Credibook Receives 21 Billion Rupiah Pre-Series A Funding Led by Wavemaker Partners

Fintech startup CrediBook announced $1.5 million (over 21 billion Rupiah) pre-series A funding led by Wavemaker Partners. Alpha JWC Ventures participated in this round along with Insignia Ventures as an investor in the previous round.

CrediBook’s Co-Founder & CEO Gabriel Frans said to DailySocial, fresh funds will be channeled to strengthen the company’s new business to provide financial solutions for MSMEs with new features and expanding its presence outside Jabodetabek and Bandung.

“We want to digitize the manual process in MSMEs, for many are still using paper and books, by introducing more robust products and expanding the distribution network of retailers and suppliers,” he said, Tuesday (26/1).

These solutions for the MSME segment, he continued, are not just debt managers or invoices automation. They also need solutions such as sales management, therefore, their business activities can be slowly digitized.

Jooalan is one example of MSME solutions that the company released. It has a number of features for MSMEs, such as making it easier for warung merchants to transact at wholesalers without having to queue at the location.

“Credibook wants to be a catalyst, therefore, retailer business activities can be less manual. We also want to support retailers and wholesalers with more features and financial products to support their business activities.”

CrediBook debuted last year, targeting micro-businesses with simple financial recording solutions for micro-businesses, such as shops, with features for recording debt, complete reports, and sending bills via WhatsApp/SMS, telephone.

Gabriel claims that CrediBook users have reached 500 thousand people throughout Indonesia.

After obtaining funding from Payfazz, the two companies are aggressively expanding their financial products from one another to provide added value to each of their users. “We have several partnerships with lending, including Payfazz, to support users. In the future, there will be more financing products in collaboration with Payfazz.”

From a business perspective, this kind of service is considered very helpful for entrepreneurs to go digital, starting with digital financial records as historical data that can be carried off when applying for loans to financial institutions. The low penetration of micro-entrepreneurs is aware of the importance of this matter, making it an attractive business for many tech companies to do.

In the similar segment, apart from CrediBook, there were BukuKas and BukuWarung which also announced the acquisition of funding during the pandemic. Interestingly, these three startups got funding together last year throughout the pandemic. Apart from them, there are other players who have joined, including Moodah, Teman Bisnis, Akuntansiku, Lababook, Akuntansi UKM, and many more.


Original article is in Indonesian, translated by Kristin Siagian

Discovering Various Concepts of “Open Finance” in The Digital World

Innovation and problems are two related things. As in the world of fintech, especially in developing countries like Indonesia with low bank account ownership, is a firm land to innovate various financial products.

There are new terms emerged, such as open banking, open finance, or banking as a service (BaaS), all of which actually take advantage of the open APIs targeting various sectors. In clarifying this term, DailySocial asks industry players involved in this sector to interpret the views of the two terms. There are Brankas, Finantier, and AyoConnect.

In terms of Finantier, open banking becomes one of the building blocks, but not the only one in the world of open finance. Meanwhile, open finance has a bigger aspect than open banking. On the other hand, open banking is likely centered around bank accounts. Despite this fact, there are still many underbanked people in Indonesia.

“Some companies have tried to do open banking but this only serves 30% of Indonesians who have access to a bank account. What about the other 70%? Although open banking can function in other countries, here [Indonesia] is different,” Finantier‘s Co-Founder and CEO Diego Rojas said.

Meanwhile, AyoConnect says open API is similar to open banking because it allows interlink and interconnection between multiple options via one API. This condition has the potential to significantly accelerate the integration process between parties, therefore, to reach customers faster.

“The difference is that open banking is initiated by the bank for its third party, while our API is initiated by ourselves which allows interconnection between billing providers and channel partners,” AyoConnect’s Co-Founder and COO Chiragh Kirpalani said.

Also, Brankas sees the easiest way to differentiate is to place open banking as a model or philosophy that supports the movement of people and companies to get more access to payments and account information, with the owner’s consent. Meanwhile, open API is a necessary tool to activate this philosophy.

“Where the company can connect with it, to make things possible, for instance, top-up on the e-wallet [platform] using your bank credentials in real-time,” Brankas’ Co-Founder and CEO Todd Schweitzer said.

Finantier, AyoConnect, and Brankas are taking advantage of the API’s remarkable works in carrying out their respective missions. In fact, they want to simulate existing financial services with APIs, therefore, end consumers can experience the benefits.

Various innovations

AyoConnect positioned itself as an open bill network, connecting billing companies, consumer platforms, and aggregators through one open network accessible via centralized API, the AyoConnect API. As a result, billing companies – such as telecommunications companies, apartment managers, educational institutions, insurance, and others – can expand their payment points quickly and easily.

On the other hand, companies with direct contact with customers, such as e-commerce, banks, retail stores, to other fintech applications, can provide their customers with access to 3 thousand billing products from 25 categories for their customers.

Chiragh explains that all these solutions exist because the company sees itself as a provider. Bill payment has become a mandatory feature offered by consumer-related platforms to maintain retention. If you build this all yourself, the margin that comes from the transaction is actually very small, and even tends to be unprofitable.

AyoConnect Co-founders / AyoConnect
AyoConnect Co-founders / AyoConnect

“Our value proposition to partners is to run bill payments and digital goods as an end-to-end profitable category. Our technology provides the infrastructure that helps clients grow faster while focusing on the core business at the same time. ”

Meanwhile, Brankas saw the wide range of opportunities offered by open finance in Indonesia and Southeast Asia. Schweitzer and his partner, Kenneth Shaw, founded Brankas in 2016 with the vision of making modern financial services available to everyone.

“By helping banks prepare new technologies, helping online businesses connect easily to banks, we can create new product categories in the financial services industry.”

Brankas solutions include providing open finance for financial service providers (banks, lenders, e-wallets) who want to offer API-based products and online businesses or fintech companies who want to connect with banks.

Next, partner with banks to build and manage their open finance infrastructure, produce APIs for real-time payments, identity, account opening, and more; provides an aggregation API that allows online businesses to connect in real-time to multiple banks and embed financial services into their own products. There are several API aggregation products, account mutations, direct transfers, payment links, and disbursements.

Schweitzer calls all of these product initiatives based on the results of identifying problems faced by customers and creating products to solve problems with better financial infrastructure. He provides an example, one of the creative innovations is about opening an online account.

Online account opening by companies is actually in great demand during a pandemic due to the reduced activity of people visiting branch offices. The company partnered with a campus organization to streamline the process of creating accounts with Brankas’ bank partners and accelerate the process from weeks to less than 48 hours.

Sumber: depositphotos.com
Sumber: depositphotos.com

Meanwhile, Finantier focuses on developing open finance services for consumers and businesses to get financial services in improving their financial well-being. They do this by providing valuable financial information about consumers and businesses to financial institutions and fintech in the form of e-KYC, enriched financial data, and others.

