Indonesia’s Digital Economy Growth in 2020

Google, Temasek, and Bain & Company released their annual report “e-Conomy SEA 2020” to review the development of digital or internet business in Southeast Asia. The headline for this is “At full velocity: Resilient and racing ahead” – indicating how the ambitions of digital players survive and try to maintain growth amid the global economic downturn.

There are 7 highlighted digital sectors. Apart from the existing ones, e-commerce, transport & food, online travel, online media, and financial services; This year the research added two new business landscapes, healthtech and edtech – because both are experiencing significant growth amid the Covid-19 pandemic.

The pandemic has drove internet penetration in the region, with an estimated 40 million new users in 2020. Therefore, there are around 400 million internet users in total in Southeast Asia – equivalent to 70% of the total population. The existence of social restrictions forms a new culture, such as work/school activities from home, resulting in a drastic increase in consumption of digital services.

One quite interesting issue is that in Indonesia has 56% of total digital service consumers this year come from outside the metro area, while the remaining 44% are still from around the urban area. It is said, digital development is currently still Jabodetabek-centric; and this cannot be denied because there is a significant gap between metro and non-metro areas in terms of accessibility to infrastructure.

Gross Merchandise Value (GMV) is the matrix used to measure economic units in this report; that is, indicating the value of transactions/sales that occur within a certain period of time by the user. The GMV for the internet economy in Southeast Asia (accumulating value from the 7 highlighted sectors) is projected to exceed $100 billion. Indonesia will contribute $44 billion or the equivalent of 621 trillion Rupiah.

In Indonesia, most of  our GMV comes from e-commerce services, amounting to $32 billion, followed by transportation & food platforms worth $5 billion, online media $4.4 billion, and online travel $3 billion.

Validation for digital economy direction

Recently, APJII has released the latest report regarding internet user statistics in Indonesia. Specifically in 2020, there are approximately 25 million new internet users in the country (increasing by 8.9% compared to last year). Indonesia’s domination in many of the Google-Temasek-Bain & Company reports has also validated that Indonesia is on the right track in building its digital economy.

Although quite a few also say that Indonesia’s digital economy phase is still in “early stage”, at least the foundations are well formed. Looking back over the past decade, e-commerce and ride-hailing businesses have been able to become good industrial engines, they have expanded the scope of digital savvy in Indonesia – both from consumers and SMEs. The implication is that new (digital) business models are getting quickly accepted.

Covid-19 has also had a very visible impact. Some business sectors have been hit hard, for example online travel, but from there we can see how digital service providers are able to adapt quickly. Take, for example, the fast action of OTA to save businesses by aggressively promoting domestic transportation services or the “staycation” vacation model. So it is not surprising that in the statistics of the e-Conomy, the OTA platform still has a significant position.

On the other hand, the pandemic is actually ripening the level of digital adoption in society. The benefits for digital players may be seen at a later time. When the community lockdown starts to get used to shopping, studying, consulting health online, this will become new permanent habits. Especially when the platform is able to accommodate these needs, therefore, it brings a more pleasant impression.

In our internal records, funding to digital startups have also continued to pour during this pandemic. This indicates a good trend regarding investor trust in Indonesia’s  business players – amidst a recession and increased risk of failure due to economic dynamics. This momentum certainly needs to be maintained to ensure that the Indonesian startup ecosystem continues to grow, and realize the nation’s vision to lead the Asian digital economy.


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

LinkAja Announces 1.4 Trillion Rupiah Series B Funding Led by Grab

E-money platform LinkAja announced the Series B funding worth around $100 million (1.4 trillion Rupiah) led by Grab. Also participated in this round the previous investors, Telkomsel, BRI Ventures, and Mandiri Capital. There is no mention of LinkAja’s current valuation. This funding is the first funding for LinkAja from a company outside the BUMN.

This funding will be fully utilized to accelerate LinkAja‘s growth to become a national financial technology leader that focuses on middle-class consumers and SMEs in Indonesia.

Grab’s strategic investment includes a wide range of synergies and potential collaborations for both parties. This synergy and collaboration in terms of ecosystem access and technology will accelerate financial inclusion for the Indonesian people.

In an official statement, LinkAja President Director Haryati Lawidjaja said that his team is very enthusiastic on Grab’s involvement as a shareholder in the company. He believes this strategic partnership supported by investment and the power of Grab’s technology will strengthen LinkAja’s services in presenting effective solutions to provide financial and economic access for the Indonesian people.

“We are very grateful for the trust and support of all shareholders and the Ministry of BUMN. The Series B investment from Grab, Telkomsel, BRI Ventures, and Mandiri Capital is a form of trust in the business model and initial achievements that LinkAja has achieved in one fell swoop since its establishment,” he said, Tuesday (10/11).

Grab Indonesia’s Managing Director, Neneng Goenadi also said that the company decided to invest in LinkAja because the two companies could accelerate the goal of accelerating financial inclusion in Indonesia.

“The strategic collaboration between LinkAja and our digital ecosystem, including OVO and Tokopedia, allows us to provide a variety of cashless services for all levels of Indonesian society safely, comfortably and easily accessible,” said Neneng.

