#Asia Eduardo Saverin in $25m funding for insurance and wellness marketplace

//

Rosaline Koo. Photo credit: CXA.

Rosaline Koo made a huge bet with CXA. Not long after she started up the healthcare products marketplace, it acquired Singapore’s third-largest homegrown insurance brokerage, Pan Group. Rosaline injected all her life savings and took out a loan to finance the purchase and build the venture.

It’s now paying off.

CXA today announced it has become a US$100 million company following a US$25 million series B investment, co-led by Facebook co-founder Eduardo Saverin’s B Capital Group and Singapore’s Economic Development Board Investments. Global life and health reinsurance company RGA and Philips Healthcare, maker of data-driven medical devices and disease management programs, also put in some cash.

Rosaline will use the funds to take CXA beyond Singapore and Hong Kong to markets like China, India, Japan, South Korea, Taiwan, Indonesia, Malaysia, the Philippines, and Thailand.

CXA lets employees choose a mix of insurance and wellness benefits that best suits them. So rather than having, say, a US$1,000 one-size-fits-all insurance coverage, which you rarely or never use, you can free up that money and decide where you want to spend it. CXA aggregates all providers in its platform – from insurers to gyms and yoga studios.

Her startup now caters to 500 corporate clients.

Employers can use the service to consolidate their vendors, digitize claims, and manage payments. Using CXA’s big data, they will be able to directly link their wellness and disease management programs to health outcomes and premium reductions.

“We’re bringing evidence-based wellness into the workplace to improve employee health in order to control rising employer healthcare costs,” says Rosaline. “Instead of just offering advice, we actually deliver solutions to companies by aggregating the providers, the data analytics, and the tools. Our goal is to shift the focus of insurance from treatment to prevention and to empower employees to take personal responsibility for their health.”

Rosaline knows the sector inside-out. Before her startup venture, she led Mercer Marsh Benefits, the largest employee benefits brokerage and HR benefits consultancy in Asia Pacific, overseeing a 14-country operation with over 400 staff and growing the business eightfold.

CXA now caters to 500 corporate clients, 45 of which are Fortune 500 companies. It’s reached US$10 million in annual revenue.

The company’s regional expansion includes distribution deals with banks and insurers, who will white-label its platform to cross-sell individual insurance products. It has just piloted its first deal, with more in the works.

See: Raised in a nasty Los Angeles ghetto, this founder now runs a fast growing tech startup

This post Eduardo Saverin in $25m funding for insurance and wellness marketplace appeared first on Tech in Asia.

from Startups – Tech in Asia http://ift.tt/2kQtP8n

#Asia Eduardo Saverin, EDBI join insurtech startup CXA’s US$25M Series B round

//

CXA helps employers unlock wellness in the workplace without spending more, by converting existing benefits dollars into prevention and disease management

Rosaline Chow Koo, Founder and CEO of CXA Group

CXA Group, a Singapore-headquartered insurance technology startup, has raised US$25 million in Series B investment round, co-led by B Capital Group (co-founded by Facebook Co-founder Eduardo Saverin) and EDBI (the VC arm of Singapore Economic Development Board).

The round also saw participation from Royal Philips, a diversified health and well-being company, and RGAx, a subsidiary of Reinsurance Group of America. Existing investors, including NSI Ventures and BioVeda Capital, have also joined the round.

With this, CXA’s total funding raised to date has crossed US$30 million.

The lated capital infusion will help CXA to scale its existing platform and operations beyond Singapore and Hong Kong, to include China, India, Indonesia, Japan, Malaysia, the Philippines, South Korea, Taiwan and Thailand.

Its regional expansion strategy includes scaling CXA’s SaaS platform for distribution to SMEs and individuals via banks and insurers. The company said in a press release that a large insurer has piloted CXA’s white label portal to cross-sell individual insurance and wellness products to its captive base.

Must Read: I don’t want, can not, and have not changed the world by myself: Facebook Co-founder Eduardo Saverin

Founded in late 2013 by Rosaline Chow Koo, CXA provides a ‘next generation’ cloud-based employee benefits platform which integrates a health insurance brokerage solution, flexible benefit wallets, wellness marketplace, and healthcare Big Data — allowing employers to leverage their existing insurance spend to get integrated workplace wellness, flexible benefits and benefits administration.

