Tuesday, February 12, 2013

Intellocut wants to help garment manufacturers to save costs, offers software to optimise shop floor

One of the most interesting startup to demo at UnPluggd’12 was “Intellocut” a stark difference from the run-of-the-mill startups focusing on the social media or hiring problems.

Intellocut,  by Thredsol Software Private Limited, caters to the manufacturing industry and focuses on the niche of garments, upholstery and leather sectors. What they provide is a cutting room software which helps businesses to cut down on manual decision making in the factor’s cutting room to improve fabric usage, and reducing labor time.

The Delhi based startup was co-founded by Mausmi Ambastha, an expert in garment production and Manasij, the tech guy. Mausmi has been helping garment makers optimize their production in India and South East Asia for the last 7 years.

In any garment manufacturing unit, the largest share of the cost comes from the garment itself. Using Intellocut’s offering the duo have been able to reduce garment usage by 2-5%. It might not seem like a lot, but translates into million dollar savings for the huge factories in the real world.

Manasij points out that since they are in an entirely new domain they have to convince the enterprises over the effectiveness of their product. In simplest terms Intellocut finds the sweet spot between time and resources which go into the manufacturing process to have the optimum level of production. They typically begin by taking the client’s cutting room data for a given period and run it through their algorithms to show them how much more they could have saved on using Intellocut’s program. The savings vary but some organizations using their product boast of million dollar savings in cost in the form of reduced labor and fabric; and optimum utilization of resources.

The bootstrapped venture is a ten member team and has been active since the past two years. They offer their product in two major variants which include the on premises option which include the one time fees for the product along with options for annual maintenance, upgradation, license and a number of add-ons. The other model is the cloud based offering based on the Microsoft’s Azure. Out of the number of big label brands they have on board, Aditya Birla group’s Madura Garments which owns brands like Peter England and Allen Solly, stands out. They use Intellocut on their shop floors.

Watch Intellocut’s Demo at UnPluggd


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[Singapore] Become a NSZombie, Introduction to iOS

subh, iOS Dev ScoutBecome a NSZombie, Introduction to iOS

There’s no doubt the mobile is HUGE and will continue to grow rapidly in the next few years. Want to learn how to code an app like Evernote WITHOUT spending a ton of money? This class is for you.

In this hands-on tutorial based workshop, you will build a simple application while learning basic Objective-C and iOS App Programming concepts. You are strongly encouraged to bring a Mac laptop along.

Lunch will be provided at no additional charge. You will be redirected to a form after making payment on PayPal to tell us your dietary preferences and contact details.

By the end of the day, you will be able to create a simple note-taking app.

10:00 AM: Doors Open
10:30 AM: Introduction to Objective-C and Xcode 4.5
11:30 AM: 1st iOS App // hands-on
12:30 PM: Lunch
01:30 PM: M-V-C, Interface Builder & Navigations
02:30 PM: Create a navigation based app to display note titles and description // hands-on
03:30 PM: Break
03:45 PM: Table View Controller, Frameworks
04:45 PM: Customize Table View Cells, Share a note via Facebook or Email // hands-on
05:45 PM: Where to go from here.

For enrollment before 21st Feb, you will be entitled to an early bird discount. The class will cost S$15 instead of the usual S$25. This is a not-for-profit initiative. All fees will be donated to the iOS Dev Scout user-group fund.

About your instructor
Subh is one of the leaders behind the 800-members strong iOS group, iOS Dev Scout. He has been doing iOS application development since late 2008. Prior to diving into iOS development, he worked few years as a Linux and Ruby on Rails developer. He has worked on several iOS applications ranging from casual games to enterprise mobility apps. Among the notables he has built the Spongebob Tickler, MTV Music, Vevo, Golden Gate Park, iOS applications in 2009-2010. Golden Gate Park iOS app was one of the featured apps on AppStore for 2 months. For last 2 years he has been working for few multinational companies as an iOS Architect and helping them build enterprise mobility solutions for their airlines, insurance and automobile customers in South East Asia. One of his passions is to explore next generation mobile technologies like Augmented Reality and Voice Recognition.

