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The Series B collision: Why your execution is falling behind your pitch

I’ve sat through dozens of Series B pitches, and there is a specific, palpable moment where the air leaves the room. The founder has just finished a brilliant presentation where the slides are clean, the vision is grand, and the growth curves are flawless. But then, an investor asks an unpolished question about a messy detail—a product delay, a spike in churn, or a key hire that didn’t work out.

In that moment, the founder has a choice: stay inside the “compelling story” they’ve spent months perfecting, or step out of it and talk about the messy reality of their business. When they stay inside the story, they flounder. They fail not because they lack vision, but because they have spent two years building a culture that values the appearance of success more than the accuracy of information. At Stage 2, this information decay is the single greatest threat to your valuation.

In the founding stage, a CEO is rewarded for optimism because they must sell a dream to keep the team moving. However, as you scale, this optimism often becomes a filter that creates severe operational risks. First, there is the issue of information decay, where bad news is softened as it moves up through layers of management until the CEO receives a “polished” version of reality and makes strategic decisions based on inaccurate data.

This leads to delayed course correction; if the culture rewards “green KPIs,” teams will hide failing projects longer than they should, burning capital that should have been reallocated months ago. Finally, this culminates in the “due diligence haircut.” Professional investors look for data-driven storytelling, and when they find a discrepancy between your pitch and your raw logs, they don’t just question that metric—they question your entire ability to manage the firm.

To increase your valuation and decrease execution risk, you must move from managing the story to engineering the feedback loop, starting with the acceleration of the “bad news” signal. A startup’s survival depends on the speed at which a failure reaches the decision-maker; if it takes a month to find out a marketing channel is failing, you have wasted a month of runway.

You must explicitly reward employees who flag failures early, making “speed of reporting” a more important metric than the “success of the initiative” itself. Research on psychological safety shows that organisations that normalise error-reporting mitigate long-term damage, a trait investors value because it ensures the company remains capital-efficient.

Also Read: Funded: SEA does not need more impact capital, it needs fewer weak capital seekers

Furthermore, you must prioritise stress-testing over consensus, as groupthink is the primary cause of strategic failure in scaling startups. If everyone in the room is nodding, it is a signal that nobody is thinking critically. For every major decision, you should appoint a “Red Team” whose only job is to find the flaws in the plan.

If the strategy cannot survive an internal attack, it will certainly not survive the market. Project Aristotle at Google proved that the highest-performing teams are those that allow for rigorous dissent, creating a scrutiny-tested business model that investors view as a de-risked asset.

Scaling is inherently a tangle of trade-offs, and attempting to force your business into a perfect, linear narrative suggests you don’t actually understand your own complexity. Instead, you should manage the complexity openly by leading with the trade-offs. When discussing your roadmap with stakeholders, explain exactly what you are sacrificing to achieve your goals, which demonstrates a mastery of the operational reality.

Columbia Business School research demonstrates that ignoring “bad news” signals—like operational friction or customer complaints—leads to a lower Net Present Value (NPV) for the firm. Showing you are aware of these signals builds institutional trust that a “perfect” story never could.

Also Read: The talent question every founder needs to ask before they try to scale

Ultimately, trust is a predictability asset that relies on your “Say/Do” ratio. If you tell investors you are a “product-led” company, but your engineering team is losing headcount and focus, that inconsistency becomes a glaring red flag. You must ensure your internal resource allocation matches your external messaging because if your actions and your words don’t align, you are creating organisational friction that slows down every transaction.

The “Say/Do” ratio is a core driver of firm value; when what you say and what you do are identical, you remove the “risk premium” that investors otherwise apply to your valuation. Investors at Series B are not looking for a visionary who is disconnected from their own operations; they are looking for a reliable engine. Stop trying to make the pitch sound better and start making the information move faster. In the high-stakes world of scaling, the truth isn’t just a moral choice—it’s a financial one.

Preparing for this level of scrutiny requires a radical internal audit before you ever step into the pitch room. You must look at the last six months of your operation and identify exactly when a major failure occurred and how many days passed before that information reached the executive suite; if that loop is slow, your feedback velocity is broken. You need to verify if your leadership team can articulate three credible reasons why your current strategy might fail, ensuring that your path is stress-tested rather than just a product of consensus.