CXA helps employers unlock wellness in the workplace without spending more, by converting existing benefits dollars into prevention and disease management. Employers use the platform to consolidate all their vendors into a one-stop marketplace — digitising claims, health data and payment flows between employees, companies, insurers and providers. Companies buying their insurance through CXA brokerages get the platform for free, including flexible benefits and workplace wellness administration and data analytics.

Facebook and B-Capital Co-founder Eduardo Saverin

Facebook and B-Capital Co-founder Eduardo Saverin

Employees are given a fixed benefits wallet to choose the most relevant mix of insurance and wellness services from a range of providers to suit their personal needs. 

Saverin, who joins the CXA board, said: “CXA’s unique business model cuts across three out of four of our focus industries, including health and wellness, financial services and consumer services. The CXA platform offers employers and employees an innovative solution that facilitates deeper and more personalised benefits experiences in the workplace, and enables employees to make better financial choices and more informed wellness decisions.”

“We’re bringing evidence-based wellness into the workplace to improve employee health in order to control rising employer healthcare costs,” said Koo “Instead of just offering advice, we actually deliver solutions to companies by aggregating the data analytics and the wellness and disease management providers. Our goal is to shift the focus of insurance from treatment to prevention and to empower employees to take personal responsibility for their health.”

Also Read: Facebook’s Eduardo Saverin invests US$13M in baby products e-tailer Hopscotch

EDBI invests in knowledge and innovation-intensive sectors covering biomedical sciences, ICT, smart & sustainable technology, and select industry clusters under its Strategic Growth Programme. Under BMS, EDBI seeks investment opportunities in digital health, medtech and biopharma. Its previous investments include Shape Security,  Druva, nuTonomy, LogRhythm, RetailNext, Sprinklr, Knewton.

The post Eduardo Saverin, EDBI join insurtech startup CXA’s US$25M Series B round appeared first on e27.

from e27 http://ift.tt/2kpjpfg

#Asia Paktor continues spending spree: acquires two new dating startups

//

It has acquired Brazil’s Groopify and Taiwan’s Goodnight

The dating app by Groopify

Mere weeks after it inked an acquisition deal of American casual dating startup Down, Singaporean dating platform Paktor has announced it’s buying up two new dating startups.

They are: Taiwanese voice-chat dating app Goodnight and Brazil’s Groopify, which operates European- and Latin American-based group dating app called Kickoff.

Founded in 2015, Goodnight and matches people with common interests, after which, they can engage in a voice chat of up to seven minutes. It claims a user base of over 500,000.

Groopify was founded two years earlier. The Kickoff app connects users with potential matches by trawling their friends’ lists for single people. It claims to have accumulated over 250,000 users across 40 cities. It had previously raised €2 million (US$2.13 million) in funding.

The two companies will join forces Down to form a new division called Paktor Labs, a social apps accelerator headed by Colin Hodge, previously CEO and co-founder of Down,

The users from Hodge’s two dating apps DOWN and Sweet, and those from Kickoff and Goodnight, will increase Paktor’s user base by over 7 million, bringing the total number to 20 million users.

By leveraging these new distribution channels and extend dating app offerings, Paktor is seeking to develop the most comprehensive portfolio dating services – online and offline – in Asia, said a press release.

“These 4 dating apps are natural complements to Paktor dating app and their stellar teams have demonstrated impressive organic growth. These transactions are aligned with Paktor Group’s growth strategy and reflect our commitment to provide singles with a broader variety of choices based on their dating preferences and needs,” said Paktor Group CEO Joseph Phua, in an official press statement.

In December last year, Paktor made its first acquisition when it bought a controlling stake in Taiwanese video streaming platform 17 media.

Image Credit: Groopify

 

The post Paktor continues spending spree: acquires two new dating startups appeared first on e27.

from e27 http://ift.tt/2kjYnfv

#Asia Advertising, content and the future of the internet

//

From user experience to monetisation methods, publishers and advertisers need to innovate

There were two contrasting events that played out this year. On one hand, Facebook has been growing its massive user base, as well as advertising revenues, both driven by record high engagements.

On the other hand, Medium.com’s founder Ev Williams declared that advertising doesn’t work for him, laid off a part of this team and pledged to work hard to find alternative models for his platform.

