Being a startup means believing in your dreams, and Southeast Asia needs dreamers, say incubators.
500 Startups, for one, is keen to sell hope to the growing communities of startups in Southeast Asia, and is willing to back that up with real money.
When I spoke with its founder, Dave McClure, in Jakarta a couple of months ago, he said the acceleratorâs plan for the region starts with âthrowing some moneyâ at startups, simply to get the ball rolling.
âIt has to start with the ability to write some checks. It gets people off the ground. Thatâs the problem with other investorsâ"theyâre not willing to throw money away,â he said with a laugh.
âBut really, a better way to spend a million bucks is to invest in 20 companies at 50 grand each. Weâd probably emerge with three wins out of that.
âThat isnât even the main success of it though; the process of investing in 20 companies gives people the chance to believe in themselves, and creates an ecosystem where people believe in something,â he said.
McClure is on a march to conquer the world. 500 Startups has dedicated about 20 percent of its capital to international companies, and this year set up shop in China and Southeast Asia. This follows last yearâs expanded coverage to include India, Japan and Latin America.
His interests in revving up the startup community, of course will mean that 500 Startupsâ relatively early presence in these markets will allow it to enjoy the first fruit.
For Southeast Asiaâs startup scene, which he says trails behind that of Western markets and other emerging markets like Mexico, that first step needs to start with more money being up for grabs.
He highlighted Startup Chile as an example. In 2010, the Chilean government set up an incubator program that offered startups $40,000, office space and industry support in exchange for them moving to Santiago for six months to build their companies. The program has launched its seventh intake, and according to reports, 37 percent of the applicants in this latest round were local, up from 10 percent in the first round.
âWeâre in the movie businessâ"weâre selling dreams.â â" Dave McClure
This boost to the local ecosystem cost its government about $10 million a year, spread out over 200 companies. âThatâs cheap, for changing the brand of your entire country,â said McClure.
âIn Silicon Valley, thereâs such a strong belief system that itâs possible to be the next Yahoo, YouTube, Google. People donât question that belief, and that cycle is self-sustaining.
âPeople in Asia, on the other hand, need cheerleaders. Thatâs what incubators should be doing here. Weâre in the movie businessâ"weâre selling dreams,â he said.
Reza Behnam, AdzCentral founder and CEO said, of his experience raising funding as an Asian startup, that many investors in the region still shy away from technology investments. âTech venture investments are relatively new here. There seems to be a lot of expertise in Singapore for more traditional, mature types of companies. This cycle needs to mature in order for investors to feel more open to the higher initial risk,â he said.
Hugh Mason, co-founder and CEO at incubator JFDI Asia said the ecosystem in the region is at the point of maturity where startups are keen, but need to be taught the basics of getting organized and pitching their ideas.
âI believe you can probe, sense and respond to how the market responds to your idea, and thereâs a process by which you can teach people to be entrepreneurs,â he said.
âItâs not about the MBA-style business plans, itâs about being able to tell a plausible story around your idea, backed up by evidence. But once a business reaches Series A, it needs to change its culture to fit into the kind of standardized box that a venture capitalist expects,â said Mason.
Eventually, as more successful entrepreneurs return to the community, startups shouldnât need to go through Entrepreneur 101 anymore. âRight now, itâs harder to find investment-ready start ups here. There is a lot of tacit knowledge in the air in places like Silicon Valley about how to make businesses work, and all that is teachable if we can get the right clusters of people together in a community,â he said.
JFDI just closed applications for its second program for 2013, and 317 startups applied to it. The incubator has accelerated 20 startups in the last year-and-a-half, with eight closing funding, raising $3.2 million between them.
500 Startups is an early-stage seed fund and incubator program located in Mountain View, CA. They invest primarily in consumer & SMB internet startups, and related web infrastructure services. Their initial investment size is typically $25K-$250K. Selected areas of interest include financial services & e-commerce, search/social/mobile platforms, personal & business productivity, education & language, family & healthcare and web infrastructure.
JFDI.Asia is a Singapore-based seed accelerator modelled on TechStars that has 60% success taking start-up businesses from idea to $600k seed investment in 100 days. JFDI.Asiaâs focus is on mobile and digital products and services made in Asia, for Asia. Its customers are business start-up teams, early stage business investor/acquirers, and organizations that seek to inspire innovation and entrepreneurship in their workforce.
AdzCentral is a Scientific Media Buying Platform. AdzCentral uses advertising technology tools and expertise to improve their clientsâ digital media spending. Whether youâre a direct marketer, brand marketer, advertising agency or media company.
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