J.P. Ellis’ Unexpected Journey as a Non-Native Tech Entrepreneur in Indonesia

This article is a part of DailySocial’s Mastermind Series, featuring innovators and leaders in Indonesia’s tech industry sharing their stories and point of view.

John Patrick Ellis, well known in the industry as J. P, is a technology and finance entrepreneur based in Indonesia for the past 15 years. Born in the United States and raised in Asia and Europe, he first came to Indonesia to work in development in 2005 and remains here until today as a fintech founder.

J. P.’s career journey is full of unexpected choices and serendipity. From New York’s legal industry to education and public health work in Flores, associate roles in a regional private equity firm, launching an early location-based messaging application from his Jakarta dining room table in 2012, to helping establish the Indonesian Fintech Association and founding a successful regional fintech company.

With a background in political science, international relations, and languages, J. P. has extensive experience in entrepreneurship, technology and deal-making. In his current role as the CEO of the C88 Financial Technologies group, he oversees a diverse fintech business in the credit decisioning, financial analytics, credit scoring and marketplace lending spaces with over 400 employees in Indonesia, the Philippines, Singapore, Thailand, Australia and China. We caught up with J. P. to discuss his journey, why Indonesia, why fintech and what it’s like to try and succeed as a non-native immigrant here. Half of our discussion was in English, and the other half in his excellent Bahasa Indonesia, where he expresses himself fluently but with a small accent.

When you were young, did you ever dream to start your own business or become a CEO?

I was born in the United States but I spent my childhood moving every few years around Asia and Europe. This experience of movement and change defined my youth, and has made me a very adaptable, resilient and open-minded person.

As a kid, my dream was to be a competitive swimmer. I trained hard and did reasonably well in competition. But around the age of 16, I realized that I wouldn’t quite make it to an Olympic level. So around that time, I decreased my focus on sport and increased my focus on school and study. But a strong work ethic from swim training has remained with me, and has been a big help to me over the years.

From a young age, I always liked thinking about how to solve problems, but it wasn’t until later in life that I realized I could do that as a founder. So I did a lot of things before I became a founder, but the common thread of my career is a focus on problem solving.

You have background study in political sciences and international relations, what is your actual passion and how does it align with your career?

I like to solve problems, and I like to understand how the world works. I think this is what really drives and defines me. In Indonesia, and all over the world, there are so many problems to solve, and solving problems also creates business opportunities. Not all problems are business opportunities, but many of them are. Many of the world’s great companies were founded this way.

I graduated from Columbia University and the typical next step after studying what I did is to earn a Juris Doctor degree from a law school. Many of my friends did this, and I was intending to as well. After graduation, I worked in New York’s law industry in dispute resolution. It was very interesting and I was very good at my job, but I was sitting at a desk all day. I felt like something was missing. So I applied to several programs for development work around the world. I received many offers including one from Princeton-in-Asia, but the most interesting offer was from a Stanford University-affiliated program called ViA to join a project in Flores, in rural eastern Indonesia.

At that time, everything in Flores was very limited. There was no electricity, no mobile phone signal, and no running water. We had to walk through the forest to get to the villages. Perhaps because of this, it was a place of incredible warmth and community. I connected with the Tado people, learned the Manggarai language, and helped bring about some good initiatives in education and public health for the village communities, working with their teachers and their Puskesmas. It was a very fulfilling but also an eye-opening experience.

J.P. Ellis with the district head and ethnic leaders At Rumah Tua Golo Beo Tado, Manggarai Barat, Flores, NTT in 2015
J.P. Ellis with the district head and ethnic leaders At Rumah Tua Golo Beo Tado, Manggarai Barat, Flores, NTT in 2005

After that, I worked for very successful entrepreneurs John and Cynthia Hardy, who sold their international jewelry company to a private equity firm. After the sale, John and Cynthia then asked me to help them transform a bare plot of land in Sibang Kaja, south of Ubud, into what is now the Green School; so I was the first employee there. John and Cynthia are so charismatic and so innovative. It was a real pleasure to be around that enthusiasm and energy every day. Through them, I also met my wife Agatha. She also worked there and we met at the team lunch table. We have now been married for close to 13 years and have two young children.

I then had the opportunity to join a regional private equity firm in Singapore and Jakarta founded by Tom Lembong. It was called Quvat Capital and Principia Management. I learned so much from Tom and really enjoyed working for him, Brata, and the team. I spent a little more than four years there and did a lot of varied projects including company due diligence, deal sourcing and execution, fundraising, investor relations, research, special situation restructuring, and even some trading.

Throughout this time, I was really enjoying being around such smart people and working directly with companies in such a dynamic, fast-moving environment. Even though Jakarta is a megacity in many ways it retains the values of a smaller community; its manners and politenesses. I think my time in rural Indonesian villages definitely helped me understand its capital on a deeper level than if I had come to Jakarta directly from New York, Paris, or San Francisco. I think the lesson is that it’s really important to understand things on both a micro-level as well as macro level. You can’t really know one without the other.

Before your current company and CekAja, you founded Harpoon Mobile, are you willing to share some stories about the company?

From 2011 on, I was convinced that the mobile internet will be a very powerful economic force in Southeast Asia. With hindsight, I can see that I was very early in my actions. But I did not realize that at the time. Plus, after several years in private equity, I felt that I wanted to start and grow a business myself. I like creating things and solving problems, I’m very adaptable, and I like challenge and adventure. In many ways, technology startups are the perfect vehicle to express and experience all of this.

We launched Harpoon Mobile from my dining room table, and our first product release was a location-based iOS and Android application called Harpoen. We later added a complimentary product stack called Mapiary, which was basically a location-based ad-server, in an attempt to monetize better.

My co-founders and I liked that we were trying something original. Back then, many startups in the region were likely to be copycat models. We felt proud that we were trying a new idea. Thankfully, many of our friends in the tech community and its media supported and encouraged us. My co-founders and I actually also represented Indonesia at the World Summit Awards for mobile innovation in Abu Dhabi in early 2013, and we won! It was a cool experience to be recognized for innovation.

But innovation alone isn’t enough. Your first startup, the odds are, you will get a lot of things wrong. And that was true for us. In selecting a location as our service core we were locked into the inflexible mathematics of GPS and the complexity of information saturation. To summarize it briefly, in usual information networks content exists on two axes, typically creator and recency or relevancy. Location introduces the third axis and thus achieving a mathematical density of information is exponentially harder: the world is a big place and no matter how large you make the GPS vectors, there will always be places out of coverage and with old content or no content at all. This is the reason a lot of location services like FourSquare and Highlight were not as successful as everyone predicted back in 2012. In the language of computer science, location-based user content would be described as an algorithm with “exponential complexity.”

In retrospect, even if we had been massively successful and achieved hockey-stick DAUs, the commercial model wouldn’t have worked anyway because ad monetization and CPM are commercially very hard to scale in Indonesia even now, let alone back in 2012.

So, after a year of trying — and a lot of awesome experiences including being the first founder to pitch at the first TechInAsia Summit in Jakarta in 2012 — I met a Toronto, Canada-based advertising company who was planning to commercialize location to enterprise clients. Our Mapiary location ad-server could help their clients like Nike take people on interactive jogs, or Heineken takes people on interactive pub crawls. There were a lot of interesting use cases and they were excited about it, and I felt the technology was more suitable for North America as well, so they ended up acquiring what we had built and I was able to return capital to my seed and angel investors. Overall, it was not a resounding commercial success, but it gave me a lot of grit and experience.

How did you come up with the idea of CekAja?

After Harpoon Mobile, I remained very passionate about startups. At that time, the startup community in Indonesia was still quite small and everyone knew each other. I was thinking a lot about what changes and opportunities would be created by increasing economic digitization, and my close friends Sebastian Togelang and Andy Zain were doing the same. In late 2013, we all came together to found Kejora Ventures. I was the founding entrepreneur-in-residence. I started building my fintech company at the Barito Pacific building in Jakarta, side-by-side with Kejora.

We decided to do something unusual and launched in Jakarta and Manila at the same time. It’s quite unusual to launch a product in two countries simultaneously, but we had deep technical resources and strong co-founders like Stephanie Chung in Manila, so it made sense. Plus, fintech in both markets was equally early in 2013; it wasn’t the case that one market was more advanced than the other. So we felt taking a “two birds with one stone” approach would help us scale faster.

We were definitely one of the first companies in Jakarta and Manila to engage with banks about fintech/bank cooperation models. We hit the ground running and visited every bank boardroom pretty quickly. But what we didn’t appreciate back then was how long it would take banks to adapt and change. Even now, I am still amazed that more banks in this region aren’t doing more digitally. This can partially be explained by residual banking-sector trauma from the ‘98 crisis, and that large institutions have incentives that punish failure more than they reward success, whereas startups are the exact opposite. So asymmetrical incentives are my best explanation when people ask me why the pace of change hasn’t been faster. Change is happening though, and COVID-19 has accelerated it.

In the early days, we also realized quite early on that laws and regulations would need to evolve to support fintech innovation. Starting from 2014, I joined with several other fintech entrepreneurs including Niki Luhur, Karaniya Dharmasaputra, Budi Gandasoebrata, Aldi Hariyopratomo, Ryu Kawano, Alison Jap, and many others to start what has now become the Indonesian FinTech Association. We did similar policy advocacy work in the Philippines, too. This created what I think is the momentum for a lot of fintech regulations and activities that we see today in both of these markets.

Over the years, both the business as well as the Association have grown and matured. In the business now, we have marketplace aggregation, marketplace lending, credit scoring, score aggregation, insurtech, data management solutions, analytics, and credit risk management, and decisioning software available in the cloud and as a license. We partnered with Anton Hariyanto, Sulaeman Liong and Rainier Widjaja for enterprise capabilities and our clients are pretty much every banks in the country.

