Mekari Receives Series D Funding, Considering to Acquire Other SaaS Starutps

Mekari SaaS startup raises series D funding worth $18 million (more than 250 billion Rupiah) led by Money Forward, Inc. PT Mitratama Grahaguna, EV Growth, PT Supra Primatama Nusantara, PT Karang Mas Investama, PT Mitra Dutamas, PT Perkom Indah Murni, and Alto Partners are some investors participated in this round. Except for EV Growth and Alto Partners, these investors entered MidPlaza Holdings.

Money Forward was previously participated in the series C round in December 2019, which was led by EV Growth.

Mekari’s Co-Founder and CEO, Suwandi Soh, said to DailySocial that the majority of the fresh funds will be used for the development of Mekari’s main products, HR, Accounting, and Tax. The company recently released new innovations, Mekari Chat (integrated communication with HR) and Mekari Flex (modern employee benefit solution).

“Apart from product development, we are also actively looking at merger and acquisition (M&A) opportunities for Indonesian SaaS companies, in line with the company’s vision to become a platform for modern companies in Indonesia,” he explained, Monday (17/8).

Suwandi’s statement is quite interesting, because Mekari (previously known as Sleekr) also fully acquired three SaaS startups, Talenta, Jurnal, and KlikPajak in April 2019. Then each service is consolidated into one platform, enabling Mekari to attract target users of various scales. effort.

In Indonesia, SaaS startup users is growing rapidly, it’s also due to the Covid-19 pandemic. In terms of the supply side also, the number of players is increasingly diverse, offering its respective services.

Suwandi said, without further details, Mekari’s business always grows positively every month. The fastest growing business sectors are services, trading and manufacturing. In terms of business sector, it is manjorly held by SMEs as Mekari’s current products are very suitable for this sector.

“We have micro consumers, but not many. However, enterprise (large business) is also part of our segment that has grown very much in the last half of the year.”

Mekari noted, users with more than 500 employees grew significantly. They use cloud HR products which are very helpful when adapting to the Covid-19 situation and compliance with new regulations such as PPh 21 by the government (DTP).


Original article is in Indonesian, translated by Kristin Siagian

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Gojek-Tokopedia Merger Officially Completes, Launching the New Entity “GoTo”

Gojek and Tokopedia officially merge to form a new entity “GoTo” today (17/5). GoTo combines e-commerce, on-demand and financial services into one ecosystem. The combination is said to spread around Indonesia, and the largest one between the two internet companies in Asia.

It was supported by the ranks of the two companies’ main investors. Those are Alibaba Group, Astra International, BlackRock, Capital Group, DST, Facebook, Google, JD.com, KKR, Northstar, Pacific Century Group, PayPal, Provident, Sequoia Capital, SoftBank Vision Fund 1, Telkomsel, Temasek, Tencent, Visa, and the Warburg Pincus.

The GoTo Group ecosystem represents 2% of Indonesia’s total GDP and will increasingly serve 270 million Indonesian consumers and other developing countries in Southeast Asia. In the description, the GoTo Group has a total Gross Transaction Value (GTV) of more than $22 billion in 2020; more than 1.8 billion transactions in 2020; more than two million driver-partners registered as of December 2020; more than 11 million business partners as of December 2020; more than 100 million monthly active users.

In an official statement, Gojek’s Andre Soelistyo is to lead GoTo as the Group CEO, with Patrick Cao from Tokopedia as GoTo’s President. Next, Kevin Aluwi will remain as Gojek’s CEO and William Tanuwijaya as Tokopedia’s CEO.

Aside from his responsibilities at the group level, Andre will continue to lead the payments and financial services business called “GoTo Financials”. GoTo Financials includes GoPay services, as well as financial services and business solutions for business partners.

Ekosistem layanan GoTo

“Today is very historical as the GoTo Group is formed and it marks the growth phase for Gojek, Tokopedia and GoTo Financial. [..] The GoTo Group will also enable us to further encourage financial inclusion in Indonesia and Southeast Asia,” Andre Soelistyo said.

GoTo’s President, Patrick Cao added, “The GoTo Group business model is becoming more diverse, stable and sustainable. [..] We are excited to start the next chapter of our business history and will continue to innovate to drive more inclusive growth in every sector our technology involved.”

