Monday, August 22, 2011

2 Years Old, 200 Millions Users, and Sina Weibo Is On NASDAQ

It took Twitter 5 years to reach 200 millions, but for its counterpart in China, Sina Weibo has claimed that it reached 200 millions users at its 2-years old birthday.

To celebrate this impressive performance, Sina even managed to get its Weibo on NASDAQ, with the greeting Share happiness with 200 million people here!.

We have spent lots of words talking about Weibo these days, so better keep this post short. Not sure if it will be actually Listed on NASDAQ and when, and it has not really solved the monetization question yet, but you have to agree, Weibo is changing Chinese daily life.

Related posts:

  1. 50 Millions Users, Sina To Launch Weibo.com For Its Microblogging Service
  2. Tencent 100 Millions Microblogging Users, Sina 12,000 Tweets Per Second
  3. Sina Weibo is 50-60% of Sina's valuation – Is it too High ??


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Start Your Own Business: Opportunities And Challenges

The Second Largest VC Market

Zhongguancun, the Silicon Valley of China in Beijing. On the 2nd floor of a plain-looking building hiding a cafe named “Garage Cafe.” According to its founder, 32 years old Su Di who used to be an investor, the brand name reflects the practice of how innovative initiatives in Valley build up their empires with an origin from garages, like HP, Apple, Google and YouTube.

The cafe claims to be the first open office space for Chinese startups and entrepreneurs. The expense of one cup of coffee entitles you to a whole day stay here with free access to Wi-Fi, office facilities and even meeting rooms.

Since its founding in April of tis year, Garage Cafe has earned its fame with the frequent visiting of entrepreneurs, venture capitalist and internet practitioners. As of now, there’re bunch of startups stationed there, making the place more of a office space.

Not far from Garage, there is a 3WCafe which situated in one corner of an office building and a BetaCafe which located in China Technology Exchange Building, at which Innovation Works headquartered.  People who frequent there are neither hipsters nor lovers, vast majority of them are those involved in internet businesses, investors, entrepreneurs or people who are considering starting his/her own company.

All they talked in these cafes are business model, product and function design. It’s no surprise to find a twentysomething pitching a fresh idea to a investor.

With the broader penetration of internet, increasing of netizens, ever-lasting grow of internet market size and influx of venture capitals, starting a business is no longer something that beyond rank and file people’s reach.

And China has become the second largest VC market in the world.

 

Incubators

Out of all these initiative takers, some are serial entrepreneurs whose life is inspired by the challenges of the unknown. They are seasoned in doing a company with wide connections and abundant funding choices.

But vast majority of venture takers are first-time doer with inadequate connection and puny experience. All they got is a vague but firm idea. They know little or even nothing beyond product design and development, like how to register a company and to deal with legal affairs. Rather than just funding money, they’re more in need of “hand by hand” coaching and “save all your hassles” services by incubators, such as YCombinator, TechStars in the States, and Innovation Works in China.

Those incubators provide startups with seed funding as well as all-around services in financing, legal affairs, human resources, marketing, operating etc.. Besides, startups will be served with necessary info sessions for industry know-how. For instance, Innovation Works which was founded by former Google China head Kaifu Lee launched its own incubation program “Jump Start”, through which startups will receive a disparate set of resources, including RMB 150,000 (US$ 23,452) seed fund, 4 months of incubation period in Innovation Works Beijing headquarter, free access to a bunch of package service regarding legal affair, finance, human resource, IT and marketing. After the incubation period, all projects will be assessed by Innovation Works and be set up with angel investors, big-name venture capitals for further talks as regards to new investment.

 

“Make The Most Out Of Here”

Many startup teams which made it to Jump Start program recalls vividly the first day they joined Innovation Works, Kaifu Lee delivered a welcoming speech telling them to “make the most out of their stay.”

Some believed that, to some extent, money is the less important thing in entrepreneurs’ long march and the most indispensable and valuable stuff for them are resources. Money helps you stick around for a while, but resources actually help you keep growing.

