Series A Funding Secured, Bot MD to Arrive in Indonesia in Q2 2021

Singapore-based startup Bot MD has secured $5 million in Series A funding. Its service focuses on the health sector, presenting a chatbot-based application equipped with Natural Language Processing (NLP) technology. Post funding news, the company plans to expand to other countries such as the Philippines, Malaysia, India, and Indonesia.

Bot MD’s Co-Founder & CEO, Dorothea Koh revealed to DailySocial that the platform focuses on providing a user experience that modernizes clinical workflows, without having to adopt a completely new hospital system or change the existing workflows.

“The Bot MD A.I. chatbot is made using NLP technology developed independently. We have trained the AI to understand various medical terminology and capable to understand various hospital contents, therefore, they can provide answers quickly,” Koh said.

Given the large demand from large hospitals and health care organizations during the pandemic, this fresh fund will also help accelerate the company’s growth in the Asia Pacific through partnerships with hospitals, public and private clinics.

This funding round was led by Monk’s Hill Ventures. Also participated investors in the new and previous round, including SeaX, XA Network, and SGInnovate, as well as healthcare industry veterans Yoh-Chie Lu and Jean-Luc Butel, and Steve Blank.

“Unlike other SaaS company players, the team’s extensive experience in the healthcare industry has provided them with deeper insight into the real pain points of doctors and hospitals, allowing them to create highly intuitive products for doctors to use without any training required,” Monk’s Hill Ventures Partner Michele Daoud said.

In Indonesia, there are lots of chatbot platform has been developed by local startups. There are also several players focused on the health sector, including Prixa, which is a business unit of Kata.ai and DokterSiaga.

Targeting Indonesian market

By prioritizing AI technology, Bot MD currently has been trained by more than 13 thousand doctors who have used the platform. This chat engine can also be used to support chat/messaging apps for consumers including WhatsApp, to help doctors provide care to patients.

As one of the countries with a large population and number of chat/messaging app users in Southeast Asia, Indonesia has become an ideal country for Bot MD to explore. According to the plan, the company aims to launch in Indonesia around the second quarter of this year.

Currently, Bot MD is still in the process of teaching bots to understand Indonesian. In addition, the recruitment of local teams ranging from engineers, clinical pharmacists, nurses, and sales teams to be stationed in Jakarta is still ongoing.

Regarding products or services that are relevant and needed by the market in Indonesia, Koh emphasized that they have two main products that might be very suitable for Indonesia. First is the MD Hospital Bot which is used by doctors and clinical staff to search for hospital-specific content. This ranges from their hospital call list schedule to drug information and clinical guidelines, patient health reports, and scans, prescribing medications, ordering and scheduling Radiology, and Lab examinations.

Another product to be launched in Indonesia is Bot MD Care, which is a WhatsApp-based clinical monitoring platform for doctors to monitor patients with diabetes, hypertension, and chronic kidney disease.

“We believe Bot MD Hospital and Bot MD Care are very relevant to the Indonesian market due to quite a large number of patients and the low ratio of doctors to patients, therefore, your doctor is a very busy person. Besides, the prevalence of chronic diseases such as diabetes and hypertension in the population. Indonesia is improving. With Bot MD, doctors can help streamline clinical workflows and seek information in order to save time and focus on serving patients better,” Koh said.


Original article is in Indonesian, translated by Kristin Siagian

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PasarPolis Announces Over 70 Billion Rupiah Funding from IFC

Insurtech startup PasarPolis announces follow on funding worth $5 million (more than 70 billion Rupiah) from the International Finance Corporation (IFC), a financial institution that operates under the World Bank that focuses on accelerating financial inclusion and literacy in developing countries. This funding was caught four months after announcing a Series B worth $54 million.

The two companies will gather to continue and strengthen the PasarPolis mission to democratize insurance coverage, one of which is through developing innovative microinsurance products that are affordable and in accordance with the needs of the community.

PasarPolis’ Founder & CEO, Cleosent Randing said the company needed world-class partners who could strengthen PasarPolis’s mission that is quite tough in order to encourage insurance penetration in Southeast Asia.

“We are ready to continue PasarPolis mission to answer the challenge of insurance inclusion in Southeast Asia, which remains such a homework, but through technology and microinsurance products, it can provide access to create a better impact,” he said in a virtual press conference, Thursday ( 4/2).

