BukuWarung Bags 855 Billion Rupiah Series A Funding, Aldi Haryopratomo Participated as Angel Investor

BukuWarung today (10/6) announced series A funding worth of $60 million or equivalent to 855.3 billion Rupiah. With oversubscribed status, this round was led by Valar Ventures and Goodwater Capital. The company said this funding is the largest series A ever obtained by a startup in a related field.

In addition, Golden Gate Ventures and Blue Fund are reportedly involved in this round. Also participated some angel investors, including Aldi Haryopratomo, Victor Jacobsson, and several others. Currently, BukuWarung has successfully collected over $80 million from its investors.

In early February, BukuWarung has announced funding from Rocketship.vc. The round is said being participated by several retail companies in Indonesia and angel investors. This is a follow on funding from the pre-series A fundraising the company has secured in mid-2020, with Quona Capital as the lead investor.

According to our sources, BukuWarung’s valuation has reached $200 million. The investors involved in BukuWarung’s funding include Y Combinator, East Ventures, AC Ventures, Soma Capital, Sampoerna, HOF Capital, GMO Venture Partner, Venture Souq, Tanglin Venture Partners, DST Global, and angel investors from technology company leaders such as Grab, Gojek, Uber, Airbnb, Modalku, Xendit, etc.

This round was announced shortly after its rival BukuKas received an investment worth of $50 million. It was led by Sequoia Capital India, with a number of well-known angel investors, including Gokul Rajaram and Taavet Hinrikus, co-founders of TransferWise.

Both applications provide similar services, financial management for MSMEs. It includes financial records, financial reports, and debt collection features. In the future, both BukuWarung and BukuKas will also transform into integrated fintech services, enabling MSME players and their customers to access various financial products online.

Currently, the main focus lies in tier-2 and 3 cities, with the quite large unbanked population in the region. Based on the statistics, BukuWarung has gathered 6.5 million merchants in 750 cities.

In order to support its services, BukuWarung has launched the Tokoko application, a platform that allows merchants to open their online stores independently. Users can list their products, manage orders, accept payments, track deliveries, and talk to customers.


Original article is in Indonesian, translated by Kristin Siagian

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wagely Secures 79 Billion Rupiah, Targeting 250 Thousand Employees for Early Wage Access

Indonesia has the largest underbanked population in Southeast Asia. Millions of low- and middle-income workers struggle to cover unexpected expenses each month, putting significant financial pressure on their paycheck.

Tobias Fischer, Sasanadi Ruka, and Kevin Hausburg intend to address this issue by establishing wagely in March 2020 in Jakarta. Those three hold digital industry background that counts for Wagely’s vision and mission to provide financial welfare to employees by providing access to early salaries.

Fischer used to work at Grab Financial Group, Capital Match, ADB, and Rocket Internet. Meanwhile, Ruka previously worked at Tokopedia, Jenius, AWS, and HappyFresh. While Hausburg has strong experience in digital marketing for many global companies.

In an interview with DailySocial, Fisher explained that Wagely helps businesses increase the productivity, engagement and loyalty of their workforce by offering employees an innovative financial benefits platform to access earned wages and financial education.

Employees can withdraw up to 50% of the salary instantly and on demand to their payroll bank account. The money will be used to help them pay for unexpected expenses and emergencies. Wagely provides an affordable flat fee per withdrawal with no hidden fees or interest. Therefore, Fisher consider wagely in accordance with the sharia concept.

“Wagely has a unique approach as it does not provide loans to employees but only access to earned salary. Therefore, Wagely does not require any underwriting and available to all employees in a company,” he said.

It is said that wagely has partnered with more than 50 companies, most of the companies are in global and national level. Among those are British American Tobacco, Ranch Market, Mustika Ratu, and others. As many as tens of thousands of employees from all of these partners have been served with early salary access.

Mockup aplikasi wagely / wagely
Wagely mockup app / wagely

Seed funding

In the same occasion, on its first anniversary, wagely officially announced the seed funding of $5.6 million (over 79 billion Rupiah) led by Integra Partners (formerly known as Dymon Asia Ventures). Also participated in this round Asian Development Bank (ADB) Ventures, PT Triputra Trihill Capital, 1982 Ventures, Willy Suwandi Dharma (former President Director of Asuransi Adira Dinamika), and others.