We have an awesome team, and while of course there have been many setbacks and challenges along the way, we are growing and delivering value to our clients and the industry. And in the Association, we have experienced tremendous growth and now there are hundreds of fintech companies in the country, and clear fintech laws, and incredible engagement with OJK and BI. Because of this, I would say that Indonesia has some of the most innovative and clear fintech laws and policies in the whole world. This is the work of a whole industry and I am so proud to have played a small part in it.

In 2018, C88 Financial Technologies (parent company of CekAja), received a strategic minority investment from global credit scoring company Experian.

You’ve seen the market in some other places, what makes Southeast Asia market different, especially Indonesia?

The region is unique because of its demographics, growth rates, and interest rates. In the region, Indonesia is unique because of its size. The other markets of Southeast Asia each have their own importance, and to be successful regionally there are principles that you must get right to balance the strengths of each market harmoniously versus the weaknesses of others. For example, while Indonesia is large and full of potential, monetization is very difficult and consumers and enterprises are very price sensitive. Other markets may have easier monetization paths, but smaller market sizes and less growth. The best approach for the region therefore creates balance among these elements.

For those who want to start a technology business in the region, I would advise them that the market is fast-moving, and it will remain like this for many years to come. Don’t be intimidated by how fast it moves or think it is “too late” at all. There is now significant internet usage and mobile device penetration, a vibrant venture ecosystem with plenty of capital and professional investors, inspiring leaders and success stories that are locally visible and accessible, there are super apps and also successful exits via both trade sale and IPO, cloud technology is starting to emerge and become viable and this will start to enable SaaS models, laws are clearer, and now COVID-19 has created this massive digitization push. After everyone is vaccinated and the economy opens again, there is clearly going to be an acceleration of tech-enabled business models.

But it’s also important not to start a startup. Instead, start a business. Know your economics, know the path to monetization and profit, focus on doing that well instead of vanity metrics or headline-chasing. It’s sometimes hard to distinguish between these, especially for young founders, and when the media is breathless and boardroom investors demand growth to meet their own portfolio return expectations. But as someone who has done a lot in this space for many years, experiencing both success and failure, I can tell you that you really want to be starting a business and not just a startup.

Entrepreneurship is never easy, especially when you’re not a native. What kind of hardships have you encountered when you first arrived and while building businesses in Indonesia?

Indonesia has been very welcoming to me. It has given me so much and I am thankful for that. I love the work I do every day, the people I work with, and the opportunities we have to solve problems and construct a better industry, a better society, and a more prosperous country.

I think any hardships I have experienced are hardships that any founder experiences: getting to product-market fit, wrestling to be on the right side of unit economics, building a great team and healthy culture, navigating the COVID-19 crisis, and so on. I wouldn’t even call these hardships – this is what being a founder is all about.

In terms of being a foreigner, I honestly don’t even register that anymore. For people who know me well, there is very little friction between my bule self and my Indonesian self. I feel comfortable in both worlds and I like that.

With so much experience in the business, do you still aim for something more in this industry? Have you ever thought of going back to the US for some kind of bottom line?

I’m interested in many things and I feel like I can keep creating new and innovative products and services for many decades to come. There are a lot of things I want to do, and a lot of problems to solve, and new innovations to create.

In fintech specifically, we are still very much at the beginning of the industry. I really believe over the next decade, technology companies will be the ones that harness data, create products, write software, construct analytics, and craft customer experiences to make Indonesian consumers and businesses become universally banked, as well as regionally and globally competitive.

Regarding the United States, I do admit that the country needs to rebuild society and trust and restore its institutions in a post-Trump context. The United States will need energetic and committed people willing to roll up their sleeves and help to do that. I don’t rule out that one day, I might want to go back to play a part in that. But right now, my company, clients, friends, and family need me here in Indonesia and in Southeast Asia. Keep in mind, we also have a significant presence in the Philippines too, and hundreds of employees and a big business there, and there is a lot of opportunity there that I am incredibly excited about too.

About the current pandemic, is there any significant change in your business?

Our clients are banks and financial services institutions. Many were forced to suspend or delay projects and activities due to the pandemic. Even if they didn’t intend to delay things, adapting to work-from-home for such big organizations is a challenge, so many delays are inadvertent. As a business, we have had to be very flexible and adaptive to this reality to ensure we can continue to exceed our client expectations. The good news is that our clients need digital solutions. We anticipate a very encouraging post-vaccine climate for our clients and our business.

Going into 2020, we felt we were as prepared as any company could be for what happened. We have a small executive presence in Beijing, and because of this the executive team and I were aware as early as mid-January of last year that a global pandemic was a possibility. We had scenarios that went all the way up to frightening levels of mortality that thankfully the disease never came close to.
As lockdowns started to happen in the Philippines and Indonesia in March of last year, I gathered the whole company and we laid out a clear strategy of what we were going to do to survive the crisis and ensure business continuity.

We had very specific levels of business continuity, and we sent everyone home to work with clear guidance, policies, and instructions. I also open-sourced our bi-lingual strategy memo and sent it around to many other companies and startups. I wanted what we were doing to respond to COVID-19 to be accessible to others who maybe had uncertainty on whether it would affect them. We thought COVID-19 would create a crisis that would be long and hard and unfortunately, we were right.

Obviously, my team and I were able to make the appropriate changes to the business to put us on a good path. We continue to serve our clients well, are growing profitably, and innovating in our market segments. With vaccines starting to roll-out now, we are beginning to shift to an optimistic mindset for 2022 and beyond. We do feel 2021 will continue to be hard for most of the year, with some improvement towards the second semester.

Something you want to say to those entrepreneurs who wanted to start a business but constrained by pandemic?

I would say It’s never been a better time to start in tech entrepreneurship. Yes, the virus creates challenges but the vaccine is almost here too. Focus on 2022 and beyond. And do not think it’s too late. In technology, it’s never really over because innovation is always innovating versus itself. The code is constantly re-compiling. Yes, it is true that close to 90% of startups fail, but if you focus on building a business instead of a startup, you will already improve your odds of success. Nearly every knowledge you need is accessible and easy to learn. All it takes is the commitment and hard work to do it. I do this, and a lot of my high-performing colleagues and friends do it too. We don’t just magically learn new subjects. Instead, it is a constant effort to stay on top of what is new and be current with technology and the world.

To start a company, you must identify where the big problems are, how do you solve them and how do you turn them into a business. This mindset is something that I spent years learning about and developing. Focus on the problem and the customer, be a learning machine, be both optimistic and realistic at the same time, treat others well, focus on community and you’ll be fine. Indonesia needs more problem-solvers, so you could also argue it is a duty to go out there and solve problems. Kita bisa. Anak bangsa bisa. Saya optimis kok.

Irzan Raditya tentang Masa Depan Industri: AI Berpotensi Memanusiakan Teknologi

Manusia adalah makhluk yang rumit, jikalau sebuah mesin akan menggantikan perannya jelas bukan perkara sederhana. Irzan Raditya menyadari sepenuhnya fakta ini, namun ia tetap percaya bahwa kekuatan teknologi dapat membuat ekosistem manusia menjadi lebih baik. Dia, melalui Kata.ai, memungkinkan teknologi untuk berinteraksi dengan orang-orang dengan cara yang mirip manusia, dengan percakapan AI (Artificial Intelligence).

Perjalanan awal

Sebagai seseorang yang berprivilese untuk mengakses teknologi sejak usia dini, Irzan tidak menyia-nyiakan kesempatan. Ayahnya memegang peran penting dalam tumbuh kembang minatnya pada teknologi. Ia mulai jatuh cinta dengan menggambar sejak sekolah dasar, Paint menjadi pintu gerbang pertamanya dalam dunia komputer. Sekitar usia yang sama, mulai tumbuh keyakinan untuk belajar tentang IT dan menjadi seorang programmer suatu saat nanti.

Bakat bisnisnya sudah terlihat sejak kelas 6 SD. Kegemarannya terhadap video game semakin mempertajam sisi kreatifnya. Menggunakan perangkat yang ada serta pengetahuan teknologi dari rumah, ia berhasil mengumpulkan uang dari membuat game mod untuk teman-temannya. Ketika ia mulai mengenal internet broadband, sekitar akhir SMP dan awal SMA, ia bisa mendalami minatnya terhadap musik dengan menjual bot game [ragnarok]. Semua yang ia lakukan semata-mata otodidak, berkat eksistensi internet.

Perjalanan membangun karir di bidang TI dimulai ketika ia diterima di Hochschule für Technik und Wirtschaft Berlin dalam perjuangan meraih gelar sarjana di bidang Ilmu Komputer. Di tahun 2009, perusahaan teknologi Jerman tidak semarak di AS. Irzan suka menggambar, tetapi dalam hal karier dan bisnis, ia memutuskan untuk mengambil jurusan aplikasi seluler daripada desain grafis.

Dia memanfaatkan waktunya di Jerman dengan mengeksplorasi pengalaman yang berharga, dia menjadi teknisi magang di Zalando (anak perusahaan dari Rocket Internet). Di sinilah ia belajar bahwa pemrograman bukanlah bakat terbaiknya, tetapi dia memiliki kemampuan untuk melihat sesuatu dari perspektif yang berbeda. Ia menemukan banyak sekali pertanyaan tanpa jawaban pasti dan akhirnya dari rasa penasaran itu mempelajari peran/skill dalam manajemen produk, karena Anda bekerja tidak hanya dari segi teknis tetapi juga dari sisi bisnis dan desain.

