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Taiwan’s AI ecosystem map: Deepening synergies between startups and corporates

AI Taiwan

The world has been living with the pandemic for over a year now. Although vaccinations are already underway worldwide, many dramatic changes that businesses have adopted during COVID-19 are irreversible.

Both startups and corporates have increasingly turned to AI, cloud, and digital transformation to streamline operations and survive under the new normal, permanently altering the way we do business.

During the first half of 2021, the Taiwanese AI ecosystem reached a significant milestone with Appier’s public listing in Japan, becoming the first Taiwanese startup to officially achieve unicorn status.

Additionally, AI chip startup Kneron received funding and resources from major electronics manufacturers Hon Hai and Winbond at the beginning of the year, signalling a continuing demand for increasingly higher-efficiency computing capabilities from major technology companies. 

AppWorks Accelerator has updated Taiwan’s AI Ecosystem Map First Half 2021 with our learnings over the past six months. With the breakneck pace of digital adoption, some applications are no longer limited to a specific industry and have thus been reclassified as cross-industry solutions or technologies, which we believe is more reflective of the AI ecosystem in Taiwan.

In reviewing the changes in the overall ecosystem, we have observed several notable trends for the first half of 2021:

Taiwan’s AI Ecosystem Map First Half 2021

New perspectives and opportunities in AI

According to Hive Ventures’ AI report for Taiwanese enterprises released in the first quarter of 2021, 25 per cent of companies have deployed relatively mature AI applications in their organisations.

In addition, 53 per cent of interviewed companies believed that there was a need to introduce AI to their organisations, with learning how to deploy and apply AI more effectively becoming a top priority for many leaders.

We noticed that companies have gone from directly seeking external solutions to building an internal team to sort integrated data, define application fields, develop and deploy AI models, and finally realise the assimilation of AI in their organisations.

Also Read: Taiwan is poised to power the AI economy in the region

It is precisely because of this trend that we see a number of AI enablers gaining significant momentum in the market.  ProfetAI, an automated machine learning engine aimed at assisting companies to introduce AI with the best efficiency, received pre-A funding from AU Optronics, Hive Ventures, and other investors in early 2021.

In addition, Infuse AI received a US$4.3 million Series A round of fundraising led by Wistron in the first quarter of 2021 to continue to develop their MLOps (Machine Learning Operations) platform.

Model development, management, and monitoring are optimised this year to assist more companies in deploying and managing AI models.

The next step in martech

As the penetration rate of e-commerce in Taiwan continues to rise, the concept of online-merge-offline (OMO) fusing virtual and physical sales and marketing is demonstrating powerful potential. The effect of Google’s announcement of phasing out third-party cookies continues to ferment, forcing companies to reassess how they manage their scattered online and offline data pockets.

Specifically, companies are now left to contend with the challenge of effectively accumulating, integrating, and drawing insights from fragmented customer data, and using that to make agile marketing decisions. Such issues have created new development opportunities for AI innovation within martech.

In the face of making increasingly complex marketing decisions, the data required is more difficult than ever to integrate by yourself. We noticed martech startups have begun to actively seek alliance opportunities with other companies, jointly form teams to share data, improve product content together, or even derive new service models.

Whether it’s teaming up between new ventures or seeking cooperation in different industries, you can find clues of these synergies happening throughout the first half of 2021. For example, two conversational AI startups, GoSky and Crescendo Labs, cooperated with iKala’s KOL Radar to collect the data they needed to launch social commerce solutions.

Another martech startup, Accuhit, collaborated with key media players in early 2021 to establish a joint venture in AI and big data called DaEX. Through cross-industry alliances, the media’s advertising data will be integrated with CDP (Customer Data Platform) to create a comprehensive marketing ecosystem.

In addition to its aforementioned fundraising news, Appier also acquired BotBonnie, an omni-channel social commerce platform to enrich their services and data analysis. With this wave of martech teams building strong networks, more AI applications will be born through such synergies.

Roles for large companies in Taiwan’s AI ecosystem

In the development of the overall AI ecosystem, whether in Taiwan or internationally, the participation rate of integrating AI in organisations and processes is increasing. In terms of startup accelerators, AppWorks Accelerator, established in 2010 and focusing on founders working in AI and Blockchain since August 2018, has graduated over 100 AI teams so far and continues to build up Taiwan’s AI ecosystem.

In April 2021, AppWorks also announced a partnership with Wistron, an active player in the AI ecosystem, to launch the first batch of the new Wistron Accelerator powered by AppWorks to focus on startups in the fields of AI, IoT, cloud computing, and information security.

Various business units of Wistron Group will collaborate with these startups to propose solutions for their departments and seek more growth opportunities within the overall AI/IoT ecosystem.

Also read: Why Taiwan’s AI ecosystem is a fast-emerging opportunity during the pandemic

Leading AI chip maker NVIDIA also announced that it will establish Asia’s first NVIDIA Inception AI startup base in Linkou’s innovation park, supplemented by the NVIDIA Inception AI accelerator program to inject talent and innovative technology into Taiwan.

In addition, startup accelerators that support AI startup teams, including SparkLabs Taipei, Taiwan AI x Robotics Accelerator, and the CIAT Accelerator, are all recruiting AI startups to join them.

Taiwan AI Academy Foundation and Taiwan AI Labs are Taiwan’s representative institutions in AI education and research, respectively. The former, a consortium, combines industry and academia to promote the implementation of AI in various industries.

It promotes services for AI project evaluation and transformation strategies. Taiwan’s smart driving test lab and Taoyuan’s innovation park connect government and corporate resources to provide an R&D environment for self-driving cars to test.

With organisations now banding together to push the AI agenda forward, we will continue to see the demand for integrating AI rise.

Taiwan’s AI Ecosystem Map First Half 2021 is jointly produced by AppWorks and Taiwan’s Artificial Intelligence Foundation (AIF), and is updated every six months. Download the map here: Taiwan’s AI Ecosystem Map First Half 2021

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 group, FB community or like the e27 Facebook page

Image credit: monaliza0024

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Mobile, e-sports, live streaming shaping SEA’s gaming startup landscape in 2021

gaming

Over the next ten years, media and entertainment will become one of the most attractive sectors for investments in Southeast Asia, as per a recent report by Golden Gate Ventures. It is already evident from the number of startup exits in the region. Of the total 80 exits so far, media and entertainment registered the fourth most exits, as per Crunchbase.