As wagely’s CEO, Fisher said that the fresh funds will be used to accelerate the adoption of the Wagely platform to more employees. It is targeted to attract more than 250 thousand employees as users this year. He said, providing a sound and affordable solution to an emergency cash flow problem is only the first step towards building long-term financial health.

“Ensuring long-term financial well-being means building a holistic platform that offers workers access to affordable services, encourages financial responsibility, and provides a pathway to financial stability and inclusion, with access to earned wages at the core and seamlessly integrated features. We are committed to building a complete ecosystem that builds and protects the future financial sustainability of employees in Southeast Asia.”

In an official statement, Integra Partners’ Partner, Christiaan Kaptein said, “The investment and participation of several Indonesian family conglomerates highlighted Wagely’s leadership role in financial awareness and its ability to build sustainable and responsible businesses by taking advantage of the vast financial services market opportunities in Southeast Asia,” he said.

ADB Ventures’ Senior Fund Manager, Daniel Hersson added, “This investment underscores our belief that Wagely has what it takes to lead financial inclusion and literacy in Indonesia. wagely offers workers what they didn’t have before: fair and accessible financial tools to help them manage inevitable contingencies and emergencies, including those caused by climate change.”

The presence of Earned Wage Access (EWA) platforms such as Wagely in Indonesia, GajiGesa has attracted a lot of attention from investors as the potential it offers. EWA solutions provide companies with the opportunity to reduce turnover, increase employee productivity, and increase business savings.

In the United States, Dailypay has received funding that brought them to the unicorn level. Softbank also invested in similar startups named Payactiv, Jeff Bezon and Bill Gates (Wagestream and Minu), and Peter Thiel (Even).

Alodokter Locks Additional Funding from MDI Ventures and Samsung Ventures

Healthtech startup Alodokter today (07/6) announced additional funding from MDI Ventures and Samsung Ventures Investment Corporation. The value is undisclosed and this is a follow on investment to the series C+ funding in November 2020 and series C funding in October 2019.

“Investments from MDI Ventures and Samsung Ventures will be directed towards further enhancing the Alodokter ecosystem [..] Key areas of focus going forward include technological innovation, increasing the talent pool, and adding new features and functionality. Our expansion has always focused on providing a better customer experience. fast, accurate and reliable on the Alodokter platform,” Alodokter’s Founder & CEO, Nathanael Faibis.

Based on the statistics, Alodokter is currently connected to around 43 thousand doctors and 1500 hospitals/health clinics. They have also served millions of patients in Indonesia. The services offered include health content, telemedicine, online ordering of doctor’s appointments, drug purchases, and insurance packages.

“The pandemic has driven the acceptance of telemedicine services for both patients and healthcare providers. We believe that enabling better healthcare through technology is more important than ever,” Alodokter’s Co-Founder & President Director, Suci Arumsari.

Throughout 2021, the health-tech sector has raised bigger attention due to its potential to help people gain access to health facilities. Other health-tech startups also being invested, including the rival Halodoc in April 2021 with series C funding worth IDR 1.1 trillion. Recently, Prixa also secured a seed funding worth of 40 billion Rupiah from MDI Ventures and TPFT.

“Alodokter has a proven track record in developing their comprehensive healthcare solutions. All innovations, from telemedicine to insurance, have been developed to provide Indonesian people for affordable healthcare. MDI investment will further expand healthcare growth through potential collaborations with several SOEs in Indonesia,” MDI Ventures’ CEO, Donald Wihardja said.

Since 2019, Alodokter has been supported by ranks of investors, including Softbank Ventures, Sequis, Golden Gate Ventures, Philips, Heritas, and Hera Capital.

In terms of Samsung Ventures, apart from Alodokter, they have invested in Travelio and Gojek. Meanwhile, apart from Alodokter and Prixa, MDI Ventures also invested in other healthtech startups, mClinica (Singapore), CXA Group (Singapore), and Heals Healthcare Group (Hong Kong).


Original article is in Indonesian, translated by Kristin Siagian

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goKampus Receives Pre Series A Funding Led by Sovereign’s Capital and SALT Ventures

The edtech platform goKampus that focuses on lecture’s needs today (03/6) announced the pre-series A funding led by Sovereign’s Capital and SALT Ventures. Currently “oversubscribed”, also participated in this round Azure Ventures and several angel investors. The value was undisclosed. Additional capital will be focused on product development, team recruitment, and user acquisition.