Tokopedia’s Co-Founder & CEO, William Tanuwijaya said, “[..] The GoTo Group will make it easy for all levels of society to gain access to high-quality products and services, anytime and anywhere. In order to achieve this goal, the journey is still quite long, but today is all about starting it all together.”

Gojek’s Co-Founder & CEO, Kevin Aluwi said, “This is a combination of two companies that share the same principles, thoughts and work ethic. Delivering an agreement of the size and scale of a business such as Gojek and Tokopedia in a relatively short time and smooth move, can only be achieved because we share the same goal, which is to always provide the best experience for consumers supported by the fastest and largest mobility network of driver partners and our merchants.”

In this merger process, Goldman Sachs acted as Gojek’s financial advisor. Davis Polk & Wardwell LLP and Assegaf Hamzah & Partners joined as legal advisors to Gojek. Citi also involved as Tokopedia’s financial advisor. Allen & Overy LLP acted as Tokopedia’s legal advisor.


Original article is in Indonesian, translated by Kristin Siagian

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Edtech Startup Rolmo Officially Launches, Providing Learning Concept from Industry’s Role Model

The pandemic has accelerated the Indonesian edutech platform. Not only for the formal education, but also informal education in a broad sense. From education regarding finance and investment, programming languages, to parenting. One of the local platforms that strives to contribute to the informal education sector is Rolmo.

Rolmo’s Founder, Jonathan Aditya revealed to DailySocial, althoug using a similar concept with most edtech platforms, they provide different approach for content by focusing on the role model. For example, there is a class on the platform featuring Andra Matin with his life experiences, knowledge, and lessons learned in a career as an architect.

“To date, there are still very few learning options in Indonesia to achieve success and life goals based on experiences, mistakes, and suggestions from role models. Most of the current solution is to offer engineering study, which can be found free or paid on the platforms. We believe that this solution [Rolmo] is well received, especially by people around the productive age,” Jonathan said.

Aside from Indonesia, Rolmo expects its platform to be available in other countries. Therefore, the platform is not simply a website, but also an application. Rolmo has equipped with translations in 12 languages ​​in every course offered.

Along with other founders, Johanes Adika, Rolmo is expected to be ‘the’ platform for the wider community who wants to gain insights, learn directly from their role model.

“Through Rolmo, we want to create opportunities for as many individuals as possible to have access to good education. Another thing Rolmo wants to achieve is to create equal opportunities for anyone to be able to learn from these role models. We believe that by being able to learn from role models, everyone can achieve their goals,” Johanes said.

The VR/AR technology

Currently, courses are available to purchase by users. After making a purchase, they can access it for one year. Using the video-based learning method, every content is available via smartphone and desktop. Not only videos, Rolmo also provides a more intimate experience using 360° Virtual Reality (VR) and Augmented Reality (AR) technology.

By implementing 360 ° VR, users can get closer to role models. Previously, Rolmo has applied it in various cases, one example is a course by Andra Matin. Users are invited for tour of one of the buildings designed by Andra Matin. The user can look around as if they were there.

In the next five years, Rolmo projects the AR technology will be available not only through smartphones, but also with new tools like glasses.

“We get that not everyone has the funds, access and time to be able to see and meet Andra Matin directly. The AR technology will help visualize learning materials in three dimensions. For instance, users can see the Andra Matin project mockup,” Jonathan said.

In the future, Rolmo will add learning materials from other role models from other fields such as interior design, graphic design, product design, business, fashion, photography, film, music, and others.

“This year we are targeting to be able to present more than 20 role models in various fields. We also plan to raise funds in the pre-seed stage,” Jonathan said.


Original article is in Indonesian, translated by Kristin Siagian

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Fintech Startup GajiGesa Raises Additional Funding, Launching Employee Management App “GajiTim”

Fintech startup GajiGesa announced additional strategic investments with an undisclosed value from OCBC NISP Ventura and some strategic angel investors, including Kopi Kenangan’s Founder. This round is announced four months after GajiGesa raised seed funding of $2.5 million.