Finally, audit your calendar and your capital; if your actual resource allocation doesn’t mirror the “compelling story” in your deck, you are essentially pricing in a credibility tax that will surface during due diligence. In the end, if a Series B investor sat in on your internal management meetings today, they should hear the same company described in your pitch—anything less is just performance.

Editor’s note: e27 aims to foster thought leadership by publishing views from the community. You can also share your perspective by submitting an article, video, podcast, or infographic.

The views expressed in this article are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the official policy or position of e27.

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Why Asia faces the sharpest agentic fraud exposure

In March 2026, a US federal court ruled in Amazon v. Perplexity that a user’s permission to an AI agent does not constitute the platform’s authorisation.

The ruling was narrow in its legal scope but enormous in its commercial implications: it established, in a jurisdiction that sets global precedent, that the chain of accountability in agentic commerce is not solved by obtaining a user’s consent. The platform, the merchant, and the rail all retain independent liability exposure.

The Agentic Economy Report by blockchain firm Morph, published in Q2 2026, frames this as one of the defining risks of the current technology cycle and makes a pointed prediction: a Fortune 100 company will publicly attribute a major cyber breach to an AI agent before the end of 2028.

Also Read: The US$0.20 payment that could rewire Asia’s financial rails

When that disclosure happens, it will, in the report’s words, “reset the liability map for every merchant and every issuer that depends on one.”

The accountability gap is structural, not incidental

The scale of the attack surface is not theoretical. Citi GPS has tracked deepfake scam growth at more than 2,000 per cent over three years. The public MCP ecosystem — the infrastructure layer through which AI agents discover and invoke external tools and APIs — now exceeds 10,000 servers, each one a potential entry point for a malicious actor or a poorly scoped agent instruction. AP2’s cryptographic mandates were designed precisely because authorisation and accountability remain unsolved at the protocol level.

The problem is architectural. As Dr Changhao Jiang, CTO at Cobo, states in the report: “Prompts are not permissions. The industry’s greatest risk is a failure of architecture: granting agents the power to act without the guardrails to stop them. To bridge the accountability gap, we must decouple an agent’s reasoning from its power to spend through the pact. By replacing ‘assumed trust’ with infrastructure-level enforcement, we ensure that while execution is autonomous, liability is absolute.”

This distinction — between an agent’s reasoning and its power to transact — is the central design challenge that the agentic payment stack has not yet solved at scale. The Mandate layer of the stack (Layer 2 in the Morph framework) attempts to address it through AP2’s Cart and Intent Mandates, which are cryptographic and hardware-backed. But the protocol is voluntary, implementation is uneven, and the legal framework for adjudicating disputes among agents, users, merchants, and issuers has not been tested at commercial scale in most jurisdictions.

Asia’s specific exposure

Southeast Asia and broader pan-Asia face compounded exposure on this question for three reasons. First, the region’s regulatory frameworks for AI liability are nascent compared to those that are taking shape in the EU and the US. Singapore’s Model AI Governance Framework is a voluntary standard; it does not create binding liability rules for agentic transactions. Most of the region’s emerging economies have no comparable framework at all.

Also Read: The invisible shopper rewriting Asia’s e-commerce playbook 

Second, Asia is disproportionately exposed to the deepfake and social-engineering threat vectors that feed into agent-based fraud. The Citi GPS 2,000 per cent figure aggregates global data. Still, security researchers have consistently found that Asia-Pacific is the fastest-growing target region for AI-generated fraud, driven by the region’s high mobile penetration, cross-border commerce volumes, and varying levels of digital literacy across income groups.

Third, the region’s super-app and embedded-finance architecture — where a single platform may function simultaneously as a social network, marketplace, logistics provider, and financial institution — creates uniquely complex liability chains. When an AI agent transacts within a super-app ecosystem, determining which layer should bear the loss for a disputed instruction is a question those platforms have yet to answer publicly.

The card networks’ defence and its limits

Visa’s Trusted Agent Protocol (TAP), listed in the Morph report’s standards comparison table, represents the card networks’ primary response to the accountability problem. TAP layers network-level agent identity and fraud-signalling onto card rails, essentially attempting to keep agent traffic inside Visa’s visibility and accountability perimeter. Mastercard has tied its agentic commerce strategy to its 40 per cent tokenised base and global issuer rollout.