“Sovereign’s Capital provides connections and accelerates growth in Indonesia, as well as a strong network in the United States; while SALT Ventures’ strong media presence in Indonesia makes it easy for us to increase the number of student users on the platform,” GoKampus’ Founder & CEO, Nathanael Santoso said.

Was founded in 2018, goKampus services seek to digitize college system by providing comprehensive access to higher education services. Starting from registration to campus, virtual learning services, scholarship information and education loan, and channelling internships.

A study case, students can be accepted into their dream department by sending a photo of their transcript. goKampus and college partners will proceed admission instantly through the application.

From the statistics, the startup currently has around 250 thousand active student users with 400 university partners spread across Indonesia and various other countries. As of 2021, it is also said that student placements through the GoKampus Instant Approval feature have increased 30 times compared to the previous year.

Earlier this year the GoKampus Cloud University program was launched as the first digital university to offer an on-demand digital business management curriculum equivalent to an undergraduate degree in Indonesia. The fee is claimed to be 40% more affordable than conventional universities, the curriculum is designed as attractive as possible, therefore, the study will not be boring.

“At goKampus Cloud University, each student can build their own curriculum, get the most advanced learning experience, transfer credits to our partner universities, earn a bachelor’s degree, or enter internships and work programs after they have completed the course. The courses will be through film and cinematic learning experiences, where class quality, student retention and learning outcomes will be accelerated and optimized. We plan to launch this latest version of the digital university experience in July,” Nathanael said.


Original article is in Indonesian, translated by Kristin Siagian

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Zenyum Secures Series B Funding, to Accelerate Expansion Throughout Asia

After securing series A funding in 2019 from RTP Global, Sequoia India, TNB Aura, SEEDS Capital, and several other investors, the direct-to-consumer (D2C) platform that offers Zenyum dental care products has received another funding from L Catterton worth of $25 million. Zenyum’s previous investors participated in this round, including Sequoia Capital India, RTP Global, Partech, TNB Aura, Seeds Capital and FEBE Ventures.  The company managed to raise a total funding of $40 million.

Zenyum’s CEO, Julian Artope revealed to DailySocial that dental care and related products, also known as “Smile Cosmetics” is a billion dollar opportunity across Southeast Asia. Zenyum wants to be the market leader in the fastest growing region in the world.

“With this funding, we can accelerate our expansion across Asia, deepen our product range, and further develop our technology stack to become a true partner for dentists while building a category-defining company,” Julian said.

Regarding Zenyum’s business in Indonesia, Julian emphasized their plan to expand. Was founded in 2018, Zenyum has grown exponentially, with a 4x increase in revenue by 2020. With technology support and partner network integration, Zenyum formed collaborations with dentists that are accessible across Asia through a secure and personalized process.

“Zenyum has grown exponentially over the past year and ZenyumClear has quickly become the market leader in our segment in Asia. We are also executing on a wider category and successfully launching other Smile Cosmetic Products such as our ZenyumSonic toothbrush which has proven to be a great success story, dominates the Electric Toothbrush category on third-party e-commerce platforms and is sold at well-known retailers such as the Guardian,” Julian said.

Pandemic and Zenyum business growth

During the pandemic, Zenyum launched online and offline activities and services to help their customers. The difficulty in conducting face-to-face meetings was solved by the Zenyum team by providing online consulting services and treatments.

It is expected that through this process, instead of returning every month for visits, Zenyum’s dentist and customer service team track customer progress more closely and timely through the app and only ask customers to come back for an in-person consultation if necessary.

“This enables our customers to use proprietary technology to minimize inefficiencies in the invisible aligner treatment process and also helps dentists optimize their time and digitize their practice. This can also increase the level of care and quality of outcomes for customers, resulting in a Net Promoter Score (NPS) of the best customer in its class,” Julian said.


Original article is in Indonesian, translated by Kristin Siagian

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Treasury Gold Investment Platform Provides Crypto Asset Trading Service

Treasury digital gold investment platform officially provides crypto asset trading services. Treasury collaborates with Tokocrypto to offer crypto assets as an alternative investment besides gold.

In a virtual press conference today (03/6), Treasury’s CEO, Dian Supolo said that Indonesian people’s interest in digital assets has experienced significant growth in recent years. The Commodity Futures Trading Regulatory Agency (BAPPEBTI) noted that the Indonesian crypto asset investors has reached 4.45 million as of March 2021.

