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A snapshot of the six cool products we found at Beyond Expo in Macao

The third BEYOND International Technology Innovation Expo is underway in Macao. The three-day-long event  — launched as an Asia alternative to the annual Consumer Enterprise Show in Las Vegas — is showcasing and discussing technologies related to healthcare, consumer-tech, and sustainability.

Tens of companies are exhibiting their innovative products at the Beyond Expo. From medical devices to driverless cars and autonomous helicopters and air taxis, many the cool products are in display at the event.

Below are brief descriptions of some of the exciting products that we saw at the event.

QCRAFT

Founded in 2019 by former executives of Google Waymo, Silicon Valley- and China-based QCRFT is an autonomous driving technology company. Its first product is robobus, a fully autonomous car.

QCRFT has already launched 100 buses across several cities in China, including Wuhan.

AGAO

AGAO is a solar-powered scooter owned and operated by Chinese firm Snail Zhi Xing Technology. AGAO will charge solar power for use of about 15-20km distance every day. Its maximum speed limit is 25km/h and its maximum distance is 35km when fully charged.

NOTHING

NOTHING  is a consumer-tech company founded by Carl Pei, co-founder of One Plus smartphone brand. Its product line comprises smartphones and wireless earbuds.

The smartphone has Glyph interface, meaning the lights are synced to flash in unique patterns to every custom sound. It also lets the user know who’s calling, notifications, and charging status without checking the screen all day. It has a 50MP dual camera, 120Hz OLED display, and runs on Snaprdragon 778G+.

EHang

EHang is an autonomous aerial vehicle technology platform company. It aims to make autonomous and eco-friendly air mobility accessible to everyone. EHang provides customers in various industries with AAV products and commercial solutions: air mobility (including passenger transportation and logistics) and smart city management and aerial media solutions.

XPENG AEROHT

XPENG AEROHT, an affiliate of XPENG, is a flying car company based in China. It has integrated intelligent vehicles and modern aviation into its product to provide a safe intelligent electric flying car for individual users.
Its X2 model is made of carbon fibre and adopts the innovative fusion geometry design method to make it lightweight. It has a two-seater enclosed cockpit.

XAG

XAG is an agricultural drone company. Its XAG P100 Pro agricultural drone has a container capacity of 80 litres, a maximum discharge rate of 150 km per minute, a maximum flight speed of 13.8 m/s, a spread width of 3-7 metres, and a granule size range of 1-6 mm.

The writer is in Macao at the invitation of the Beyond Expo.

Echelon Asia Summit 2023 is bringing 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 get the chance to pitch to 5000+ delegates, among other benefits like a chance to connect with investors, visibility through e27 platform, and other prizes. Join TOP100 here.

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Are you using your air miles? The future of air miles with NFTs

AirMiles was the pioneer of the coalition or multi-partner loyalty program when it made its debut in 1992, and it rapidly gained popularity among Canadian customers. Following its triumph in the domestic market, the program expanded to other nations worldwide, such as the UK, Spain, and the Netherlands.

The announcement of their filing for bankruptcy last month may have come as a shock to many but as emerging technology offers increased transparency and airlines expand their own loyalty programs third-party platforms may be pushed aside.

There are plenty of seasoned globetrotters out there who harbour distrust of the one-sided rules, hidden costs, and limited redemption options of these airline programs. It’s not all points and perks. However, there are ways to make the most of these rewards by using them strategically. The key is to think of those earned miles and points as a currency. The value varies by airline, so it’s important to pay attention to the number of points required for a particular flight or travel date.

Also Read: Wonderful world of Web3: What is next for this groundbreaking industry?

Savvy travellers will understand the benefits of current loyalty schemes, opting for premium class redemptions and planning long-haul flights can offer better value.

Does the frequent flier care?

The globe-trotting corporate travellers of the world were once the envy of anyone starting out in their career journey. Until recently, travel was once seen as a major perk to joining an organisation. However, the high-end perks of first class, lounge access and priority boarding can seem unattainable to the average flier.

With low-cost airlines and remote working, the digital nomad lifestyle has become more accessible to younger travellers. With this in mind, many of the Airline loyalty programs can be tailored to cater for new audiences.

Now it is up to the airline to communicate the benefits of their program. Collecting points can save travellers a ton of money. Using the same airline over and over again, travellers can redeem free flights or upgrades.

