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SoftBank Vision Fund 2 leads Funding Societies’s US$294M Series C+ round

(L-R) Funding Societies Co-Founders Kelvin Teo (Group CEO) and Reynold Wijaya

Singapore-based SME digital financing platform Funding Societies (known as Modalku in Indonesia) said today it has secured US$144 million in an oversubscribed Series C extension round (equity).

In addition, it has received US$150 million in debt lines from institutional lenders across Europe, the US, and Asia.

The equity round was led by SoftBank Vision Fund 2, with participation from new investors, including Vietnamese tech giant VNG Corporation, Rapyd Ventures, EDBI, Indies Capital, K3 Ventures, and Ascend Vietnam Ventures.

The extension round comes on the back of Funding Societies’s US$45 million Series C raised between 2020 and 2021.

Also Read: Samsung backs Funding Societies to drive its vision of financial inclusion for SMEs in SEA

The funds will propel fintech firm’s expense management and B2B payments services for MSMEs across Southeast Asia.

It also revealed that it provided US$16 million to former and existing employees via its stock option plan in the form of share buyback.

Started in 2015 by Kelvin Teo and Reynold Wijaya, Funding Societies intends to fill the region’s US$300 billion financing gap by offering microloans from US$500 up to US$1.5 million, which can be disbursed in as fast as 24 hours.

Instead of using a traditional corporate supply chain approach to financial inclusion, Funding Societies follows an AI-led credit model to provide value-added products to under-served businesses.

The digital lender operates in five countries: Singapore, Indonesia, Malaysia, Thailand, and Vietnam. To date, it claims to have disbursed over US$2 billion in business financing to MSMEs through more than 4.9 million loan transactions in Southeast Asia.

The press release also mentioned that Funding Societies’s annualised loan origination exceeded US$1 billion in Q4 2021.

Also Read: Funding Societies appoints GoBear co-founder Frank Stevenaar as CFO, promotes Ishan Agrawal to CTO

A portion of the group’s outstanding loan exposure comes from Europe-based institutional lenders.

Last October, Funding Societies secured US$18 million in debt funding led by Helicap Investments, Social Impact Debt Fund, and an unnamed Japanese financial services group. This was preceded by a round of investment from Samsung Venture Investment Corporation. A few months earlier, it had secured US$40 million.

Funding Societies’s other investors are SoftBank Ventures Asia, Sequoia Capital India, Alpha JWC Ventures, SMBC Bank, BRI Ventures, Endeavor, SGInnovate, Qualgro, and Golden Gate Ventures, among others.

Ready to meet new startups to invest in? We have more than hundreds of startups ready to connect with potential investors on our platform. Create or claim your Investor profile today and turn on e27 Connect to receive requests and fundraising information from them.

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Corporate venture funding models: Determining the sweet spot between risk and control

Is all capital equal? As long as your venture gets the cash it needs, does it matter how? If you’re building corporate ventures, your answers to these questions might be more important than you think.

Today, many corporations turn to venture building to launch new businesses and capture new markets. While most understand that a diversified portfolio of innovation investments is required to secure future growth and avoid disruption, fewer know how to structure and fund each investment.

The importance of funding models

Even the most seasoned captain would find themselves lost at sea without a functional navigation system when charting unfamiliar territory. Likewise, a misaligned funding strategy with corporate ventures can spell trouble for the vessel. 

Venture capital-backed startups benefit from a large pool of potential investors who play by the same rules. Investment term sheets are today more or less standardised. The journey from angel investment to seed round to Series A and onward is predictable and well-trodden.

But while venture capital-backed startups have a single objective to build a large sustainable business, investing company resources towards corporate ventures is an exercise of balancing dual objectives:

  • ventures need to be able to create long-term value for the organisation whilst also being able to
  • function as standalone businesses with robust products or services at their core.

This means that the journey is not always predictable, and a ‘one size fits all approach to funding doesn’t work. 

Also Read: Gen Z is saying no to climbing corporate ladders. Here’s what it means for Singapore’s startup ecosystem

We have found four archetypes of corporate venture funding models that serve as a starting point to achieve those objectives. So, which factors determine the suitable model for a specific corporate venture?  

Risk and control: determining the sweet spot

Determining the right funding model for a corporate venture is based on two primary factors: 

  • Risk exposure – The amount of risk that the corporation is willing to bear
  • Strategic control – The amount of strategic control the corporation wants to retain compared to other current or future shareholders in the venture

Calibrating the optimal level of risk vs control is mainly dependent on four major factors that corporate venture builders must evaluate for each venture:

  • Strategic importance – To what degree is the venture addressing a critical market to future-proofing the core corporate business?
  • Integration with core business – How intensely is the venture reliant on close ties with the core business? Are these links there to achieve strategic goals or leverage existing capabilities and infrastructure? 
  • Association risk – To what extent does the venture benefit from direct brand association with the corporation? And how much would this association impact the corporation?
  • Affiliate and subsidiary status – Depending on the jurisdiction, would this venture be considered an affiliate or a subsidiary? To what degree would this increase bureaucratic necessities like reporting consolidated taxes and earnings? 

