Sunday, July 1, 2012

China’s Top 4 Cloud Notes Services, Including Evernote [USER STATS]

Yes, it's a crowded market: all four main cloud notes rivals in China squished together.

New user number stats for the main cloud notes services in China reveal that Evernote has made a great impact in the mere two months since it launched a separate version for the country. With a reported 1.1 million users, Evernote’s Chinese cousin – called Yinxiang Biji – has shot into third place among four main contenders.

But that still leaves Evernote trailing behind two major Chinese web companies and their more established notes syncing offerings. The oldest of the bunch has the greater number of users: that’s Shanda’s (NASDAQ:SNDA; FRA:RZP) Mknote with five million users (see the table below).

In second place is Netease’s (NASDAQ:NTES) Youdao YunBiji, which has grown to three million keen note-takers from the two million figure we reported back in February [1]. That leaves one startup, FIT, trailing in fourth place with its stylish YunBiji (yes, it has the same quite generic name as the Netease product, meaning “cloud notebook”) picking up 400,000 users so far. The stats were compiled by Techweb.com.cn, and come from self-reported figures:

Evernote’s main battle is clearly against Netease and Shanda. For free users, Evernote’s meagre 60MB of storage allowance per month seems to be sufficient and is not hampering the early traction of its Yinxiang Biji in the country. Since these services are mainly about taking notes, not storing files, the generous 1GB storage of the major web companies might not be a factor. I’d hazard a guess and say that the slickness of the Windows app – and then the accompanying mobile apps – will prove to be the winning factor.

Check out all four competitors on their homepages: Evernote’s Yinxiang Biji, Netease’s Youdao Yunbiji, Shanda’s Mknote, and FIT’s Yunbiji.

[Stats from: Techweb - article in Chinese]


  1. Netease has put up an interesting page to celebrate its three million milestone, and reveals that 36 percent of its users are primarily using Android, with just 18 percent on iOS. As for PC (I guess it means Windows only), 46 percent are mainly just using the service on their desktops.  ↩

The post China’s Top 4 Cloud Notes Services, Including Evernote [USER STATS] appeared first on Tech in Asia.


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The Termsheet Anatomy and Sample Series A Termsheet

The previous post Termsheet – The Prenup Agreement briefly illustrated the stages of the fundraising process – from initial interaction and due diligence to issuing termsheet, signing definitive agreements and fund transfer.  Also discussed were components of the termsheet to give a flavour of the rights and terms an Investor typically proposes.

In this second part, I will try to put to rest some of the concerns which many entrepreneurs have when they read the termsheet. Some of the common questions that always pop-up in the head are:

1. “WTF, how can they put such a term in the termsheet?”

2. “Hey, how can you do that? We are the founders and this is our company?”

4. “Is it us or does it just appear in every damn f***ing termsheet!”

5. “Hey if you want all this, what do I get at the end?”

Typically there are almost 40-42 terms in a typical Series A termsheet. I have classified these terms under three separate categories based on the amount of importance it holds from a VC’s perspective and hence also for the entrepreneur. The three categories are illustrated in the following infographic

The Gold Cup

The terms included in this category are very critical. Seldom, will a VC miss out on any of these terms. Hence while negotiating there are very few chances (read as negligible) you will be able to convince them to forgo any of these rights.  Ask entrepreneurs who have received investments from institutional VCs and they will testify that VCs were most sticky on these rights and most negotiations happened around these terms.

The rights act as a control mechanism for  VCs to safeguard their investment, ensure there is no mis-utilization of funds, control the exit transaction, be involved and have a say in all strategic issues of the company.

As an entrepreneur these terms might get you agitated or all worked up. However, these terms will only be enforced when things get really bad and the situation is irreparable. If the company is doing well, why would a VC force an exit on you or discourage you from taking strategic decisions which will benefit the company in the long run? Having said that, you should negotiate these terms well because VCs should not forget that they are providing risk capital. If they want those big fat returns they should also be prepared for some failures and if so they should not be unreasonable in those circumstances either.

The following classification will help understand the function of the terms included in this category:

  1. Exit Transaction – Exit Clause (QIPO), Drag – along, Buy Back of Investor Shares
  2. Capitalization Clarity – Post Closing Shareholding pattern, Pre-money valuation
  3. Distribution of Proceeds -Liquidation Preference (Participatory / Non Participatory)
  4. Key Decisions – Reserved Matters, Right of First Refusal (mainly for sale of shares by ), Voting rights, Board Representation / Composition
  5. Control over conflicting activities by promoter – Vesting of Founder Shares, Lock-in period for Founder Shares, Tag along
  6. Setting milestones to achieve a tranche based investment [Many times the Investors even keep aside a portion of their shares to reward the founders for achieving the milestones]