Customers also get to enjoy connecting with an exclusive community, swap travel tips and get exclusive discounts. The current tracking of these points is often manual or semi-automated as part of an internal marketing strategy.

NFTs offer a way to embed loyalty into every stage of the traveller’s journey. By using NFTs as a digital record, airlines can track the needs of frequent flyers and provide a more personalised loyalty offering.

Just last month Argentinian Airline Flybondi announced that it is integrating Web3 into its ticketing process as NFTs. This follows a range of airlines such as airBaltic, Qantas and Lufthansa, exploring the use cases of the metaverse and NFTs for community engagement and streamlining operations.

Also Read: How to launch collaborations that grow communities: A guide for Web3 founders

Blockchain and NFTs reinvigorate existing loyalty programs

Why are current loyalty programs failing? Today’s consumers are savvy. They know when organisations are not providing value. They can easily Google to get reviews, advice and recommendations for products and services.

Therefore, companies need to be transparent in their marketing efforts and their approach to building repeat customers. Loyalty programs will go stale if the customers are offered the same old rewards, the system for collecting those rewards is over complicated and there is no element of personalisation.

Think about it from the traveller’s viewpoint. They have spent the time providing you with all of the insights you need to tailor the next email or journey for them. Make the customer feel valued and you have given them a user experience worth returning for.

Imagine if we could reimagine loyalty programs in a secure, transparent way. That is where blockchain technology can play a role. Using NFTs, airlines can create a tamper-proof way to record customer preferences for loyalty program benefits and ensure that the points are secure for future benefits.
NFTs also provide the frequent flier with enhanced control, allowing open access to the points a customer earns and what these points have been used for.

For airlines, blockchain technology can cut down on operation costs and make future loyalty programs less complicated. Establishing trust will be a key factor in all future loyalty programs. Today’s consumers want to feel valued and even some would like to get involved in future community development.

Web3 is reframing the importance of customer insights and providing enhanced tools for servicing the frequent flyers of tomorrow.

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Image credit: Canva Pro

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Flash Coffee extends Series B round to US$50M, aims to grow footprint across APAC

Today, Singapore-based tech-enabled coffee chain Flash Coffee announced the successful completion of its Series B financing round led by White Star Capital, raising a total of US$50 million following its latest closing.

Existing investors, including White Star Capital, Delivery Hero, Geschwister Oetker, and Conny & Co, participated in the financing round – several of them further increased their stake in the company.

The new funds will be channelled towards accelerating the company’s mission to achieve group-level profitability. This includes sustainably growing its footprint across the Asia Pacific region, serving customers in Singapore, Indonesia, Thailand, Hong Kong and South Korea, doubling down on technology and product innovation and further developing the sales performance of existing stores.

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

Flash Coffee will continue expanding deeper into its most mature market Indonesia, where the fast-growing middle class is rapidly driving coffee consumption in Southeast Asia’s most populous country. Following the company’s successful entry into Bandung – its first expansion outside of a capital city – with 11 outlets across the metropolitan area of over 8.8 million inhabitants, Flash Coffee will officially launch in Surabaya in July 2023.

“We are grateful to have the continued backing of our shareholders in this financing round. With 100 per cent of our 92 stores in Indonesia being profitable, we have found a solid product market fit and are eager to expand our presence into additional cities in Indonesia to further drive sustainable growth. Offering a product that people love and following our ongoing trajectory of topline and profitability improvements, we are confident that we will reach our overarching goal of being profitable on a group level next year,” said David Brunier, Founder & CEO of Flash Coffee.

In a statement, Flash Coffee said that it had experienced exponential growth over the past two years, with a 23-fold increase in year-on-year revenue in 2021, followed by another four-fold year-on-year increase in 2022 while achieving more than 100 percentage points year-on-year EBITDA improvement on a group level in the same year.

With stores being solidly profitable across the region, the company is on track to reach group-level profitability in 2024. The first markets are set to become EBITDA-positive in the coming months.

Echelon Asia Summit 2023 is bringing 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 get the chance to pitch to 5000+ delegates, among other benefits like a chance to connect with investors, visibility through e27 platform, and other prizes. Join TOP100 here.