Also Read: BRI Agro CEO Kaspar Situmorang: Why tapping into the ecosystem is key to a digital bank’s success

Evaluating these factors helps guide a discussion to determine how much funding from outside investors will be allowed and how much equity is granted to the team building the venture (if at all).

Four archetypes of corporate venture funding models

We have found four funding models that serve as a guideline for potential funding structures, beginning with the lowest risk exposure and need for control and ending with the most risk & control. 

  • Shared risk and reward – The new venture is partially funded by the corporation and external investors, and significant equity is shared with the founding team.
  • Controlled incentives – The corporation provides 100 per cent of the funding but still allocates equity to the founding team with a buyout option. 
  • Joint venture – Partially funded by two or more corporations & investors, and the founding team may be given equity, but it is shared case by case.
  • Full control – Fully funded by the corporation, with little to no equity package for the founding team.

Please watch this short video to learn more about these archetypes, the tradeoffs and considerations for each. 

This article is written as part of the Corporate Venture Launchpad programme. The S$10 million (US$7.5 million) pilot programme by EDB New Ventures aims to enable large, established companies to launch a new venture in Singapore within six months.

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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YC-backed mental health platform MindFi raises US$2M from Canva & Slack investors

MindFI CEO Bjorn Lee_funding_news

MindFI CEO Bjorn Lee

MindFi, a corporate mental health and wellness startup based in Singapore, announced today it has secured an oversubscribed US$2 million seed funding round.

Existing investor, Singapore-based early-stage VC firm M Venture Partners, and backer of Aussie tech unicorn Canva and NYS-listed Slack, Global Founders Capital, joined the round.

Other angels are Carousell co-founder Marcus Tan, Carro executive Kenji Narushima, Spin co-founder Derrick Ko, among others in the US and Asia.

The fresh funding will enable MindFi to accelerate its AI-driven product development as well as cultural localisations in key markets among its present-day 20 markets across the Asia Pacific.

Last August, MindFi raised US$750,000 in pre-seed funding from a slew of investors, including iGlobe Partners and M Venture Partners, fresh off its admission into Y Combinator’s (YC) Summer 2021 programme.

Also read: How to foster mental wellness in the workplace and boost performance

Founded in 2017, MindFi’s cross-platform mobile app delivers 24/7 guided self-care programmes, community-driven features such as forums and group therapy, and intelligent matching with diverse coaches and therapists.

HR leaders and corporate clients can access anonymised analytics to measure and support their employees’ health and productivity. The app also generates personalised recommendations, which are based on a user’s unique Human Wellbeing Profile (HWP). These profiles aggregate mental health data from MindFi app usage, such as moods and stress levels, with self-reported assessments, physical health data from wearables, such as sleep, heart rates and daily activity, as well as guidance from culturally-intelligent care providers.

The firm counts Fortune 500 companies and high-growth startups such as Visa, Willis Towers Watson and Patsnap among its corporate clients, which are able to access Mindfi’s services in 16 languages.

Since completing the YC programme in September 2021, MindFi said that it has tripled the company’s employee headcount and recorded 5x annual revenue growth.

MindFi fosters the vision of “culturally competent” wellness in APAC, where cultural values such as interpersonal harmony, loss of face, and filial piety strongly influence people’s receptivity to mental health services and support.

“A mental health solution for Asia cannot be copy-pasted over from other regions,” explained MindFi CEO Bjorn Lee. “Wellbeing is multi-dimensional, and we seek to build a localised understanding of wellbeing that takes physical and cultural differences into account.”

Professor Kua Ee Heok of the Yong Loo Lin School of Medicine, NUS, echoed this viewpoint as she said that technology products need to account for the unique cultural beliefs, mores, nuances and feelings of their users in order to deliver the best types of utility value on a regular basis.

Also Read: Why Khailee Ng puts mental healthcare support as key to successful founders-investors relationship

To date, MindFi claims the usage of its app-based mental health and wellness programmes are 10 times higher than traditional teletherapy services.

The pandemic has boosted the global demand for mental health support in the last two years. According to the World Health Organisation, new depressive and anxiety disorder diagnoses spiked 400 per cent in 2021.

As per Singapore Mental Health Study conducted in 2016, despite one in seven Singaporeans experiencing mental health hurdles at some point in their lives, only a quarter of those seeks treatment for it. The digital health industry, therefore, is gaining momentum in Singapore, which is estimated to increase at a 6.94 per cent annual rate (CAGR 2022-2025) and results in a projected market volume of US$2,8 billion by 2025.

Recently, MindFi and Fitbit have teamed up on the joint pilot study to examine the impact of workplace stress among Singapore’s educational community during this pandemic period.

This January, Singapore-based Intellect, another YC-backed mental health startup, also secured US$10 million in a Series A financing round.

