Koinworks to Cast More Institutional Lenders, Focusing to Serve SMEs

Lendable pours another debt funding to KoinWorks. In 2020, the funds given were worth $10 million (equivalent to 149 billion Rupiah), the nominal has currently increased to $30 million or around 435 billion Rupiah. In Indonesia, Lendable also disbursed a similar loan to Amartha in February 2021 valued at 704 billion Rupiah.

Previously in April 2020, KoinWorks also announced the debt funding from two Europe-based financial institutions. As we contacted, the company refused to reveal its identity. In an interview, KoinWorks’ Co-Founder & CEO, Benedicto Haryono did say that collaboration with institutional lenders is one of his strategies, both from domestic and foreign institutions.

He explained that the company had obtained institutional lenders since early 2018, marked by the entrance of Saison Modern Finance. Furthermore, Bank Mandiri followed in the middle of the year. In 2019, Sampoerna and CIMB Niaga also joined.

Focused on SMEs

For the company’s next plan after receiving the fresh funds, KoinWorks’ CFO Mark Bruny said that his team will still focus on serving the SME market which has great potential in Indonesia. This strategic collaboration is also said to be a success thanks to the transparency and good communication that exists between KoinWorks and Lendable.

“We believe that digital SMEs that have become borrowers on our platform will be able to survive and even seize the opportunity to thrive from this pandemic. Lendable agrees and they believe in the ability of Indonesian Digital SMEs and KoinWorks’ ability to carry out this vision,” Mark told DailySocial.id .

Regarding a change in approval or additional requests from Lendable to KoinWorks through this second collaboration, Mark emphasized that the approval is likely remain. Through the 300% increase of loan amount, KoinWorks is expected to be able to accelerate the distribution funds to Indonesian SMEs.

The current number of KoinWorks’ disbursed funds in the second quarter of 2021 is exceed 1 trillion Rupiah to 300 thousand SMEs in Indonesia, a threefold increase compared to 2020. This indicates a significant development in this pandemic with many SMEs attending and pivoting to digital.

In a research by KoinWorks, it was revealed that SMEs using conventional and digital channels actually dominate the market with a share of 48% compared to SMEs that only use digital channels (40%) or conventional channels (12%). This digital transformation has succeeded in helping Digital SMEs not only survive but are able to thrive during the pandemic.

This transformation was also a major factor in the rise of the Digital SME Confidence Index to the level of 2.49 from the level of 2.37 at the end of last year and pushed us closer to the normal level, at the level of 3.00.

Potential of foreign investors in Indonesia

Mark also said, the high interest of foreign investors, in this case those who provide funds in the form of debt funding such as Lendable to Indonesia, is due to the large business growth in Indonesia, especially among SMEs. Indonesia has become the investors target, seen from the potential and incoming investment.

Was founded in 2015, Lendable Inc through fintech has channeled a lot of capital to people around the world. This is a good way to be able to provide access to financial services to the public. The direct entry of companies like Lendable to Indonesia has had a multiply effect on funding. By introducing foreign investors to Indonesia, it opens up opportunities for other fintech services in Indonesia to raise fresh funds.

“As the current most advanced platform, we are lucky to be able to make this deal and help the ecosystem by introducing strong players while introducing Indonesia globally,” Mark said.


Original article is in Indonesian, translated by Kristin Siagian

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Ula Snags 1.24 Trillion Rupiah Series B Funding, to Release Paylater Product for Warung

Ula snags $87 million in series B funding (approximately 1.24 trillion Rupiah) led by Prosus Ventures, Tencent, and B-Capital. Participated also in this round, the Bezos Expeditions, a VC created by Amazon founder Jeff Bezos; along with other leading investors, Northstar Group, AC Ventures, and Citius.

Ula‘s previous investors, including Lightspeed India, Sequoia Capital India, Quona Capital and Alter Global cut another check in this round. On this occasion, Ula also announced that AC Ventures Founding Partner, Pandu Sjahrir was appointed as the company’s advisor.

This funding was announced eight months after the series A funding in January. Collectively, the company has raised a total $117.5 million in funding within 20 months since its founding.

The company will use the funding to expand its geographic and team coverage area, to realize its vision of empowering the traditional retail industry in Indonesia. These include releasing new categories, developing paylater feature, developing new technologies, logistics infrastructure, and local supply chains.

Ula’s Co-founder & Chief Commercial Officer, Derry Sakti said that this BNPL solution was presented because Ula already has 70 thousand stalls that transact through its platform, the database is a provision for credit scoring before disbursing loans.

The company is said to grow 230 times, offering more than 6 thousand products. The majority of Ula users come from tier two to four cities that still lack access to resources and logistics infrastructure.

As is known, traditional retailers have limitations in accessing banking products, even though they are very dependent on daily income, this makes the paylater option to suppliers will have tremendous benefits for warung.

“Using Ula, they no longer have to worry about purchasing goods, product availability, or even payment, which will give them more time to focus on other more important things. Seeing the impact firsthand that Ula has given to customers’ lives certainly moves our team to move forward,” he said in an official statement, Monday (4/10).

Ula’s Co-founder & Chief Operating Officer, Riky Tenggara added, “Solving the complexities of supply chain problems in Indonesia is a very challenging and impactful endeavor. As a company built on a community, we cannot underestimate the importance of providing services that our customers can always rely on, especially services that can make a real difference to their lives.”