In addition, through this new service, his team wants to drive financial balance in digital asset transactions. He said, the concept of financial balance in asset diversification is the basic principle of financial management.

“We don’t just make crypto [investment] services because we don’t want users to only think about money. We also want to educate the public through our products,” Dian said.

Treasury partners with Tokocrypto because it is considered to have the same frequency, not only investing for the sake of profits, but also being responsible for creating a balanced investment culture.

On the same occasion, Tokocrypto’s Co-founder & CEO, Pang Xue Kai also said that this collaboration is expected to improve the crypto asset ecosystem as a better and safer alternative asset class in Indonesia.

“Many still assume that crypto trading is illegal in Indonesia, even though the government has unlocked the access. We encourage a safe crypto trading ecosystem here as we are trying to avoid potential money laundering,” Kai said.

In a general note, Tokocrypto is the first crypto platform in Indonesia to have a license from BAPPEBTI. In April 2021, Tokocrypto officially introduces Toko Token (TKO) which is the first local crypto project with a hybrid model (CeFi and DeFi) in Indonesia.

Previously, Pluang, which started as a gold investment application which later also diversified into crypto instruments. Pluang partners with Zipmex for strategic collaboration.

Crypto investment starts from Rp5,000

Treasury users can now buy and sell crypto assets starting at IDR 5,000. Currently, there are five options, including Bitcoin (BTS), Ethereum (ETH), Binance Coin (BNB), and Tether (USDT), while Toko Token (TKO) can be purchased in multiples of one token.

Dian said that Rp5,000 to start crypto investments are the ideal price for the Indonesian people. He said, this price should not interfere with the user’s money management for other needs, especially emergency funds.

Furthermore, his team currently offers five options as the Indonesian market enthusiasm for crypto is quite large. However, Dian added that there will be more options in the future. “We don’t want instant and rush to analyze data [on the market], everything has a process,” he said.

Just like other investments, users can buy and sell crypto assets through a piggy bank balance that can be top up via various available payment methods. Treasury also provides some features where users can check the total asset value or the details of each asset to an easy-to-understand profit/loss estimation.


Original article is in Indonesian, translated by Kristin Siagian

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Prixa Bags Funding Over 40 Billion Rupiah Led by MDI Ventures and TPTF

Prixa healthtech announced fresh funding of $3 million (over 40 billion Rupiah) led by MDI Ventures and Trans-Pacific Technology Fund (TPTF). As previous investor, Siloam Hospitals Group also participated in this round.

In an official statement, fresh money will be used to expand Prixa’s platform coverage and user base, supporting the B2B customer base, and increasing accessibility to healthcare and the digital transformation of Indonesia’s healthcare services.

“There is a dichotomy in healthcare industry where constant innovation exist in advanced patient care, but access to basic healthcare continues to lag behind. [..] We thank the strategic investors for the opportunity, who have supported us in making a positive impact on healthcare through digital primary care,” Prixa’s Co-Founder & CEO, James Roring said.

Each investor representative gave a statement. TPTF’s Managing Director, Barry Lee said, “As an international venture fund, we see a significant opportunity to support the healthcare industry in Indonesia through cutting-edge technology. We look forward to contributing the global experience in this sector that we gain from our portfolio of other health technology companies to support Prixa’s growth.”

MDI Ventures’ GM Legal and Corporate Communications, Aditia Henri Narendra added, “MDI co-led the funding at Prixa for demonstrating its ability to support insurance companies and hospitals in making physician services more accessible and affordable through its AI-powered telemedicine platform. [..] We are very happy that Prixa can actively support the digital health ecosystem in SOEs.”

Prixa was founded in 2019 by James Roring, MD with the first service launched was an AI-based health management platform. The platform provides telemedicine and other basic primary care services to healthcare payer with the mission of humanizing healthcare by leveraging data and technology.

Prixa focuses on healthcare payer services, which include insurance companies, corporations, and government entities, serving approximately 10 million users. Aiming to reduce claims costs and healthcare costs, Prixa strives to provide healthcare in a paradigmatic way through a managed care approach. This business model is in line with Prixa’s support for government programs for digital transformation in the healthcare sector and for improving health services across all levels of society.

