Crypto Asset Platform Blocknom Temporarily Terminate its Services due to License Issue

Crypto-asset earning platform Blocknom announced to temporarily halt its services from July 1, 2022. Blocknom did not specify the reason, however, it is said to consider the market situation and government regulations. On the other hand, the company is yet to have an operational permit or authority license, in this case from CoFTRA.

In its blog post, Blocknom’s management said to discontinue support for Decentralized Finance (DeFi), for which daily interest on USDT, USDC, and XIDR will also stop accruing.

“At this time, we advise you to withdraw your assets from the platform as soon as possible. You need not worry because your assets are safe. Please withdraw all your assets before July 31, 2022,” stated on the post.

According to management, the platform has stopped accepting new users and deposits since June 20, 2022. In order to simplify the asset withdrawal process, it appeals to users to immediately withdraw assets before July 31, 2022. After that, it is most likely that withdrawals will only be made via offline CS.

“We will come back stronger with more services as soon as we get our license. Please wish us luck.” Blocknom team stated.

Recently, crypto asset management services have risen in Indonesia. This is in line with the increasing number of people diversifying into this virtual currency. According to CoFTRA, as of February 2022, there are an estimated 12.4 crypto investors.

Aside from Blocknom, with a unique mechanism, several startups also offer crypto-earn services, including NOBI and Finblox. Both have received equity funding support from venture capitalists.

Recently secured funding

For a general note, Blocknom was initiated in January 2022 by former Gojek & Shopee employee Fransiskus Raymond and former engineer Ritasi Ghuniyu Fattah Rozaq. Blocknom is known to be one of the incubation startups in the Y Combinator batch Winter 2022.

Blocknom has recently secured seed funding of $500,000 or over IDR 7 billion from three investors, including Y Combinator, Number Capital, and Magic Fund last March.

In increasing the added value to its platform, Blocknom offers deposit yields on stablecoin-based crypto assets, namely USDT (Tether), USDC (Circle), and XIDR (StraitsX).

In addition, Blocknom applies transparency to the fund management process and has proof of a community system in the DeFi selection process for managing investor funds, and unlimited incentive programs for its community.

Since the last few months, Indonesia’s digital ecosystem has been hit by a bubble burst phenomenon due to global situations and conflicts. Crypto asset prices are also reported to continue to fall, including Bitcoin and Ethereum.


Original article is in Indonesian, translated by Kristin Siagian

Modalku Acquires Singapore-Based Fintech Payment “CardUp”

Modalku Group announced acquisition with an undisclosed amount over CardUp, a Singapore-based fintech startup providing payment solutions. CardUp capabilities are to enhance Modalku’s loan products in order to provide more integrated financial services for MSMEs in Southeast Asia.

Once the acquisition process is complete and approved by local regulators, the Modalku Group will welcome CardUp Co-founder Nicki Ramsay as a member of the management team to lead the payments business while retaining all CardUp employees in Asia.

In an official statement (29/6), Co-founder of Funding Societies and CEO of Modalku Indonesia, Reynold Wijaya, said that his team has known Nicki and CardUp since 2018. In terms of culture and strategy, this is quite a match for the Modalku Group.

He said, with this acquisition, the company can accelerate its leadership in the regional fintech market by combining payment service capabilities, improving user experience, and adding local licenses to Modalku Group’s digital lending services in key markets. “We are excited to work with the CardUp team. This is an honor for us,” said Reynold.

CardUp’s Founder and CEO, Nicki Ramsay said, “We also identify the Modalku Group as a perfect associate for the company’s expertise in payments. For him, this acquisition reflects the strong strategic and cultural synergy between the two companies.

“We have the same mission to empower MSMEs and have been providing the medium for them in business operations and cash flow management. We believe that CardUp has a bright future with the Modalku Group and we are delighted to be working together on this new journey,” Ramsay added.

CardUp will continue to operate its business and consumer services, also continue its long-term relationships with partners, card issuers, and media partners. The two companies will take advantage of synergies through complementary human resources, technological innovation, banking, and technology partnerships to continue to empower MSMEs in Southeast Asia.

This acquisition, Reynolds continued, is one of the most significant corporate actions during this year. In February, the company raised $294 million in Series C funding, with $144 million streaming from equity. Moreover, the company also invested in Bank Index in Indonesia, launched a virtual business card called Elevate in Singapore, and expanded business in Vietnam. “All of this is to strengthen and expand the range of corporate financial services for MSMEs.”

About CardUp

CardUp was founded in 2016 in Singapore, providing payment solutions for individuals and businesses to pay suppliers and receive payments from customers digitally. In addition to Singapore, the solution has been used by tens of thousands of businesses on various business and industrial scales (B2B and C2B) in Malaysia and Hong Kong. They use CardUp for transactions related to payroll, rent payments, corporate taxes, vendor payments, accounts receivable flows, and fees between countries.

CardUp is licensed by the Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS) as a Major Payment Institution under the Payment Services Act and is also licensed by the Hong Kong Customs and Excise Department or HKCED. ) as a Financial Service Operator (Money Service Operator).

CardUp is in high demand from businesses looking to save time and money by digitizing payment transactions. This is reflected in the claimed quarterly growth of 53%.