Sembari mengampu pendidikan, ia berhasil memulai sebuah proyek kecil bernama Amplitweet, sebuah platform bagi para musisi agar musiknya bisa diunduh dengan cara menggunggah tweet dan follow. Dalam upaya pertama, Irzan merasakan bahwa menjadi pendiri solo membutuhkan kerja ekstra, ia kemudian berhenti dan fokus belajar. Namun, selalu ada perasaan gelisah ingin melakukan sesuatu di waktu senggangnya. Lalu terpikir sebuah ide, clothing line untuk para geek yang turut menampilkan ilustrator dari Indonesia, aplikasi ini bernama Cape & Fly. Rencananya sudah matang tetapi eksekusinya belum sempurna. Waktu yang tidak pas serta sempitnya peluang menjadi penghalang. Tidak berhenti di situ. Sekitar tahun 2012, Instagram mulai booming tetapi tidak ada satu platform pun yang menyediakan feed untuk fashion dan belanja. Styyli bisa jadi jawabannya, sayangya mereka bertemu partner yang salah dan produk pun jadi berantakan. Gagal maning.

Meskipun begitu, selalu ada hikmah di balik setiap kegagalan. Saat itu, ia menjabat sebagai Head of Mobile Product di sebuah platform pengiriman makanan di Jerman, ia bertanggung jawab atas lini bisnis di 11 negara dan menerima laporan dari sekitar 10 orang setiap harinya. Bosnya adalah seorang yang pantas menjadi panutan, muda dan ambisius, ia pun termotivasi. Percobaan terakhir Irzan di Jerman adalah Rumah Diaspora, sebuah platform yang menghubungkan orang-orang dari negara asal yang sama yang ingin tinggal bersama. Saat itu, ia berhasil, platform diluncurkan.

Dari perjalanan itu, Irzan belajar tiga hal, (1) Kamu tidak bisa melakukannya sendiri. Dia bekerja dengan Reynir [sekarang CMO Kata.ai] dan belajar banyak hal bersama melalui Styyli. Selain itu, ia menemukan dedikasi dan etos kerja yang baik pada Wahyu Wrehasnaya [sekarang COO Kata.ai] ketika bekerja bersama melalui Rumah Diaspora (2) Memecahkan masalah di tempat yang tepat, inilah alasan ia mendirikan Rumah Diaspora di Jerman. (3) Mulailah dengan apa yang Anda miliki, salah satu alasan kegagalan Styyli adalah karena merek fesyen biasanya digunakan oleh pengguna iOS, sedangkan Irzan memiliki latar berlatar belakang Android. Dengan kata lain, tidak cocok.

Mendirikan perusahaan teknologi

Pada tahun 2015, Irzan memutuskan untuk pulang ke Indonesia dan berhasrat untuk membangun bisnis sendiri. Yang ia dengan, Indonesia adalah negara dengan banyak isu, dan hal itu merupakan surga bagi para pengusaha. Sementara itu, di Eropa, tidak ada cukup masalah. Sebagai wirausahawan, memang tidak seseksi di Indonesia.

Awalnya ia mempelajari pasar di Indonesia. Terinspirasi dari sebuah perusahaan di AS yang menyediakan asisten virtual yang kemudian dipadukan dengan budaya masyarakat Indonesia yang berbasis pada chat serta memegahkan segala sesuatu yang praktis. Akhirnya, ia memutuskan untuk mendirikan YesBoss – sebuah perusahaan yang menawarkan layanan asisten virtual dengan dua Co-founder dari perusahaan sebelumnya, Reynir [Styyli] dan Wahyu [Rumah Diaspora].

“Saya percaya untuk membangun tim co-founder yang kuat, harus ada kepercayaan dan komitmen sebagai pondasi dasar, hal-hal lain bisa dipelajari dan akan berjalan seiring. Itu sebabnya saya bersyukur bisa tetap bertahan bersama Co-Founder saya. ” Kata Irzan.

YessBoss akhirnya mendapatkan eksposur dan berhasil membuat VC mengantre menawarkan term sheet. Salah satu VC di US yang fokus di tahap akhir bahkan bersedia menghubungkan mereka dengan Managing Partner di 500 Startups. Sejak hari pertama, tim kami menyadari bahwa teknologi ini sangat manual. Akan sulit untuk bisa scalable tanpa memiliki kemampuan dalam pembelajaran mesin dan NLP, yang merupakan bagian AI. Kami pun meminta Jim Geovedi untuk menjadi penasihat teknis untuk algoritma NLP. Perusahaan kemudian berhasil mengumpulkan dana dan dalam satu setengah tahun telah mengembangkan sayap ke Filipina [dengan mengakuisisi perusahaan serupa, HeyKuya] dengan total 100 karyawan.

Namun, semuanya tidak berjalan semulus yang direncanakan. Datanglah episode kelam, waktu berlalu dan perusahaan masih tidak dapat menemukan model bisnis yang berkelanjutan.

“Sangat sulit untuk menjadi scalable jika Anda mencoba menjadi segalanya untuk semua orang. Di sisi lain, kami memiliki kewajiban kepada investor dan untuk bisa bertahan. Akibat perubahan model bisnis, kami harus merumahkan 90% karyawan kami. Saat itu keadaan sangat sulit,” kata Irzan.

Anggota tim lainnya bekerja keras untuk mencari solusi, dan masa depan teknologi adalah AI. Pada akhir 2016, perusahaan secara resmi beralih ke bisnis B2B yang menawarkan teknologi percakapan AI untuk korporasi yang dinamai Kata.ai. Pertama kali mereka menjalin kerjasama dengan LINE dan Unilever untuk chatbot. Mereka mulai dengan 10 orang pada saat itu, dan mereka kembali ke 100 orang. Saat ini perusahaan telah mencapai pertumbuhan bisnis 3 kali dalam setahun dan masih terus bertambah.

Kiprah AI yang fenomenal

Irzan mengatakan bahwa pertemuannya dengan AI adalah tidak sengaja. Di Jerman, ia pernah bekerja paruh waktu, salah satunya menjadi agen call center. Dia bekerja sekitar 4-6 bulan untuk perusahaan outsourcing di Inggris dalam menerima keluhan dan pertanyaan. Ia selalu berpikir ini hanya pekerjaan yang berulang yang membuat orang-orang menderita karena teriakan dan tekanan. Kata.ai salah satunya hadir untuk bisa menjadi solusi terbaik dalam masalah semacam ini.

Dia juga menyebutkan, “AI sebenarnya adalah alat, bukan tongkat sihir. Selalu ada pihak yang melihat AI sebagai ancaman, sisi lain yang cukup ekstrim menganggap AI sebagai penyelamat. Saya berada di antara keduanya, dan lagi itu semua kembali kepada kita, sebagai manusia. Secanggih apapun teknologi yang kita miliki, semua akan jadi sia-sia jika kita tidak bisa memanfaatkannya dengan baik.”

AI akan menjadi hal fenomenal seperti internet dan listrik dalam 5-10 tahun mendatang. Setiap hari, kita berinteraksi dengan aplikasi yang didukung AI. Google speech to text, rekomendasi youtube, dan apa yang Kata.ai lakukan dengan percakapan AI melalui chatbot. Setiap produk/perusahaan yang tidak menggunakan AI akan segera tertinggal. Banyak masalah di luar sana yang bisa diselesaikan melalui AI, khususnya di Indonesia. Namun, kita belum cukup mengeksplorasi dan mengekspos lebih jauh tentang hal ini. AI dalam perawatan kesehatan, AI melalui pendidikan, AI bekerjasama dengan pemerintah, AI untuk pengembangan kota pintar. AI memiliki kemampuan untuk memanusiakan teknologi dan membuatnya lebih efektif.

Dari teknologi AI yang luar biasa, menjadi penting untuk mengetahui skenario terburuk yang bisa diakibatkan oleh teknologi yang menyinggung dunia manusia ini. Pertama, ketika Indonesia tertinggal jauh dalam pengadopsian teknologi AI, maka peluang beralih ke pemain lain dan mereka akhirnya memimpin pasar. Kedua, kita berbicara tentang AI yang menyebabkan hilangnya pekerjaan. Manusia memiliki perasaan, mereka selalu menemukan cara dan mencari peluang. Di era disrupsi, berbagai jenis pekerjaan baru ditemukan. Tidak akan ada pekerjaan yang hilang tetapi akan ada peralihan tugas. Menggunakan percakapan AI , tugasnya bisa sangat ‘manusiawi’. Manusia cenderung lupa dan mengira bahwa AI bisa belajar dengan sendirinya. Sementara itu, ada banyak pekerjaan dan kebutuhan tenaga manusia di balik pekerjaan AI yang luar biasa.

Karya kecerdasan buatan telah ditangkap dan disalurkan melalui beberapa media. Misalnya, ada banyak film yang menyoroti karya-karya AI yang luar biasa, beberapa di antaranya memaparkan visi bahwa AI bisa begitu kuat, bisa tumbuh lebih besar dari manusia serta pemikirannya. Irzan mencoba menjelaskan dari sudut pandang pakar AI tentang masalah ini, Kai Fu Li dan Andrew Ng. Dia mengatakan kecerdasan buatan yang digunakan di beberapa film yang dapat melebihi kapasitas manusia disebut AGI (Artificial General Intelligence). Namun, dari status quo sekarang menuju visi yang utopis, kita masih dalam proses mencerna. Deep learning yang ada saat ini masih belum memadai, kurasi sudah baik namun fokus masih terpaku pada satu hal. Meskipun pertumbuhan terjadi secara eksponensial, masih membutuhkan kemampuan kognitif.

Selain AI percakapan dan AGI, teknologi ini memiliki cabang ilmu yang cukup luas. Neuroteknologi, misalnya, adalah disiplin ilmu lain yang cukup diminati Irzan. Ini adalah jenis proses di mana mesin dapat membaca pikiran orang. Penelitian ini masih berlangsung, tetapi idenya sendiri sangat mencengangkan sekaligus menakutkan.