IFC’s Senior Country Officer, Jack Sidik said this investment is one of IFC’s series of efforts to assist Indonesia’s economic recovery through various initiatives in the private sector. In the past two months, IFC has mobilized IDR 5 trillion, mostly directed at the manufacturing sector in which most affected.

“Regarding PasarPolis, it is an equity [investment] of $5 million. We will help PasarPolis to expand insurance penetration in order to improve the digital economy. Thus, Indonesian workers and their families can have insurance and other safety nets,” Sidik said.

Separately, in an official statement, LeapFrog Investments Partner Fernanda Lima said that the cooperation between IFC and PasarPolis shows the great potential of insurance coverage at affordable prices, in order to increase positive social impacts. “With 30 insurance companies and 25 digital partners serving millions of new users during 2020, the opportunity for PasarPolis to expand its reach and services is extraordinary.”

Regarding the fresh funds, Randing explained that the company will continue to provide the best experience for consumers, from the product selection to the claim process. In terms of technology, it is also being improved for it can be easily used by underprivileged people and in remote areas, having limited use of digital technology.

He also emphasized that PasarPolis’ has other focus to increase insurance penetration and literacy in other ASEAN countries, such as Vietnam and Thailand, as one of the priorities in 2021. “From an industrial perspective, Vietnam and Indonesia have similar insurance market criteria, even though insurance awareness in Vietnam is relatively lower than Indonesia, Thailand is a fairly mature insurance market with a higher penetration rate.”

It is said that PasarPolis currently has more than 80 products specifically designed to lighten the burden and meet the unique needs of people. During the five years of operation, it is claimed that the company has provided protection to 11% of Indonesia’s population of around 30 million people.

As many as 90% of PasarPolis consumers are first time buyers, and 40% of policyholders are informal sector workers, such as online motorcycle taxi drivers, couriers, and online MSME players.


Original article is in Indonesian, translated by Kristin Siagian

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Turochas “T” Fuad on The “Exit” Stories: Speed and Execution is Everything

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.

“Starting a new venture never seems to get old for me. The rush, the pain, the anxiety, the joy, all mix together. It is never the same yet, it is also so familiar.”

Turochas “T” Fuad wrote in the opening paragraph about his latest venture, Pace.

It’s a compact yet thorough explanation about the life of a serial entrepreneur, at least for Turochas Fuad, or sometimes called T. Was born in Indonesia and had a chance to study English in Singapore, he decided to pursue his Management Information System degree all the way to the US at The University of Texas, Austin. That is quite the beginning of his big passion for technology.

From the story of the founding of his first venture which finally acquired by an American-based tech giant, Yahoo!; next to the founding of the iconic travelmob, which then acquired by Homeaway in 2013 for $11.5 million; then the story of Coworking-space giant WeWork acquired Spacemob to ramp up its expansion and growth in Southeast Asia.

DailySocial team had a chance to interview him on his business journey as a veteran entrepreneur and the vision towards a better future in the tech industry.

Let’s start with your latest venture. Before Pace, I don’t recall you have been involved in the fintech industry? What makes you interested and started this one?

What excites me most about starting a new business is the possibility to create a positive impact on individuals on a large scale. From my very first company till my last startup, Spacemob, this has always been the driving force behind what I do and continues to be the case, even now with Fintech.

With Pace specifically, the chance to create financial inclusion across Asia is an opportunity that is too difficult to turn down. The financial landscape remains fragmented, with room for incumbents to be disrupted across all segments, payments notwithstanding. Our mission is to provide financial inclusion by building a banking engine that can operate across multiple countries easily – one that helps merchants create sales efficiencies, and provides consumers with an option to spend sustainably.

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Completing a bachelor’s degree in the US and manage to work there for a while, why did you finally decide to build a career in Singapore? [Since you were born in Indonesia]

Singapore, being a major business hub in Asia, represented a way for me to build a career that could give me international exposure and provided me a global network of contacts that I could build over time. Being around the right people helps you think big, and I’ve been lucky enough to gain perspective from the many talented people I’ve gotten to know here. Truth be told, given my time here in Singapore, I’ve also developed businesses across North Asia and Southeast Asia.