In an interview with DailySocial, GajiGesa’s Co-Founder, Vidit Agrawal said, the OCBC NISP Ventura entrance creates an opportunity for GajiGesa to integrate its products with financial products. “Including to offer bank accounts opening for those who unbanked, loan products, and other financial solutions that can help improve the welfare of blue collar workers,” he said.

This is because as many as two thirds of the population in Indonesia are unbanked, which means they do not have bank accounts. Bank OCBC NISP has the opportunity to gathered them through GajiGesa.

In a separate interview with Techcrunch, Agrawal said that the founder of Kopi Kenangan, who is backed by a network of investors such as Sequoia Capital India, Alpha JWC, and Horizons Ventures, has made them prolific angel investors for other startups. He believes the network will help GajiGesa accelerate the impact for employers across Indonesia.

GajiGesa provides services for employers and employees in smoothing cash flow with financial products, including flexible salary access or what is known as Flexible Earned Wage Access (FEWA), financial education, bill payments, real-time analysis, and more. This concept is different from cash loan services operated by most lending companies in Indonesia.

For employees, GajiGesa provides employees with real-time access to early salaries in the current month, which can be used to pay bills, buy credit and data packages, and access financial education.

Meanwhile, for employers, GajiGesa’s analysis platform provides the HR team to measure the effectiveness of financial health strategies, get real-time visibility into engagement, maintain retention and productivity, and employee financial health.

Employers have the flexibility and control of FEWA offerings, they can decide whether to take this service to employees for an additional fee or as part of a benefit package.

Agrawal said that GajiGesa has been used by more than 30 companies with a total of tens of thousands of employees in Indonesia.

Without further details, he said Ramadan and Eidthese are has became busy periods regarding the trend of early disbursement of salaries, because many employees withdrew their salaries earlier, given the increasing family needs. This condition is reflected in GajiGesa, where salary disbursement activities almost doubled during that period.

Launching Gajitim app

Agrawal said that the company has launched GajiTim employee management application for the UMKM segment in late March. This product is due to the requests and input from GajiGesa users who want a more efficient, transparent salary calculation and employee tracking solution.

“Building a product that can be used by businesses of all sizes is at the heart of our commitment. Martyna and I always wanted a meaningful solution that everyone could use. Our team quickly innovated to launch GajiTim.”

GajiTim helps MSMEs to manage employees digitally, such as daily/monthly salary, attendance/leave, salary calculation, payments, and others. It is also equipped with features and business insights, therefore, companies have better employee retention.

The innovation is expected to create an integrated and meaningful employee benefits solution for businesses of all sizes and their employees. Agrawal claims that since this application was initiated, it has been able to attract more than 50,000 active users organically.

GajiTim competes with similar players under the same industry. Those are Catapa, Talenta, Jojonomics, KaryaOne, Gadjian, Gaji.id, Benemica, Synergo, and others.


Original article is in Indonesian, translated by Kristin Siagian

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The Momentum of Green Business Startup

Blue skies, fresher air, cooking back to the kitchen, exercising are just some of the signs that many people have experienced since the pandemic. Even though the situation is getting flexible as there have been relaxation in many sectors, a figure pops out that there is an awareness to start living a healthy life.

The opportunity arises for environmental enterprises to be recognized. Although there are not many startups practicing green or environmental, social and governance (ESG) approach, Managing Director of Angel Investor Network Indonesia (ANGIN), David Soukhasing said, there is currently a positive trend of having impactful businesses in the ecosystem. Impact investment has also emerged, which has been discussed in the DSInnovate report on Indonesian agritech.

Most of them are there to support entrepreneurship, providing more specific support for certain groups of social entrepreneurs, for example an energy focus accelerator program, an accelerator program waste management focus, or entrepreneurial support that focuses on a specific geographic area.

For Soukhasing, this factor was able to measure Indonesia’s readiness for impact investment. Indonesia needs a comprehensive ecosystem to be ready to welcome impact investors. Not only capital, basically a strong pipeline from companies/startups is necessary.

“A measure of maturity is the overall value of diversity in capital, diversity of investors, different stages, different types of money, and all supporting functions. In terms of supporting functions, such as incubators, accelerators, co-working spaces, Indonesia is actually quite developed. There are quite a lot of pipeline networks and investors here,” Soukhasing explained to DailySocial.