Momentum for MSMEs

The acquisition is considered to have the right momentum, as the MSME segment is projected to drive Southeast Asia’s digital financial market to $60 billion by 2025, according to a Bain & Company report. Meanwhile, citing McKinsey, the business payments sector will grow at a CAGR of 10% over the next five years.

Modalku provides digital funding services, borrowers (potential MSMEs) can get an unsecured business capital loan of up to IDR 2 billion funded by platform lenders (individuals or institutions looking for alternative investments) through the digital market.

In addition to Indonesia, Modalku also operates in Singapore, Malaysia, Thailand, and Vietnam under the name Funding Societies. To date, the Modalku Group has succeeded in disbursing business loans of Rp. 35.14 trillion to more than 5 million MSME loan transactions in Southeast Asia.


Original article is in Indonesian, translated by Kristin Siagian

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Good Doctor to Strengthen Its Position as a Holistic Health Ecosystem in Southeast Asia

This year marks Good Doctor’s third year operation in Indonesia. Since its debut in 2019, Good Doctor is said to record various significant achievements, including 14.2 million users with up to 40 times growth in the country.

In addition, Good Doctor has partnered with more than 45 insurance companies, 500 corporate partners and a major network of third-party administrators (TPA), more than 1,000 hospitals and laboratories, and 2,500 pharmacies throughout Indonesia. The rapid growth of Good Doctor’s network in Indonesia is said to have driven annual business growth up to 864%.

According to the Managing Director of Good Doctor Technology Indonesia, Danu Wicaksana, his team is exploring a Health-as-a-Service partnership, one of the focuses in the pipeline. “We don’t want to offer just a solution, but to create an ecosystem of various stakeholders including the government, laboratories, and clinics,” he told DailySocial.

Good Doctor Technology (GDT) is a joint venture of Ping An Healthcare and Technology (formerly Ping An Good Doctor), Grab, and SoftBank. Initially, Good Doctor was present in Indonesia as a feature called GrabHealth which was embedded into the Grab application in 2019. Then, this service officially became a separate platform in March 2021. Currently, Good Doctor is present in Indonesia and Thailand with regional operations based in Singapore.

In an exclusive interview with DailySocial, Regional CEO of Good Doctor Technology, Melvin Vu said that the platform is currently preparing to become a telehealth provider with a holistic ecosystem in Southeast Asia. The momentum of digital acceleration is fully utilized to develop various health services, therefore, they can accommodate a wider network.

What are Good Doctor’s next steps and strategies?

B2B and Health as a Service

Based on Dukcapil data as of the end of 2021, the number of health workers (nakes) in Indonesia was recorded at 567,910 people, or 0.21% of the total population of 273.87 million people. Meanwhile, health spending through digital platforms in Indonesia is predicted to be $973 million (around Rp. 14.4 trillion) in 2023.

With the uneven distribution of doctors, Melvin believes that telehealth can overcome challenges for a market like Indonesia with large population and geographical condition. He also believes that telehealth can balance the health ecosystem in Indonesia.

In order to stay at the forefront of the telehealth sector, Good Doctor has two main strategies. First, to reach more people by expanding services to the B2B segment. Second, offering Health-as-a-Service (HaaS) solutions by leveraging the strong support for technology, ecosystem, and partners of Good Doctor.

Technology leverage and localization

In the healthcare industry, including virtual health, technology allows wider exploration. Melvin said that Good Doctor has a strong position to execute it due to the technology and experience built by the parent company over the last seven years. For example, the implementation of AI to help doctors in Indonesia understand symptoms, provide diagnoses, and issue drug prescriptions for their patients.

In addition, Melvin said Good Doctor has another added value as it has an in-house doctor whose expertise can be used to carry out quality control services. One of them is developing clinical pathways. For your information, a clinical pathway is a guideline used to carry out evidence-based clinical actions in health care facilities. Every disease has different guidelines.

In general, health service demand is almost the same in all countries in the Southeast Asian region. In this case, Good Doctor developed a solution from Thailand, then customized it for the Indonesian market.

“We are fortunate that Ping An has been in this field for a long time, therefore, we can leverage its proven technology in China. Being a regional player allows us to understand healthcare issues in different markets, learning from each other. With our technology, everything is conceived on how we deliver healthcare virtually,” he said.

However, Melvin also highlighted the essence of being integrated with various stakeholders. Collaborations will enable Good Doctor to deliver a variety of services and create a holistic health ecosystem in the future, whether through hospitals, clinics, companies, or digital platforms.

“Leveraging technology is one thing, it is also important that we customize to localize. We can have different points of view with service integration. Furthermore, this allows us to minimize fault for every integration, every platform is different. Therefore, we can integrate fast. We can deliver a better customer journey to our clients,” he said.

Transition to endemic

Responding to Good Doctor’s move in welcoming endemic, Melvin said that telemedicine or other virtual health services will continue to play a significant role. He said, services for sick care will always be available, but preventive care is no less important.

“We want [Good Doctor] to transcend sick care services to preventive care in order to keep people healthy. We also want to help control and treat chronic diseases. Related products and services that will be developed, also allow them to be connected to IoT devices. Good Doctor has We are in a strong position to do this because we have the technology and understand how to deliver products,” he said.