Event details:

  • Start: Saturday, 2 March, 2013 10:00 a.m.
  • End: Saturday, 2 March, 2013 05:00 p.m.
  • Venue : Plug-In@Blk71, 71 Ayer Rajah Crescent, 139951 Singapore
  • Register here
  • Organizer : Learnemy

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Kakao Page launched as online marketplace for digital content

Kakao Page

Kakao Page is an online distribution platform where content creators can sell their music, videos, e-books and other digital content to Kakao Talk’s market of 70 million users.

Even with the popularity of free apps and content meant for desktops and mobile devices, e-commerce platforms are optimistic that there will be a market for paid content online. The makers of Kakao Talk have announced plans for such a content marketplace, and the company has recently launched Kakao Page.

Kakao Page targets the creative type, which includes artists, writers, musicians and other such individuals and groups. The platform can be used to sell and market songs, video and e-books to other users within the Kakao platform. Kakao CEO Brian Kim says Kakao Page is not just an online repository of digital content. “People upload content to places like the App Store and Google Play but the content doesn’t get any exposure. Kakao Page is a content distribution platform. Anyone can make content and Kakao Page puts it out there for everyone to see,” he said.

VentureSquare notes that the online platform might face a bit of a challenge at first, given the lack of free content. However, Kakao is optimistic it will reach its goal of 1 million profit-earning content creators within three years. The platform itself is free to access, although the company plans to take a percentage cut from content sales.

See also: KakaoTalk lets groups set events with new Schedule feature

The launch of these new platforms is testament to the idea that the South Korean Kakao Talk can actually find a good business model for its mobile messaging app. The network has since grown to 70 million users, and growth has been fueled by the addition of a gaming platform, as well as “Chatting Plus,” which enables game and app developers to integrate Kakao Talk into their apps and platforms.

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M-governance initiative : Shortcodes allotted for mobile governance purpose

To boost National e-Governance Plan (NeGP), Government of India earlier announced mobile governance framework that aims to enable mobile phone devices and applications for delivery of public information and services to citizens and businesses.

According to a circular released by Department of Information Technology (link/pdf), government is developing a cloud based Mobile Service Delivery Gateway (MSDG) service. Essentially, MSDG aims to put in place government’s wide shared infrastructure and services to enable rapid development, mainstreaming and deployment of  m-Governance services.

Key details of Indian government’s m-governance framework

  • Government has obtained short codes 51969 and 166 from Department of Telecommunications (DoT) for mobile-governance purposes.
  • Web sites of all Government Departments and Agencies shall be made mobile-compliant, using the “One Web” approach.
  • Open standards shall be adopted for mobile applications for ensuring the interoperability of applications across various operating systems and devices as per the Government Policy on Open Standards for e-Governance.
  • Uniform/ single pre-designated numbers (long and short codes) shall be used for mobile-based services to ensure convenience.
  • All Government Departments and Agencies shall develop and deploy mobile applications for providing all their public services through mobile devices to the extent feasible on the mobile platform. They shall also specify the service levels for such services.

MSDG will enhance interoperability across various  public services as well as reduce the total cost of operation of m-Governance services by providing a common pool of resources aggregating the demand for communication and e?Governance services, and act as a platform for various Government Departments and Agencies to test, rapidly deploy, and easily maintain m-Governance services across the country.

With inclusion of MSDG, Government eyes to ensure information and service available to every citizen, irrespective of the device or the browser they are using. This implies that all Government’s websites should be compliant with mobile devices to enable users of such devices to access the same information and services (to the extent possible) as available over the web.

The framework aims to create unique infrastructure as well as application development  ecosystem for m-Governance in the country. Earlier, government launched its “m-Governance” applications for Android and Java based phones through its app store (read: Indian government has an app store. We wish it was more). Currently,  the app store has nearly 26 live applications and 60 demo applications.