The problem with content today

Content and advertising have come a long way from the beginning of the internet. Internet content was originally available at a premium. Low-cost newspapers commoditised their cost through ad sales.

The quality of the content seemed reasonably high, and the quantity of content generated was far lower than today.

Also Read: Something is broken in mobile advertising; here are the 4 rules to fix it

The internet today probably generates petabytes of content every hour. Almost all of it is supported using advertising, and therein lies the problem. Most content is treated as equal by advertisers who measure and buy impressions. And even though there has been a strong push towards buying audiences, it all boils down to Cost per click (CPC) and cost per thousand views (CPM).

Ad-tech has been failing us

Ads from outbrain and Google from a popular publisher

  • The ad industry has been busy in figuring out how to make more money and has forgotten about user experience.
  • The open RTB spec, which exchanges heavy amount of over a slow web protocol, chokes networks and adds to the additional consumption of petabytes of bandwidth each year.
  • The technology feels like it is decades behind and the UX has not caught up in the age of Facebook Instant Articles.
  • Ad-tech vendors often boast of how better they can bid or buy than their competition, how algorithms can deliver better results and so on. The fact of the matter is that such technology is now a commodity and it has also significantly failed to deliver the promise, except when large user data is available at scale.
  • This is why you see two big companies  — Google and Facebook, both having significant user intent data — being the duopoly of advertising.
  • Mainstream ad-tech players ad zero value to the ecosystem, provide little or no meaningful results beyond rattling off standard ad-tech metrics.
  • Ad platforms also treat all kinds of content as the same, and this is fuelling the growth of fake news and fake content throughout the Internet, spreading misinformation and electing governments on the basis of that misinformation.
  • Such monetisation makes genuine content a commodity, punishes quality publishers and puts them at the same level as the bad quality of content generated by thousands of fake websites and Facebook pages.

Ad-tech companies have invested too much infrastructure and time on supporting the RTB bloat, and with a small slice of revenue there’s has been very little room to navigate or innovate. No wonder we’ve seen dozens of ad tech companies, their IPOs, and their fortunes go bust and value plummet pretty dramatically in the last few years.

The future of content and the internet as we know it

So, what is the future of the Internet and content as we know it today?

The future of Ad-tech is in better user experience. User experience of ads on the content and user engagement with ads is truly important for ad-tech to survive in the long term. Ads can’t suck anymore.

Ad-tech Players need to truly innovate or die. Ad-tech players need to put their big boy pants on and figure out to look beyond standard exchanges and RTB, and learn to truly innovate. It is not enough to just be the middleman anymore.

Owning the user. It has become increasingly important to own the user as well — just ask Facebook and Google. This is why user owned ad-tech plays will become more common — Snapchat, Pinterest and possibly carriers like Verizon and less of players that simply function as middlemen.

Multiple monetisation methods are the way forward. The future of the internet lies in multiple monetisation methods. Services like Patreon will allow users to pay small payments to subscribe for specific content that they like instead of having everything available for free. Increasing paywalls on leading portals are a great way of keeping a certain content restricted.

Affiliate links provide some monetisation through the sale of physical goods, and data generated through these platforms will be used to upsell you other SAS services that you might need.

Also Read: 10 trends that will shape the future of mobile ads and marketing

However, ads based monetisation will continue to be relevant. The conversation is never going to be binary — and not all publishers have the capacity to rethink business models like Medium wants to. Ads will continue to be a subset of monetisation together with micro-payments/subscriptions for content.

Ads will remain relevant for only one reason: Customers will never want to limit their choices and someone will always offer a lower priced/free content access with ads and publishers will be forced to commoditise content in order to meet consumer demands. It’s a behaviour that will probably not change for decades to come.

—-

The views expressed here are of the author’s, and e27 may not necessarily subscribe to them. e27 invites members from Asia’s tech industry and startup community to share their honest opinions and expert knowledge with our readers. If you are interested in sharing your point of view, submit your post here.

Featured Image Copyright: marcinmaslowski / 123RF Stock Photo

The post Advertising, content and the future of the internet appeared first on e27.

from e27 http://ift.tt/2ljgsdF

#Asia Snapdeal’s go-to man for fundraising quits amidst mild investor interest

//

Amidst fundraising troubles and cost-saving measures, Snapdeal’s two senior executives have quit the firm. Abhishek Kumar, who was the head of corporate development and responsible for fundraising, has resigned.