Using the information, financial institutions and fintechs can identify customers, assess their financial capabilities, and the form it takes, to offer a variety of financial products, not limited to loans and insurance. Companies can also speed up time-to-market and cut costs in developing custom-designed digital solutions.

“Companies can have a good overview of their customers’ financial health, and offer tailored services for each user. For example, with the information we provide, fintech lending can provide more competitive loan interest to customers,” Diego explained.

The open finance ecosystem is important because the raw data collected by each institution is different. However, when the data processed, it will be very useful, but the investment in this area is quite large and takes time.

“The problem is that financial information is difficult to access. Even if someone has access, how do you make sense of the data? The first problem is that there is actually a lot of financial information available, but it takes a lot of effort to get it. This is a difficult problem that we are determined to solve.”

Solid B2B

The presence of API players, like the three companies above, fully targets companies as users, not retail consumers. Chiragh says the company charges partners a fair fee because they trust AyoConnect to handle bill payment features to keep partners seamless, overhead cost minimal, and save their money overall.

Some of these partners, including DANA, JD.id, Bukalapak, Pegadaian, Indomaret, Home Credit, telco, Indosat GIG, Bank Mandiri, and many more. “We, first of all, make sure that our partners’ businesses grow and our incentives align with each other.”

In terms of Brankas, all users are companies from financial institutions and third-party service providers. Brankas operates two business models by looking from the supply and demand side.

Schweitzer explained that on the supply side, the company is building an open banking infrastructure, partnering with financial institutions to open their financial products and services in the form of APIs. The API can connect with third parties from partners.

Since all financial institutions have different infrastructure and different implementations for each bank, this business is monetized per project. “We usually work with banks to understand their requirements, technical infrastructure, and requirements to deliver contracts that make sense to consumers.”

Brankas's duo Co-founder
Brankas’s duo Co-founder

In terms of demand, Brankas provides services for startups, e-commerce companies, fintech, and others by providing aggregate APIs for payment-related and all data-related uses. For example, Brankas customers in the Philippines can make fund transfers using the open banking concept through end-user approval and make peer-to-peer funds transfers on third-party applications.

The API aggregate helps partners no longer have to connect to several banks through several open APIs using a bit of a standard. “Through Brankas, they can connect to a single API giving access to all financial services, which means less overhead in maintaining these connections. Therefore, in this model, we charge our customers based on successful transactions, for example paying for services per its function.”

Finantier is quite similar. They partner with fintech companies and financial institutions. Diego designs win-win solutions for consumers and businesses, therefore, they can get access to financial services. Partners only have to pay-per-use for each API call they make.

Moreover, partners will benefit from Finantier’s API that provides them valuable financial information, therefore, partners can improve their performance. “When our partners work better, so do we. We are currently working with 40+ partners and are rapidly scaling up our team to meet the increasing demand. ”

Finantier’s COO Edwin Kusuma added that the majority of corporate partners come from banking, p2p lending, multi-finance, and wealth management, and others. Creating an API is not an easy job, especially for financial companies with experts in their respective fields. As a result, in-house API development is expensive.

Even for fintech lending companies. Even though they are tech companies, they need help from companies like Finantier to solve the problem. “For lending companies, their main business is lending, therefore, to invest in technology and build a good technology team, it doesn’t make sense to them. Also, AFPI itself as an association encourages cooperation between p2p companies and other companies,” Edwin said.

Finantier' Co-founders / Finantier
Finantier’ Co-founders / Finantier

The future of open banking and open finance

Schweitzer believes Indonesia is in the process of entering a new era of open banking as banks are now competing to launch products and partner with fintech companies. For Brankas, this momentum was very beneficial because the more lenders who came, the more financial insights that could be obtained to be channeled back.

“The pandemic has forced many banks to look for alternative business models, to switch to digital solutions that help MSMEs. Bank Indonesia recently announced new regulations and permits that will take effect in July 2021 which will help support businesses that wish to provide open banking solutions, whether related to bank account data or payment initiation.”

The implication will be more of real uses for open banking and will make the API more familiar, widely available, and widely accessible. In the end, people can manage bank accounts faster, pay smoothly, and share financial data to get access to credit, which was quite difficult.

In response to that, Brankas plans to launch new products in the coming months for fintech and other startups looking to partner with banking services via APIs to empower their users. Then, work with more banks to open their core systems through open APIs, therefore, more companies can connect directly with banks and facilitate the transfer of funds and data.

“Eventually, looking for ways to connect Indonesia to the regional fintech ecosystem through open banking. Part of this will require Brankas to slide into new markets, something we’ll see further in 2021.”

Diego’s view was not much different. He sees API usage increasing exponentially in Indonesia, along with the number of technology companies. This momentum is getting to its peak as more valuable information about consumers and businesses cannot be used before.

“With our API, we help create new business models that didn’t exist before. More companies will use our solutions and enter the financial ecosystem, providing new and innovative products. Ultimately, this is good because consumers and businesses are benefiting from improved access to finance and better ways to improve their financial well-being.”

Last, AyoConnect will continue to expand its open bill network ecosystem with larger and highly fragmented bill payment companies. “That’s where we will direct our focus for now. Therefore, we will remain dedicated to expanding our network and developing solutions for our partners,” Chiragh concluded.


Original article is in Indonesian, translated by Kristin Siagian

Investree Philippines Obtains SEC Approval to Continue Operation

Investree Philippines, a joint venture between Filinvest Development Corp and Investree, has officially secured a license agreement to operate the crowdfunding platform from the Philippine Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC). This news also marks the issuance of the first Philippines’ company licensing, after the SEC released new rules and regulations in 2019.

Quoting from the Philippine Information Agency, the license obtained by Investree Philippines as a crowdfunding broker and this funding portal is valid for one year and is required to comply with certain rules. Approaching one year, to be precise in the 11th month of operation, the SEC will examine for an extension.

Investree works with a Singapore legal entity, Investree Singapore Pte. Ltd., in the establishment of this joint venture.

Similar to Investree Indonesia, Investree Philippines has an ambition to address a credit gap of more than $200 billion for SMEs with difficulty accessing funding in the Philippines. In order to make this happen, by connecting SMEs and startups with institutional investors through a crowdfunding marketplace.

“FDC is proud to be able to present the first official and licensed platform in the Philippines and contribute to the development of SMEs through Investree Philippines. [..] We believe that Investree can be the best solution for SMEs who want to rebuild and develop their businesses, while at the same time supporting the country’s economic recovery and growth,” FDC’s President and CEO Josephine Gotianun-Yap said in an official statement, Friday (15/1 ).

Investree’s Regional Co-Founder & CEO Adrian Gunadi added that the strong FDC ecosystem, including EastWest Bank and its understanding of the local market, will seamlessly connect lenders and SMEs. “In synergy with FDC, we now have a solid operating and business model to ensure optimal service in order to support the growth of SMEs in the Philippines region.”