Recommended Read: Indian government to spend $6.9 bn on Technology in 2013.


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BizPhone integrates call data with Google Analytics, Manage callers and site visitors from a single dashboard

Cloud telephony service, Kookoo’s flagship product BizPhone has announced integration with Google Analytics, enabling customers to track/manage their website visitors as well as callers from a single dashboard. bizphone

Currently, this feature will be enabled on-demand to users’ BizPhone account and allows businesses to configure Google Analytics details directly in their BizPhone account. That way, they can observe and manage their web site visitors as well as callers from a single dashboard.

With this integration, BizPhone’s client will able to use advanced reporting features of Google Analytics and custom reports for tracking their complete business communications including who is visiting, and interacting with them in real time.

Launched in 2011 at UnPluggd event as Cloud based PBX service and later rebranded as BizPhone, the SaaS based service powers your phone as central piece for your business communications. BizPhone intercepts the call and routes it to the mobile phone of the employee at the selected extension and when an employee answers the calls, all the details get recorded in the system. Combined with the facility to tag calls, this provides a powerful way of providing context to a call.

Earlier in August 2012, BizPhone launched Android app (link) to help its client to manage their customer communication. For businesses, the app offers screenpops on mobile for accessing contextual information about callers including call tagging and default dialer on the phone.

Currently BizPhone offers subscription based monthly plans for enterprise (for large volume calls) and upto 1000 monthly call for SMEs.

Besides Android app, BizPhone also has a mobile version of website through which businesses can access all customer communication records on their mobile including call recordings and respond the customers directly over the phone.


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DailyDose: Apple paid out $8 bn to developers, up by a billion in a month & failing Yahoo- Microsoft search deal

DailyDose, your everyday technology brief is here. In today’s edition: Apple’s massive payout to developers. The failing Yahoo- Microsoft search deal. Obama’s plans to make education more tech focused and more.

Apple announces $8B paid out to developers, a jump of $1B in just one month: Apple CEO Tim Cook today announced that Apple had paid out $8B to developers, a number that displays an increase of $1B since the last time numbers were announced on January 7th. That displays a massive increase in acceleration for developer payouts. More here.

Marissa Mayer

Marissa Mayer

CEO Marissa Mayer Says Yahoo-Microsoft Search Deal Is Underperforming: Yahoo’s search deal with Microsoft is underperforming, CEO Marissa Mayer said during an appearance at the Goldman Sachs Technology and Internet Conference in San Francisco on Tuesday. Read More here.

Apple buying small companies every other month but constantly evaluating larger acquisitions. At the Goldman Sachs’ Technology and Internet Conference on Tuesday, Apple CEO Tim Cook pointed to the company’s “deliberate, thoughtful” mantra as a reason it doesn’t typically acquire large companies but admitted it’s not opposed to such purchases if the right one comes along. More here.

Obama Announces Plan To Make Education More Focused On Tech Skills: During the State of the Union, President Obama has announced a plan to make the American education system more focused on tech skills. More here.

Intel confirms its Internet TV launch this year, complete with set-top box and a camera. Erik Huggers, General Manager of Intel Media, has confirmed that the company is, in fact, working on providing television over the internet, and it plans to do so with new consumer hardware that Huggers described as something with “beautiful industrial design.” More here.

Silicon Valley and Immigrant Groups Find Common Cause. Silicon Valley executives, who have long pressed the government to provide more visas for foreign-born math and science brains, are joining forces with an array of immigration groups seeking comprehensive changes in the law. And as momentum builds in Washington for a broad revamping, the tech industry has more hope than ever that it will finally achieve its goal: the expanded access to visas that it says is critical to its own continued growth and that of the economy as a whole. More here.