On top of aforementioned benefits such as seed fund and free office space, Innovation Works also cook up a series of delicious recipes for their coaching syllabus called “Boot Camp”.

According to Dora Cui, operating manager of Innovation Works’ Jump Start Program, they carefully devised a tailor-made “Boot Camp” scheme to instruct these young and promising venturers essential information that relevant to their businesses. Kaifu Lee and Wang Hua, co-founder of Innovation Works also give lectures to help them improve on their products. Except for internal resources, successful founders like Yang Bo (Douban.com founder and CEO), Wang Wei (tudou.com founder and CEO) are also invited to share their experience in starting a business from scratch. And program participants who are specializing in a certain area will also be invited to share with their peers.

For Jump Start program participants, time at Innovation Works is too valuable to be wasted. That’s why Innovation Works worked out a format of “lunch meeting” for lecturing and sharing without taking up too much of their time so they can focus on product design and development. Bai Jie, marketing director of Innovation Works said that Kaifu Lee always shares experience and gives advices during lunch time with these venture takers gathered around him.

 

 

Life Is Too Short To Work In Boring Companies

It’s hard for those who are not involved in startup business before to imagine the pressure entrepreneurs undergo. According to some Jump Start program members, even after joining Innovation Works with lots of hassles being taken care of by someone else, they are still overwhelmed by the hardship and stressfulness coming out from starting a business. They still undergo tremendous pressure, but in a good way.

Before joining the program, venture takers work alone without frequent sharing and mutual support with their peers. But now even though working on different projects, they are starting up their own businesses together. Hence they have someone else to communicate and experience all that takes to realize a wonderful idea. They stir up each other and eventually become each other’s inspiration.

That’s why those incubator teams are noticeably grow up in a faster pace compared to the progress they made before. They used to have only unfulfilled ideas, but now they’re capable of turning that into real business.

Life is too short to work in boring companies, since the current era is considered to be the best time to start up a business, why not hop on the opportunity to work for yourself.


Related posts:

  1. 3rd September, Innovation Works Partners With TechNode to Welcome Startups to Jump-Start Program
  2. The Founder Institute Expands To Singapore To Boost Local Startups Ecosystem
  3. Chinaaccelerator – Incubating Start-ups in the Sun and Sea of Dalian


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China Digest: Tudou get listed in the US, NeuroSky tech adopted, and more

Here are some interesting startup news from China, not only in its capital, Beijing, but also other startup hubs such as Shanghai, Hong Kong, Hangzhou, and many more.

(1) Chinese online-video site Tudou Holdings scored a victory by completing its initial public offering on NASDAQ last week, but the stock declined on its first day of trading. Shanghai-based Tudou, which has some similarities with YouTube, is the first Chinese company to list in the U.S. since Taomee Holdings went public in June.

(2) NeuroSky declared that Haier Group will adopt its brainwave technology in the latest Cloud smart TV. Cloud Smart TV is a new product which merges smart TV technology with a cloud service, which is a milestone in lifestyle change. This new product is scheduled to be available in October.

(3) 17startup was launched in China earlier last week, following the model of TechCrunch’s CrunchBase, a comprehensive database covering tech companies and the people behind them, from startups to giants.

(4) Crows Coming is a new game for iOS that uses the frontal camera to detect your motions. The game, released 20th August for US$0.99 on iTunes, is the first developed by Beijing-based developer Vision Hacker.

(5) San Jose-based Special Deals is opening its operation in China soon, but with some innovations to differentiate itself from Lashou, Meituan and Nuomi, all aggressive and fierce local competitors, and also to avoid all the pitfalls that Gaopeng have fallen into.

(6) Ohbaba is a simple location-based service which helps locate the public toilets around you. The idea is simple: Like other LBS apps, it detects your location and finds the closest public toilets for you. Ohbaba also allows users to submit new entries for toilets. And when you submit a new entry, there is a tick box to indicate if toilet tissue is available.