Ula investors, AC Ventures and Northstar, also put on some statement. They stated that they have the same mission regarding the importance of empowering Indonesian MSMEs through technology. This is because MSMEs contribute more than 60% of Indonesia’s GDP and become the backbone of the country’s economy.

“Ula provides a more efficient procurement and operational system, and ultimately opens access to credit that is needed to expand the MSME business scale,” AC Ventures’ Managing Partner, Adrian Li said.

The Ula app allows shop owners to order a wide variety of products and have them delivered directly to their stores. With a simple concept, Ula tries to focus on customer needs rather than adding unnecessary features, to ensure the best experience. The app is said to be lighter, suitable for low connection environments and the most basic devices, and ensures it doesn’t take up too much space on their phones.

Potential warung digitization

The service solution solves a very fundamental issue. Based on the results of a research entitled The Future of Southeast Asia’s Digital Financial Services, at least 92 million adults in Indonesia are yet to have access to banking financial services (unbankable) – making it difficult for them to access transactional digital services directly. This is quite a big number, even greater than the total population of countries in Southeast Asia except the Philippines.

Warung is the most outreaching business system – the place where micro-economy across Indonesia revolves. According to 2016 Economic Census data released by BPS, of the 26.4 million units of Micro, Small and Medium Enterprises (UMK), 46.38% fall into the category of “Wholesale and Retail Trade, Repair and Maintenance of Cars and Motorcycles. “ – warung is in it. This number is also the largest among other types of businesses in Indonesia.

In an interview with DailySocial.id, Ula’s Co-Founder Nipun Mehra explained his analysis of why his startup is steadily expanding into this sector. He said, traditional retail like warung is the main pillar of the Indonesian economy. “This is the backbone of the consumption economy, while employing millions of people. Traditional retailers are cost-effective and have deep knowledge of the local market. However, this sector is the most vulnerable part of the value chain because they usually work individually on a small scale,” he added.

The diversification they trying to make is the efficiency of resources and capital by presenting a doorstep system (direct product delivery) that is cost-effective. In addition to connecting retailers with stock providers of FMCG products, they will also expand product coverage in the fashion category.


Original article is in Indonesian, translated by Kristin Siagian

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Wealthtech Platform Ajaib Is Indonesia’s Newest Unicorn

Wealthtech platform Ajaib confirmed its new status as Indonesia’s next unicorn, after closing a $153 million (over 2.1 trillion Rupiah) series B round led by DST Global. This value is slightly higher than the one rumored at the late September. This funding adds up to the total amount of $243 million.

Further informed in the series B round, previous investors, including Alpha JWC Ventures, Ribbit Capital, Horizons Ventures, Insignia Ventures, and SoftBank Ventures Asia were participated.

DST Global and Ribbit Capital are investors of Robinhood, a US-based similar platform. Ajaib was often compared to Robinhood, it proves Indonesia’s advanced technology and capital market capabilities are able to compete with global markets.

Ajaib Group’s Co-founder & CEO, Anderson Sumarli said Ajaib will use this fresh fund to massively recruit top talent and conduct educational campaigns to inspire more budding investors.

“Our mission is to welcome a new generation of investors to modern financial services. Indonesia still at 1% of share investor penetration and we still have a long way to go to support government programs to increase financial inclusion and literacy in Indonesia,” Anderson said in an official statement, Monday (4/10).

The company currently has 1 million retail investors in shares, since it was first founded two and a half years ago. This is quite rapid achievement as Indonesia only has 2.7 million stock investors. “The growth in the number of retail stock investors has never been this fast in the Indonesian history, therefore, it is certainly the first step to build the strength of young Indonesian investors to change the nation’s future.”

Alpha JWC Ventures’ General Partner, Chandra Tjan said, “Ajaib’s success is a clear testament to the growth and strength of technology and the Indonesian capital market. “As Indonesians, we are very proud to be able to participate in building the country’s digital ecosystem, and to have a real impact on people’s daily lives,” said Chandra.

DST Global Managing Partner Thomas Stafford added, “Ajaib has built world-class products using modern technology to serve the younger generation of Indonesia in entering the capital market. We are very proud to be walking with Ajaib in their mission to democratize access to investment for all.”

On the same occasion, last month Ajaib also announced the appointment of Andi Gani Nena Wea, one of the President Commissioners of BUMN, as the President Commissioner of Ajaib.

As is known, according to the results of a survey by the Financial Services Authority (OJK) in 2020, the level of financial literacy in the capital market is  relatively low at 4.9% and the inclusion rate is only 1.6%. The company has been committed to providing financial education, especially in the investment sector through the Stock Generation Program that has been carried out with the IDX in various regions with low financial literacy.

To date, the program has reached 26 cities, from the capital to Papua. In addition, Ajaib also conducts online education every day as a form of Ajaib’s commitment to increasing financial inclusion and literacy, especially for the capital market.