Image Credit: Flash Coffee

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Harness the power of your location data to drive business growth

UNL

The past few years have spurred the rise of industries such as e-commerce and food delivery, exhibiting market growth in unprecedented ways. Along with its rise, we have also witnessed the growing importance of accurate mapping technology, particularly for last-mile deliveries that are reliant on correct and updated information. Thanks largely to advances in technology such as satellite imagery combined with crowd-sourced data, the overall accuracy of mapping has improved significantly, providing a visual representation of the world, which can be used for various purposes. 

Nonetheless, when maps fail to represent the real world accurately, it can lead to costly mistakes or even dangerous situations. “Maps, which are supposed to offer a reliable source of information, often misrepresent the world due to distortions or outdated data. Traditional mapping providers face challenges with unmapped regions, missing or inaccurate addressing, inadequate or incorrect points of interest (POI) data, and keeping up with changes in real-time”, shared Xander van der Heijden, CEO of UNL.

Because of these challenges, industries that require accurate mapping for efficient last-mile deliveries have been deeply affected. Hence, it is essential to find solutions to enhance mapping technologies and their applications.

How Bringing Your Own Data (BYOD) can enrich business mapping

UNL

Bringing Your Own Data (BYOD) is a powerful approach for companies looking to gain a competitive edge in the current landscape. By leveraging their unique datasets, businesses can unlock valuable insights and create customised solutions tailored to their customers’ specific needs. In this regard, location-based service companies are particularly well positioned to benefit from BYOD as they possess large amounts of location data that could be used more effectively than it currently is. This data includes address information, points of interest (POI) with associated metadata, and details about drivers and workforce insights which can be infused into the business map and provide an additional level of precision and hyperlocal location intelligence, which traditional solutions lack.

There is a plethora of valuable information that can be harnessed and maximised from driver knowledge. For example, companies that use e-vehicles for their last-mile operations can incorporate data on the vehicles’ battery capacity and the location of nearby charging stations. This data can be integrated into the routing optimization to plan the most efficient delivery routes, ensuring that the e-vehicles recharge at the most optimal stations and complete their deliveries on time. This enables businesses to increase the efficiency of their delivery fleet, reduce range anxiety and delivery delays, and improve their overall delivery performance. Particularly with last-mile deliveries, customer insights can help drivers locate their entry points for efficient drop-off.

Also read: Check out 6 startups that are frontrunners for this year’s TOP100

When incorporating their data into maps and powering location services with it, location-based businesses can greatly improve business performance by optimising delivery times/ETAs or providing better customer experiences through improved navigation capabilities. Additionally, having access to private business context allows organisations an unprecedented level of control over how they manage and maintain the quality of the data, giving them an advantage over competitors.

“BYOD, including workforce knowledge and user contributions, brings a unique, competitive advantage and is often not available via traditional mapping providers and data providers. Businesses usually have the richest and most up-to-date data. The capability to embed this intelligence to optimise services like search, geocoding, route planning, and turn-by-turn navigation, can greatly bolster performance and operations”, explained Xander van der Heijden, CEO of UNL.

How UNL empowers businesses to harness the power of their location data

Recognising the gaps in the market, UNL developed a revolutionary solution called Virtual Private Maps (VPMs) to address the limitations and challenges of traditional mapping services. The solution can be leveraged to power location services such as route planning, distance matrix, geofencing, routing, search, geocoding, etc, which are crucial features of location-based services such as food/parcel delivery, mobility, and ride-hailing, among others.

VPMs enable businesses of any size to bring, manage, and leverage their business data to power better location services. This provides businesses with greater control over their data as it remains 100% in ownership and control of the business itself. 

In addition, UNL’s VPM system allows companies to leverage third-party geospatial data sources which further enhances the accuracy of location information available for use. This creates an accurate source of location data that can be used by all types of businesses regardless of sizes, origins, or sectors. 

How UNL uses BYOD capabilities to power their unique Living Geocoder Solution

Geocoding is a critical component of many applications, as it provides the ability to accurately locate and identify a given address or point of interest (POI). UNL Geocoding API offers powerful features which allow users to take advantage of sophisticated algorithms to identify the geo-coordinates and assigns a unique UNL geoID (unique digital and verifiable address) to a given address, POI, landmark, locality or administrative area.

UNL leverages unique VPM and BYOD capabilities to power an advanced Living Geocoder solution, which continuously learns from available VPM data – including customer private business data, and third-party data sources, and leverages real-time feedback loops.