He continued, “However, we need more action, capital diversity is required to really talk about a mature ecosystem. Another aspect of maturity is the policy, how regulations are developed to have an impact on investment and entrepreneurship, and this is still lacking in Indonesia.”

Based on ANGIN’s report entitled Investing in Impact in Indonesia, in 2013, the concept of impact investing was quite rare in Indonesia. However, it is getting more familiar as some VCs has created special funds to invest in impact business.

There are several impact investors have invested in Indonesia, both local and foreign players. Some already have a representative team in Indonesia. It has reached 66 investors, including 61 from foreign funds and the five remaining from Indonesia.

Meanwhile, the mainstream investors that have disbursed its funds to impactful sectors will continue to increase, nearly two times as many as 107 investors. It includes 32 local investors and 75 investors from abroad.

Each impact investor actually has different focuses. ANGIN thematically recorded, there are 10 types of respective focus for impactful businesses, divided into financial inclusion, forestry, clean energy, poverty, gender lens, circular economy, fisheries, climate, agriculture, and the media. Each reflects the opportunities and challenges in Indonesia.

What the global non-profit organization New Energy Nexus has done may be a concrete example in the field. They know that the potential for renewable energy has not been fully explored in Indonesia, provoking them to be present in Indonesia since 2018 through the routinely held incubation and acceleration programs and hackhaton.

To date, New Energy Nexus has completed seven batches of incubation and acceleration programs, and guided more than 40 renewable startups in honing their business and innovation strategies. “We not only provide capacity building support but also provide funding to provide overall support,” New Energy Nexus Indonesia’s Program Director, Diyanto Imam said.

Total grants has reach IDR650 million until March 2021, while convertible notes funding has reached IDR 3.5 billion. One of its portfolios is PT Bina Usaha Lintas Ekonomi (BLUE), a renewable energy startup that provides a Warung Energi marketplace and B2B solar energy solutions for commercial, industrial, and centralized.

It’s different with philantrophy

Soukhasing explained that the basic similarity between philanthropy and impact investing is that both have “impact intention” and “impact measurement”. However, we can distinguish them based on two factors, priorities and expectations of financial returns.

Philanthropy has clear social and environmental objectives, placing investments that are given as grants and not to expect returns. Unlike philanthropy, impact investors prioritize impact and profit.

Thus, impact investors expect financial returns. However, there are investors adopting a second approach called venture philanthropy.

This hybrid approach takes the best of both ways. The gain is the creation of a social impact and an expected financial return. Impact investors value opportunities differently from philanthropists. “It is important to note that not every impact (which is often discussed by philanthropists) is always suitable for impact investing and vice versa.”

Monetization strategy and challenges of impact business

Interestingly, many impact businesses have currently positioned its businesses as startups, aka using a technological approach to reach their target users, monetize, and accept investments from third parties.

One example is Siklus, which focuses on reducing plastic waste. Siklus provides a mobile refill post for shampoo, detergent, and floor cleaning fluid. One jerry can of shampoo brought by the officers is claimed to save the cost of making 2,500 sachets. Consumers can buy few or many refills at a lower price.

The business model Siklus uses is B2C because they do capital expenditures and require a number of orders per station which is difficult to do when using B2B2C.

“Our selling point is that we offer cheaper price and deliver to consumers’ places, suitable for price sensitive customers. However, we also see that there is a growing consumer segment that cares about sustainability,” Siklus’ Founder and CEO, Jane von Rabenau said.

The same focus, but with a different approach, was used by Rekosistem. They focus on recycling inorganic waste by creating a collection point or approaching consumers with a logistics fleet provided and ordered through the application.

Any inorganic waste received will be reprocessed into recycled materials, energy, and environmentally friendly building materials. Meanwhile, organic waste is processed using a biodigester into liquid fertilizer and biogas which will be given to consumers.

In other sectors, nafas focuses on providing air quality data through applications. The Indonesian people awareness about the pros and cons of air quality has not become a common topic for many people’s daily lives. Currently, apart from the application, nafas is exploring a smart home based air purifier product called aria. Nafas’ Co-Founder & CEO, Nathan Roestandy explained, the biggest challenge for startups like nafas, apart from increasing awareness in the market, is access to good quality factories for ease of the manufacturing process.