That said, my heart is still very much with Indonesia, and with its current speed of growth and large population, any startup that does not have Indonesia as a part of its expansion plans is missing out on the potential to create a large positive impact. After all, it is hard to ignore the fourth largest country in the world, ya?

You’ve had your history with some tech giants like Yahoo! and Skype. How did those past experiences shape you and what finally encouraged you to build your own company?

If anything, these experiences showed me how important culture is to the success of any company. I’ve had the pleasure of working with people from all over the world, and I’ve seen how the most successful of them, learn to always be people-first even in the most difficult situations. That, to me, is a great culture.

The other thing that was very prevalent in these companies was their speed of execution. You can have the greatest plan in the world, but when it comes down to it, the most difficult part of it is figuring out how to iterate and execute as fast as you can, while maintaining the quality of your product or service. Especially when you’re operating in a disruptive space, you’re going to face a barrage of challenges; staying focused on executing through tough times, is imperative for success.

On the journey to “exit”, did you have certain considerations or specific targets before deciding to sell the company?

Great entrepreneurs never start a company to sell it, because without having a convicted mission that is focused on creating change, a company often wavers under pressure, and eventually crumbles.

When it came to evaluating the previous exits I’ve had, the question I’ve always asked myself was, ‘will this acquisition furthers our company’s vision?’ If there was any doubt at all, then a decision against it would be easily made with a clear heart.

A great example of this was the acquisition of Spacemob five years ago. We set out to build collaborative workspaces across Southeast Asia that helped people to bring their visions to life, and with the acquisition by WeWork we were able to do just that. The core Spacemob team stayed together, expanded the business to dozens of spaces across six countries in Southeast Asia, and delivered on the mission we set out to achieve.

You’ve launched and sold three startups so far, what is the biggest lesson you’ve learned among all those experiences?

It’s often said that speed & execution is everything, and through the different situations I’ve been in, I’ve learned that to be very true. That, and making sure you have a great team of people who are willing to commit themselves to the grind. If you do these few things well enough, there’s no reason why you can’t succeed.

Do you have a particular individual or figure that inspired you to become your today self?

As cliche as it sounds, I’ve always been inspired by my father. Growing up in Medan, I saw him work hard at his own small business, which he still runs today. Although my brothers and I were fortunate enough to be put through school in the US, it didn’t come easy for him. Through permanent late nights and non-existent weekends, he’s made personal sacrifices to ensure we got the best he could provide. That strength and commitment towards putting in the hard work and staying focused on the daily grind is something that keeps me going every single day.

Especially when the Covid-19 still around, how do you see the development of the tech industry in Southeast Asia?

In short, it’s bright and full of promise! Southeast Asia has been churning out great tech talent in recent years and companies now have more options than before, in how they want to set up their teams. We’ve also seen large expansions into the region both from American companies like Amazon and Chinese companies like Bytedance, which validates the quality of people in the industry and the scale of the business opportunity in Southeast Asia.

More specific to different countries, I think Singapore will continue to be a business hub for the region and the first landing spot for companies looking to expand into Southeast Asia as a whole. But once operations have been set up, companies immediately look towards Indonesia as a key source of long-term growth, and the best of them move quickly to gain market share there.

Fintech is also fast becoming a mainstay in this region, with companies getting fresh rounds of funding even during economically uncertain times. Coupled with healthtech, these two categories are the ones to look out for in terms of growth and innovation.

With tons of experience in the business, do you still aim for something more in this industry? Maybe you have other goals yet to be achieved?

With each startup, I keep telling myself that it will be my last one. And then, soon enough, I find myself starting yet another company. In some way, I guess this is my calling in life and I’m thankful to be able to continue building businesses because it’s a privilege that not everyone gets.

In terms of goals, I would have to say that seeing my daughters growing up and being with them each step of the way, will be the most rewarding achievement that I will have in life. The family gives me the greatest joy, and seeing each of them succeed in their own way is a goal worth striving hard for.

What would you say to all the tech enthusiasts out there trying to make something but hindered with pandemic stuff?

I’d say that there never is a right time to start a business. There’ll always be a reason not to, and you just have to keep finding solutions to any hurdles you might face. Whether that’s as simple as not having enough time, or as difficult as trying to look for funding to get your business off the ground, there will always be a solution if you search hard enough. But with enough will to do so, coupled with a willingness to put in the time and work, there is no reason for success to evade you. And when you do make it, remember to find your own ways to pay it forward.