Previously, in November last year LinkAja was available as a payment option in the Grab application and also its competitor Gojek.

LinkAja achivements in 2020

Haryati continued that the success of raising investment in the midst of this pandemic has proven the investor’s trust in the LinkAja business with many of leading supports.

In terms of shareholders from state-owned boards; a unique business model resulting from strategic partnerships with state-owned enterprises, local, central and private governments, which come from multi-industry; hyperlocal knowledge base and distribution network with extensive coverage in second and third tier cities, plus more than 1 million cash in/cash out receiving points.

“An innovative product with a strong brand that is rapidly developing into an iconic local fintech platform, and a provider of daily necessities with payment methods that can be accepted across thousands of merchants, with a variety of e-commerce, and various means of transportation.”

LinkAja is claimed to be able to increase the gross transaction value (GTV) and the number of transactions in the third quarter of this year by 3 times compared to the same period in the previous year.

It is said that LinkAja now has 58 million registered users, with more than 80% of them coming from second and third tier cities. Last April, the company launched its sharia services and has received a Sharia Conformity certification license from DSN MUI and Bank Indonesia. This Sharia service is claimed to have more than one million users, within its six months operation.


Original article is in Indonesian, translated by Kristin Siagian

AdaKerja’s Target After Securing 14.7 Billion Rupiah in a Follow-on Funding

On Friday (30/10), job marketplace platform AdaKerja announced the follow-on funding from Beenext worth $1 million or 14.7 billion Rupiah. The seed funding has opened since last year when the company debuted, Beenext also became their first investor. Thanks to the participation of several angel investors (including the leadership of LinkedIn, DBS, ICAP, and the Tolaram Group), the total funding raised was $1.4 million.

The additional capital obtained will be prioritized in product and technology development resulting in AdaKerja’s service more capable of accommodating blue-collar workers in Indonesia.

In fact, a similar platform is also being prepared to be replicated in Singapore under the name AskSteve. However, to DailySocial, Founder & CEO Ashwin Tiwari said that currently they only focus on business in Indonesia. While the unit in Singapore is only in the beta stage – functionally the same as AdaKerja already operating in Indonesia.

Was founded in 2019, AdaKerja claims to have reached around 600 thousand job seekers and 10 thousand businesses involved on its platform. This achievement made Ashwin and his team quite optimistic about 2020, even though the business climate was badly hit by a slowdown due to the pandemic.

Targeting blue-collar workers (in the informal sector), AdaKerja is not solely on this sector, there are already several platforms that provide similar services. There are Job2Go, Heikaku, or Workmate. However, Ashwin is quite optimistic, because there is a value proposition they offer.

“Yes, I can imagine. But after you open [AdaKerja], there are major differences. And the most important thing, we are not a digital staffing agency. The model [agency] is widely adopted by other players, they charge up to 20% commission to workers, those who should get the whole [wages] income,” Ashwin said.

Ashwin Tiwari
AdaKerja’s Founder & CEO, Ashwin Tiwari / AdaKerja

In terms of features, AdaKerja provides a personalized job search experience for job seekers by chatting using the WhatsApp or Messenger bot. Meanwhile, business partners (UKM), they are presented with an application to manage the recruitment process more efficiently. Embracing blue collar circles, most of AdaKerja’s partners come from SMEs. Because it is considered that these businessmen absorb more informal workers.

As for his business model, Ashwin explained, “Our service is completely free for job seekers. Employers buy interview credits at an affordable cost, then use them to invite candidates.”

Building a job marketplace business in Indonesia is not without challenges. “Frankly, the challenge is to build a fast-growing business, regardless of whether the company is based in Indonesia or not. Building a strong team and corporate culture is also not easy.”

“Our mission in Indonesia is to digitize job search and payrolls for 100 million blue-collar workers and 60 million MSMEs. According to projections, SMEs absorb about 95% of the workforce and record $ 300 billion in the annual payroll; serving them is our focus,” concluded Ashwin.


Original article is in Indonesian, translated by Kristin Siagian

Alex Rusli in the Ecosystem: Startup Founder and Angel Investor

Alex Rusli is very familiar in ecosystem circles. One of the peaks of his career was when he served as CEO of Indosat Ooredoo (Indosat), one of the largest telecommunications services in Indonesia.

Now Alex Rusli is busy with his business and investments. DailySocial tries to find out what he is currently busy with as an entrepreneur, a commissioner in three companies, and an angel investor.

Enthusiasm for innovation

Alex first joined Indosat in January 2010 as an Independent Commissioner. Then he was appointed President Director and CEO two years later. Several digital products launched by Indosat under his leadership are Cipika, Cipika Play, Cipika Books, and Dompetku.

“Before serving as CEO at Indosat Ooredoo, my career at Indosat was quite long. Previously I also had experience working in government and other companies,” said Alex.

After leaving Indosat in 2017, Alex has been involved in various positions which are claimed to have spent more time working than when he was at Indosat.