The approach has institutional logic. Card networks carry deep fraud-management infrastructure, chargeback mechanisms, and regulatory relationships that open-protocol stablecoin rails do not yet replicate. For regulated, ticket-sized purchases — a flight, a hotel, a large electronics order — the card model retains meaningful advantages even in an agentic world.

But the economics break down at the volume layer. The Morph report’s Prediction 2 holds that most agent-initiated payments, by transaction count, will settle outside traditional card rails — not because card networks lose the high-value category, but because the count of agent transactions is dominated by sub-dollar machine-to-machine calls that the card model was never designed to handle. The liability framework that travels with the card does not automatically extend to x402-settled stablecoin micropayments. That gap is currently uninsured.

The disclosure that changes everything

Jordan Patapoff, VP of Ecosystem at Quicknode, captures the broader stakes in a quote cited by the Morph report: “Every technology wave has a moment when its infrastructure gets defined: TCP/IP, HTTP, OAuth. The agent economy is in that moment right now. The protocols adopted in the next eighteen months are the ones a generation of agents will run on.”

Also Read: Agentic commerce: How autonomous AI is quietly rewriting the payments stack

The liability question is part of that infrastructure definition. Whoever writes the standard for agent accountability — whether it is a protocol consortium, a card network, a central bank, or a regulator — will shape the commercial terms of agentic commerce for the next decade. For Asia’s fintech sector, the risk of arriving late to that standard-setting conversation is not merely competitive. It is the risk of inheriting liability frameworks written by and for markets elsewhere, applied to a region with fundamentally different commerce architectures, fraud profiles, and consumer protection regimes.

The Fortune 100 breach prediction may or may not resolve before 2028. The accountability gap it will expose is already open.

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Why US$60K is the most important number in crypto right now

Bitcoin gained 2.62 per cent to reach US$63,048.16 over a 24-hour period. This price action closely tracks a 2.51 per cent rise in the total crypto market capitalisation. The entire digital asset market simply rebounds from multi-week lows. The Fear and Greed Index currently sits at an extreme fear reading of 15.

This metric confirms that broad market sentiment dictates the price action rather than any catalyst specific to Bitcoin. The broader market still remains down over 12 per cent for the week. We witness a relief rally operating within a larger downtrend. Participants must watch for sustained growth in market capitalisation above US$2.2 trillion to confirm a genuine shift away from bearish momentum. We must look past these temporary fluctuations and focus on the underlying network fundamentals.

Derivatives activity provides the mechanical explanation for this sudden upward push. Bitcoin open interest rose five per cent in the last 24 hours. This metric indicates fresh capital entering leveraged positions. Concurrently, liquidations totaled US$108.03 million. This figure represents a 19.41 per cent increase from the prior day. These numbers point directly to a squeeze of highly leveraged short positions during the upward move.

The price rise was significantly amplified by forced buying as the market liquidated these shorts. Traders should monitor the average funding rate for a flip from negative to positive. Such a shift would signal growing bullish leverage and confirm the strength of this derivatives-fueled bounce. I always treat these leveraged squeezes as speculative gambling where the odds temporarily favour the bulls. The underlying trend requires much more than a short squeeze to reverse.

Also Read: Why Asia faces the sharpest agentic fraud exposure

Institutional flow data presents a more fragile picture of the current market structure. ETF assets under management experienced slight outflows. The total dropped from US$105.32 billion last week to US$102.05 billion currently. This capital withdrawal contradicts the retail frenzy we see in the derivatives market. The immediate technical path hinges entirely on holding the US$62,000 support level. A successful defence of this floor could propel the price toward the US$65,000 resistance zone.

The market needs a daily close above US$64,500 to signal stronger bullish conviction. Without this conviction, the asset risks falling back into the US$60,000 to US$64,000 consolidation range. The trend appears to be stabilising right now, but it remains highly vulnerable amid a multi-week decline. I monitor these ETF flows closely because they reveal the true appetite of traditional finance amid macroeconomic uncertainty. Smart money moves cautiously before major economic announcements, and this behaviour perfectly illustrates that approach.

We cannot analyse these crypto movements in a vacuum because traditional macroeconomic forces dictate global liquidity. The tape repriced everything on Friday when the May jobs report came in hot and wages firmed. This data landed on a market already nervous about inflation.

