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Go-Jek partners with travel booking startup Tiket.com to launch Go-Travel

Tiket.com, the immediate competition of Traveloka in Indonesia, is now Go-Jek’s latest partner

Go-Jek has announced its latest collaboration, this time with Indonesia’s online travel booking startup Tiket.com to launch Go-Travel, as reported by KrAsia. This comes after announcing that its users are now armed with a chat room.

Go-Travel will allow Go-Jek’s users to book hotel rooms through Go-Jek. However, the option will only allow bookings for hotels, and not for flights or train tickets.

Go-Pay isn’t available as a payment option for Go-Travel just yet and the company said it will spend more time to integrate the experience.

Tiket.com reemerged as a travel booking frontrunner after being acquired by GDP Venture through e-commerce platform Blibli in 2017. Blibli and Tiket.com are both owned by Djarum Group, an Indonesian conglomerate.

Aside from Go-Travel, recent news also said that Go-Jek is developing a Go-Mall feature on its apps that will have JD.id and, possibly, Blibli.

Also Read: Robo-trading platform Lubna.io secures seed funding from East Ventures

Grab, Go-Jek’s main rival in the ride-hailing and all-in-one apps sector, has also announced a hotel booking feature on its platform for Singapore users, in partnership with Agoda and Booking.com.

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Save it for a rainy day: How startups can handle media crisis like a pro

Can’t afford to hire a PR consultant? Left to handle media crisis all by yourself? Let this Academy piece be your guide


Landing a press coverage is often a cause for celebration; finally all of your hard work is being recognised by the media, and you just cannot imagine the opportunities it might lead to.

But unfortunately many startups found their names in the headline for all the wrong reasons.

From public spat between co-founders, sexual harassment scandals, protests, to illicit content appearing on your site, with their limited resources, early stage startups can only wish to have a strong team of public relations professionals backing them up in times of crisis.

“Data breaches, customer service debacles, recall fiascos –crises are everywhere, and countless institutions have been sunk by an unseen bombshell,” Burson-Marsteller Indonesia Market Leader Nia Pratiwi explains to e27.

“But in many cases, it isn’t the crisis itself that causes an organisation to flounder; too often it’s a organisation’s response to the crisis that causes the greatest damage,” she warns.

The public relations and communication consultancy has won an Asia Pacific Gold SABRE Award for their work in handling media crisis for Big Daddy Entertainment, a concert promoter who aimed to bring singer Lady Gaga to perform a concert in Jakarta in 2012. The concert faced rejection from religious hardliner groups, leading to the authorities’ refusal to issue permit for it.

Though the concert ended up being cancelled, with proper care, the promoter was able to gather neutral to positive media coverage during the time of crisis.

Also Read: Best and worst Indonesian startups in 2016 as picked by Santa Claus

So what are the steps that startups need to take when faced with a media crisis? Let these insights shared by Pratiwi be your guide:

Do they know it’s a crisis?

 

The first lesson that startups need to take is identifying the crisis itself. So is there any solid definition for a media crisis?

“Crisis usually comprises of several key components like high negative impact, unpredictability (results, impact, etc.) and involves potential amplifiers (like media, social media, or other stakeholders). What’s makes crisis different from emergency is that despite of the negative situation in emergency, there is a clear SOP to mitigate the issue and containment plan is relatively clear,” Pratiwi says.

In this digital era, it is almost impossible to the deny the role of social media in amplifying a crisis. In fact, Pratiwi notes that many crises began in social media platforms.

So how does one know that it is time to take action? Or is it okay to remain silent and give “no comment” during crisis?

“Action should be taken, be it solving internal issue or fixing the cause of problem, but there is no exact formula or clear distinctive factor to decide when to respond or stay silent. It will all depend on the assessment of severity of issue, reach of impact, who are stakeholders involved and what are the facts that are available,” she answers.

The steps to take –and to avoid

Due to the uncertain nature of media crisis, it is important to have flexibility and keen assessment of the situation. But generally, these are the standard operating procedures (SOPs) in handling a media crisis:

Step 1: Be honest with yourself

Organisations should never, ever put the blame as to customers’ fault or some other forms of “unforeseeable, unavoidable stroke of bad luck.”