Furthermore, Melvin ensures that his team will explore new expansions while focusing on working on existing markets in Singapore, Thailand, and Indonesia.


Original article is in Indonesian, translated by Kristin Siagian

Mapan Announces 223 Billion Rupiah Series A Funding Led by Patamar Capital and Astra Digital

Mapan announced a series A funding worth $15 million or around 223 billion Rupiah. This round was led by Patamar Capital and PT Astra Digital Internasional, with the participation of BRI Ventures, SMDV, Blibli, Prasetia Dwidharma, Flourish Ventures, and 500 Global.

Previously, Mapan’s majority stake (45.53%) was acquired by Gojek through its subsidiary PT Dompet Karya Anak Bangsa (Gopay). At that time, Mapan was involved in GoPayLater initiative, a BNPL service that becomes main feature in the Gojek and Tokopedia ecosystems.

Founded in 2009 by Aldi Haryopratomo, Mapan (PT Ruma) has reached more than 3 million users in Java, Bali, Sumatra, Nusa Tenggara, and Sulawesi. Its core service is digitizing the ‘arisan’ concept that community groups are familiar with, then inserting financial services into it.

The fresh funds will be used to further develop digital arisan services through expanding product range and partnering with the best suppliers; targeting to expand Mapan coverage accessible to 10 million Indonesian families by 2026.

Mapan’s mission is to improve the life quality of  the Indonesian people by removing barriers to financial access for all levels of society. The lower-middle economic group can take advantage of Arisan Mapan’s products to increase household purchasing power for items such as kitchen utensils, electronics, and furniture.

In addition, they now also provide other products and services such as Mapan Pulsa (a bill payment application) and Mapan Mart (a consumer goods resale platform).

“We are interested in the approach that Mapan uses to strengthen women’s empowerment in their community. The concept of social gathering has long been a part of Indonesian culture and with digitalization, Mapan has succeeded in bringing scalability to this long-standing cultural practice,” Dondi Hananto, Partner at Patamar Capital said.

Future plans

According to a trusted source, this funding will also help Mapan become a more independent company under the GoTo Group — therefore, it is on par with other digital subsidiaries such as GoPlay and others.

In terms of leadership, Mapan recently appointed Ardelia Apti as the CEO, replacing Hendra Tjanaka. She has experience in fintech and deep tech. For 5 years, Ardelia has held various positions at Gojek and helped build Swadaya, a benefit program for Gojek driver-partners that helps them save on their daily expenses.

In addition, Ardelia also heads GoPay’s Offline Payment business, encouraging the use of QR payments for consumers, businesses, and SMEs. Previously, Ardelia worked as Country Director at Element, Inc., and consultant at McKinsey & Company.

Founder & Commissioner of Mapan, Aldi Haryopratomo said, “This funding round supported by strong Indonesian and global investors makes us even more excited to embark on Mapan’s new phase that is about to begin. This is a support for Ardelia’s vision of building a women’s community and ensuring Indonesian families become financially independent.”

Meanwhile, Ardelia added, “In Indonesia, women play an important role in managing family finances, including managing arisan as a form of savings and financial management that has been known for a long time in Indonesian culture. We are proud that Arisan Mapan products can empower women to be able to help increase purchasing power and improve the quality of life in their communities. We are committed to working with them so that we can continue to develop financial solutions broadly.”

Application Information Will Show Up Here

East Ventures Leads RPG Commerce’s Series B Funding

East Ventures is leading a $29 million or approximately 431 billion Rupiah series B funding round for RPG Commerce. In addition, this round was also led by UOB Venture Management, Vertex Ventures SEA & India (VVSEAI), and RHL Ventures.

In his official statement, East Ventures’ Co-founder and Managing Partner, Willson Cuaca said, RPG Commerce has a unique position as it takes an approach by serving various categories, brands, and roll-up models in e-commerce sector.

He said this is an important strategy for D2C businesses to attract international interest in ensuring its success in the market. “RPG Commerce is capable to grow a loyal customer base in the United States, Canada, and Europe, through quality products and innovation in the supply chain,” Willson said.

RPG Commerce’s Co-founder & CEO, Melvin Chee said he would use the additional funding to add to the brand portfolio and the team numbers, encourage R&D innovation, also M&A. “We wanted to quickly add to our talent and leverage technology capabilities to expand our consumer landscape,” Melvin said.

On a general note, RPG Commerce is a D2C-based social commerce startup from Malaysia. The platform offers in-house brand products in the categories of daily necessities, clothing to basic household. Currently, RPG partners with more than ten brands, including Thousand Miles, Bottom Labs, Eubi, Montigo, and Cosmic Cookware.

RPG manages various brands from product launch, operations, and optimization supported by end-to-end production and delivery. According to the company’s data, RPG is supported by state-of-the-art back-end technology and a visionary creative team that has been able to rapidly expand its brand portfolio and grow its customers by 300% over the past year.

With the spirit of supporting independent businesses with on-demand products, he aims to empower small business owners through incubation and acquisition programs to serve consumers in various verticals.

Investment climate and social commerce potential

In a recent interview with DailySocial.id, Willson Cuaca mentioned some interesting notes regarding the investment climate. Despite the negative sentiment in the Indonesian startup ecosystem, he believes that this has not changed his position in finding potential startups.