“For me, activities as an entrepreneur, and especially starting a startup, provide its own adrenaline which is very interesting to follow. The structure of an irregular startup makes this process full of challenges but full of disruption,” said Alex.

Together with his former colleague at Indosat, Prashant Gokarn (former Chief Digital & Service Officer), Alex founded Digiasia Bios (Digiasia). The company, which targets fintech services, is the holding company for the e-wallet service KasPro, the P2P lending platform KreditPro, and remittance services with digital channels and the RemitPro offline network.

“Right now Digisasia is the biggest investment that I have made. Together with Prashant, we are starting to acquire several companies and their licenses and then we will refresh it into a new story,” said Alex.

All of his professional experiences are used by Alex to further understand fintech services, including regulatory compliance, in Indonesia.

Angel investor journey

Currently Alex has invested in around 11 companies. He does not hesitate to help develop the company’s business, provide consultation, and help them find the right solution for the company’s interests.

Alex claims to enjoy this new activity. Of the several investments made, only one, according to Alex, should be closed. The reason is because of the stubborn attitude and position of the startup founder.

“I have experienced several conditions when startup founders are very stubborn and reluctant to accept input or feedback from investors. As an angel investor, this is quite crucial and certainly disturbs the creation of a good relationship with the startup founder. angel investors, “said Alex.

In the future, Alex sees the dynamics and ecosystem of angel investors will increase in number. According to him, there are already many angel investors that exist in Indonesia, although their movements are not very visible. The concept of long-term investment is one of the attractions to become an angel investor.

“I who like things that are not standard and full of challenges are ideal [conditions] to enter the world of startups and entrepreneurship. But for those who like things that are organized and structured, it’s good to avoid getting into the world of startups,” said Alex.

The dynamics in operator business

Alex himself said that he did not close the opportunity to invest in the telecommunications sector which he has controlled for the last 7 years. However, at this time, he wanted to try to go outside and enter into new sectors and different innovations.

Regarding the challenges faced by telecommunication operators during the pandemic, even though it was a traffic harvest, Alex said, “I see this condition is quite difficult, because during the pandemic telecommunication operator companies could not raise prices. So even though traffic has increased, it is not accompanied by an increase in prices to customers. , “said Alex.

In fact, the telecommunication industry experienced an increase in revenue in the February-March period. However, income growth since March has continued to decline during the pandemic. The need for greater internet bandwidth makes their expectations quite high.

“I see that although fixed broadband services have experienced an increase in the number of new subscribers, from the connection side, there are still many who say that telecommunication operator connections are sometimes better than fixed broadband connections. This means that from the service side, it is still good for telecommunication operators,” said Alex.


Original article is in Indonesian, translated by Kristin Siagian

Localio to Develop Marketplace Platform for Home-Made Culinary Business

It is not new knowledge that household activities during the pandemic are busier than normal days. Cooking activity is one of the most dominant. The benchmark is the number of home culinary businesses that have grown significantly during a pandemic. Localio tries to catch the fortunes of this trend.

Localio is a digital startup that was just established in July. This startup was founded by Andry Suhaili, Sebastian Wijaya, Donald D. Kusumo, and Handoko Kusumo as a marketplace for the home culinary business. Although at first glance it is no different from the GoFood and GrabFood platforms, they insist that the Localio business is different. One of them is the localization of their product.

“Basically Localio is a local homemade marketplace, helping MSMEs meet their communities,” said Andry, who plays the CEO.

The initial idea for Localio came from the Andry family who intended to sell their home cooking but had difficulty finding a large niche market. To enter platforms such as GoFood or GrabFood, according to Andry, is quite difficult because it requires a long queue.

Departing from that problem, he and his friends made research about the difficulties experienced by the home culinary business. After that they found a number of similar problems including the difficulty of the home business in marketing and there was no single platform for them.

Product segment

Andry admitted that there are already other platforms such as GoFood, GrabFood, and other e-commerce that can be used by home culinary businesses. However, according to him, the platform above does not really suit the needs of a home business. With Localio, Andry said that his party can help home businesses from promotions, attracting customers, online business training, to courier selection.

Since their target audience is micro and even ultra-micro businesses, Localio does not charge any fees to merchants who join. Nor do they seek to profit by applying commissions.

“We are not taking commissions, but we see opportunities in infrastructure, for example with suppliers,” Andry added.

What Andry means by infrastructure is the ecosystem that Localio is building. Andry explained that there are three main pillars that will become the Localio ecosystem, namely fulfillment, finance, consulting and advertising services. Advertising includes their current business model.

The fulfillment in question includes the supply chain that connects sellers to food vendors, delivery, and provision of satellite kitchens. This supply chain thing, they call it LocaSupply, is still a work in progress. Andry said that his party plans to partner with Wahyoo for this product.

Which is quite interesting in the delivery options. Andry said that they prepared courier options using bicycles, scooters and pedestrians. The pedestrian option arose because the food delivery distance in Localio was only 3 kilometers. In addition to the choices of couriers, they also took Gojek and Help as additional options.

“Our existing business model is Live Streaming, LocaAds, and delivery.”