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SME Venture debt financing company IntelleGrow raises under $2 mn from Michael & Susan Dell Foundation

IntellegrowMumbai based venture debt financing company IntelleGrow has raised little under $2 million form Michale & Susan Dell Foundation to finance small and medium social enterprises. The non banking finance company as so far disbursed 20 loans totaling about $3 mn to small and medium enterprises, according to the company.

IntelleGrow is promoted by Intellecap, a business solutions provider that helps sustainable enterprises.

A report last year by IFC and Intellecap showed that despite the key economic role small and medium enterprises play, contributing to nearly 22 % of the Gross Domestic Produce, over 37 % of the overall debt demand by SME’s cant be serviced by existing financial institutions.

The company said:

Most formal lenders typically engage in traditional collateral-based lending to enterprises operating in established industries and require at least three years of profitable track record. IntelleGrow provides viability-based debt financing to early-stage enterprises with a turnover of less than $10 mn and at least 12 months of track record. It provides customised financing solutions using flexible repayment schedules linked to cash flows.

Sanjib Jha, CEO of IntelleGrow said

Michael & Susan Dell Foundation’s investment would allow us to take the spirit of innovation that we inherited from our parent entity Intellecap and nurtured by the strong support of Shell Foundation to build an Rs 250 cr (~$ 50 mn) portfolio by 2015.


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Nokia cries foul over $ 2.5 bn tax demand by Indian authorities, calls it unacceptable

Nokia-logo-psd43421Finnish phonemaker Nokia Corp is crying foul after Indian tax authorities raided its offices in Chennai last month. On Tuesday, Nokia said that the tax raids are “excessive, unacceptable and inconsistent with Indian standards of fair play and governance,” reports The Wall Street Journal.

The Income Tax department is has reportedly laid claim to nearly $ 2.5 billion (Rs 13,000 cr) in tax money from Nokia, which has been struggling to pull its bottom line up. In the third quarter, Nokia reported a $754 million operating loss on a topline of $9.49 billion. Revenue officers have submitted an interim report on the Nokia case to the Government.

Taxmen had asked Nokia to cough up $ 500 mn in taxes and raided its Chennai facility last week.

The authorities suspect that the company has not paid tax in India for the software it runs on its mobile phones, a media report citing unnamed officials said. The phonemaker, counts India as one of its largest markets sells millions of handsets in the country which has over 900 million mobile phone subscriptions.

Earlier this month, while releasing the annual tax figures, Finance Minister P Chidambaram had stressed that revenue officers need to meet tax targets for 2012-13. With less than 2 months left for the year to come to a close, the government is likely to fall short of its tax revenue growth target. The government wanted to grow tax revenues this year by 27 %, however, for the first 10 months of the year, net direct tax collection which includes income tax and corporate tax, went up only 12.49 % year on year.

Other prominent cases in India

IBM India Private Limited

For the assessment year of 2008-09, Tax authorities have demanded IBM to pay up over $200 million dollar. The technology giant is fighting a legal battle in Karnataka High Court which recently asked IBM to deposit 50 % of the amount with the authorities before March 31. This case is likely to be escalated to higher courts.

Google India Private Limited
Google has been slapped with a $14.5 million penalty for alleged tax evasion for the year of 2008-09. The Tax department said that Google has misled the authorities by shifting profits that arise out of India to offshore tax havens like Netherlands and Ireland. More on that case here. Google has moved to the Income Tax appellate tribunal. The case is likely to end up in the courts.

Vodafone
Telecom major Vodafone was asked to pay more than Rs 14,000 cr in tax and interest for its acquisition of Hutchison Essar by the UK based company for $11 billion. The tax authorities contend that transactions involving Indian assets must be taxed in India.

The Supreme Court later ruled in favor of the IT department. In the previous budget, the government introduced a retrospective clause which made it mandatory for companies to pay tax on acquisitions involving Indian assets.

Following a massive outcry from the industry, a committee headed by Parthasarathi Shome, the director and CEO of Indian Council for Research on International Economic Relations (ICRIER)to examine the ammendment, said that retrospective tax demands must be waived off. The waiver was only on demands made in retrospect.