“Manufacturing in Indonesia is still dominated by large electronics brands that are capable of setting up large factories. Resources [that big] are not accessible to startups. However, we have the experience to build a supply chain to overcome this,” Nathan said.

Aria is indeed no different from the products of other brands. Nathan claims, aria has a sensor connected to nafas for the most up-to-date indoor air quality monitor. These are the advantages offered to the market.

Soukhasing added that the challenges of impacts business  is quite vary and is not apple-to-apple with other types of businesses. He gave an example that the green energy sector has its own characteristics and stakeholder profiles that cannot be compared with other types of startups.

Talking about “attractiveness” also has a different meaning, as green energy startups also comprise multiple verticals – whether they work with urban households/settlements, rural residents, or B2B companies.

“Therefore, we’d say we can’t measure green energy startups using the same success metrics we usually have for a typical startup. This will bring another context to the problems faced by green energy startups, including finding the right investors and support systems who understand their sector well.”

Most investors who are unfamiliar with green energy startups may perceive their business model to be capital heavy (high capital expenditure), require a longer timeframe, and require more effort to penetrate and educate a market that is more familiar with existing solutions (e.g. energy-based fossil). Therefore, startups have a lot of homework to “educate” customers and investors, supported by programs or other ecosystem actors.


Original article is in Indonesian, translated by Kristin Siagian

Telkomsel Channels Follow-on Funding to Gojek Worth 4.3 Trillion Rupiah

Telkomsel today (5/10) announced follow-on funding to Gojek worth $300 million or equivalent to 4.3 trillion Rupiah. In fact, this act has been discussed since last April, carried by a statement from its President Director, Setyanto Hantoro.

Previously, Telkomsel’s first batch for Gojek was announced in November 2020. Then, the value given has reached $150 million (equivalent to Rp2.1 trillion).

In the official release, it is said that both companies signaled this investment as a momentum to strengthen and deepen collaboration for comprehensive digital services and more innovative solutions.

It is also mentioned taht this strategic investment action was supported by Telkomsel’s shareholders, Telkom Indonesia and the Singtel Group.

“[..] Telkomsel is optimistic that the latest investment will open up more opportunities for the public to see and make use of more advanced local-produced technology-based innovations,” Setyanto said.

He continued, this corporate action is part of Telkomsel’s strategy in strengthening the trifecta of the company’s digital business, Digital Connectivity, Digital Platform, and Digital Services.

Since the first injection, several joint initiatives that have been successfully initiated by the two companies include: (1) integration of Telkomsel MyAds with GoBiz; (2) Gojek partners can become Telkomsel reseller partners through DigiPOS; (3) special data packages for driver partners on GoPartner and MyTelkomsel; (4) Telkomsel partners in the GoShop application; and (5) collaboration between Telkomsel Dunia Games and Gopay.

“[..] Telkomsel’s follow-on funding will clearly optimize the resources and technology expertise of each company to innovate and expand the benefits of the digital economy for more consumers, driver partners, and MSME players throughout Indonesia. We are both confident and committed that this partnership will support the acceleration of Indonesia’s digital transformation which will strengthen Indonesia’s position as the leader of the digital economy market in Southeast Asia,” Gojek Group’s Co-CEO, Andre Soelistyo explained.

Telkomsel’s entrance amidst the merger finalization news of Gojek and Tokopedia –  the joint company is rumored to go public on the stock exchange soon. It’s indeed create a strategic value for Telkomsel as a shareholder, especially since both startups are currently the market leaders [local] in its respective segments.

Meanwhile, Telkomsel and Gojek have crossed paths several times [indirectly]. First, when Gojek announced its investment in the LinkAja payment platform through series B round in early March. It is known that the LinkAja’s root was Tcash service which was previously developed by Telkomsel – Telkom Group and some SOE shareholders.

Second, Telkomsel, through its investment arm, Telkomsel Mitra Inovasi, recently participated in Halodoc’s series C funding worth 1.1 trillion Rupiah. Gojek is an early investor of this healthtech service.


Original article is in Indonesian, translated by Kristin Siagian

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East Ventures Led Another Funding for Bonza Worth Over 28 Billion Rupiah

Bonza, a big data analytics startup, announces a $2 million (more than IDR 28 billion) fundraising led by its previous investor, East Ventures, with the participation of Elev8.vc. Previously, East Ventures has poured seed funding for Bonza in May 2020 with an undisclosed amount.