Edtech Startup ELSA Secures Series B Funding, to Enhance Its Presence in Indonesia

Edtech services have been increasingly in demand during pandemic, many players have competing hard to present products with their respective targets. This opportunity was also used by the San Francisco-based edtech startup ELSA (English Language Speech Assistant) after securing $15 million in Series B funding led by VI (Vietnam Investments) Group and SIG.

Also participated in this round investors from the previous round, including Gradient Ventures (Google’s VC that focuses on AI), SOSV, and Monk’s Hill Ventures. Endeavor Catalyst and Globant Ventures are two new investors entering the Series B round. Globant will help ELSA enter the Latin American country.

In an official statement, ELSA will use the fresh funds to build a special R&D for AI development, enhance the B2B platform, and recruit new talent. Indonesia, which is one of ELSA’s target countries, will have its own portion, there will be more local teams hired.

The ELSA application has been used by 13 million users in more than 100 countries since its debut in 2015. The company alone has built offices in Portugal, Vietnam, India, Indonesia and Japan. The application has supported the Indonesian language to reach users from Indonesia.

In a separate interview with DailySocial, ELSA’s Co-Founder & CEO Vu Van explained that Indonesia is one of the main targets. Therefore, companies will invest a lot by expanding digital distribution channels, collaborating with influencers and others to acquire more users here.

“To date, we have several team members helping the growth and expansion in Indonesia to drive more traction in the coming year,” said Van, Tuesday (2/2).

Although Indonesia is relatively new for ELSA, the company claims to have attracted nearly 200 thousand users with monthly growth between 30% -50% in the last few months. “With more investment in marketing strategies, we are confident that there will be more growth channels to explore in the near future. We see that there are still many opportunities available.”

He mentioned one local partnerships that has been established with Yuna & Co, an AI startup for personal stylists. Van also said that he was exploring partnerships with edtech and other online platforms in Indonesia.

“Regarding distribution channels, apart from subscribing directly through the application, users can buy through Shopee. We are exploring opporunities with Tokopedia and other e-commerce partners to expand distribution channels.”

Business model and growth

Van also said, ELSA is the only edtech application that only focuses on learning English especially on pronunciation as close as possible to native speakers. Supported by AI, ELSA grades each user’s words to improve pronunciation, intonation, and fluency.

“90% of our users report improved speech clarity and more confidence in just three weeks after using the app. We believe ELSA provides a unique and strong added value in the landscape of English education, where grammar and reading are emphasized, but the most important skill, speaking, has limited tools for its training. ”

He said most English students said speaking was the most difficult skill to master. Part of the reason is because speaking takes a lot of face-to-face practice, which is expensive and kind of difficult to organize. Thanks to AI, students can practice speaking at any time, with a coach who can correct pronunciation and speaking style, without the shame of talking to strangers.

ELSA released some social features in the application, such as Community to connect with friends in the same city or a common interest, to study together to get to the highest position. Van said this feature is here to answer the needs of students who sometimes get bored for a while. “ELSA wants to be a platform where students can achieve success in learning English together.”

ELSA runs B2C and B2B businesses. In terms of B2B, the company provides training services for corporates and schools which available at home or as a group on the ELSA platform. With a duration of 10 minutes each day, it is enough to see progress in a few weeks.

The application is equipped with a dashboard that allows schools and companies to track how much time students have spent and how many of them have improved over time. This method is considered effective for measuring the impact of training, rather than having to go offline which is difficult to track the progress.

In addition, ELSA’s B2B business can be escalated by offering an English course prepared by the University of Pennsylvania (UPenn) on career development and earning a certificate upon completion of the course. “We will be adding content from several other prestigious partners and publishers around the world.”

To enrich the content, Van said the company released a new feature called Study Set. In this space, teachers or students can create their own content to share with students, friends or colleagues. It is expected to be more convenience and relevant to their needs regardless of their age or interests. It is claimed that within a few months after launch, there were hundreds of thousands of study sets created and distributed around the world.

This B2B service has been piloted in schools and companies in Vietnam and India, in the near future it will be rolled out to other countries where ELSA operates.