In entertainment, gaming is the largest and most expansive industry globally. As of 2021, it has a staggering three billion game players, which is equivalent to nearly 40 per cent of the world population. Newzoo forecasts that the global gaming market is expected to generate US$175.8 billion in revenue this year. When it comes to Southeast Asia, the market is set to grow by 8.5 per cent per year on average, according to a Research And Markets study.

Where is the gaming industry headed and what are the key trends in this booming industry?

e27 spoke to a few market players, including the region’s fastest-growing media publisher SHAREit, Singapore’s social media unicorn Bigo, and Vietnamese blockchain game developer Sky Mavis, which owns the popular NFT-based game Axie Infinity.

Pandemic-fuelled behaviour shift: mobile, e-sport, and live streaming

Ranked first in the 2019 global growth rate, mobile gaming in the region made its mark, thanks to high smartphone penetration. This hype has been accelerated further in recent years due to the extended lockdown induced by COVID-19. Mobile games have led the charge as the most viable form of entertainment for the homebound.

According to mobile consultancy App Annie, users worldwide downloaded 30 per cent more games in Q1 2021 compared to Q4 2019. The spending on mobile games also reached a record US$1.7 billion per week in Q1 2021, up 40 per cent from pre-pandemic levels. 

Plus, emerging markets such as Vietnam and the Philippines have seen over 50 per cent growth in consumer spending on mobile games.

“While, at one point, gaming used to be considered as socially isolating, people all over the world under lockdowns turned to gaming as a way to seek out a community connection on the other side of the screen,” said Karam Malhotra, partner and global vice president at the SHAREit Group.

Karam Malhotra, partner and global VP at SHAREit

Karam Malhotra, partner and global VP at SHAREit

Social gaming, therefore, has emerged as a notable trend that drives the explosive growth of e-sports.

“Southeast Asian gamers’ strong inclination towards community play — coupled with a lucrative environment and government policies — has aided in the rise of e-sports in the region,” Malhotra added.

Since people cannot go and watch real-life sports in stadia, e-sports viewership in Asia has grown to 618.4 million in 2020, a 21 per cent increase compared to 2019, according to research published on Research And Markets.

Also read: ESPL raises pre-Series A to grow its e-sports platform for grassroot gamers

E-sports turned mainstream when Singapore-based live streaming platform Bigo signed an agreement with Pakistan’s Ministry of Information and Broadcasting and Garena to launch an initiative to support and facilitate young gamers to enter the industry.

Gamers use global live streaming platforms such as Bigo Live to observe, showcase, connect and create content for real-time game streaming. Some of the most viral games on Bigo Live are Bang Bang (MLBB), PlayerUnknown’s Battleground (PUBG), Free Fire, Fortnite, Call of Duty and Valorant.

“Livestreaming has not only emerged as a popular format for gamers to view and participate in e-sports but also an important platform for gamers to build and connect with the community,” said Mike Ong, Vice President at Bigo.

Mike Ong, Vice President at BIGO

Mike Ong, Vice President at Bigo

Ong added that the lockdown blues drove more people to turn to digital platforms and watch live game streams. The number of users enjoying live streaming games saw an uptick of more than 11.7 per cent globally between 2019 and 2020.

“Users are shifting to video-first social experiences such as live streaming that favours content creators,” Ong noted. “We have noticed a shift towards authentic experiences as users are starting to move towards a model of directly recognising content creators instead of traditional content produced by production houses.”

Indonesia, Vietnam and Thailand have emerged as the top countries in terms of game live streaming, according to Bigo.

Blockchain-based games attract venture capital

These changing user behaviour also increased the need for technology-powered gaming experiences. In particular, the growing blockchain technology advancements in recent years have fostered blockchain-based games’ positive momentum in Southeast Asia.

Axie Infinity, a blockchain game developed by Vietnamese startup Sky Mavis released in 2018, became the first-of-its-kind NFT-based game developed in Southeast Asia. In August, the startup announced that the game drew a record 800,000 daily active users in July and will soon hit the one million mark.

Axie Infinity

NFT-based game Axie Infinity

Ever since, the combination of gaming and blockchain technology, wherein gamers utilise the true in-game item ownership, has become more popular and attracted investments.

Earlier this year, My DeFi Pet, a game developed by Vietnamese studio Topebox, also received a US$1 million investment from Axia8 Ventures, OKEx Blockdream Ventures, and OKEx. Having decentralised finance (DeFi) and non-fungible token (NFT) features, the game allows players to earn tokens while playing, get rewards by joining events and make profits from trading in-game characters.

Just last month, Virtually Human Studio, which owns virtual horse racing platform Zed Run, raised US$20 million in a Series A round led by media and technology-focused investment firm TCG Capital Management, besides Andreessen Horowitz and Red Beard Ventures.

These deals mark investors’ appetite for companies that stand at the crossroads of entertainment, gaming and NFT.

The capital, however, is not restricted only to conventional VCs or corporate VCs. Even retail cryptocurrency investors are also betting on the governance token of the game to fuel its development. Axie Infinity’s token is now worth around US$70 per token, which was just US$3-4 a month ago.

Also read: VCs, IEOs, and crowdfunding: How the likes of Sky Mavis manage good relationship with each investor

Game design and Economic design 

“Blockchain is changing the monetisation and mechanics of mobile games,” stated SHAREit’s Malhotra. “It allows players to monetise their own gaming experiences with NFTs unlike traditional gaming, which forms an opportunity area.”

As a prominent success case, Sky Mavis CEO Trung Nguyen said that Axie Infinity combined both game design and economical design. With the “play-to-earn” model, gamers can have verified ownership for digital assets, create digital value in tokens for virtual items, and then trade or convert them to local currencies.

“Nevertheless, there are still several conflicts between designing blockchain games and other conventional games,” Nguyen said. “While conventional games aim to maximise the unilateral revenue towards the developer, a decentralised platform of blockchain games works as a true economy, where the ecosystem is broadened by maximising total in-app transaction and creation value of users.”