As Pratiwi has explained, oftentimes the issues that led to the crisis are caused from within and aggravated by the organisation itself. Honesty helps leaders to get to the root of the problems and capably address them.

Also Read: ICOs are putting tech media in a bind, and that is a good thing

Step 2: Act carefully but quickly

The next step to take is crafting a strategic plan to diagnose the problem with a dedicated team. In this process, startups should consider all options, no matter how difficult and undesirable they are.

“Once a decision has been made and a plan has been developed and vetted, it must be put it into action as quickly as possible. Time is usually of the essence in such scenarios, so there can be no dillydallying or feet dragging. When crises demand same-day responses, delays can be perceived as incompetence or even indifference, both of which can exacerbate a crisis,” Pratiwi explains.

But what if there is more time available to consider the solutions? Then take it. But remember to keep on being careful and quick.

Step 3: Stay focussed

Startups need to be aware that just because they have managed to execute their action plan, it does not mean that there will not be any further challenge and setback from surfacing.

Competitors might take this opportunity to drag you even deeper to the mud; startups might even see their previous mistakes and controversies be added to the brewing storm.

“If you start to lose focus on the big picture, it might be necessary to take step back from the situation and reassess it, or even seek outside advice. But it’s important not to despair. If your plan is sound and the organisation’s intentions are good, then push through the discomfort and uncertainty,” Pratiwi encourages.

Grabbing the microphone

 

How about using your own personal Medium or Facebook page to address a crisis? This seems to be a popular route taken by many startup founders in crisis as it gives them the opportunity to tell their side of the story –and hopefully steer the narrative to their favour.

While Pratiwi does not think this is wrong, the action has to be taken with caution.

“If the startup founders’ personal social media channels have been consistently putting out positive and relevant content, then they could use blog, Facebook page or Twitter thread to address issue during crisis. However, this should be published in parallel or followed with an official statement from the company on its official channels,” she says.

“The founders’ personal message would give a more human touch that could potentially diffuse a crisis situation,” she adds.

Also Read: Another corruption scandal hits Huawei top executve in suspected bribery

In addition to making sure that one’s social media channels are “clean”, with messages that are in line with the company’s stance on the issue, founders should also be sympathetic and straightforward in addressing the issue.

And please, do not bring one’s personal political or strict religious view in the statement.

In principal, there are four things that startups need to avoid:

1. Be defensive and hostile
2. Move and react based on assumptions

“It is important to gather all the facts and verify them, but don’t wait until you have all the facts then communicate, as stakeholders would be anxious and every piece of verified fact can help to manage and contain the crisis.”

3. Under-estimate complaints or neglect reactions from stakeholders
4. Assuming that people understands you

Image Credit: Kayla Velasquez on Unsplash

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Malaysian conglomerate Hong Leong Group launches startup innovation centre

The innovation centre is called HLX and it aims at facilitating corporates and startups to meet

Malaysia-based conglomerate Hong Leong Group announced that it has launched a new innovation centre named HLX. The conglomerate group stated that it seeks to boost the local tech startup ecosystem by creating an intersection point for every aspect in the tech startup community, as reported by KrAsia.

HLX is designed as a Southeast Asia-common practice of private-public partnership (PPP) between Hong Leong Group and the Malaysian Digital Economy Corporation (MDEC), a government agency. It will be located in the heart of Kuala Lumpur.

HLX said it plans to become the hub where corporates can connect with the startup community to exchange ideas and accelerate innovation around technologies like artificial intelligence, high-performance computing and fintech.

HLX features a 250,000 square foot facility with co-working spaces, event facilities, talent development programs, an auditorium, restaurants and a gym.