In Southeast Asia, SMEs in general still have much greater financial needs, even though they are considered businesses with microfinance needs. Yet, too small to be served effectively by the general banking model. This is because SMEs are often constrained by problems such as lack of collateral and credit history which are usually required by banks, thus creating a financial credit gap for this middle segment.

Especially in the Philippines, this segment is underserved. In fact, SMEs contribute 35% of the country’s GDP, employing more than 60% of the local workforce.

“With the support of FDC, Investree Philippines will leverage the power of technology and data to develop and use a robust risk assessment model that will help and accelerate the credit assessment process in banks and lending institutions in general,” said f (dev) Managing Director Xavier Marzan. f (dev) is FDC’s subsidiary which is engaged in venture and innovation.

Investree Philippines is the second Investree expansion, after Thailand, which started in early 2019. In Thailand, Investree uses the eLoan brand and cooperates with local partners who understand the conditions in the field.

As of November 2020, Investree has booked a total loan facility of Rp7.7 trillion and a disbursed loan value of Rp.5.5 trillion. The average rate of return is 16.8% per year and the average TKB90 is 99%.

About overseas expansion from Indonesia

Indonesia is a ready ecosystem to plant a service until it “blooms”. When it is considered successful, it has a significant position here, it means that there is a sure guarantee that the service can be carried outside Indonesia, especially to Southeast Asia with more or less the same family, culture, and behavior.

Supported by sufficient capital, a handful of local startups are confident to be free of the cage. Investree and DanaCita are two companies born from fintech lending. Most companies arrived from overseas, mostly from Singapore, entering Indonesia by localizing their brand.

The rest is still just a plan, which may be delayed due to the Covid-19 pandemic. Apart from that, successful startup verticals have entered a number of countries in Southeast Asia, including Gojek, Ruangguru, Traveloka, Sociolla, PasarPolis, and Xendit.


Original article is in Indonesian, translated by Kristin Siagian

J.P. Ellis’ Unexpected Journey as a Non-Native Tech Entrepreneur in Indonesia

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.

John Patrick Ellis, well known in the industry as J. P, is a technology and finance entrepreneur based in Indonesia for the past 15 years. Born in the United States and raised in Asia and Europe, he first came to Indonesia to work in development in 2005 and remains here until today as a fintech founder.

J. P.’s career journey is full of unexpected choices and serendipity. From New York’s legal industry to education and public health work in Flores, associate roles in a regional private equity firm, launching an early location-based messaging application from his Jakarta dining room table in 2012, to helping establish the Indonesian Fintech Association and founding a successful regional fintech company.

With a background in political science, international relations, and languages, J. P. has extensive experience in entrepreneurship, technology and deal-making. In his current role as the CEO of the C88 Financial Technologies group, he oversees a diverse fintech business in the credit decisioning, financial analytics, credit scoring and marketplace lending spaces with over 400 employees in Indonesia, the Philippines, Singapore, Thailand, Australia and China. We caught up with J. P. to discuss his journey, why Indonesia, why fintech and what it’s like to try and succeed as a non-native immigrant here. Half of our discussion was in English, and the other half in his excellent Bahasa Indonesia, where he expresses himself fluently but with a small accent.

When you were young, did you ever dream to start your own business or become a CEO?

I was born in the United States but I spent my childhood moving every few years around Asia and Europe. This experience of movement and change defined my youth, and has made me a very adaptable, resilient and open-minded person.

As a kid, my dream was to be a competitive swimmer. I trained hard and did reasonably well in competition. But around the age of 16, I realized that I wouldn’t quite make it to an Olympic level. So around that time, I decreased my focus on sport and increased my focus on school and study. But a strong work ethic from swim training has remained with me, and has been a big help to me over the years.

From a young age, I always liked thinking about how to solve problems, but it wasn’t until later in life that I realized I could do that as a founder. So I did a lot of things before I became a founder, but the common thread of my career is a focus on problem solving.

You have background study in political sciences and international relations, what is your actual passion and how does it align with your career?

I like to solve problems, and I like to understand how the world works. I think this is what really drives and defines me. In Indonesia, and all over the world, there are so many problems to solve, and solving problems also creates business opportunities. Not all problems are business opportunities, but many of them are. Many of the world’s great companies were founded this way.

I graduated from Columbia University and the typical next step after studying what I did is to earn a Juris Doctor degree from a law school. Many of my friends did this, and I was intending to as well. After graduation, I worked in New York’s law industry in dispute resolution. It was very interesting and I was very good at my job, but I was sitting at a desk all day. I felt like something was missing. So I applied to several programs for development work around the world. I received many offers including one from Princeton-in-Asia, but the most interesting offer was from a Stanford University-affiliated program called ViA to join a project in Flores, in rural eastern Indonesia.

At that time, everything in Flores was very limited. There was no electricity, no mobile phone signal, and no running water. We had to walk through the forest to get to the villages. Perhaps because of this, it was a place of incredible warmth and community. I connected with the Tado people, learned the Manggarai language, and helped bring about some good initiatives in education and public health for the village communities, working with their teachers and their Puskesmas. It was a very fulfilling but also an eye-opening experience.

J.P. Ellis with the district head and ethnic leaders At Rumah Tua Golo Beo Tado, Manggarai Barat, Flores, NTT in 2015
J.P. Ellis with the district head and ethnic leaders At Rumah Tua Golo Beo Tado, Manggarai Barat, Flores, NTT in 2005

After that, I worked for very successful entrepreneurs John and Cynthia Hardy, who sold their international jewelry company to a private equity firm. After the sale, John and Cynthia then asked me to help them transform a bare plot of land in Sibang Kaja, south of Ubud, into what is now the Green School; so I was the first employee there. John and Cynthia are so charismatic and so innovative. It was a real pleasure to be around that enthusiasm and energy every day. Through them, I also met my wife Agatha. She also worked there and we met at the team lunch table. We have now been married for close to 13 years and have two young children.

I then had the opportunity to join a regional private equity firm in Singapore and Jakarta founded by Tom Lembong. It was called Quvat Capital and Principia Management. I learned so much from Tom and really enjoyed working for him, Brata, and the team. I spent a little more than four years there and did a lot of varied projects including company due diligence, deal sourcing and execution, fundraising, investor relations, research, special situation restructuring, and even some trading.

Throughout this time, I was really enjoying being around such smart people and working directly with companies in such a dynamic, fast-moving environment. Even though Jakarta is a megacity in many ways it retains the values of a smaller community; its manners and politenesses. I think my time in rural Indonesian villages definitely helped me understand its capital on a deeper level than if I had come to Jakarta directly from New York, Paris, or San Francisco. I think the lesson is that it’s really important to understand things on both a micro-level as well as macro level. You can’t really know one without the other.

Before your current company and CekAja, you founded Harpoon Mobile, are you willing to share some stories about the company?

From 2011 on, I was convinced that the mobile internet will be a very powerful economic force in Southeast Asia. With hindsight, I can see that I was very early in my actions. But I did not realize that at the time. Plus, after several years in private equity, I felt that I wanted to start and grow a business myself. I like creating things and solving problems, I’m very adaptable, and I like challenge and adventure. In many ways, technology startups are the perfect vehicle to express and experience all of this.

