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Video: WeChat’s entertainment empire

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Here’s how Tencent, the social media titan behind WeChat, is transforming into an entertainment and cinematic powerhouse.

Tencent's new empireWeChat + Wonder Woman = a new frontier for the Chinese tech titan.

Posted by Tech in Asia on Wednesday, 29 November 2017


Transcript:

Tencent is best known as the maker of WeChat. What few people know is the Chinese social media giant is a growing powerhouse in entertainment and cinema.

It has invested in big-budget Hollywood films like Wonder Woman, Kong: Skull Island, and Warcraft. That last one really makes sense because World of Warcraft is huge in China.

At its disposal is the internet behemoth’s more than 1.7 billion combined social network user base, plus one of China’s top streaming sites. That’s what makes Tencent’s entertainment machine so remarkable – it has such a huge, captive audience, more than Amazon Studios or Netflix can even dream of.

Pony Ma, Tencent’s founder and CEO, says the two-year-old film studio, dubbed Tencent Pictures, taps into two things: content and connection.

Movies aside, it’s also investing in TV series, animations, and made-for-the-web shows.

Entertainment is actually a big part of Tencent’s DNA. In 2003, the fast-growing firm branched out from social media with its online gaming business. Over the years, it has made an art form out of packaging, dismantling, repackaging, and reselling its content across all kinds of mediums. And with a flex of its social media arm, Tencent easily pulls users in.

One venture capitalist describes Tencent’s ecosystem as having “a lot of users inside its walled garden, and everybody needs entertainment, which it provides.”

With the release of Kong: Skull Island in March, Tencent pulled out all the stops. WeChat dived deep into its trove of data, sending as many as 46 million targeted advertisements to lure its users into cinemas with Kong emoji stickers. Plus, Kong giveaways in ad campaigns targeted 12 of its most popular games.

And the tell-tale sign of its success? The Kong movie raked in $169 million in China, larger than the take from the US and Canada combined.

This post Video: WeChat’s entertainment empire appeared first on Tech in Asia.


Google reveals latest accelerator batch, including first startups from Bangladesh and Pakistan

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Copyright: <a href='https://www.123rf.com/profile_bennymarty'>bennymarty / 123RF Stock Photo</a>

Google’s global headquarters in Mountain View, California. Photo credit: bennymarty / 123RF

Google has announced the startups that will join the latest edition of its Launchpad accelerator program, with 10 of the 24 new entrants hailing from Asia.

This latest intake represents the accelerator’s fifth batch, and includes the first Bangladeshi and Pakistani startups to be selected.

The 10 Asia-Pacific entrants are:

  • Ayannah (The Philippines) has developed a number of B2B and B2C financial services for underbanked communities, including cross-border remittances
  • BabyChakra (India) is a parenting and pregnancy advice app
  • Kulina (Indonesia) delivers meals on a subscription basis, using tech to make the supply chain and logistics more efficient
  • Maya Apa (Bangladesh) crowdsources answers to anonymous user questions on topics such as healthcare and legal issues
  • Monkey Junior (Vietnam) offers online courses in languages, mathematics, and science for young children
  • m.Paani (India) uses loyalty schemes and special offers to help brands gain marketing insights
  • Niramai (India) – is building a low-cost, software-based diagnostic system for detecting breast cancer
  • Priceza (Thailand) is a price comparison app and search engine for shoppers
  • SocialCops (India) collects, cleans, and analyzes data to help governments and nonprofits with policy and strategic decision-making
  • VividTech (Pakistan) wants to improve the experience of being put “on hold” by your service provider by replacing looped muzak with interactive and visual experiences

Established last year, Launchpad is a six-month scheme that selects growth-stage startups from emerging markets, providing equity-free support including mentorship and an all-expenses-paid, two-week training at Google’s headquarters in Silicon Valley.

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Asia tech news roundup – Nov 30

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Viddsee co-founders Ho Jia Jian (L) and Derek Tan (R). Photo credits: Viddsee. Montage: Tech in Asia.

The cryptocurrency craze continues as Indonesia’s central bank indicates it will ban not just the tokens but also the businesses that transact them. In other news, two US tech giants reported positive growth in the region.

Media and entertainment

Viddsee bets on original content (Singapore). The video streaming company has created Viddsee Studios to produce original content for its platforms. It has also announced a partnership with the Singapore government’s Infocomm Media Development Authority to produce five online TV series next year. (Viddsee)

Fintech

Ayopop secures series A funding (Indonesia). Finch Capital led the round. Mobile bill payment app Ayopop previously raised US$1 million in seed funding from Gree Ventures and angels including Sandeep Tandon, co-founder of FreeCharge. (Finch Capital)

Central bank indicates cryptocurrency startups face ban (Indonesia). Bank Indonesia Governor Agus Martowardojo said that all forms of cryptocurrency will be formally outlawed in the country at some point next year. He added that parties facilitating cryptocurrency transactions will be prohibited. (Coconuts)

Copyright: <a href='https://www.123rf.com/profile_saiko3p'>saiko3p / 123RF Stock Photo</a>

The former headquarters of Indonesia’s central bank in Jakarta, now a museum. Photo credit: saiko3p / 123RF

Consumer tech

Athlede raises US$40,000 seed funding (Singapore). Tri5 Ventures led the investment in the startup, which is developing health, fitness, and sports training assistance wearables. Athlede is backed by venture builder Budding Innovations. (Budding Innovations)

Transportation

Ola to trial bike-sharing (India). The ride-hailing company is making a tentative move into dockless bike-sharing. Dubbed Ola Pedal, the service will be piloted on the campus of the Indian Institute of Technology in Kanpur. (VCCircle)

Big tech

Amazon’s Marketplace revenue grows by over 105 percent (India). The US company’s ecommerce business appears to be a big hit in India, reporting that its income there more than doubled over the course of the year. (The Economic Times)

Copyright: bennymarty / 123RF Stock Photo

Google’s global headquarters in Mountain View, California. Photo credit: bennymarty / 123RF

Google reports 25 percent growth in ad revenue (Asia-Pacific). The internet giant’s chief business officer Philipp Schindler declared himself “a big fan” of the region, citing the significant growth in Google’s advertising revenue from markets such as Japan, Vietnam, and the Philippines. (Mumbrella)

Investors, incubators, and accelerators

It also announced its fifth Launchpad cohort (Asia-Pacific). Google’s emerging market accelerator program has selected 10 startups from Asia, including its first-ever Bangladeshi and Pakistani entrants. (Tech in Asia)

Eight Roads Ventures announces new US$222 million fund (Japan). The Bermuda-based VC firm’s second Japan-focused fund will invest in companies working in fintech, healthcare, and other emerging technologies. (Eight Roads Ventures)

Rocket Internet expects startup profitability next year (Asia-Pacific). The German venture builder and investment firm has pushed back its original prediction that its startups would begin turning a profit by the end of this year. However, Rocket also reported a 28 percent jump in revenue between January and September – while its nine-month losses narrowed to US$44 million, improving from US$642 million over the same period last year. (Reuters)

See: Previous Asia tech news roundups

This post Asia tech news roundup – Nov 30 appeared first on Tech in Asia.

Digix gets $1.3m seed funding to turn gold into cryptocurrency

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Copyright: <a href='https://www.123rf.com/profile_dariohayashi'>dariohayashi / 123RF Stock Photo</a>

Photo credit: dariohayashi / 123RF

Singapore-based Digix has secured US$1.25 million in seed funding, it announced today.

The round was led by Japanese VC firm Global Brain, with Shanghai’s Fenbushi Capital – one of Asia-Pacific’s most prominent backers of blockchain-related startups – also participating.

See: Japanese VC firm Global Brain to start investing in ICOs

The funding will help the startup continue building its DigixDAO platform for trading gold-backed digital tokens on the Ethereum blockchain.

By tokenizing gold bullion, Digix is aiming to create a cryptocurrency that can provide more stability for investors. Unlike the majority of cryptocurrencies currently being traded, each Digix token will represent a real, physical asset – in its case, a piece of gold stored in a secure vault somewhere in Singapore.

This reflects the concept of the gold standard, under which most of the world’s currencies were directly linked to the value of gold. Most countries abandoned the gold standard in favor of the fiat system – where the value of money is not based on the value of a commodity – during the 20th century.

By using the distributed ledger, Digix is able to securely record and track ownership of its gold-backed tokens.

Twice the tokens

Digix has created two digital tokens so far.

Digix Gold (DGX) is the result of its tokenization of gold reserves, with each unit of DGX representing 1 gram of gold.

DigixDAO (DGD) was distributed as part of the startup’s initial coin offering (ICO) in March last year. The DGD token is not backed by gold and, like most tokens that can be thought of as cryptocurrencies, its value can go up and down depending on market forces and exchange rates.

In addition to giving its holders the ability to claim rewards on DGX transactions, DGD also grants them a say in the way the Digix ecosystem is run.