(7) Beijing-based SmarTots is a start-up that aims to help connect parents and their children through learning. They attracted a lot of attention after winning the GMIC Early Stage Start-up Competition back in April.

(8) Hong Kong based Stepcase was founded by Leon Ho in 2007. Its iPhone photo community, Steply, has over 7.5 million users. In comparison, one of the most popular Android photo app, Camera 360, has about 6 million users.

(9) Research firm IDC recently reported that Apple now has 19.1% of the smart-phone market share compared to the incumbent, Nokia with 15.7% market share.

(10) Xiu.com, a Chinese ecommerce site focusing on luxury and fashion goods, raised US$100 million in series B funding. The round was led by American private equity firm Warburg Pincus, with previous backers Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers participating. KPCB invested over US$20 million in its series A funding earlier this year.

(11) GSR Ventures, an early stage venture capital firm in China, announced that Li Yinan, the former head of China Mobile subsidiary UMessage, joined GSR Ventures as a venture partner.

(12) A new start-up called Wokaishi, currently in closed beta, is aiming to make fitness available to everyone, anywhere and anytime. The goal is to teach people how to take care of their bodies until they are comfortable enough to go to a gym or a professional health practitioner to gain maximum benefits.

(13) Youku.com, listed on the NASDAQ as YOKU, got a nice 13% spike in their share price to $27.01, after speculation that they are in talks with Tencent to buy a piece of them. Tencent, the 3rd largest internet company by market cap in the world, is believed to be looking to invest in Youku to manage their online video business.

(14) Tuita, another rich-blogging service in China by online gaming and entertaining powerhouse Shanda, disclosed that the service is about to raise US$ tens of millions in Series A funding. According to Tuita, all its executives and rank and file employees will receive stock options.

We thank nordicfactory for the flag image.


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Introducing: Rohit Singal, Sourcebits Founder [Speaker @Appnomy Conference]

Sourcebits is one of the leading app development companies in India and you’d be surprised to know that the man behind the company is not a geek (by education/certificate).rohit_singhal

Rohit Singal, founder of Sourcebits is a radiologist-turned app entrepreneur!

In terms of “degree”, he holds an MBBS in Medicine from Rohtak Medical College and an MD in Radiodiagnosis. He started Sourcebits in April 2006 (in a garage) and the company now has offices in Bangalore as well as US (they recently raised $10mn from Sequoia Capital and IDG ventures).

At Appnomy Conference, Rohit will share his entrepreneurial journey and if you are an app developer (who aspires to build an app business), you just cannot afford to miss this conference.

What does it take for a radiologist to build an app business? The question is: Why can’t you do it?

» Links: Appnomy Conference [In Partnership With txtWeb] | Agenda | Apply For The Demo Slot (deadline: August 22nd, i.e. today).

————

Date: August 27th, 2011 [Saturday].

Venue: The Oxford PG & UG College, HSR LAYOUT CAMPUS, No.32, 19th Main, 17th ‘B’ Cross, Sector IV, HSR Layout, Bangalore 560 102 [map link].

Contact Details: Kunal (+9 1 9241 00 9423)/kunal@pluggd.in.

Supported By: MoMo Bangalore.


The Appnomy Conference: Mindblowing Content + Exciting App Demos » August 27th, Bangalore (details). Learn the art of building an 'APP Business'.
» Introducing: Rohit Singal, Sourcebits Founder [Speaker @Appnomy Conference] @Pluggd.in.


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Mobile TV Startup Jigsee Launched In India [Steaming Media For The Feature Phones]

Jigsee, a Candian startup has launched its service in India and the company delivers streaming media (entertaining, informative, and educational video content) to people who use feature phones.

The technology delivers continuous video streams in low-bandwidth environments (with data rates as low as 50 Kbps). Combined with the company’s Smart Client technology – which makes video streaming possible on phones with basic features, Jigsee has overcome hurdles which have prevented the uptake of mobile TV services in most emerging markets.