Ready to meet new startups to invest in? We have more than hundreds of startups ready to connect with potential investors on our platform. Create or claim your Investor profile today and turn on e27 Connect to receive requests and fundraising information from them.

Image Credit: MindFi

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Sagri: Bringing agriculture to the future and sustainability to the forefront with satellite data, AI, and GRID

Sagri

According to a 2020 report around 690 million people, which is around 8.9 per cent of the global population—are hungry, a surge of nearly 60 million in five years. The food security challenge is going to become more difficult, as the world will need to produce over 70 per cent more food by 2050 to feed an estimated 9 billion people. On the other hand, agriculture contributes to a number of environmental issues leading to a range of challenges, including climate change, deforestation, biodiversity loss, dead zones, soil degradation, and pollution.

Owing to the urgent need for better agricultural solutions and the strong correlation between agriculture and climate change, there has been an emergence of climate-smart agriculture in the past few years. Climate-smart agriculture seeks to balance agricultural productivity within the bounds of our climate by leveraging digital technologies. Tech startups, founders and VCs are starting to see the potential and urgency for this industry and there’ve been significant strides in the industry in the past few years.

One such startup that focuses on alleviating the pain points in the agriculture sector while helping the environment is Tokyo-based Sagri. We spoke to Satoshi Nagata, the global business director from Sagri to understand more about the smart agriculture data and service platform startup.

Utilising technology for climate-smart agricultural solutions

Sagri

Sagri is solving agricultural and environmental problems with satellite data, machine learning and grid mapping technology. One of the main challenges faced by farmers is the inaccuracy in farmland mapping and accurate delineation of farm boundaries is crucial to undertake many planning and decision-making actions. First, it enables a better estimation of cropland area, which is important information for both the farmer and agricultural managers (e.g., ministries, private sector players). Second, accurate information on farm boundaries can not only facilitate land registration but also help in the subsequent acquisition of land use rights for smallholder farmers. Hence, Sagri is developing an application for monitoring abandoned, AI mapping for farmland boundaries. The startup is also working on a soil data check system leveraging satellite data.

Also read: How Geotab continues to reinvent the transport industry through tech

“Generally speaking, everybody wants to do smart farming and do it fast. However, it is important to understand the diversity across Southeast Asia to address specific farming needs. For example, the rice in the Philippines, India, and Thailand are completely different,” explains Satoshi.

As such, for each crop cycle in specific regions with different kinds of resources and soil, smart farming has to be tailored. To support that a robust agricultural infrastructure is needed and this is where Sagri is stepping up.

“In Japan, we are a member of the committee “Digital agricultural mapping” by the Minister of the Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries in Japan. Hence, we are committed to digital mapping for agri-commerce by leveraging big data and analytics,” shares Satoshi.

Southeast Asia as a potential market

Sagri

Sagri works for wheat (Left: Without Sagri support / Right: With Sagri support)

Sagri is ready to expand and establish a presence in Southeast Asia through the Japan External Trade Organization (JETRO). Southeast Asia has a burgeoning smart agriculture market. In Thailand alone, the market value amounted to around 128.7 million U.S. dollars in 2018 and is forecasted to reach 269.9 million U.S. dollars by 2022. 

Sagri is already working on a Proof of Concept project in Thailand in partnership with The Thai Ministry of Agricultural  Cooperatives (MOAC). Under this project, Sagri aims to help in the promotion of the digitalisation of agricultural land information.

Also read: Imagining communities: building localised digital experiences with CiPPo corporation

Furthermore, digital agricultural services are gaining ground across the region and transforming agriculture for smallholder cultivators. The unification of these largely unintegrated services offers a stronger proposition for actors in agricultural ecosystems. Therefore, visualisation is a key trend emerging across Southeast Asia.  

“From what we have learnt, almost all Southeast Asian governments are keen on creating a unified data platform for smart agriculture, however, there are some challenges, such as lack of input data, data traceability problems, and so on.  To address these challenges, Sagri plans to install a robust unified data platform by connecting various data resources,” shares Satoshi.

Sagri seeks to promote sustainable economic development with innovation for the farmers and to the consumers across Southeast Asia and beyond. Learn more about Sagri’s innovative and sustainable agritech solutions here.

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

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

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Monit, the ‘Brex of Indonesia’, attracts funding led by 1982 Ventures

Monit Co-Founders Rizki Aditya (L) and Teddy Tjahjadi

Monit, an Indonesian B2B fintech startup that helps SMEs manage their finances, has secured an undisclosed sum in a funding round led by 1982 Ventures, a Southeast Asia-focused early-stage VC firm.

The startup will use the money to hire talent and develop its products.

Founded in late 2021 by Rizki Aditya (ex-Silicon Valley engineer) and Teddy Tjahjadi (ex-Country Head at Payswiff Indonesia), Monit focuses on supporting SMEs to pay bills, manage reimbursements and disbursements, and issue corporate credit cards.

Monit, dubbed as the ‘Brex or Ramp of Indonesia’, has earlier raised funding from Init 6, the VC firm founded by Bukalapak co-founders Achmad Zaky and Nugroho Herucahyono.