Also Read: Kickstart Ventures to manage Ayala’s US$150M Corporate VC fund in Philippines

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Changing up the real estate industry one digital solution at a time

How Real Estate Doc is pioneering efforts to revolutionise a traditional industry that is still dependent on old-fashioned tricks

Real Estate Doc (RED)

In recent years, we have seen a clear shift in how different industries operate on the grassroots. Whether we are talking about finance, healthcare, entertainment, or even architecture and design, among many others—these different industries are employing the use of cutting-edge technology to improve their work.

Like these traditional industries, we see the same steady and clear shift surfacing in the real estate space. The thing about traditional operations is that the same problem tends to permeate across different workspaces: problems on heavy paper dependency, long processing time, propensity for human error, and many others.

On the backend, the status quo of the real estate industry looks bleak with current backend systems being incompatible to each other, making it difficult to sync data to the incumbent systems. Executives have to spend extra time double keying data into the backend systems from the physical documents, thus, leading to human errors.

Thankfully, there are efforts springing here and there to change the business landscape by means of digitalisation.

 

Game changers in the real estate space

 

Pioneering these efforts is Real Estate Doc—a frontend ERP-lite space and lease management platform that currently focuses on the real estate space.

Real Estate Doc (or RED) allows for digital contracts, digital signing, and digital payments, thereby eliminating the need for paper-based contracts and cuts down sales turnaround time to just 2 days (unlike the typical 2 to 3 weeks it used to take for retail leasing contracts to be completed).

From deal origination to digital contract acceptance and payments, Real Estate Doc’s modular platform serves to drive business flow and streamline work processes through digital automation. All transactions and digital contracts are also recorded in an immutable ledger of records through blockchain technology for the landlord’s easy reference and retrieval.

Also read: 4 good reasons why commercial real estate should use blockchain

More than that, Real Estate Doc promotes integration into existing backend systems, enabling a straight-through processing of data from digital contracts. This completely eliminates the need for double keying and transcription, and streamlines the long and tedious process of data collection.

One of their best features so far is their data analytics. While data analytics in traditional real estate practices are often done manually, resulting in long processing time, with Real Estate Doc, the processing of data into useful analytics is done automatically. This allows for better business decision-making for mall managers, for example, without having to go through the rigorous process of manually keying data into spreadsheets.

 

How the idea to revolutionise the real estate space came to be

 

The folks behind Real Estate Doc started their journey in the tech startup ecosystem with Averspace, a startup that operated as a direct property portal with a focus on digital documentation.

Having been involved in the Real Estate Industry Transformation Map (RE ITM) meeting with the government, they had the opportunity to meet with property developers who were interested in their digital solution.

Because of their collective experiences particularly in digital documentation, plus their in-depth understanding of the market and its specific workflows and processes, they have developed a focus on the real estate B2B space.

 

What Real Estate Doc has accomplished so far and where they are headed

 

As of today, Real Estate Doc has penetrated key spaces such as Frasers Property Singapore. Currently, their platform has gone live in eight of Frasers’ shopping malls across Singapore.

Going beyond the present, Real Estate Doc is currently in talks with other major property developers in Singapore and the rest of the Southeast Asian region. The plan to expand to the rest of the Asia Pacific region is also set for the next three years—with further developments and improvements of their product to continue providing solution to more problems within the retail industry.

Currently, the Southeast Asian real estate spectrum across the region is gaining momentum with regards to digital documentation and signing laws. Soon, we can expect widespread adoption to take place due to the substantial savings in time and money that digitalisation promises.

This gives the folks at Real Estate Doc optimistic feelings for the future of real estate. Similarly, traditional real estate spaces can look forward to better, more streamlined, and more efficient operations within the next few years.

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Deskera reportedly raises US$100M+ in extended Series A funding round

The funding round followed a US$60 million Series A funding round that Deskera announced in 2018

Singapore-based cloud-based software provider Deskera has raised more than US$100 million in an extended Series A funding round from an entity linked to South Korean tech giant Naver, according to a report by Deal Street Asia.

The funding round followed an over US$60 million Series A round from a number of investors that include Jungle Ventures, Cisco Investments, Tembusu Partners, Susquehanna International Group and Innoven Capital in late 2018.