Jigsee Media Server incorporates a stateless design which facilitates high simultaneous traffic. It implements a proprietary streaming engine which is highly scalable, and includes resilient attributes which allow it to function smoothly in a wide range of wireless environments.

Content partners include UTV, Spice, Mukta Arts and Manorama Music etc. One of the features quite interesting about Jigsee is auto-bookmarking – i.e. you start a video from where you left-off. Given how bandwidth starved country we are, Jigsee surely has a bright future. As far as monetization is concerned, platform will follow a typical VAS route- i.e. revenue share with providers (for premium content).

Started by ex-DoubleClick and RIM employees, the startup has raised funding from IAN and Sequoia Capital.


The Appnomy Conference: Mindblowing Content + Exciting App Demos » August 27th, Bangalore (details). Learn the art of building an 'APP Business'.
» Mobile TV Startup Jigsee Launched In India [Steaming Media For The Feature Phones] @Pluggd.in.


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AfDay Brings Traditional And New Age Indian Art Products Online [Art For Everyday]

Bangalore based Art for Everyday offers Indian art & craft, handmade, ecofriendly products across a wide range of categories like home decor, jewellery, personal accessories, bags & purses, lamps, paintings,afday pottery, kids toys, games, craft based educational kits and much more. 

We believe that “Art” is present in and around our lives in many forms. A statue can be a piece of art and a key ring too can be a piece of art. As they say , it all lies in the eyes of the beholder. We also think that Indian designers and craftsmen – professionals and amateurs are creating the widest and most unique range of Art. This needs to be brought in front of the entire world.  It is also time that we make this easily accessible and in a format which is convenient. These thoughts have resulted in creation of Art for Everyday abbreviated as Afday.com.

Started by Rashmi Daga (IIM A, 2001, was earlier the VP Operations at Tutorvista), here is a QnA with the team on sourcing strategy and challenges in the current market.

How do you source these products?

These products have been sourced from a varied mix of NGOs, crafts groups, designers, artists, studio potters, design houses, amateurs etc. All these groups work with Indian art & craft and also do innovation around it. A lot of these works come from very qualified designers (NID, NIFT, Fine Art college pass outs) while there are some self taught artists and designers who learnt their way purely from passion to create something unique.

Current challenges in the market – how do sellers perceive the online distribution part? How much of convincing/hand-holding is required to get them started?

Sellers believe that there is a market for their products online though most of their products sell through brick and mortar stores and exhibitions. Some amount of convincing for them to explore the option of online sales is required. There are challenges in terms of them taking high quality pictures, detailing their products and focusing on an alternate distribution channel. They have constraint of bandwidth too. We feel we can get a lot more sellers online once we see sales traction.

This is a high-margin, but not-so-high volume business (correct me if I am wrong). What do you think will drive the big volume in this business?

I would like to differ with high margin, low volume thesis for this market. We are working on a very broad platform which is Art for everyday. This is a mix of Indian traditional as well as new age art and craft. These products (which are not run of the mill Indian handicraft available in all emporiums or handicraft bazaars) should appeal to a large section of domestic Indian, NRI and International audience. A lot of them are functional products which all of us use in our day to day life. Most of these products are not available off the shelf and hence can give an impression of low volume range. But I believe that there is a huge latent demand for such products. Everyone continuously looks for new gifts, home decor, accessories, kids stuff and once it is presented well it can serve a part of demand in these large categories. We have placed ourselves differently compared to other online art, handicraft, kitsch and quirky stores and this gives us a lot of flexibility to present traditional handicrafts, modern art and designer products to a larger cross section of population.

Do give Afday a spin and share your review with the team.

Startups in this space:


The Appnomy Conference: Mindblowing Content + Exciting App Demos » August 27th, Bangalore (details). Learn the art of building an 'APP Business'.
» AfDay Brings Traditional And New Age Indian Art Products Online [Art For Everyday] @Pluggd.in.