Sandeep Komaravelly, senior vice-president for Snapdeal’s mobile customer-to-customer marketplace Shopo, also resigned in January. Abhishek will be replaced by high-profile recruit Jason Kothari, who was earlier put in change of reviving beleaguered Housing.

See: Why is a turnaround expert joining Snapdeal?

The exits have come after the SoftBank-backed startup said in November that it will shuffle its senior management. The program kicked off with Vishal Chadha, who was overseeing Snapdeal’s seller network. He was re-designated as the head of business, categories, brand alliance, and services. Grabbon co-founder Tony Navin was made senior vice president of partnerships and strategic initiatives, and vice president Anubhav Goyal was given charge of the price analytics team.

Snapdeal’s vice president of design Harish Sivaramakrishnan quit in November to join Google India, while Anand Chandrasekaran, chief product officer, quit in May to join Facebook.

Abhishek, who has been with Snapdeal for close to three years, also oversaw the US$400 million acquisition of FreeCharge in 2015. Shopo, headed by Sandeep – which failed to create any interest in the market – was later merged with Freecharge.

Sandeep is leaving to start his own venture, the company spokesperson said. He joined Snapdeal when the ecommerce startup acquired his group-buying website Grabbon in 2010.

Snapdeal has been in talks recently with existing investor SoftBank to raise money at a valuation of US$3-4 billion, after it failed to do so at an earlier valuation of US$6.5 billion in February last year.

“The last few months have been challenging for Snapdeal with Amazon increasing their marketing spend and gaining market share, and Flipkart trying very hard to retain the leading market share position,” says Satish Meena, analyst at Forrester Research.

See: For Snapdeal, a rebirth and a renewed attack in the ecommerce war

In November, investor SoftBank wrote off a total of US$550 million in two of its largest startup investments in India – Ola and Snapdeal. SoftBank has invested close to US$2 billion in India until now, and the majority of its funds, about US$1.3 billion, has been deployed in Ola and Snapdeal. SoftBank also has investments in hotel booking platform Oyo Rooms, grocery delivery app Grofers, and real estate classifieds player Housing.

In FY16, Snapdeal incurred a loss of US$490 million, higher than US$197 million the previous year.

The company has been struggling to arrest its cash burn and has moved around senior executives internally across Snapdeal, FreeCharge, and logistics arm Vulcan to streamline the company in face of stiff competition from Flipkart and Amazon.

At the end of March, Flipkart had a market share of 37 percent, down from 43 percent in the previous year, while Snapdeal’s market share fell to 15 percent, from 19 percent. The gainer was Amazon, which increased its market share to 24 percent, from 14 percent.

Snapdeal has been dealing with high costs for the past year and has implemented several cost-cutting measures to tackle it. The startup has rolled back discounts to preserve cash.

Interestingly, on Monday its co-founder Kunal Bahl said the startup is set to turn profitable in two years. “We are not in active fund raising mode right now,” the company said in an email response to Tech in Asia.

This post Snapdeal’s go-to man for fundraising quits amidst mild investor interest appeared first on Tech in Asia.

from Startups – Tech in Asia http://ift.tt/2kgXEvr

#Asia 4 rising startups in India – Feb 7 2017

//

rising, startups, travel, pyramid

A closeup of the face of the Great Sphinx with a set of pyramids in Cairo, Egypt. Photo credit: pius99 / 123RF.

A travel portal, a new fund, a phone company, and a hotel solutions provider. Looks like India’s travel boom is getting real, and funds are starting to trickle back in.

TravelTriangle

This Noida-based travel startup lets users book, plan, and curate vacations, and it just raised US$10 million in series B funding from Singapore’s RB Investments.

The Indian startup will put the money towards hiring more employees and adding more services. TravelTriangle aims to serve more than 100 holiday destinations across the world.

Started by IIT grads Sankalp Agarwal, Sanchit Garg, and Prabhat Gupta, the online marketplace connects globetrotters to multiple local travel agents. It not only takes care of tickets and bookings, but also customizes holiday packages depending on client needs.

Stellaris Venture Partners

Early-stage venture fund Stellaris Venture Partners has completed the first close of its US$100 million maiden fund on Monday.

Photo credit: Jeremy Paige.