The last Consumer Price Index print stayed uncomfortably high in annual terms. Producer Price Index readings remain warm, and the current tariff regime continues feeding into prices. A strong labour market and sticky inflation lead to only one conclusion. The Federal Reserve possesses no room to cut rates and has a real reason to maintain a hard stance. The market performed the mathematics in real time. Market participants pulled forward rate-hike expectations, the 10-year yield jumped toward 4.71 per cent, and the US$ broke higher. Gold and equities subsequently took the hit. This environment highlights the inherent flaws in centralised monetary policy. Policymakers react to past data instead of anticipating future realities, creating endless cycles of boom and bust.

Also Read: B2B founders keep skipping brand, and it is costing them more than they realise

This inflation reckoning arrives right before the first Federal Open Market Committee meeting for the new leadership. Markets trade the May data through the lens of Kevin Warsh. He serves as the 17th Chair of the Federal Reserve and took the oath on May 22. Jerome Powell remains a voting Governor. Warsh will preside over his first meeting from June 16 to 17.

The market already decided what it expects from this transition. With a hot labour market, sticky inflation, and tariffs still in the system, a new Chair who built his reputation as an inflation hawk has every incentive to come out hard. He needs to establish credibility from day one. This logic drives the current repricing of rate hikes. A hot Consumer Price Index print hands Warsh the cover to sound hawkish and keeps the USD bid. A soft reading provides the only thing that can take the edge off this move. We will see exactly what kind of leader he truly is very soon.

This macroeconomic tightening also accelerates the push toward decentralised alternatives. As central banks tighten their grip to fight inflation, they simultaneously accelerate the development of Central Bank Digital Currencies. I view these retail digital currencies as ultimate surveillance tools and mechanisms of control. They represent the exact opposite of the financial freedom that Bitcoin provides. When traditional institutions restrict liquidity and monitor every transaction, the value proposition of a permissionless network becomes undeniable. The current inflationary environment forces policymakers into a corner. They must choose between crushing the economy with high rates or allowing inflation to erode the currency.

This dilemma drives visionary individuals and institutions toward assets that operate outside their direct control. The resilience of the Bitcoin network during these periods of extreme monetary tightening proves its viability as a sovereign store of value. People increasingly recognise that true ownership requires absolute independence from government interference and centralised banking systems.

Also Read: Funded: SEA founders need a capital sequence, not another funding scramble

The underlying architecture of Bitcoin demonstrates remarkable structural integrity despite this overwhelming macroeconomic pressure. The psychological floor of this market reveals itself in the order book dynamics. Bid density increases significantly by 42 per cent as the price approaches the US$60,000 threshold. This metric correlates perfectly with the Glassnode Production Cost Metric and the Miner Shutdown Price. Staying above US$60,000 is the mission now.

Editor’s note: e27 aims to foster thought leadership by publishing views from the community. You can also share your perspective by submitting an article, video, podcast, or infographic.

The views expressed in this article are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the official policy or position of e27.

Join us on WhatsAppInstagramFacebookX, and LinkedIn to stay connected.

Image Credit: Art Rachen on Unsplash

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Superbank under Grab: what the takeover means for Indonesia’s crowded digital banking scene

Grab Holdings has formally become the majority shareholder of Superbank, marking a strategic escalation in the Singapore-headquartered group’s push to control financial services infrastructure in Southeast Asia’s largest economy.

The ownership milestone was reached after related entities, including A5-DB Holdings and GXS, acquired additional shares in May 2026, pushing Grab’s effective stake above the controlling 50 per cent threshold.

Also Read: Superbank, Genesis launch US$40M financing solution for Indonesian startups

The move cements Grab’s role not merely as a distribution partner but as a controlling owner of a licensed bank operating in Indonesia, where mobile-first financial services are rapidly reshaping consumer behaviour.

A clearer route to scale lending

Superbank has been one of the most prominent success stories among Indonesia’s digital lenders. The bank reported a 55 per cent year-on-year increase in its loan portfolio as of April 2026, a surge industry observers attribute largely to tighter integration with the Grab and OVO consumer ecosystems. Those platforms offer abundant data and customer touchpoints, from ride-hailing and e-commerce to payments, that can be used to underwrite loans and cross-sell financial products.