He said, there are still many startups with good fundamentals. “Remain calm and alert in dealing with this situation. Seek support from your investors, be more prudent in spending, and don’t do fundraising when your company needs money,” Willson advises the founders.

In the context of social commerce in Indonesia, this model shows the potential for great growth in the future. Bain & Co data recorded that transactions from social commerce contributed $12 billion to the total GMV of e-commerce in the country which amounted to $47 billion in 2020.

In addition, social commerce trends continue to develop considering that rural communities still have limited access to fulfill their needs through online platforms compared to people living in urban areas.

By empowering the distribution network model or reseller, social commerce can open access to products and wider job opportunities.


Original article is in Indonesian, translated by Kristin Siagian

Neobank as Koinwork’s Further Validation to Encourage more Bankable MSMEs

The Indonesian p2p lending business is entering its mature phase. Meanwhile, inclusive access to finance for MSMEs is still an unresolved homework. KoinWorks, which recently started working on neobank, believes that this solution can slowly help MSMEs level up from being underserved and underbanked to bankable.

In an interview with DailySocial.id, KoinWorks’ Co-founder & CEO, Benedicto Haryono said that as long as the company stays as a p2p lending business, the conversion rate is turned out to be relatively low, aka below 10% of the total incoming leads. It occurs due to MSMEs being overfinanced, not eligible for funding, or don’t have urgency for funding.

The segment that was rejected by KoinWorks actually has potential to be explored in the future, considering the type of loan provided is productive. In other words, they certainly want their business to grow. “We thought of, what if we gave a more general product, it doesn’t need a lot of requirements. This can be a solution as if they need credit, they are qualified and can immediately get funding,” told Ben which is known as Benedicto’s nickname.

KoinWorks NEO is an integrated financial platform for MSMEs, freelancers, content creators, and start-ups. With NEO Card and financial management services, this product enables users to fulfill their business needs. From remittances, payment link services to create payment links, monitor financial condition, and expense reports, and all the financial literacy assistance business owners need in order to grow their business.

Through KoinWorks NEO, the company provides its own added value that is different from lending. In an observation, other MSME issues are financial records that have not been integrated or manually still, using books or Excel directly done by the business owner due to limited resources. Eventually, a lot of time was wasted, and business owners could not focus on developing their business further.

In further detail, Neobank’s one solution is to provide accounts receivable that are automatically reconciled and equipped with an auto-reminder feature for re-billing. This solution is expected to save business owners’ time, also from the point of view of increasing consumer experience.

“We want to encourage these MSMEs to start managing operations, finances, and grow with us, before receiving financing from us. By providing another experience in terms of financial policies that are more suited to their growth and in accordance with our vision.”

He continued that the business, which has been supported by KoinWorks for five years of operation, is claimed to have an impact as proven by the positive average growth of sales. The improved business has reached more than two million. “Hence, this neobank validation is part of the mission we implemented from the beginning that we want to realize more helping MSMEs in Indonesia.”

In building KoinWorks NEO, Ben continued, the company also collaborated with various partners through the BaaS mechanism, excluding Open API. He said what KoinWorks need as a company is more specific and customized for MSMEs. Meanwhile, in the current Open API solutions, there is no specific answer to these needs, it is still limited to consumers.

“Therefore, we work directly with financial partners and only use features that are relevant to us from Open API players such as Finantier, Ayoconnect, and Brick.”

Ben further explained that KoinWorks NEO has a financial management service that automatically combines financial activities and money movements; quick and easy access to business loans, for example, access to various loans for various purposes, including installment loans, earned wage access (EWA) for their employees.

At last, the virtual card “NEO Card” which functions as a prepaid and charge card is supported by Mastercard and BNI to simplify online transactions through the Virtual Card Number (VCN). In addition, the NEO Card can be used to process any local or international payment transfers for free.

Growth machine

As a startup aiming to pursue growth, amid the growth of the lending business which is no longer exponential, the company will rely on KoinWorks NEO as its engine. The lending business will continue to be the company’s biggest profit-generating engine due to its large volume, even though its growth is only 3%-5% per year.

“However, from the growth of the transaction data ecosystem and user base, NEO will be the largest. Therefore, it will grow x percent, around 20-25 percent of the NEO user base that can get financing and there is a value service that we can provide to them as well.”

The company will also be more aggressive in entering the second and third-tier cities, considering that it has only available in the urban. This step will be done through KoinWorks NEO. He also mentioned that in the midst of slowing growth in the lending business, as it is starting to mature, market segmentation is increasingly formed with their respective specializations.

It is different from the early situation when almost all players worked in all financing sectors. That time triggers the public’s extensive knowledge of a lending company. For example, people will associate Amartha with women’s productive loans, ALAMI for sharia loans, and for MSMEs, there are Investree, Modalku, KoinWorks, and so on.

“Today’s market knows more about the lending segment and knows what they are looking for. In the future, penetration must be increased to tiers 2 and 3, while we are still in tier 1 so we need extra effort so that our services can be more diverse.”

From a managerial perspective, the company added new positions to generate more focus. Among other things, the Strategy Division focuses on creating value and the overall direction of the company, as well as ensuring that KoinWorks will continue to build the Indonesian MSME ecosystem. Moreover, the Product Division that is fully data-driven will be stronger and sharper in solving complex problems into simpler ones to produce the right products.