Citing anonymous sources linked to the development, the report said that the company’s valuation was close to US$500 million following the funding round.

Naver itself had confirmed in an email statement that the investment was made via the Mirae Asset-Naver Asia Growth Fund. The company declined to give further details.

Also Read: Today’s top tech news, April 17: Deskera works with ITE to equip students with tech skills

“… Naver and Deskera are in discussions with respect to collaboration in technology and cloud infrastructure such as hosting and other services,” Naver wrote in the statement.

Deskera CEO Shashank Dixit has declined to comment on the report.

The report also mentioned that Deskera has begun fundraising for its Series B funding round.

Founded in 2008, Deskera provided solutions that enable SMEs to track finances, manage customers as well as hire and manage employees.

It has raised a total of US$40 million to date.

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Streaming platform iflix announces funding round, partnership with Indonesia’s MNC

The strategic partnership will see the inclusion of up to 10,000 hours of MNC content in the iflix platform

iflix_mnc_funding

Asian streaming platform iflix has announced an undisclosed investment and partnership with Indonesian media giant PT Media Nusantara Citra Tbk (MNC).

Following the partnership, MNC CEO David Fernando Audy was also appointed to the startup’s advisory board.

“Indonesia continues to be an incredibly important market for iflix and MNC’s influence and resources in the industry are a powerful advantage for us in the execution of our strategy as we continue to cement our leadership as a digital entertainment service in Indonesia,” said iflix Co-Founder and Group CEO Mark Britt in a press statement.

The strategic partnership will see the inclusion of up to 10,000 hours of MNC content in the iflix platform.

Also Read: Today’s top tech news, iflix raises fresh funding and Grab aims for US$6.5B

The Indonesian media giant’s portfolio includes four national free-to-air TV stations which account for 46 per cent share of Indonesia’s ad-based television, in addition to 20 subscription-based channels, radio network, and print media.

e27 has reached out to iflix to find out more details about their plans with the partnership.

Following its recent exit from the African market with the sales of its business unit to Econet, iflix has been focussing heavily on Asian market.

In April, South Korean media company JTBC Content Hub made a strategic investment in the startup.

Japanese entertainment giant Yoshimoto Kogyo has also invested in the company, and set up a joint venture to promote Japanese content in the platform.

Image Credit: iflix

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(Exclusive) MarketX launching US$150M fund to invest in pre-IPO tech companies

MX50 Fund invests in companies that have proven track record and are expected to rise in value at least 2-5X before IPO

MarketX Founder and CEO Cathryn Chen (C) with Senior Partners Qiyun Cai (L) and Hanna Wu

MarketX, a one-stop platform for pre-IPO investments with operations in China, the US and Singapore, is launching a US$150 million fund to invest in pre-IPO technology companies, its Founder and CEO Cathryn Chen told e27.

Christened MX50, the fund is already in advanced talks with 30-odd family offices in Asia, and expects to make the final close by September-October this year.

She didn’t however share the names of the investors.

MX50 is a global diversified late-stage technology fund, which invests in market leading private companies in the US and Asia. According to Chen, this strategy offers significant upside potential and limited risks compared to traditional venture capital. “There are not a lot of late-stage pre-IPO secondary funds in the market. We believe we can leverage our platform business, which has been around for five years, to help investors take advantage of the in-transparent secondary pre-IPO market.”

She says the fund is fundamentally different from traditional VC funds. “We are not investing in early-stage companies, which comes with a lot of risk. Usually when you invest in 1,000 early-stage companies, only one will become a unicorn and most of the time you will lose all your money. On the other hand, MX50 invests in companies that have proven track record and are expected to rise in value at least 2-5X before IPO,” she explained.

Has the tech world done enough to check #MeToo? These speakers are discussing this topic at Echelon

The fund aims to invest in five to eight companies in total. The transaction size will vary between US$1 million and US$100 million.