As a result of the token sale, the platform became a decentralized autonomous organization (DAO) – an economic entity governed according to smart contracts on the blockchain, theoretically removing the need for a traditional corporate structure.

Buyers that hold DGD over a certain amount will be able to submit proposals to the DAO as to the direction the platform should take in order to encourage adoption of DGX. All DGD holders will be able to vote on such proposals.

In its ICO, Digix managed to raise 465,134 Ether – worth close to US$5.5 million at the time. This will be spent in accordance with decisions made by DAO members.

Much has been made of the apparent conflict between ICOs and traditional VC funding. Earlier this year, money raised by ICOs surpassed that of VC seed funding in internet-related startups.

See: Easy money? Top token players weigh in on the ICO vs venture capital debate

The consensus among panellists at Tech in Asia Tokyo earlier this year was that both fundraising formats could and should be seen as complementary.

This post Digix gets $1.3m seed funding to turn gold into cryptocurrency appeared first on Tech in Asia.

Three months after launch, this unbanked crypto exchange made $7.5m in profit

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Photo credit: cooldesign / 123RF.

With the price of bitcoin soaring past US$10,000 this week, the idea of trading it for a less proven token sounds crazy. But for the nouveau riche of the cryptocurrency world, it’s an opportunity to invest in faster-moving currencies.

“Most guys who are holding bitcoin are high-risk, early adopters. They have a high tolerance [for] swings,” explains Changpeng Zhao, founder of Binance, a cryptocurrency exchange operating out of Tokyo. “Sometimes it’s not even about the money. People just want more.”

Sometimes it’s not even about the money. People just want more.

That’s one of the drivers behind growing exchanges like Binance, which deals exclusively in cryptocurrency – no dollars or fiat currency of any kind. Instead, traders buy and sell bitcoin, ether, and a variety of tokens from different initial coin offerings (ICOs), a cryptocurrency-based crowdfunding model that’s raised more than US$3.7 billion for blockchain projects this year. It’s a way for bitcoin traders to diversify their holdings through riskier tokens with potentially higher returns.

Zhao says Binance’s exchange processes about US$500 million in trade every day, of which the company takes a 0.1 percent fee – which drops to 0.005 percent if users pay commission in Binance Coin (BNB), Binance’s own token. In its first quarter ending in October, the company reported a profit of about US$7.5 million in commission fees.

Not bad for an exchange that launched in July.

“This year, ICOs have definitely contributed to exchange volume,” he says. The increasing number of bitcoin buyers has boosted trade as well, as it’s the first cryptocurrency most people become familiar with. Still, there’s a lot more room to grow, emphasizes Zhao.

“The crypto space even today is a very small part of the overall market potential,” he says, pointing out that the traditional equity market is much larger. “This is just the beginning.”

Surviving China

The 40-year-old Zhao’s foray into cryptocurrency can be traced back to poker. In Shanghai, he used to play in a private group that included Bobby Lee, now CEO of BTCC, one of the largest cryptocurrency exchanges in China. Ron Cao, managing director of venture capital firm Sky9 Capital, played as well. In 2013, Cao urged Zhao to get into bitcoin – this was around the time when Lee bought BTCC.

See: Q&A: Veteran VC Ron Cao reflects on almost 20 years of investing

“We had a group of guys that played poker together,” remembers Zhao. “Ron and I have always been pretty good friends, and on a poker table, you can tell the other guy’s personality pretty well. So we always had respect for each other.”

The more you deal with fiat, the more authorities can control you.

He then left his job at Fusion Systems, an IT and business consultancy, and dove in as head of development at Blockchain, a software platform for digital assets. In 2014, he became CTO of OkCoin, a major exchange for fiat and cryptocurrency in China. A year later, he left that too amid controversy between his friend, bitcoin evangelist Roger Ver, and OKCoin.

This year, Zhao felt it was the right time to move into a purely cryptocurrency exchange (what he calls ‘exchange 2.0’), as he watched the volume of cryptocurrency exchanges like Poloniex rise.

“If you do fiat to crypto […] you have to have a bank account that can accept money,” he says. “That has its own advantages and problems. You have to deal with regulatory issues and usually you’re tied to one country.”

Changpeng Zhao, founder and CEO of Binance. Photo credit: Binance

Binance doesn’t have to deal with banks at all. “We don’t touch fiat so we don’t have a bank,” he explains. “But we have to deal with a lot of different wallets, [so] we have to integrate a lot of different wallets – we have to keep all of them secure.”

The lack of fiat has helped Binance in others ways too, particularly during China’s crackdown on ICOs and bitcoin exchanges in September. The fact that Binance was purely a cryptocurrency exchange meant that they weren’t contributing to capital outflows – a large concern for the Chinese government.

“The more you deal with fiat, the more [authorities] can control you,” says Zhao. “The bank will freeze your bank account. They can make the wire transfer slow.”

The company was also lucky – a week before the ban was announced, Zhao’s team moved all their servers out of China. Now, the founder is working on opening another office in Hong Kong and has moved the company’s core team out of mainland China.

When there’s rumors of a China ban, people panic and sell.

“At least in China, [fiat-to-cryptocurrency exchanges] are not very possible in the foreseeable future. So crypto-to-crypto exchanges emerged,” says Chris Zhou, cryptocurrency trader and head of China operations at BTC Media, a media outlet focusing on digital currency. Cryptocurrency-exclusive exchanges are “a way to bypass the tightening regulation.”

“In the meantime, it is also a sign that people are trying to use bitcoin or ether as a standard cryptocurrency. To every other coin, this acts as a benchmark crypto. I think this is going to be a trend,” he tells Tech in Asia.

The excitement around regulations this year has helped drive volume for the young exchange. Earlier this year, Japan recognized bitcoin as a form of money, opening the flood gates for Japanese investors and exchanges such as bitFlyer, which this week announced plans to expand into the US. Even China’s ICO ban has boosted trade.

“When there [are] rumors of a China ban, people panic and sell,” explains Zhao. “Even though the price might be going down, the volume will be high. Hence the commission fees charged by the exchange – the revenue from exchanges – will be high.”

“The worse you can expect is no news. Then it just stays flat,” he says. “There’s no trade.”

Hacking fears

Binance’s core team, including He Yi, Binance’s co-founder and ex-OKCoin co-founder. Photo credit: Binance

Besides facing competition from the industry’s more established and larger exchanges, such as Bittrex and ShapeShift, security will certainly be an ever-present challenge for Binance. The short history of cryptocurrency is riddled with exchange hacks, notably Mt. Gox, which reportedly lost US$460 million to hackers in 2014.

“I still use crypto exchanges, but I keep to my favorites and abstain from leaving too much money there because I’ve been burned by two exchange hacks and closures, namely Cryptsy and Mintpal,” says T.M Lee, co-founder of CoinGecko, a data platform that tracks hundreds of cryptocurrencies.

“I lost a lot of altcoins there, which are worth a lot today – not much then,” he adds.

I’ve been burned by two exchange hacks and closures.

Zhao says the company practices multifaceted security measures, from using network security to prevent social engineering attacks to securing its physical office locations. Different groups of white-hat hackers conduct penetration tests on Binance’s system monthly, he adds.

Of course, savvy traders – or traders that have had bad experiences – won’t rely on exchanges to keep their money safe. For those who aren’t trading tokens every day, it is often deemed safer to store cryptocoins in their own wallets, where they have more control over withdrawal.

On top of security, Binance is prioritizing team expansion and opening more office locations. The company also runs an incubator called Binance Labs, and is working on its own ICO listing platform and developing a decentralized exchange.

(Correction: This article was updated three hours after publishing to correct Binance’s daily trade volume.)

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Asia tech news roundup – Dec 1

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Photo credit: Didi Chuxing.

As we head into the weekend, Didi has decided to leave the US market to its strategic partner Lyft, while a platform that turns gold bullion into cryptocurrency is among the startups to raise funding.

Transportation

Didi Chuxing cedes the US to Lyft (China). The Chinese ride-hailing firm has ended a trial it began in April last year which allowed Chinese tourists visiting the US to use local player Lyft through its own app. Didi is now encouraging its users to hail rides with Lyft, in which it invested US$100 million in September 2015. (Technode)

Holachef gets US$1.38 million (India). The mixed debt and equity investment in the food delivery startup came from several angels and family offices as well as software firm IPI Technolab and Innoven Capital, a venture debt arm of Singapore state fund Temasek. (VCCircle)

Ecommerce

Befikr raises US$2 million in series A funding (India). The marketplace for home services such as plumbing, carpentry, and electricians, will use the money for marketing and expanding its reach in Delhi and Pune. The investors were not disclosed. (Inc42)

Media and entertainment

One Championship founder and CEO, Chatri Sityodtong

One Championship founder and CEO, Chatri Sityodtong. Photo credit: One Championship.