Next, the newly formed Platform Division will constantly look at user experience, especially MSME players by building an ecosystem that helps them from starting a business to growing beyond MSMEs.

Synergizing with the Product Division and Platform Division, the Wealth Division is committed to helping KoinWorks users through investment products that are in line with the user’s journey to achieve financial goals. Meanwhile, the Marketing Division will maximize KoinWorks in helping users to recognize the benefits and ease of accessing digital financial platforms such as KoinWorks.

In five years of operation, the company, which used to solely distributed loans to MSMEs, now has a series of products, such as digital gold savings, artificial intelligence (AI)-based automated P2P funding, invoice guaranteed financing, education fund financing, early wage access, and bond purchasing. Until the beginning of this year, KoinWorks had disbursed Rp11 trillion in funding.


Original article is in Indonesian, translated by Kristin Siagian

Blockchain Startup Ekta Receives 891 Billion Rupiah Funding from Global Emerging Markets

Blockchain technology development startup Ekta announced $60 million (over 891 billion Rupiah) funding from Global Emerging Markets, a New York-based alternative asset investment group. The fund is said to be used to prepare a series of blockchain-powered products such as NFT marketplaces, hybrid crypto exchange platforms, blockchain-based games, and real estate investments.

“The funds will be used for the development of the Ekta ecosystem, liquidity for the NFT marketplace and hybrid exchange, the development of the plant-to-earn MetaTrees game, marketing, and building a technology team,” Ekta’s CEO, Berwin Tanco said.

Was launched in August 2021, Ekta stands as one of the most focused decentralized protocols for aligning blockchain with the physical world. Headquartered in Bali, Indonesia, the company was founded by Berwin Tanco (CEO), Yog Shrusti (CSO), and Jason Zheng (CMO), and now has a total team of 75 people worldwide.

It was written in the blog that Ekta’s founders have the vision to empower blockchain utilities to provide opportunities for everyone to live a better life. Therefore, Ekta leverages the power of blockchain to create a new and transparent ecosystem, allowing everyone from all backgrounds to participate.

Ekta’s developed mainnet i, called EktaChain, tokenizes real-world assets, such as property, music, art and gold. Ekta token holders will be able to transact and interact with financial products to grow their wealth, earn money by playing games, buy and sell digital and tangible assets. All of these products will later be combined in one super-app.

“This app will be a Web2 practice using Web3 as a backbone, therefore, people will easily get involved and no need to know whether there is a crypto or blockchain behind it,” Ekta’s CIO, Sven Milder added.

Ekta’s products

Source: Ekta

Lately, the crypto market is bearish, affecting most Web3 companies. However, Tanco remains optimistic since the company has a unique proposition that will ultimately provide good benefits once the market recovers. “We are in a very good position during this decline period as we believe the next trend is blockchain bridging to the physical world and Ekta has been doing so since 2021.”

Ekta will create a cross-chain NFT platform for trading, staking, and exchanging physical assets with digital asset representation. The Ekta NFT marketplace will serve as a bridge through which NFT developers and physical asset owners interact with other brands and individuals through their virtual collections.

Compared to similar players, Ekta is closely tied to real-world use cases, has value and utility, and is asset-backed. The NFT marketplace, for example, will sell tokens that link real-world assets and values ​​with projects offered on its platform.

MetaTrees is a blockchain-based game that allows players to earn crypto while playing an active role in conserving real-world natural resources. Meanwhile, Ekta Island, a 16-hectare land located near Bali and owned by time Ekta, will be a blockchain-fueled physical space and will offer token fractional investment and access to ordinary people.

One of Ekta’s flagship products is the Ekta Portal, the company said that this is the world’s first endpoint node to reward operators with cryptocurrencies. By activating the device via the Ekta NFT Portal, operators can start earning a daily reward of 10 thousand Ekta tokens which will be divided by the number of active operators. Having NFT Portal Ekta automatically whitelists holders for all Ekta offerings, such as Ekta Island and MetaTrees.

By bringing blockchain solutions to traditional industries, businesses, and physical assets, the company aims to attract more people to the crypto world. “While 10% of people on the internet hold crypto, we are targeting the next 10% by building true utility and value for them,” Tanco said.


Original article is in Indonesian, translated by Kristin Siagian

Edward Chamdani to Unlock Indonesia’s Ultimate Potential by Encouraging Upstream Investment

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.

Edward Ismawan Chamdani started his journey in the tech industry through the best-known computer company in the world. For years, he had his shared interest in the financial sector and finally started his own software company. With a decade-long experience in the industry and one of the perks of being an analyst, he builds a fine network within the startup and investment scene.

In partnership with Andi S. Boediman, Ideosource was built from brick to brick. Now it is expanding beyond just a VC. His other initiative, Gayo Capital, partnered with Ishara Yusdian and Jefri Sirait focuses on revenue-generating companies whose businesses organically create impact to the world. Recently, he also started a venture builder named Starcamp Asia aiming to bridge the founder’s gap in the country.