The fund – run by former Helion Venture Partners executives Ritesh Banglani, Alok Goyal, and Rahul Chowdhri – will focus mostly on series A investments to tech businesses solving India-specific problems.

Focus areas will include local language online services, technology-led financial inclusion, supply chain networks, machine-learning applications, and global software-as-a-service (SaaS) businesses.

iManageMyHotel

iManageMyHotel Technologies, which offers cloud-based property management solutions for mid-sized hotels, raised an undisclosed amount of funding from Jaarvis Accelerator, VC Circle reports.

Founded in 2014, iManageMyHotel’s offers online booking and a central reservation system, a channel manager, and front-desk and restaurant management systems. The software lets hoteliers manage the entire reservation process from different sources, such as online travel agencies, offline travel agents, and corporates, VC Circle reports.

Micromax’s Orbis Capital

India’s biggest home grown mobile phone company, Micromax is to set up an independent fund, called Orbis Capital, to invest in consumer internet companies across the world. The new fund is expected to raise up to US$100 million, the Economic Times says.

The fund will look to invest in 10-12 startups with a ticket size of US$3-5 million each, the paper reported.

This post 4 rising startups in India – Feb 7 2017 appeared first on Tech in Asia.

from Startups – Tech in Asia http://ift.tt/2jXqDIU

#Asia Selling your startup: Architecting a successful acquisition

//

A successful acquisition can be a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity, so it pays to be prepared

2016 was a great year for tech M&A (mergers & acquisitions) – the global deal volume has reached new peaks. The European and US tech ecosystem were marked by transformational mergers and acquisitions, reflecting the maturity of these markets in global technology terms. Tech is eating the world. In 2016, technology companies held each of the top five spots of the world’s most valuable companies. In addition to organic growth, these companies also grew via strategic investments and acquisitions of startups.

Tech is not only eating but also radically changing the traditional business world. Non-tech companies made more than US$125 billion worth of acquisitions in 2016, compared to US$20 million in 2011.  Startups are benefitting from this global trend. The acquisition appetite from tech and non-tech buyers is growing constantly as the advantage of spending money for disruptive technologies outweighs the risk of being disrupted by this technology.

As the Southeast Asian tech ecosystem is maturing continuously and the Series A/B/C rounds grew to multi-million dollar amounts, we will also see more mergers & acquisitions in 2017 and the upcoming years. Buyers from China, US, Europe and Southeast Asia are looking for promising technologies and strategic investments. Golden Gate Ventures expects 250 M&A transactions per year in 2020 – a 500per cent increase from 2015.

Also Read: Managing the many moving parts during acquisitions and exits

But what does it mean for a startup and its founders to sell the company? Stories about 100 million dollar acquisitions, deals closed in the airport-lounge and signed contracts belong to myths spread across entrepreneurs. But M&A is not magic. It is a result of great preparation and in most cases a well executed process on the buyer and seller side.

Selling a business is not easy, and it needs a lot of effort. In most cases, it is more complex that raising funds for your company, although the steps are very similar. It is a one-time chance and should be prepared and executed at its best! A process which lasts between four to nine months requires a highly concentrated and well steered collaboration between sellers, buyers, advisors, former investors, and other parties. During this time and even before, the sellers/founders have to focus on both – the operational business and the sale process – and this requires extra effort by founders and often key employees.

Let’s have a look how a sell-process is structured  and how M&A investment bankers can help to streamline the process, relieve the management from additional work and close the deal successfully. While reading the following process description keep in mind that there are lots of variations on this process but this is a fairly typical example.

Image 1: Example Sell-side M&A process

Great preparation is the key to success

The analysis and preparation phase is time consuming and has the aim to prepare the company for the sale. An in-depth analysis and detailed preparation increases the probability of a positive reaction from potential buyers. This is very similar work to a Due Diligence, which we will describe later.

The investment bankers start with the history and analyse the company’s development, vision, products and services, market and competition, team and management, financials, marketing, KPI’s, and technology aspects. A good advisor also helps you to adjust and reposition aspects which could pop up and threaten the sale or bring up arguments for price reductions, before the buyer approach starts.