One Championship expands executive team (Singapore). The martial arts-focused sports media company has hired private equity specialist Hua Fung Teh as chief financial officer, Intel alumnus Mahesh Subramanian as chief technology officer, and tech startup veteran Souvik Dutta as vice president of engineering. The new hires will help the company as it pushes into mobile and OTT streaming. (One Championship)

Tencent and Spotify are in talks for a deal (China). Tencent’s music group and Spotify may swap up to 10 percent stakes in each other’s businesses. The two are planning to join forces for future licensing negotiations with major music labels, The Wall Street Journal reported, citing people familiar with the matter. The move comes ahead of their expected public listings next year. (WSJ)

Liquid Comics gets US$5 million investment (India). The parent company of Graphic India, which is creating a range of graphic novels and animated TV series based on Indian mythology and popular culture, received the capital injection from Start Media, 3one4 Capital, and a number of angel investors. (TechCrunch)

Data-light YouTube app arrives in beta (Southeast Asia). Now available in Malaysia, Thailand, Vietnam, and the Philippines, YouTube Go is aimed at users in countries where mobile data availability might not be as complete as in other countries. Users can download content using wifi to watch later while they’re on the move. (Mashable)

Fintech

Copyright: dariohayashi / 123RF Stock Photo

Photo credit: dariohayashi / 123RF

Digix secures US$1.25 million for gold tokenization platform (Singapore). Japan’s Global Brain led the seed round with China’s Fenbushi Capital joining in. The startup previously raised US$5.5 million from its initial coin offering. (Tech in Asia)

Medtech

US$30 million raised by 12 Sigma in series B round (China). SBCVC led the investment with CDBI Partners, Delian Capital, Matrix Partners, and Zhen Fund also joining what is reportedly the biggest fundraising by a Chinese medical imaging startup this year. (China Money Network)

Consumer tech

US government agency claims DJI may be spying for Beijing (China). A leaked US Immigration & Customs Enforcement memo suggests that drones built by Shenzhen-based DJI – which are in widespread commercial and consumer use in the country – are “providing US critical infrastructure and law enforcement data to the Chinese government.” DJI responded that the report is “based on clearly false and misleading claims.” (The New York Times)

This post Asia tech news roundup – Dec 1 appeared first on Tech in Asia.

The Australian VC who funded PropertyGuru and Chope isn’t interested in your valuation

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Paul Bassat, co-founder and managing partner of Square Peg Capital

Paul Bassat, co-founder and managing partner of Square Peg Capital. Photo credit: Square Peg Capital

Square Peg Capital raised a US$180 million fund for startups earlier this year. The Australia-headquartered VC has investments in its home country as well as in Southeast Asia, Israel, and the US. Its portfolio includes an early small stake in Uber, Australian graphic design firm Canva, and Singapore’s PropertyGuru, Chope, and Wego.

Paul Bassat, Square Peg’s managing partner and co-founder, is an entrepreneur himself, having co-founded jobs site Seek in 1997. And before he invests, the last thing he wants to hear from founders is their company’s valuation.

In Bassat’s mind, an entrepreneur who’s too eager to push a number on investors risks putting them off, as they might find the proposed valuation too high. Then, if the entrepreneur haggles, investors might think this sounds too desperate or betrays lack of confidence in the initial proposal.

“Raising money is as much about psychology as anything else,” Bassat tells Tech in Asia. Also, if investors value your company at a certain amount and you come to them with a lower price in mind, it’s your loss. “I just don’t think you’re doing yourself any favors,” he notes.

More importantly, that’s not what you should be focusing on as a founder, he adds. “We want to meet folks who are just passionate about running the business. So there’s a little bit of a turn-off when they come along with valuation comparatives and talk more like investment bankers.”

Growth potential

Square Peg invests in technology businesses that can target markets with high potential and address real problems in them. In Southeast Asia, the VC has invested in property portal PropertyGuru and travel search engine Wego. Most recently, it funded restaurant finder Chope and services marketplace Kaodim.

The VC’s 27-strong portfolio also includes payments provider Stripe, US-Israeli big data weather predictor ClimaCell, and freelance services marketplace Fiverr. It’s had one exit so far, with Texas-based logistics software builder Shipping Easy selling to competitor Stamps.com for US$55 million last year.

“[These companies] have platform or marketplace dominance to them,” Bassat says. “They are very, very scalable businesses. We love scalable businesses. And that’s not just financial scale, it’s organizational scale.”

You have a list of things that you want to do. On most days, you can’t get to any of them.

This means that as the business grows larger, it doesn’t get proportionately harder to manage. “Contrast that with ecommerce-type businesses, where the level of complexity just keeps growing and growing as the company gets bigger and bigger,” he explains. “The number of agents [on PropertyGuru] has probably doubled since the time we’ve been involved in the business. It’s not two times more complex to deal with double the number of agents.”

A common refrain of investors outside Southeast Asia who hesitate to invest in the region is the lack of local knowledge and presence on the ground. Square Peg counts on the expertise of its portfolio companies instead of trying to learn everything itself. Working with local investors who go into deals with it is also part of Square Peg’s strategy.

“We feel we understand those markets well enough to make investment decisions. But in terms of actually executing and running a business day to day, we’re relying on incredible local knowledge and expertise,” Bassat says. “And what we bring perhaps in this case is strong domain expertise in terms of understanding how to scale marketplace businesses.”

To accomplish this, Bassat tries to keep his hands off the wheel when working with a portfolio company. “The way I think about our role is to push and challenge if we do have questions. But ultimately, it’s really to back management,” he says. “And it’s very, very easy as a former CEO sitting on the board to think, ‘Oh, why can’t they do this?’ or, ‘This is easier. Why can’t they do more things?’”

Since Bassat was a CEO himself between 1997 and 2011, he has an idea of the challenges in store. “You wake up in the morning and arrive at work. You have a list – maybe a mental or a written-down one – of things that you want to do. On most days, you can’t get to any of them. On a good day, you get to one or two of them, out of the six or seven. And you never finish any of them.”

Plus, the problems that usually reach the CEO are the tough ones. Otherwise, Bassat thinks they would have been solved somewhere along the way.

Paul Bassat, managing partner, Square Peg Capital

Bassat during a team meeting at Square Peg. Photo credit: Square Peg Capital / Stuart McEvoy

Cheering from the sidelines

PropertyGuru and Chope appear satisfied with this approach, especially as it helps them build strong management teams. “For example, [when] we brought on a new COO – our most recent hire – the board played a big role in vetting the individual,” Hari Krishnan, CEO of PropertyGuru, tells Tech in Asia.

Krishnan thinks that having an open mind is necessary to be part of PropertyGuru’s board. “We’re not a finished product,” he says. “We continue to grow and learn and develop. So the board really helps set that context and then continues to challenge [them] as they come on board the business.”

“There was a candidate for a senior management position we were assessing,” says Chope CEO Arrif Ziaudeen. “First thing [that Square Peg] did which was helpful was use its own networks to get honest opinions on the candidate that I couldn’t.”

You end up with an outcome that most people around the table are comfortable with because the data tells a story.

More importantly, the investor let Ziaudeen know they trusted his instincts on the candidate. “That’s an important distinction, I think, between helping the entrepreneur think through a particular issue [and] helping [them] think through how to make tough decisions and grow.”

“Like any other groups of people, we have disagreements,” Krishnan adds. “But you can have that constructive disagreement and debate and keep it in a good place if you build relationships. When I read about backseat driving in articles, I often feel there’s been an underinvestment in the relationship. So I don’t take that for granted. There’s a lot of time spent just understanding where my expectations are at, where are people at – not just the board, but even with my executive team.”

Disagreements and debates are what informs Square Peg’s relationship with its portfolio companies as well as its strategy. Bassat says the VC does not have a controlling stake in any of its portfolio companies. Instead, it usually takes one seat in their board.

For Bassat, advice from a board member doesn’t have to be gold all the time. “I can think of plenty of examples where we’ve had debates with management teams, and we’ve ended up being wrong,” he muses.

“And there are probably more examples [when] we’ve been wrong than [when] we’ve been right. But most of the time, it’s not so much that someone has got this view and someone else has got that view. You sit, you chat, you debate things, you have a data-driven conversation. And you end up with an outcome, with the view that most people sitting around the table are really comfortable with because the data tells a story,” he adds.

Opportunity abounds

Square Peg usually goes for a 10 to 20 percent stake in the companies it backs. “Maybe 95 percent of the investments we do fit within that model. We think it’s a great opportunity to have that perspective of looking at things more broadly,” Bassat says.

Though he didn’t share specific figures about Square Peg’s investments and returns, he says the VC tries to make a compelling case to its investors on why it can deliver them higher returns than other types of investment.

“We say to our investors that if you invest in Square Peg and we end up giving you back the same returns that you get from the stock market plus a small premium, then really, you shouldn’t be giving us money. Because you’re better off having the liquidity and the benefit of investing in liquid assets if the returns are broadly similar,” he explains.

Square Peg is riding an early-stage wave for growing businesses and markets, Bassat hopes. He offers PropertyGuru as an example, where a large addressable market was ready for property listings and agent services to move online, together with most of that industry’s money.