From the official statement today (5/6), the fresh money will be used to accelerate its vision of becoming the leading data company in Southeast Asia. Currently, they are developing a platform to support companies to better process data and deploy AI solutions through a no-code platform.

The no-code approach developed by Bonza will enable technical and non-technical teams to build and deploy data-driven solutions at scale.

Bonza’s Co-Founder & CEO, Elsa Chandra said, “[..] This investment will be a stepping stone for us to build a world-class engineering and data science team, accelerate the development of our platform, and market expansion throughout Southeast Asia.”

East Ventures’ Co-Founder & Managing Partner, Willson Cuaca added, “Data infrastructure development is inevitable for all organizations. Bonza’s no-code platform accelerates the implementation of data modeling that companies need to stay competitive. Elsa and Philip have done it well last year.”

Elsa continued, what differentiate Bonza is that the platform removes the friction and barriers that an organization faces when creating and implementing data-based solutions for the first time to create added value from their data. Organizations can integrate multiple data sources within the organization, then build and deploy machine learning models in a responsive user interface.

Users can automate the long integration process of data for report, reducing the duration to implement AI solutions from months to days. Elsa gave an example, one e-commerce merchant has used the Bonza solution now gets a 360-degree view of the customer to improve the customer experience and personalization.

Ilustrasi Produk Bonza / Bonza
Bonza products illustratiom / Bonza

Meanwhile, fintech players build real-time fraud detection engines and monitoring tools that will be useful for the fraud operations teams to gain insights from different venues and unstructured data sources so that fraud rates are reduced.

“One of our clients has experienced an increase in GMV three times every quarter since they started using Bonza as they succeeded in increasing marketing effectiveness and reducing customer churn by utilizing real-time analytics,” he explained.

Bonza is a one year old company which is claimed to have reached a profitability point in its first year. This startup was founded by Elsa Chandra and Philip Thomas while they were working at Traveloka. Elsa manages Traveloka investments, while Philip leads one of the data science teams tasked with implementing the machine learning model for Traveloka.


Original article is in Indonesian, translated by Kristin Siagian

Women and Investment: The Essentials of Being Financially Independent

For one so-called reason, financial matters are often positioned as a male sole responsibility. As more women join the workforce today, the world is shifting towards gender equality even in the realms of investments. In this modern era, lots of women have been supporting [or at least making money] for their family or simply themselves. And now, they are planning their investments in order to be financially independent.

Based on the Global Gender Gap Report 2021 conducted by the World Economic Forum, Indonesia is said to close 68.8% of its overall gender gap, corresponding to a rank of 101st globally, although this year’s gap is 1.3 percentage points larger than in the previous edition.

This decline has resulted mainly from wider Economic Participation and Opportunity gaps. The reason is said to be the sharp drop in the share of women in senior roles. Beyond the performance of this indicator, women participate in the labor market significantly less than men (55.9% of women and 84% of men) and wage and income gaps remain large (69.7% and 51.7%, respectively). In addition, 81.8% of the women’s employment is in the informal sector (compared to 79.4% of men).

Claudia Kolonas is one of the few women founders in the Indonesian tech industry. She founded an investment platform, Pluang, with a goal to promote financial inclusion in Indonesia. As a woman in the fintech industry, it’s impossible to go through without facing any challenges. However, during her mission, Claudia tried to dodge all the negativity that blanketing her potential and put on the confidence as people might throw doubt for her as a woman leader.

Being a financially independent women

Based on the Women and Finance: The 2019 Rich Thinking Quantitative Survey by Barbara Steward, CFA, most women understand the importance of being financially independent. In the survey, more than 200 women from 24 countries were asked the most important reason why they invest, the second most popular answer was “to become more financially independent,” and occupying the top of the table, “fund my retirement.”

In a patriarchal-demand society such as Indonesia, women usually have less contribution in terms of financial support for the family. Especially when they’re married, the rule often applied that she’s become her husband’s responsibility. It may sound like a relief while in fact, the expression is kind of terrifying, to give up yourself in return for what? nobody can really guarantee anybody’s safety.