In January 2022, Monit began onboarding clients and partnered with Visa, Mastercard and CIMB Niaga to provide corporate cards for businesses.

Also Read: 1982 Ventures backs Indonesian agri commodity marketplace PasarMikro

Aditya said: “Corporate credit cards are tough to obtain, especially for SMEs, and the challenges around managing finances are hurting Indonesian businesses. Monit supports SMEs by providing an all-in-one expense management platform including corporate cards for payments.”

“The next product will be focused on a complementary real card product and treasury to help companies get an all-in-one platform not only for spending but also investment return from their idle cash,” said Co-Founder Tjahjadi.

“The upside for Monit is hugely based on the fast-growing B2B payments opportunity and their mission to build the future of finance for the next wave of businesses in Indonesia,” stated Scott Krivokopich, Managing Partner of 1982 Ventures.

Based in Singapore, 1982 Ventures is a seed fund investing in fintech startups in Southeast Asia. Its investments include open banking API platform Brick, personal finance app Pina, earned wage access platform Wagely, book-keeping app Lista, investment platform Infina (YC S21), ‘buy now, pay later’ firm Fundiin, rent-to-own home financing app Homebase (YC W21), and automated financial data delivery platform Bluesheets.

Also Read: 1982 Ventures joins Singaporean ‘wealthcare’ app Hugo’s US$2M round

In December 2021, 1982 Ventures announced the initial close of its first seed-stage fund with US$12.5 million in committed capital. The fund targets to raise a total corpus of US$15 million.

Ready to meet new startups to invest in? We have more than hundreds of startups ready to connect with potential investors on our platform. Create or claim your Investor profile today and turn on e27 Connect to receive requests and fundraising information from them.

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Nanotech Indonesia Global gears up for IPO on IDX

Nanotechnology company PT Nanotech Indonesia Global Tbk (IDX: NANO) is gearing up for its IPO by issuing 1.28 billion shares or the equal of 29.99 per cent of funding acquired during the process. The company is said to be the first nanotechnology company to get listed on the stock exchange in Indonesia.

In its prospectus, the company puts the price at IDR95 to IDR105 per share with the target to raise IDR134.92 billion (US$9.3 billion). The initial offering is scheduled to happen on February 8-15 and is targeted to receive effective from Financial Services Authority (OJK) in February.

Nanotech began as a nanotechnology research group that was founded in 2005 by Prof. Nurul Taufiqu Rochman. After years of conducting research and development for new products based on nanotechnology, Nanotech was established as an official entity in 2019.

The company’s mission is to tackle the problems, needs, and challenges faced by academicians, investors, industry players, and the government that can only be solved through science and technology. According to a statement on its website, Nanotech offers R&D, material engineering, and nanotechnology services with more than 10 years of experience in the field.

Nanotech is connected to more than 300 nanotechnology scientists, owns more than 40 tech licenses, 29 brands with nanotechnology, and 100 formula banks.

Also Read: AI and nanotechnology are innovating healthcare

Use of IPO funds

Based on its prospectus, Nanotech aims to use the funds secured through the IPO to purchase machinery and tools for material engineering technology (IDR16.39 billion/US$1.1 million) as well as machine and tools related to healthcare, cosmetics, and pharmacy industries (IDR16.7 billion).

It will also use another IDR16.22 billion to purchase machinery and tool for R&D purposes, IDR17.04 billion for waste management machines, and IDR3.61 billion (US$251,000) to develop IT and support infrastructure.

Speaking to DailySocial on a separate occasion, Nanotech COO Kurniawan Eko Saputro said that the business plan is able to be executed collectively in 2022 as the company is supported by its joint operation with several strategic business units (SBUs).

Nanotech currently runs five SBUs: General Industry, Health, Cosmetics and Pharmacies, Aquaculture and Agribusiness, Education and Training as well as Property and Construction. “SBUs under this scheme will be executed in Q2 2022 with the goal to support the acceleration of growth in general,” Saputro said.

For the health, cosmetics and pharmacy industries, the COO believes that there is a great potential for growth in Indonesia as the country is blessed with natural diversity that consists of 30,000 identified animal, plants, and microbe species –with 950 species that have been known to have medicinal and food properties.

With this condition, Indonesia has the great potential to become a producer of natural ingredients for food, medicine, and cosmetics production. Citing Statistica, Saputro said that the market for natural and organic cosmetic ingredients have been growing rapidly in the past years and is estimated to reach US$22 billion in 2024.

Global cosmetics sales valuation is also said to reach US$145.3 billion in 2020, and is expected to grow with a 4.99 per cent CAGR in 2020-2025. According to Statista 2022, the global cosmetics market is projected to reach US$189.3 billion in 2025.

Also Read: In brief: NanoMalaysia sets up nanotech initiative targeting Indian startups

There is also the potential for pharmaceutical industry growth that reaches 12-13 per cent annually. According to the Ministry of Industry (Kemenperin), the Indonesian pharmaceutical market is estimated to reach US$10 billion in 2021.