Indonesia’s list of unicorns

Ajaib has confirmed to be the 7th unicorn from Indonesia. Even so, according to DailySocial.id’s records, there are currently 12 startups that have been confirmed as unicorns. They are:

Perusahaan Est. Valuasi
Gojek-Tokopedia $18 miliar
Traveloka ~$3 miliar
Bukalapak $6 miliar
OVO ~$2,9 miliar
JD.id (confirmed) undisclosed
Blibli (confirmed) undisclosed
Tiket.com (confirmed) ~$1 miliar
J&T ~$7,8 miliar
Kredivo* $2,5 miliar
Xendit ~$1 miliar
Ajaib ~$1 miliar
*assuming the merger process has been completed, to go public soon via SPAC

Original article is in Indonesian, translated by Kristin Siagian
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MDI Ventures and Some Investors Pour 1.79 Trillion Rupiah to Kredivo Through PIPE

Kredivo’s parent company, FinAccel received another investment of $125 million or 1.79 trillion Rupiah from MDI Ventures, Cathay Innovation, and Endeavor Catalyst through Private Investment in Public Equity (PIPE). This additional investment will strengthen its position ahead of the IPO preparation through the SPAC scheme.

In his official statement, MDI Ventures CEO Donald Wihardja said he was impressed with the company’s vision to build an AI-based digital consumer credit platform through the use of its first post-funding alternative data for the series B round. Kredivo is also supported by ongoing partnerships with eight leading e-commerce platforms in Indonesia.

On the same occasion, FinAccel also announced three new ranks to fill the position of the Board of Commissioners of Kredivo Indonesia, Arsjad Rasjid, Darmin Nasution, and Karen Brooks. All three are still waiting for approval from the regulator. Meanwhile, the new Board of Commissioners will play a role in helping to design the strategic growth and expansion of Kredivo’s market.

The brief profiles of the three consist of Arsjad Rasjid currently serving as CEO of PT Indika Energy Tbk and General Chair of the Indonesian Chamber of Commerce and Industry (KADIN Indonesia); Darmin Nasution is a leading economist in Indonesia who is also the former Coordinating Minister for Economic Affairs (2015-2019), and former Governor of Bank Indonesia (2010-2013); and Karen Brooks, who served on the White House National Security Council Officer, with more than a decade of experience in private equity and global investment management.

In a joint statement, the three said that Indonesia is still one of the largest unbanked markets in the world despite an increase in financial inclusion in recent years. “We are committed to helping Kredivo make an impact on tens of millions of customers over the next few years because we are optimistic about their innovative credit scoring system,” he explained.

In general note, FinAccel announced its action to become a public company on the NASDAQ through the SPAC scheme. In order to realize this plan, Kredivo will merge with shell company VPC Impact Acquisition Holdings II (NASDAQ: VPCB) which is an affiliate of Victory Park Capital (VPC). From the two company merger, FinAccel will obtain a pro-forma equity valuation of $2.5 billion, assuming no redemption.

Digital loan market

According to data quoted by DSInnovate in the report “Indonesia Paylater Ecosystem Report 2021”, paylater services will grow 76.7% compared to the previous year, posting a GMV of $1.5 billion in 2021. It is projected to continue to increase to reach $8.5 billion in 2028. This is also supported by an understanding of the paylater business model which is increasingly familiar in the community.

Besides Kredivo, in Indonesia there are several other players such as Akulaku, Atome, Indodana, Julo, Vospay, Kreditmu, and Home Credit. In addition, the super application has also developed similar services, such as Gopaylater, Traveloka Paylater, and SPayLater from Shopee.

In terms of funding, several startups have also backed by the investors. We have collected the data, Akulaku is one of the players with the largest valuation after Kredivo, its value is close to $1 billion.

Indonesia’s paylater startup funding / DSInnovate


Original article is in Indonesian, translated by Kristin Siagian

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Payable Software Startup Spenmo Obtains 484 Billion Rupiah Series A Funding

Spenmo fintech startup, a payment-for-business (payable software) SaaS solution provider, announced series A funding round of $34 million (over 484 billion Rupiah) led by Insight Partners, a VC from the United States. Other investors participating in this round include Addition, Salesforce Ventures, Alpha JWC Ventures, Global Founders’ Capital, Broadhaven, Operator Partners and Commerce Ventures.

Apart from institutional investors, several angel investors also participated. They are William Hockey (Plaid’s founder), Andy Cohen (Ex-SVP of Sales Bill.com), Ongki Kurniawan (Head of Stripe Indonesia), Kunal Bahl & Rohit Bansal (Snapdeal’s founder), Matt Doka (Fivestars’ founder), and John Kim (Sendbird’s founder).

It is said that this funding is one of the largest series A rounds that the Y Combinator-backed company has successfully closed in Southeast Asia.

The fresh funds will be used to build market penetration and access to more than 20 million SMEs and mid-sized markets in Southeast Asia. Most of the segment doesn’t use any software to manage their debts, previously using spreadsheets or human labor.

Spenmo is a fintech company that provides SaaS solutions for managing business payments through corporate credit card products aimed at SMEs and medium-sized enterprises as the target users. This credit card is intended to help businesses manage finances when paying bills, tracking, categorizing purchases, and bookkeeping on autopilot in 90% less time.

In Indonesia, Spenmo already has a local team and is actively recruiting new talents. The Spenmo website is available in Indonesian to target new users.

In an official statement, Spenmo’s Co-founder & CEO, Mohandass Kalaichelvan explained, Spenmo’s services were previously considered a back-office function, but finance and debt are an important part of running a business.

“The finance team that implemented our service got their hours back. On average, they save over 50 hours and $10K each month. Our goal is to return 10 billion man-hours every year to finance teams across the region,” he said.

Insight Partners’ Principal, Rebecca Liu-Doyle has joined the board of directors at Spenmo after this round. She said that the payment industry would be disrupted, especially in Southeast Asia, which Spenmo’s solution had not yet explored. “We are delighted to be able to play a part in Spenmo’s journey to continue to innovate and develop,” Rebecca said.