In his view, balancing these conflicts by designing enticing gameplay and ensuring a healthy in-game economy will help secure and scale its user base.

Blockchain games have also become an alternative, easy-access approach for financial benefits or savings. The games act as an “abstractor” to popularise technologies and “increase financial inclusion”.

This, combined with the rise of mobile as a platform to offer publishers a direct line to reach a broader audience than before, has empowered developers to be creative in genres, formats and monetisation models.

For example, immersive in-game ads have become more sophisticated, which require a deep understanding of gaming technology and the audience. Ads must reside within a digital world seamlessly and not be intrusive in any way.

In the past two years, developers across regions also increasingly shifted their focus from an ad-only monetisation strategy to include in-app purchases. “The publishers that creatively integrate ads will see higher lifetime value and retention with lower churn,” said Malhotra.

In the case of game streaming activities, creators can also be recognised for their work through ‘gifts’ or in-app currencies given by the audience.

“Our users can give various forms of virtual gifts to their favourite broadcasters, which can then be converted into cash,” said Ong of Bigo. “This is part of our ongoing efforts to foster a sense of giving back to our broadcasters and being at the forefront of the creator economy.”

In a broader sense, the democratisation of the gaming experience for people has become the most important trend that can leverage the growth of this sector in years to come.

“We are democratising the mobile gaming experience for millennials, be it a casual, social, mid-core, hardcore, or professional gamer,” said Malhotra.

Image credit: 123rf, SHAREit, Bigo, Sky Mavis

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Momos rakes in US$6.5M financing to grow its F&B SaaS platform beyond Singapore

Momos co-funders Andrew Liu and Sai Alluri (R)

Momos co-funders Andrew Liu and Sai Alluri (R)

Momos, a startup providing an online platform for marketing, reviews, and analytics to F&B businesses in Singapore, has received US$6.5 million in a seed funding round co-led by Sequoia India and Alpha Wave Incubation, a US$300-million early-stage fund.

Other investors include K3 Ventures, Captii Ventures, HOF Capital, JIA Group, Hong Kong-based Integrated Capital, and angel investors from global food delivery and software companies.

With the new investment, the SaaS startup plans to bankroll its expansion plans as part of an international strategy, enhance its value proposition for restaurant partners, and further build its platform.

Momos was launched in 2020 by Sai Alluri and Andrew Liu, former executives at Grab, Uber, Microsoft, and Intuit. The platform offers restaurants a unified interface to operate across meal delivery systems, social media, and other online channels, and launch virtual delivery-only brands.

“We started Momos during the pandemic to help restaurants embrace the massive change happening in the F&B industry,” said CEO Alluri. “We think of ourselves as building Shopify for F&B, but in reverse.”

Andrew Liu, Momos co-founder and CBO, added that they realised restaurants faced the same challenges everywhere and consider the region a hotbed for talent and global SaaS companies. 

Also read: F&B’s growing appetite for technology solutions and how it leads to success

According to Aakash Kapoor, VP, Sequoia India, F&B is a vast and growing market, with numerous multibillion-dollar corporations catering to restaurant operations’ cost side, including delivery and POS payments. 

“Momos has built a unique and compelling SaaS platform to instead help restaurants grow their business,” said Kapoor.

The company is working with large and small food and beverage firms in Southeast Asia, including The Lo & Behold Group, Flash Coffee, Guzman y Gomez, and Wolf Burgers. 

Besides, it counts virtual brands such as Tree Side Nasi Lemak, COOP by Neon Pigeon, and Curry Fried Chicken among the partners.

report by Consumer Foodservice by Location in Singapore says that cafés/bars, limited-service restaurants, and street stalls/kiosks are leading the US$8.3-billion F&B foodservice industry in Singapore, which is anticipated to grow at a CAGR of 2.1 per cent by 2023.

Image credit: Momos

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How can female founders become the new normal in Asia?

Clockwise from top left: Davis Ng (Helicap), Qing Ru Lim (Host), Everard Ong (MFH Team), Pin Duangdee (Goldman Sachs), Yiping Goh (Quest Ventures), Georgina Lee (RGS Alumnae), Yen-Lu Chow (Asia Institute of Mentoring), Edwina Yeo (SuperMomos), Grace Sai (Ravel Innovation), Aaliya Samuel (Student), Alice Ho Tan (Integrow), Doris Yee (SVCA), Shao Ning Huang (AngelCentral), Carmen Yuen (Vertex), Sarah Tan (MFH Team), Senior Minister Sim Ann, Elise Tan (MFH Team), Joshua Sng (MFH Team).

This article is run in collaboration with Makan For Hope, a non-profit initiative by Asia Startup Network. The Makan For Hope Festival brings notable mentors and aspiring entrepreneurs in 30 meaningful virtual conversations over food from Social Enterprises to raise S$125,000 for Fei-Yue to support the children and seniors from low-income families. 

At this Makan For Hope session hosted by exited entrepreneur and investor Qing Ru Lim, she led the discussion with 10 seasoned startup founders, angel investors, and venture capitalists.

The roundtable took a deep dive into the headwinds women faced and discussed the steps we can take today to empower female founders and encourage more to thrive in the Southeast Asia startup scene.

Setting the context

Globally, venture funding allocation to female-founded companies is an astonishingly low percentage –two per cent in 2020, according to Crunchbase News. 

The number is nine per cent in female co-founded companies. In Southeast Asia, the numbers are higher, though still on the low side: companies with female founders or co-founders raised 16.4 per cent of total funding.

Yet, according to a BCG study, women-led startups provide better financial returns for investors — for every dollar of funding, they generated a return of 78 cents. In contrast, male-founded startups generated less than half that. 

On the investment side, only 2.4 per cent of all VC partners globally are women. Yet, having more women in funds provided higher fund returns and more profitable exits, according to a research report by Harvard Kennedy School –VC firms that increased the number of female partners by 10 per cent experienced a 1.5 per cent increase in fund returns each year, plus 9.7 per cent more profitable exits.

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

Data from both sides of the table suggest that females could outperform their male counterparts. 

Now more than ever, we need to support more females in startups

Besides the strong hypothesis that women make great entrepreneurs, the other reason for this urgency is the COVID-19 pandemic.