“Indonesia has natural biodiversity and demographic bonus. There is great potential for Indonesia in this. At the moment, our highest performing SBUs are the ones on general industry and health, cosmetics and pharmacy. This strategy helps to push for revenue growth by giving added value to the services that are provided to users and stakeholders,” Saputro said.

As for the waste management tech implementation, the COO added that the company is currently preparing for a system to turn waste into more environmentally friendly materials. This technology will also be offered to other companies that are struggling with their operational waste management. For example, cooking oil and textile refinements waste.

The article was written by Corry Anestia in Bahasa Indonesia for DailySocial.

Image Credit: microgen

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The next fintech innovation will be a customer-led phenomenon

Gone are the days when digitising your fintech startup was considered an innovation unto itself. Having a website or app and enabling digital transactions is no longer considered an innovation— it’s more like a necessity for survival.

Fintech firms that want to stay ahead of the curve have to look deeper into their business model to find new ways to innovate beyond simply integrating new technology.

So how do you innovate your fintech startup in an era of digitisation? The key is to understand your customers and adopt a customer-centric approach for your entire business.

Be a creator, not a disruptor

Many entrepreneurs are still stuck on the old idea that the only way to generate new business is to disrupt an existing market. But that isn’t exactly true.

Nondisruptive creation allows you to create new market segments where there weren’t any. That way, you can build a new market for your business without destroying an existing player or running anyone out of their jobs. You can find better and lower-cost ways to solve existing problems and align your company goals with your customer.

But to be a creator, you need to understand your customer base truly. You need to be aware of their exact pain points and innovate not just for the sake of innovation but also to make their lives easier.

Also Read: How voice AI is revolutionising the fintech scene

Let’s look at an example. Hometap is a startup that allows homeowners to access a portion of their property’s future value in cash. Homeowners can access capital without selling their property to fund immediate needs such as healthcare expenses.

It’s a great example of a fintech startup creating a new market segment by solving an existing problem in a new way.

There are many more examples of fintech providers taking on the role of a creator instead of a disruptor. If there’s one thing they all have in common, it’s an acute knowledge of their customer base and market segment.

No more product-led

You’re probably familiar with the concept of product-led growth. Starting with salesforce in the early 2000s and continued by Slack and Dropbox, numerous software companies have pivoted to a product-centric business model.

Unlike the sales-led growth strategy of the ’80s and ’90s, the product-centric business model’s entire customer lifecycle from acquisition to retention is defined by the product itself.

Today, there’s an even better option— customer-led growth. Allowing customer needs to define your business model results in a better product that’s already tied to the requirements of an existing market segment.

This approach allows startups to serve a particular customer segment based on a deep understanding of their unique pain points. It means you can innovate the market without disrupting the existing market while still delivering value in a way that matters.

Also Read: Fintech is transforming how Southeast Asian companies process international payments

In fintech, we’re already seeing customer-first solutions taking off everywhere, from banking to cryptocurrency.

Digital and mobile-first banking

In most Asian countries, banks have been moving toward digitisation long before the pandemic came to be. However, the push toward social distancing and the need to get everything done remotely has accelerated the shift to mobile banking.

Today, people prioritise convenience and ease of access over traditional factors like interest rates, to the extent that a 2021 McKinsey report demonstrated that more than 70 per cent of Singaporean consumers are open to migrating to digital-first banks.

Banks have had to adapt to keep up with the competition, and they were quick to introduce full-fledged online banking solutions. Throughout 2022, we will continue to see banks refine their digital offering through more cutting-edge and mobile-first banking solutions.

Hybrid solutions in fintech

We are also starting to see the boundaries between banks and other personal financial institutions blur. From investment cards to smart deposits and so many more, banks diversify their portfolio of services beyond the traditional remits, often in partnership with other financial institutions.

Hybrid fintech solutions deliver more value to their customer base, which helps the companies themselves grow even further. As more banks hop aboard the digital bandwagon, we expect to see a further rise in the number of bank-Fintech hybrids going into the new year.

There are even more significant opportunities for growth, as consumers expect banks and Fintech startups also to provide non-financial services that help make their lives easier.

Social engagement in fintech

From a consumer’s perspective, digital banks are utility apps. They are useful financial tools, but there’s little to no engagement involved in the service to make people feel attached. Simply put, there’s nothing stopping customers from switching from one digital bank to another.

Also Read: Pocket power: 27 personal finance startups in SEA to help you manage money

Adding a little touch of interaction to make it social+ can change this. From PayTM in India to Venmo in the US, social+ fintech had a great year in 2021.

But what really is social+? Simply put, it’s a strategy that turns social engagement into an inextricable part of your product — so much so that the success of your business community is directly linked to the success of the product itself.

The benefits of this business model are quite overwhelming. The need to belong to a community is primal among human beings, which is why social+ brands have experienced massive growth fuelled by increased user engagement and user retention.