Since its launching in Singapore last year, Spenmo has expanded across Southeast Asia, bringing in several thousand customers representing a wide range of sectors, from high-growth startups to SMEs, mid-market companies and accounting firms.

Corporate credit card

Corporate credit card is an expensive item for SMEs in Indonesia as banks have a number of strict requirements for the application process. Almost all banks issue corporate credit card products as their target users, in addition to credit cards for retail.

Due to the gap, it finally opens up opportunities for fintech lending players exposed to finance business capital or KTA. At Spenmo, the physical and virtual credit cards they present allows companies to easily manage team expenses and lot of bills by providing invoice payment features and automatic bank transfers.

Spenmo provides virtual and physical credit cards to pay rent, invoices, and employee salaries on a scheduled basis in the dashboard. Also, you can easily integrate the API with accounting software (such as Xero, SAP, and myob) already used by the company.

It is claimed that SMEs can apply for a Spenmo account with a 30 minute process, control (freeze and cash out) spending with just one click, and prioritize security by setting pre-approved funds to avoid overspending.

B2B paylater trend

In addition to corporate credit cards or productive capital loans, B2B paylater services has been intensively implemented. According to a research publication released by DSInnovate entitled “Indonesia Paylater Ecosystem Report 2021”, currently there are several startup collaborations that offer these services.

Indonesia’s B2B paylater service provider / DSInnovate

The concept is that the fintech lending service acts as a partner in providing financing, synergizing with the owner of the procurement service — both goods and services. In contrast to lending services that provide cash capital loans, B2B paylater focuses on financing or purchasing business equipment.


Original article is in Indonesian, translated by Kristin Siagian

Jaygan Fu Ponnudurai Is Officially OVO’s New CEO, Replacing Jason Thompson

OVO appointed Jaygan Fu Ponnudurai as the new CEO replacing Jason Thompson as of September 2021. Jaygan was previously OVO’s COO since June 2018, also held various positions at Grab Malaysia and Grab Indonesia.

Regarding this succession, Jaygan has confirmed his new position to the DailySocial.id team.

Both Jaygan and Thompson were former Grab executives before leading OVO. Thompson previously served as GrabPay’s Managing Director before becoming OVO’s number one person. Before Thompson, OVO was led by Adrian Suherman in its early establishment as part of the Lippo group.

After Thompson served as the CEO, Adrian moved as OVO’s President Director, until Karaniya Dharmasaputra arrived to occupy the seat until now. Adrian is currently the President Director of Matahari Putra Prima (MPPA).

In separate occation, at yesterday’s (28/9) press conference, OVO has now entered its 4th year and has transformed from being just an e-money platform to digital financial services. “One of the innovations in the investment area is with Bareksa, a deep integration between e-money and e-investment. This is what I think is the first in Indonesia,” Karaniya said.

In fact, entering its second year, OVO has become the country’s 5th unicorn. It also means the youngest company compared to its peers.

In the midst of fierce competition for digital payment services, he continued, according to research by Kadence International Indonesia, OVO is the most often used digital payment. It is said that OVO has 71% active users and a brand awareness level of up to 96%. It was also revealed that OVO’s user profiles came from the age group of 25-45 years with a composition of 51% male and 49% female.

Some of the reasons for consumers choosing OVO are include accesible with many applications or online merchants, available for bank account transfer, offering many promos and cashbacks, the lowest top-up fees, and used by many online stores and merchants.

The research also revealed that 8 out of 10 OVO users ordered food online and 7 out of 10 users used OVO for offline payment transactions at restaurants.

OVO is now available in more than 430 cities and regencies, with more than 1.2 million merchants from various industries, including MSMEs that have implemented QRIS.

Digital payment app competition

Based on Bank Indonesia’s data, the number of electronic money transactions in 2020 has reached Rp161 trillion with 4.6 billion transaction volumes. The trend continues to increase from year to year, as of August 2021 alone, it has recorded a transaction value of IDR 161 trillion with 3.3 billion transactions.

OVO has a fairly strong position in the market, especially as the main payment service on Tokopedia and Grab. According to the BOKU 2021 report, based on the market share of the total existing players, the ranking is as follow: OVO (38.2%), ShopeePay (15.6%), LinkAja (13.9%), Gopay (13.2 %), and FUND (12,2%).

However, OVO clearly not to be careless, the business dynamics that recently occured have the potential to ‘threaten its position’. With the Gojek-Tokopedia business merger, in particular they also co-founded GoTo Financial which will accommodate all fintech on both platforms. Gojek alone has Gopay and Gopaylater which is OVO’s direct competitor. Recently, its services have started to be integrated into Tokopedia.

It is likewise for Grab, the ride-hailing giant’s intimacy with EMTEK has been getting closer lately. Meanwhile, the technology conglomerate also operates DANA in its line of business. To date, there has been no indication of OVO’s shifting position in Grab; the news spread about merger plan between OVO and DANA.

With another player comes another strategy. ShopeePay is still focused on accommodating its very massive customers, while starting to dive into the O2O realm. Meanwhile LinkAja continues to strengthen its presence as an offline merchants payment– by continuously increasing integration into consumer platforms, including Gojek.