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Baby Boom in India? Why Flood Of Baby Product eCommerce Sites? [Complete List]

Last year we saw a trend of Local Deal sites mushrooming everywhere. While the mainstream media is still Gung-ho about these sites, there is a new trend coming up, that of baby product sites.

Logistics and inventory is a greater problem for these sites as compared to other ecommerce sites selling standard products. But even a bigger problem is that of discoverability. Apart from stuff like diapers and oils, no one knows what they are looking for. Searching for “kids toys” is just too broad to do any SEO magic. I believe there is a content game around here with a lot of influence and visibility coming from parenting/mom blogs.

Here’s a non-exhaustive list of all baby product sites in India, not particularly in any order. Before we move ahead, one common thing that these sites have is that the UI seems to be targeted more towards the kids than the parents. They really need to know who they are selling to.

1. FirstCry: Raised a funding of $4Mn from SAIF partners earlier this year. The startup is based out of Pune. Traffic seems decently large and has grown at a good pace but mostly on the back of affiliate ads. FirstCry is currently paying Rs.175 as affiliate commission and additional 0.5-1.5% as bonus commission. They have around 150K fans on Facebook and given the activity on every post, their follower base seems to be very engaged.

FirstCry is one of the few sites that do not have a baby-ish UI. Though a little cleaner but the product details page definitely needs to improve. Things like having the call-to-action button below the first fold are serious issues. The search result page needs serious SEO, which has been ignored completely. They still have the URL as the page title and the URL is dynamic. Something about this site makes it feel like the founders are not techies or product managers themselves.

2. BabyOye: Raised a funding of $2.5Mn from Accel Partners and Tiger Global. The startup is based out of Delhi. Traffic is hovering little below FirstCry, though that doesn’t seem to be coming from ad network. BabyOye has 6 times more pages indexed on Google but with a lower Page Rank. They are also giving Rs.175 as affiliate commission and additional 1-2.5% as bonus. They also have about 150K Facebook fans who are equally active, if not more.

A lot of products (that I saw) are out of stock and they have this weird thing of mentioning that important message on top left in light grey, where no one can see. One would go crazy wondering how to add quantity. Also minor things like keeping order quantity default as 1 instead of 0 makes a difference in the overall user experience. Though their 1 page checkout system seems a bit easier than FirstCry’s ‘sign up first’ process.

3. Hushbabies: Hasn’t announced any funding. The startup is based out of Coimbatore. The traffic isn’t really much to talk about and the 13K fans on Facebook don’t seem to be much active. You will get that baby-ish site feel here. The product pages are definitely better designed than both of the above funded sites.

4. BuzzlingBabyShop: They haven’t announced any funding yet. The startup is based out of Mumbai. They hardly have any traffic even after offering the same affiliate commissions as FirstCry and BabyOye.

The interesting part of this startup is that they do have a content play. Indiaparenting.com is their own site with a lot of content around parenting, health and general content farm stuff. The site does have decent traffic as well. The 2 sites have a PageRank of 4 and 5 between them. The problem is that they haven’t utilised it well enough. Infact, the eCommerce site is promoting the content site rather than the other way around. There Facebook page also goes by IndiaParenting and not BBS. May be they are happier earning AdSense money than building a business. The UI also is just too poor to review the complete checkout process.

5. Balgopal.com: The startup is based out of Delhi. I am really not sure how this site came in my list. May be I would have seen their ad somewhere. They do not have any social media presence and the traffic also seems to have died down. They have confused product description with product name which makes the whole shopping experience a lot painful. The same startup also runs another eCommerce startup, Ratetag.com.

6. Kidloo: Based out of Hyderbad, this startup hasn’t announced any funding. They have about 4K fans on Facebook which aren’t very active though. Traffic is also not much on the site. There biggest drawback I believe is there lack of focus on product. Who in the world would expect a homepage of 2.35MB to gain any popularity. For once you may get a little impressed when you click on the “Add to cart” button but the nightmare starts when you try and checkout. Of all things in the world, they even ask for your Fax number. Really, Is this 1991?