Edward has a personal purpose to unlock the ultimate potential of Indonesia sustainably from various aspects mainly in leveraging human capital surplus and abundant natural resources via technology disruption and implementation. In order to achieve this mission, he encourages people to be more invested in the core issues, it is upstream investment.

Indonesia is the tech paradise of Asia, where technologically enabled startups can find fertile soil to grow and deliver impactful contributions to the developing nation’s problems. The President himself has announced the Nation’s Vision To be the Digital Energy of ASIA. An achievable vision as Indonesia has been the biggest economy in Southeast Asia, 8th biggest in the world, and in the middle of a massive digital transformation changing its young population from a nation of workers into digital-savvy talent taking over the world, one unicorn at a time.

Starting with mechanical engineering, grasping some financial background, and accidentally creating a VC, Edward has been learning during the process. He is currently serving as Managing Partner at Ideosource Venture Capital, Gayo Capital, and StarCamp  – with a mission to incubate, invest and accelerate with a “Purpose”.

DailySocial is glad to have such an insightful and passionate discussion of Edward’s biggest dream to unlock Indonesia’s ultimate potential. Below is an excerpt of the conversation.

What do you think of Indonesia’s investment ecosystem nowadays?

It was early 2011 when we first started Ideosource, startup quality was quite green. There are limited sources for mentors, and events, let alone VCs, we’re all still learning. Every time we find startups with a legitimate business model, it’s still not clear how the investment process should be carried out. Years passed by and we finally see a sweet spot around 2014-2015, turns out our investment was fruitful.

Over time, Indonesia’s startup ecosystem is getting mature and one by one reached unicorn status. Rudiantara, who at that time still leading Indonesia’s Communication and Informatics Ministry, initiated the leaders of these tech giants to meet with global investors, and the progress is superb. Indonesia is getting broadened and better exposure in the global tech scene. In 2018, was held the first Nexticorn (Next Indonesian Unicorn) with a vision to step up the game for Indonesia’s startup scene.

Indonesia’s list of unicorns in the first quarter of 2022

Observing the startup scene in the last few months regarding the global meltdown, it is still very promising. In fact, this is the right time for them to start fundraising due to the projection of investment decline in 1-2 years ahead, especially for heavily impacted VCs with big-level funding. However, in general, it will not affect the whole ecosystem we still have a great potential growth story. Our market share remains huge in several sectors, including commerce, fintech, and edtech.

The most interesting is in healthtech. Previously, we have substantial issues with online prescriptions and Electronic Medical Records. Under the supervision of a tech-literate figure, there are more policies that support tech accessibility and adoption. The presence of the Peduli Lindungi app, telemedicine service, and government collaborations with healthtech companies are proven effective during this pandemic.

In addition, there are many other sectors yet to optimize, including forwarding, logistics, cross border trading. In terms of natural resources from agriculture to human capital. There are huge potential lies in B2B while people are focusing on B2C.

The thing is, most investments are engaged in the downstream sectors instead of the upstream side due to market availability and accessibility. Upstream investments may take extra effort as it is aimed at the root causes that are often identified by determining the most immediate and direct causes and working backward from there. In many cases, upstream action addresses social, economic and environmental conditions.

Ideosource grasps the experience of investing in the upstream sector with eFishery. It is resulting in the shifting of the whole value chain, from the unbankable to bankable fish farmers through thoroughly distributed information. This is the kind of ecosystem that will drive the whole sector. As it extends the business and continues to the processing level, it will lead to export and import and ends up in the country’s exchange.

It is not about the downstream sector did not have an impact, it is only limited to the additional income for the players. When we focus on the producers, we can use local resources for the country’s economic resilience. I think VCs should consider this investment angle.

You have a background in mechanical engineering, strong experience in the financing industry and currently serve as Managing Partner in two giant VCs. Can you share a bit of the transition?

Previously, I’ve been in a sales organization that handles industrial product distributors. Then, I moved to IBM and really got into the tech stuff. In my last year, I’ve been handling the financial sector (around “11 banking institutions), combining IBM’s solutions to advise banking customers.

In 2002, I co-founded a software company, and my evolution as a founder continue until I decided to exit in 2007. However, I was still around as a Director for several years up to 2010. After that, I’m not immediately started a new company. What I learn as I started my own company, the hardest part is to align the vision, mission, and chemistry with partners. It is bad enough when you meet the wrong partner.

My next journey is to be a business consultant, and the story gets better when I worked with Plasa.com. That is where I build a work-related relationship with Andi S. Boediman, the other Managing Partner in Ideosource. It was late 2010 when I meet a general partner of a big-enough Private Equity (PE), and he said then would be the perfect timing to start a VC. We did our research around 4-5 months to finally debuted with Ideosource. It was a simple analysis, in late 2010, 3g penetration is still around 30 million with the rapid growth of internet users. It was also the beginning of the e-commerce era.

Starting with mechanical engineering, grasping some financial background, and accidentally creating a VC, I’m learning during the process. The thing is, I learned that running a business, and generating cash flow with available funds for growth are totally different. A conventional business survives only with cash flow. Once I entered the VC scene, there are other perspectives. It is ok if you don’t make a profitable business at the beginning, as long as you are analyzing a certain business model in a sector that you can be sure to be a dominant player.

