flipkart

Thursday, 21 January 2016

Startup News...

Indian startups at risk as global investors close taps, Modi fund falls short???

 

 



After pumping billions of dollars into internet start-ups in the last 24 months, global investors are cutting that flood back a trickle as dreams of huge online sales are clouded by soaring valuations and still-distant profits.

Even as Prime Minister Narendra Modi lines up a four-year, $1.5 billion government fund to help startups create jobs, entrepreneurs fear that may prove a drop in the ocean. Venture capitalists have already tightened purse strings as ripples from China's economic slowdown lap around the world.

According to a new report by CB Insights and KPMG, venture capital investments in India's start-ups nearly halved to $1.5 billion in fourth-quarter 2015 from July-September. Faltering start-ups could mean India missing out on huge potential: Bank of America Merrill Lynch has forecast Indian e-commerce will surge to $220 billion by 2025 from about $11 billion last year.

"While the first phase of funding was about investing in big markets...now investors want to look at how entrepreneurs manage their business and compete while investing," said Niren Shah, India head of Norwest Venture Partners, said.

Modi's plan for newly launched companies includes tax breaks on their first three years of profits, as well as their investors.

But most of tech startups make losses, not profits. They follow a discount-driven business model aimed at generating revenue from customers that buy and sell goods and services, touting growth in 'gross merchandise value' on their platforms as a metric to attract funding.

Two of the country's best known e-commerce retailers - Flipkart and Snapdeal - have attracted big-name backers like Accel Partners, Singapore state investor Temasek Holdings and Japan's SoftBank Group Corp, enthused by growth potential in a country where only 252 million of a population of 1.3 billion people have Internet access.

Yet the pair have notched up huge losses as they compete for increasing sales through deep discounts, according to banking and industry sources. Flipkart and Snapdeal did not immediately respond to Reuters' emails seeking comment.

"In the last few years, people were looking at gross merchandise value (when considering investment)," said Radhika Aggarwal, co-founder and chief business officer of online marketplace Shopclues.com. "I think that changed very quickly in the second half of last year."

Shopclues.com raised funds last week from investors including Singapore sovereign wealth fund GIC and Tiger Global that valued the firm at more than $1.1 billion - helped by detailing plans to hit profitability by the first half of next year, Aggarwal said.

In early warning signs for the start-up industry, firms from food delivery companies TinyOwl and Foodpanda to SoftBank-backed property firm Housing.com have either cut jobs or shrunk their services. At TinyOwl, last November around 20 employees even held their boss hostage for two days after it announced job cuts.

"We are in the middle of this funding winter and global issues such as a slowdown in China could likely have a bigger impact this year," said Vijay Shekhar Sharma, founder of mobile wallet Paytm, backed by Alibaba Group Holding Ltd.

Together, Infosys and Wipro have spent over $50 million in picking up stakes in startups over the last year or so, as most of India's leading software exporters look to make futuristic bets in disruptive technologies and partner with startups to fill gaps in their own repertoire.

Together, Infosys and Wipro have spent over $50 million in picking up stakes in startups over the last year or so, as most of India's leading software exporters look to make futuristic bets in disruptive technologies and partner with startups to fill gaps in their own repertoire.

"The way these startups are being directly pitched to clients — they are like the crown jewels in a large deal where these IT services firms are trying to impress a customer," said an executive at a large ventu ..

Sunday, 17 January 2016

Big Boostup For Indian Startups......

Historic Startup Action Plan....