We launched Harpoon Mobile from my dining room table, and our first product release was a location-based iOS and Android application called Harpoen. We later added a complimentary product stack called Mapiary, which was basically a location-based ad-server, in an attempt to monetize better.

My co-founders and I liked that we were trying something original. Back then, many startups in the region were likely to be copycat models. We felt proud that we were trying a new idea. Thankfully, many of our friends in the tech community and its media supported and encouraged us. My co-founders and I actually also represented Indonesia at the World Summit Awards for mobile innovation in Abu Dhabi in early 2013, and we won! It was a cool experience to be recognized for innovation.

But innovation alone isn’t enough. Your first startup, the odds are, you will get a lot of things wrong. And that was true for us. In selecting a location as our service core we were locked into the inflexible mathematics of GPS and the complexity of information saturation. To summarize it briefly, in usual information networks content exists on two axes, typically creator and recency or relevancy. Location introduces the third axis and thus achieving a mathematical density of information is exponentially harder: the world is a big place and no matter how large you make the GPS vectors, there will always be places out of coverage and with old content or no content at all. This is the reason a lot of location services like FourSquare and Highlight were not as successful as everyone predicted back in 2012. In the language of computer science, location-based user content would be described as an algorithm with “exponential complexity.”

In retrospect, even if we had been massively successful and achieved hockey-stick DAUs, the commercial model wouldn’t have worked anyway because ad monetization and CPM are commercially very hard to scale in Indonesia even now, let alone back in 2012.

So, after a year of trying — and a lot of awesome experiences including being the first founder to pitch at the first TechInAsia Summit in Jakarta in 2012 — I met a Toronto, Canada-based advertising company who was planning to commercialize location to enterprise clients. Our Mapiary location ad-server could help their clients like Nike take people on interactive jogs, or Heineken takes people on interactive pub crawls. There were a lot of interesting use cases and they were excited about it, and I felt the technology was more suitable for North America as well, so they ended up acquiring what we had built and I was able to return capital to my seed and angel investors. Overall, it was not a resounding commercial success, but it gave me a lot of grit and experience.

How did you come up with the idea of CekAja?

After Harpoon Mobile, I remained very passionate about startups. At that time, the startup community in Indonesia was still quite small and everyone knew each other. I was thinking a lot about what changes and opportunities would be created by increasing economic digitization, and my close friends Sebastian Togelang and Andy Zain were doing the same. In late 2013, we all came together to found Kejora Ventures. I was the founding entrepreneur-in-residence. I started building my fintech company at the Barito Pacific building in Jakarta, side-by-side with Kejora.

We decided to do something unusual and launched in Jakarta and Manila at the same time. It’s quite unusual to launch a product in two countries simultaneously, but we had deep technical resources and strong co-founders like Stephanie Chung in Manila, so it made sense. Plus, fintech in both markets was equally early in 2013; it wasn’t the case that one market was more advanced than the other. So we felt taking a “two birds with one stone” approach would help us scale faster.

We were definitely one of the first companies in Jakarta and Manila to engage with banks about fintech/bank cooperation models. We hit the ground running and visited every bank boardroom pretty quickly. But what we didn’t appreciate back then was how long it would take banks to adapt and change. Even now, I am still amazed that more banks in this region aren’t doing more digitally. This can partially be explained by residual banking-sector trauma from the ‘98 crisis, and that large institutions have incentives that punish failure more than they reward success, whereas startups are the exact opposite. So asymmetrical incentives are my best explanation when people ask me why the pace of change hasn’t been faster. Change is happening though, and COVID-19 has accelerated it.

In the early days, we also realized quite early on that laws and regulations would need to evolve to support fintech innovation. Starting from 2014, I joined with several other fintech entrepreneurs including Niki Luhur, Karaniya Dharmasaputra, Budi Gandasoebrata, Aldi Hariyopratomo, Ryu Kawano, Alison Jap, and many others to start what has now become the Indonesian FinTech Association. We did similar policy advocacy work in the Philippines, too. This created what I think is the momentum for a lot of fintech regulations and activities that we see today in both of these markets.

Over the years, both the business as well as the Association have grown and matured. In the business now, we have marketplace aggregation, marketplace lending, credit scoring, score aggregation, insurtech, data management solutions, analytics, and credit risk management, and decisioning software available in the cloud and as a license. We partnered with Anton Hariyanto, Sulaeman Liong and Rainier Widjaja for enterprise capabilities and our clients are pretty much every banks in the country.

We have an awesome team, and while of course there have been many setbacks and challenges along the way, we are growing and delivering value to our clients and the industry. And in the Association, we have experienced tremendous growth and now there are hundreds of fintech companies in the country, and clear fintech laws, and incredible engagement with OJK and BI. Because of this, I would say that Indonesia has some of the most innovative and clear fintech laws and policies in the whole world. This is the work of a whole industry and I am so proud to have played a small part in it.

In 2018, C88 Financial Technologies (parent company of CekAja), received a strategic minority investment from global credit scoring company Experian.

You’ve seen the market in some other places, what makes Southeast Asia market different, especially Indonesia?

The region is unique because of its demographics, growth rates, and interest rates. In the region, Indonesia is unique because of its size. The other markets of Southeast Asia each have their own importance, and to be successful regionally there are principles that you must get right to balance the strengths of each market harmoniously versus the weaknesses of others. For example, while Indonesia is large and full of potential, monetization is very difficult and consumers and enterprises are very price sensitive. Other markets may have easier monetization paths, but smaller market sizes and less growth. The best approach for the region therefore creates balance among these elements.

For those who want to start a technology business in the region, I would advise them that the market is fast-moving, and it will remain like this for many years to come. Don’t be intimidated by how fast it moves or think it is “too late” at all. There is now significant internet usage and mobile device penetration, a vibrant venture ecosystem with plenty of capital and professional investors, inspiring leaders and success stories that are locally visible and accessible, there are super apps and also successful exits via both trade sale and IPO, cloud technology is starting to emerge and become viable and this will start to enable SaaS models, laws are clearer, and now COVID-19 has created this massive digitization push. After everyone is vaccinated and the economy opens again, there is clearly going to be an acceleration of tech-enabled business models.

But it’s also important not to start a startup. Instead, start a business. Know your economics, know the path to monetization and profit, focus on doing that well instead of vanity metrics or headline-chasing. It’s sometimes hard to distinguish between these, especially for young founders, and when the media is breathless and boardroom investors demand growth to meet their own portfolio return expectations. But as someone who has done a lot in this space for many years, experiencing both success and failure, I can tell you that you really want to be starting a business and not just a startup.

Entrepreneurship is never easy, especially when you’re not a native. What kind of hardships have you encountered when you first arrived and while building businesses in Indonesia?