The Silver Cup

These rights are critical and very frequently used to negotiate (give on these and stick to those) the Gold Cup rights. The Silver Cup rights help the VC to achieve the following objectives

  1. Indemnify from liabilities arising from past and future operations of the company – Indemnity, covenants and representations and warranties, Keyman, E&O and D&O Insurance
  2. Secure interests in future round of funding – Anti-dilution, Pre-emptive rights
  3. Ensure the founders’ don’t  participate in any conflicting activities – Use of Proceeds, Non- Compete, Non – Solicitation and Non – Disclosure, Transfer
  4. Access to critical information of the company’s performance -Information Rights
  5. Ensure exclusivity and confidentiality of the proposed transaction to avoid term-sheet ‘shopping’ -
  6. Providing guidelines for closure of the current transaction – Investment Amount, Closing Conditions, Expenses related to the transaction, Nature of Document

The Bronze Cup

The ones included here are certain standard rights and definitions. These are the least argued upon in any discussion. VC and founders always accommodate requests from the other side.

  1. Rights – Conversion, Dispute Resolution, Dividend, Due Diligence, Governing Law and Jurisdiction, Registration and Piggyback Rights
  2. Definitions -  Investors, Promoters, Promoter Shares, Type of security, Closing

As promised earlier, attached is a Sample Series A Termsheet. In the next two subsequent posts I will help dissect the key terms of the termsheet [mainly the ones in the Gold & Silver Cup].

- Download from here

[Kulin Shah worked with Reliance Venture Capital for 3.5 years before starting his entrepreneurship journey. The article has been reproduced from Kulin’s blog.]


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Xiaomi’s Lei Jun Explains His Weibo Battle With Qihoo 360′s Zhou Hongyi

These gentlemen would like to punch each other (Zhou on left, Lei on right)

China’s tech scene is not for the faint of heart (or those with a sense of propriety). The advent of Weibo, especially, has made it possible for CEOs to talk shit about each other more quickly and publicly than ever before, and more than a few choose to take advantage. Now their ranks include Xiaomi’s Lei Jun (who has always been an outspoken figure) and Qihoo 360′s Zhou Hongyi (himself a veteran of several public mudslinging incidents with other tech companies, most notably Tencent). The pair recently used their Sina Weibo accounts to batter each other with scores of negative posts, and the battle is ongoing. (In case you’re curious, here’s Lei’s weibo, and here is Zhou’s).

The fact that there’s a bit of enmity between the CEOs of two companies that are becoming competitors with the launch of Qihoo 360′s cheap smartphones isn’t entirely surprising. But why are these guys taking it to the streets and duking it out in public rather than just waiting to see whose sales numbers win the day?

We contacted Qihoo 360 for comment, but were unable to get its wiser-than-their-boss PR reps to talk on the record about Zhou’s fight. Is it a coincidence that this fight is happening now, just a day before the company launches a new smartphone together with Haier? This is just my own speculation, mind you, but probably not.

Of course, that doesn’t explain why Lei Jun is responding (and thus adding fuel to this already-viral fire). Luckily, Lei Jun explained that himself in an interview with Southern Metropolis. Primarily, he said, he chose to react because of Zhou Hongyi’s allegations that Xiaomi was making a massive profit. “A lie told a thousand times becomes the truth,” Lei said, emphatically denying that Xiaomi was making huge profits. “Of the phones on the market using the same processor [as the Xiaomi M1], Xiaomi is the cheapest.” He also said that Zhou Hongyi’s repeated assertions that the Xiaomi phone will drop in price was causing consumers to wait to purchase the phone.

Lei’s other issue was that Zhou announced Xiaomi’s successful funding and $4 billion valuation while the company was still in talks with investors, and hadn’t finalized anything. This made the negotiations much more difficult and nearly scared off Xiaomi’s investors. Although Lei told reporters he wasn’t angry about this, it sure seems like he is, but he waited until after the deal was finalized to react to Zhou’s comments publicly.

Whoever’s right or wrong here is pretty irrelevant, I think. This kind of public mudslinging makes the whole industry look unprofessional, and it makes the participants look like petulant children. This is especially true of Mr. Zhou, who seems incapable of going more than a few months without blowing up into some kind of high-profile battle with another figure in the tech industry.

In fact, this idiocy annoys me enough that I’d like to address Mr. Lei and Mr. Zhou directly: Gentlemen, although I’m certainly not a successful tech CEO, I think I can be of some help to you here. Please, just stop. Shut up, and let your products speak for themselves. If your phone is the better product, people are ultimately going to realize that. And if your phone isn’t the better product, shouldn’t you be focused on improving it rather than yelling at someone else on weibo?

[Southern Metropolis via Sina Tech]

The post Xiaomi’s Lei Jun Explains His Weibo Battle With Qihoo 360′s Zhou Hongyi appeared first on Tech in Asia.