Artikel asli dalam bahasa Inggris, diterjemahkan oleh Kristin Siagian

Irzan Raditya on the Future of Tech: AI Has The Ability to Humanize Technology

Humans are complicated creatures, to say a machine can replace one is obviously not a simple matter. Irzan Raditya is fully aware of this fact, yet he still believes in the power of technology can make a better human ecosystem. He, through Kata.ai, allows technology to interact with people in a human-like way, with conversational AI (Artificial Intelligence).

Early ventures

As one of the privileged kids who have access to technology in early childhood, Raditya did not take it for granted. His father held an important role in the development of his interest in tech matters. Having a crush on drawing since elementary school, Paint was his first gateway to the computer. Around the same age, he gains the conviction to learn about IT and to become a programmer someday.

His flair for business has seen since 6th grade. Being obsessed with video games has sharpened his creative mind. Using all the tools and tech knowledge at home, he was able to collect money from creating some popular game mod for his friends. By the time he was introduced to internet broadband, sometimes around late junior and early high school, he can afford his passion for music by selling game [ragnarok] bot. Everything he did is self-taught, thanks to the internet.

The pursuit of a career in IT began when he entered Hochschule für Technik und Wirtschaft Berlin to get his bachelor’s degree in Computer Science. The year was 2009, German’s tech company was not as blooming as in the US. Raditya loves drawing, but when it comes to career and business, he decided to major in the mobile app instead of graphic design. 

He made the most of his time in Germany by exploring valuable experience, he became an intern Engineer at Zalando (a subsidiary of Rocket Internet). This is where he learned that programming wasn’t his best talent, but he kinda has the ability to see things from a different perspective. He discovered lots of questions without certain answers and finally intrigued with role/skill on product management, as you work not only from the technical view but also the business and design part. 

While busy studying, he managed to start a small project called Amplitweet, for musicians can have their music downloaded by users who tweet and follow. In the first attempt, Raditya gets that being the sole founder requires extra work, he then quit and focused on the study. However, there’s always this itch to keep doing something in his leisure time. Another idea comes to mind, a clothing line for geeks featuring illustrator from Indonesia called Cape&Fly. The plan was perfect but the execution flopped. Bad timing and lack of opportunity had to come in the way. Moving on to the next venture. Around 2012, Instagram started to boom but not a single platform provides people to have feeds for fashion and shopping. Styyli can be the answer, but they met the wrong partner and the product was a mess. Another failed story.

Anyway, there is always a pearl of wisdom behind every failure. At that time, he was the Head of Mobile Product in mobile food delivery in Jerman, in charge of 11 multiple business line countries with around 10 people reporting to him every day. His boss was quite the role model, young and ambitious, and he got motivated. Raditya’s last try in Germany was Rumah Diaspora, a platform that connects people from the same origin country who wants to live together. That time, it worked, it was launched.

From the journey, Raditya learned three things, (1) You cannot do it alone. He was working with Reynir [currently Kata.ai’s CMO] and learn many things together through Styyli. Also, he found dedication and good work ethic in Wahyu Wrehasnaya [currently Kata.ai’s COO] while trying to make things worked with Rumah Diaspora (2) Solve the problem in the right proximity, this is the reason he created Rumah Diaspora in Germany. (3) Start with what you have, one of the reasons for Styyli’s failure is because the fashion brand usually used by iOS users, while Raditya has a background in Android. In other words, It’s not a match.

Building a tech company

In 2015, Raditya decided to come home to Indonesia and exercised his passion to build his own business. He also heard that Indonesia is a country with lots of problems, it’s a paradise for entrepreneurs. Meanwhile, there are not as many problems in Europe. As an entrepreneur, it’s not as sexy as in Indonesia. 

At first, he studied the market in Indonesia. Inspired by a company in the US that provides virtual assistants, combined with the culture of Indonesian people that is chat-based and craving for anything practical. Eventually, he decided to create YesBoss – a company that offers virtual assistant services with two Co-founders from his previous companies, Reynir [Styyli] and Wahyu [Rumah Diaspora].

“I believe to building a strong co-founding team, there must be trust and commitment as the basic foundation, other things can be learned and will follow. That’s why I’ve been thankful to be able to stick with my Co-Founders.” Irzan said.

YessBoss finally gained exposure and have VCs lining up with term sheet. One of US’ VC for late-stage even does the favor to connect them with 500 startups’ Managing Partner. Since the first day, our team aware that this technology is not quite automatic. This will never be scalable without having the capability in machine learning and NLP, which is the AI part. We requested Jim Geovedi to be the tech advisor for the NLP algorithm. The company managed to raise funding and within a year and a half has expanded to the Philippines [by acquiring a similar company, HeyKuya] with 100 employees in total. 

However, things didn’t go as smoothly as planned. Here comes the dark episode, time passed and the company still can’t find a sustainable business model.

“It was very hard to scale if you tried to be everything for everyone. On the other side, we have an obligation to investors and to survive. As a result of changing business models, we have to lay off 90% of our employees. It was devastating,” Raditya said.

The rest of the team worked hard to figure out the solution, and the future is AI. In late 2016, the company officially pivots into a B2B business that offers conversational AI technology for corporations named Kata.ai. The first time they were approached by LINE and Unilever for a chatbot. They start with 10 people at that time, and they’re back to 100 people. Currently, the company has reached business growth 3 times a year and still counting.

The remarkable works of AI

Raditya said that he came across AI by accident. He used to do part-time jobs in Germany, one of which is becoming a call center agent. He was working around 4-6 months for an outsourcing company in England to receive complaints and inquiries. He thought this is just repetitive work and people are suffering from the shouting and pressure. Kata.ai can be the best solution for this kind of problem.

He also mentioned, “AI is actually a tool, it’s not a magic wand. There is always a side that sees AI as a threat, another side is quite extreme, considering AI as a savior. I’m somewhere in between, and it goes back to us, to people. With every kind of technology in our hand, if we can’t make it useful, it’ll just go up in smoke.”

AI will be the biggest thing just like the internet and electricity in the next 5-10 years. Every day, we interact with AI-powered apps. Google speech to text, youtube recommendation, and what Kata.ai’s been doing with conversational AI through the chatbot. Every product/company that didn’t use AI will soon be left behind. Many problems out there can be solved through AI, especially in Indonesia. The thing is, we are yet to explore and expose further on this. AI in healthcare, AI through education, AI featuring the government, AI for the smart city. AI has the ability to humanize technology and make it more seamless.

From the remarkable works of AI, it’s necessary to know the worst scenario of this thing that can affect the human world. First, when Indonesia far left in the adoption of AI technology, therefore, the opportunity goes to other players and they ended up leading the market. Second, we’re talking about AI to cost some job losses. People have compassion, they always find ways and look for opportunities. In the age of disruption, different kinds of new jobs are founded. There wouldn’t be any job lost but there will be a shift of task. Using conversational AI, the task can be quite high-touch works. People tend to forget and thought that AI can learn by itself. Meanwhile, there is a lot of work and the need for human labor behind AI’s remarkable work. 

The work of Artificial intelligence has been captured and channeled through some medium. For example, there are many films highlighting the remarkable works of AI, some of those are giving a vision that AI can be so powerful, it can outgrow the human as its brain. Raditya tried to explain from the AI experts’ view on this matter, Kai Fu Li and Andrew Ng. He said the artificial intelligence used in some of the movies that can outgrow the human capacity is called AGI (Artificial General Intelligence). However, from the present status quo towards the utopist vision, we still digest away. The current deep learning is yet to be sufficient, it performs good curation but still focuses only on a specific task.  With exponential growth, it still lacks the cognitive capability.

Aside from conversational AI and AGI, this technology has quite a large branch of science. Neurotechnology, for example, is another discipline that Raditya quite has an interest in. It is the kind of process where machines can read people’s minds. The research is still ongoing, but the idea is breathtaking and frightening at the same time.

Perluas Cakupan Pasar, Xendit Gencarkan Pengembangan Fitur Baru

Pergeseran perilaku masyarakat ke arah digital mendorong Xendit, startup fintech yang menyediakan infrastruktur pembayaran asal Indonesia, untuk menambah saluran pembayaran digital menggandeng ShopeePay.

Integrasi ini diharapkan bisa menjangkau lebih banyak merchant rekanan Xendit dari berbagai lini bisnis serta para pelanggan setianya untuk mengakselerasi adopsi pembayaran digital.

“Dengan bertambahnya saluran pembayaran yang bisa kami sediakan untuk merchant saat ini. Kami harap ini bisa melengkapi ekosistem pembayaran serta membantu ShopeePay berkembang, juga mitra merchant kami ke depannya,” ujar Mikiko Steven Head of Customer Solutions Xendit.

Di masa pandemi ini, tren belanja masyarakat sudah mulai beradaptasi dengan marketplace daring serta pembayaran secara digital. Dari data Xendit sendiri mencatat kenaikan signifikan pada jumlah transaksi secara digital di bulan April-September 2020 sekitar 3x lipat.

Survei MarkPlus memperlihatkan ShopeePay sebagai aplikasi uang elektronik yang paling populer di Indonesia selama pandemi. Lebih jauh dipaparkan, ShopeePay unggul dengan pangsa pasar sebesar 26% dari total volume transaksi uang elektronik di Indonesia. Kemudian disusul Ovo (24%), Gopay (23%), Dana (19%), dan LinkAja (8%).

Head of Strategic Merchant Acquisition ShopeePay Eka Nilam Dari turut menyampaikan, “Dengan adanya kolaborasi strategis antara ShopeePay dan Xendit, kami berharap bisa membuka peluang yang lebih besar lagi baik untuk kedua belah pihak, juga para mitra usaha untuk semakin mendorong inklusi keuangan melalui pembayaran digital.”