The social+ model also unlocks new ways to approach data and personalisation, making it a gold mine for a brand’s marketing strategy.

We expect to see many more companies hop onboard the social+ train in Fintech going into 2022, and the impacts are poised to be glorious.

Engaged customers will help you to innovate

The social+ approach isn’t just about slapping some social features to your existing product. Instead, it implies the implementation and integration of community-building into your product from day one in a way that delivers value to your customer base.

From in-app communication via emojis to competitive leaderboards and rewards, social+ can help gamify Fintech and make it more attractive to the customer base. This, in turn, will help drive higher rates of user engagement.

Unlock the power of social engagement and cement that feeling of belonging that we all crave into your Fintech service.

Editor’s note: e27 aims to foster thought leadership by publishing views from the community. Share your opinion by submitting an article, video, podcast, or infographic

Join our e27 Telegram groupFB community, or like the e27 Facebook page

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Ecosystem Roundup: Temasek buys stake in Grab, Bolttech buys Ava, Sony Ventures launches US$217M Fund III

bolttech Group CEO Bob Schimek

Temasek buys stake in Grab, Robinhood Markets
Temasek also invested in fashion e-commerce platform Rent the Runway, restaurant payment company Toast, and sports betting firm DraftKings; At the same time, the fund sold all its shares in Uber, Coinbase and Tencent Music.

Bolttech buys Ava Insurance
The deal will help accelerate the deployment of Bolttech’s insurance exchange in Singapore, which aims to make it easier for insurers, distributors, and customers to connect with each other; It is also looking to simplify the process of buying and selling insurance.

Sony Ventures hits first close of US$217M Fund III
LPs include Mizuho Group, Daiwa Securities, Sumitomo Mitsui Trust Bank, Mitsubishi Estate, and Sony Group; Sony Innovation Fund 3 invests in all stages of emerging tech companies and startups solving global environmental challenges.

Lazada co-founder backs US$20M round of Singapore recommerce marketplace Reebelo
Reebelo is a licensed online marketplace selling pre-owned electronic devices at affordable prices; Its marketplace houses 100+ vendors certified by Reebelo who list an array of products including mobile phones, laptops, tablets, drones and gaming hardware.

Taiwanese edutech firm AmazingTalker raises US$15.5M Series A
Investors include CDIB Capital, JAFCO Asia, and 500 Global; AmazingTalker runs a tutor-matching platform focused on language learning; The firm, which promises a better profit-sharing system for its instructors, also offers K-12 education services for children.

Animoca opens Japan unit, bags US$10M seed money
The capital came from MCP IPX One Fund, jointly launched by MCP Asset Management and Animoca Brands; Animoca Japan is building a blockchain platform to help IP holders build and expand fan communities via the issue of their own NFTs and fungible tokens.

Appboxo raises US$7M Series A for product development, global expansion
Investors include RTP Global, Antler, 500 Southeast Asia, SciFi VC, and Gradient Ventures; Appboxo owns Shopboxo, a platform that helps entrepreneurs, brands and SMEs create online stores to offer their goods and services directly to consumers.

VIZZIO rakes in US$6.7M from undisclosed investors
VIZZIO employs AI-powered geospatial, 3D virtualisation and Digital Twin solutions to enable users — from novices to digital experts — to access 3D-as-a-service offerings on-demand, helping them to co-create, virtualise and interact with digital realities.

NOBI raises US$4M in seed funding
Investors are AC Ventures, Appworks, Skystar Capital, Cakra Ventures, and GFC; As a platform, NOBI aims to help investors in diversifying their assets to crypto and help busy investors to manage crypto assets in a simpler manner.

Real Impact Matters Most Sustainability raises US$3M pre-Series A
Investors are Beenext and Mamoru Taniya; RIMM’s automated platform provides SMEs with simplified sustainability guidance and solutions; It also offers intelligent tools that enable sustainability management, reporting, and optimisation.

Go-Ventures leads seed round of job platform KitaLulus
KitaLulus enables users to take relevant courses and build professional networks before applying for jobs in its app; It claims it currently processes 1M job applications per month; Its clients include J&T Express, Hangry, and Apotek.

Semaai reaps US$1.3M from Beenext, Sequoia’s Surge
Semaai provides farmers with access to tools such as soil testing technology, as well as farming inputs such as seeds and fertilisers; Five months after its establishment, the firm’s gross merchandise value increased by 10x.

Health data verification firm Riverr bags US$1M in seed round
Investors include KSL Maritime Ventures and Seeds Capital; Singapore-based Riverr simplifies the verification of health data, including vaccination history, across organisations and governments.

YC-backed mental health startup MindFi raises US$2M in seed funding
Investors include M Venture Partners, GFC, Carousell’s Marcus Tan, and Carro’s Kenji Narushima; MindFi provides corporate employees with personalised mental health recommendations, self-care programs, and consultation sessions with coaches and therapists.

watchTowr raises US$2.25M to secure ‘attack surface for enterprises’
Investors include Wavemaker Partners and Vulcan Capital; watchTowr directly addresses the challenges organisations face in managing and securing their external attack surface.