Profitability has followed growth: Superbank’s profit before tax leapt 1,529 per cent to 142 billion rupiah (about US$7.81 million) for the four months ending 30 April 2026. While the absolute profit figure remains modest relative to legacy banks, the scale of the improvement signals that digital distribution and low-cost customer acquisition can rapidly compress time-to-profitability when a bank is embedded within a large consumer platform.

This commercial logic appears central to Grab’s willingness to convert a commercial partnership into outright control. Owning a bank removes certain regulatory frictions around product development and gives Grab greater latitude to integrate credit, deposit and payment services across its apps.

Consortium backing and strategic partners

Superbank’s ownership reflects a consortium approach that mixes regional tech companies with local media and telco know-how. Alongside Grab, Singtel, KakaoBank, and Indonesia’s Emtek Group, these backers have steered product development and distribution since the bank rebranded from Bank Fama International to Superbank in 2023.

Also Read: Digital banks win transactions, not loyalty: A missed opportunity in Indonesia

That consortium model has been influential in Superbank’s rapid product rollout. Singtel and KakaoBank bring regional digital-banking experience, while Emtek offers local distribution channels and brand recognition. For Grab, the arrangement combines foreign capital and regional expertise with on-the-ground local partners, a pragmatic route into a market where domestic understanding and regulatory navigation remain crucial.

A crowded, competitive market

Grab’s majority stake comes at a moment when Indonesia’s digital banking sector is noticeably crowded. Regulators have licensed some 17 digital banks, and policy changes have encouraged foreign participation, allowing non-Indonesian investors to own up to 99 per cent of local lenders. That regulatory openness has invited cross-border competition, with established internet giants, telcos and financial groups all vying for scale.

For Grab, securing majority control of Superbank is both an offensive and defensive play. Offensively, it positions the company to accelerate product innovation, from point-of-sale financing to savings and insurance, while using its consumer touch points to drive scale. Defensively, it pre-empts rivals from buying the same infrastructure or forming competing alliances that could lock Grab out of lucrative financial flows generated by its apps.

The Southeast Asian angle

Indonesia is a bellwether for digital finance across Southeast Asia. With hundreds of millions of mobile-first consumers, many still underbanked or underserved by traditional lenders, the opportunity for platform-led banks remains substantial. Grab’s acquisition therefore has implications beyond Indonesia — it signals an intensifying phase of consolidation in Southeast Asia, where platform companies are moving from partnerships to ownership of financial infrastructure.

Other markets in the region will watch closely. If Superbank’s model — rapid user acquisition via platform integration, machine-learning-based credit underwriting, and low marginal cost distribution — continues to deliver outsized growth and profits, it could accelerate similar moves elsewhere. Regulators in countries such as the Philippines, Vietnam and Thailand are also revising digital banking rules, and Grab’s latest step will likely shape competitor strategies and regulatory conversations across the region.

Questions and risks

Despite the strategic logic, owning and operating a bank brings new sets of risks. Credit quality can deteriorate rapidly if underwriting standards loosen during aggressive origination pushes, competition could compress interest margins, and regulators may tighten oversight as digital banks grow systemic importance. Grab will need to demonstrate robust risk management, capital adequacy and operational resilience as Superbank scales.

Also Read: How digital banking is driving financial inclusion in SEA

There is also the broader question of ecosystem concentration. Critics argue that platform companies owning banking infrastructure can create single points of control over many aspects of consumers’ economic lives. Regulators balancing financial inclusion goals against concentration risks may respond with stricter scrutiny, a dynamic that could complicate rapid expansion plans.

What’s next

For now, the acquisition gives Grab a stronger hand in shaping the future of embedded finance in Indonesia. The company can expand credit and savings product distribution through its app, OVO, and partner networks, while experimenting with product bundles that tie payments, lending and marketplace services together.

How successfully Grab translates control into sustained, responsible growth at Superbank will influence whether the move becomes a template for further consolidation across Southeast Asia, or a cautionary tale of the challenges that come with running a bank in one of the world’s most dynamic digital-finance markets.

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The capital cost strategy: Why high initial investment is your strongest protection

Modern entrepreneurship dictates that we must be software-first, where there is low capital expenditure, rapid prototyping, and infinite scalability. This approach is designed to attract venture capital, which views hardware, inventory, and physical assets as toxic liabilities that inhibit explosive growth.