To date, in time of pandemic, it is said that Prixa has experienced exponential growth for its services, including online medical consultations. The Prixa platform allows users to connect directly with primary care services, which include telemedicine consultation, drug delivery, and on-demand laboratory tests.


Original article is in Indonesian, translated by Kristin Siagian 

Arip Tirta: Technology Can Change People and Business in a Fast and Significant Way

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.

Silicon Valley is the paradise of the startup industry and Arip Tirta spent nearly 7 years analyzing the market for the US-based leading capital market company that lends to technology, life sciences, and sustainable technology companies. He has specialties in venture capital, venture lending, private equity, start-ups, entrepreneurs, financial structuring, and business models.

In 2011 he decided to come home and built his own venture. His startup debut is in the property sector, with UrbanIndo, an online service that helps its users to market, sell, and buy property in Indonesia. After being acquired by another proptech startup 99.co, Arip moved to the next venture in the accommodation sector, Bobobox. Aside from building a venture, he also actively invest in startups, he also directly involved in some of the startups.

Arip’s current focus now lies in Evermos, the first social commerce to empower Small Medium Enterprises and individuals, by connecting brand owners to resellers to end consumers through the platform. He’s currently very passionate about cultivating the SME ecosystem, also become a part of BRI Ventures’ commissioner to help to build the VC ecosystem in Indonesia.

Aside from his experience in Silicon Valley, Arip Tirta has specialties in venture capital, venture lending, private equity, start-ups, entrepreneurs, financial structuring, and business models. DailySocial team has an opportunity to discuss his venture and future expectations of the Indonesian tech industry.

When was the first time you realize that you’re in the tech industry?

I have an educational background in scientific computing. It’s a combination of applied math, statistics, and computer science. During my campus life, I always dreaming about making it into Wall Street and become a trader. Then, life got in the way. In my last year of college, I got an interview with one of the venture capital & private equity-based in Palo Alto. My viewpoint of the tech industry was limited at that time, however, I managed to pass the interview with my technical skill.

My first attempt in the tech industry was being an analyst for the US-based leading capital market company that lends to technology, life sciences, and sustainable technology companies. During my first few years, I was being a generalist until I decided to focus on the tech industry in my third year. I think that was when it all started to become more interesting. I spent 7 years analyzing the market in Silicon Valley and leaving with the finest seeds to plant in the home country.

Hercules Capital annual meeting circa 2008

You’ve had the time of your life in Silicon Valley, what makes you leave the “it” city and decided to come home?

If there is one thing I’ve learned in Silicon Valley, technology can change people and business in a fast and significant way. In terms of marketing, back in the day when the internet is very exclusive, people have to pay loads of money for ads. Nowadays, when there are options, everything is made possible even with just a little money. Technology is changing the way marketing works and still counting.

In 2010, Indonesia was having its first internet boom, one of the historical moments was Koprol’s acquisition by Yahoo! I was watching Indonesian tech companies’ growth from afar and quite impressed. With some serious considerations, I finally pull the trigger and leave Silicon Valley to contribute more in my capacity with my experience to the Indonesian market.

How was your first experience building a startup?

When we want to start anything, there is no such thing as perfect timing. Few months before leaving for my hometown, I’ve already worked on some ideas and business plans, one of which is the real estate industry.

Indonesia circa 2010 is like a wild wild west where basic infrastructure is very limited. Therefore, we [tech enthusiasts] collectively trying to develop the foundation. I did it in the property sector, there are others in different sectors. At the same time, we need to educate the market. Market in this sense not only stands for end-users but also the government, including families a.k.a societies.

When I set my foot back in this archipelago, I’m aware that I shall not compare how things work in here with the way things are in Silicon Valley. Therefore, I did it all without high expectation, just try to make it work. We founded UrbanIndo, an online service that helps users market, sell, and buy property in Indonesia in 2011.

UrbanIndo year-end event circa 2014

First, I see the Indonesian property lacks market data and decided to disrupt this industry for more people can have more insights on this sector. UrbanIndo was build to become the best property site in Indonesia by redefining the way Indonesians looking at properties. Therefore, all Indonesian people can make the best decision regarding investment in property. We’re focused on market insights, changing prices, projections, available undervalued property, and so on.

We did everything in our capacity to build this platform, it was backed by Gree Ventures, IMJ Fenox, East Ventures, and prominent angels. It was an exciting nearly-7-years time of making business work until in late 2017, we finally decided to accept an unsolicited offer from Singapore’s property search startup 99.co.