Para pelaku digital yang saat ini berada di bawah naungan Xendit memiliki kesempatan untuk menjangkau lebih luas lagi para pengguna ShopeePay di tengah situasi yang sulit. Saat ini, lebih dari 100 merchant Xendit sudah mulai terintegrasi dengan kanal ShopeePay dan menambah use case baru ke dalam ShopeePay termasuk IT, Saas, Travel & Hotel Booking Platform, Education, Beauty, NPO dan Donation platform.

Kembangkan inisiatif baru

Belum lama ini, Xendit juga telah meresmikan kehadirannya di pasar Filipina. Peluncuran yang dilakukan secara virtual pada tanggal 4 Desember 2020 tersebut diharapkan bisa mendorong peningkatan transaksi digital bisnis di Filipina melalui pembangunan infrastruktur digital, juga mengukuhkan Xendit sebagai payment gateway terbaik di Asia Tenggara.

Sejak beroperasi di tahun 2017, Xendit telah memproses US$1,5M transaksi, setara dengan 20 triliun per tahunnya. Selain fitur pembayaran utama, Xendit turut mengembangkan layanan tambahan untuk pemenuhan pajak serta penyediaan modal tambahan bagi merchant melalui XenTax dan XenCapital.

XenTax merupakan produk yang dibuat oleh Xendit untuk menyederhanakan proses klien dalam mengelola pajak, sehingga mereka dapat fokus pada bisnis mereka dan mendorong pertumbuhan. Untuk menyediakan layanan ini, Xendit terkoneksi dengan salah satu Bank Persepsi dan PJAP (Penyedia Jasa Aplikasi Perpajakan) yang telah berizin dan resmi bermitra dengan DJP.

Untuk XenCapital, Xendit bekerja secara eksklusif dengan mitra yang memiliki lisensi dari OJK di MultiFinance untuk menyediakan modal bagi produk pinjamannya. Limit untuk setiap merchant yang mengajukan produk ini akan berbeda tergantung pada review penilaian kredit dari tim evaluasi. Semua produk Xendit tersedia untuk merchant yang sudah terdaftar dan terintegrasi.

“Rangkaian layanan Xendit dirancang untuk membuat pembayaran menjadi sederhana, aman, dan mudah bagi pelanggan sekaligus memungkinkan bisnis tumbuh secara eksponensial. Sebagai platform yang berakar kuat di Asia Tenggara, kami terus mendengarkan untuk lebih mengenali kebutuhan dan keinginan spesifik dari setiap bisnis di pasar,” ujar Moses Lo, CEO & Founder Xendit Group pada kesempatan berbeda.

Saat ini Xendit sudah memiliki total tim lebih dari 300 orang yang berkantor pusat di kawasan Senopati, Jakarta Selatan. “Tujuan kami adalah untuk lebih agresif dalam menemukan solusi serta apa yang dapat kami bantu sementara sebagian besar dunia berpikir untuk menyerah,” tambahnya.

On Lee dari GDP Membahas Potensi AI dalam Industri Teknologi Tanah Air

Artikel ini adalah bagian dari Seri Mastermind DailySocial yang menampilkan para inovator dan pemimpin di industri teknologi Indonesia untuk berbagi cerita dan sudut pandang.

Menghabiskan hampir lebih dari tiga puluh tahun di negeri orang, CEO & CTO GDP Labs juga sebagai CTO GDP Venture, On Lee akhirnya kembali ke Indonesia pada tahun 2011. Dalam kurun waktu 10 tahun, ia berhasil mengembangkan GDP Venture dan membangun GDP Labs dari awal berbekal pengalaman matang hasil merantau. Selain itu, ia sebelumnya menjabat sebagai CEO & CTO Kaskus, forum komunitas online Indonesia terbesar di Indonesia.

Dengan lebih dari 30 tahun pengalaman dalam dunia internet, seluler, AI, Blockchain, Semantic Web, Knowledge Graph, pengembangan perangkat lunak konsumen dan perusahaan, ia telah memegang berbagai posisi manajemen dan teknis sebagai salah satu pendiri, CEO, CTO, Wakil Presiden Eksekutif Teknik, dan teknisi di perusahaan startup dan Fortune 500 di AS.

On Lee sangat tertarik dengan inovasi Artificial Intelligence. Beliau sempat mengampu jurusan teknik elektro sebelum akhirnya beralih jurusan ke ilmu komputer. Keyakinannya pada industri teknologi Indonesia dan teknisi lokal telah memberinya inspirasi untuk mendirikan GDP Labs. Dari tahun 2012 hingga saat ini, GDP Labs telah mempekerjakan 160 orang [kebanyakan insinyur] di lima kota di Indonesia, Jakarta, Bandung, Bali, Yogyakarta, dan Surabaya.

Melalui GDP Venture, sebagai venture builder, dengan fokus pada komunitas digital, media, perdagangan, dan perusahaan solusi di industri internet konsumen Indonesia. Mereka telah berinvestasi di lebih dari 50 portofolio dan masih terus bertambah. Selain itu, ia telah membangun tim untuk memulai produk baru yang strategis di perusahaan rintisan dan perusahaan besar di AS, Indonesia, Cina, dan India.

DailySocial berhasil mendapat waktu beliau untuk berbagi cerita penuh wawasan sepanjang perjalanan entrepreneurship-nya.

Sebagai CTO GDP Ventures, juga CEO & CTO GDP Labs, menurut Anda apakah industri teknologi Indonesia berpotensi untuk membangun pusat global untuk teknologi tinggi dan inovasi atau menjadi sebuah hub?

Pastinya. Teknologi digital dan AI mewakili peluang emas bagi Indonesia, dengan populasi yang relatif muda dan bersemangat lebih dari 260 juta orang. Negara ini menawarkan usia rata-rata produktif 30 tahun dan tingkat literasi 95 persen. Ekosistem start-up digital Indonesia sudah prima dan siap mengikuti jejak negara-negara Asia lainnya seperti Jepang, India, Taiwan, Korea, dan China yang telah berhasil mentransformasi negaranya melalui teknologi. Mereka telah secara signifikan meningkatkan keterampilan individu, standar hidup, dan produktivitas serta telah diakui sebagai pemain global utama di dunia. Pemerintah Indonesia memiliki banyak inisiatif teknologi; kebanyakan universitas menawarkan kelas ilmu komputer; dan investor lokal dan asing berinvestasi besar-besaran dalam ekonomi digital, dan semua hal ini meningkat selama pandemi.

Setelah sekian lama merantau, hampir tiga puluh tahun menggali ilmu di negeri Paman Sam. Apa yang mendorong Anda kembali ke Indonesia dan memulai GDP Labs? Apa yang menjadi mimpi Anda?

Saya kembali ke Indonesia karena alasan keluarga. Orang tua kami semakin tua, dan kami perlu merawat mereka.

Saya kemudian menemukan banyak talenta teknisi perangkat lunak yang hebat tetapi masih mentah di Indonesia. Banyak dari mereka tidak memiliki kesempatan untuk menerima pelatihan yang tepat, bimbingan, dll. Pak Martin Hartono, CEO di GDP Venture, dan saya membina beberapa pemimpin muda yang paling cemerlang dan paling menjanjikan yang akan menjadi ahli teknologi dan berpengetahuan luas dalam bisnis dan kepemimpinan di GDP Labs. Upaya kami menunjukkan hasil awal yang menjanjikan.

On Lee at GDP Labs Team Building 2018 with Martin Hartono
On Lee dalam acara GDP Labs Team Building 2018 bersama Martin Hartono

Kapan pertama kali Anda mengecap industri teknologi? Apakah hal ini memang menjadi passion Anda?

Awalnya saya mengambil jurusan teknik elektro, sebelum kemudian beralih ke jurusan ilmu komputer dengan minor dalam matematika.

Salah satu hobi saya adalah bermain catur. Dulu saya sempat menjadi pemain catur profesional. Saya tertarik pada ilmu komputer, matematika, dan catur karena keduanya memiliki dua kesamaan: logika dan pemecahan masalah. Hal ini membantu meningkatkan hidup saya secara pribadi dan profesional.

on lee 9
On Lee sedang bermain catur secara simultan dengan 2 orang teknisinya

Saya sempat membaca beberapa artikel Anda terkait Artificial Intelligence (AI). Apa yang menjadi alasan Anda percaya bahwa teknologi dapat menjadi solusi bagi seluruh masalah di dunia?

McKinsey memprediksi AI memiliki potensi untuk menambah aktivitas ekonomi global sekitar USD13 triliun pada tahun 2030. Betul sekali, besarnya USD13 triliun. Beberapa ahli mengatakan bahwa AI sama pentingnya dengan penemuan api dan listrik. Meskipun itu mungkin tampak berlebihan, intinya adalah bahwa AI akan menjadi salah satu teknologi terpenting yang pernah ditemukan manusia, meninggalkan dampak pada masyarakat dan bisnis dengan cara yang sangat mendalam. Kemungkinan besar akan memiliki kelasnya sendiri. Hal ini akan menjadi bagian dari kehidupan pribadi kita, di hampir semua industri. AI akan membantu mempercepat pemulihan dan pertumbuhan ekonomi global serta memposisikan Indonesia dengan baik untuk masa depan dunia baru di hadapan kita.

2020 bukanlah situasi yang ideal bagi semua orang, namun apakah Anda yakin bahwa industri teknologi tanah air berperan penting dalam pemulihan kondisi negara ini?