Original article is in Indonesian, translated by Kristin Siagian

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Verihubs Secures 39.9 Billion Rupiah Seed Funding, to Release Credit Scoring Service

The E-KYC service startup Verihubs announced $2.8 million (approximately 39.9 billion Rupiah) seed funding round led by Insignia Venture Partners with participation from Central Capital Ventures (CCV) and Armand Ventures. The company plans to expand into regional markets, as well as develop new products, one of which is credit scoring.

Participated also in this round a series of local startup angel investors, including Budi Handoko (Shipper’s Co-Founder), Jefriyanto and Ricky Winata (Payfazz’ Co-Founder), Rohit Mulani (Gotrade’s Co-Founder), Chinmay Chauhan (Bukuwarung’s Co-Founder), and Pramodh Rai (Modalku’s ex-Chief Product Officer).

Previously, in the 2019’s pre-seed, Payfazz’ Co-founder, Hendra Kwik and Xfers’ Co-founder, Tianwei Liu participated in this stage along with Indigo Creative Nation.

Quoting from TechCrunch, a series of angel investors were previously Verihubs’ users. Together with Payfazz, Verihubs opens the opportunity for customers to deposit money with local agents to use for online payments, and BukuWarung, to access transaction data.

The two examples above are Verihubs solutions for the unbanked segment. Meanwhile, the company also serves the segment of users who already have a bank account. The CCV entrance as Verihubs’ investor ranks opens the possibility of implementing e-KYC verification, especially for users with bank accounts, as they can partner with BCA to access customer data.

Currently, 46 companies have used Verihubs’ service, most of which are in the financial sector. The number of users is targeted to be doubled to 100 companies, because Verihubs technology can also be used for e-commerce companies, marketplace rentals, and hospitality. One of Verihubs users came from hospitality, they used the platform to simplify the room check-in process.

Verihubs’ Co-founder & CEO, Rick Firnando said, before Verihubs, many of its clients still doing manual customer verification, which takes between one to two weeks. Verihubs serves as an all-in-one verification solution to only five seconds, using AI-based identity authentication technology and APIs that enable companies to continuously verify returning customers via SMS, WhatsApp or speed dial.

“Because developer has difficulty to do integration with multiple vendors, Verihubs allows clients to do KYC, offer phone number verification using WhatsApp or SMS, and also verify customer financial data,” Rick said.

When users log into the app using Verihubs for the first time, they will be asked to take a selfie and then upload a photo of their government-issued photo ID. Verihubs AI technology compares the two photos to see if they match, and cross-references the ID with a telecom operator’s credit score and Indonesian government database, including criminal records.

The company applies a transaction fee-based business model, the client will pay according to the number of successful verifications.

Rick continued, the company is building a credit scoring system based on transaction data and account balances. In addition, it plans to expand into regional markets, such as Vietnam and the Philippines.

“For the ID verification system, we found that Verihubs already has a product-market fit in Indonesia, however, we want to expand it to new products. We consolidate financial data from multiple sources, not only for banks, but also for the unbanked population. And we are also exploring potential expansion into new markets, such as the Philippines and Vietnam.”

This startup has just graduated from summer batch of Y Combinator 2021, this funding is claimed to be YC’s first AI startup from Indonesia.

Verihubs was founded in 2019 in Jakarta by Rick Firnando with more than 9 years of experience in the B2B industry, and Williem, an AI researcher with a PhD in computer vision from Inha University, South Korea.

Market competition

In Indonesia, there are already several services targeting similar segments such as ASLI RI. In collaboration with LoginID, a Silicon Valley company, ASLI RI launched AsliLoginID, a Biometric-Authentication as a Service (BaaS) platform with FIDO2 certification. The certification is one of today’s most stringent security standards, internationally recognized and is compatible with various types of computing device operating systems.

In addition, one of the service development startups based on artificial intelligence Nodeflux also has a business line that focuses on developing solutions to simplify the eKYC process, Identifai. Nodeflux alone is one of the partners of the Directorate General of Civil Registration as a joint platform provider to provide the best performance in data utilization without security risks.

Regarding the SaaS industry landscape that specifically develops API-based verification solutions, Rick also said that in terms of education, the target market for this service already has a good understanding of the importance of verification solutions. “As the fintech industry and other digital-based companies grow, this solution will be increasingly needed and developed,” he said.

According to ReportLinker, the global software as a service (SaaS) market is expected to grow from $225.6 billion in 2020 to $272.49 billion in 2021 at a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 20.8%. The market is expected to reach $436.9 billion by 2025 at a CAGR of 12.5%.


Original article is in Indonesian, translated by Kristin Siagian

PINA Secures Seed Funding, to Launch Investment and Financial Management App

The developer of personal financial management application PINA announced seed funding with an undisclosed amount. This round was led by 1982 Ventures, with the participation of iSeed Asia, Prasetia Dwidharma, Oberyn Capital, and a series of angel investors. The fresh funds will be used to accelerate product development and growth before its launching in November 2021.

Later, the PINA application will help people manage and grow their money by providing management and investment solutions in a single app. The startup was founded by former Grab executive Daniel van Leeuwen and financial services veteran Christian Hermawan.

“Our mission is to help everyone achieve financial independence by providing products and advice to make complex financial decisions simple and relevant. Wealth creating tools for high net worth individuals are now available to everyone. PINA empowers people to invest and manage their money in an understandable way,” Daniel said.

1982 Ventures’ Managing Partner, Herston Powers revealed to DailySocial, although the platform is yet to launch, its founders’ mature experience is enough to be a strong reason for investors to invest.

