Tag Archive for 'startups'

Meeting Online this Saturday [Today] @ 3PM

Compared to how things were a few years back, the Startup Community has come together in such a fabulous way. We have OpenCoffee Club meets, Startup Lunches, Startup Saturdays, Mobile Mondays, Barcamps, Ideacamps etc, etc, and the plethora of other activities that organizations such as TiE, NEN, NASSCOM, etc are providing to benefit this same target audience.

All that said, we understand that most of these benefits are enjoyed by those who live in the major cities, and in most cases in the cities down south. There hasnt been much activities going on in cities such as Hyderabad, Pune, Kolkatta, Ahmedabad or any where in Kerala to bring the community together and to share, ask questions, and receive support from one another.

In an attempt to bridge that, we are hosting an online meet this Saturday [today] at 3pm at http://chat.proto.in. Most of you would know how to login, and the process is quite simple. Visit the URL, enter a nickname and you could join in.

If you would be participating, do post a comment to this post, and feel free to ask any questions if you do have any. You are also more than welcome to invite your friends, should they be interested, and ask them to join.

I look forward to seeing you there, if Possible.

PS: The Client is tested to work on an Iphone, and quite beautifully. Also if your phone as an IRC client, you could participate, on the move.

Founders:Stop Hoping for Magic and Start Working

Interesting post at onstartups.com

Stop Waiting For The Magical Startup Fairy

Founders:  Stop Hoping for Magic and Start Working :)

Did I hoped for magic? Yes.

Did you?

Selling to the Unaffordable. Part I

Most enterprises in India look to “more economically viable” markets abroad as their target customers. If you ask them why is it that we are never focused on local demands, and the market that is seemingly so huge and is often quoted to be one of the fastest growing, the response is usually the same: “They Cannot afford this service”. Despite, seemingly valid claims, the stability of an economy depends on diversifying your target markets and India being this large pool of potentially huge market is being eyed by foreign companies as a last hope and last stand for their company stability, all this while we are still looking elsewhere for our hope to shine from.

An average television viewer cannot afford the cost at which shows are produced. A startup cannot afford to get a paid mentor onboard though it might essentially be the secret sauce of success. Most developing countries cannot afford the lifestyle that developed countries take for granted. Most booming economies still cannot afford the price tags of “brands”. Folks in Chennai, bangalore and most of the growin ‘n’ emerging urban centers cannot afford housing within city limits. Most people in rural India cannot afford most of what urban india consumes and produces. If you really think about it, in the economics of transactions, very little is part of the category where people can really afford it. For everything else, there is mastercard :) I wish it was simple as that.. But nope, I can only wish for that.

Continue reading ‘Selling to the Unaffordable. Part I’

Startups + Talent + Lunch = One way to Solve Talent problem.

We at Proto.in have been realizing the need for startups who are looking for talent to hire. We did announce that we’ll do something about this and here it goes:

In most cases, it does seem like there is just a simple need to connect folks with the right people; Startups and the people who are interested in joining them.

I’ve setup a simple template at http://startuplunch.proto.in which should explain the process. It’s quite simple. If you are a startup, put down your name, and the company info. And if you are someone looking to join a startup, jot down your name. If the startups can collaborate and set a date then its to follow a meeting over lunch and see if your interests with the candidate match up.

I am very keen to hear of your suggestions. Feel free to create a new wiki/site should you find the need and just link it up to the section under your city so that people can follow.

Am hoping that this will serve to be self-sustainable so that there is no additional overheads on the already lean finances of the startup.

If you are looking for a job in an interesting startup and would like to meet the founders over lunch sometime, do feel free to register right away.

The Creation of a Sustainable Ecosystem.

This is perhaps a wee bit of eerie timing, as there are posts by Sujai* and quite a few others circulating around the blogosphere with some very serious questions about the Indian entrepreneurship ecosystem. Perhaps its of relevance to go through the basics yet again and what it would take to make this ecosystem mature, robust and something that can even remotely come close to being competitive to the valley.