Also read: Echelon Asia Summit is back! Get to know our PR partner

Elaborating further, Xander van der Heijden expressed, “Accurate geocodes translate to fewer failed deliveries, fewer miles per delivery, less time needed to locate addresses, lower operational costs, and improved route optimisation. Leveraging our proprietary technology, we are building a hyperlocal “living geocoder” designed for continuous improvement, which can train itself with address and location data to derive higher coverage and accuracy on an ongoing basis. With our VPM approach and close collaboration with the customer, we are creating a unique feedback loop mechanism to consistently improve geocoding accuracy across regions.”

This ensures that the results are always up to date even when queries are incomplete, partly incorrect, or descriptive — making it ideal for markets with varying and inconsistent addressing standards. Furthermore, this approach also eliminates manual maintenance costs associated with traditional geolocation databases which need regular updates due to changes in addressing systems over time.

Xander van der Heijden added, “Companies across Southeast Asia are already using our technology and training their Living Geocoders with their own business data, leading to improvements in the accuracy of geocoding by 15-20%.”

Photo by Norma Mortenson via Pexels

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This article is produced by the e27 team, sponsored by UNL

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

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How Funding Societies implement diversification strategy to push for growth and sustainability

Co-founder and Group CEO of Funding Societies | Modalku, Kelvin Teo

This Means Business series showcases startups in Southeast Asia (SEA) and how they are making their money. If you want to be featured in this series, please contact writers@e27.co.

In April, Funding Societies–the digital finance platform known in Indonesia as Modalku–announced that it had crossed US$3 billion (approx. S$4.1 billion) over more than five million business financing transactions to small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) across the region.

This milestone encouraged e27 to reach out to the company to learn more about how it is making its revenue and building a strong and sustainable business in the fintech sector.

“Our revenue model consists of payment fees, lending and service fees, as well as interest income from SMEs and funders. As our name Funding Societies suggests, funding is a main part of our business and revenue, because it is the biggest pain point for SMEs. We hope to uplift SEA societies by giving every SME a fair opportunity for growth and by accumulating the wealth of funders,” explains Funding Societies | Modalku Co-founder and Group CEO Kelvin Teo in an email interview.

“Nevertheless, since 2019, we have explored SaaS and payments through organic buildout of supply chain finance platform Silk Road; investment into GoGMGo, Paper.id and Bank Index; and acquisition of CardUp, as well as various partnerships, to complement lending. We aim to help SMEs manage their cash flow end-to-end.”

In this conversation, Teo explains more about this business model and the lessons learned from the discovery process they had to go through to build it. The following is an edited excerpt of the interview.

Also Read: What is co-lending and how will NBFCs benefit from it?

Can you explain how you came up with the existing business model and the process you must go through?

We started as a peer-to-business lending platform in 2015. However, soon we realised that it is an excellent model to start, but not a good one to end. Hence, we have consistently evolved our business model.

We learnt that the name of the game in SEA is aggregation. This is because distribution here is nascent, hence we offer all forms of short-term financing to SMEs through our channels. This increases LTV (loan to value) and reduces CAC (customer acquisition cost).

Secondly, fintech is a risk management business – diversify. We diversify our borrower base over five countries, industries and segment sizes; diversify our funding base to include on- and off-balance sheet lending, individual and institutional funders, local and foreign funders; and finally multiply licences in each country.

This helped us to ride through COVID-19 lockdowns, market slowdown and domestic country risk.

Our approach prioritises external risk management and business nimbleness but increases internal operations complexity. Thus we’ve built up internal capabilities, streamlined products and automated processes for years.

Also Read: How will generative AI advance embedded lending

Who are your users and what is your strategy to acquire them?

We have two groups of users. Firstly, they’re under-served MSMEs from sole proprietors to small listed companies and traditional SMEs to startups, in our five operating countries across sectors. They typically come to us for their first-time business loan, top-up to a bank loan, fast credit approval and flexible financing options.

With our integration of CardUp and the soon launch of accounts, we would also help SMEs save time by automating payments, improving receivables collections and earning points by allowing card usage in more places.

Secondly, we serve individuals and institutions looking for fixed-income investments, in the form of private SME debt. They include retail and accredited individual investors, as well as banks, credit funds and impact funds that want quality, short-term, convenient and fixed-return investment.