Prime Minister Narendra Modi launched a number of initiatives on Saturday to support the country's start-ups, including a 100 billion rupee ($1.5 billion) fund and a string of tax breaks for both the companies and their investors.
India, which already has a handful of new generation success stories, is seeking to encourage more cutting edge technology and other start-ups - supporting new businesses in a country which badly needs to accelerate a still sluggish economic recovery and create millions of jobs as the workforce expands.
Modi's high-profile event in New Delhi - attended by hundreds of investors and entrepreneurs, including the founder of taxi-hailing app Uber, Travis Kalanick - promised a shot in the arm for the sector, with exemptions from tax and compliance inspections for three years.
"I urge all entrepreneurs to create companies that solve India's problems and create jobs," he told a packed auditorium in New Delhi, speaking in Hindi.
"Start-up does not mean a billion dollar company where thousands of people work. It is about employing even 5 people, and developing India."
Online companies such as e-commerce marketplaces Flipkart and Snapdeal, along with ride-sharing company Ola, have highlighted the potential for home-grown technology successes in a country best known for capitalising on cheap engineering talent as the world's back office.
However, the push by Modi's government is the first time Indian policymakers have announced a set of policies directly aimed at promoting start-ups and entrepreneurship.
Modi said on Saturday start-up companies would benefit from cheaper and faster patent applications, enjoying 80 percent rebates on the cost of patents. A mobile app would allow companies to be set up within a day, he promised.
Moreover, they will be exempt from income tax for the first three years in which they make a profit. Their investors could also benefit: recognised funds of funds could see exemptions from capital gains tax, Modi said.
The announcements, at a government-organised conference on start-ups in New Delhi, comes months after Modi made a whirlwind tour of Silicon Valley, meeting the chief executives of Facebook Inc, Google Inc and Apple Inc.
India, with a rapidly expanding population of Internet users, is seen as one of the world's fastest growing start-up hotspots. Venture capital funds including Sequoia and Tiger Global have raised multi-billion dollar funds for their Indian investments in recent years.

Here are top points in startup action plan

1) No Income Tax for 3 years
Start-ups will be exempted from paying income tax on their income for the first 3 years.

2) No Capital Gains Tax

Capital gain tax exemptions will be provided to startups.

3)Faster patent registration
PM announced simplifying IPR (Intellectual Property Regime) for start-ups and 80% reduction in patent fees. There will be a panel of legal facilitators for startups to file IP (patents, designs, trademarks), and all the costs will be borne by the government.

4) Easier government procurement policy


5) Clear Exit policy
Startups will be able to exit within 90 days as per the provisions already tabled in the Parliament via the new bankruptcy bill.

6) New Rs 10,000 cr dedicated fund

It will start with 2,500 crore and a dedicated fund of Rs 10,000 crore will be created for funding of start-ups.

7) Credit guarantee scheme

Credit guarantee scheme will be introduced for start-ups in the next 4 years, funds of around 500 crores will be given every year

8) No inspection of startups for 3 years

No inspection for 3 years of start-up businesses in respect of labour, environment law compliance post self-certification. Thereafter, they will get exemption on the basis of their experience and turnover.

9) Compliance regime based on self-certification and One-page registration form

One page registration form can be available on smartphone via an app. Mobile app will be launched on April 1. Registration of startup company can be done in one day!

10) New innovation centres will come up
Atal Innovation mission will give encouragement to state-of-the-art innovation centres. 31 innovation centres at national institutes, 7 new research parks like IIT-M and 5 new bio-clusters will come up.

11) New women entrepreneur-centric policies
New women entrepreneur centric policies will be announced to promote more and more women in setting up businesses.

Monday, 11 January 2016

Health Care Startups....

Here are some Health Care Startups to watch for......

 

 

Pratco:
Offering a suite of CRM, practice management and marketing tools, Practo’s platform offers doctors new ways to highlight their practice, reach target patients and increase revenue by offering online consultations. Attacking issues of visibility and growth from the ground up, Practo not only brings users to points-of-care more efficiently, but its tools allow clinics to run like businesses so doctors can focus on healing patients.
Founded: 2008
Founders: Abhinav Lal & Shashank ND
Category: Care Delivery & Management
Funding: $124 million.