This kind of perspective makes me see there are totally two different worlds. Many people find it hard to understand that capital market, venture investment, and startup thesis, are totally different from conventional business. An interesting fact, the availability of funds will never lessen. It is just a matter of who can convince people with loaded bags of money to invest.

Early days of Gayo Capital

What are your hypotheses on the portfolios?

In terms of analyzing, it is relatively similar. First, we need to look at the founder’s quality, integrity, and so on. Sometimes, when the founder is approved, the fund is secured. Furthermore, we are to discuss the sector, business model, addressable market, and the target for several years. Also, is it attractive enough for the investors? Because liquidity can only work if the story is compelling for the next investors. We’ll be reluctant if there’s no story.

What is your biggest hardship during the business journey?

Hardships are inevitable. I previously mentioned the hardest part is finding the right partner. That is one of the reasons why I have several initiatives with different partners. Each of them has quite a distinct appetite, knowledge, and passion. Ideosource was a fruit of the seed that Andi Boediman and I planted a decade before. Our creativity doesn’t stop there, Andi has his shared interest with Ideosource Entertainment, while I’m nurturing more impact-initiated startups with Gayo Capital.

Along the way, we found that investing in the upstream sector has its own challenge. The founder gap is clear. The quality of founders in the upstream and downstream sectors is quite big, especially outside of Java Island. Recently, we’ve launched our latest initiative named Starcamp to bridge founders with all kinds of information and tools to build qualities and step up their game. This is a marathon as we also develop the founders to deliver vision and mission.

You have previously mentioned the founder gap, also investors should be more invested in the upstream sector, what’s your take on this issue?

In terms of the founder gap, I think it is fine for the startups with a focus on the core technology to be headquartered in Java. When the infrastructure is ready, they can deploy it outside the island. Therefore, if there are other cases like eFishery,  startups outside Java could replicate the concept. They did not necessarily become a tech company but they can be a facilitator.

There are many in the agriculture sector, these are companies we tried to invest in. We’ll create together a more scalable business model that allows them to expand outside of Java. This is the kind of upstream investment I was roaming about, for investors to invest in a certain technology to be licensed outside the island. An integrated value chain happens there.

The thing is, innovation in conglomeration takes 5 to 10 years, just like in the upstream sector. Not many startups are brave enough to enter this scene, only conglomerations with strong capital and a 10-year investment horizon. How can VCs have a conglomerate-like horizon and invest in such kinds of startups?

I have one terminology in Gayo Capital, a reverse conglomeration, inspired by the downstream sector portfolios in Ideosource’s early time which currently has contributed a lot more. Why can’t it be the upstream sector? If we’re going to rely only on conglomeration, the innovation is limited although it has a big contribution to the GDP. Startups have potential as long as they focus on creating an ecosystem that is integrated with each powerful core business, therefore, creating a solid value chain.

Aside from the current position, you’re also in charge of this year’s Nexticorn highlighting the emerging sector. Can you elaborate on this matter?

Such names are emerging this year, including the web3 and its definition which is still fragmented. However, the underlying of this blockchain technology has tremendous evolution. People are learning about bitcoin, the NFT is rising, and more platforms are developed to cater to this industry. The concept is aiming to be a decentralized autonomous organization. That’s the ultimate destination.

Edward Chamdani diampu sebagai CEO NXC 2022

In the crypto scene, we’ve seen people are still relying on the exchange.  In the future, the role might be getting less needed as people are having their own wallets and stuff. In the future, peer-to-peer will exist, and decentralized finance will happen. Disruption will be more extensive than ever, including in VCs.

VCs and investors are said to be more careful and selective to place their money. What is your suggestion for the startup?

I think those who are too insecure might lose the opportunity. Every situation has its moment. It all comes back to the hypothesis. Even in the most peculiar situation, if the market is there and in need of a solution, and it is possible to be executed, it is a deal. I think the more investors are hesitant, VCs who can see the opportunities shouldn’t stop.

In fact, using the “growth at all cost” strategy to be a dominant player is so last year. Investors are now looking for growth to profitability. It’s no longer an era for “burning money”, there are already many casualties. It is a natural correction. Investors will also see the country’s direction while doing investments related to the regulation and government. This will also be the highlight of this year’s Nexticorn. There will be related policymakers to explain Indonesia’s objective toward the tech industries, from crypto, tax, and exchange regulations.

As a seasoned investor with tons of experience in the industry. What is your biggest dream about this country’s tech and investment ecosystem?

After a decade or two in the tech industry, building Ideosource while hands-on in various sectors, focusing to impact with Gayo Capital, and bridging the founder’s gap with Starcamp, the main objective is one. I want Indonesia to be able to unlock its full potential. Even with the founder’s gap, there must be an initiative that we can work together to create a path for them. This is also the reason I’m very excited to join Nexticorn.

I’m also part of several associations, including Amvesindo and Aludi. All of their initiatives are merely to aspire the startup and investment ecosystem in Indonesia to be better. For the people to not depend solely on conventional financial sources and instead have alternative funding. From unbankable to bankable.

On the other side, we need to provide education and nurturing, also mentorship for them. As it continues to grow, various associations with its own specific subject, including Nexticorn, will open new doors to global investors. By saying this, hopefully, Indonesia can be faster to unlock and unleash its truest and full potential. Personally, after setting this vision and mission, I can work more focused and with purpose.