Jeff Bezos’s second investment in Indonesia is SME-focused firm Lummo
This is Bezos Expedition’s second investment among Indonesian startups, following its participation in the Series B round of Ula; Lummo runs has two apps: e-commerce enabler solution LummoShop and BukuKas.

Monit, the ‘Brex’ of Indonesia’, attracts funding led by 1982 Ventures
Monit focuses on supporting SMEs to pay bills, manage reimbursements and disbursements, and issue corporate credit cards; The startup is also backed by Init 6, the VC firm founded by Bukalapak co-founders Achmad Zaky and Nugroho Herucahyono.

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Hyperlocal mapping: a solution for real-world interactions in retail metaverse

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Amid the NFT (non-fungible token) frenzy, you might hear people talk about a digital artwork worth millions of dollars, a virtual piece of land being sold at a record price, and brands building their own retail stores on those online properties — things that haven’t physically existed.

“It is still early days for the metaverse,” Janine Yorio, Managing Director at Republic Realm, told e27. “However, we believe a convergence of fundamental shifts in technology, society, socialisation, gaming, and retail will provide significant tailwinds for mass metaverse adoption and development”.

The retail industry, in particular, is quickly catching on in a “retail metaverse”, blurring the boundary between our physical world and the future virtual society.

Disrupting retail metaverse with hyperlocal mapping solutions

Brands are expanding from their physical stores into the metaverse that allows customers to experience physical goods in the virtual world. Gucci, Vans, Adidas, and L’Oreal are all taking their baby steps into this space and creating brand awareness among younger users.

“This generation grows up doing things just like we interact on Zoom. They’re more accustomed to immersive experiences when they use the Internet,” said Yorio. “The companies that fail to adapt will be left behind because the next generation of consumers is going to expect to find new products and their favourite old products in these immersive environments.”

Imagine purchasing a couch in your metaverse store, and it is linked with a physical warehouse and a carrier that will deliver the product to your doorstep within hours. This sounds like a shopping experience in e-commerce. 

But with the retail metaverse, instead of watching things through a screen and being frustrated with the real product’s quality that doesn’t match with how it is described on the e-commerce platform, you can step into the immersive 3D store and try things out without actually moving from your house.

Also Read: Demystifying NFTs and DeFi

Case in point, the app that helps you plan a room layout and design with the exact size and feel of furniture via the support of AR/VR can be considered the initial version of this retail metaverse. What you are looking at on the app is just a few steps away from experience in the virtual twin of our actual world.

This no-boundary future will be made available with tons of complex technologies moving forward. Hyperlocal mapping solutions, with their ability to uniquely map out and address spaces with precision, hold the potential to enable direct interaction with physical places.

“You need to have a real-world metaverse, a replica of the planet because products and people still need to move from A to B,” said Xander van der Heijden, Co-Founder and CEO of UNL, a Singaporean startup providing micro-location and mapping technology. “Digitising locations, creating an infrastructure to interact with these places — what we’re creating is the real-world metaverse through the Internet of Places.”

Founded in 2018, UNL offers a library of plug-and-play geospatial solutions to help businesses build scalable, hyper-local services and applications. UNL enables direct interaction with physical locations by giving unique digital addresses to every geolocation and accurately linking data to locations to contextually represent real-world situations and events.

In simple words, its technology pixelises the physical world into a multi-resolution smart grid to give any location a digital and verifiable address — UNL geoID — similar to an IP address. UNL geoIDs uniquely map out and address spaces with up to 1×1 cm2 precision, covering outdoor, indoor and elevation.

On top of that, UNL goes beyond street names and postal codes to what it calls the “Internet of Places”. They are developing location domain name services to interface with these locations without using the initial numeric geoIDs. 

For example, Starbucks at Orchard will still be named Starbucks in the digital world, corresponding with its location in the real world.

It, therefore, helps mobility companies engage with their workforce, vehicles, customers and products by validating precise addresses and locations where they need to pick up people or drop packages. The solution can also be plugged into any step of the retail industry’s supply chain, supporting the greater movement of goods from supplier to vendor to end-user, providing clients with delivery and navigation even within large buildings.

Also Read: Metaverse is around the corner and you should play a role in it 

Besides, its maps possess self-healing features that automatically collect data from different data sources (IoT, satellite, cars, smartphones, or end-user contributions), compare these data, choose the highest quality of data, and publish that.

Mounting demand in Southeast Asia

UNL is one of the first successful ventures from the Netherlands-based venturerock studio, a venture builder where Heijden also serves as a General Partner. However, the team decided to emphasise the Southeast Asia market as it recognised the biggest problems in the region are addressing and digital infrastructure.

“You’re talking about billions and billions in loss because of inaccurate addresses that result from the lack of last-mile information and data,” said Heijden. “We saw a huge potential in Southeast Asia, especially during the pandemic when companies can leapfrog existing stack and old legacy systems by adopting new innovative digital platforms, hence, move faster forward into the future of logistics.”