It is said that you are also an active angel investor. With Bobobox, you become the Co-Founder and directly contribute to managing day-to-day operations as Managing Director for almost a year. How did you manage?

While I was working with UrbanIndo, I also did some angel investing. There are several sectors that are worth disrupting. With bobobox, I was involved since the beginning. I see the travel industry is at its peak. Many people are traveling a lot, despite for content or just for peace of mind. We then found out that accommodation becomes a big cost-related issue in this segment. One of the ways to solve this problem is to maximize space resulting in cost-effective price.

Bobobox was founded in 2018, a new, young, sleek, nimble, and smart accommodation solution for everyone. Bobobox becomes the alternative accommodation for millennial adventurers and smart travelers who crave something new and refreshing. The platform was built to revolutionize sleeping habits and help people sleep better and experience more through technology.

Angel investing in Indonesia is getting popular as many startup founders have exited with high net worth individuals growing interested to invest directly in startups. In Silicon Valley, it’s different indeed as they have passed some full cycle from startup founding to exit. Meanwhile in Indonesia, it’ll make its full cycle this year when the nation’s unicorn/decacorn succeeded to exit in the overseas stock exchange.

As social commerce, Evermos focuses to empower SMEs and individuals on its platform, especially Muslim brands. Why do you take this approach?

Throwback to Silicon Valley, I used to think I would start my venture with e-commerce. In every region, the sector that is usually taking off first is e-commerce, the first one to make it into a unicorn. However, when I examine the current situation in Indonesia, there are already some leading players and if I added one more, there will not be a significant difference in terms of a value proposition.

Fast forward to 2018, I see the there are lots of pain points in our retail industry. It requires many middlemen to complete the cycle from brand owners to end-users. And I think to myself, how to disrupt this retail market? Years have passed since e-commerce expanding all around Indonesia, but the percentage of online purchasing is considered not big enough. There are several reasons, including people as a social being and culture.

Back then, social commerce is yet to be a thing. In fact, we also tried to bring the positive impact of e-commerce to a bigger market. Founded in November 2018, Evermos is the first social commerce to empower Small Medium Enterprises and individuals, by connecting brand owners to resellers to end consumers via our platform.

We want to create inclusive economy and prosperity by giving access, opportunity and training for individuals and SMEs to become more financially independent.

Indonesia is a country with the largest Muslim population in the world, therefore, we decided our platform be sharia compliance. However, it is not exclusive and it’s open for all kinds of merchants regardless of the sharia compliance. The approach is to make the platform more inclusive.

SME becomes one of my focus since it contributes to 60% of our GDP and absorbs around 97% of domestic employment. Try counting the unskilled workers, too. Evermos is considered to take the hard road as it is easier to deal with global brands with a growth mindset and sophisticated technology. However, we did questioning ourselves about the impact we want to create, is it to make a short term gain or long term gain. Thus, we decided to focus on local brands that can create an impact on the nation’s economy.

We believe whether the group of people or SMEs work together with the right platform and incentives, we can achieve something substantial. That is why we put our trust in social commerce because this is people’s economy, where we can be the bridge for SMEs in the early stage. With Evermos, they can focus on production to create a competitive price with global players. Our sales channels are distributed throughout Indonesia, therefore, the local brands automatically become national companies. This has become our value proposition.

My biggest fear in terms of tech startups or SME is that our country became a sole consumer. We have to be able to build the value, instead being a sole trader. Indonesian economy should have the positive impact, it’s an essential part of this nation.

Evermos first pitch to investor trip circa 2018

You’ve been venturing in the property sector, accommodation, and now the social commerce, Evermos. What is the biggest challenge or the lesson learned from all your experiences?

Every industry holds different issues. In fact, there are some similar concerns we should be aware of and collectively improve. In Indonesia, some startups are usually having difficulty with monetization. Our previous blunder was thinking of market share first and being the leading one, then we can turn on monetization. This strategy has proven in many countries. After all, Indonesia is indeed a unique nation that some people are not willing to pay a certain amount for an internet solution. It might work in other country but it’s a leap of faith in Indonesia.

Second, it’s the human resources. To date, Indonesia still experiences a crisis due to the lack of a middle layer. In terms of supply, talent is still quite rare, especially in a tech background. I think both issues are happening in almost every sector.