More women than ever are leaving the workforce, as shared in McKinsey’s Women in the Workplace study. Without deliberate intervention, as the report suggests, it will be “unwinding years of painstaking progress toward gender diversity.”

It would also hold our economy back. Furthermore, there has been increasing investment into ESG funds to support the empowerment of women and minorities. 

The timing is favourable, and there is no matter time to act than right now. But how can we increase the number from 16.4 per cent to 50 per cent?

What needs to be done, what needs to be changed? At the roundtable conversation, most believe that change needs to happen at all levels, and women also need to lead the change themselves.

More can be done to sustain the growing trend of females in tech:

At the Government level

One of the initiatives led by the Ministry of Social and Family Development is the “Conversations on Singapore Women’s Development” which aims to shift societal mindsets for a more inclusive society for men and women. While progress in recent years has been encouraging, we can do much more. 

  • Qing Ru Lim: suggested increasing access to funding by creating a Perpetual fund to back women-led startups (similar to SheEO, which pools money to loan to female founders at zero per cent interest) and a tax incentive scheme for female-led VC funds, which is already implemented overseas.
  • Shao-Ning Huang: seconded the tax incentive scheme because tax is only relevant for profitable companies, which aligns with investors’ interests.
  • Yiping Goh: shared that back in 2017, the government raised the paternity leave to two weeks from one week for working fathers. She opined that supporting men in the ecosystem is also important and believes they can create more incentives for husbands to support their wives in caregiving tasks.

At the Investor level

Investors could pave the way to empower more female founders. Women in startups often face headwinds of blinds spots and cognitive bias, making fundraising even harder than it already is.

A recent study conducted by TechCrunch found that women are asked more risk questions than men, which ultimately results in far less money being raised.

Even more surprising is that female investors typically exhibit the same gender bias demonstrated by their male counterparts towards female founders. And for most of them, they may not even be aware of it.

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

Here are three possible measures to lead change:

  • Shao-Ning Huang: VC firms must look at ways to hire more women decision-makers, at all levels, especially at the top. This is important as female investors would have a better capacity to empathise, understand and communicate more effectively with female founders.
  • Carmen Yuen: Investors or stakeholders could consider having a team of organisational development specialists offering guidance to their portfolios to overcome gender bias and implement female-friendly policies.
  • Qing Ru Lim: Limited partners could promote gender diversity by requesting it to be a mandatory ESG component in Annual Reports of the funds they invest in. The same goes for investors — it will be game-changing for them to seek their portfolio companies to include how they have embraced gender diversity in their investor reporting.

At the personal level

To see sustained change, females also need to start with changing their own mindset and behaviour.

Also Read: How the tech industry can become friendlier for women

The group’s ideas boiled down to five priority areas for action: 

  • Senior Minister of State Sim Ann: Women need to revisit their own experiences and highlight the obstacles they have faced or what held them back. She encourages females to champion the change they wish to see.
  • Doris Yee, Executive Director of Singapore Venture Capital & Private Equity Association: Education will be instrumental, such as leadership training for women leaders to change the tendency of holding themselves back.
  • Edwina Yeo, co-founder, and CEO of Supermomos: She testified to the reality of gender-related subconscious bias, but also the reality that women may voluntarily decide to take a back seat after they have kids. She believes it is about paving the way to ensure these women could still score in their career while juggling other priorities, possible through more flexible work arrangements.
  • Yen-Lu Chow, Co-founder and Executive Chairman, WholeTree Foundation and Over-The-Rainbow: He saw how many women, through his experience, have made a significant difference to the lives of people when allowed to lead. He urges more women to say yes to leadership opportunities — stand up, speak up, and be counted.
  • Shao-Ning Huang: There is a need for female founders to be self-aware of the hero’s mindset and victim’s mindset that they tend to adopt. Both mindsets are unproductive and obstacles to building good startups. Women also need to be open to enlist help from others, use them and unitedly create a vicious cycle of female empowerment. A single chopstick may be easy to break, but a bunch of them creates a robust and unbreakable infrastructure.

Banding Together is how we can realise the vision of seeing female founders as the new normal.  Here’s how you can play a part— support these ground-up initiatives listed here.

This article is co-written by Jessica Bong.

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 group, FB community, or like the e27 Facebook page

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Ecosystem Roundup: Blibli eyes 2022 IPO, Ant invests US$15M in Chope, Omnilytics to buy Supahands for US$20M

Blibli CEO Kusumo Martanto

Djarum Group-backed Indonesian e-commerce firm Blibli eyes 2022 IPO
It has picked advisers for a potential initial public offering in Jakarta as early as next year; Deliberations are still at an early stage, and the size of the IPO could depend on which Blibli businesses are included.

Omnilytics to acquire Malaysia’s Supahands for US$20M to enhance its retail tech stack capabilities
This deal is part of the Singaporean firm’s ongoing strategic acquisition drive to expand its product offerings and enhance its retail tech stack capabilities; Supahands is backed by Patamar Capital, Cradle Seed Ventures, Axiata and 500 Startups.

Singapore crypto startup Alethea AI raises US$16M to bring NFTs to life
Investors include Mark Cuban, Alameda Research, Multicoin, Galaxy Interactive, Dapper Labs, and LD Capital; Alethea is part of a select group that’s helping test Generative Pre-trained Transformer 3, a language model that can produce human-like text; Through Alethea’s platform, users can create interactive NFTs so they can come “alive.”

Ant Group invests US$15M in Chope
The fundraise comes on the back of a strategic partnership between Chope and Ant Group’s Alipay; Alipay will provide Chope with its mini-programme SaaS and know-how, while Chope becomes Alipay’s platform partner with the capability to integrate a wide variety of mini-programmes.

Dekoruma nets US$15M Series C to expand its experience centres beyond Jakarta
Investors include Nexter Ventures, KTB Network, GDN, OCBC NISP Ventura and Foundamental; Dekoruma offers an ecosystem connecting home furnishing merchants, interior designers, contractors and property developers; Dekoruma also wants to see itself in around eight cities in the archipelago by the end-2022.