Indonesia has been very welcoming to me. It has given me so much and I am thankful for that. I love the work I do every day, the people I work with, and the opportunities we have to solve problems and construct a better industry, a better society, and a more prosperous country.

I think any hardships I have experienced are hardships that any founder experiences: getting to product-market fit, wrestling to be on the right side of unit economics, building a great team and healthy culture, navigating the COVID-19 crisis, and so on. I wouldn’t even call these hardships – this is what being a founder is all about.

In terms of being a foreigner, I honestly don’t even register that anymore. For people who know me well, there is very little friction between my bule self and my Indonesian self. I feel comfortable in both worlds and I like that.

With so much experience in the business, do you still aim for something more in this industry? Have you ever thought of going back to the US for some kind of bottom line?

I’m interested in many things and I feel like I can keep creating new and innovative products and services for many decades to come. There are a lot of things I want to do, and a lot of problems to solve, and new innovations to create.

In fintech specifically, we are still very much at the beginning of the industry. I really believe over the next decade, technology companies will be the ones that harness data, create products, write software, construct analytics, and craft customer experiences to make Indonesian consumers and businesses become universally banked, as well as regionally and globally competitive.

Regarding the United States, I do admit that the country needs to rebuild society and trust and restore its institutions in a post-Trump context. The United States will need energetic and committed people willing to roll up their sleeves and help to do that. I don’t rule out that one day, I might want to go back to play a part in that. But right now, my company, clients, friends, and family need me here in Indonesia and in Southeast Asia. Keep in mind, we also have a significant presence in the Philippines too, and hundreds of employees and a big business there, and there is a lot of opportunity there that I am incredibly excited about too.

About the current pandemic, is there any significant change in your business?

Our clients are banks and financial services institutions. Many were forced to suspend or delay projects and activities due to the pandemic. Even if they didn’t intend to delay things, adapting to work-from-home for such big organizations is a challenge, so many delays are inadvertent. As a business, we have had to be very flexible and adaptive to this reality to ensure we can continue to exceed our client expectations. The good news is that our clients need digital solutions. We anticipate a very encouraging post-vaccine climate for our clients and our business.

Going into 2020, we felt we were as prepared as any company could be for what happened. We have a small executive presence in Beijing, and because of this the executive team and I were aware as early as mid-January of last year that a global pandemic was a possibility. We had scenarios that went all the way up to frightening levels of mortality that thankfully the disease never came close to.
As lockdowns started to happen in the Philippines and Indonesia in March of last year, I gathered the whole company and we laid out a clear strategy of what we were going to do to survive the crisis and ensure business continuity.

We had very specific levels of business continuity, and we sent everyone home to work with clear guidance, policies, and instructions. I also open-sourced our bi-lingual strategy memo and sent it around to many other companies and startups. I wanted what we were doing to respond to COVID-19 to be accessible to others who maybe had uncertainty on whether it would affect them. We thought COVID-19 would create a crisis that would be long and hard and unfortunately, we were right.

Obviously, my team and I were able to make the appropriate changes to the business to put us on a good path. We continue to serve our clients well, are growing profitably, and innovating in our market segments. With vaccines starting to roll-out now, we are beginning to shift to an optimistic mindset for 2022 and beyond. We do feel 2021 will continue to be hard for most of the year, with some improvement towards the second semester.

Something you want to say to those entrepreneurs who wanted to start a business but constrained by pandemic?

I would say It’s never been a better time to start in tech entrepreneurship. Yes, the virus creates challenges but the vaccine is almost here too. Focus on 2022 and beyond. And do not think it’s too late. In technology, it’s never really over because innovation is always innovating versus itself. The code is constantly re-compiling. Yes, it is true that close to 90% of startups fail, but if you focus on building a business instead of a startup, you will already improve your odds of success. Nearly every knowledge you need is accessible and easy to learn. All it takes is the commitment and hard work to do it. I do this, and a lot of my high-performing colleagues and friends do it too. We don’t just magically learn new subjects. Instead, it is a constant effort to stay on top of what is new and be current with technology and the world.

To start a company, you must identify where the big problems are, how do you solve them and how do you turn them into a business. This mindset is something that I spent years learning about and developing. Focus on the problem and the customer, be a learning machine, be both optimistic and realistic at the same time, treat others well, focus on community and you’ll be fine. Indonesia needs more problem-solvers, so you could also argue it is a duty to go out there and solve problems. Kita bisa. Anak bangsa bisa. Saya optimis kok.

BukuKas Secures Series A Funding Worth of 142 Billion Rupiah Led by Sequoia Capital India

A startup developing a financial record keeping app for SMEs, BukuKas, today (12/1) announced Series A funding of $10 million or the equivalent of 142 billion Rupiah. This round was led by Sequoia Capital India with the participation of previous investors, including Saison Capital, January Capital, Founderbank Capital, Cambium Grove, Endeavor Catalyst, and Amrish Rau.

Founded in 2019, BukuKas has successfully raised $22 million or the equivalent of 313 billion Rupiah from investors – including through seed and pre-series A rounds. The additional capital will be focused on accelerating merchant acquisitions and building up the technical/product team at the Jakarta office. and Bangalore.

As of November 2020, BukuKas users has reached 3.5 million with 1.8 million active monthly users. However, BukuKas has quite some competitors in market share. The closest one is BukuWarung, with a business model similar to that of millions of users. In addition, there are several local startups that have also launched SME financial records applications, including Credibook, Moodah, Teman Bisnis, Akuntansiku, etc.

“To date, we see this funding round as a strong belief in a huge market opportunity, as well as team and execution capabilities. Even though we have grown rapidly this year, we are just getting started. This round is an important step for us to continue working towards our mission to empowering 60 million small traders and retailers in Indonesia so that they go digital,” BukuKas’ Co-Founder & CEO Krishnan Menon said.

In a previous interview with DailySocial, he said that his business is positioned as an SME digitization software company that will develop into a fintech player. “Sellers have realized that go-digital is very important to their business. Sellers save 2-4 hours a day, 20% in costs, and minimize manual calculation errors. We also allow merchants to recover debts 3x faster because the process is automated.”

Regarding its business model, he also explained, “We currently have an interesting initial experiment on monetization, but it’s still too early. It can be done in many ways, some of which are obvious like SaaS, financial solutions, and there are some interesting thoughts but we are yet to share.”

In its release, BukuKas also announced the acquisition of the Catatan Keuangan Harian app. This company act has actually been going on since last September 2020; expected of strengthening their leadership in related segments.

Statistik pengguna BukuKas dengan matriks DAU / LinkedIn, Krishnan Menon
BukuKas user statistic with DAU metrics / LinkedIn, Khrisnan Menon

“Although the application features can be replicated as they develop, maintaining extreme levels of simplicity in products while adding substantial value will be a challenge. Eventually, companies that are able to make this happen on a large scale will take the lead,” said Krishnan.

With its unique characteristics, the Indonesian market does need a special touch. BukuKas team believes in this, which is represented in feature adjustments. For example, to be able to reach users in small cities, they present an offline mode with automatic synchronization when the user is successfully connected to the internet network.