“PINA is the first Indonesian personal finance app to serve all Indonesians. The path to personal investment is not stock trading or crypto exchange, but a financial product made for the masses that focuses on building wealth. PINA’s holistic approach and values ​​are fully aligned with our mission to transform financial services and empower millions of Indonesians,” Herston said.

1982 Ventures is a venture capitalist that focuses on fintech startups. Based in Singapore, they focused on early stage funding, for businesses in Southeast Asia. Aside from PINA, Brick and Wagely are 1982 Ventures’ other portfolios in Indonesia.

Meanwhile, Prasetia Dwidharma’s CEO, Arya Setiadharma said, “PINA’s vision is to empower Indonesians to pursue and secure financial freedom in a simple and straightforward way. Reducing barriers to accessing markets is as important as educating those who want to access them – financial literacy must be a priority. ”

Other platforms that offer similar services are including Halofina, Finansialku, and Fundtatstic. Not only a personal financial recording application, it also embed investment services and financial education in its application — their mission is to make it easier for every user to achieve their financial goals.

Targeting young generation

PINA’s mission is not only to provide an easier way to invest in Indonesia’s emerging financial markets, but also to provide access, trust, and financial literacy to address the low penetration of retail investors, particularly the lower middle class, younger generation, and beginners.

In order to achieve this goal, they have partnered with several institutions, including BNI Sekuritas to offer various investment products, Asli RI for e-KYC and biometric security, and other leading asset management companies. Currently, PINA has been registered and is under the supervision of the Financial Services Authority (OJK).

Until Q2 2021, we noted some wealthtech (financial and investment management) startups that received funding from investors, including:

Announcement Startup Round Amount Investor
January-2021 Zipmex Series A $ 6,000,000 Jump Capital
March-2021 Pluang Pre-Series B $ 20,000,000 Openspace Ventures, Go-Ventures
February-2021 FUNDtastic Series A $ 7,700,000 Ascend Capital Group, Indivara Group
January-2021 Ajaib Series A $ 25,000,000 Horizons Ventures, Alpha JWC Ventures, SoftBank Ventures Asia, Insignia Ventures, Y Combinator
January-2021 Bibit Series A $ 30,000,000 Sequoia Capital India, East Ventures, EV Growth, 500 Startups
March-2021 Ajaib Series A $ 65,000,000 Ribbit Capital, Y Combinator Continuity, ICONIQ Capital, Bangkok Bank PLC, angel investors
May-2021 Pintu Series A $ 6,000,000 Coinbase, Blockchain Ventures, Castle Island Ventures, Intudo Ventures, Alameda Ventures, Angel Investor
May-2021 Bibit Series B $ 65,000,000 Sequoia Capital India, Prosus Ventures, Tencent, Harvard Management Company, AC Ventures, East Ventures

It is projected to increase, in line with market opportunities for financial management services that continue to be in demand. A study mentioned, the wealthtech solutions market size will reach $54.62 billion by 2021; and will continue to grow to $137.44 billion in 2028 with a CAGR of 12.1%.


Original article is in Indonesian, translated by Kristin Siagian

Makmur Investment Platform Secures Seed Funding

Online investment platform Makmur secures seven-figure seed funding led by BEENEXT. A number of VCs and angel investors participated in this round, including Kinesys Group, Trihill Capital, Yiping Goh (Partner at Quest Ventures), Edward Tirtanata via Kenangan Kapital, Vidit Agrawal (CEO of GajiGesa), and Andrew Lee.

The money will be used to drive business growth by developing product features and portfolios. Makmur will also increase the number and develop the quality of its human resources.

“Currently, Indonesia’s capital market investors are experiencing significant growth, but only represent 2% of the total population in Indonesia. We expect this funding to support our efforts to close the financial inclusion gap and encourage literacy in Indonesia,” Sander said in his official statement.

Edward Tirtanata through his angel investment fund, Kenangan Kapital said that Indonesia is currently experiencing an unprecedented surge in investment from the retail market. Using this growth, Makmur focuses on financial advisory and goal-based investing to help assist novice investors. He considered this to provide different values ​​compared to wealthtech startups in Indonesia.

“Non-professional investors like me need financial advisors, and Makmur democratizes financial advisor services,” Edward told DailySocial.id in separate occation.

In general note, Makmur allows investors to invest with a minimum value of IDR 10,000. Makmur offers a number of features to strengthen the added value of its products. First, technology-based human advisors and Makmur Recipe to make it easier for novice investors to compare the right mutual funds. Users can also place mutual funds in different pockets according to their needs or investment goals (goal based investing).

Currently, Makmur provides eight investment managers, BNI Asset Management, Bahana TCW Investment Management, Trimegah Asset Management, Avrist Asset Management, Capital Asset Management, RHB Asset Management, FWD Asset Management, and Syailendra Asset Management.

Strengthen its position

In fact, Makmur is backed by a series of team work experiences at well-known technology and financial companies in Silicon Valley and Wall Street. Sander previously had an internship as a Facebook Software Engineer who was responsible for the algorithm for sorting posts on the News Feed and a Software Engineer at Motorola Solutions.

He has also held various positions in the financial industry, from KCG Holdings to Head of Quantitative Trading at Virtu Financial, one of the largest stock trading companies on Wall Street.