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Overview of venture capitalist industry in South Korea

While the number of venture capital deals has been skyrocketing in South Korea since 2008, acquisitions of startups are still few and far between. Most exits come in the form of IPOs. These findings are derived from a beSUCCESS Special Report by Eunse Lee. Altogether, there are 105 registered VC firms in Korea, handling about KRW 9,460B  (US$8.28B) worth of funds.

Korea’s Venture Capitalists for Start-ups

View more PowerPoint slides from besuccess

On a separate note, a VentureBeat report stated: “Angel investing is on the smaller side with about 30 percent of Korea’s venture capital deals going toward early stage companies. There is an emphasis on proving your company’s worth before money is awarded, which Go Venture Forum’s Youngha Go sees as a block in the growth of the Korean startup community.”


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Technology Entrepeneurs Creative Arts Mix (TECx) comes to Vietnam for the fifth time

SAVVi (Strategic Alliance Vietnamese Ventures International), a US based global platform providing services to those wishing to do business with Vietnamese professionals and Vietnam, will be organizing its semi-annual signature event, the Technology Entrepreneurs Creative Arts Mix (TECx) from 4th July to the 7th July.

The four day conference targets professionals who are interested in technology, entrepreneurship, and the creative arts. This year, TECx will focus on four emerging sectors:

1. How has technology affected movie making, media and mobile?
2. How is technology saving lives in the health and personal care sectors such as with stem cell research and tele-medicine? What are the latest technologies used in personal eye and skin care?
3. How is technology, including bio-technology, being used in the agriculture sector to address the growing concerns about food production and security?
4. How is technology being used in education to help spur entrepreneurship and innovation?

The event will feature some heavyweight speakers such as Christian Cadeo, Head of Mobile for Google SEA, Hoang Thi Mai Huong, Chairman-CEO of Saatchi & Saatchi Vietnam, Rick Howarth, General Manager of Intel Products Vietnam, Christopher Harvey, CEO of VietnamWorks.com, Huy Do, Chairman & President, SAVVi as well as a whole range of other notable speakers. On top of that, the conference will also feature several other activities including:

1. SAVVI Demo Day – JULY 6, 2012
A showcase of approximately 20 up-and-coming entrepreneurs as they demo their latest projects. A sneak peak of the Vietnamese companies involved in the Demo Day below:

2. SAVVI Workshop  - JULY 7, 2012
A one-day certificate workshop about innovation and using technology in business operations, as well as how to do business in the US and with US companies.

3. Lounge With Us – JULY 4-5, 7 2012
We’ll show you quintessential Vietnamese flavors as we stomp and chomp our way through town with guest speakers from the conference.

Event Details:

Date: 4th July – 7th July

Venue: New World Hotel, Ho Chi Minh City

Agenda: http://savvi.bz/savvi/index.php?page=tbc&sub=agenda

Register Now : http://savvi.bz/savvi/index.php?page=tbc&sub=register

More Info: http://savvi.bz/savvi/index.php?page=tbc


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Technology Entrepeneurs Creative Arts Mix (TECx) comes to Vietnam for the fifth time

SAVVi (Strategic Alliance Vietnamese Ventures International), a US based global platform providing services to those wishing to do business with Vietnamese professionals and Vietnam, will be organizing its semi-annual signature event, the Technology Entrepreneurs Creative Arts Mix (TECx) from 4th July to the 7th July.

The four day conference targets professionals who are interested in technology, entrepreneurship, and the creative arts. This year, TECx will focus on four emerging sectors:

1. How has technology affected movie making, media and mobile?
2. How is technology saving lives in the health and personal care sectors such as with stem cell research and tele-medicine? What are the latest technologies used in personal eye and skin care?
3. How is technology, including bio-technology, being used in the agriculture sector to address the growing concerns about food production and security?
4. How is technology being used in education to help spur entrepreneurship and innovation?

The event will feature some heavyweight speakers such as Christian Cadeo, Head of Mobile for Google SEA, Hoang Thi Mai Huong, Chairman-CEO of Saatchi & Saatchi Vietnam, Rick Howarth, General Manager of Intel Products Vietnam, Christopher Harvey, CEO of VietnamWorks.com, Huy Do, Chairman & President, SAVVi as well as a whole range of other notable speakers. On top of that, the conference will also feature several other activities including:

1. SAVVI Demo Day – JULY 6, 2012
A showcase of approximately 20 up-and-coming entrepreneurs as they demo their latest projects. A sneak peak of the Vietnamese companies involved in the Demo Day below:

2. SAVVI Workshop  - JULY 7, 2012
A one-day certificate workshop about innovation and using technology in business operations, as well as how to do business in the US and with US companies.