Furthermore, BukuKas’ Co-Founder & COO Lorenzo Peracchione said, in the near future there will be several new features including digital payment integration. “Merchants will be able to collect money from their customers using various payment options in an easy way. Payments will be automatically added to the BukuKas application, which further automates the bookkeeping process and reduces the inconvenient process for our users.”

BukuKas also recently released an innovative inventory management module in its application. This feature allows small sellers to track the movement of their stock without creating complex frameworks that characterize today’s inventory management solutions.


Original article is in Indonesian, translated by Kristin Siagian

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Alami Fintech Raised Equity and Debt Funding Worth of 283 Billion Rupiah

The sharia fintech lending startup, Alami, announced $20 million (over 283 billion Rupiah) in equity and debt funding led by AC Ventures and Golden Gate Ventures. Quona Capital is also participating in this round.

Both AC Ventures and Golden Gate Ventures were the previous investors that led Alami’s seed funding worth $1.5 million in late 2019. The arrival of Quona Capital has placed Alami in its Indonesian portfolio list after investing in KoinWorks, BukuWarung, Ula, and Julo.

“We believe that players in the Islamic finance industry have only just tapped a fraction of its potential. Social finance, for example, can be explored further,” Alami’s Founder & CEO Dima Djani said, quoting from the AC Ventures website.

Dima aims that this year Alami can increase the loan disbursement up to four times or worth more than IDR1 trillion for the health, agriculture, logistics, and food sectors. In addition, the company plans to explore opportunities for synergies with Islamic banking financial institutions such as Islamic Commercial Banks (BUS), Sharia Business Units (UUS), and Sharia Rural Banks (BPRS).

One of these plans has been successfully realized. At the same time, through an official statement on the same day, Alami launched a financial channeling partnership with BRI Syariah targeting IDR40 billion this year.

“Through this financial channeling collaboration, it is expected to accelerate the recovery process of small and medium enterprises affected by the pandemic, as well as revive the Indonesian economy,” Dima said.

BRI Syariah’s  Head of Retail Banking Division, Elvera Melladiana stated the one factor that considered the company solid in establishing partnerships with Alami was because it had a positive track record, both in terms of funding, and the potential projects in it.

“BRI Syariah has served SME customers from various levels of capital, and we are aware that in order to achieve an exponential distribution of financing targets, collaboration with fintech companies must begin. This is in order to realize easy, fast, and safe access to Islamic finance,” Elvera said.

As of December 2020, Alami claims to have distributed around Rp. 300 billion to thousands of MSMEs throughout Indonesia from around 20 thousand lenders registered on the Alami platform.

Sharia lending market

Alami is several lending startups focusing on the sharia segment. In addition, there are Ammana, Bsalam, Duha Syariah, Dana Syariah, Finteck Syariah, Qazwa, Ethis, and Investree (sharia business unit). However, its popularity is quite far behind compared to conventional services.

Referring to OJK’s data, the accumulation of fintech lending grew 113.05% YoY to Rp128.7 trillion in September 2020. The new sharia fintech donations contributed around Rp1.2 trillion of the total.

Chairman of the AFPI’s Sharia Funding Fintech Cluster, Lutfi Adhiansyah, stated that there are some factors that make conventional lending run faster than sharia. One of them is in terms of quantity, there are more conventional players and the different nature of the product and business model.

“Many sharia fintech lending targets the productive sector. Therefore, the process is more selective and takes longer to verify. It’s different from multipurpose fintech lending, where online loans are relatively fast and the nominal is quite small,” Lutfi said as quoted from Kontan.co.id.


Original article is in Indonesian, translated by Kristin Siagian

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Ajaib Closes Series A Funding Worth of 356 Billion Rupiah, Striving for Education and Acquisition of Millennial Users

The investment platform which recently acquired Primasia Unggul Sekuritas (Primasia Sekuritas), Ajaib Group, announced Series A funding of $25 million or the equivalent of 356.3 billion Rupiah. This round was led by Horizons Ventures (Li Ka-shing) and Alpha JWC Ventures, followed by SoftBank Ventures Asia, Insignia Ventures, and Y Combinator.

Previously, Ajaib had joined the Y Combinator program in 2018, as well as raised the seed round. Funding continued the following year, securing funds worth $2.1 million from Y Combinator, SoftBank Ventures, Alpha JWC Ventures, and Insignia Ventures.

“I feel proud for Ajaib has become the best choice of most of the new stock investors in Indonesia. As a millennial, I know how difficult it is when I started investing. That’s why Ajaib is so focused on millennials and better education,” Ajaib Group’s Co-founder & CEO, Anderson Sumarli said.

The fresh money is to be used by the company to improve technology infrastructure, recruit technical teams, and expand product offerings. In addition, this round will also be used to support the Ajaib’s educational campaign#MentorInvestasi which aims to assist the Indonesian government’s efforts in educating millennials about investment and financial planning.

“The investment sector in Indonesia is quite underserved and lack of accessibility is one of the reasons. Ajaib was able to provide a solution to this problem and revolutionized the stock brokerage industry in less than two years. We are very impressed with Ajaib’s growth speed and we are delighted to see Ajaib helping millions of young people in Indonesia towards better investment,” Jeffrey Joe, Managing Partner at Alpha JWC said.

In Indonesia, there are currently several digital services that accommodate user needs in investing; including mutual fund instruments, stocks, gold, and crypto-assets. In the Fintech Report 2020 released by DSResearch, surveying 329 respondents, the following results were obtained regarding application awareness for investment needs.

Aplikasi Investasi

Some of the applications above are providing similar services with Ajaib, including Bibit, Tanamduit, Bareksa for the mutual fund; and Stockbit for stock.

Ajaib Group growth

Founded in 2019, Ajaib has become one of the fastest-growing investment platforms in Indonesia, through Ajaib Sekuritas (online stock securities) and Ajaib Reksadana (online mutual funds). Within 7 months of the launch of Ajaib Sekuritas in June 2020, the company recorded more than 10 billion stock lots have been traded in Ajaib.

Ajaib also supports more than 1 million monthly users on their investment journey. In December 2020, Ajaib also announced that the company is partnering with Korean drama actor Kim Seon-ho who plays Han Ji-pyeong in the Start-Up series on Netflix as a Brand Ambassador.

Anderson told DailySocial some time ago that the current pandemic has not been able to dampen the enthusiasm of Indonesian individual investors to pour money in the capital market. In the first two months since the launch of the stock availability at Ajaib, the company has registered tens of thousands of new users, most of whom are millennials.

“Currently, the market position has not fully recovered, therefore, the opportunity for users to reap profits in the capital market is quite large,” he said.

In 2021, Ajaib will continue its mission to welcome a new generation of investors to the Indonesian capital market. As of December 2020, there were 1,592,698 stock investors in Indonesia, meaning that less than 1% of Indonesia’s population has a stock account. In order to increase the number of domestic retail investors, Ajaib plans to expand the scope of investment education and financial planning campaigns targeting millennials.