“That’s exactly the sort of thesis that we like. And that hopefully is going to lead to our investors getting really, really good returns. But they have to be patient because we want to be involved in companies like PropertyGuru for a long time,” Bassat says.

This post The Australian VC who funded PropertyGuru and Chope isn’t interested in your valuation appeared first on Tech in Asia.

8 startups in Asia that caught our eye

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asian startups weekly list
Here’s our newest round-up of the featured startups on our site this week. If you have startup tips or story suggestions, feel free to email us. Enjoy this week’s list!


1. AOS Mobile | Japan

Tokyo-based AOS Mobile uses artificial intelligence (AI) to help enterprises communicate through mobile with their customers. Its products include AOSSMS, which enables businesses to send SMS text messages simultaneously and securely to multiple recipients and InCircle, a high-security messenger that can be used as an office chat app.


2. Change | Singapore (Startup Profile)

Change is one of several fintech startups in Southeast Asia that aims to make cryptocurrencies easier to spend and interchange with fiat currency in everyday life. It is creating a banking platform for cryptocurrencies, incorporating a debit card, digital wallet, and payments app. It is also building a marketplace that aggregates different financial services from a range of third-party fintech companies.


3. Digix | Singapore (Startup Profile)

Digix is aiming to create a cryptocurrency that can provide more stability for investors. Each Digix token will represent a real, physical asset – in its case, a piece of gold stored in a secure vault somewhere in Singapore. The company has created two digital tokens so far.


Startup lists

4- 8: 5 rising startups in Japan


Related startup stories


Like RSS? There’s always our Asia startups RSS feed!

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Video: With solar panels, this city’s citizens could soon make as much energy as a nuclear power plant

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South Korea is subsidizing households to get mini solar panels for their apartments.


Transcript:

South Korea is building a “solar city.” In Seoul, mini solar panels are installed on apartment balconies. One can produce enough energy to run a fridge, which means lower electricity bills.

Goal: 1 million households with mini solar panels.

Target: Seoul’s citizens will produce 1 gigawatt of power by 2022. That’s about the same as one nuclear reactor

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The CFO dilemma (infographic)

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A startup’s financials affect its long-term executions – the status of your revenue, the speed of your burn rate, or potential risks in future dealings. This is where a CFO could help.

And yet some consider hiring a CFO is a luxury. They’re redundant when you’re still at an early stage, building the backbones and scaling the sales learning curves. So how does one consider whether they are ready for a CFO? This short graphic by Matahari Indonesia provides some clues.

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Survival of the prettiest: Malaysian beauty marketplace Bfab gets a makeover

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Copyright: <a href='https://www.123rf.com/profile_luckybusiness'>luckybusiness / 123RF Stock Photo</a>

Photo credit: luckybusiness / 123RF

For many – perhaps most – entrepreneurs, there comes a time when they have to admit to themselves: “This isn’t working.”

Their vision didn’t turn out the way they thought it would, or their startup is heading in the wrong direction. Maybe the niche they saw in the marketplace didn’t really need to be filled, or perhaps people just didn’t really care as much about their product as they did.

At such an inflection point, many founders will have to make the tough decision of wrapping up their business and moving on to the next idea.

But with the right attitude and approach, sometimes there’s still a chance to press the reset button, identify a new niche to fill, and steer a startup back towards success.

That is what has happened to Kuala Lumpur-based Bfab.

Founded by Rocket Internet alumnus Pawel Netreba, the startup launched its online marketplace for the Malaysian capital’s beauty and wellness industry in January 2016.

He had considered entering a variety of verticals using the marketplace model he learned while managing the Malaysian operations of Foodpanda, back when it was still a Rocket Internet company.

Netreba and his co-founders, Sergey Gaydar and Raeesa Sya, settled on beauty and wellness services since they found it to be a particularly fragmented and offline-driven industry, with no dominant player despite an oversupply of service providers. Also, consumers were becoming more accustomed to accessing services online or through mobile apps, suggesting there was potential demand for a beauty and wellness marketplace.

See: This guy used all he learned as a Rocket Internet exec to build his own startup

Brick-and-mortar businesses like hairdressers, nail salons, and spas were invited to list on Bfab’s platform. Customers could then surf the site to find whatever service they require, compare prices, and book an appointment with their chosen merchant.

Bfab experienced several months of decent traction. More than 2,000 salons and beauty professionals signed up to take bookings through its portal by November 2016.

In the same month, Bfab secured a six-figure US dollar amount in funding from Captii Ventures. This came after an earlier six-figure seed raise from Captii, 500 Startups, and KK Fund in late 2015, prior to the platform’s soft launch.

“However, we figured out pretty quickly there’s a limit – a majority of people still prefer to go directly to these guys, using WhatsApp to book, and they didn’t need our booking platform,” Netreba tells Tech in Asia.

Something’s up

At first, Bfab tried to tackle this problem with an offline strategy. The startup sought to build its brand with a media push, talking to magazines, attending events, and sharing social media posts from celebrities that mentioned it.

It also tried to ply Kuala Lumpurians with promo codes, money-off vouchers, and other special offers. But these tactics quickly took their toll on Bfab’s time, energy, and money.

“Eventually, we said it’s not going to work in terms of unit economics,” says Netreba. “A purely B2C booking platform won’t work with limited financial resources – we needed a much bigger budget to change the behavior of the consumers. The salon side was no problem. We were actually increasing the supply side. But we were investing our marketing dollars into educating the consumers.”

Moreover, it faced fierce competition in the space from the few rivals that managed to survive. “Most of the startups in this field died, except for the well-funded Vaniday, Vanitee, and ourselves,” he says. “These startups died, no one really was succeeding, and it was because of this.”

We sat down and said, ‘What actually is the problem here?’

By the time Bfab’s second tranche of venture capital arrived, the platform had been live for about four months. But its projected marketing spend was going up, and would get increasingly difficult to convince investors to foot that bill without seeing a tangible, positive effect.

Netreba and his team now found themselves stuck, spending what limited money they had left on trying to persuade consumers who could easily revert to their habit of booking appointments directly with their stylists or massage therapists.

The probability that they might have have to pull the plug on the business soon grew with each passing day. Undeterred, they decided to look again at the market and the role Bfab should be playing within it.

“So we sat down and said, ‘What actually is the problem here?’,” says Netreba. If these merchants’ customers still book via WhatsApp or a phone call, then why did so many salons and beauty professionals sign up for Bfab in the first place?

Eureka moment

The Bfab team worked out that customer attraction and retention were the core issues facing most merchants. They found it difficult to secure regular customers, and many didn’t make repeat visits. By signing up with Bfab, they hoped to find a source of new customers to make up the shortfall.

“They have this fundamental problem: they never took care of their existing customer base, never understood them,” explains Netreba. “They weren’t communicating with them – [not] with regular emails, new updates, new promotions. They didn’t do anything in terms of CRM [customer relationship management].”

Bfab co-founder and CEO Pawel Netreba. Photo credit: Bfab.

Digging deeper, the Bfab team found that most of their merchant partners didn’t database their clientele, didn’t analyze the demographics, and rarely stored email addresses or phone numbers. When asked how many customers they had, they couldn’t give a definitive answer. Moreover, this meant they couldn’t easily determine the number of customers and which ones returned to book a second appointment.

“In short, they didn’t have easy-to-use tools to do the numbers and analytics,” says Netreba. “We came to the conclusion that 60 percent [of merchants] were totally manual – even bigger outlets with three or four branches were manual. The few that had software typically had a 10-year-old old POS [point-of-sale system] for their invoices, and were using Excel for their customer data.”

It was then that Bfab realized there was a need for a software-as-a-service solution in the beauty and wellness space. The decision to pivot to a B2B model, providing a whole suite of services from customer communications and POS to invoice and inventory management, was made.

Bfab began building around its simple, existing in-house CRM, working with its merchant partners to customize the new cloud-based platform – named Bfab Pro – to their needs.

Since releasing a rough alpha version of the software in April, the startup has signed up more than 30 merchants – including not just beauty salons and spas but also physiotherapists, opticians, and fashion designers – to road-test the platform and report bugs.

New beginning

Booker and Mindbody in the US, as well as Zenoti in India, have built similar enterprise solutions for the beauty and wellness industry. But Netreba claims that Bfab Pro is the only one available in Southeast Asia that offers a wide range of features, plus onboarding and support services.

Depending on the package they select, merchants pay around US$110 per month for Bfab Pro, though they have to pay their subscriptions annually and in advance.

Copyright: <a href='https://www.123rf.com/profile_alexoakenman'>alexoakenman / 123RF Stock Photo</a>

Photo credit: alexoakenman / 123RF

Netreba says a basic version starts at around US$50 per month, per outlet. Clients can then pay extra for add-ons like marketing tools, online booking, advanced analytics, and loyalty management.  Bigger groups consisting of more outlets get a volume discount, reducing the price they pay per outlet.