Business plan and target

Localio started out in a relatively small business. They started their business by hooking up with a seller in the Tanjung Duren area, West Jakarta. Then they hooked up with other home businesses in the Kelapa Gading, Pluit, PIK, Sunter, and Pasar Minggu areas.

CTO Sebastian Wijaya said that his party now has a number of sellers scattered outside cities such as Sidoarjo and Medan. However, for now they will still focus on expanding their reach in the Jabodetabek area. Meanwhile, until December, they are at least targeting to expand to Bandung, Surabaya, Bali and Singapore. They chose Singapore because according to them the conditions of the home-based culinary business there are also improving, plus Sebastian who is currently living there.

Apart from expansion, Localio also plans to attract professional chefs who were laid off from work during the pandemic to join their platform. Later the chefs will be accommodated into their own canals.

By mid-October, Localio had won 1000 sellers. They are targeting to reach 4000 sellers by the end of the year with the expansion they have planned. This growth target will also be used to attract investors. Currently, the capital in Localio is still in the bootstrap phase with additional capital from Win Ventures.

“In the future, we want to form a home-based business ecosystem. Overall, we want to be a platform that connects local MSMEs, promoting them from an unknown food business to becoming a global player to exporting abroad,” said Andry.


Original article is in Indonesian, translated by Kristin Siagian

Indonesia’s Agritech to Develop Progressively

One of the things that is quite encouraging in the development of Indonesia’s digital economy is the creation of solutions to various problems in various sectors, as well as creating new opportunities that can actually impact many people. Online motorcycle taxis, food delivery merchants, and the transformation of stalls to digital are some of them.

What has not been widely heard is how the agritech industry has grown in Indonesia. The story has not yet reached the surface. Actually, several names have focused on this sector, TaniHub, SayurBox, KedaiSayur, iGrow, Crowde, Etanee, EdenFarm, Freshbox, and other names are a series of startups trying to transform the agritech industry in Indonesia with their own solutions.

Over the past few years they have tried to validate the idea as well as educate the market that there are technological solutions that can solve existing conventional problems, such as farmer loans, low prices, and the distribution of their crops.

In 2020, since entering the pandemic period, several names in this sector have started to show significant growth. Especially those who focus on delivering their produce directly to customers. This potential also makes KedaiSayur a pivot and focus on order delivery services for food ingredients. Sayurbox, Etanee, EdenFarm, and Freshbox also compactly stated that there was a growth in retail customers during the pandemic.

Meanwhile, in terms of capital services, Crowde shared stories with DailySocial at the beginning of the pandemic, their operational businesses were also affected. This condition is due to the large number of POs with their horeka businesses that have to be canceled due to force majeure as well as travel restrictions from one area to another.

Many parties are surprised by the various new policies and gray plans, for example, such as many investors who have not dared to make capital again after repayments or new policies to limit the types of businesses they capitalize.

“We have also made adjustments to the system so that capital will still have relevant risk mitigation during this pandemic, such as credit insurance options for capital, diversification offtakers for the absorption of crop yields, to options for purchasing crops in tonnage. To simplify the capital distribution assistance system, we We also work more with local men as farmers consultants and field agents, “said Crowde Head of Impact Investment Afifa Urfani.

Crowde’s performance during the pandemic is quite promising. In the period March to August they claim to continue to distribute funds up to more than Rp. 60 billion. This figure is higher than normal conditions, considering that the peak planting period is from September to October each year. The funds are channeled to more than 18,000 farmers and more than 300 small and micro businesses in the agricultural sector.

“During the pandemic, we continued to cooperate with> 10 institutional investors who were not afraid to channel their capital even in pandemic conditions with uncertainty over credit. agricultural capital, “said Afifa.

Supply chain and farmer’s capital loan

If you look further about the problems that technology startups are solving in the agritech sector, it will focus on two things of the supply chain or distribution and also farmer capital loans. For the supply chain, these startups will usually go directly to the area to meet with farmers or farmer groups and work together to accommodate their crops.

Then the crops will be accommodated in a kind of processing center to be sorted and packaged before being passed on to customers. With a short distribution chain like this, the quality of vegetables and fruit will be better maintained, prices will remain competitive, and customers will have an interesting shopping experience.

Meanwhile, for agricultural capital loans, the outline of the process is that farmers open projects on the platform provided, complete with information on the crops they will plant with the amount of profit offered. Then the owner of the capital will choose the project and finance it.

Of these two fundamental problems, there is one thing that makes it a positive impact on farmers. All of them are competing to make farmers harvest maximally and with quality. The goal is to produce the best quality for their respective services. Quality fruit or vegetables in abundance, or good yields for those who invest. This synergy is expected to be able to elevate farmers to a better, more measurable, and more documented level.

Agritech in other countries

China as a country with fast technology adoption in the past decade has made transformation in the agritech sector a national priority. They launched a development plan and digitization of the agricultural sector from 2019 to 2025. Cutting-edge technologies such as AI robots for sensor-based automation and monitoring, blockchain, supply chain, and 5G networks are expected to create solutions in the agricultural sector. From a report published last March, investment in Chinese e-Grocery grew 25% from 2018. Touching the $ 2.1 billion mark.