ELSA’s geographic expansion will focus on the Latin American region as the company’s growth is most exponential here. Meanwhile, in Vietnam, India and Japan, the growth reached five times last year, it is anticipated that demand will further grow from these three countries.

Apart from ELSA, recently Ruangguru is taking the English learning segment by releasing the English Academy. There is also LingoAce that is soon to arrive, even though it’s an edtech player that specializes in Mandarin.

According to the World Economic Forum, out of 1.5 billion English speakers globally, it is estimated that more than 1 billion non-native speakers learn English as a second language. Indonesia is one of the countries that adopts such an education system.


Original article is in Indonesian, translated by Kristin Siagian

BukuWarung Scores New Funding; Officially Launches Tokoko App

BukuWarung, a fintech startup providing an app for digitizing MSMEs today (03/2) announced the acquisition of new funding from Rocketship.vc. Participated also in this round some retail companies in Indonesia and angel investors – undisclosed. Although the value was not announced, the current nominal is said to be greater than the previous rounds.

Previously, after the demo day of Y Combinator accelerator programs in September 2020, BukuWarung has received funding from some investors, including Partners of DST Global, GMO Venture Partners, Soma Capital, HOF Capital, VentureSouq, and other angel investors.

BukuWarung plans to use the investment fund to expand its technology and product teams in Indonesia, India, and Singapore, therefore, the company can launch more products and features to digitize MSMEs in Indonesia. This year, the company aims to launch monetizing products such as credit and expand payment solution features.

Was founded in 2019, BukuWarung has reached 3.5 million users from MSME. They are living across 750 cities and countries in Indonesia, with the majority located in tier 2 and 3 regions. With the user base, they have booked over $15 billion worth of transactions on their platform and have processed over $500 million in payments, claiming to be the market leader in terms of volume.

They recently launched Tokoko, a platform that allows merchants to open their online shop. MSME players can list their products, manage orders, receive payments, track goods delivery, and talk to customers. Previously, they’ve had strategic partnerships with Warung Pintar – both of which are East Ventures portfolios.

“Unlike other players, we have now achieved revenue through payment solutions. However, we are placing payments as a way for monetizing opportunities through other financial services as merchant adoption grows. This year, we’re focus is to expand the offering of payment solutions and ways of using them. [use cases] for traders,” BukuWarung’s Co-Founder & President, Chinmay Chauhan said.

Currently, there are several startups to develop similar services in Indonesia. From our previous article, we list several players who are currently penetrating the market, including:

Application Rank (business category) Downloaded
BukuKas 3 1M+
BukuWarung 6 1M+
Credibook 46 100K+
Akuntansi UKM 84 100K+
Moodah 121 10K+
Lababook 184 1K+
Teman bisnis 254 100K+
Akuntansiku 309 1K+

BukuWarung’s closest competitor is BukuKas. They recently announced the Series A funding worth 142 billion Rupiah last January. BukuKas is said to reached 3.5 million users with 1.8 million active monthly users.

BukuKas BukuWarung
Seed Investors Surge, 500 Startups, Credit Saison, dan angel investors East Ventures, AC Ventures, Golden Gate Ventures, Tanglin Venture Partners, dan angel investors
Pre-Series A Investor Surge, Credit Saison, Speedinvest, S7V, January Capital, dan Cambium Grove Capital, Prasetia Dwidharma Quona Capital, East Ventures, AC Ventures, Golden Gate Ventures, Tanglin Venture Partners, Partners of DST Global, GMO Venture Partners, Soma Capital, HOF Capital, VentureSouq, angel investors
Series A Sequoia Capital India, Saison Capital, January Capital, Founderbank Capital, Cambium Grove, Endeavor Catalyst, Amrish Rau Rocketship.vc, perusahaan ritel Indonesia, angel investors
Accelerator Surge (Sequoia) Y Combinator


Original article is in Indonesian, translated by Kristin Siagian

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Aldi Haryopratomo is Appointed as eFishery Commissioner

The Aquaculture startup eFishery appointed Aldi Haryopratomo as a commissioner. Aldi’s figure as the former CEO of GoPay is considered relevant for a company that is currently entering a hypergrowth period, in order to reach millions of fish cultivators in Asia.

Aldi will step down as CEO effective January 2021, after serving for three years. Now Andre Soelistyo, Hans Patuwo, and Ryu Suliawan are jointly developing the payment sector at Gojek Group.