Tahun 2020 menjadi sulit bagi semua orang karena pandemi yang menyebabkan kebangkrutan, pengangguran, dan masalah sosial. Selain mengurangi biaya, meningkatkan produktivitas dan kenyamanan, teknologi akan membantu kita menjadi lebih aman dan sehat. Hal ini akan turut membantu mempercepat pemulihan ekonomi.

Bagaimana dengan GDP Venture dan GDP Labs sendiri? Apakah situasi ini mempengaruhi kinerja perusahaan secara signifikan?

Tentunya, tidak ada yang kebal. Kami telah meminta perusahaan kami untuk merevisi rencana tahun 2020 mereka tentang bagaimana bertahan dalam jangka pendek dan berkembang dalam jangka panjang. Pandemi ini bisa diibaratkan seperti kaca pembesar dan akselerator. Ia menyoroti apa yang telah Anda lakukan dengan benar tetapi juga apa yang telah Anda lakukan salah. Kami telah memilih untuk mempercepat beberapa inisiatif. Singkatnya, kami mencoba beradaptasi.

Dalam hal investasi, apakah menurut Anda Indonesia sudah memiliki iklim yang bagus untuk industri teknologinya? Apakah Anda melihat perubahan pada lanskap investasi sebelum dan sesudah pandemi?

Iya. Kami mendapat dukungan pemerintah yang cukup baik. Universitas menghasilkan banyak teknisi perangkat lunak setiap tahunnya, dan terdapat hampir 200 juta pengguna Internet di Indonesia, pengusaha, investor lokal dan asing.

Pandemi adalah salah satu bentuk peringatan yang baik. Startup fokus pada apa yang paling penting untuk bertahan dan berkembang, penilaian dan ekspektasi perusahaan menjadi lebih realistis. Ini adalah pengalaman yang mengajarkan banyak hal.

Beberapa portofolio GDP

Sebagai serial entrepreneur dengan pengalaman lebih dari 30 tahun dalam dunia teknologi, Anda pasti pernah ditempatkan dalam situasi yang sulit sebelumnya. Apakah Anda berkenan berbagi kisah jatuh bangun membangun perusahaan? Serta bagaimana Anda berhasil melewati masa-masa sulit itu?

Benar. Waktu dan keberuntungan memainkan peran besar dalam keberhasilan atau kegagalan perusahaan mapan dan startup. Salah satu perusahaan rintisan tempat saya bekerja berada di jalur yang tepat untuk mencapai valuasi miliaran dolar di Silicon Valley. Sayangnya, resesi 2008 melanda AS serta perkara hutang teknis. Perusahaan itu dijual dengan harga lebih rendah dari ekspektasi kami meskipun kami masih mendapat untung.

Apakah Anda memiliki sosok panutan (mentor) untuk melewati masa-masa sulit? Mungkin semacam support system.

Pastinya. Saya beruntung mendapat bantuan dari banyak orang – teman, keluarga, pembimbing, rekan kerja, guru, dan bahkan orang asing.

Setiap orang akan memiliki titik terendah dalam hidup mereka. Mereka membutuhkan support system untuk melewati kesulitan. Saya belum melihat ada orang yang berhasil melakukannya sendiri.

Siapa yang menginspirasi Anda hingga seperti saat ini? Apakah Anda masih punya mimpi yang belum tercapai?

Banyak orang – ahli teknologi, ilmuwan, olahragawan, seniman – menginspirasi saya. Mereka memiliki karakteristik sebagai berikut: mereka terus-menerus belajar untuk dapat memiliki pengetahuan yang lebih luas dalam kepemimpinan, bisnis, dan pemimpin dalam domain masing-masing.

Saya percaya, adalah hal yang penting untuk membantu generasi muda karena banyak orang membantu dan memberi saya kesempatan ketika saya masih muda dan belum berpengalaman. Ada begitu banyak peluang untuk mendisrupsi banyak bidang dengan menggunakan teknologi, sementara beberapa perusahaan mapan masih menggunakan teknologi abad ke-20. Tetaplah sehat.

Apa yang ingin Anda sampaikan pada para tech enthusiast yang masih berjuang menapaki jalan menuju industri namun terhadang oleh pandemi?

Kejelasan. Kepercayaan. Keyakinan. Memiliki kejelasan tentang apa yang ingin Anda lakukan. Jalankan dengan kepercayaan dan keyakinan tanpa henti. Ada peluang tersembunyi selama pandemi.

Artificial Intelligence disebut akan menggantikan pekerjaan manusia. Sebagai seorang individu, pernahkah Anda memikirkan tentang skenario terburuk yang bisa diakibatkan oleh teknologi ini?

AI akan menggantikan beberapa pekerjaan yang ada. Tapi, itu juga akan menciptakan jenis pekerjaan baru; lebih dari itu menghilangkan. Mari kita lihat dua skenario berikut.

Pertama, industri mobil menggantikan industri kuda. Ada lebih dari 1,4 miliar mobil dan hanya ada 58 juta kuda di dunia sekarang. Industri mobil – produksi, layanan, mobilitas yang baru ditemukan, dll. – telah menciptakan lebih banyak pekerjaan daripada yang dihilangkan dari industri kuda.

Kedua, ada perusahaan yang mengimplementasikan robot bertenaga AI di gudang mereka. Banyak karyawan yang khawatir akan kehilangan pekerjaan. Ternyata perusahaan mempekerjakan lebih banyak orang karena robot. Ini mungkin tampak kontra-intuitif. Mengapa? Karena robot efisien dan bekerja 24 jam sehari sehingga menghasilkan lebih banyak; manusia menjadi penghambat dan lebih banyak manusia perlu disewa untuk mengimbangi robot. Meskipun robot dapat melakukan tugas tertentu, mereka tidak dapat melakukan segala hal.

Manusia akan bebas melakukan pekerjaan yang lebih kreatif, sementara teknologi dan AI menangani pekerjaan mekanis. Selain itu, teknologi dan AI membebaskan sebagian waktu umat manusia sehingga kita dapat menghabiskan waktu kita dengan orang lain.

Singkatnya, AI meningkatkan kreativitas manusia dan pada akhirnya menjadikan kita lebih manusiawi.


Artikel asli dalam bahasa Inggris, diterjemahkan oleh Kristin Siagian

Moodah Kembangkan Aplikasi Catatan Keuangan, Targetkan UKM yang Terdampak Pandemi

Angka konfirmasi kasus positif Covid-19 di Indonesia yang semakin meningkat menunjukkan bahwa belum ada tanda-tanda negara ini akan bebas dari belenggu virus tersebut. Hal ini berpotensi membawa sektor UKM semakin terpuruk jika tidak mulai beradaptasi dengan perubahan yang ada. Salah satu solusi yang saat ini banyak ditawarkan untuk membantu adaptasi para penggiat UKM ini adalah aplikasi pencatatan keuangan.

Salah satu aplikasi yang belum lama ini meluncur adalah Moodah. Arini Astari, selaku Co-Founder menyampaikan fakta terkait 78% UKM yang bangkrut di tahun pertama adalah karena mayoritas mereka masih unbankable, serta keuangan usaha dan rumah tangga yang tidak tertata rapi. Jadi meskipun penjualan terlihat bagus, penghasilan yang didapat tidak transparan.

“Dengan background kami para founders yang datang dari ERP consultant, kami percaya kami dapat menggunakan solusi-solusi yang sebelumnya kami kembangkan untuk big corporates, kami sederhanakan untuk sesuai kebutuhan UMKM dan membantu mereka untuk mulai menata laporan keuangannya tanpa harus belajar akuntansi,” ujar Arini.

Moodah merupakan produk ekspansi dari Rubyh.co, sebuah software house Indonesia yang berfokus dalam memberikan solusi perangkat lunak berkualitas tinggi untuk masalah terkait teknologi. Setelah tiga tahun berdiri, timnya memutuskan untuk merambah produk baru yaitu sistem manajemen inventaris. Pada tahun 2018, terbentuklah Moodah yang digawangi oleh Arini Astari, Muhammad Irfan, dan Alexander Sie To.

Fitur yang ditawarkan Moodah cukup sederhana, yaitu pencatatan transaksi, pembuatan laporan keuangan, serta pengelolaan hutang/piutang. UMKM hanya perlu memasukan pengeluaran dan pemasukan, lalu aplikasi akan membuatkan laporan keuangan yang sesuai dengan SAK EMKM.

Dengan memiliki laporan keuangan yang jelas, pelaku UMKM dapat membuat keputusan lebih cepat dan lebih baik. Laporan keuangan ini juga dapat menjadi modal mereka untuk mengajukan pinjaman. Timnya turut menambahkan, pelaku UKM yang menggunakan Moodah dilaporkan mendapat kenaikan laba bersih sampai 125%.

“Saat ini kami memfokuskan kepada teman-teman yang terdampak pandemi (dirumahkan) dan mulai berjualan mandiri secara online ataupun offline. Aplikasi pembukuan Moodah dapat dinikmati UMKM secara gratis, namun kami juga menawarkan fitur-fitur premium yang dapat dibeli oleh pengguna,” tambah Arini.

Selama beroperasi, Moodah telah bekerja sama dengan banyak pihak, terutama pemerintah, seperti Jakpreneur, Rumah Kreatif BUMN, KADIN, serta pengembang komunitas lainnya. Dalam tiga bulan terakhir, Arini turut menyampaikan antusiasme tinggi dari UKM yang ditunjukkan dengan peningkatan pengguna aplikasi hingga 86%.

Pada bulan Oktober lalu, Moodah juga terpilih sebagai salah satu kandidat untuk mengikuti program Startup Studio Indonesia. Ini merupakan program intensif yang diselenggarakan oleh Kementerian Komunikasi dan Informatika RI bagi startup tahap awal untuk mengakselerasi skala bisnisnya.