Meanwhile in India, the supply chain is also a challenge for the agritech industry. Linking farmers directly to customers appears to be an important homework of agritech in many countries.

A report, titled Agritech – toward transforming Indian Agriculture issued by EY in August, stated that the potential supply chain for the Indian market reached $ 12 billion, while for financial services it reached $ 4.1 billion. These two sectors provide space for startup players to grow and at the same time contribute to national agriculture.

Future potential

Indonesia is an agrarian country where every year there is news about farmers who have failed crops or farmers whose harvest prices have plummeted. When talking about potential, clearly empowering farmer groups to reduce these risks is one of the most important.

Furthermore, in a more mature stage of IoT-specific sensor technology, predictions based on data typical of big data and machine learning can take farmers to the next level. Determine which planting period and variants are the most profitable to reduce the risk of crop failure.

Indonesia is on its way. The investment obtained by companies in the agritech sector is expected to be able to provide solutions for a better future for Indonesian farmers.


Original article is in Indonesian, translated by Kristin Siagian

Digital Campaign Platform “Dukung Calonmu” is to Facilitate the Election of Political Contestants

Starting from a public fundraising campaign site (crowdfunding), Dukung Calonmu is to shift into a comprehensive digital campaign platform. Even though it hasn’t left the crowdfunding feature which is currently known as a donation, the Founder & CEO, Christian Hutabarat shared his vision and ambition with us.

He said his service pivot was based on in-depth observations regarding the current conditions in Indonesia. Fundraising platforms have not been fully accepted by political contestants.

“Such a concept is difficult to enter into Indonesian political culture because there are several obstacles that are encountered. Among them, political contestants are concerned about the small number of donations coming in. Then there is a concern that by raising campaign funds, there is a negative perception that they (political contestants) don’t have the capacity economically,” Christian said.

Currently, it is still difficult for political digital platforms such as Support Your Candidates to instantly disrupt habits or methods that have previously been embedded in Indonesian society for a long time. For that reason, Dukung Calonmu strives to present relevant features and services for users.

“Political contestants who are included in our scope are not limited to the special legislative circle, but also for those candidates for RT heads, BEM heads, student council leaders can take advantage of our platform. Starting from a small-scale success story, the hope is that Support Candidates can expand its coverage to medium to the national scale,” Christian said.

Dukung Calonmu will continue to actively communicate with regulators such as the KPU and Bawaslu, to ensure that the steps taken are in accordance with existing regulations. Meanwhile, to create a wider network and provide even more massive education, they work with organizations to communities ranging from small to large scale.

“We hope that support from stakeholders can help Dukung Calonmu to be better known and eventually used as a digital campaign platform that supports political contestants and the general public,” Christian added.

Two leading features

Because the function is not used for daily needs, Dukung Calonmu is currently not available as an application. It only use the website.

One of its features is dubbed the “Digital Campaign”, and includes several interesting options that can be used. For example, to create a campaign site, a candidate profile information center, to a center for interaction with the community.

There is also an “Online Election” feature, providing options such as easy voter registration, verification of registered voters with guaranteed security.

For the donation feature, Dukung Calonmu is to embed this choice in the Digital Campaign feature. For contestants who want to launch donation activities, they can take advantage of this option by managing the money accommodated in advance by Dukung Calonmu team, using a third party payment gateway.

After the donation has been successfully collected, the money can be disbursed through a verified account. Dukung Calonmu already has a number of users who are scattered in their locations. Not only in Indonesia, they claim to have users in the Netherlands.

“Through Dukung Calonmu, the wider community can find out more relevant information about political contestant candidates, build direct relationships and, if interested, can make donations according to the initiation of the political contestants,” Christian said.

For the monetization strategy that is implemented, Dukung Calonmu provides a subscription option (subscribe) within a certain time frame and also certain features that can be used. Meanwhile, Online Election is a price package, depending on the number of voters who will use it.

Claiming to be the first and only platform to present political campaigns online, there are several plans and targets for Dukung Calonmu to achieve, including conducting fundraising.

“Dukung Calonmu’s target next year is certainly to be able to develop even more, and also for the product itself, there will always be developments to improve existing products to satisfy or meet all the needs that are difficult for our users,” Christian said.


Original article is in Indonesian, translated by Kristin Siagian

Effectivity of Business Pivot from Three Startups Amid Pandemic

Business pivot is not a new thing for startups. Usually, this action is taken when a business is difficult to progress, aka not growing. In the Covid-19 pandemic situation, many startups have pivoted. This is not because the business is not growing, but the act must be taken due to survival.

The pandemic has hit all business sectors, especially the aviation, tourism, and hospitality sectors. As a result, startups that depend a lot on their main income from this sector are forced to rethink their business strategy and take new steps.

It has been eight months since Covid-19 broke out in Indonesia. DailySocial interviewed three CEOs of three Indonesian startups regarding the realization and effectiveness of their business pivots during the pandemic.

Market research before pivot

Before talking about effectiveness and realization, doing a pivot must be accompanied by careful readiness for the target market and business model to be explored. In their interview with DailySocial, Kedai Sayur, Medigo, and Izy admitted to doing market research and survey first.