When the address is not accurate, the deliveryman starts calling the person to deliver the package. This costs them a lot of time and efficiency, which translates into a huge loss in revenue and profits.

These issues in the delivery space have already sparked demand from regional giants such as Grab or Gojek. These companies need to work with multiple third-party mapping providers as one often doesn’t provide 100 per cent accuracy. They then build their own internal mapping teams to combine these data and create their own data sets.

In addition, this kind of hyperlocal tech infrastructure can go beyond retail to support interactions in the whole economy covering various industries from entertainment to F&B and manufacturing.

The gaming sector, for instance, can utilise this immersive hyperlocal mapping to improve the player experience, a next level from what we did with Pokémon Go in 2016. For advertising and F&B, by creating an augmented reality, they can navigate people to collect tokens on locations, create 3D text sprinting around them, and then navigate them through to a restaurant to spend these tokens in exchange for coffee.

And suppose you still remember the “omniverse” that manufacturing giants BMW Group and NVIDIA are creating with its virtual factory planning. In that case, this technology will help engineers from all aspects of factory design collaborate in a shared virtual space. The entire factory can be simulated with hyperlocal details.

It’s not competition, it’s decentralisation

Now that the technology is said to accurately link data to locations to represent real-world situations and events contextually, how is this different from and better than an upgrade version of Google or Apple’s Maps?

Also Read: NFTs provide new ways to handle IP management, empower content creators: Inmagine CEO Warren Leow

“When you generate data on top of the Google infrastructure, they own your data,” stressed Heijden. “If you contribute data to our infrastructure, you keep ownership of that data, and we enable stakeholders to monetise on those data.”

With this business model, UNL can create an underlining infrastructure for companies, consumers, and governments to create virtual private maps and public maps, contribute data, and then be rewarded for that.

“We don’t see Google as a competitor. We are just focusing on a different market,” he added.

This virtual private mapping architecture of UNL is also associated with the whole story of decentralisation, which will serve as a huge pushback against big players getting involved in the space.

Remember Republic Realm announced the launch of its shopping mall Metajuku on the Decentraland metaverse? Yorio said these elaborate virtual malls are being built in the metaverse and opening a window to a nascent industry called ‘de-commerce’ (decentralised e-commerce).

Kevin Indig, Director of the e-commerce giant Shopify, echoed this viewpoint. He believes that the metaverse will most likely encourage the decentralisation of e-commerce, which gives brands the ability to escape from uniform marketplace formats to virtualise their customers’ shopping experience.

Hence, the development of this industry hinges on every agent’s participation and engagement in the retail metaverse, not in the hand of any big-pocket players.

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Image Credit: 123rf

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Animoca Brands acquires motorsports game developer Grease Monkey Games

Animoca Brands_ Grease Monkey Games_ acquisition_news

Animoca Brands, a Hong Kong-based games publisher and VC firm focused on open metaverse, has completed the 100 per cent acquisition of Melbourne-based indie motorsports game developer Grease Monkey Games.

The deal size hasn’t been disclosed. It will allow Animoca Brands to benefit from Grease Monkey’s significant game development capabilities and expertise. So far, Grease Monkey has logged 45 million downloads across both mobile and PC worldwide.

The current management of Grease Monkey Games will continue to operate the company after the arrangement, stated in the official announcement.

Its team will work closely with Animoca Brands to align efforts relating to blockchain integration, fungible tokens, non-fungible tokens, play-to-earn (P2E) capabilities, synergy opportunities, and product launches. Animoca Brands owns the REVV Motorsport ecosystem, whose all tiles are based around the concept of P2E.

Also read: How play-to-earn is fueling the next wave of blockchain adoption

Founded in 2014 by Yat Siu, Animoca Brands has a growing portfolio of more than 150 investments in NFT-related companies and decentralised projects contributing to building the open metaverse. Its investments include Axie Infinity, OpenSea, Dapper Labs (NBA Top Shot), Yield Guild Games, Harmony, Alien Worlds, and Star Atlas.

Animoca Brands also owns multiple subsidiaries, including The Sandbox, Blowfish Studios, Quidd, GAMEE, nWay, Pixowl, Bondly, and Lympo.

Launched in 2013 by Arran Potter, a veteran of the video visual effects industry, Grease Monkey Games develops motorsports games, connecting video game enthusiasts and motorsport fans worldwide. The driving game Torque Burnout and drifting game Torque Drift are its prominent original IP gaming titles.

Grease Monkey Games said it has an extensive portfolio of licensed partnerships with vehicle manufacturers including Nissan, Toyota, Ford, and BMW, and aftermarket parts manufacturers including Link ECU, Wilwood, and Mishimoto.

This February, Animoca Brands announced its partnership with global venture accelerator Brinc to launch Guild Accelerator Programme, aiming to enable millions of people worldwide to generate income by participating in the P2E gaming ecosystem.

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Image Credit: Animoca Brands

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