In an official statement, eFishery Founder & CEO Gibran Huzaifah said the company needed an experienced person in the startup field in developing the eFishery business. He expects Aldi can provide direction so that eFishery can grow and reach 1 million fish farmers over the next three years, increasing positive socio-economic impacts in the aquaculture ecosystem.

“Aldi shares the same vision with us. In addition, he has superior experience and expertise in developing products and building organizations that target MSMEs, rural communities, and the informal sector to have an impact on a massive scale, such as when GoPay and Mapan reached millions of users,” Gibran said, Thursday (21/1).

eFishery itself received series B funding from Go-Ventures and Northstar Group in August 2020, targeting to provide comprehensive and integrated services, from cultivation operations, financing, to distribution.

Personally, Aldi and Gibran met for the first time in 2015, when Gibran was chosen to be Endeavor Entrepreneur and Aldi became a mentor. Finally, the two of them meet regularly to discuss eFishery direction.

There is a common vision & mission between the two, both promote the community in the village. At that time, Aldi was building Mapan (formerly known as RUMA), an online social gathering application that focuses on rural communities, right before Mapan was fully acquired by Gojek in 2017.

Aldi also said that Indonesia needs more entrepreneurs like Gibran and startups like eFishery to reach MSMEs which still find it difficult to benefit from technology. “I am grateful to be a small part of eFishery until now. Hopefully, eFishery can continue to recruit the nation’s best young generation and help millions of fish cultivators.”

Last year, eFishery reached a 4 times increase in revenue compared to the previous year. The company’s innovations have been acknowledged to have helped farmers increase their production capacity by 26% which resulted in an increase in farmers’ income by up to 45%.

This year, the company targets to launch an integrated Smart Farming Solution service specifically designed to increase the efficiency and productivity of shrimp farming. The company wants to participate in realizing the government’s target to increase shrimp exports by 250% in 2024.

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Indonesia’s Food Delivery Service GMV Hits 52 Trillion Rupiah, Grab and Gojek Leading the Market

The food delivery sector has accelerated growth during the pandemic. According to research by Momentum Works, this service GMV in six Southeast Asian countries will reach $11.9 billion in 2020. In Indonesia alone, the total value has reached $ 3.7 billion or equivalent to 52 trillion Rupiah – dominated by two big players, Grab and Gojek, respectively holding 53% and 47% of the total market share.

In addition, this achievement actually contributed only 1% of the potential for food delivery in Indonesia, which value is projected to reach $61 billion by 2019. The main indication is that the players’ penetration is still focused on big cities, while the business in tier-2 and tier-3 has not been much optimized.

Momentum Works’ CEO Jianggan Li said, most of the growth in food delivery services that occurred in 2020 was permanent. Given the trend of digitalization and changes in consumer behavior towards digital.

“We are optimistic about the prospects for food delivery services in Indonesia, although it will likely take several years before this sector can be massively adopted. Food delivery service players need to have a long-term strategy to take advantage of opportunities in this enormous market optimal,” he said.

Gambar 1

Growth factors

The main factor that makes Indonesia the largest food delivery service market in the region is none other than the large population in this country. The 2020 census data states that Indonesia’s current population is around 270.20 million people. Of the total, 27.94% were Gen Z and 25.87% were millennials. In addition, it is also supported by several other factors such as economic growth, urbanization, and smartphone penetration.

The research also highlighted several steps taken by the players to achieve long-term profitability and sustainability. The platform needs to control acquisition/retention costs, maintain unit economics, and generate additional revenue which could include advertising, financing, and other B2B services. The option is based on a successful case study of Meituan, one of the major food delivery services in China. In Q2 2020, the company reached a net profit of up to $420 million.

Gambar 2

Meanwhile, from the consumer’s perspective, some things that are taken into consideration when choosing a food delivery service include the number of choices, speed, quality/reliability, and cost. According to Momentum Works, each player must (at least) excel on the two factors, because leading across all of these variables is said to be impossible.

Explore the potential

Apart from Indonesia, some of the major food delivery service markets in Southeast Asia are in Thailand ($2.8 billion), Singapore ($2.4 billion), the Philippines ($1.2 billion), Malaysia ($1.1 billion), and Vietnam ( $0.7 billion). Research also states several potential strategies that can be implemented to increase the value of these business transactions each year. First, focus on increasing the transaction volume of the upper middle-class consumer segment.