We take an omnichannel approach towards reaching our users, i.e. digital channels, partnerships, referrals and sales, progressively moving them from offline to online.

Your company is now operating in different markets in Southeast Asia. What uniqueness does each market have? How do they contribute to sustaining your business?

Currently, we operate in Singapore, Indonesia, Malaysia, Thailand and Vietnam. Each country is unique. While we can leverage best practices, technology and talents from the group, we have to localise ~40 per cent of our business for each market.

Singapore (which we entered in 2015) is more mature in our business model evolution, Indonesia (2016) has a much larger market and Malaysia (2017) is our most stable business. Vietnam (2021) is a tough but promising market, while Thailand (2021) is up-and-upcoming.

Having a regional footprint diversifies our business from facing risks instead of only operating in one country. Our regional presence gives us economies of scale and allows us to be more productive in serving a multi-country customer base – in turn, more growth opportunities to be sustainable. Each country is a Center of Excellence for instance, we launched our first card in Singapore, Shariah-compliant trade finance and digital finance in Malaysia, and supply chain finance in Indonesia.

Also Read: How embedded lending will drive healthy growth in credit in Indonesia

There has been greater pressure for startups today to become more sustainable businesses financially. How do you achieve this with your business model?

Since 2019, we’ve had a dual focus on growth and profitability. This is demonstrated in three ways. Firstly, since inception, we’ve focused on building a credit-led business model because of its shorter path to profitability, yet longer time to build out.

Secondly, we track our product unit economics and line items in our cost-to-income ratio closely with intellectual integrity, to ensure that every loan is profitable on the first transaction and we are making meaningful steps towards group profitability.

Hence we often avoid unhealthy price wars, when others under-price the risk and cost of SMEs.

Finally, we’ve taken a conservative approach towards fundraising and capital allocation. After our first and only right-sizing in COVID-19, we’ve controlled our recruiting carefully to ensure we do not hire ahead of the business. We stay disciplined with growth experiments. And we fundraise before we need to minimise undue stress.

How do you deal with back-to-back global crises?

In the recent global crisis of credit crunch, rate hikes and continued supply chain disruption, we expect banks to cut back on SME lending, SME loan demand to stay high allowing us to cherry-pick, NPL (non-performing loans) to climb but manageable for solid firms like us, funding cost to rise yet volume to fall, equity investors to be selective, talent competition to drop giving us upgrade opportunity, and fintech market to consolidate. Overall, we’d continue growing, as the SME financing business is counter-cyclical.

The back-to-back global crises are transformative events. Most of us have not seen a pandemic like COVID-19 in our lifetime and such high US central bank rates since 2007.

Nevertheless, in my chat with my co-founder Reynold Wijaya, we realised that we have experienced some crises each year, since our founding in 2015. Yet we’ve overcome each of them.

In fact, we doubled our revenue and improved our profitability by 30 per cent last year, and grew through COVID-19 in 2020 and 2021. We attribute it to an aligned leadership, team and shareholders; Sequoia’s feedback of us when they invested in 2016 “aggressive in execution and expansion, but conservative in risk management and compliance”; our pre-emptive thinking and a dose of luck.

Also Read: Why digital lending is the future for SMEs in India

What other opportunities do you aim to seize this year? 

I’d be sceptical if a fintech firm could commit to a big plan for 2023. In fact, an investor suggested that we run on a quarterly rather than annual budget, given market volatility.

We’re strategically expanding beyond lending, through our CardUp acquisition and integration since Q4-2022, progressively across our countries. This is building on our Elevate card introduced in Q1-2022, our business expense solution with a credit line, which benefited nearly 2,000 SMEs in Singapore in just one year. We’d also be combining and scaling up CardUp’s solution to allow SMEs to make card payments in places that typically do not accept cards and facilitate collections from their customers.

For our financing business, we’re further strengthening core functions for profitable growth, team learning and development, and organisational capabilities required for an eventual public listing. In reality, we find ourselves working even harder than before.

Echelon Asia Summit 2023 is bringing 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 get the chance to pitch to 5000+ delegates, among other benefits like a chance to connect with investors, visibility through e27 platform, and other prizes. Join TOP100 here.

Image Credit: Funding Societies

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