Claudia said, “I think that investment is very important for women. Because it is very important that women can be financially independent, especially if their husbands leave them. When women are married, these women usually have a greater burden of expenses, therefore, it is very important to save for emergency funds. This emergency fund will be very useful when there are unexpected events such as loss of work, etc.”

Financial independence is a critical theme for women. A financially empowered woman is not just more confident but also more productive and capable of a perfect work-life balance. This is one of the main factors that can measure the prospect of a woman’s success.

“The most important thing is to provide support for women, especially those engaged in a family, who want to break into the tech industry. It’s essential to have an equal platform to work for both men and women,” she added.

In terms of investing capabilities, studies also show that women spend more time researching their investment choices. And while they do take on less risk than men when it comes to investing, it doesn’t automatically translate into avoiding risk. Rather, they’re simply more likely to take on appropriate levels of risk with their investments than men. Both of these findings make for better investing outcomes.

Investing in a time of the pandemic

There are several common investment objectives in the public. Some people invest to ensure safety [post-retirement], generate income [for daily purposes], or gain revenue from their capital asset. In fact, investment platforms are harvesting amid this pandemic. Especially since people spending a lot more on the internet during WFH and investing gets easier as powered by technology.

In Indonesia, some platforms are existed to accommodate these objectives, including Investree, Pluang, Bibit, etc. It enables people to invest in gold, capital market, mutual funds, and many other forms of investment, easier through clicks.

Based on the Indonesian Central Securities Depository (KSEI), in the first four months of this year, the number of capital market investors increased 31,11% to a total of 5.08 million. Meanwhile, mutual fund investors increased 38.85 percent to 4.40 million investors.

Source: KSEI Investor Demography April 2021

The demography paper also implied that women are narrowing the investment gap to 38,45% with an estimated asset value of Rp208,84 trillion. This information is backed by the fact that Pluang, one of the leading investment platforms in Indonesia, claimed that the majority of its investor are women. Following the investment statistics and trends, the company also plans to add more products this year.

“This year, my personal focus is on the purchase of government debt products, such as SUN or ORI, as well as investing in mutual funds and also in state-owned bonds. In my opinion, there are still many opportunities to increase the value of fixed-income products in Indonesia, and the risks are quite moderate,” Claudia explained.

Despite all the convenience to plant money in the digital platform, the internet is not immune to fraud. There are several cases involving fraudulent investment that spreading across devices. This is a very complicated issue that requires the whole ecosystem to contribute. The market needs more education, to fathom the investment product and not to violate basic morals.

The good news, the financial literacy index and financial inclusion index in Indonesia had increased since 2019. OJK reported the value has reached 38.03% for the financial literacy index, while the financial inclusion index has reached 76.19% in 2020.

Claudia also mentioned that many investment products become more volatile during a pandemic, resulting in risk increases. “We think it is very important to be able to educate our users about investment risks, especially when there is economic uncertainty,” she added.

Investing is not a game. As fun as it sounds, will you bet the money you can’t afford to lose? Just because most of your colleagues are constantly bragging about the excitement of the market. Investment is indeed fundamental to reach financial independence. However, it’s very important to invest in something you can fathom.

Edtech B2B Startup ProSpark Announces Seed Funding Led by AC Ventures

ProSpark, a learning management system (LMS) platform for the B2B segment, today (5/7) announced to secure follow-on funding for its seed round. Led by AC Ventures, participated also other investors, including 500 Startups, Azure Ventures, Prasetia Dwidharma (follow-on), Assembly Ventures, and several angel investors.  Some investors were involved in their pre-seed last April 2020. The value is undisclosed.

ProSpark’s LMS service combines distributed content marketplace features with a gamification system that encourages user engagement in an organization. Through this platform companies can train and improve the workforce’s skills online. This funding is also considered in the right momentum, changes in behavior due to the pandemic are driving growth and demand for edtech services for businesses.

Specifically, fresh funds will be used to expand markets and improve technology infrastructure. Currently, ProSpark is struggling to immediately initiate regional expansion in Southeast Asia. Based in Singapore, ProSpark services are available to Indonesian users; and now it started to penetrate the Philippines market.