Centauri Fund raises US$8.5M from K-Growth to boost investment corridor between Korea and ASEAN
Launched in December 2019 with a target of raising US$150 million, Centauri is run by KB Investment and MDI Ventures: It invests between US$1M and US$5M in machine learning and fintech startups focusing on the Indonesia market.

HIJUP launches US$7M fund to back modest fashion brands in Indonesia
Called HIJUP Growth Fund, it aims to invest around US$138K each in local modest fashion brands and has already backed Buttonscarves and Puru Kambera; Hijup does not intend to fully acquire the companies/brands it backs.

Akulaku CEO William Li: ‘Asia’s BNPL sector has great potential compared to Europe’
The BNPL sector market size and penetration in Asia will be US$134B in 2023, which is only 4% of e-commerce sales, he says; Akulaku has raised US$218M from Ant Group, Sequoia India, and Qiming Venture, among others. It is now in talks to raise US$100M.

Startup Villages helps entrepreneurs move to Italian villages and make the most of their ‘EUR1 house’ schemes
Startup Villages target startups in food, dairy, agri, automotive & EVs, future tech, drones, AI, and food in Italian and Japanese villages in the initial phases.

Medici, a health-tech firm founded by ex-Grab exec, gets seed funding led by Insignia Ventures
With the new investment, the startup aims to foray into the insurance industry; Medici has partnered with companies such as FWD, Bao Viet Insurance, PTI, PVI, VBI, and Bao Minh Insurance to co-launch insurance products; Its healthcare services ecosystem includes telemedicine, health screenings, and a marketplace for drugs and supplements.

Tessaract.io raises US$3.3M to expand workflow automation solutions in new markets
Investors include Wavemaker Partners (lead), CMIA Capital Partners, and M Venture Partners; Tessaract aims to assist professional services firms across the region to automate repetitive operations and deliver a better experience to their customers.

Insignia, Y Combinator back US$2.2M round of Intellect to provide mental health services across Asia
Intellect aims to make mental healthcare and wellbeing support accessible for everyone through its end-to-end, 24×7 mental healthcare system in a single app; It claims to have clocked over 2.5 million users and 20 enterprise clients globally, covering 12 countries and 11 languages.

Ethis Global closes US$1.7M pre-Series A to accelerate global expansion effort
Investors include Malaysia Airline chairman Wan Zulkiflee, Daud Vicary Abdullah (Trustee at RFI Foundation), and Khurram Hilal (Islamic banking lead at Standard Chartered); Ethis operates sharia-based crowdfunding platforms in Indonesia and Malaysia and social finance platform GlobalSadaqah.

Ex-TPG exec’s startup Marathon Education raises US$1.5M to change the after-school tutoring market in Vietnam
Investors are Forge Ventures (lead), Marcel van Miert and Singapore Life founder Walter de Oude; Marathon leverages a live large-class hybrid model to ensure students get access to top-quality education from “top one per cent teachers”.

Vietnam’s bookkeeping startup SoBanHang attracts US$1.5M to venture out into working capital loans
Investors include FEBE Ventures, Class 5, and Business Insider founder Kevin P. Ryan; The startup helps small retailers create e-stores and manage orders to tap into a market of 16+ million nano- and micro-businesses in Vietnam.

VUIHOC gets funding from Do Ventures to provide primary school education through animation, gamification
The edutech helps students cultivate their self-study from an early age; It covers all three core subjects for primary school students: math, Vietnamese, and English; VUIHOC currently offers more than 150 courses, nearly 9K video lectures, and a repository of 240K quiz questions.

Mindtera bags funding led by East Ventures to grow its personal growth learning platform
Hustle Fund and Henry Hendrawan of Traveloka also participated; Mindtera provides curated personal growth learning curriculums across key areas of life — family, love and work, assisting people in a structured manner to better navigate through life.

Indonesian healthtech startup Zi.Care wins Telkomsel backing in US$500K seed round
Investors are Iterative VC, Choco-Up, and Tinc; Zi.Care digitises patients’ medical and health records then stores them on its cloud-based platform; The solution can increase accuracy in medical records while reducing waiting times and administrative processes in Indonesian healthcare facilities.

Talenox co-founder reveals the grind behind the glamour of entrepreneurship
However, if you are thinking of spending time on building a really good product and only raising funds when you experience hyper-growth, then you should focus on getting more revenue on board in a sustainable way and raise buffer funds to help you bridge your cash flow.

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6 pivot stories of Vietnamese F&B brands that are worth your time (and taste)

F&B

The ongoing lockdown orders and temporary restaurant closures have left Vietnam’s F&B industry in a rather grim state. From restrictions on dine-in, delivery and takeouts with only basic essentials and grocery items given the pass, many restaurants have had to shut their doors (temporarily).

However, here are six F&B businesses that have successfully pivoted during these uncertain times.

Using technology to empower charity and enable mobile donations

While not a restaurant, Sayvu is an F&B-tech mobile app that pre-pandemic allowed users to redeem F&B vouchers from their favourite restaurants and cafes in Saigon.

Like any tech app, user downloads is one of the key KPIs as well as one of the largest cost factors. When restaurants could only do delivery and takeaway, Sayvu launched its contactless payment feature which allowed users to use the Sayvu app to make contactless cashless payments at their favourite restaurants.

While this seemed like a promising feature, it proved to be short-lived following stricter restrictions on movement (people are not allowed to leave their homes unless absolutely necessary) as well as an emergence of positive cases in food delivery riders. With this, the prospect of walking to your local neighbourhood restaurant slowly became an impossibility.

A month later, when the government stopped all food delivery and takeaway in an effort to flatten the curve in Vietnam, Jerome Ly felt defeated but inspired to give back to the community after seeing many suffering on the streets.

This was when he launched Vietnam Oi, Co Len, a not-for-profit charitable organisation that partners with restaurants including Baba’s Thao Dien and Lion City Heart Group to cook and deliver meals to residents in quarantine areas and the less fortunate.

Through Vietnam Oi, Co Len, which has delivered up to 70,000 meals to vulnerable at-risk communities, Sayvu has made a name for itself gathering the attention of media giants Nhan Dan TV and HTV9 as well as organisations such as the French Chamber of Commerce.

