EU, Japan, Korea, Taiwan, Hong Kong, and the SEA region.

Echelon Asia Summit 2023 brings together APAC’s leading startups, corporates, policymakers, industry leaders, and investors to Singapore this June 14-15. Learn more and get tickets here. Echelon also features the TOP100 stage, where startups can pitch to 5000+ delegates, among other benefits like connecting with investors, visibility through the platform, and other prizes. Join TOP100 here.

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Sinar Mas subsidiary invests in ex-Ant Group executive’s growth-stage PE firm 01Fintech

01Fintech Founder and Managing Partner Kenny Man

01Fintech, a growth-stage fintech private equity (PE) firm founded by ex-Ant Group executive Kenny Man, has received an undisclosed sum in funding from Sinar Mas Financial Services, a subsidiary of Indonesian conglomerate Sinar Mas Group. 

The PE firm will leverage its market insights, investment experience, and technical and operational expertise to transform and operationalise Sinar Mas Financial’s fintech vision and ambition. 

At the same time, Sinar Mas Financial will leverage the 01Fintech team’s specialisation to drive synergies amongst the business units and various fintech investments across the entire Sinar Mas Group ecosystem.

Sinar Mas Financial provides a range of financial services, such as life and non-life insurance, securities, banking, capital markets, and Web3 and fintech services to over 25 million customers daily. 

Also Read: Wealthtech, insurtech, SaaS fintech are the new hot verticals in Indonesia: AC Ventures report

“We are committed to helping Sinar Mas Financial achieve its digital transformation goals and ultimately bring greater synergy to the Sinar Mas Group through this digitisation exercise. Our work to support and nurture promising fintech companies in the region will continue now with additional funds from SMMA,” said Kenny Man, Founder and Managing Partner of 01Fintech.

01Fintech was launched by Kenny Man, former Head (International Investment and Post Investment) at Ant Group and former The PE firm leverages its extensive global LP network comprising prominent CEOs, family offices and conglomerates in Asia Pacific to invest in fintech firms in Asia.

Last October, 01Fintech launched a US$300-million Asia Pacific Fund. Its backers include David Velez, Co-Founder of Brazil’s NuBank; Alphonese Voigt, Co-Founder and Chair of Brazilian fintech unicorn Ebanx; the Philippines’s Ayala family; and Ernest Chu, CEO of the Filipino telco Globe.

01Fintech invests mainly in growth-stage fintech startups in Southeast Asia. Kenny Man, Founder and Managing Partner of 01Fintech, has a long track record of deals across Southeast Asia. During his time at Ant Group, he led the Chinese company’s investments in Thailand’s Ascend Money, Indonesia’s Dana and the Philippines Mynt when these fintech firms were just started.

Pak Indra Widjaja, President Commissioner at Sinar Mas Financial, said: “01Fintech’s team has a proven track record of identifying and nurturing promising fintech companies in Southeast Asia, and we are confident that their expertise and guidance will play a crucial role in building our fintech ecosystem for more seamless collaboration and better consolidation of resources within the Group.”

Echelon Asia Summit 2023 brings together APAC’s leading startups, corporates, policymakers, industry leaders, and investors to Singapore this June 14-15. Learn more and get tickets here. Echelon also features the TOP100 stage, where startups can pitch to 5000+ delegates, among other benefits like connecting with investors, visibility through the platform, and other prizes. Join TOP100 here.

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