Second, reducing costs to compensate for low food prices and order values. Then it is also important to increase digital literacy, therefore, merchants (restaurants, food stalls, SMEs, etc.) can easily adapt with the delivery platform. Eventually, players should dare to invest in the infrastructure needed to drive service adoption in tier-2 and 3 cities.

Grab and Gojek have been seen executing this strategy in Indonesia, one of which is realized through the cloud kitchen initiative. The shared kitchen allows SME partners to find it easy to sell their products, as well as expand the market; because basically, various productive facilities are provided and integrated into the super app ecosystem of each service. On the consumer side, it also allows them to get more food choices with lower delivery costs.


Original article is in Indonesian, translated by Kristin Siagian
Header: Depositphotos.com

TaniHub to Finalize Series B Funding, Continuosly Building Infrastructure Outside Java

Agritech startup TaniHub announces to finalize series B funding that is claimed to have the largest nominal value in all of Southeast Asia for startups in its vertical. This funding will be used to strengthen the company’s plans to expand outside Java by building business infrastructure.

Less than a year ago, TaniHub announced a Series A+ funding in April 2020 worth $17 million led by Openspace Ventures and Intudo Ventures.

In the virtual conference, the President of TaniHub Group Pamitra Wineka was unwilling to mention further regarding the fresh fund. He only said that this funding was in the finalizing stage and it was estimated to be announced in a month. The investors are claimed to be so enthusiastic that it is oversubscribed from the targeted funds.

“We want this fund to contribute back to farmers in Indonesia. We want to expand to where we can reach more farmers, hopefully, we can expand to Papua,” he said, Thursday (21/1).

The company plans to build a regional distribution facility (DC), a processing packing center (PPC), a poultry processing center (PPC), a national warehouse (national fulfillment center / NFC), and rice mills in various points. Several locations are including North Sumatra, Riau, Palembang, Lampung, Banjarmasin, Banjarmasin, Manado, and Makassar.

Currently, the PPC location with full-time operational is in Malang, which supports the supply chain of various regional distribution facilities across five cities, Bogor, Bandung, Kartasura, Surabaya, and Denpasar.

TaniHub Group Director of Supply Chain Sariyo said, Malang’s PPC has operated at almost maximum capacity. He appreciates the response the good response in the field because this PPC serves to streamline the distribution process and reduce the risk of damage.

“We build PPC based on the location whether the area has a lot of sources [of agricultural products]. Then, this will be very helpful because PPC must be close to the source area [of agricultural products],” he said.

In addition to the expansion, this year the company will digitize the entire supply chain process by building its own data-driven automation system, without manual work. Next, create a B2B consumer-only platform to accommodate specific processes in order to provide a much better transparency experience.

Last year’s business accomplishment

On the same occasion, the company also announced its glorious achievements over the past year. TaniHub Group Co-Founder & CEO Ivan Arie Sustiawan claims, the company is the first agritech company to successfully score GMV above IDR1 trillion with gross revenue growth reaching 639% YoY.

There are more than 46 thousand farmers who gained a positive impact from TaniHub, one of which is an increase in farmer income by 20%. Further elaborated, the largest revenue from TaniHub Group came from the B2B business with a contribution of 80%, the rest came from the retail business.

TaniHub e-commerce recorded a new user growth of more than 250 thousand people from March to December 2020. The most purchased products by consumers are chicken, dragon fruit, leaf vegetables, rice, eggs, avocado, spices, and melons. The total SKU owned by TaniHub is now more than 1,700, almost doubling the previous year’s SKU of 800.

TaniFund P2P lending also comes with achievements. Last year it succeeded in channeling IDR 89.2 billion funding through 243 projects in the food and agriculture sectors. There are 2500 affected farmers who joined the TaniFund ecosystem as their production has increased by 20%.

In addition, TaniFund’s spirit to increase financial inclusion is visible through the increased income of assisted farmers by an average of 25% with bank account ownership reaching 100%. TaniFund targets to increase its distribution to IDR 1 trillion to 10 thousand farmers this year.