7. LetBabyPlay: Based out of Delhi, no news about funding. They have almost no traffic. Though, they seem to be very new and would need some time to reach to a reasonable stage. There product page has the faults of FirstCry and checkout is inspired by BabyOye.

8. MyBabyCart: They are pretty new and traffic etc. is nothing to talk about. This Bangalore based startup should get a special mention for trying to replicate the ambiance of an offline Kids store on web, which is a complete fail.

Apart from these we have our usual eCommerce stores, like Infibeam, Homeshop18, Ebay etc. having baby products as a dedicated section.

Let us know your experience if you have ordered from any of these sites. Also let us know which one sells the cheapest. Guess it’s time for a comparison engine/aggregator site for baby product sites.

Wanna genuinely try the sites? You know what you have to do tonite! ;)


The Appnomy Conference: Mindblowing Content + Exciting App Demos » August 27th, Bangalore (details). Learn the art of building an 'APP Business'.
» Baby Boom in India? Why Flood Of Baby Product eCommerce Sites? [Complete List] @Pluggd.in.


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DiscountPandit Wants To Be The Hyperlocal Deal Search Engine [With Social Angle]

Couple of days back we asked a question: Is There a Business Model in Deal Aggregation Space? and an interesting perspective that came out was that Business Model for Deal Aggregators Should Not Be Aggregation of Deals.

The business model should be Distribution – distribution of deals, that’s where they start testing their capabilities and adding value to the ecosystem!

DiscountPandit is a newly launched (Bangalore based) deal site that wants to bring hyper-local + social angle to the deal space. That is, based on your current location, the site will show deals within 10 kms of radius (very recently, Snapdeal too launched Deals NearMe).discountpandit

Given that most of the deals are geo-tagged (or geo-tagging them doesn’t take a lot of effort, and few other aggregators are also doing this), the key here is distribution/discovery. In my opinion, instead of building a destination site, deal aggregators should focus on building a platform which they can license to bigger players (especially media companies/publishers).

As far as DiscountPandit is concerned, the team really needs to define the right metrics for the product. What is important – more ‘registered users’ or better conversion? Right now, you need to login to view the aggregated deals on the site and frankly, unless there is an exclusive mind-blowing deal (like Galaxy S2 for INR 100/!), an average user has way too many other deal sites/options to look at and will eventually give the site a skip.

In short, answering “What Business Am I In” is the way forward, though the good news is that the site has done a good job of categorization, usability and the mobile version works as-promised.

Here is a quick QnA with Alan, founder of DiscountPandit.

I couldn’t see anything ‘hyperlocal’ about it. Correct me if I am wrong – but these aren’t hyperlocal deals (going by the true definition of hyperlocal).

DiscountPandit has two variations i.e the web version and the mobile version. Given the complexity of finding the exact location and the hesitation by a few users to share their location on the web, DiscountPandit displays relevant search results within a 10km radius. Here, search relevancy takes precedence over location. The mobile version finds your exact location and deals are displayed based on your location. Hence, Hyperlocal. Going ahead DiscountPandit will display hyperlocal sponsored listings.

b. What’s your biz model? Are you a deal aggregator?

Technically, though we aggregate deals from various sources the social layer takes prominence over here. We will be launching several features in the coming weeks to enhance the social experience of deal buying.
The business model is through sponsored listings, deal recommendations and a deal distribution network.

Do give DiscountPandit a spin and share your comments.

Recommended Read: List of Daily Deal Aggregators In India.


The Appnomy Conference: Mindblowing Content + Exciting App Demos » August 27th, Bangalore (details). Learn the art of building an 'APP Business'.
» DiscountPandit Wants To Be The Hyperlocal Deal Search Engine [With Social Angle] @Pluggd.in.


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