You’ve had experience as a venture capitalist and venture builder, what do you think of Indonesia’s investment climate, and how do you see the Indonesian tech industry’s growth for the past few years?

As I said previously, Indonesia is yet to create one full cycle in terms of venture investment. From investing to harvesting. This year will be the year of validation for the unicorn/decacorn which already have plans for IPO. Hopefully, the exit can also bridge other startups for M&A activities. Indonesia is already a very attractive market, it’s how we trigger more success stories to impact the whole ecosystem.

In this time of the pandemic, people are looking for capital everywhere, and VCs have been tight and selective with their investment. Using both perspectives, what do you think a business can do to get funding and what kind of value most investors are seeking for in a founder/business.

The pandemic is an anomaly and people’s first reaction is to wait and see. In time, investors are getting adapt and adjust to the current condition seeing some companies can make it through with healthy growth. Also, there’s a certain amount of money to be planted to companies. When the wait-and-see season is finally passed, they started to chip in selectively.

There are also lots of startups fundraising at this moment, hopefully, the situation gets better. Regarding VC’s assessment, it’s really depend on the market and personal experience. There are times when growth becomes the fundamental, today, it’s not really about growing at any cost, but growing in a healthy way.

As one of the commissioners in BRI Ventures, I personally have two things. First, the company wants to build VC ecosystem in Indonesia. As many VCs build offices in this country, the money did not stay here. It’s about how to make VCs and its money can stay to generate the ecosystem. Second, BRI as an SME-focused bank is very aligned with my passion for SMEs.

BRI Ventures directors and commissioners circa 2020

As a seasoned entrepreneur, do you have anything to say to those tech enthusiasts who tried to start something in this time of pandemic?

In order to create tech startup, it requires certain mindset and no perfect timing. Always think of the best way out of any situation. How can we make an unfortunate card works. In fact, when we decided to venture, challenge is something expected. If you have to wait for the perfect timing, how can you face the more challenges ahead.

I personally like my hands dirty, that’s why I involved in the operation level. However, I understand that this is the time for young people to blossom. I’m currently focusing my energy to mentor and it’s already time to pass the baton. We live in a very exciting time. About 400 years ago, it’s almost impossible to create big impact in such short time. Technology creates equal opportunity and pulling the gap closer for people to create a big impact.

Telkomsel Mitra Inovasi Reportedly Involved in the Funding of EVOS Esport

Telkomsel Mitra Innovation (TMI) is reportedly involved in the series B round for the local esports team “EVOS Esports”. This is TMI’s debut to invest outside tech-based service startups.

DailySocial has contacted TMI and EVOS representatives to confirm, but they neither willing to comment on the issue.

In a general note, EVOS Sports is a Jakarta-based esports organization founded by Ivan Yeo, Hartman Harris, and Wesley Yiu in 2016. Apart from Indonesia, EVOS has esports teams in Singapore, Thailand, Malaysia, and Vietnam. In addition, EVOS has entered the content, merchandise, event, and Head of Talent (KOL) business under WHIM Management.

Meanwhile, Telkomsel Mitra Innovation is an investment arm founded by Telkomsel in 2019. The company focuses on investments in the IoT, big data, and entertainment (music, games and video) verticals. The goal is none other than to improve the digital business ecosystem, especially in the telecommunications industry. Some of TMI’s portfolios include PrivyID, Qlue, Roambee, Sekolahmu, and TADA.

Community as the new target user

EVOS ha received funding from venture capital several times, both domestic and foreign. Based on Hybrid data, Attention Holdings Pte. Ltd., EVOS’ parent company, raised $12 million in series B funding in October 2020.

The funding round was led by Korea Investment Partners and several other investors, including Mira Asset Ventures, Woowa Brothers, and IndoGen Capital. Also involved are Insignia Ventures Partners, which previously led the EVOS series A funding round in 2019.

IndoGen Capital’s Managing Partner Chandra Firmanto said, Indonesian esports fan base is very large that it attracts companies to enter this industry. “The Indonesian esports team will be successful as we have strength in the community. This is also due to the number of young Indonesians and their quite large spending,” he said.

In the context of TMI, Telkomsel already has its own esports team, Dunia Games (DG) Esports. However, referring to the above thesis, and if Telkomsel confirms this investment, there is a chance that the cellular market leader intend to target a wider new market segment.