Original article is in Indonesian, translated by Kristin Siagian

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Sampingan Announces Series A Funding of 71 Billion Rupiah

Sampingan announces the closing of $5 million Series A funding or equivalent to 71 billion Rupiah. This round was led by Altara Ventures, with the participation of Access Ventures, XA Network, iSeed SEA, and two investors in the previous round, Golden Gate Ventures and Antler. Currently, the startup founded by Wisnu Nugrahadi, Margana Mohamad, and Dimas Pramudya has managed to raise up to $7.1 million in funds.

Fresh funds will be focused on strengthening the technology, product, and sales teams. Since their launch in 2019, they have served around 150 corporate clients with 850 thousand workers. Its services allow business partners to connect with blue-collar workers to perform various types of work, such as making sales, creating product reviews, conducting surveys, installing applications, etc.

In Indonesia, there are several platforms that specifically target blue-collar workers (informal workers). In general, it consists of two forms. First, there is a job marketplace that allows companies to recruit prospective workers with a more formal recruitment process. While agency services usually provide certain jobs on the platform, registered workers can take on and do the task directly, and get a commission after successful submission.

Platform Pekerja Kerah Biru di Indonesia

The presence of these services is based on a fairly large niche market. Based on BPS data in 2019, these workers dominate the informal sector with a rate of 57.27%. Sampingan’s internal data also recorded an increase during the pandemic. From March to December 2020, the number of Sampingan applications downloads exceeding 1 million, increased by 4 times. The number of partners also increased significantly during this period, without announcing a detailed number.

Previously, in an interview with DailySocial, the founders said that Sampingan was inspired by an outsourcing business model that applies daily or monthly targets to workers. In the process, Sampingan uses a similar approach to that model, providing pay based on performance results (pay per performance).

Sampingan was started as Antler startup generator’s first batch program in Singapore. In 2020, the program finally arrived in Indonesia to provide mentorship and investment programs to prospective founders. Apart from Sampingan, there are also local startups generated from this program, including Bubays and Cooklab.


Original article is in Indonesian, translated by Kristin Siagian

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Ula Announces Series A Funding Round Worth of 282 Billion Rupiah

A technology startup for traditional retail digitization, Ula comes up with $20 million (over 282 billion Rupiah) Series A funding led by Quona Capital and B Capital Group. Participated also Sequoia Capital India and Lightspeed India as the previous investors.

The company aims to expand its team and location through this funding, therefore, more small retailers can be digitized through Ula technology. In addition, Ula will expand the product category to fashion and electronics, and reaching out to retailers selling FMCG and vegetable products.

Ula has closed $10 million in seed funding in June last year. This round involved SMDV, Quona Capital, Saison Capital, and Alter Global. Several angel investors also participated, including Patrick Walujo, Willy Arifin, Sujeet Kumar, Vaibhav Gupta, Amod Malviya, Rohan Monga, and Rahul Mehta.

Quoting from TechCrunch, Quona Capital Managing Partner Ganesh Rengaswamy said, “If you look at the entire retail value chain, especially essential products, such as FMCG, staples and fresh products, it is very fragmented. In fact, the market has developed in terms of consolidation, demand, and supply in a more efficient way.”

He continued, “Ula is trying to repeat the retail distribution ecosystem with a significant technology overlay. Ula connects some of the biggest players on the supply side to the smallest retailers and consumers.”

Ula provides working capital for micro-retailers, who usually operate in small shops on their home page. This way, they don’t have to wait for payment by customers to restock. The company recognizes that this is a serious challenge for micro-retailers in Asia.

These micro-business owners generally have strong bonds with their customers, they often selling goods without upfront payment. Meanwhile, collecting these payments often takes longer than expected.

“Frictionless payments and offering credit to retailers for more efficient cash flow management is an essential component of modern digital commerce,” Rengaswamy said.

Ula was founded by former Indian Flipkart officials Nipun Mehra, and Derry Sakti, who started his career at P&G in Indonesia, in January 2020. Mehra said that most of the Indonesian retail market is unorganized, similar to India.

In the vegetable category, for example, farmers often sell to middlemen, then arrived in the market. “From the market, supplies go to small wholesalers and so on. There are many players in this chain,” he said.

Over the past year, the company is claimed to serve more than 20 thousand stores. Ula first operated in Surabaya and expanding its presence quickly throughout East Java and Semarang.


Original article is in Indonesian, translated by Kristin Siagian

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