Also Read: How to pull-off that magic phrase: M&A

Following the first analysis, the sellers and advisors define a strategy plan, i.e. determine the goals of the transaction, such as deal structure (share deal vs. asset deal), process type (auction process vs. negotiated sale), price expectations, preferred buyer field. But selling a company is different from case to case. If you are not the next Google, a great “equity story” gains in importance, increasing your attractiveness for potential buyers. There are different strategies which make an equity story successful, the positioning can vary, depending on the buyer.

But how do you show what you have to offer? Well, bankers call it Teaser and Information Memorandum (IM). The Teaser is the appetiser. It is used to generate a first interest: It includes basic information about your business, the planned transaction, market and competition, as well as other information.

Buyer approach

The bankers compile a long-list with a potential buyer field and after you agree on buyers you would like to approach, the short-listed buyers will be approached. As selling a business is a very sensitive task and in case of an unsuccessful process it is very likely that you will still remain active in this market, it is very crucial not to spread the information across the market, especially not to your customers, competitors or employees. Why? Rumours circulate very fast.

It is very obvious that, for example, employees who hear about the sell process start getting scared about their jobs. It is not always a positive sign when a company is being sold, so either you inform your employees early in a proper way or keep it confidential. Same for competitors and clients. In many cases it makes sense to approach selected parties, or do a step-by-step approach, starting with the most desired buyer.

The buyer approach should be done indirectly, as far as you do not know your buyer very well. The one time opportunity is too important to approach buyers without a profound knowledge. Furthermore the advisors’ intermediate role positions him as the “good guy” or “bad guy”.  As described above, the process can take up to nine months, and during this period divergent views are expressed. After a successful exit, the sellers remain within the company, at least for a certain period – and it makes much more fun to work with somebody whom you like and vice versa. The advisor leaves after the sale, being a bad or good guy.

After generating a first interest, and signing a non-disclosure agreement (NDA), the IM is distributed to selected parties. The IM includes more information about your business. Depending on the size and complexity of your business, it can contain between 30 and 150 pages of information.

Also Read: Preparing for a merger or acquisition? Here is what you can not afford to ignore

Remember that each process is tailor-made, but following the IM the next logical step is to answer related questions and clarify open issues, so that the buyer will be able to submit an indicative offer based on the information he has received and first discussions with the management.

In some cases, a roadshow with management presentations can make sense, i.e. on-site presentations by the management for the buyers. Selected bidders are invited to participate in further due diligence after the investment banker and seller have reviewed the bids and decide which party will be invited into the VDR (virtual data room).

Due diligence and negotiations

In today’s world, it is not required to be present in a physical data room – especially not when we are talking about tech companies. A virtual data room, which can be set up in dropbox or more sophisticated environment such as Merrill Data site, is accessible 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. The banker and seller can continuously track the activity, limit the access to sensitive documents, manage the rights of several viewers, even restrict the documents to being printed. Specialised providers offer really great tools, but this comes at a price. If you want to go basic, a dropbox data room is easy to setup, although we would not recommend it as you often can draw analytical conclusions how interested the bidder really is and protect your sensitive data.

A data room’s intention is to make your business as transparent as possible to the buyers. Past, present and future prospects are made available to the data room invitees. Financial reports, contracts, agreements, insurance policies, legal documents, strategic papers, technology descriptions, KPI’s, are just some parts of the VDR which we mention here exemplarily.

Different levels of access and a smart management allows to held sensitive data back until final stages of negotiations. Remember, at this stage buyers can still stop the process and gain data which could harm your business. There are certain protection mechanisms, such as break-up fees, but still, paying a relative reasonable fee vs. gaining competitors’ information can be more lucrative in the long-term. Smart advisors will manage the data room and provide the right information at the right time to the parties.

Also Read: Pro bono: Practical legal advice about startup fundraising from lawyer Yingyu Wang

Following the viewing period, the bidders will come up with questions. In many cases, specialised advisors will join the buyer, e.g. tax advisors, market specialists, product experts, lawyers, HR specialists, and each of them will come up with questions. That’s what they are paid for, and therefore easily 500+ questions can be submitted before the buyer will be ready to submit a binding offer. This is a lot of work, considering that you have to run your daily operations while managing the sell process.