“Program Startup Studio sangat membantu kami untuk fokus kepada solusi akan masalah yang kami mau coba pecahkan. Kami diberikan 1:1 session
dengan para founders yang sudah series B ke atas, sehingga kami bisa sharing experience dan sangat relatable,” ungkap Arini.

Layanan pencatatan keuangan sendiri sedang mendapat perhatian dari banyak investor. Hal ini ditunjukkan dengan beberapa platform yang berhasil meraih pendanaan di tahun ini, sebut saja BukuKas, BukuWarung, serta Credibook. Sebelumnya, Moodah juga telah mengikuti program akselerator MOX oleh SOSV, perusahaan modal ventura yang bermarkas di Amerika Serikat, dan berhasil mendapatkan dana pre-seed pada bulan Februari 2020.

Terkait dampak pandemi, Arini turut menyampaikan bahwa timnya kini lebih fokus dan terarah untuk mencapai target, serta semakin termotivasi untuk membantu sektor UKM yang 47%-nya sudah tutup buku.

“Kami selalu mencoba melihat sisi yang positif dari suatu kejadian. Kami melihat pergerakan UMKM ke arah digital menjadi lebih cepat karena untuk dapat bertahan di masa pandemi, UMKM harus beralih online,” jelas Arini.

Saat ini, Moodah juga memfasilitasi UMKM dari mengadakan pelatihan-pelatihan online hingga meluncurkan fitur penagihan menggunakan WhatsApp. Penggunanya pun dapat melakukan pembayaran langsung menggunakan dompet digital, seperti GoPay, OVO, dan DANA, maupun transfer bank (virtual account).

Application Information Will Show Up Here

Otoklix Secures 28 Billion Rupiah Funding, Bridging Car Owners and Repair Shops through Application

An online-to-offline solution startup that digitizes the automotive aftermarket industry in Indonesia (including car service or repair services), Otoklix, announced initial funding of $2 million or the equivalent of 28 billion Rupiah. This round is led by Surge, the accelerator program of Sequoia Capital India. Also participating in this round GK Plug and Play, Kenangan Investment Fund 1, Lentor Ventures, Noble Star Ventures, and Andree Susanto as the founder of Waresix.

Surge is an acceleration program by Sequoia Capital aimed at startup companies in Southeast Asia and India. This program is held twice a year, Otoklix has successfully become a representative from Indonesia to participate in the fourth batch of Surge with other selected startups from India, Singapore, Vietnam, Indonesia, and Australia.

The Indonesian car aftermarket market is projected to grow up to $15 billion, with 20 million cars being part of the industry market by 2025. This is one of the reasons for Martin Reyhan Suryohusodo, Joseph Alexander Ananto, and Benny Sutedjo to start the largest automotive aftermarket network in Southeast Asia.

Otoklix was founded in 2019, with a mission to bridge the gap between vehicle owners and Indonesia’s fragmented general workshop industry. Transforming the vehicle maintenance experience for consumers and equipping workshops by increasing their visibility, providing business solutions through software, and reducing procurement costs.

Otoklix co-founder Martin Suryohusodo said, “The fragmented condition of the Indonesian automotive aftermarket creates difficulties for consumers due to the lack of information transparency. On the same side, the industry is also a large potential market that is often underestimated. Learning from the US market, shared mobility was able to increase aftermarket industry spending by 150% and this inspires us for the future of the Indonesian automotive aftermarket industry.”

Otoklix service covers two user segments. For car owners, Otoklix has developed a mobile application to facilitate car maintenance. Car owners can order service at a recommended independent repair shop nearby and receive standard rates and service levels. Car owners also get a guarantee for every transaction at Otoklix partner workshops and can track their repair and maintenance history in the application.

Within one year of operation, Otoklix has facilitated service for 10 thousand cars per month by more than 100 active workshop partners. The team believes that it is currently on a growth trajectory to become the largest and most trusted aftermarket service network in Indonesia, with 20 million cars that will become part of the automotive aftermarket market in the next five years.

With the funding obtained, Otoklix targets 500 partner workshops to join and serve 100 thousand cars per month, and 75% of the revenue share of the total procurement of goods and spare parts by partner workshops by December 2021.

Previously, there were three startups that had already tried out the previous batch of Surge acceleration programs from Indonesia. The three of them are Storie, Chilibeli, and Rukita.


Original article is in Indonesian, translated by Kristin Siagian

Otoklix Raih Pendanaan 28 Milliar Rupiah, Hubungkan Pemilik Mobil dan Bengkel Melalui Aplikasi

Startup solusi online-to-offline yang mendigitalisasi industri aftermarket otomotif di Indonesia (termasuk di dalamnya layanan servis atau perbaikan mobil), Otoklix, mengumumkan pendanaan awal bernilai $2 juta atau setara 28 miliar Rupiah. Putaran ini dipimpin oleh Surge, program akselerator milik Sequoia Capital India. Turut berpartisipasi GK Plug and Play, Kenangan Investment Fund 1, Lentor Ventures, Noble Star Ventures, dan Andree Susanto selaku founder Waresix.

Surge adalah sebuah program percepatan oleh Sequoia Capital yang ditujukan untuk perusahaan startup di Asia Tenggara dan India. Program ini diadakan sebanyak dua kali dalam setahun, Otoklix berhasil menjadi wakil dari Indonesia untuk mengikuti Surge batch keempat bersama startup terpilih lainnya dari India, Singapura, Vietnam, Indonesia, dan Australia.

Pasar aftermarket mobil Indonesia diproyeksikan akan mengalami pertumbuhan hingga $15 miliar dengan jumlah 20 juta mobil menjadi bagian pasar industri tersebut pada tahun 2025. Hal ini menjadi salah satu yang mendorong Martin Reyhan Suryohusodo, Joseph Alexander Ananto, dan Benny Sutedjo untuk memulai jaringan aftermarket otomotif terbesar di Asia Tenggara.

Otoklix didirikan pada tahun 2019, dengan misi untuk menjembatani kesenjangan antara pemilik kendaraan dan industri bengkel umum Indonesia yang terfragmentasi. Mentransformasi pengalaman perawatan kendaraan untuk konsumen dan memperlengkapi bengkel-bengkel dengan meningkatkan visibilitas mereka, penyediaan solusi bisnis melalui software, serta penghematan biaya pengadaan.

Co-founder Otoklix Martin Suryohusodo menyampaikan, “Kondisi industri aftermarket otomotif Indonesia yang cukup terfragmentasi memunculkan kesulitan bagi para konsumen karena kurangnya transparansi informasi. Di sisi yang sama, industri tersebut juga merupakan sebuah pasar berpotensi besar yang sering kali diremehkan. Belajar dari pasar Amerika Serikat, mobilitas bersama mampu meningkatkan pengeluaran industri aftermarket sebesar 150% dan hal ini menginspirasi kami untuk masa depan industri aftermarket otomotif Indonesia.”

Layanan Otoklix sendiri mencakup dua segmen pengguna. Untuk pemilik mobil, Otoklix telah mengembangkan aplikasi seluler yang memudahkan perawatan mobil. Pemilik mobil dapat memesan layanan di bengkel independen yang direkomendasikan di dekatnya dan menerima harga dan tingkat layanan standar. Pemilik mobil juga mendapatkan garansi untuk setiap transaksi di bengkel mitra Otoklix dan dapat melacak riwayat perbaikan dan pemeliharaan mereka di dalam aplikasi.

Selama kurang lebih satu tahun beroperasi, Otoklix telah memfasilitasi servis bagi 10 ribu mobil per bulan oleh lebih dari 100 mitra bengkel yang aktif. Pihaknya meyakini bahwa saat ini telah berada pada lintasan pertumbuhan untuk menjadi jaringan layanan aftermarket terbesar dan paling terpercaya di Indonesia, dengan 20 juta mobil yang akan menjadi bagian pasar aftermarket otomotif dalam lima tahun ke depan.

Dengan pendanaan yang didapat, Otoklix menargetkan 500 mitra bengkel yang tergabung serta melayani 100 ribu mobil per bulan, dan 75% bagian pendapatan dari total pengadaan barang dan suku cadang oleh bengkel-bengkel mitra pada Desember 2021.

Sebelumnya, ada tiga startup yang sudah lebih dulu menjajal program percepatan Surge batch sebelumnya dari Indonesia. Ketiganya adalah Storie, Chilibeli, dan Rukita.

Application Information Will Show Up Here

GDP’s On Lee Talks about The Potential of AI in Indonesian Tech Industry

This article is a part of DailySocial’s Mastermind Series, featuring innovators and leaders in Indonesia’s tech industry sharing their stories and point of view.

Spending almost over thirty years outside the nation, the CEO & CTO of GDP Labs and CTO of GDP Venture, On Lee finally returned to Indonesia in 2011. In the span of 10 years, he managed to grow GDP Venture and build GDP Labs from scratch, based on the best practice he learned from overseas. Meanwhile, he previously served as the CEO & CTO of Kaskus, the largest Indonesian online community forum in Indonesia.

With over 30 years of experience in internet, mobile, AI, Blockchain, Semantic Web, Knowledge Graph, consumer and enterprise software development, he has held various management and technical positions as a co-founder, CEO, CTO, Executive VP of Engineering, and engineer in both startup and Fortune 500 companies in the US.

On Lee has quite an interest in Artificial Intelligence innovation. He was doing electrical engineering before eventually shifting major into computer science. His belief in the Indonesian tech industry and local engineers has brought him the inspiration for GDP Labs. From 2012 to date, GDP has employed 160 people [mostly engineers] in five cities in Indonesia, Jakarta, Bandung, Bali, Yogyakarta, and Surabaya.