As DailySocial.id reached, Sander based his thought on a number of strategies in blending Makmur’s superior features, therefore, users can experience investing like having a personal wealth manager

For example, Makmur Recipe’s superior features were developed in several options, such as Makmur Recipe for emergency funds, retirement funds, and passive income. In addition, there is also a tech-enabled human advisor feature to design strategies according to the user’s investment goals. The recommended investment strategy will also follow the user’s risk profile.

Sander said this feature was designed by experts in their fields with the support of research and data-based investment technology. He considered that human advisors better understand the investment needs of users than robo advisors that have been circulating on similar platforms.

“We see that Indonesia has a quite low investment literacy. Most people invest because they join in or are attracted to sweet returns. In fact, a good investment must be based on data and research, not just feeling or simply following. Therefore, we made a quantitative investment strategy which draws on decades of data and research results used by Wall Street, not just academic theory,” Sander said.

Business development

This year, Sander revealed that his team will increase the mutual funds options by adding investment manager partners with good reputation and track record. His team will also collaborate with several mutual fund sales outlet partners

“We strictly select investment manager partners. In terms of mutual fund products, we consider some factors, such as performance, top holding, managed funds, and management fees for similar mutual funds,” he said.

In terms of products, Makmur will add new features to make it easier for users to invest, such as payment methods. According to Sander, the GoPay and Direct Debit payment methods are in the process of being integrated and are targeted for release in the next two months.


Original article is in Indonesian, translated by Kristin Siagian

Application Information Will Show Up Here

Digital Prepaid Strives to Become Consumers’ Alternative Service

Over the past decade, telecommunication operators have been experimenting to find the right formula to improve its business performance. Since the emergence of over-the-top (OTT) services in Indonesia, operators have developed various service models to bring in new customers and increase ARPU.

A series of operators have tried e-commerce and digital money businesses. They failed to develop a sustainable business. From two years ago, the operator is finally back with a new strategy. This time, it’s not creating digital services. Instead, they provide services that remains in the corridor of its core business, but with a different approach.

Operators introduce digital-based prepaid services. It is said as various user transaction activities are carried out entirely through the application. In this case, the operator offers a unique value proposition to accommodate market demand that likes to try new ways.

For example, consumers can customize the SIM card, or in other words, select a ‘special number’ through the application. Likewise the purchase and registration of cards. This method is definitely different from what we usually do; buy starter packs and top up data at the counters.

Currently, consumers have three choices of digital prepaid brands, by.U, Live.On, and MPWR. There used to be four, but Switch Mobile decided to discontinue its service in early 2021.

The question is, will digital prepaid services be able to survive the hustle and bustle of the telecommunications industry which is getting saturated? DailySocial, through this writings, has compiled various perspectives regarding the digital prepaid phenomenon and its projections in the future.

Changing operator’s branding

As previously said, telecommunications services are identical to conventional methods. In fact, the idea of ​​digitizing this process has been achieved considering that operators have its own applications that serve to provide data or credit package purchases. However, this is not the goal.

According to Telkomsel’s former President Director, Emma Sri Hartini, by.U could bring “refreshment” to the telecommunications industry that was more familiar with the presence of the old card brand. She considered by.U to be able to embrace the younger generation without having to be closely associated with Telkomsel, which has often been associated with expensive cellular cards.

Another reason is that today’s young generation tends not to want to be dictated to the service needs, aka product-driven. Digital prepaid cards offer service customization that is considered to be able to meet the needs of users in this segment.

Smartfren’s President Director, Merza Fachys previously said the same thing. This digital cellular brand can be positioned as a completely new product without the need to be associated with the existing parent brand.

Big job on increasing awareness

Based on its timestamp, by.U is the first digital prepaid product launched in Indonesia (October 2019). Then, followed by Switch Mobile (March 2020), Live.On (October 2020), and MPWR (December 2020). Almost two years later, are these products able to disrupt the existence of cards that have been circulating in the market for a long time? Can the new approach brands steal consumers’ attention?

The hypothesis above can easily be broken considering the Switch Mobile’s sudden discontinuation within only a year. Switch did not specify the reason behind this closure. We can assume this service is a failure in the market. It may also be because consumers are not used to enjoying cellular services in a new way. Otherwise, it could be a lack of awareness due to the Covid-19 pandemic situation which makes it difficult for service providers to market its products offline.

Another assumption is that the cellular market is already saturated, making it difficult to gain significant traction. Moreover, it is targeting certain segments, not the mass market.

Quoting Katadata, the Central Statistics Agency (BPS) noted that cellular card users reached 341.28 million in 2019, down from 435.1 million in 2017. Its penetration exceeded the total population of 269.6 million in 2019.

Platform Provider Rating
by.U Telkomsel 4.5 (5M+ downloads)
Live On XL Axiata 3.7 (100K+ downloads)
MPWR Indosat Ooredoo 2.7 (1M+ downloads)
Switch Mobile Smartfren Terminated

We tried to validate this with every digital prepaid service provider, but most were reluctant to share the data. Telkomsel isthe only provider willing to reveal a little information. by.U’s Principal Growth Lead, Riko Ringgoanto said its users reached 2.5 million after two years of launching. This means that by.U only contributed 1.4% of the total 169.2 million Telkomsel subscribers in the first semester of 2021.

Riko added, this achievement has exceeded the prior expectations. This target even consider the Covid-19 factor where consumers tend to reduce their spending. With the current total user and engagement, he said that by.U is already product-market fit.