Others
Companies like Akamai Technologies, MSC Software Coropration, Microsoft and others are also entangled in various legal battles in different courts in the country.


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Mobilewalla raises $4 mn from early Amazon backer & IAN

Mobilewalla's architecture: Courtesy (pdf)

Mobilewalla’s architecture: Courtesy (pdf)

App search and discovery company Mobilewalla has raised $4 million in funding from Madrona Venture Group (an early Amazon investor) and the Indian Angel Network’s Venkat Raju, Google India head Rajan Anandan and Sharad Sharma along with Singapore government’s venture capital arm, according to a new report.

About a year ago, Mobilewalla pivoted from being an app search and discovery company to becoming an Analytics company, reports TechCrunch. The idea was to do analytics on mobile and social apps using public and private data. Earlier, Techcircle had reported the possibility of Mobilewalla raising another round.

The portal claims that it rates apps using more than 100 variables. Mobilewalla’s website seems to be undergoing maintenance at present.

The company, founded by Anindya Datta, an associate professor at the National University of Singapore had earlier co-founded Chutney Technologies which was sold to networking giant Cisco. Datta is a database systems scientist and had founded Chutney Technologies in 2000 to commercialize his research.

Recommended Read : Check out this paper written by Mobilewalla [here (pdf)] if you are interested in the nuts and bolts of app discovery challenge mobilewalla is trying to solve.


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8 Startup Lessons on Working with Big Brands

Simon is currently CEO at Frenzoo. He was previously APAC head of emerging technology at Juniper Networks. He is an angel investor in startups, and a writer on startups and gaming. Follow his blog or on Twitter.

handshake


“If you’re doing a startup, there’s an allure to big brand partnerships.”

You might think: close a deal in a couple months and then prestige, validation, press, growth, new opportunities, and lots more all await. “If I get this deal we’ll be up in bright lights.” Except it doesn’t usually work that way.

The reality is that it’s so hard getting a foot in the door, then signing a contract is grindingly tough. Next, getting a successful partnership that delivers real mutual value is the real challenge, and then you have to do all this without getting sidetracked and accidentally burning your precious funds.

Successes and failures

My startup has worked with a few large brands in the past year. One failed, draining precious cycles. A couple turned out much better, including a successful collaboration with media giant Condé Nast on the new game Teen Vogue Me Girl, launched after months of hard work.

Here are 8 of the startup lessons we learned:


Lesson #1 – Press is the icing, not the cake.


If your main goal is buzz that will lead to more downloads or users or revenue for your startup, brace for disappointment.

Even a mention in major media such as Wired translates to only a temporary spike – we’ve seen this happen. A friend even got a top-tier celeb to promote his new startup, resulting in far fewer returning users than he’d hoped.

We all remember glitzy press launches for projects that end up failing a year later. And those that rose to success without PR. Our new game got only a handful of media mentions but has still grown well despite that.

Whilst press can help for other reasons, such as fundraising, a partnership is a pretty risky and resource-grabbing way to try and achieve those goals.

Press is icing on the cake, rather than the cake itself.

Think about press as a great bonus – if you don’t get it, no worries, a solid project will still thrive without it.


Lesson #2 – Is your opportunity cost acceptable?


Doing any project with a mega co. is going to take more time than you expected. Much more time.

Our project took nearly 6 months to deliver, and that’s fast.

Big brands need multiple approvals with different stakeholders, reviews with marketing and legal, endless back and forwards on product etc.

If you’re a small startup and think you can create a new app for a big brand whilst maintaining momentum on your “main” business, think again.

You’ll need to either hire up, rework what you already have, or try to turn your tech into a platform. Or accept that this project; this will be your startup, and that your prior project will have to wait, perhaps forever.

Our project that failed in the end turned out as a good thing for us. Though the brand involved was famous and one that many would like to be associated with, it was turning into a large departure from our existing path (high opportunity cost) without enough strategic benefit.