Through GDP Venture, as a venture builder, focusing on digital communities, media, commerce, and solution companies in the Indonesian consumer internet industry. They have invested in over 50 portfolios and still counting. Additionally, he has built teams to start strategic new products in startups and large companies in the US, Indonesia, China, and India.

DailySocial managed to convince him to share some insightful stories along his entrepreneurial journey.

As the CTO of GDP Ventures, also the CEO & CTO of GDP Labs, do you think the Indonesian tech industry has the potential to develop the global center for high technology and innovation or become a tech hub?

Definitely. Digital technology and AI represent a golden opportunity for Indonesia, with a relatively young and vibrant population of over 260 million people. The country boasts a median age of 30 and a literacy rate of 95 percent. Indonesian digital start-ups are primed and ready to follow in the footsteps of other Asian countries such as Japan, India, Taiwan, Korea, and China, which have been successful in transforming their countries through technology. They have significantly improved people’s skills, the standard of living, and productivity and have been recognized as key global players in the world. The Indonesian government has multiple technology initiatives; most universities offer computer science classes; and local and foreign investors are investing heavily in the digital economy, and this has only accelerated during the pandemic.

You’ve been away for almost thirty years, growing knowledge in the U.S. What drives you back to Indonesia and finally started GDP Labs? What was your dream?

I returned to Indonesia due to family reasons. Our parents were getting old, and we needed to take care of them.

I then discovered many great but raw software engineering talents distributed in Indonesia. Many of them did not have the opportunity to receive the right training, mentoring, etc. Mr. Martin Hartono, CEO at GDP Venture, and I are nurturing some of the brightest and most promising young leaders who would become technology savvy and well-rounded in business and leadership at GDP Labs. Our efforts show promising early results.

On Lee at GDP Labs Team Building 2018 with Martin Hartono
On Lee at GDP Labs Team Building 2018 with Martin Hartono

When was the first time you encountered the tech industry? Does technology always been your passion?

I originally majored in electrical engineering. I then switched to a computer science major with a minor in mathematics.

One of my hobbies is playing chess. I used to be a professional chess player. I am interested in computer science, mathematics, and chess because they have two things in common: logic and problem-solving. They helped improve my life personally and professionally.

on lee 9
On Lee was playing chess simultaneously with 2 of his engineers

I read some of your articles about Artificial Intelligence (AI). What makes you believe in the first place that this technology can be a key solution for most problems in the world?

McKinsey predicts AI has the potential to deliver additional global economic activity of around USD 13 trillion by 2030. Yes, that’s USD 13 trillion. Some experts have said that AI is as important as the discovery of fire and electricity. Although that may seem like an exaggeration, the point is that AI is going to be one of the most important technologies humanity will ever invent, leaving an impact on society and business in a deeply profound way. It will likely be in a class by itself. It is going to be part of our personal lives, across virtually all industries. AI will help accelerate the global economy’s recovery and growth and position Indonesia well for the future of a new world before us.

2020 is not an ideal situation for everyone, do you believe our tech industry can play a big part in our country’s recovery?

2020 has been hard for everyone due to the pandemic which leads to bankruptcies, unemployment, and social issues. In addition to reducing costs, increasing productivity and convenience, technology will help us be safer and healthier. This will help to lead economic recovery faster.

Many companies and governments are accelerating their digital transformation using cloud computing, mobile computing, and AI during the pandemic.

How about GDP Venture and GDP Labs, does this pandemic situation affect the company in a significant way?

Yes, no one is immune. We have asked our companies to revise their 2020 plan on how to survive in the short term and thrive in the long term. Pandemic is like a magnifying glass and accelerator. It highlights what you have been doing right but also what you have been doing wrong. We have chosen to accelerate some initiatives. In short, we needed to adapt.

In terms of investment, do you think Indonesia has provided a good investment climate for its tech industry? Do you see any significant change in the tech investment scene before and after the pandemic?

Yes. We get good government support. Universities produce many software engineers annually, and almost 200 million Internet users in Indonesia, entrepreneurs, local and foreign investors.

The pandemic is a good wake up call. Startups focus on what matters most to survive and thrive, company valuations and expectations become more realistic. It is a humbling experience.

Some of GDP Venture’s portfolios

As a serial entrepreneur with over 30 years of experience in technology, I believe you’ve been put in a bad situation before. Are you willing to share some of the hardships in building a venture? And how you come up with a solution amid the pressure?

Yes. Timing and luck play a big part in both established companies’ and startups’ success or failure. One of the startups that I worked at was on track to hit a billion-dollar valuation in Silicon Valley. Unfortunately, the 2008 recession hit the US and technical debts. The company was sold for lower than our expectations even though we still made some profit.

Do you have certain figures(mentors) to help you through the hard days? Some kind of support system?

Definitely. I was fortunate to get help from many people — friends, family, mentors, colleagues, teachers, and even strangers.

Everyone will have low points in their lives. They need a support system to go through hardship. I haven’t seen anyone successful by doing it alone.

Who inspired you to be the person you are now? Do you have goals you’re yet to achieve?

Many people — technologists, scientists, sportspeople, artists — inspired me. They have the following characteristics: they were constantly learning to be well-rounded in leadership, business, and master in their domain.

I believe it’s important to help young people because many people helped and gave me opportunities when I was young and inexperienced. There are so many opportunities to disrupt many areas using technology, while some established companies are still using 20th-century technology. Stay healthy.

What will you say to those tech enthusiasts struggling to pave their paths into the industry yet stumble upon the current pandemic situation?

Clarity. Confidence. Conviction. Have clarity on what you want to do. Execute on it with confidence and conviction relentlessly. There are hidden opportunities during the pandemic.

Artificial Intelligence (AI) is said to replace a human’s job. As a human, has it ever occurred to you that there’s the worst scenario that can result from this technology?

AI will replace some existing jobs. But, it will also create new types of jobs; more than it eliminates. Let’s look at the following two scenarios.

First, the car industry replaced the horse industry. There are over 1.4 billion cars and there are only 58 million horses in the world now. The car industry – production, services, newfound mobility, etc. – has created more jobs than it eliminated from the horse industry.

Second, there was a company implementing AI-powered robots in their warehouses. Many employees were worried they would lose their jobs. It turned out that the company hired more people due to robots. This may seem counter-intuitive. Why? Because robots are efficient and work 24 hours a day so they produce more; humans became the bottleneck and more humans needed to be hired to keep up with the robot. Although robots could do certain tasks, they couldn’t do anything.

Humans will be free to do more creative work while technology and AI take care of mechanical work. Also, technology and AI free up some of humanity’s time so we could spend our time with other people.

In short, AI augments humans’ creativity and ultimately makes us more human.

Kata.ai Announces Series B Funding, to Launch a Social Commerce Platform

Wednesday (25/11), the AI ​​and NLP powered conversational technology platform Kata.ai announced a series B funding led by the Trans-Pacific Technology Fund with the participation of MDI Ventures and Buana Investama. The nominal is still undisclosed. Funds will be focused on expanding and accelerating AI services in a broader industry, such as commerce, healthcare, and insurtech.

“The focus is on expanding services towards SMEs, particularly social commerce, as well as accelerating AI services in other industries such as healthcare and engineering. Kata.ai is here as an enabler to help players in this industry be more thriving with artificial intelligence technology,” Kata.ai’s CEO, Irzan Raditya said in the media pers conference for INTERACT 2020.

Irzan also said that Indonesia’s digital economy is projected to reach $125 billion in 2025. It is estimated that by 2030, the impact of artificial intelligence on Indonesia’s GDP could reach $ 366 billion. This number is quite massive considering the positive impact that AI can have on Indonesia.

In addition, with the challenges posed by the pandemic, businesses must find new ways to survive and sustain sales. As many as 125 million Indonesians have used WhatsApp and 70 million of them already have Instagram. This should be used by business people to create new experiences in shopping.

Launching Qios

The social commerce platform is predicted to have quite a big role in online commerce sales in Indonesia. McKinsey predicts that by 2022 the total Gross Merchandise Value (GMV) of social commerce in Indonesia will reach $ 25 billion. Looking at the problems and opportunities that exist, 2021 is predicted to be a momentum for conversational commerce, this solution is not only used for customer service but can also be a scalable sales service.

QIOS is a service for SMEs, especially social sellers who sell through social media to manage their business. Through this platform, SME players can create a virtual system via WhatsApp to serve inquiries, as well as payments to delivery.

This platform is integrated with e-wallets such as OVO, DANA Linkaja, and also logistics services such as Go-Send and Grab Express. Through this platform, SMEs are expected to be more focused on managing their business with the help of AI and chatbots.

“We see a lot of opportunities in this sector, apart from chatbot technology, we are also developing voice technology, and looking for ways to transform business actors in Indonesia at the micro, small and medium scale,” Irzan said.

Currently, Qios is still available in beta. The current business model is freemium, however, there will be a fee for each transaction made on the platform. There is no further information regarding the calculations. One of the merchants that have used Qios’s services is the Tuku Coffee Shop.

Business plan 2021

Since founded in 2016, Kata.ai has collaborated with various institutions on its mission to provide conversational AI services that are scalable and have a broad impact on the people of Indonesia. Some of these include launching a virtual assistant to accommodate the needs of BPJS users, also working with Prixa to provide an AI-based symptom check system.

Kata.ai has experienced very rapid growth. The growth rate in 2020 will increase by 5x from the previous year. To date, Kata.ai has processed more than 750 million conversations. In addition, there are 3 million Monthly Active Users who interact with chatbots created using Kata Platform.

The pandemic is said to be one of the supporting factors for business fertility that allows triple growth, which usually takes 18 months to become in just 6 months.

Regarding the business plan, Irzan said, “Our business plan remains to accelerate digital transformation in Indonesia for business people.”


Original article is in Indonesian, translated by Kristin Siagian