While Bfab Pro is still in its infancy, Netreba predicts average annual recurring revenue (ARR) of US$1,200 per client based on its current pricing framework and client base. “The CLV [customer lifetime value] is immense as we estimate the average customer to stay at least three years,” he adds, indicating a minimum US$3,600 lifetime revenue from each merchant that signs up. “That gives significant room to invest into acquiring these clients. We calculated that every sales person, after two to three months, will be profitable, covering his own cost, and generate a positive profit contribution for the business.”

Netreba says that Bfab will soon begin the search for investors for its next fundraising round, the proceeds of which will go towards sales activities.

Recently, the startup also announced its expansion to Singapore as part of its growth plans. Compared to the Malaysian businesses that needed to first understand the potential benefits of CRM, Singaporean merchants are ready and willing to try out new technology that can make their businesses more efficient and cost-effective.  

With only a few months of traction, we weren’t getting a big benefit, and went through this big, cold winter.

Additionally, Singapore hosts the regional headquarters of many larger brands in the beauty and wellness space, presenting more opportunities for Bfab to seek out partnerships with them. Netreba says that the startup has already held discussions with cosmetics and haircare brands L’Oreal and Wella, with a view to providing its software solution to their partner salons in the region.

The pivot, however, has not been without costs. Co-founders Gaydar and Sya – who served as Bfab’s chief marketing officer and chief creative officer, respectively – both departed during the transition. Netreba says Sya left as her background was more in line with the consumer-facing model that Bfab was moving away from, while Gaydar left for family reasons.

In a relatively short time, the startup has traveled a long and winding road. From its beginnings in the B2C marketplace – which is still operational, though Bfab is no longer allocating significant resources to it – to its current foray in the B2B software space. 

Bfab co-founders Pawel Netreba (L), Raeesa Sya (M), and Sergey Gaydar (R). Sya and Gaydar have since left the startup. Photo credit: Bfab

As Netreba points out, Bfab’s old B2C model could have worked, “but it [would have] required a lot of external financing.”

“With only a few months of traction, we weren’t getting a big benefit, and went through this big, cold winter,” adds Netreba. “So we had to think – how can we tweak it? How can we still service this beauty industry which is huge, but is still old-fashioned, traditionally minded, relationship-based, and relationship-driven?”

“It was a time of uncertainty, with no path, no clear options,” he admits. “We went through many big discussions and many emotional phases over which path to choose, which option to focus on.”

But with input from partners, investors, and other people in the startup world, new possibilities began to emerge, and the future looked brighter. The ability to bounce off ideas with peers and seek their support was critical to Bfab’s eventual pivot – and is key for any startup going through a similar experience, Netreba suggests.

“There were a lot of lessons learned,” he says. “One thing you should do is engage early with your investors and get their feedback. That’s important because they’ve heard so many pitches, seen so many other other markets. They can really help you think about your options, which to consider and which to rule out. They can give you good market sense and good perception.”

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Asia tech news roundup – Dec 4

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Xiaomi, Lei Jun

Xiaomi co-founder, chairman, and CEO Lei Jun. Photo credit: Xiaomi

Hellobike raises US$350 million, PonyCar gets US$37 million, and Xiaomi is (still) planning its IPO. Here are some of the top Asia-Pacific stories from today and the weekend.

Transportation

Hellobike raises US$350 million from Alibaba unit (China). Alibaba’s Ant Financial joined carmaker WM Motor and VC firm Chengwei Capital in the funding round, which is Hellobike’s fourth to date. The bike-sharing firm merged with Youon Ditan in October in the sector’s first major consolidation event in October. (Reuters)

PonyCar gets US$37 million in series C round (China). Electric vehicle (EV) developer Zhihe Chuxing led the investment in PonyCar, which is an online sharing platform for EVs. The startup’s previous backers include smartphone maker Oppo and investment bank China Peakedness. (China Money Network)

Mobike partners with Singtel (China/Singapore). The Chinese bike-sharing firm and the Singaporean telco will collaborate on mobile payments, data analytics, marketing, and internet-of-things technology on a pan-Asia basis. (Singtel)

Fintech

Regulators issue stricter rules on micro-lending (China). Unlicensed online lenders have been banned outright by the new regulations, while the approval of new licenses remains suspended following an edict last week. Microloan startups that already have a license will be forbidden from charging annualized interest rates above the legal limit of 36 percent. Some had reportedly been charging rates in excess of 100 percent. (Caixin)

Central bank and securities watchdog consider ICO rules (Philippines). Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas Governor Nestor Espenilla said his agency is in talks with the Philippine Securities and Exchange Commission to develop regulation for token crowd sales or “initial coin offerings” (ICOs). (Bloomberg)

Investors file police reports against SixCapital (Singapore). They claim that the fintech startup, which developed a range of automated trading products and promised returns of up to 18 percent per year, stopped making payouts in June. In the same month it indicated to investors its bank accounts with OCBC had been shut down, while it has also discontinued several products and had a number of staff quit. (The Straits Times)

Mobecom partners with Nets (Singapore). Customers will be able to spend airBux points – part of a loyalty rewards platform that Australia’s Mobecom provides to brands – at merchants with Nets payment terminals. (Mobecom)

Copyright: <a href='https://www.123rf.com/profile_sepavo'>sepavo / 123RF Stock Photo</a>

Marina Bay, Singapore. Photo credit: sepavo / 123RF

Media and entertainment

City-state singled out as copyright infringement haven (Singapore). The Asia-focused Coalition Against Piracy (CAP) – which counts Disney, Fox, Sony, and the BBC among its members – have rebuked Singapore for its apparent lack of protection for copyrighted works like movies and TV shows. “Singapore is the worst [Asian country] in terms of availability of illicit streaming devices,” said CAP general manager Neil Gane, referring to set-top boxes that can be used to stream copyright-infringing content. (Bloomberg)

Consumer tech

Xiaomi eyeing IPO in Q2 2018 (China). Speculation about the mobile maker’s long-expected IPO is nothing new, but insiders now say the company is aiming for a listing as early as the second half of next year. Xiaomi was valued at around US$46 billion after its last funding round in 2014, but its growth has slowed considerably since then. (The Information)

Ecommerce

India opposes new rules framework for global ecommerce (India). The Indian government has submitted a formal opposition to any World Trade Organization (WTO) negotiations over new rules governing cross-border ecommerce. Several WTO member states have pushed for an update to the current framework, which was adopted in 1998. India says many countries don’t yet fully understand the implications of negotiating new, binding rules. (The Economic Times)

Copyright: <a href='https://www.123rf.com/profile_sumpao'>sumpao / 123RF Stock Photo</a>

World Trade Organization headquarters in Geneva, Switzerland. Photo credit: sumpao / 123RF

Legaltech

Dragon Law rebrands to Zegal (Hong Kong). The startup – which offers a cloud-based platform for creating and signing business documentation, and operates as a virtual law firm – has changed its name and opened an office in Manchester, UK, marking its first foray into Europe. (Zegal)

Investors, incubators, and accelerators

Comb+ launches US$77 million artificial intelligence fund (China). The Beijing-based accelerator is aiming to use the vehicle to help foreign artificial intelligence startups enter the Chinese market. (TechCrunch)

DCM Ventures raising third US$100 million Android fund (Asia-Pacific). The firm, which is focused on US, Chinese, and Japanese investments, is putting together a new fund to back startups working with Google’s open source Android operating system. (DealStreetAsia)

Singtel, NTU, and A-STAR partner on emerging technologies (Singapore). Nanyang Technological University (NTU) and the Agency for Science, Technology, and Research (A-STAR) are joining forces with telco Singtel to establish the Singtel Cognitive and Artificial Intelligence Lab for Enterprises (SCALE@NTU) to develop applications for use in healthcare, manufacturing, public safety, smart urban solutions, and transportation. (Singtel)

See: Previous Asia tech news roundups

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Starbucks wants you to be glued to your phone in its experimental, hi-tech roastery

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Starbucks is trying something new in China, where tomorrow it opens its biggest and most hi-tech store ever. Over two floors, Starbucks’ Shanghai Roastery is the size of a soccer field.

GIF by Tech in Asia, from Alibaba video.

Starbucks wants you to be glued to your phone at this experimental new store. It has partnered with Alibaba, China’s online shopping titan, to make visits interactive.

As soon as someone walks in the door, a page pops up on their phones if they have Alibaba’s Taobao app installed. It shows a map of the huge store:

GIF by Tech in Asia, from Alibaba video.

And the menu of teas and coffees appears too.

GIF by Tech in Asia, from Alibaba video.

Elsewhere in the Roastery – only the second such store outside of Starbucks’ native Seattle – Alibaba has brewed up some augmented reality (AR) wizardry to help visitors understand what’s going on.

You can point your phone at the copper casks to see animations that detail what’s happening to the coffee beans in there.

GIF by Tech in Asia, from Alibaba video.

The AR explainers include the teas on offer as well.

GIF by Tech in Asia, from Alibaba video.