More on MarketX’s platform business

MarketX is a pre-IPO investment platform catered to Family Offices around the world. Basically, it helps clients invest in top pre-IPO companies such as Uber, Airbnb, Tencent Music, Bytedance, and Grab. Chen says MarketX is already working with 200-plus family offices, funds, and high net-worth individuals, and has over 30 asset partners, with combined assets of over US$5 billion across the globe. In China alone, MarketX works with more than 300 entrepreneurs via its institutional partnerships.

“We aim to help Family Offices get access to opportunities previously not available to them directly. It’s a new asset class we are creating. We focus on secondaries in private stocks, which not a lot of VCs actively invest in,” Chen added.

So far, the MarketX platform has raised US$1.6 million in seed funding from prominent entrepreneurs and investors, such as Boquan He, Lie Jun Cai WenSheng and other top angels in China.

MarketX, with operations in different parts of the world including the US and China, recently soft-launched in Singapore. It has also applied for Monetary Authority of Singapore’s licence to operate in the city-state.

Explaining the rationale behind the Singapore launch, she said the city-state has garnered a lot of attention for being the new financial centre of Asia. “We want to position ourselves as the go to platform for pre-IPO investing for Family Offices and private funds. We have establishment in Silicon Valley and China already and would like to expand our footprint in Southeast Asia, and Singapore is our first stop in the region.”

Have you booked your ticket yet? Use the code ECHELONFUTURE to secure yours.

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10 crazy blockchain ideas for Facebook

Imagine using Facebook to check into an airline

The Wall Street Journal coined Facebook’s blockchain project as Project Libra, approaching allies such as Mastercard and Visa. MIT’s Christian Catalini is said to be working on Facebook’s cryptocurrency efforts.

We know that two of the top lieutenants of Mark Zuckerberg are indeed on the team — David Marcus and Kevin Weil. Facebook is hiring aggressively for blockchain roles.I’m excited about the long term cryptocurrency utility and adoption of blockchain technologies.

This is a speculation on the 10 on-chain possibilities that Facebook’s efforts could power for the global citizen. What’s your take?

1. Peer to peer payments

With a Facebook USD-backed cryptocurrency, users can pay each other for meals, rent and anything that’s needed. Venmo might get jealous.

2. Peer to peer verification of identity

It’s a global and connected world, communities and persons can mutually verify identities to ensure that bad players are weeded out. A verified identity will have a check mark across their name with the no. of verifications. Peers are incentivized to deal only with other peers with strong verified identities.

3. Voting and delegation

To keep communities moving forward, it will be nuts for us to make every single decision and vote on what’s possible in our communities, meetup groups, social clubs and organizations. Everyone in the communities should be able to delegate or vote directly for decisions to be made on proposals and drafts to their benefit.

4. Invoiced and pay for goods and services

Businesses can invoice and charge users for their products and services. They should also be able to pay their employees, file taxes and do all kinds of financial functions seamlessly.

5. Lending and working with credit

Businesses should be able to automatically extend lines of credit and have payment periods in working with other businesses. This will enable more efficient business operations.

6. Invest in securities

Regular citizens and accredited investors should be able to invest through smart contracts and be issued securities for the businesses they’ve invested in.

7. Access any e-service, game, app

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Using their identity, citizens can authenticate and login for e-services, games and applications. They can opt to have personalized experiences only upon authentication of their verified identity.

8. Sharing and retrieving data with 3rd party e-service, game, app

Should a game require photos of the user from another service, the user should be able to authenticate and grant permissions for one-time sharing or retrieval. Without authentication of verified identity, services will not be able to perform such actions.

9. Travel and immigration using their global identity

With their identity, they could use their mobile device and private keys to authenticate themselves at immigration or when they check in for their flights. Doing so enables them to pass through seamlessly through the expedited immigration counters. Public travel records are available for countries to access.

10. Assets and information inheritance

Everything accessible by the verified identity of the citizen would be up for inheritance programmed to the citizen’s preference. Assets, information, services, securities owned can be passed on easily.

There’re many possibilities for Facebook to experiment. There will be barriers to adoption. We’re definitely excited about how mass adoption of cryptocurrencies and blockchain technologies will happen in the next few years.