Lesson #3 – Work with the right advocates


In a big company, it can be easy to find groups who may be interested and engage you in promising discussions that end up stalling.

Before committing lots of time with a group, some good questions to ask:

What is the group’s mandate and business goals?

  • Do they have budget?
  • Do they have buy in from the relevant business units?
  • Have they executed a similar project?
  • Who signs off on a potential project?
  • Do they have resources to commit to the project?

In our case, we found an innovation products group who had a track record of projects and getting buy in from the different Conde Nast brands, and brands willing to embrace a new project – which got it all started.


Lesson #4 – Define your scope up front


Whilst in lean startup land we work iteratively and adapt, doing this with a brand that changes scope every week is a recipe for chaos. Small innocent requests – “Oh, can we add a module to let the customer redeem coupons through the website as well as the app?” – can snowball quickly.

Though there are pros and cons, I think it’s better to agree a list of deliverables and put it in writing early.

But how do you get it “right” from the start?

A good way is to either adapt from something that is proven to work (we based the new game on a mechanic from our first game) or do the upfront customer development and planning work to make sure it has as high chance as possible at success. It’s a tricky balance.


Lesson #5 – Harness the supertanker


Big companies have processes, legacy systems, and move slowly; startups are lightweight speedboats, deciding and moving quickly. So what can you do?

The natural instinct may be to try and bend the big company to your way and pace of working. This will lead most likely to frustration. Yours.

Instead, adapt to their way of working, get the big supertanker pointed in the right direction, and let it power through.

For example, all our normal task planning is through Google Docs. On the other hand, our partner did planning through Excel spreadsheets and a project management system. After a while, we just ran with it, and made sure that all the things to make the project successful were included.

Once they were “locked in” the system, they just got carried through their usual process and got done. If you focus less on the “how” and more on the “what” you can make the big company ultimately work for you.


Lesson #6 – Get the term sheet in place early


Legal contracts are one of the least enjoyable things a startup CEO has to deal with (after emptying trash, and 4.00AM server down emergencies). Crawling through pages of minutia to spot potentially lethal gotchas doesn’t help make your app better.

And perhaps, like me, you suck at it.

I’ve found a couple of ways to lessen the pain:

  • First, get to a simple term sheet with the key points agreed up front, that can be signed off and act as the letter of intent. This should be no more than a few pages written in plain English. Once you have this in place, you can commit and focus on the project, and in parallel, take your time with the legals.

  • Get experienced mentors to help review the deal and legals. In my case with Frenzoo, I’m lucky to have a few angel investors who have plenty of experience in contracts, and act as sounding boards and sanity checks. It also helps to have a lawyer or two on your investor or advisor team. Pro tip: that’s a huge advantage for an early-stage startup.


Lesson #7 – Secure a budget


Startups think burn rate, but big companies think budgets and headcount. Are they going to contribute marketing to the project? Then what budget will be spent, by whom and where?

Are they going to be doing part of the work on the project? Then who is allocated and for what percent of their time?

Ensure your project has resources allocated. If not, ask nicely for them. If they are not sure, then request a good number and discuss from there. Having these in place rather than a “best effort” will increase the chance of making it a success.


Lesson #8 – Do your head and heart align?


Back when we were doing virtual worlds, we once did a collaboration with Weta. As a big fan of Lord of the Rings, King Kong, and stuff like that, I loved this deal!

We would collaborate on a contest to promote their Dr Grordbort’s steampunk sci-fi brand. The problem? Our audience, mainly women, weren’t into that genre. Despite it being well executed, it didn’t either make our service more sticky or drum up more buzz for their brand.

The lesson? At the end of the day, only go ahead with a partnership if it really makes sense at both emotional and business levels.

If head and heart line up, chances are it’s worth pursuing. Good luck!

What’s been your experience? I’d love to hear. Hit the comments or find me on Twitter.

The post 8 Startup Lessons on Working with Big Brands appeared first on Tech in Asia.


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