Starbucks is also giving Alibaba users a special Shanghai Roastery photo filter that they can share with buddies over social media.

GIF by Tech in Asia, from Alibaba video.

And this being China, the world’s biggest market for mobile payments, you can of course pay for your drinks and food with your phone – using either Alibaba’s Alipay or Tencent’s messaging app WeChat. That’s the case in any China-based Starbucks.

China is Starbucks’ fastest-growing market, which is why it’s opening a new store there every 15 hours, according to the company. It now has 27,000 locations worldwide – 3,000 of which are in China, with 600 in Shanghai alone.

More hot trends from China:

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Asia tech news roundup – Dec 5

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Actor and broadcaster Shenaz Treasurywala promoting Ola cabs. Photo credit: Ola.

It was all about transportation today, from the arrival of electric car sharing in Singapore, to a high-profile executive departure at Ola. Elsewhere, Google made its first known direct investment in an Indian startup – a digital concierge and delivery service named Dunzo.

Transportation

Sequoia Capital leads Leapmotor’s pre-series A round (China). The Hangzhou-based “green” carmaker raised an undisclosed amount in the round. Its previous backers include Dahua Technology, a Shenzhen-based manufacturer of video surveillance equipment. Two Dahua senior executives co-founded the startup. (China Money Network)

More management departures at Ola (India). Shalabh Seth has resigned as chief executive of the ride-hailing firm’s cab leasing unit less than a year after joining. Ola said he had left to pursue entrepreneurial ambitions. Seth’s departure follows the departures of chief financial officer Rajiv Bansal, chief marketing officer Raghuvesh Sarup, and design head Sunit Singh after similarly short tenures. (Livemint)

Electric car sharing goes live next week (Singapore). Eighty cars will be available to hire from stations in public housing estates, industrial areas, and the city center via BlueSG’s mobile app, which is available for download from today. Users will be able to pick from two price plans – the more expensive one costing about US$0.25 per minute for a minimum of 15 minutes, on top of an US$11 per month fee. BlueSG aims to roll out a total of 1,000 cars in the near future. (Channel NewsAsia)

india city

Chennai. Photo credit: Dr Mithun James

Ofo comes to India (India). The Chinese bike-sharing app is expected to launch its first Indian service in Chennai. Ofo’s entry comes just after local players Ola and Zoomcar announced pilots of their own bike-sharing schemes. (VCCircle)

Ecommerce

Google leads investment of up to US$12 million in Dunzo (India). Existing backers Aspada and Blume Ventures are also joining the round, which will see the US tech giant acquire a minority stake in Bangalore robo-concierge app Dunzo. The deal represents Google’s first known direct investment into an Indian startup. (VCCircle)

Amazon USA ends free shipping (Singapore). The ecommerce company’s Marketplace is not present in Singapore, but since 2013 its US business did offer free shipping to the city-state on orders over US$125. However, Amazon confirmed that this has been permanently scrapped. While no reason has been given, the decision may be linked to the launch of its Prime Now service in Singapore earlier this year. (Mothership)

Photo credit: Mike Seyfang

Media and entertainment

Valuklik merges with Dentsu Aegis (Indonesia). The data-driven performance marketing startup will be rebranded as iProspect Valuklik as part of its merger into global communications firm Dentsu Aegis Network. The deal – the value of which was undisclosed – is expected to close in February next year and represents an exit for seed investor East Ventures. (Dentsu Aegis)

Consumer tech

Xiaomi pricing its IPO at US$50 billion (China). It was reported yesterday that the tech unicorn is planning its stock market listing for as early as next year. Today, more details emerged, with Hong Kong said to be the most likely venue and Xiaomi seeking to raise as much as US$50 billion from the float. (Bloomberg)

Real estate and property

Estate agents charged under short-term rentals laws (Singapore). Two men who work for real estate agency Savills have been charged with renting out a private property to others for under six months. They are thought to have offered the properties through Airbnb, and are among the first individuals to be charged under Singapore’s recently enacted laws targeting short-term rentals. (The Straits Times)

See: Previous Asia tech news roundups

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China’s most addictive news app Toutiao eyes world domination with AI feeds

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Chinese news aggregator Toutiao sucks in daily active users for 74 minutes per day. Photo credit: Antonio Tajuelo.

Despite multibillion-dollar valuations, Chinese tech giants have little presence overseas – excluding investments – especially on the consumer side. Bytedance, a rising Chinese unicorn, does not want to suffer the same fate.

The Beijing-based tech company operates one of the stickiest apps in mainland China. Bytedance estimates that its flagship content aggregator Toutiao hooks in 120 million daily active users, each of whom spends an average of 74 minutes per day inside the platform – more than double that of Snapchat.

This year, the company expanded its focus abroad – mostly through a spree of overseas investments, such as its estimated US$800 million purchase of video-based social app Musical.ly. Bytedance believes it can replicate its success in China by focusing on regions with similar content consumption habits, fast-growing mobile growth – resembling China’s landscape a few years ago – and artificial intelligence.

See: How Chinese startup Musical.ly won the hearts of American teens

“We have identified several key markets that we want to really focus on, [including] Japan, Korea, Brazil, the US, Europe, Southeast Asia, and India,” Liu Zhen, senior vice president at Bytedance, told media at the company’s AI conference last week. Previously, Liu was the head of strategy at Uber China.

In five years, about half of the company’s revenue will come from overseas, she estimated – an ambitious claim given that at present, most of Bytedance’s business comes from mainland China.

Tencent is still king in terms of addictive apps. Its messaging apps WeChat and QQ are ahead of Toutiao, as well as Baidu-backed video streaming app Iqiyi.

Bytedance is somewhat of an anomaly in China’s tech industry. Unlike most startups, the tech firm hasn’t received funding from Alibaba nor Tencent, making it a relatively independent entity in an increasingly binary ecosystem. Its massive content platform, which monetizes through advertising, also challenges established players, such as Tencent’s news products, Tian Tian Kuai Bao and Tencent News.

Bytedance was one of the earliest companies in China to use algorithms to recommend content.

“Before they get rid of you, you need to grow into a player that can’t be overlooked,” says Pheona Chen, investment manager at Autobot Capital Partners, referring to China’s Baidu, Alibaba, and Tencent tech giants. Autobot is a Chinese VC firm that invests in entertainment startups.

Bytedance, she says, managed to pick a vertical and push forward aggressively and quickly scaled up their short-video business. They’re also “one of the earliest companies in China to use algorithms, not simply editors or manpower, to recommend content.”

Ride the mobile wave

At first glance, it’s hard to understand how Toutiao became so popular in China, a country where consumers are spoiled for choice when it comes to news and other kinds of content. In the short video industry, there are dozens of apps. Tencent and Sina Weibo both operate their own news portals. Chinese superapp WeChat also serves up a dizzying variety of news, blogs, and videos.

But Bytedance caught China’s smartphone wave. Between 2011 and 2016, the number of mobile internet users in the country almost doubled from 356 million to 695 million, making up 95 percent of total internet users by 2016. Early on, CEO Zhang Yiming, who founded the company in 2012, anticipated the need for a one-stop shop for mobile content browsing.

“Late 2011 to 2012 [was] when the mobile market in China really took off,” explained Liu. “[When] Yiming took the subway commuting from home to work, he discovered there were [fewer and fewer] newsstands and kiosks in the subway station. People tended to spend more time on their mobiles, reading content.”

Liu Zhen, senior vice president of Bytedance, ex-head of strategy at Uber China. Photo credit: Bytedance

Today, the app does not only include articles aggregated from various news sites, but also blogs, Quora-style question-and-answer posts, short videos, and live streaming. Instead of having to download multiple apps, all users have to do is open Toutiao, which uses machine learning to create customized newsfeeds based on in-app behavior and reading preferences. It’s more of a “you are what you read” than a “you are who your friends are” approach.

“Toutiao gave new internet users something to ‘do’ when their mobile time was still up for grabs,” observed Anu Hariharan, a partner with the Y Combinator Contuity Fund and investor in Toutiao, in a blog post.

“In the years that followed, competition for user share of attention on mobile would drastically increase – the number of mobile apps available in China more than tripled in the three years from 2012 to 2015,” she wrote. “But Toutiao’s early lead meant that, by the time competitors arrived, it already had an important and valuable foothold.”

Toutiao gave new internet users something to ‘do’ when their mobile time was still up for grabs.

Bytedance might be able to catch the same wave in less developed markets, like India and Indonesia, which are both in the company’s line of sight for international expansion. In India, where mobile internet usage was estimated to have reached 420 million in June, Bytedance already has a stake in local news aggregator Dailyhunt. In Indonesia, the company launched Tik Tok, a social app where users share their own music videos, in September.

That being said, the Chinese unicorn will face competition from local companies, such as Singapore-based live streaming app Bigo – though they could also become potential acquisition and investment targets. Bytedance is well-funded by Sequoia Capital and Russian billionaire Yuri Milner, among other investors.