Please note, the three startups are both playing in the Business-to-Business (B2B) segment. The difference is, both Izy and Kedai Sayur decided to pivot to B2C because of the pandemic. Meanwhile, Medigo, whose pivot has been planned since 2019, has actually been impacted by the pandemic.

Izy’s business model is closely related to hospitality where it provides digitalization of services to encourage increased consumption of hotel and accommodation guests through the platform. For example room service and laundry.

Izy started pivoting in April 2020 after conducting simple market research with several clients and related parties to get initial input. With the same business model, Izy creates new markets by penetrating modern retail and residential settlements.

Meanwhile, Kedai Sayur, which initially served B2B, such as vegetable vendors, cafes, and restaurants, is forced to enter the B2C segment or end-users. Social restrictions have resulted in a decrease in visitor transactions at restaurants and cafes, therefore, managers have to reduce the volume of orders for ingredients.

“We do market research to determine consumer behavior, the need for fresh products that are of interest, and on the lifestyle. This is because B2C and B2B consumer behavior is different,” Kedai Sayur’s Co-Founder and CEO, Adrian Hernanto said.

In Medigo’s case, this platform initially attempted to connect all ecosystems in the health industry from upstream to downstream with hospitals (RS) as an initial approach.

Given the hospital bureaucracy that required a long integration process, Medigo finally pivoted by focusing on clinical management only. In December 2019, Medigo built a Smart Clinic and opened it in February 2020.

“When we developed the clinic management system in early 2019, there were indeed more than 300 clinics that registered. It’s just that the usage is still small. We start researching and surveying the clinic to find out what the problem is. Is technology or is there any major problem that hasn’t been resolved yet?,” Medigo Indonesia’s Co-Founder and CEO Harya Bimo said.

Along the way, Medigo encountered difficulty in executing the pivot. Smart Clinics are run with two business models, namely building their own and collaborating with existing clinics. Problems arise when a pandemic hits.

“When we wanted to build a second Smart Clinic, the situation was not possible because the model had to be monitoring, renovating, where it requires high touch. Meanwhile, we had to be low touch as that time were social restrictions. Here we are rethinking our pivot strategy and partnership model,” said the man who is better known as Bimo.

Pivot realization during pandemic

Approximately almost eight months after the pandemic occurred in Indonesia, the three startups said that they had reaped positive results or responses from the new services they offered to the market.

Although this pivot is temporary, Izy’s Co-Founder and CEO, Gerry Mangentang admitted that he has managed to earn revenue. Even so, his team avoids sharing details regarding the increase in revenue because it is related to internal data with its partners.

“For the core product/service, we will remain the same as before, focusing on the hotel industry. However, this pivoting will be very useful in the future to complement the Izy platform and ecosystem,” he said.

Meanwhile, Kedai Sayur recorded an increase in sales with the demand of more than 50 percent after entering the B2C segment. Adrian said the demand continues to increase because people are getting used to buying foodstuffs, vegetables, and fruits online.

Apart from sales, Adrian said, the company also recorded other positive responses. For example, the number of customer complaints at Kedai Sayur continues to decline every month, followed by an increase in traffic engagement and the number of new users through social media. “To maintain customer satisfaction and loyalty, we accelerate the delivery process from H + 2 to H + 1,” he explained.

Medigo’s entry into the clinical supply chain also recorded a significant increase. At the beginning of the period of social distancing, the company did not immediately reap a business increase because people tend to be afraid to go to hospitals or clinics during that period.

However, its services began to increase with a peak in May up to four times compared to April. He claims that since May until now, the increase has more than quadrupled. “In fact, we already have a healthy margin every month. Therefore, our income is higher than our burn rate,” he said.

Effectivity and metrics used

By optimizing technology, operations, and the right business model, Medigo, Izy, and Kedai Sayur reveal that this pivot is working effectively. However, there is still room for improvement in the future.

In measuring the effectiveness of pivots, Adrian said that his team did not rely solely on traction metrics or the number of transactions alone. They seek to maximize Customer Relationship Management (CRM) by utilizing quality data to get better business prospects.

Previously, Adrian had mentioned that data plays an important role in reading a trend or phenomenon in the digital era. In the context of a pandemic, Adrian said data can show trends in demand for orders or product prices in certain areas.

“The biggest challenge of pivoting into B2C is the big effort in bringing the [name] brand to the wider community with various characteristics. Therefore, we pay close attention to details that can be essential updates to improve our services in the future,”

However, Bimo added, his team did not rely solely on sales metrics to measure the effectiveness of this pivot. Since its debut, Medigo has defined interactivity in the healthcare ecosystem as its “North Star Metric”. This means that these metrics are at the core of growing its main business.

“Our pivot is very effective because it is not only measured from commercial, but also non-commercial. It’s useless if non-commercial is good, but it can’t be monetized because the business model is not yet supported. After the pivot, [non-commercial metric] interactions on our platform increase extraordinary,” Bimo added.