“Companies are constantly trying to find their best approach amidst the pandemic. Now that e-learning is growing, offline learning is becoming relatively more expensive, inefficient and less scalable. The ProSpark service comes with personalized and scalable solutions, through adaptive learning with results that can be monitored,” ProSpark’s Co-Founder & CEO, Alfa Bumhira said.

He continued, “This funding will help us expand our end-to-end user experience by providing a wider range of content solutions, better competency on gap mapping capabilities, and a focus on user learning outcomes [..] This is the right product, at the right time, in the right area.”

The corporate education sector is now developing as the rise of self-development activities trend  through the application. Actually, the B2B edtech service has been implemented by several other players in Indonesia. From HarukaEDU with its product CorporateEdu, then the SaaS Mekari platform which also released Mekari University last year, also Codemi that has received capital support from a venture unit of Bukalapak’s former founder. Each platform has offered a different approach.

“The offline workforce is at risk of falling behind in the new digital economy and this problem has been accelerated by the global pandemic. Training the workforce with the skills they need to survive and thrive is urgently needed [..] We believe ProSpark e-learning solutions can thrive across the Southeast Asian region and tackle these skills upgrading problems in various sectors,” 500 Startups’ General Partner, Binh Tran said.


Original article is in Indonesian, translated by Kristin Siagian

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Cermati Scores Series C Funding Led by MDI Ventures; It’s Now a Holding Company

Financial product aggregator startup Cermati announced an undisclosed series C funding led by MDI Ventures, through the Centauri Fund. Also participated in this round the previous investors which led the series B round in 2018, Djarum Group through Central Capital Ventura (CCV).

The fresh funds is said to be used to develop products and technology, recruit new talents, and provide new services with the embedded fintech strategy. Along with MDI Ventures, CFG will synergize with the Telkom Group network to develop financial products.

In today’s official statement (5/5), MDI Ventures’ CEO, Donald Wihardja expressed his enthusiasm for the synergy between Cermati and Telkom in developing products that can provide financial access to 150 million telecommunication network users and hundreds of fintech uses throughout Telkom’s network. “This hold the potential to play an important role in accelerating Indonesia’s financial inclusion,” Donald said.

On this occasion, also introducing Cermati as a holding company named Cermati Fintech Group (CFG) which oversees a number of business verticals, Cermati.com (financial product aggregator), Cermati Protect (insurtech), and Indodana (fintech lending). CFG leverages big data and AI technology to serve the underserved in Indonesia by developing microfinance and insurance products.

Separately reached by DailySocial, Cermati’s Co-Founder & CEO, Andhy Koesnandar explained, CFG is the company’s vehicle to accelerate financial inclusion in Indonesia. He believes that by using technology and working with large ecosystem partners, he can reach more underbanked people and get acquainted with financial products which previously not engaged with banking and insurance institutions.

“Since 2018 we have started to develop the micro insurance and micro finance business to be able to reach a wider Indonesian community,” he said.

Cermati’s flagship product is a financial product aggregator that has been operating since 2015. Andhy said the product has successfully enriched Cermati’s experience in developing digital onboarding products for banking partners, insurance and other financial institutions, through the components of API, Fraud Detection, Credit Scoring, and e- KYC which has become the standard in banking. “This experience provides capital for us to continue to develop new business lines at CFG.”

Amid the pandemic, without any specific details, Cermati has captured the public’s enthusiasm for digital financial services, which also increased as many people migrated to digital services for all activities, including their financial needs.

In terms of insurtech, Cermati Protect has now collaborated with more than 30 insurance company partners. The insurance products also vary, ranging from health insurance, vehicles and also micro insurance products that are distributed through big e-commerce players such as Shopee, Bukalapak, Blibli, Tiket and so on.

“Particularly for this micro product, we are working with our partners to build products that are suitable for the context of transactions with low prices starting from Rp1,000 to help people benefit from insurance at very affordable prices.”

Meanwhile, Indodana has distributed BNPL (Buy Now Pay Later) products to various e-commerce players. One of them is through the Djarum Group, Tiket.com and Blibli. Indodana is more focused on targeting consumers without access to credit card. Both Cermati Protect and Indodana are registered and licensed by the OJK.


Original article is in Indonesian, translated by Kristin Siagian

Application Information Will Show Up Here