The Chinese startup also runs an ambitious advertising business, though Liu wouldn’t disclose whether the company has hit profitability. “All I can say is that the company is very healthy and well-capitalized,” she replied. Next year, Bytedance aims to hit about US$7.6 billion in advertising revenue.

Toutiao headquaters in Beijing. Photo credit: Tech in Asia.

Scaling short videos

One challenge that content platforms grapple with when they expand to other markets is localization. Bytedance plans to overcome that with short videos, which it believes have more global appeal.

Creating a one-stop solution for content – like Toutiao’s Q&A column, blogs, and Twitter-like posts – may need some customization, especially in linguistically and culturally diverse regions like Indonesia and India. But for short-video products, Liu explained that “it’s easier to make it a global platform.”

A lot of our technology is actually language-independent.

That may be especially true for neighboring countries in Asia, where there is already proof of cross-border traction between Japanese, Korean, and Chinese content, according to the company. “We found out that creators, content, [and] music videos from Japan are actually quite popular in […] China,” pointed out Liu.

Its music video app, Tik Tok, has also seen positive reception across Southeast Asia in countries like Thailand and Vietnam, according to Liu. But the company declined to disclose any figures around user growth.

In more mature markets, Bytedance will rely on niche markets first, such as the tween and teen culture that Musical.ly and Tik Tok target. The North American and European markets have more developed key players, making market entry more challenging, said Liu. And on top of media sites, there are also social platforms that are in the publishing space.

“I think for developed markets, you probably start out with a niche market and a market that’s untapped and expand from there.”

Dual learning

Ma Weiying, head of Toutiao’s AI Lab. Photo credit: Bytedance

Finally, artificial intelligence may give Bytedance a leg up in its overseas ambitions. Specifically, research from its AI Lab will make it possible to take certain AI systems trained on Chinese user data and apply them to other markets.

“A lot of our technology is actually language-independent,” Ma Weiying, head of Toutiao’s AI Lab, told reporters during a group interview at Bytedance’s AI conference. For instance, the way that the company automatically tags and understands videos is done through image and object recognition. In that sense, the company doesn’t need to understand a user’s native language in order to recommend videos based on what they click.

“So the algorithm we train on a huge amount of Chinese people is now suddenly useful and beneficial to other countries,” he explained.

Conversely, Bytedance’s expansion abroad would make Toutiao’s machine translation systems more intelligent. When Ma was still with Microsoft Research Asia, he studied a type of AI technique called dual learning, which makes it possible for a machine translation system to automatically learn from unlabeled data. More data from international users and products would thus make it possible for Bytedance to develop translation for various language pairs.

That’s the power of Toutiao’s content platform, emphasized Ma. If it goes abroad, the lab can plug in big data not only from China but also from around the world, “across languages, across different cultures.”

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Amazon launches full Prime membership in Singapore after ending free US shipping

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Photo credit: jetcityimage / 123RF

Amazon has today launched its membership-based program Amazon Prime in Singapore, marking the US giant’s latest major incursion into the Southeast Asian ecommerce market.

Its debut comes just days after online shoppers in the city-state reported that free shipping from Amazon’s US was no longer available. The ecommerce company’s Marketplace is not present in Singapore, but since 2013 its US business did offer free shipping to the city-state on orders over US$125. Amazon confirmed yesterday that the feature had been permanently scrapped, without offering further explanation.

Amazon is offering Prime membership… for a cut-price of S$2.99 per month for a limited time, after which it will cost S$8.99.

However, the launch of Amazon Prime has introduced a new framework for shipping items from the US site. It may be an indication that a local Marketplace is on its way.

Consumers in the city-state that sign up to Amazon Prime will now be able to access a range of members-only services.

These include faster and cheaper shipping of items purchased through Amazon’s platform. Free two-hour delivery will be available this week for orders of certain items made through Amazon’s Prime Now app that are more than S$40 (US$29.70) in total value. Amazon is also offering unlimited free international shipping on orders above S$60 (US$44.55) in total value on over 5 million items from its US site.

Amazon’s Prime Now service and mobile app launched in Singapore in July to much fanfare, though it faced growing pains – including several failures to make good on its promise to deliver within two hours – and had to fall back on hiring private taxis to fulfill orders at one point.

Amazon’s Singapore fulfillment center, which opened in July with the launch of Prime Now. Photo credit: Tech in Asia

Singaporean Prime members will also be able to stream Amazon’s exclusive catalogue of movies and TV shows through Prime Video, and gaming benefits through Twitch Prime.

As part of a promotional effort, Amazon is offering Prime membership to Singaporeans for a cut-price of S$2.99 (US$2.22) per month for a limited time, after which it will cost S$8.99 (US$6.67) per month. The first 30 days of Prime membership will be free.

Upping the stakes

Prime’s arrival not only ups the stakes in Southeast Asia’s ecommerce market, where Amazon is facing off against Sea’s Shopee, Alibaba-backed Lazada and Tokopedia, and various smaller portals. It also brings Amazon into direct competition with local content streaming players such as iFlix, Hooq, and Viddsee, as well as global rivals like Netflix.

See: Winners and losers in Amazon’s entry into Southeast Asia

Xiaofeng Wang, a senior analyst at market research firm Forrester, says that Amazon needs to play to its strengths to dominate the increasingly saturated Singapore market and tempt back former Prime Now users in the country who were put off by service outages and delivery delays.

“Besides its two-hour delivery promise, consumers in Singapore expect Amazon’s own products like Echo, Kindle, digital books, and so on to be made available to them, access to more products and brands from the US, as well as digital content like games and movies. These are unique offerings that Amazon can provide to the market that its local competitors do not.”

With the arrival of Amazon Prime, Singapore consumers can finally get access to many of these products and services and can potentially get more value when they shop on Prime Now, she says.

“In addition, with the attractive loyalty program offerings and promotions that Amazon is offering, consumers will be willing to give Amazon another shot. Whether Amazon will be able to retain them and turn them into loyal customers will depend on the consistency of its service quality and if Amazon can provide more value to their customers that they are otherwise unable to get from other retailers.”

Converted from Singapore dollar. Rate: US$1 = S$1.35.

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7 rising startups in Japan

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The tap of money flow into Japanese startups seems to be wide open as 2017 winds down. Get the lowdown on earlier-stage Japanese startups that received their seed funding and an investment update on fashion startup AirCloset.

PLEN Robotics

Osaka-based PLEN Robotics is launching PLEN Cube, a carry-size personal robot for all your IoT needs. PLEN Cube’s features include panorama photography, weather and news updates, notification and reminders, and more. Funding for PLEN Cube was originally raised through two crowdfunding sources: Kickstarter and Japanese platform Makuake. PLEN Robotics recently announced a partnership with MX Mobiling that’s aimed at providing AI concierge services to apartments and other accommodation facilities.

The startup just received an undisclosed amount of funding from ABBALab. It plans to use the money to further develop PLEN Cube’s personal service and support functions. 

Minden

Minden is an early-stage electric retail service startup that aims to decentralize the distribution of energy. It provides greater transparency about energy sources and gives customers more freedom to choose where to get their power supply. The company is also developing a sort of shared economy platform where people can create or buy energy.

In its series A, Minden raised US$1.6 million from major players including SMBC VC, Mizuho Capital, Yokohama Capital, and MT Partners. The startup plans to use this funding to develop its PTP platform to connect energy producers with consumers.

Flamingo

Flamingo connects foreigners living in Tokyo with Japanese people who are looking to learn English or one of 36 other languages that the sharing-economy service supports. Aspiring teachers can register through Flamingo’s iOS app, and then students can request a lesson. Prices are set by teachers, and the final rate includes a fee for Flamingo’s handling costs. Over 1,500 users have joined Flamingo, and the company estimates around 200 more people sign up each month. 

Flamingo just raised US$1.5 million  for its Series A from Globis Capital, Global Brain, among others. This round comes after the company secured an undisclosed investment from Mercari, Freakout President Yusuke Sata, former CTO of Nanapi Shuichi Wada, and CEO of Campfire Kazuma Ieiri, last June.

AirCloset

AirCloset, a personal styling fashion subscription startup, just secured a whopping US$8.5 million from Nakazono Holdings. This comes after the company raised its Series B of $US8 million from venture capital firm JAFCO, Terrada, White Kyubin, and Credit Saison, in January 2016.

Air Closet offers three services: AirCloset, AirCloset x ABLE, and pickss. AirCloset is a fashion rental service that sends subscribers three items of clothing chosen by experts that they can rent for as long as they like.  Meanwhile, AirCloset x ABLE is the in-store experience of AirCloset, based in Tokyo’s Omotesando area.  Finally, pickss is an online service launched in October 2017 that gives customers access to a personal stylist, who then sends them five fashion pieces to consider. Customers can choose to buy or return any of those five items. 

For this round of funding, airCloset is working to use AI and data science to strengthen their business. 