Desty Announces Additional Funding Led by Square Peg

Desty, a digital platform developer startup that supports social sellers, announced additional funding led by Square Peg. This investment follows the pre-series A round which was announced in mid-2021. It is then followed by additional rounds at the end of 2021 with the participation of East Ventures, Jungle Ventures, 5Y Capital, and several angel investors.

Desty plans to leverage its new funding for product optimization, team expansion, and user acquisition.

“We are welcoming the support from Square Peg with their extensive experience investing in comparable business models around the world. Indonesia has a very unique digital economy with striking fragmentation across merchant traffic, sales channels, payments and logistics. We firmly believe that our holistic approach to empowering merchants with our suite of enablement tools will solve their problems most effectively,” Desty’s Co-founder & CEO, Mulyono Xu said.

Square Peg is a global technology investment company that manages over $1 billion in funds and has actively deployed more than $200 million in Southeast Asia. Some of his portfolios include PropertyGuru, FinAccel, Pluang, and Doctor Anywhere.

“We are excited to partner with Desty, not only because it is attractive and we’ve seen the customer satisfaction, but also because of the technical talent and deep market knowledge brought together by Mulyono and Bill (Desty’s Founder). They have deep industry expertise and best practice experience that will help unlock economic opportunities for millions of small businesses in Indonesia and across Southeast Asia,” Square Peg’s Partner, Piruze Sabuncu said.

Desty’s business growth

Over the last few months, coupled with the launch of new features, Desty has increased its merchant capacity to handle transactions and has recorded an average monthly GMV growth of 250% over the last quarter. Desty solutions are used by various brands, such as fashion, electronic retail, and culinary.

Desty has reached nearly one million users with 33x annual growth. Over the past year, they have upgraded several merchant empowerment tools and technology infrastructures such as Link-in-Bio (desty.page), Online Store Maker (desty.store), Digital Order Menu System (desty.menu), and Omni Channel Dashboard (desty.omni).

It was previously said that around 50% of Desty’s users are online sellers, while 30% of users are creators or influencers.

Social commerce enabler service

Desty’s services target social commerce actors, either through social media or other channels. The size of the social commerce market in Indonesia itself is quite large. According to the Research and Markets report, in 2022, the market value is to reach $8.6 billion and will increase to $86.7 billion in 2028.

In general, enabler platforms provide services to facilitate the management of goods and transaction systems. Some also help on the marketing side up to payment. In addition to Desty, several platforms that are offering similar service to help social commerce players include AturToko, Avana, Minmin, Tokotalk, and several others.


Original article is in Indonesian, translated by Kristin Siagian

Flash Coffee Is Listed as Centaur after Closing Series B1 Funding Round

Flash Coffee has recently closed another funding in the Series B1 round. The representative confirms this information as contacted by DailySocial, however, the company is reluctant to mention further details. It is said that the closing of the B2 round will soon follow and it potentially turns the coffee chain startup into a unicorn.

From the data that has been submitted to the regulator, a number of investors were involved in the B1 Flash Coffee round. The funds raised amounted to more than $30 million, catapulting the company’s valuation to $175 million and cementing them in the centaur ranks.

Previously, Flash Coffee has secured Series A funding worth $15 million in 2021. White Star Capital led this funding, followed by a number of other investors, including DX Venture, Global Founders Capital, and Conny & Co.

Flash Coffee’s Founder & CEO, David Brunier revealed at that time that the company would expand to 10 countries in the Asia Pacific by targeting 300 new outlets or three new outlets every week.

Brunier considers that the retail coffee outlet market in Indonesia is very attractive and has great room for growth. In addition to the high population, the upper-middle-class segment with a thirst to try new products, and coffee consumption per capita keep increasing.

Flash Coffee was founded in January 2020 and now has more outlets in Indonesia, Singapore, and Thailand. It is claimed that the majority of Flash Coffee outlets have made a profit while demonstrating the success of their business model

Based on its website, there are currently around 82 outlets spread across the Greater Jakarta area. Flash Coffee remains attractive to coffee lovers even during the pandemic.

The growth of coffee tech

In the last two years, technology-enabled coffee shop platforms have received substantial funding. Starting from Fore Coffee, Janji Jiwa, Jago Coffee, and Kopi Kenangan.

Even though the F&B business has been under a lot of pressure during the pandemic, a technology-based (O2O) approach allows these coffee chain startups to survive and accelerate their business. One of them is the grab & go concept — using the developed application, users can place orders and make payments to be picked up at the nearest outlet. On the other side is taking advantage of the food delivery service.

According to research (MIX, 2020), 40% of young coffee customers in Indonesia are starting to switch to grab & go outlets. This demand is encouraged by the shifting behavior from instant coffee, as consumers want a higher quality drink — as well as pairing it with complimentary snacks. The products sold on average are in the middle price range — below premium coffee, but above instant coffee.

The presence of the application is not solely for transactions but also as a medium to increase user retention through a series of loyalty-based promotional programs and activities. Moreover, app traffic becomes useful data for studying user habits and trends to be later translated into product and service innovations.


Original article is in Indonesian, translated by Kristin Siagian

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