After a positive DD outcome, management meetings and clarifying all questions, the buyer should submit his binding offer, also called Share Purchase Agreement (SPA). It’s almost done. After reviewing the bids and agreeing about the conditions, the contracts can be signed and withe the transfer of the money to your account the deal can be closed. The last steps are also very crucial ones. All deal members had spent many months of hard work and each party will try to optmize the SPA to his best, the risk for a deal braker is still very high: Founders who had a dream that it does not make sense to sell the company, the night before the signing, or buyers who decided to acquire a competitor are not just myths.

Conclusion

The secret of a successful exit or fundraising process is a great preparation and of course a great company. Creating and communicating a great investment case, an understandable and plausible business plan, smart negotiations and realistic price expectations increase the probability to successfully find a buyer for your startup.

Selling your company is the culmination of many years of hard work, sacrifice, sweat and is one transformative moment in the founders’ lives. Without being guided throughout the process, the risk of making costly mistakes and missing the one time opportunity is very high. Buyers are mostly skilled at acquisitions and work with deal devoted teams. If you do not have any M&A experience in your team, you should definitely think about external support.

—-

The views expressed here are of the author’s, and e27 may not necessarily subscribe to them. e27 invites members from Asia’s tech industry and startup community to share their honest opinions and expert knowledge with our readers. If you are interested in sharing your point of view, submit your post here.

Featured Image Copyright: rawpixel / 123RF Stock Photo

The post Selling your startup: Architecting a successful acquisition appeared first on e27.

from e27 http://ift.tt/2lerV2u

#Asia TravelTriangle raises $10m ahead of India’s global tourism boom

//

paying-guest-PG-india-traveller-backpack-queen

A still from the movie Queen. Photo credit: Santabanta.

Holiday marketplace TravelTriangle, which lets users book, plan, and curate vacations, just raised US$10 million in series B funding from Singapore’s RB Investments.

The Indian startup will put the money towards hiring more employees and adding more services. TravelTriangle aims to serve more than 100 holiday destinations across the world.

Started by IIT grads Sankalp Agarwal, Sanchit Garg, and Prabhat Gupta, the online marketplace connects a globetrotter to multiple local travel agents. It not only takes care of tickets and bookings, but also customizes holiday packages depending on client needs.

“There are 65 million passport holders in India who are potential travelers. In 2016, only 18 million were traveling outside the country, indicating that the outbound leisure holiday market is in its infancy in India. The outbound leisure market is estimated to be about $10 billion which conservatively set to double by 2020 and will continue to experience secular growth for some time to come,” said Raghav Bahl of Bessemer Venture Partners, which is also an investor.

Launched in October 2011, TravelTriangle gets about 2 million visitors on its website every month and serves travelers from more than 65 countries, the startup claims.

Based in Noida and with a team of about 400 people, it raised US$1.7 million pre-series A in July 2014, followed by a series A round of US$8 million in April 2015.

This post TravelTriangle raises $10m ahead of India’s global tourism boom appeared first on Tech in Asia.

from Startups – Tech in Asia http://ift.tt/2kgKi2D

#Asia Trax gets $19.5 million to push image recognition software that analyses store shelves automatically

//

This brings the Singapore-Israeli startup’s all-time funding to US$97.5 million

Singaporean-Israeli image recognition startup Trax has added another treasure to its chest with $19.5 million in new funding, mostly from lead investor Investec Bank, adding onto the $40 million the company raised over the summer.

Trax offers a groundbreaking technology for retailers, especially supermarkets. It uses image recognition to scan and analyze any product on the shelf, then taking sales data to spit back recommendations on how the store can promote it: change the price, move it to a different part of the shelf, shift it to a different section of the store, etc.

Also Read: Singaporean-Israeli image recognition startup Trax grabs US$40M investment

Its so-called “real-time shelf analysis” takes market data from a number of sources to make decisions. Reasons to change a product’s position in the store’s coolers could be as mundane as the label’s colors blending too easily with a neighboring product. Degrouping them could make them more visible to customers passing by.

Trax was vague about its intentions for the new money, which brings their all-time fundraising to $97.5 million according to the company, saying it would expand its global operations and try to focus on more products belonging to “top-tier retailers.” They already brag about having Procter & Gamble, Nestle, Heineken, and Coca-Cola as clients.

Not the only ones focusing on this market angle, they have competition in companies like Paris-based Planorama, which similarly uses image recognition to match products with data visualization and urges retailers to improve sales efficiency. Perhaps unsurprisingly, global brands Coca-Cola, Heineken, and Nestle are also listed as Planorama clients, alongside Unilever. That shouldn’t make you think those companies are sneaking around on their partners — it’s pretty common for major companies to mix and match services, especially new ones like this, as much as possible.