Original article is in Indonesian, translated by Kristin Siagian

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East Ventures Leads Series A Funding for Biotech Startup Nusantics

Nusantics biotech startup announced series A funding led by East Ventures with an undisclosed value. Less than a year ago, East Ventures took the lead in seed funding for this startup managed by Sharlini Eriza Putri.

East Ventures decided to reinvest because these startups have managed to grow due to their fast response to the disruption caused by the Covid-19 pandemic. Nusantics utilizes its capabilities in microbiome research to develop two generations of PCR-based Covid-19 test kits with high levels of sensitivity and specificity.

The test kit is capable to detect various mutations of the Coronavirus in Indonesia, including a virus strain that recently became an epidemic in the UK. The first generation test kits have been distributed to 19 provinces as part of the Indonesia PASTI BISA movement in collaboration with the Agency for the Assessment and Application of Technology (BPPT).

The company is also partnering with Bio Farma in the development of a second-generation test kit that cuts the diagnostic test process three times faster. It is claimed that this test is still relevant to the latest virus mutations that have detected an outbreak in the UK.

Bio Farma has produced and marketed the second generation of test kits with a production capacity of test kits per month which can be increased to 3 million test kits per month.

In an official statement, Nusantics will use the series A fund to strengthen their research and development capabilities to continue innovations in the field of microbiome analysis and medical diagnostic tools. The company is currently developing a third-generation Covid-19 PCR test kit designed to detect the SARS-CoV-2 virus in saliva samples.

“We are planning to develop a new product, a test kit that can detect viruses through saliva samples. The use of saliva increases the efficiency, safety level of medical personnel, and makes the sampling process more comfortable,” Nusantics’ CTO Revata Utama said, Thursday (7/1).

According to Revata, this test method also allows the detection of potential transmission because it can distinguish which samples are more infectious. In addition, they will continue to optimize for the test kits that have been produced can be used in all types of PCR machines in Indonesia. The company is working with several companies on research and development projects related to the microbiome.

Nusantics’ CEO, Sharlini Eriza Putri mentioned that their short-term focus is to participate in efforts to combat the pandemic, while the medium-term focus is to shape understanding in the public about the relationship between microbiome diversity and health.

“We want to contribute to finding solutions to the impact of the Anthropocene (human impact on the environment), by utilizing the biodiversity index associated with the microbiome. This is a challenging journey, but exciting,” she said.

Previously, in the last year’s seed funding round announcement, Nusantic had officially launched the Nusantics Hub in Jakarta, the first microbiome laboratory in Indonesia to provide testing and consulting services for the treatment of skin microbiome balance.

On the same occasion, Nusantics also announced Triawan Munaf as a member of the Board of Commissioners at Nusantics. Triawan also serves as Venture Advisor at East Ventures.

“Indonesian youth must continue to innovate in the field of biotechnology domestically and collaborate with other stakeholders, including the government, in order to increase local resilience. Nusantics, has shown this spirit of collaboration and I am very happy to be part of their journey,” Triawan said.

Responding to Triawan, Sharlini said, “We are proud to have someone like Triawan who is visionary, with a broad cultural understanding, and never stops looking for solutions that benefit all parties. We will indeed learn a lot from him,” he concluded.


Original article is in Indonesian, translated by Kristin Siagian

Gredu to Close Series A Funding, Mapping for Expansion This Year

Edtech becomes one of the few sectors that has been gaining positive impact during the pandemic. The new online habit of teaching and learning activities through digital channels has made Gredu’s distance learning system the best option for schools. Entering the new year, Gredu aims for expansion as the next focus.

Gredu’s Sales Lead, Theresia Andina said that the team is targeting to collaborate with at least 200 schools or convertible to 70 thousand new users for the first quarter of this year. The expansion will be focused on areas such as Pangandaran, Yogyakarta, Tangerang, Cirebon, and Southeast Sulawesi.

“From 2021 onwards, there is still a great potential in Indonesia to be explored, although each school has different facilities and infrastructure,” Andina said.

Market expansion certainly requires additional capital. Andina mentioned that Gredu has prepared to raise another funding round this year. “Series A funding in the middle of the year,” she added.

When Gredu introduced the school digitization app in January 2020, they announced the pre-series A funding led by Vertex Ventures. Meanwhile, in the seed funding round, they received fund from angel investors and Global Wakaf Corporation.

2021’s current plans

In addition to school collaboration for distance learning, Andini explained, Gredu had done several other things. Some of these include running mobile assistance campaigns for students in need of online training.

Starting from here, Gredu claims to have 350 thousand users across Jabodetabek, West Java, East Kalimantan, Aceh, West Sumatra, Bengkulu, Bangka Belitung and Ambon.

The number of school partners increased significantly, from under a hundred to 300 schools. Andini said this condition would not last forever because the pandemic would end and teaching and learning activities would return to normal.

However, Andini optimistic their learning management system (LMS) platform will not be left out by the school after the pandemic. The reason is, she thought, what has changed after the pandemic will be limited to teaching and learning activities, but not for other school management activities.

“Therefore, we will continue exploring ways to digitize all the processes. Therefore, all the necessary processes at school will be provided by Gredu,” Andini said.

Gredu alone has been around since 2016 with the founding team Mohammad Fachri (CTO), Rizky Anies (CEO), and Ricky Putra (COO). In January 2020, they introduce a school digitization platform which turned out to be aligned with the school’s needs affected by the pandemic.

With a B2B business model, Gredu offers SaaS services to digitize school processes from attendance, scheduling, teaching, and learning activities, to monitoring channels for parents of students.

According to data summarized by the Edtech Report 2020 released by DSResearch, the education management platform has indeed become one of the fastest-growing innovations in Indonesia and the regional market. Apart from Gredu, in Indonesia, there are also several startups that offer similar services, including Quintal, InfraDigital, and Codemi.

Edtech in SEA

In June 2020, InfraDigital has secured the series A Funding led by AppWorks after receiving seed funding in February 2019.


Original article is in Indonesian, translated by Kristin Siagian

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Chandra Tjan: Indonesia’s Digital Ecosystem Is Quite Green, Momentum for Investors and Startups

Alpha JWC Ventures becomes one of the most active venture capital in Indonesia. After pouring investment for 10 startups in the past year, the list goes up to 41 portfolios by the end of 2020. This year, they plan to close the third fund that is said to worth much bigger than the previous one in order to aggressively contribute to Indonesia’s startup landscape.

In order to discover Alpha JWC Ventures’ vision and goals, we had the opportunity to do an exclusive interview with one of their founders, Chandra Tjan. He’s not quite the newbie in this industry as he used to be the Co-Founder & Managing Partner in East Ventures’ first fund in 2009. His investment footprints included the seed funding of Tokopedia, Traveloka, Disdus (acquired by Groupon), Pricearena (acquired by Yello Mobile), and few others.