More than anything, it has touched the hearts of F&B operators (previously not partners of Sayvu) and of course, increased app downloads since Sayvu sells donation meals.

Also Read: Revolutionising the food industry with Malaysia’s StixFresh

An offline-to-online pivot driven by comforting F&B products catered for an anxiety-stricken market

I don’t care what anyone says, coffee is an “essential” and you can tell by looking at the number of speciality coffee brands and cafes in Saigon alone.

When the lockdown was announced, there was a surge in coffee interest,  from beans to cold brew as Saigon residents flocked to their favourite coffee shops to stock up on their daily dose of ‘lockdown fuel’.

I was admittedly one of them and while I love my French press, there is nothing I love more than a fresh almond milk latte.

So when Kel Norman and Will Frith (the good guys behind Building Coffee) announced they were doing fresh milk (both plant-based and dairy) lattes, my heart skipped a beat.

Not only are BEL Fridges the few fresh lattes (plant-based milk options available too) available for sale in Saigon at the moment, they also leverage the expertise, equipment and technology of Building Coffee, one of the city’s most credible coffee brands.

Simply put, building coffee is Saigon’s source for quality and behind the menu of some of the best places to get coffee in town.

And if you find the name BEL familiar, it’s probably because you’ve come across it on Sprudge, the go-to destination for all things coffee news and culture.

BEL is building coffee’s first retail concept combining speciality coffee and wine (under the watchful eye and expertise of seasoned sommelier, Dan Sousanis, a Level 2 Sommelier) under one roof.

Pegged to open on the 21st of July but due to the current lockdown orders in place, has delayed its opening.

Undefeated and armed with new equipment and fresh brand assets, Kel and Will launched BEL via a product-driven strategy i.e. fresh milk-based lattes and an evocatively nostalgic tea-based beverage coined “Dreamsicle”, which is infused with almond milk (lightly sweetened with coconut blossom nectar) and 100 per cent orange juice.

So, what do you get when a new ‘virtual brand’ introduces comfort-driven products for an anxious market while riding on the back of its market-leading credible older brother? Well, the answer is simple.

Lines forming at its door when its opens. Most of who will be loyal customers by then (including myself). This well-thought-out marketing strategy accords BEL its inclusion on my list of successful pandemic pivots and fingers crossed a buzzing status for this new-kid-on-the-block in months to come.

Also Read: F&B’s growing appetite for technology solutions and how it leads to success

Broccoli and beer anyone?

When beer was declared a ‘non-essential’ (I beg to differ) F&B product by the government in July 2021, this necessitated household craft beer brand Heart of Darkness to halt its operations and founder John Pemberton to say “enough is enough”.

At this time, much of Saigon was still in lockdown amid record-high cases and e-grocers were overwhelmed with orders resulting in an average 10-to-14 day waiting period. John Pemberton and his team recognised the bottleneck in the grocery supply system and decided to offer an alternative for Saigon residents.

Within a week, the HOD team partnered up with a fresh fruit and grocery supplier and leveraged its technology, warehouse logistics, manpower and resources to turn this household craft beer brewer into well, an e-grocer business. Best part? Yes, you can get your favourite ready-to-drink Heart of Darkness beers too.

Today, Heart of Darkness has even partnered up with other local F&B brands including Tartine and D’Art Chocolate to sell sourdough bread and made-in-Vietnam artisan chocolate on its e-grocer platform. Cheeky? Perhaps. Genius? Definitely.

Selling pizza with books and livestream DJ events

Beyond pizzas, cheese and pasta, Pizza 4P’s is a name widely associated with a myriad of different attributes namely sustainability and trendy interior design.

Unsurprisingly, one doesn’t become a household F&B brand well-loved by both locals and expats in Vietnam and around the world for no reason other than its products, right?

Continuing with this ethos of going beyond products, Pizza 4P’s launched a series of interesting launches during the lockdown including a virtual live music event featuring an on-premise DJ at one of its restaurants to live stream tunes to its followers and anyone interested in catching a glimpse of what a DJ turntable cum wood-fired pizza oven looks like.

I for one tuned and couldn’t be more jealous of the DJ that got to get a whiff of whatever pizza remains left in that oven.

In addition to live stream DJ events and frozen pizzas and pasta that caused much debate within Saigon’s expat community, Pizza 4P’s also launched its inaugural book Prayer to the Future: A book that lasts a thousand years, aligning with its sustainability initiative launched a few months ago for its 10th-anniversary celebration.

The book is a project that has been in the pipeline for months and features local creatives Ki Saigon and Zac Buehner with the simple purpose of sharing compassion with the people and world around us. It includes a series of letters written by friends, loved ones, loyal customers to their great-grandchildren with words of wisdom, hope and most importantly, love.

Since the letters had to be preserved for generations to come, they had to be done on plastic, which is recycled by Pizza 4P’s in conjunction with local recyclers who helped to collect secondhand plastic off the streets of Vietnam.

Is it working? Are they selling? Who is to know but perhaps that’s not even the point. What Pizza 4P’s has done is made itself memorable and the talk-of-the-town online (social media, Facebook groups, etc.) during the lockdown.

From fierce online debates about how its frozen products are incomparable to the real deal to heightened curiosity around the debut of its inaugural book launch.

Ultimately, where Pizza 4P’s wins is in its ability to engage Saigon residents virtually and establish itself as a fun and personable F&B brand. Now that’s how you attain household brand status.

Also Read: Mohjo bags seed funding from East Ventures to launch new plant-based foods, beverages

DIY meal kits

This might seem like an obvious inclusion for those thinking DIY meal kits is simply a dish broken down into its parts. To be fair, that’s not far from the truth. Nonetheless, for a restaurant to pivot overnight from offering in-person dining and hot food meant for delivery and takeaway to frozen DIY meal kits is no easy feat considering only certain types of foods can achieve this efficiently and effectively.

Furthermore, the equipment and logistics tied to being a DIY frozen meal kit business are not the same as a conventional restaurant and not many restaurants (especially premium to fine dining brands) would not opt for these options.

While pivoting to meal kits out of desperation to keep the restaurant alive might have been the original catalyst, this strategy is currently accounting for 100 per cent of revenue for several restaurants including Kebaby, Once Upon a Pasta, Rustic Kitchen and Jeffrey’s Kitchen Taiwanese Beef Noodles amongst many others who have been making waves online amongst hungry Saigon residents.