As an entrepreneur very rightly put it, “A VC is part of the ecosystem, not the entire ecosystem”. Knowing that he is a startup entrepreneur, I am of the opinion that the ecosystem is learning its ropes.

I have always maintained that the main objective of a company is not about funding. Well, those with money and those with access to capital are quite readily available in the ecosystem and in public gatherings, but most of them are there to serve other purposes than to pull out their cheque books and start signing them away - that only happens when there is a bubble in the making, and I really hope and pray that these are not such days. I strongly believe that a sign of a healthy ecosystem is when a company can bootstrap and get to a comfortable market valuation without having to raise money from investors. If the ecosystem is rich and is keen on growing startups, then there will be means to grow traction, gain customers and expand your markets without having to blow too much of money for the same. That is the environment that we should aim for.

A Lot of folks ask then as to why VCs attend all these networking events. Most of them are sincerely looking at deals, but not right away. These events, serve as an initial point of contact for most of these investors, and then through time see how the company grows and validates itself - which is a good alternative for a track record deficient ecosystem. And plus, a VC is probably the most influential person when it comes to word-of-mouth marketing as he sits across various boards and manages his portfolio of companies. There will be opportunities that will arise for partnerships, alliances and perhaps even mergers (fingers crossed).

In a recent post in the proto blog, I have started compiling a list of companies that are effectively leveraging other channels and going after the money that truly matters - making revenues out of customers, and using that as a means to enhance their valuation before they go raise money from a Venture capital firm.

All this might sound as if I am against VC firms, but truth be told, I am not. I do sit on the other side of the table with some VC firms in terms of investment analysis and most of the time the thought that is at the back of our mind is that of backing potential winners. And winners are identified when they come knocking on the door, even better when we go knocking on their doors, trying to raise capital to scale up, not when they need money to assure their mere existence. That’s too much of a risk - no matter where you may see it.

We need to stop comparing the west with what prevails in India. In the west, just acquiring capital, mostly assures that since the ecosystem is quite rich - more big corporations are standing with open doors for alliances, there is enough mentorship pool available, and there is more than enough research and technology at your disposal, an entrepreneur who is even half as smart has a chance of success. It’s not the case in India. It takes real guts and courage to survive a year of operations here.

Let me point you towards some numbers, something that has been shown and pointed at many times in meetings, I would gather: 24,000+ companies are angel funded in the US, and the number of VC funded deals are around 1700+. Take a look at the ratio. Though its not a translation figure, as this are both of the same year, within a three year gap (if we hold that as the time it takes for a seed funded company to raise VC money), the ratio is 24:1. In India, 150 companies get seed funded, and around 50+ of them make it to a VC round. The ratio is 3:1 which is enormous. But we do have this high success ratio (or passing rate) because of the struggle it takes to survive till that point. On a positive note, if you make it through the initial stages, there is a much better chance of you succeeding.

Perhaps the point I am making is that, starting a company - most importantly a product company is very tough in India. And entrepreneurship is no easy journey - it is and was never meant for the faint of heart. We do make certain things a wee bit eeasier at Proto and there are certainly a host of other activities that are going on to make things easier for entrepreneurs, but we wont be seeing such ratios as 24:1 in India anytime soon. If you are an entrepreneur, learn and love to embrace it. What we also forget is that, thats the reason why you still haven’t seen competition from abroad yet. That’s the bright side to it.

There is absolutely no way to fast track this entire ecosystem without also layering it with frailty. The only way this can happen, is if it evolves on its own and thats going to take time.

Note: This post was earlier titled as the Proto Impact. Tweaked it finally for a neutral tone for the sake of a wider audience.

Building a Telecom Equipment Startup from India

Sujai Karampuri sent me his recent piece, Ground realities from a technology product company in India .

Sujai’s company Sloka Telecom is building Wimax base stations, and recently, they have won an important validation in France at Saint Medard en Jalles (5.8 GHz Wimax deployment).

I know that Sujai is pounding the doors of the VCs to get Sloka funded. His frustrations are real, and reflective of the situation and ground realities in India. Continue reading ‘Building a Telecom Equipment Startup from India’