Protea: 
Addressing the lack of accessible healthcare, Portea has designed an in-home healthcare program for those suffering from acute and chronic illnesses. Post-op patients can have doctors, specialists or physical therapists visit their homes along with transportable, reliable equipment.
Founded: Unknown
Founders: Manjusha Anumolu, Ganesh Krishnan & Meena Ganesh
Category: Care Delivery
Funding: $46.5 million


Lybrate:
The Lybrate platform addresses care accessibility through telemedicine and transparency. Users can choose from over 80,000 vetted doctors, see the fee amount up front and pay for a live consultation saving as much as 70% in time and other expenses.
Founded: 2013
Founders: Saurabh Arora
Category: Care Delivery
Funding: $11.4 million


Docengage:
Designed for scalable clinic growth and management, the DocEngage platform standardizes procedures across affiliate clinics, helps users assess inventories across locations to better manage resources, integrates additional sources of revenue through upselling and provides a high level of engagement for patients through membership and loyalty programs without straining clinics’ resources.
Founded: 2013
Founders: Asha Satapathy & Ahimanikya Satapathy
Category: Management


Livehealth:
The LiveHealth platform pulls and aggregates patients’ medical/health records, data, doctors’ reports and test results storing them securely for constant and convenient access. The provider portal has CRM features and practice management tools to make offices more efficient, enabling doctors to spend more face time with patients.
Founded: 2013
Founders: Sanket Savia, Abhimanyu Bhosale & Mukund Malani
Category: Care Delivery & Management






 

Wednesday, 6 January 2016

Grocery Startup......

 India's Most Funded Startup Grofers Shutdown Its Operations In 9 Cities.....

 

 


Here's another sign of tough times country's startup industry is going through. Hyperlocal grocery startup Grofers is reportedly shutting down its operations in nine cities.

According to reports, the Gurgaon-based company will no longer deliver in the following cities: Bhopal, Bhubaneswar, Coimbatore, Kochi, Ludhiana, Mysuru, Nashik, Rajkot and Visakhapatnam. 

In October 2015, the company halted operations in certain parts of Delhi NCR due to operational issues after employees in Noida stopped working based on layoff speculations.

Recently, Varun Khurana, chief technology officer (CTO) of Grofers India had resigned from the company, barely a month after the venture closed a mammoth $120 million (Rs 800 crore) round of funding.  

According to Grofers they now operates there services in 17 cities - Agra, Ahemdabad, Benagaluru, Chennai, Chandigarh, Hyderabad, Indore, Jaipur, Kanpur, Lucknow, Kolkata, Mumbai, Nagpur, Pune, Delhi, Vadodara and Surat.

Grofers reportedly withdrew there services from 9 cities as it didn't see much output even after massive marketing campaigns and all the employees in these cities were relocated to other centers.

Sunday, 3 January 2016

Celebs Into Startups......

Here Are Some Celebrities Who Backed Startups In 2015....

 



Yuvraj Singh
Indian cricketer Yuvraj Singh launched YouWeCan Ventures, which invested in various players this year including Vyomo, Moovo, Healthians, EduKart, JetSetGo, Cartisan, Sports365, SportyBeans, Carl’s Jr, Black White Orange Brands and Intelligent Interfaces.

Sanjeev Kapoor
Chef Sanjeev Kapoor had participated in a $2-million funding round of ZuperMeal, a mobile based food aggregator that provides authentic home-cooked meals. Other investors who participated in the round are Ravi Saxena, Co-Founder of kitchen appliance maker Wonderchef and two foreign partners.


Akshay Kumar, Raj Kundra
Indian actor Akshay Kumar and businessman Raj Kundra have launched a home shopping channel named Best Deal TV which specialises in the sale of consumer products.

Salman Khan
Bollywood actor Salman Khan has launched an ecommerce website KhanMarketOnline. However, it is still undisclosed that what khanMarketOnline will offer to its customers. Salman is also an investor in OTA firm Yatra. After launching its clothing brand called ‘Being Human’, this will be the second venture for the actor.

Gul Panag
An actress, social activist and former Miss India, Gul Panag had launched a mobile fitness startup, MobieFit  in Goa in May 2015. One week back, the startup has raised $1M in strategic investment from Bangalore-based Medi Assist.