Telkomsel can expand its telco business by targeting EVOS’ large community base. Quoting Kompas.com, Esports Charts data named EVOS as the most popular esports team in Southeast Asia. EVOS’ high reputation is reinforced by a total of 6.4 million followers on various social media platforms, including TikTok, Instagram, YouTube, Twitter, and Facebook.

In addition, EVOS also provide membership programs, both free and subscription, which have been released since mid 2020. EVOS Esports’ Co-founder & CEO, Ivan Yeo said this program is the company’s strategy to win the millennial and gen Z market. EVOS is also known to collaborate with TikTok to grow their influencer business.

In fact, the Newzoo report states that the value of the global esports industry is estimated to reach $1.1 billion or Rp15.4 trillion in 2020. Meanwhile, the largest esports market is still controlled by China with a value of $385.1 million, followed by North America at $252.8. million.

In Indonesia, the mobile esports market continues to grow rapidly. Newzoo 2019 data states that 52 million of the total 82 million smartphone users are mobile game players. Revenue from the mobile game industry in Indonesia is estimated to contribute $624 million or equivalent to Rp8.7 trillion.


Original article is in Indonesian, translated by Kristin Siagian

Investors Starting To Adapt As Indonesia Has More Capital Than Good Startup Founders

Investors Venture Capital

As an industry, Indonesia has gone a long way since its first wave of startup founding back 13 years ago in 2008. That year, new startups started to crawl up from the ruins of the dotcom era that never really took off in the country. For these internet entrepreneurs, raising even $50k was a major deal, a sum of money that seems like nothing these days. At least for startups, anyway.

And then in 2009, startups started to raise seed money in a modest range of $50k-100k, and a few years later some of them raised $150-250k seed money and fast forward to today startups are raising in the millions for seed rounds. The pandemic had an effect, of course, as investors held on their money in a wait-and-see mode for the first few months of the lock down. But as the economy recovers, investors are flooding money back to the startup ecosystem. And not just that, more money are invested more than ever.

If you’ve been keeping up with the news, 2021 year-to-date has been an insane year for startup funding. I remember back in 2010 where we probably have 2-3 startup funding news per month, but these days we averagely do 4-5 funding news per week and the amount of money injected is also significantly increasing. And this is not just domestic investors, foreign investors are pouring money to Indonesian startups at an astonishing rate.

But, the availability of a vast amount of dry powder is not without its impact, specifically the economic balance between the supply of money and the demand (startup founders). The growth of capital supply exceeds the growth of available startups that investors categorize as “bankable”, founders/companies they can invest to and work with.

A few investors I talked with confirms the problem, as their associates exhaust the founders list they collected year-long and arrived at the bottom of the list, most of the time, without any follow ups. Some of them even joked that they might have to put their money into cryptocurrencies to achieve the return they’re aiming for, not that I’m saying it’s a bad idea.

Some investors, a very few of them, saw the problem since miles away. They’ve seen how fast the industry is moving and started adjusting how they operate, mainly, how they find good founders and startups. Since 2016, a few investors with sizeable funds already adopted recruitment model to invest in a startup. These investors hunt good startups that are so good, they don’t really have to  raise funds and convince the founders to take the investment money, sometime at any cost. And the strategy worked out pretty well for these guys. Decent list of portfolios, good rate of follow on investments, and a strong exit game.

But at the time, a lot of people in the industry, including myself, saw this strategy as unorthodox and maybe even unnecessary. But of course, looking at how the ecosystem is moving, that unorthodox strategy might be the key to throne of the most successful startup investors, and maybe even becoming mainstream.

Another angle that is also interesting to keep an eye on, is the competitiveness among VCs. One of the most common question asked by an investors to founders, is “What differentiates you from similar companies?”. But no founders (or maybe very few) asked this question to investors. Why should I take your money instead of the 5 other VCs giving me term sheets to lead the round? Well, luckily for startups, the demand side, it’s not a zero sum game. Startups can always take all the money. They shouldn’t. But they can.

But the question remains, what differentiates one VC from another? When the cost of capital is basically the same, then VCs need to offer something else on top of capital. So, will startup capital become a commodity? It seems inevitable, although no one can really tell how far is the horizon or how fast we’re running towards it.

One thing is for sure, in the next few years, the global balance between capital supply and the demand from startups will change and the rest of the ecosystem will need to adapt.