Launching a Specialty Deli by Kashew Cheese

Though Kashew Cheese has always had a deli where it sold its more-ish plant-based cheeses and milk, this well-loved plant-based brand pivoted into a 100 per cent -deli concept during the lockdown. The company leveraged its connections with partners, suppliers and wholesalers to provide high-end artisan products on top of its usual offering to customers, allowing them to shop pantry items beloved by their favourite plant-based concept. It also includes products such as chilli from Saigon Charlie, wine, sake and coffee beans from Lacàph to their order, avoiding a trip to the grocery store. Sounds brilliant, doesn’t it?

The high level of convenience and relatively low risk are attractive to people cooking at home more than ever, but more importantly, these side hustles allow restaurants to earn a small profit without having to pay for the labour to transform products into fully finished dishes.

They’re a natural brand extension that could increase a restaurant’s margins while continuing to provide a service to customers who trust industry experts with some of their grocery shopping or enjoy the idea of a chef completing the mise en place for a meal.

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

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Chope secures US$15M as part of a strategic partnership with Ant Group

Arrif Ziaudeen, CEO of Chope

Arrif Ziaudeen, CEO of Chope

Singapore-based restaurant reservation company Chope has announced a partnership with Alipay, a digital payment platform operated by Ant Group.

A DealStreetAsia report said, citing regulatory filings that the Chinese tech giant invested US$15 million in Chope on the back of this deal.

Through this collaboration, Alipay will provide the foodtech startup with its mini-programme SaaS and know-how. At the same time, the Singapore firm becomes Alipay’s platform partner with the capability to integrate a variety of mini-programmes to enhance the functionality and scalability of Chope’s platform.

The partnership means businesses of all sizes can integrate into the Chope app through its customisable mini-programmes. It allows F&B operators to reach the Singapoe company’s millions of users, leverage Alipay’s innovative technology, and easily digitalise operations.

Meanwhile, diners can look forward to a broader variety of F&B types and dining services on the Chope app.

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

Arrif Ziaudeen, CEO of The Chope Group, said, “The pandemic has fueled the adoption of digital solutions and services among F&B operators. However, for some, the extreme restrictions have forced them to finally adapt to digital lifestyles not only to remain competitive but to survive. Our partnership with Alipay comes at an opportune time to help lead this evolutionary step-change. Working closely with Alipay and our F&B partners, our ambition is to do with Asia’s giant foodservice industry what e-commerce has done with shopping”.

Founded in 2011, Chope works with the region’s leading F&B operators to offers restaurant reservations, table management, marketing, deals, and delivery. With Chope, diners can discover restaurants, make instant bookings, and save with dining deals. Chope’s demand generating diner platform is incorporated with a suite of integrated solutions encompassing reservation, call, queue, and table management.

The firm claims it has served 83 million diners to date. It has partnered with 5,000 restaurants, including The Lo & Behold Group, JUMBO Group, Soho Hospitality, Lost Heaven, Dining Concepts, Hospitality Management Asia, Ismaya Group and The Union Group.

Chope is operational in seven cities, namely Singapore, Hong Kong, Bangkok, Phuket, Shanghai, Bali, and Jakarta.

To date, it has secured US$35.3 million in funding over six rounds from investors, including Square Peg Capital, Openspace Ventures, Singapore Press Holdings, and Innosight Ventures.

Image Credit: Chope

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How PRs can help their clients become thought leaders in the ecosystem

PRs

Press releases are passe. While there can only be so much news to share at any given time, startup founder stories and insights abound.

If you are a PR or communications professional seeking to get additional exposure for your clients in the tech startup ecosystem, here’s how you can leverage the e27 Contributor Programme.

It is an excellent opportunity for founders, corporate honchos, executives, government officials, and experts to establish their brand within the tech startup ecosystem in APAC. The e27 Contributor Programme is designed to nurture thought leadership in the industry. It is completely free of cost; all it takes is a simple profile set up and an original voice.

As you can see in this list of contributions we have published recently, we cover the whole range from founder stories, webinar videos with key takeaways, podcasts and infographics, funding experiences, employee management guides, entrepreneurial advice, productivity tips, sector-specific analysis, to regional trends.

All the community articles are written by ecosystem players. We simply facilitate its exposure through our widely visited platform with over two million reader base. 

What will your client’s gain?

  • Your clients’ articles will be viewed by thousands of readers of our website
  • Promoted at least 3x a day across e27 social media channels
  • They will also be featured in the masthead on our site as well as our daily newsletters going out to 50,000 subscribers
  • Boost their personal brand and position as a respected thought leader in the industry
  • Expand their writing portfolio, and attract speaking opportunities, etc.

Rachel Lau contributor

How can PRs facilitate it

Step 1: Email us the story angle your client wants to share, their bio and company profile
Step 2: Once we discuss it via email and you get a green flag, ask the client to create a profile on e27 and submit their article.
(Note: You cannot submit it on their behalf)
Step 3: We will publish the article. Get the client to share it within their networks.
(You can track the views on the article by visiting the author profile)

Video resource

If you have more questions, check out the FAQ here. We have also tried to address over 25 such queries specifically from PR professionals in an exclusive webinar with Telum. Check it out below:

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 group, FB community or like the e27 Facebook page

Image credit: zinkevych

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Thai construction-tech startup Builk One Group raises Series B+, aims for IPO in 2022 

Builk One Group

Bangkok-headquartered construction-tech company Builk One Group has secured an undisclosed amount in a Series B extension round from investors including SCG, Krungsri Group’s corporate VC arm Krungsri Finnovate, and BCH Ventures, a subsidiary under Thai telecommunication giant Benchachinda Group. 

This new investment arrives five months after it received the first tranche of the Series B round from Beacon VC, the venture arm of Kasikorn Bank, and three other unnamed strategic investors.

Builk One Group plans to use capital to strengthen its SaaS offerings in the construction and real estate industry. The fund will also be used to expand its solutions on a secured cloud infrastructure that will meet future work requirements.

As per Krungsri Bank’s statement, Builk One Group is aiming for an IPO next year.