He said the success of this pivot can be maintained if the two metrics can work together. “We run many clinics where patient medical records are stored in our system. If one hospital can handle 900 patients per day, we can manage 60 clinics with 100 patients each per day. This becomes our ‘North Star Metric’ to encourage the interaction of healthcare stakeholders,” he concluded.


Original article is in Indonesian, translated by Kristin Siagian

Andalin Secures New Funding, Local Logistics are Getting the Highlight

The smart logistic platform developer Andalin posted new funding led by BEENEXT. Access Ventures and ATM Capital took part in this round. There was no further details regarding the nominal, but Andalin is said to have raised $1.5 million, equivalent to 22 billion Rupiah.

The additional capital will be focused on expanding the team and strengthening services, the target is to acquire more clients from manufacturing companies and distributors. The service expansion throughout Indonesia will be their next target.

Was founded in 2016 by Rifki Pratomo, Andalin helps many businesses to perform export-import shipments. Including having a B2B model to help shipping companies in Indonesia find affordable cargo transportation – using aircraft (Air Cargo & Air Courier) or ships (Full Container Load & Low Container Load).

In addition, Andalin also has a supply chain service. This includes consulting services, customs management for import-export, and cargo insurance. They have also become Alibaba’s official partner in Indonesia, bridging the needs of local entrepreneurs to embrace the international market through the Alibaba platform.

“Our mission is to simplify and optimize international trade for businesses in Indonesia, starting with cross-border logistics,” Rifki said.

He also believes that Indonesia is experiencing a manufacturing boom, as happened in China three decades ago. This trend was accelerated by the US-China trade war which resulted in companies relocating manufacturing from China to countries in Southeast Asia, including Indonesia.

“By building a delivery company with modern technology, Andalin has the ability to dynamically simplify international supply chain solutions for our clients,” he added.

In Indonesia, the logistics business is quite developed, driven by many factors. Apart from manufacturing developments, the e-commerce business growth trend is also predicted to be a supporting factor. Moreover, there are many services from home and abroad that reach the international market. In the export-import segment, Andalin is not alone, there are several other players in the area include Expedito, Tera Logitic, and Janio.

Ekosistem bisnis logistik di Indonesia data iInfografik per Maret 2019)
Logistis business ecosystem in Indonesia, Infographic per March 2019

Logistics startup funding

The pandemic has become a momentum for logistics startups to maximize business. Evidently, this year there have been several startups in related fields that have received funding. The most significant was obtained by Waresix through the series B round if in total the company had raised $ 100 million worth of funding or the equivalent of 1.5 trillion Rupiah.

Startup Stage Nominal Investor
Andalin Seed BEENEXT, Access Ventures, ATM Capital
Waresix Series B EV Growth, Jungle Venture, SoftBank Ventures Asia, EMTEK Group, Pavilion Capital, Redbadge Pacific
Webtrace Seed Corin Capital, Prasetia Dwidharma, Astra Ventures
Shipper Series A $20 million Prosus Ventures, Lightspeed, Floodgate, Y Combinator, Insignia Ventures, AC Ventures
GudangAda Series A $25,4 million Sequoia India, Alpha JWC Ventures, Wavemaker Partners
Kargo Technologies Series A $31 million Tenaya Capital, Sequoia India, Intudo Ventures, Amatil X, Agaeti Convergence Ventures, Alter Global, Mirae Asset Venture Investment
Waresix Series A $25,5 million EV Growth, Jungle Ventures

Compared to last year, the trend is increasing, both in terms of quantity and nominal volume. From DailySocial’s records, there were 6 startups in the logistics sector that received funding from investors throughout 2019, as follows:

Startup Stage Nominal Investor
Kargo Technologies Seed $7,6 million Sequoia India, 10100 Fund, Agaeti Ventures, Northstar Group, Intudo Ventures, Zhenfund, ATM Capital, Innoven Capital
Triplogic Seed East Ventures
Ritase Series A $8,5 million Golden Gate Ventures, Jafco Asia, ZWC Partners, Insignia Ventures, Beenext, Skystar Capital, Mitsubishi Corporation
Waresix Series A $14,5 million EV Growth, Sinarmas Digital Ventures, Jungle Ventures
Shipper Seed $5 million Lightspeed Ventures, Floodgate Ventures, Insignia Ventures Partners, Convergence Ventures, Y Combinator
Finfleet Seri A $3,5 juta Kejora Ventures, XL Axiata, Gobi Ventures, Skystar Ventures, Asian Trust Capital


Original article is in Indonesian, translated by Kristin Siagian

The Future of Impact Investment in Indonesia

How many startups and investors in Indonesia are using an environmental, social, and governance (ESG) approach or better known as impact investment in running their business? The answer is indeed limited. There are many factors to cause this. However, the digital economic entities are recently paying attention to this aspect.

In fact, Indonesia is not as mature as developed countries with regulations that “force” more players to make impactful investments. Apart from the current digital ecosystem which is yet to mature, there are a number of factors that hold the rise of impactful investment.

Piotr Jakubowski founded nafas with a focus on raising public awareness of the importance of clean air. Nafas allows an individual or corporation to participate as a sponsor in providing air quality sensors.

