Thursday, 18 September 2014

5 new funds for startups from India’s tech biggies

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There is a reason why startups playing with cutting-edge technology are called disruptors. They demolish the old world order, disrupt the status quo, and usher in change. In fact, the larger, more established companies find it hard to innovate as nimbly and quickly as the upstarts.

In India, the traditional tech companies are staring at an existential crisis. Riding on the back of a large pool of talented engineers, companies like Infosys, TCS, and Wipro established the country as the outsourcing capital of the world in the 1990s. But advantages eroded over time. At the same time as other low-cost tech hubs emerged in China, Vietnam, and the Philippines, a wave of new and flexible startups focused on disruptive technologies stole the thunder.

See: Why India must fix its obsession with software services and pivot to products

Even if the tech giants haven’t innovated or evolved as much as they would have liked, what they do have is loads of cash. So they’re doing the next best thing – investing in innovators outside the company – that is, startups. Global tech companies like Google, Intel, and Qualcomm have had venture capital arms for some time now, and they have been actively backing young companies across the globe. Now, Indian companies too are getting into the corporate venture capital game. Even local startups that started up a few years ago and grew rapidly are setting up VC funds. After all, who better than them to see the value in startups?

Here are five such funds for startups set up by the larger Indian tech companies:

1. US$15 million MakeMyTrip travel innovation fund


Online travel company MakeMyTrip (NASDAQ:MMYT) just set up a US$15 million innovation fund to support early-stage startups. According to its official statement, the fund will be deployed to back startups in travel technology, with a special focus on mobile and IP-based companies.

MakeMyTrip, one of India’s big startup success stories, was founded by Deep Kalra, Rajesh Magow, and Keyur Joshi in 2000, when the internet wave and private equity funding first swept through India. The company listed in the US in 2010, and according to its co-founder and CEO-India Rajesh Magow, the new fund of US$15 million is now 10 percent of its cash position. The company has been actively pursuing merger and acquisition opportunities in the travel technology space as well.

2. US$25 million InMobi fund for game developers


A month ago, India-based mobile advertising network InMobi set up a US$25 million fund to engage with game developers. Apart from funding, InMobi will offer advisory services to game developers on aspects like global scaling, monetization, and ad experience creation.

The Bangalore-based startup has come a long way since it was founded in 2007. Now it competes against Google and other internet giants in the mobile advertising segment.

3. US$100 million Wipro fund for startups


Wipro, India’s third largest IT services company, recently set up a venture capital fund that will invest in early-to-middle stage technology startups globally.

Earlier too, Wipro has made investments in startups. Last year, it invested US$5 million in US-based Axeda Corporation, an ‘internet of things’ startup that securely connects machines and sensors to the cloud. Axeda was acquired by PTC (NASDAQ:pTC) for around US$170 million a few weeks ago.

Wipro’s new corporate venture arm is headed by Rishad Premji, son of company chairman Azim Premji.

4. US$100 million Infosys innovation fund


Last year, Infosys made news when it earmarked US$100 million to focus on new ideas, products, and platforms. The objective was to provide a much-needed fillip to its products, solutions and platform businesses that contribute less than six percent to Infosys’ overall revenue. Last month, the new Infosys CEO Vishal Sikka announced that he is in on the lookout to put the fund to use.

In the coming weeks, the company intends to work with venture capitalists, incubators, and accelerators to spot interesting startups to back.

5. Persistent Venture Fund


Pune-based software services firm Persistent Systems announced an early-stage investment fund last December. The fund plans to infuse up to US$250,000 in startups focusing on innovation in social, mobile, analytics and cloud (SMAC). It has invested in three US companies so far: free video-call app Ustyme, life sciences startup DxNow, and wearable tech startup Hyginex.

BSE-listed Persistent was founded in 1990 by IIT Kharagpur alumnus Anand Deshpande to develop software solutions in different verticals like analytics, big data, life sciences, and so on.


This is not all; there are other older funds. For instance, One97 Mobility Fund set up a few years ago. This US$100 million fund from India’s leading mobile internet company One97 Communications in collaboration with SAIF Partners was set up to support entrepreneurs in the mobile technology space. India’s leading mobile internet company One97 Communications in collaboration with SAIF Partners set up the fund. The idea is to support entrepreneurs in the mobile technology space. Besides venture capital, OMF shares operating experience, mentorship, and resources with the startups it picks.