The result is a market saturated with businesses that are US$50,000 to start and US$50 million to sell, built on the fragile foundation of easily replicable code.

The contrarian truth, which I have seen validated across multiple industries, is this: High initial capital expenditure is a strategic advantage. Founders who prioritise an asset-first approach (embracing complexity, physical friction, and substantial up-front investment) are building businesses with superior long-term moats, stronger unit economics, and vastly higher liquidation value.

The liability of the easy start

The bad of the Software-First approach is the liability it invites. When the barrier to entry is low, competition is instantaneous and fierce. A successful SaaS application, having raised US$2 million, must spend the next five years fighting off dozens of highly efficient, low-cost competitors that can replicate the code and the business model in under a year. The capital is spent on fighting for market share, not on product differentiation.

Conversely, consider the asset-first approach:

A founder decides to enter the specialised commercial equipment rental market, focusing on niche, highly regulated machinery (e.g., cryogenic freezers for bio-labs or specialised aerial drones for industrial inspections).

  • The bad (initially): They must secure US$2 million in debt or equity immediately to purchase the equipment. The process is slow, involves negotiation, legal work, and insurance. The market says this is inefficient.
  • The good (long-term): The US$2 million in expenditure is now a non-replicable barrier to entry for every competitor.

The competitor cannot start their business tomorrow with a credit card and a laptop; they must raise the same US$2 million, navigate the same procurement hurdles, and wait the same six months for delivery. This friction creates a long-term moat that code simply cannot replicate.

Also Read: Funded: The quieter capital path founders keep missing

The unit economics advantage

The asset-first model, while demanding initial capital, offers significantly better control over long-term unit economics.

In a pure software business, the gross margin is high (often 80 per cent), but the customer acquisition cost (CAC) and customer retention costs are perpetually volatile and must be paid monthly. Competitors can always bid up ad costs or undercut subscription fees, eroding that high margin.

In the asset-first model, once the initial capital is spent, the business controls a tangible, revenue-generating asset.

  • Fixed cost stability: The cost of the asset is fixed. The monthly revenue (rent, processing fee, etc.) is directly tied to a physical object, allowing for highly stable, predictable cash flow that is protected from digital price wars.
  • Liquidation protection: If the business fails, the founder retains the core asset (the equipment, the real estate, or the specialised inventory), which retains tangible liquidation value. A failed software startup leaves behind a pile of worthless code and depleted cash. A failed specialised equipment rental company retains the equipment, which can be sold to recover the initial investment.

The future: The asset-first premium

The future of durable business formation will see a strategic pivot away from the pure-software model toward asset-first businesses leveraging digital tools.

Also Read: Burning billions: AI’s capital frenzy and its global implications

The smartest founders are not avoiding assets; they are seeking out industries where the initial capital outlay is necessary to create a structural, long-term choke point. They are building businesses that are intrinsically connected to the physical world, using technology only to optimise the deployment of that asset, not to be the core product.

This involves:

  • Choosing complexity: Deliberately selecting regulated niches (waste processing, specialised healthcare logistics, commercial agriculture) where high start-up costs repel the vast majority of founders and VCs looking for quick flips.
  • Capital as a weapon: Viewing every large capital expenditure not as a liability, but as a defensive barrier erected against future competition.
  • Prioritising downside protection: Structuring the business so that failure still returns a significant portion of the initial investment, a luxury pure-software founders rarely enjoy.

We must stop worshipping the ease of the lean start and recognise that true, enduring success often requires embracing the complexity and high cost that creates a definitive, structural moat. The US$5 million factory may have been hard to build, but it was a better investment than the US$500,000 code repository that can be cloned and undercut by the next team of efficient developers.

Are you building a business that requires a competitor to raise 10 times your initial capital to compete, or are you building a business that can be started with a credit card and a weekend of coding? Is your priority low initial cost, or long-term, non-replicable profitability?

Editor’s note: e27 aims to foster thought leadership by publishing views from the community. You can also share your perspective by submitting an article, video, podcast, or infographic.

The views expressed in this article are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the official policy or position of e27.

Join us on WhatsAppInstagramFacebookX, and LinkedIn to stay connected.

The post The capital cost strategy: Why high initial investment is your strongest protection appeared first on e27.