What becomes a challenge, says Piotr, is that often environmental impact initiatives such as the one he built through nafas are associated with company’s charity or CSR program. It is yet to be the main objective of an entity.

“The future of this category is clear. Science has confirmed the urgency of a number of environmental issues that can result in the growth of a for-profit business model that will focus on avoiding harm to our planet,” Piotr explained.

Crowde also nurtured the importance of green business. Head of Impact Investment, Afifa Urfani said that the urgency of holding the value of sustainability is not only for the purposes of company branding which is temporary but also for long-term interests.

Afifa takes an example of how Crowde, which focuses on credit in the agricultural sector, also implements reasonable restrictions on the use of chemicals, analyzes the impact of climate change on agriculture, mitigates risks related to climate change, such as the impact of prolonged drought on capital, and the formation of green scoring to assess the capital of a sustainable plan.

“For example, we invest a certain amount of money for a conventional business. Indeed, the income will be large and quite instant, but investing in a sustainable business looks heavy in the future, it can get low maintenance costs afterward,” Afifa said.

From an investor’s point of view, belief in the importance of impact investing can determine the sustainability of a company both resource and financially. This is held what ANGIN believes in.

ANGIN’s Impact Investment Lead, Benedikta Atika, noticed that impact investment growth in Indonesia maybe around 5-10 years behind other countries with more mature markets, however, there’s still some space for impact investment to grow in Indonesia.

In the early stages of private investment, Atika sees that many digital economy players in the country are starting to look at the environmental impact on the business they are in. The growth of the sustainable agricultural sector, waste management, and circular economy represent a positive movement of impactful investment.

“Apart from that, we also observed that several VCs who previously did not pay special attention to environmental impacts are now starting to have exposure, either having a special team related to impact investment or ESG (Environment, Social, and Governance) investment. They even launching a new fund for this approach,” Atika added.

Bagan di laporan ANGIN yang menemukan investasi berdampak di Indonesia makin bergairah setiap tahun.
ANGIN’s report shows that impact investing in Indonesia gets more excited every year.

Overall awareness

Even though it is called impact investment, the awareness of its importance must start from the business players. Crowde and nafas represent this by implementing sustainability values ​​into its business model.

Atika said, aligning perceptions of investment opportunities with the business entity’s mission of sustainability is a challenge. Based on the Investing in Impact in Indonesia 2020 report, there is indeed a gap in the perceptions of the two parties. One is very focused on how big the impact of the solution they can provide, the other prioritizes the scalability of solutions that can reach a wider market in the hope of bringing greater financial benefits.

Atika believes, as long as the business model and strategy to be implemented by startups are sustainable, investors’ trust will follow.

“In fact, commitment to the environment must come from the startup and be embedded in its business model, not as a “mandate” from investors. This commitment will then be reflected in the business strategy and implementation,” Atika said.

Crowde has applied that. They have won the trust of a number of investors. Trusts earned because their entire team has equal awareness of the importance of the impact of their business on the agricultural environment

Crowde is one of the few startups that has compiled an environmental impact report on the business they run. The distribution of knowledge and awareness is not only held by company officials, but also by all employees.

“For example, the approval of a draft budget for farmers’ costs for capital by using certain chemicals that have passed the dose will not reach the CEO’s ears. It takes awareness not only from agents in the field but also from supervisors at HQ,” Afifa added.

Pandemic accelerates process

The market’s flavor can determine investment appetite. Shifts in community behavior will affect business people in sustainable issues. We can take an example of the increasing public enthusiasm for clean energy products which is finally captured by new energy startups. However, it usually takes a long time to shift human behavior into a new habit.

Pandemic accelerates this process. Piotr said public awareness of clean air began to increase rapidly since the Covid-19 outbreak took place. A study from Harvard University showed there was a higher death rate from Covid-19 in areas with more concentrated PM2.5 pollution.

Afifa also sees the same thing in the agricultural sector. When the pandemic hits the global economy, investment in the food sector comes into the spotlight. Increasing productivity has always been the main focus of the food sector, almost without intersect on the sustainable aspect. In fact, Afifa mentioned, there are quite a lot of incentives from the government and the private sector to encourage investment in startups that hold sustainable issues as stated in the SDGs.

“Before the pandemic, investment in the agricultural sector was considered a ‘futuristic’ concept for future generations – which is clearly a misconception. However, with a huge hit during the pandemic, finally, investment in the food sector has become the main focus for economic growth, not just inclusively but massively,” Afifa said.

Growing awareness in the digital economy ecosystem also requires a long-term approach. Atika noticed that people often only rely on financial reports as a reference for operating expenses. Whereas health, welfare, and access can also be counted as non-financial burdens.

These indicators should be used to measure whether their business can contribute better to their environment. In addition, pursuing sustainability values, according to him, can still go hand in hand with the financial targets of a business entity.

“Again, reflecting on the mission and vision of the organization about what approach is the most feasible to do, both in terms of solutions, value chains, and business processes,” Atika said.


Original article is in Indonesian, translated by Kristin Siagian