Following up a large round with a smaller one also isn’t unheard of, but it could be indicative that a startup really wants a specific investor.

“Given Investec’s strong track record in growth capital investments, and its involvement in international wealth management and asset management, Trax is very excited to have Investec join as a shareholder as we prepare for our next phase of global growth and innovation,” said Trax Co-Founder and CEO Joel Bar-El.

Also Read: 25 best fintech events you must attend in 2017

The company is also another prime example of startups setting up in tandem branches in Israel and Singapore. The two ecosystems have been growing closer, highlighted by a $10 million investment from UOB (United Overseas Bank) in Israeli fund OurCrowd early last year.

Trax has its main R&D in Tel Aviv and corporate headquarters in Singapore, with outpost offices set up in different cities around the world like Coca-Cola-central Atlanta.

The original version of this article,Trax gets $19.5 million to push image recognition software that analyzes store shelves automaticallyfirst appeared on Geektime.

Photo courtesy of Gratisography.

The post Trax gets $19.5 million to push image recognition software that analyses store shelves automatically appeared first on e27.

from e27 http://ift.tt/2legY0N

#Asia Some old, some new, all fresh: Echelon Thailand returns to Bangkok May 2017

//

This best enjoyed in pairs to divide and conquer. Also – super early access Echelon Thailand’s digital platform? Who can say no to that?

Echelon has come a long way since our inaugural Thailand conference in 2012. Built just for the busy entrepreneur (with really, no time and energy to be overwhelmed by a thousand-strong crowd at events), the Echelon team strives to retain its relevance in the tech and entrepreneurship landscape. Not an event we’d go to? Not a journey we’d go through? No go.

With an improved approach to addressing the diverse needs of the thousands of entrepreneurs, investors, MNCs, SMEs and government representatives who still crave their annual dose of inspiration, education, connections. Stay tuned to our web-based plans – kickstarting in March – for 2017.

Of course, the two-day conference itself now aims to help you solidify relationships – rather than be your first, awkward touchpoint to your next partner, customer, or employer. Curious? Here we go:

  1. Access exclusive resources
    Exclusive access to the latest developments, insights & resources generated by influencers in Asia’s tech ecosystem.
    Don’t miss: Ecosystem Community & Crowdsourced pages: Business insights on the latest tech news and funding activity, customisable by industry, geography and trend parameters.
  2. Curated Connections
    Capitalise on synergistic opportunities between startups, SMEs and corporations to empower digital economies across Asia.
    Don’t miss: Business Matching: Tap into our Marketplace and tech exhibitors for an array of innovative product and service solutions to level up your business
  3. Promising Talent
    Leverage on the opportunities to reach out to the SEA of aspiring entrepreneurs and tech savvy crowd for recruitment prospects.
    Don’t miss: Accelerate your job search: Graduating student or looking to enter the ecosystem? Put your best personal pitch forward and hundreds of hiring companies across events
  4. Fundraise and Invest
    Find new leads and forge new partnerships with the most effective way to fundraise and invest in and across Asia. Expand your network for fundraising and investments with a one-stop structured networking platform – beyond hype, beyond scale and beyond borders
    Launching soon! TOP100 powered by Echelon Connect: The fundraising platform for Asia’s most promising startups!
  5. Epic 2-day conference
    When was the last time you actually appreciated a conference? Find new leads and forge new partnerships with the most effective way to fundraise and invest in and across Asia.
    Don’t miss: Face time with industry leaders for business insights on the latest tech news, trends and practices this May 15-16 at Centara Grand and Bangkok Convention Centre.

Intrigued? Gain access to above and more the moment you register for your Echelon Thailand access.

Also read: Discover a new spin on Echelon come 2017

Stay tuned to the latest happenings surrounding Echelon Thailand by following our Facebook event and get all the latest details about speakers, partnerships and benefits from the likes of TechStars and 500 Corporates ready to bring you a truly global journey.

Register now for super limited 1-for-1 tickets!

The post Some old, some new, all fresh: Echelon Thailand returns to Bangkok May 2017 appeared first on e27.

from e27 http://ift.tt/2kHyv0A