Girasol Energy

Girasol, which began at the prestigious University of Tokyo, is developing an solar internet-of-things platform. The technology can detect and locate abnormalities on a single panel via data-gathering sensors and Girasol’s AI engine. By enabling solar energy producers to detect and fix defects earlier, it allows for greater yield.

According toTechCrunch Japan, Girasol recently secured an undisclosed amount of funding from ANRI, as well as the CEO and CFO of PopIn, a University of Tokyo-backed venture. This round comes after Girasol raised venture capital money in October 2017 and got its pre-seed funding in March 2017 from University of Tokyo’s IPC Entrepreneur Support Program

EveEve

Created by Market DriveEveEve is a subscription-based dating app that focuses on safety for its users. To use the app, people must go through a double-review system consisting of the company itself and existing users. EveEve does the first review, and then new joiners must be approved by majority of existing users in order to move forward.

Another unique feature of the service allows users to set up a trial date of sorts with their matches: they can do a call every Friday, between the hours of 9 p.m. to midnight JST. EveEve may have features that are special, but it’s entering a dense market with domestic rivals like PairsTapple.meOmiai, as well as foreign competitors like Tinder

The startup just received approximately US$1.5 million from United Managers Japan Inc., East Ventures, Newton, among others.

Med Plus

Developed by Appdate, Med Plus is a database software designed to digitize medical information and promote the decentralization of healthcare to localities. At present, many medical institutions in Japan are still on analog mode when it comes to sharing information, relying on email, fax, and phones to communicate. 

Med Plus also allows people to search for information about local providers as well as their condition or disease, giving them access to clinics and hospitals better suited to their needs. The beta version of this search engine was recently released to several hospitals in Tokyo, but the technology is still patent pending. They plan to roll out the full version next spring.

The company just raised US$440,000 in its seed round. Investors include Genesia Ventures, other undisclosed public financial institutions.

 

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Cialfo sells consultancy arm to focus on connecting universities and students online

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The Cialfo team

The Cialfo team. Photo credit: Cialfo

Cialfo, a Singaporean startup that has developed a platform for managing school and college admissions, is selling its consulting business to ChangedEdu.

The terms of the deal announced today are not disclosed but the transaction is all in cash, according to Cialfo co-founder and CEO, Rohan Pasari.

Singapore-based ChangedEdu, a platform operator that specializes in mergers and acquisitions in the education space, will merge the business arm into its portfolio brand CollegeWise, which helps guide prospective students to colleges in the US. CollegeWise’s mission and modus operandi are similar to Cialfo’s offline guidance arm, and the deal opens up the US-based service to Singapore students exploring opportunities in US institutes.

ChangedEdu recently announced plans to invest between US$300 million and US$500 million in education-related companies.

Cialfo’s admissions consulting team will go over to CollegeWise. “It brings a lot of pride for our homegrown team to catch the attention of America’s largest college admissions brand, and to now be a part of the Collegewise family,” Pasari tells Tech in Asia.

Cialfo will retain about half its 20-strong team and press on with its software-as-a-service offering, which helps university admissions and counselors manage student applications. It launched this business-facing service in 2016 and currently works with more than 100 clients, with over 10,000 users signed up.

It operates in Southeast Asia, the US, China, and India, where it has partners like Houston-based firm Brightfutures, Indian admissions counselors Red Pen and The Edge, and schools like the Mayo College and the Global Indian International School in Singapore.

“Cialfo has increasingly been focusing on its technology platform,” Pasari says. “We are better positioned to continue to build [it] and scale the operations in key regions – India, China, [and the] US.”

Pasari also hopes the deal with Collegewise will bring “thousands” of potential students to its online service.

Dealing in education

Cialfo was founded in 2012 by Pasari and Stanley Chia, starting out with offline counseling to help Singaporean students find and enroll in US colleges of their choice. The startup raised an undisclosed amount of funding from investors Koh Boon Hwee and Anand Govindaluri in August 2016.

ChangedEdu recently announced plans to invest between US$300 million and US$500 million in education-related companies in the next three to four years, according to The Straits Times. Its last acquisition in Singapore was private schools chain Lorna Winston Schools.

“Asia’s education industry is by far the fastest-growing globally, driven by surging demand from parents, students, and institutions towards a high-quality international education,” said ChangedEdu founder and CEO Brian Rogove in a statement.

“While we will wholly absorb the Cialfo consulting team, we also plan to leverage their tech platform to help thousands of students find the dream college of their choice,” he added.

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Didi’s road to domination

Health2Sync gets $6m to defuse Asia’s ticking diabetes timebomb

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Health2Sync co-founder and CEO Ed Deng. Photo credit: Health2Sync

Health professionals in Asia have become increasingly vocal in recent years about the challenges posed by diabetes, and for good reason.

Asians have a higher genetic risk of developing diabetes than people of European descent, in spite of the latter group’s generally higher incidence of obesity, says the Asian Diabetes Prevention Initiative, an organization backed by the National University of Singapore.

Diabetics face a lifetime of meticulous monitoring: They need to keep close track of their food intake as well as blood sugar levels, which can be regulated in many cases by regular injections of insulin.

It’s a complicated life for patients, but technology can play a positive role in helping them manage their condition. Beyond biotech and medical devices, a number of app-based platforms have emerged to do just that. Diabeto and HealthPlix are just two of the Asia-Pacific startups that are addressing this problem.

Another is Taipei-based Health2Sync, which announced today that it has raised US$6 million in its series B funding round.

Tokyo’s Sompo Holdings, an insurance services provider, led the round. Existing investors such as Alibaba and WI Harper, a China-focused VC firm from the US, also participated.

How it works

The Health2Sync mobile app lets patients to track vitals such as blood glucose levels, blood pressure, and weight, along with factors that influence those readings such as diet, exercise, and medication. It offers analyses, reminders, and educational content that can help them improve the daily management of their condition.

Copyright: <a href='https://www.123rf.com/profile_andreypopov'>andreypopov / 123RF Stock Photo</a>

A diabetes patient testing their blood sugar levels using a meter. Photo credit: andreypopov / 123RF

Moreover, patients’ family members and friends of  can also be connected through the app, allowing them to provide support.

Diabetics have traditionally been coached in managing their condition through regular appointments with care providers. The health worker will look at the patient’s glucose meter or physical logbook, and chat with the patient to understand their behavior and identify opportunities for change.

The artificial intelligence built into Health2Sync means that coaching can happen in real time, allowing diabetes educators to remotely care for a large number of patients simultaneously, Health2Sync co-founder and CEO Ed Deng told Tech in Asia.

Eighty-one percent of users said they gained more knowledge on controlling blood glucose levels.

“Our AI reduces the coaching workload for diabetes educators as it constantly analyzes patient data, summarizes it for patients, and provides timely reminders and interactive educational content corresponding to the condition the patient is experiencing,” he said.

In addition to the patient-focused app, Health2Sync has developed a web-based patient management system for healthcare professionals. Using this, they can monitor patients remotely and engage in online chats with them, while also analyzing and managing patient data.

On the hardware side, the startup also built a smart cable and dongle that patients can use to download readings from their blood glucose monitoring devices.

The Health2Sync mobile app. Photo credit: Health2Sync

With over 196,000 registered users spread across Taiwan, Japan, Hong Kong, and Malaysia, the app has the numbers to demonstrate its efficacy. After using Health2Sync for three months, the average blood glucose of high-risk users decreased 22 percent, indicating ing a significant reduction in their risk of developing diabetes-related complications.

“It can help patients change their behavior for the better and make blood glucose testing meaningful to them,” explained Deng.

In a random survey of 1,400 users that Health2Sync conducted in Taiwan this March, 90 percent reported that the app made them more aware of changes in their blood glucose levels, while 76 percent said they were measuring those levels more consistently after using the app. Eighty-one percent of users said they gained more knowledge on controlling blood glucose levels, with 78 percent reporting better adherence to the guidance they received from care providers and 76 percent reporting better awareness of their diet. Surveys of the app’s users in Hong Kong and Japan returned similar findings.

Working with partners

Health2Sync will use the series B funding to set up operations in Japan, to further develop its data capabilities, and to build features related to its partnerships with insurers – including lead investor Sompo.

The Health2Sync team. Photo credit: Health2Sync

The startup is targeting Japanese expansion since the country’s diabetic population has skyrocketed in recent years, hitting 10 million – or almost 8 percent of the total populace.

Furthermore, its alliance with Sompo points to Health2Sync’s strategy of teaming up with health insurance providers.

“Traditionally, diabetics have been denied health insurance in many countries in Asia. But diabetics comprise 10 percent of the adult population, and many diabetics actually control their blood glucose quite well,” said Deng. “By coupling their insurance product with Health2Sync, insurers are able to take on more, yet manageable, risks. And for diabetics, not only can they buy insurance now, but they can also enjoy rewards and premium discounts for controlling their health well.”

This post Health2Sync gets $6m to defuse Asia’s ticking diabetes timebomb appeared first on Tech in Asia.

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