“Awareness is still our big homework for the past two years. Due to Covid-19, it has become difficult for us to market advertisements and offline events. However, we continue to intensively do digital placements, enter youth communities in the region, and hold webinars. As by.U is a digital-only prepaid, it seems that it is becoming less chaotic. Indeed, offline channels still number one promotion in Indonesia. When the situation improves, we are prepared to promote in offline locations, such as MRT and KRL,” he explained.

Meanwhile, XL Axiata’s Head of External Communications, Henry Wijayanto agred on this. Although marketing activities have become limited, his team sees a positive impact where people are now getting used to doing digital activities.

“Similar challenges faced by all digital telco brands on how to increase awareness and credibility. Moreover, as a new brand, these things will often appear. We will continue to increase sustainable partnerships to encourage consumer needs to go digital,” Henry said to DailySocial.

Is it enough for disruption?

Secretary General of the ITB Telecommunication Policy and Regulatory Study Center Muhammad Ridwan Effendi said that the emergence of digital prepaid will be difficult to disrupt prepaid brands that have been around for a long time. In addition to today’s prepaid products, Indonesians seem to prefer products with more simple feature and easier to remember. Therefore, the new products emergence is considered to be difficult to survive.

“In some countries, digital operators such as the MVNO model enter with a community approach. However, it is still less successful here. There are [prepaid] products entering the youth community segment, eventually disbanding. Maybe we need to try to enter a wider community, such as religion, motorcycles, or music. This concept has been successful in several countries,” he explained.

Currently, Indonesia has at least more than ten brands of cellular cards, both prepaid and postpaid cards. In order to boost efficiency with today’s competitive cellular market, several operators have started to streamline its service brands.

Citing Liputan6.com, Telkomsel finally merged the prepaid brands from SimPATI, Loop, and Kartu AS into Telkomsel Prepaid. According to internal research conducted over the past year, Telkomsel sees customer segmentation as less relevant in the digital era. It is now more focused on presenting packages according to customer needs and interests.

Meanwhile, Telecommunications Observer from ITB, Ian Josef Matheus actually present a different perspective. Instead of coming up with new brands and approaches, operators should give consumers more understanding that postpaid and prepaid costs are eventually the same.

“Prepaid is indeed the biggest contributor to cellular operator income. However, prepaid cards should only be made in one brand and indeed what the community really needs. It is to avoide confusion for customers or potential customers with the combined advantages,” he told DailySocial.

In addition, operators can actually develop more innovations for postpaid because their ARPU is considered to guarantee more income. For example, providing volume-based or time-based on-demand payments for digital applications developed by mobile operators.

“Unfortunately, operators are yet to have a killer product which popularity can match WhatsApp, Zoom, or Telegram. In fact, self-owned applications can reduce outgoing traffic and streamline spending costs. Even if they cannot develop internally, at least operators can collaborate with the digital ecosystem to encourage increasing ARPU,” he added.

Respondent’s perspective

DailySocial had the opportunity to conduct a mini survey from the user’s point of view. As a disclaimer, this survey does not fully reflect the facts and problems in the field. This survey was conducted to show users’ perspectives regarding the use of digital prepaid services, as well as our efforts to validate it with related service providers.

The survey shows that most respondents use digital prepaid as a secondary number for their mobile data or internet needs. Respondents also admitted that they did not plan to make it their main number.

Some respondents admitted that they did not want to use it for some reasons, including not keen to install the application, not being interested, its complicated, and too many numbers. As many as 40% of respondents said they were not interested in trying digital prepaid in the future, 40% said they were interested, and 20% answered maybe.

Sumber: Mini Survey DailySocial
Source: DailySocial’s mini survey

“Before it was launched, we were aware that by.U would be used as a secondary number, and from the start we did not try to make by.U the main number. According to our internal research, the most spending was on secondary numbers. That’s why we tried to present rewards, free quotas, and additional features (music, podcasts, etc.) to increase user engagement. Therefore, they don’t just do mere transaction,” Riko said.

(+) (-)
Choose your own number Speed issue
SIM Card is being delivered SIM Card took a long time to arrive
Additional quota for certain app Delivery charge
Unlimited active period Application running slow
App-based SIM registration Customer service is difficult to reach
Unlimited data without FUP Unlimited data up to 2Mbps
SIM Card available through e-commerce Data package is often changing
Affordable data cost May not work in remote area

Various user perspectives regarding digital prepaid services / DailySocial Mini Survey

We also spoke with two anonymous sources regarding the use of Live.On and MPWR. Each has the same concern with user experience even though the issues are different.

According to Live.On users, the internet speed is fairly good as the signal and capacity in the area are strong. He said, the package is relatively affordable, not more expensive than Telkomsel, but not much cheaper than its parent operator XL. However, the Live On user experience from the payment side is considered less than optimal.

“I use Live.On for secondary numbers on different devices. When making payments, it becomes complicated because all e-wallet applications are already installed on the main device. Inevitably it has to be done on the same device because it requires synchronization. It should be just e-wallet number for it can be directly arranged,” said one user.

Meanwhile, MPWR users also claimed to have no problems with signal and internet. However, he considered the MPWR application to be less responsive and seamless. The appearance is also considered a bit different from most applications which usually come with up and down scroll modes.

“The MPWR looks sideways so it doesn’t feel good. In my opinion, the myIM3 application is actually better than MPWR. How come it loses to the parent application, even though the [MPWR] tagline is digital.” he said.


Original article is in Indonesian, translated by Kristin Siagian