One of its portfolio companies The MobileGamer was sold to Singtel Idea Factory and Softbank two years ago. It just participated in the seed funding round of TargetingMantra, an Indian startup that arms ecommerce companies with Amazon-like personalization tools to lure, coax, and help consumers loosen their purse strings online. The One97 Mobility Fund portfolio includes Indian mobile commerce leader Paytm, artificial intelligence startup Dexetra, and customer insight provider Ciqual.

Even software industry associations, which were earlier focused totally on the needs of tech majors, are now out to support entrepreneurs. For example, the National Association of Software and Services Companies (NASSCOM) kickstarted an initiative called 10,000 Startups, and even set up a co-working space called Startup Warehouse in Bangalore. As part of the initiative, NASSCOM provides early stage support for startups through incubation programs. Its plan is to incubate, support, and help fund 10,000 technology startups in the next 10 years across India.

See: Scale up your mind: What is venture capital funding and how does it work?

(Top image: 401K)
Discover the Latest Cool Gadgets and Top Wholesale Electronics from China. Daily updates about new smart gadgets, useful tech guides.

Wednesday, 17 September 2014

Samsung unveils Club Samsung 2.0, releasing on Sept 30

Club Samsung 2.0Samsung on Wednesday announced the launch of Club Samsung 2.0 at a press event in Mumbai. It is the updated version of Samsung’s content store “Club Samsung,” which was unveiled alongside Galaxy Grand 2 in the country last year. Club Samsung 2.0 offers music, movies, videos & mobile TV at one place to the Samsung device owners.
According to Samsung, it has made a number of changes in the app including support for offline content.
“We have invested significant resources & efforts in ensuring that Club Samsung 2.0 delivers a world-class experience to our customers. Whether it’s the single hand operation or the ability to play online & offline content at one place, there are a lot of features that will excite our customers. We will continue our relentless focus on product innovation to further boost our leadership in the software & services domain,” said Tarun Malik, Director of Media Solutions Center-South West Asia, Samsung Electronics.

Club Samsung 2.0 features/ Change-log

  • Availability of content across multiple languages (like Hindi, Punjabi, Bengali, Tamil, Telugu, Kannada, Malayalam, Marathi and Gujarati) with hundreds of Movies & Videos, thousands of Songs and Mobile TV with over 90 channels
  • Improved Discovery feature
  • Integrated Media Environment (IME) and unified powerful player for all offline and online content
  • Synchronous browsing, social sharing, comments, recommendations & supports minimized version for both Audio and Video formats according to bandwidth.
  • One hand operation support via jog dial shaped music player
Club Samsung 2.0 will be available as a download from Galaxy App Store beginning September 30 for 14 devices. The compatibility will further be extended to 33 devices in the next few months.
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Samsung drops Galaxy Core 2 price to take on Android One smartphones

Samsung Galaxy Core 2 White
Samsung Galaxy Core 2
Looks like Samsung is feeling the heat from newly launched Android One smartphones. The Korean manufacturer on Wednesday rolled-out a price-cut for its Galaxy Core 2 smartphone in the Indian market. The company will now be selling the Core 2 at INR 7,990, down from the launch price of INR 11,990, revealed Mumbai-based retailer Mahesh Telecom.  The price-cut has already started appearing at the e-retailers like Flipkart as well as Samsung’s own e-store.
This is a huge reduction for a smartphone that has gone on the sale in country just two months ago. With Google’s marketing muscle behind Android One smartphones in India, Samsung really has a reason to fear. For long the company has operated without much competition in the budget segment but that has changed this year. The entry of the likes of Moto E, Asus Zenfone 4 and Xiaomi Redmi 1S have changed the dynamics but these weren’t a real threat to Samsung, as all these phones were online-exclusive and depended mostly on word-of-mouth publicity except Moto E, which is advertised a bit but nowhere near the level of Samsung smartphones. Android One smartphones, however, will also be available in physical stores beginning next month. Broader availability, aggressive marketing, and a great pricing as well as specifications are more than enough to shake Samsung, resulting in today’s decision.
To remind you, Samsung Galaxy Core 2 is an entry-level smartphone and comes with 4.5-inch WVGA display, 1.2GHz quad-core processor, 768MB of RAM, 4GB of internal storage and microSD card slot. The phone also comes with 5MP rear camera, VGA front camera, 2000 mAh battery and Android 4.4.
While the reduced pricing of the Core 2 might not be matching the Android One price-tag, thanks to the Samsung branding and distribution, the Core 2 now has a real chance to take the Google-backed initiative.
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