“In 2009, I’ve been living in Singapore for 10 years and already settled down, also had a career as a banker at Credit Suisse and Citigroup. I saw the huge potential and opportunities in the technology sector in other countries such as America, Japan, and China. I think Indonesia could’ve been that too. Technology and its social impact will advance Indonesia’s ecosystem, and I want to take part in that process,” he said.

He continued, “It turns out at that time, there were already several technology/startup companies in Indonesia, however, they have not enough capability to capture funds from foreign investors in order to grow. Therefore, I returned to Indonesia to focus on this technology sector. Together with several colleagues, I founded East Ventures and became a Managing Partner in its first fund. I was also East Ventures’ sole full-time  Partner focused in Indonesia [at that time].”

Later on, together with his two colleagues Jefrey Joe and Will Ongkowidjaja, Chandra founded Alpha JWC Ventures in 2015. To date, the team has managed two funds with a value of nearly $200 million or the equivalent of 2.7 trillion Rupiah. The funds were collected from LPs from Indonesia, Singapore, the United States, several European countries, Japan, China, and Korea. They mainly focused on early stage and every year they have target to invest in 8-10 startups. However, Alpha JWC Ventures is quite often involved in the follow-on investment for series B. The ticket sizes given vary from $200 thousand to $15 million.

“In 2013, they started to have a different vision in East Ventures resulting in me, Jefrey, and Will founded Alpha JWC Ventures in 2015. We did quite a different approach from investors in Southeast Asia, and still ongoing. Alpha JWC was founded as an institutional and independent fund. With strict discipline in investment strategy, every decision can be accounted for later. From previous experiences, I also learned the importance of assisting founders in the early days of startups, therefore, we apply a value-add approach and build a great value-creation team at Alpha JWC,” Chandra explained.

Co-Founder Alpha JWC Ventures Chandra Tjan dan Jefrey Joe / Alpha JWC Ventures
Alpha JWC Ventures’ Co-Founder Chandra Tjan dan Jefrey Joe / Alpha JWC Ventures

Digital ecosystem is yet to bloom

With the existence of decacorn, unicorns, and dozens of centaurs in various business landscapes, Chandra said Indonesia’s digital ecosystem is quite green- even though it is starting to form. There are some factors to support the maturity of a digital startup ecosystem, among those, the competition between players will be tighter, the market will become saturated, and it will be difficult for companies to grow exponentially.

“Indeed, it is getting into shape, but it’s still a long way to go. Indonesia’s digital industry is still green, and this is good news for us as investors and startups. It means that the market holds enormous potential to be discovered and developed, and the growth projection is beyond great in almost all sectors and target markets. This is a very big momentum in Indonesia,” Chandra said.

The conditions brought Alpha JWC Ventures to adopt a sector-agnostic view. They invest in various business ideas in various sectors estimated to have great growth potential with a positive impact on society.

“In terms of investment, we always look at 3 factors: people, product, and potential — the quality of the founders who built the startup, products that provide solutions to real problems for people’s need, and the potential for the product to develop in terms of features and users. Among those three, the quality of the founder is the most important factor in our Point of View, because ideas and products can change at an early stage, but we can only hold on to the founder’s commitment and vision,” he explained.

In 2020, the startup ecosystem had to encounter Covid-19 pandemic. Startups and investors had to form many adjustments. On the other side, Chandra sees that the pandemic has succeeded in forcing investors to pay more attention to fundamentals and unit economics in startups – something that Alpha JWC Ventures has been implemented since the beginning. Also, a pandemic has accelerated digital adoption in Indonesia, therefore, startups will find it easier to introduce their products to the public.

“For us, higher digital adoption will bring high investment potential, and this is the right time to invest. However, being selective is crucial, whether these startups can survive and thrive despite a pandemic. Since the beginning of the year, we are actively invest in new companies and follow-on investments into our portfolio, and until now we are satisfied with the results,” Chandra explained.

Exit strategy

To date, Alpha JWC Ventures has scored 3 portfolio exits through acquisition. Exit, through M&A or IPO, is indeed one way for venture capitalists to get ROI from their investment expense. They will profit from an increase in the valuation, based on the growth of the related startup.

Regarding the exit strategy, Chandra said that they currently focus on becoming a long-term partner for their portfolio. “Exit is certainly important, but making exit the main focus will actually damage the dynamics with the portfolio. We will exit at the right time, and ‘right’ means a different thing for each startup.”

He added, “To date, we have successfully brought 3 startups to exit, Spacemob was acquired by WeWork less than a year from our investment; DealStreetAsia was acquired by Nikkei to realize their vision of bringing quality news from Asia to the world; and Jualo was acquired by our other portfolio, Carro, as an expansion path in Indonesia. All three happened at the right moment and we are proud of this achievement. ”

Indonesia’s digital ecosystem in the future

Kopi Kenangan menjadi salah satu portofolio "signature" new retail Alpha JWC Ventures / Kopi Kenangan
Kopi Kenangan becomes one of Alpha JWC Venture’ signature portfolio of new retail / Kopi Kenangan

Chandra also revealed that investors need to read the future trends or even create the trend. “In 2010, for example, I saw that e-commerce would become an ‘idol’ in society, at that time people are getting familiar with fast and cheap internet connections. I started with Tokopedia and Traveloka. Then, 6 years ago, when we started Alpha JWC, we saw that people are getting more comfortable making transaction through digital applications and will definitely need a more practical way of payment and an affordable source of funds, that’s why we started investing in several fintech startups such as Kredivo and Modalku. Both have now become the leading players in Indonesia and part of people’s daily lives.”

He also mentioned, “It is likewise the new retail trend in the F&B sector. In 2018, we saw technology has made it easier for startups and consumers, therefore, we made a big investment in Kopi Kenangan. Many people considered this investment is a crazy act then. However, we can prove that not only did we make the right choice, but we are bringing the trend of VC investment for new retail startups – something that was unlikely in Indonesia. Always one step ahead, that’s the key. ”

Regarding the startup ecosystem, he thought that Indonesia is approaching an “inflection point”. The ecosystem has started to rise 10 years ago, and accelerated in the last 5 years; Supposedly, soon after the pandemic ends, the development will accelerate both in terms of quality, innovation, the quantity of startups, and cooperation between players.

Alpha JWC Ventures also has plans to expand its business in Southeast Asia. “After Indonesia, Singapore, and Malaysia, we believe Vietnam will become the next digital hotspot in Southeast Asia. The startup ecosystem in Vietnam is quite similar to Indonesia, only a little younger, that’s why we find it interesting.”

Regarding expansion for its startup portfolio, Chandra believes more that each portfolio has its own focus, and regional expansion is not always the best, especially with the Indonesian market that is quite large and still some space left to be discovered. “Some of our startups are going regional in the near future, but at the moment I can’t reveal much,” concluded Chandra


Original article is in Indonesian, translated by Kristin Siagian