Founded in 2005, Builk One Group has leveraged its over 16 years of experience in building construction management software to create new business model innovations in the construction industry. The firm helps companies in Thailand and ASEAN to digitalise their construction projects through a range of SaaS offerings, including business management services and online construction material trading platforms.

The company has also developed a technology for construction sites to enhance operational efficiency and reduce errors.

In March, Builk shared its plan to double down on its technology and financial services to enhance local companies’ construction material management process and propel the industry towards the digital era.

Also read: Beacon VC joins construction-tech firm Builk’s Series B round to help it with ASEAN expansion

Builk claims to have a user base of more than 40,000 businesses in ASEAN and is said it witnesses a growth rate even though the industry has been affected by the COVID-19 pandemic.

Under the new synergy, SCG and Builk will jointly develop a platform to increase work efficiency for the construction industry and enable ecosystem players to work together seamlessly, fostering the sustainable growth of the sector.

“We foresee that digital technology will be the thing that will drive the construction industry by leaps and bounds,” said Bunn Kasemsap, managing director of SCG Distribution Company Limited, SCG’s Cement Building Materials Business. “This collaboration will enable all sectors in the construction industry ecosystem to effectively connect and access construction products and services.”

Sam Tanskul, managing director at Krungsri Finnovate, stated that its participation in Builk’s Series B+ round will foster Krungsri’s expansion in the region and will support the development of strategic cooperation in banking services in the future. 

As for BCH Ventures, it realised that Builk One Group can synergy with Benchachinda Group in the future and expects to see returns in the medium term within 3 years.

Prior to Series B, Builk raised capital from Thai corporate venture capital funds Moonshot Venture Capital and AddVentures by SCG.

Image credit: Kungsri

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Why your next tech startup should be in the real estate industry

proptech

If you are about to start or are already running a technology company, I suggest you consider focusing on the real estate industry. Real estate is one of the world’s largest economic sectors, both in asset size and transaction volume.

Yet, it remains fragmented and ripe for innovation.

Consider the amount of money involved. Around the world, real assets have a total value greater than US$217 trillion. That is nearly three times the US$82 trillion total global GDP

If you are reading this, you are probably in Asia, which is good news because this region alone accounts for about half of the global total property value.

Now, let’s put the asset values aside for a moment and look at transaction volume. If you estimate that each property turns over every 20 years on average, real estate worth about US$11 trillion is bought and sold on an annual basis.

If you make a very conservative two per cent estimate of advertising and commission costs on those transactions, you arrive at US$200 to US$400 billion a year. 

Is the barrier to entry in the real estate industry too high?

We have established that the real estate market is large enough. Still, perhaps you worry that other innovative companies are already in place and represent an insurmountable obstacle to new startups. 

In a perfect world, ruled entirely by logic and reason, this would be true. In our world today, it is not.

When ranked by assets or volume of transactions, many leading industry players have found they can do perfectly well in the current environment without investing much in technology or innovation. 

Look at real estate agents. A good agent can make decent money with the most basic of tools. In the past two decades of disruption, other industries with larger margins were targeted first, with real estate largely overlooked. But this state of affairs will not last forever. 

Also Read: Ex-Zalo executives’ proptech startup Rever snags US$10.2M from Mekong Capital

Innovation and disruption are coming to the real estate industry. Why shouldn’t you be the one to bring them?

Worldwide, there are only 1,724 proptech companies, according to the PropTech Global Trends 2021 Barometer. Fewer than 10 per cent of these are in Asia, and most Asian proptechs are in China and India. They are not distributed evenly across the region. 

The relatively small number of proptech companies and their concentration in the US, which accounts for 59 per cent, leaves the field wide open for innovators in Asia.

How to decide where to focus

The real estate industry is multifaceted and immense, meaning there is a surplus of opportunity for the clever entrepreneur. To help you decide where to focus your attention, it can help to divide the world of proptech into these four conceptual categories: 

  • investing
  • building
  • managing
  • living

An “investing” startup might provide tools to enable real estate investors to evaluate opportunities more effectively. 

In the “building” category, you might offer technologies to facilitate construction management. 

In the “managing” space, your startup might focus on providing tools to real estate agents, property search for buyers and renters, or the management of investment properties.

And companies in the “living” category might focus on facility management or home IoT solutions such as security or energy management.

There are uncountable other opportunities besides those mentioned above. Yes, there are some excellent proptech businesses already operating in each of these categories, but much territory remains open to your claiming a stake. 

In fact, real estate search (“managing”), according to the Barometer, accounts for 56 per cent of all global proptech investment since 2000. 

With so much investment concentrated in a single sub-sector of proptech, there is a tremendous need for investment and innovation across nearly every other area.

Also Read: The world of proptech and its fate in a post-pandemic world

Choose where to focus based on your capabilities, technology and knowledge. In general, seek to enable market participants to increase their scale efficiently or to make better decisions, two use cases that rely on data and technology to implement.

But remember, one of the most common reasons that Asian startups fail is that they do not solve a real problem for their target users or customers.

Don’t put technology first. Don’t put a buzzword first. And don’t put what you wish were true ahead of the real problem that industry participants may be willing to pay you to solve. In this way, founding a company is the ultimate act of humility. You must put aside your own desires and instead provide what your users and customers want.

Hey there, big spender

Let’s look at real estate developers as an example. 

Most money spent on property marketing and advertising in Asia has come straight out of the pockets of developers. They run a highly capital intensive business, and their decisions can bind their company’s resources for years at a time. Sales is a volume game for them, and their advertising and sales budgets can run as high as 15 per cent of total development value. 

For all of these reasons, developers are among the most forward-looking adopters of innovations and technologies and excellent potential customers for any proptech that can improve their decision making or development and sales process.

Before agents were making wide use of virtual reality, 3-D walk-throughs and international marketing platforms, developers were employing these techniques in their sales centres.

Juwai IQI is not alone in focusing on the segment. Our super-app Atlas has given our agents a 41 per cent productivity gain. With time, we will further facilitate the transaction by integrating finance and title transfer.

That is just our path. The opportunities in proptech are practically endless. I encourage you to find your own.

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 group, FB community or like the e27 Facebook page

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