3. Lounge With Us – JULY 4-5, 7 2012
We’ll show you quintessential Vietnamese flavors as we stomp and chomp our way through town with guest speakers from the conference.

Event Details:

Date: 4th July – 7th July

Venue: New World Hotel, Ho Chi Minh City

Agenda: http://savvi.bz/savvi/index.php?page=tbc&sub=agenda

Register Now : http://savvi.bz/savvi/index.php?page=tbc&sub=register

More Info: http://savvi.bz/savvi/index.php?page=tbc


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The Verdict is In: Apple Pays Proview $60 Million to Settle iPad Trademark Dispute


Apple has been in court for quite some time now with Proview, the holders of the iPad trademark in China. Earlier this morning, a Guangzhou high court’s official weibo account announced that the case has finally been settled: Apple will pay Proview $60 million for the rights to the iPad trademark in China.

The settlement agreement was apparently signed on June 25, but it is not until today that the Shenzhen court where the case was originally filed made it official by reporting to national trademark authorities that the rights to the “iPad” trademark now belong to Apple.

The case has been bouncing around the courts since 2010, but it really heated up earlier this year when Proview attempted to stop the iPad from being sold in China, and successfully got it removed from a number of popular e-commerce platforms.

[via Sina Tech, h/t to @thats_mandarin]

The post The Verdict is In: Apple Pays Proview $60 Million to Settle iPad Trademark Dispute appeared first on Tech in Asia.


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Gumi and Shinsei Bank Launch Fund for Game Devs in China and Singapore

gumi-shinsei

Tokyo-based social game developer Gumi announced Monday that it has partnered with Shinsei Bank and set up a fund for investing in game developers in mainland China and Singapore. Japan’s economic daily Nikkei reports the fund is expected to invest in developers who are aiming at developing apps and games for consumers in North America. During the next two years, the two companies intend to invest in 10 to 15 companies, with about 10-30 million yen ($125,000 to $375,000) for each investment. Gumi is investing 50 million yen and Shinsei contributes 300 million yen ($3.75 million) to the fund.

Gumi established their local subsidiary in Singapore in April, and appointed David Ng Meng Wah as the president. He previously served as an executive at Electric Arts APAC and Malay conglomerate Dijaya.

The company’s CEO/founder Hironao Kunimitsu tells us he aspires to make his venture into a top social developer in the world gaming market, and the investment is one of their strategies to obtain high potential game titles and talented resources from the region.

Shinsei Bank was originally founded almost 60 years ago as a LTCB (Long-term Credit Bank of Japan) but went bankrupt and was nationalized in 1998. Then it was privatized and taken over by US-based private equity firm Ripplewood in 2000, and now most of its shareholders are institutional non-Japan investors.

The post Gumi and Shinsei Bank Launch Fund for Game Devs in China and Singapore appeared first on Tech in Asia.



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Burpple, a social food sharing app burps its way into China

One of Singapore’s hottest tech startup, Burpple, launches new updates and ventures into China.

Singapore based food sharing app, Burpple, has just launched its fully localized edition of its social food journal app in Simplified Chinese, and features an integration with popular Chinese social network Sina Weibo. The new chinese app pronounced “Bao Bei Shi Ji”, is a witty play of Chinese words which mean ‘precious and sumptuous food journal’.

The launch to China is motivated by the promising adoption of users based in China, making it one of Burpple’s most popular countries. With the localized Burpple app, Chinese users can now use Burpple effortlessly. The team has also introduced new editing functionalities such as renaming your Box titles, something which the Burpple team calls the photo albums.

Other than that, existing Burpple users also gets a whole new list of feature updates, which includes a whole new “Like” button, something which was previously lacking. Before this, the only way users could ‘like’ someone else’s photo was by collecting (reburpping) the photo into their own albums (Burpple boxes). Other updates include Chinese language support, Sina Weibo sharing,  visual improvements, as well as speed optimization.

So what’s in store for Burpple? According to Elisha Ong, the cofounder of Burpple, he shared in his email that “since our launch 2 months ago, we’ve seen students, sportsmen, chefs, bloggers, singers, deejays and even mums using Burpple to collect and remember their fantastic food moments. People finally now have a liberated place to share and express their love for food! What makes Burpple really magical is the type of value it can bring to people next. We’re excited to push the boundaries of curated search and discovery. Imagine that you can easily explore what’s worthy and good to eat around you, curated by someone you trust. Well, if Evernote is about being the second brain, Burpple is about being the social food brain.”

Venturing into China requires a lot of resources and the right connections, and Burpple is certainly taking a huge risk going into the notoriously competitive market with a lot of copycats. Of course, high risks reap high returns. The 1.3billion population market is definitely a very attractive market for Burpple to venture in, and we will definitely keep an eye on this hot pink Singapore startup.

Slideshow:
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