“There is a definite lack in the number of fundable ideas in the ecosystem. What we need is more incubation funds.”
I am not sure if that’s so. Fundable ideas, in most cases denotes a team that is mature enough and has the market valuation and the credibility to be looked seriously by a VC firm, not random thought processes that spew out of high school students.
I am even more not sure as to how more funds can help. We don’t need more funds. We need a way for most of the already existing funds to engage in a meaningful way in the life cycle of the entrepreneurship ecosystem.
For some reason, it feels that the stages that an entrepreneur goes through here in India, is in the best form, jerky. There are no proper transitions and the environment is still a little too harsh on young entrepreneurs to foster themselves in the wild. Though there are quite a few incubation centres across the country, very few of them have success stories in their pockets. Most of them are academic institutes, and they run to understand and gain experience – as an insight into the lifecycle of an entrepreneur – and in most cases, a helpless spectator when the startup hits some obvious mistakes along the way. It could have been avoided, if there was an experienced mentor at the helm. In most cases, that term is still so very underrated or a misnomer for a poor substitute of something else. That’s one of the major issues.
The main gap that i would point out is the transition that a startup makes from putting a team together and having their first prototype ready, and then getting to a point where a VC is ready to fund them. I do have a better perspective on this aspect of companies – about 200 of them, thanks to Proto, and I think there is a definite Gap here.
The biggest asset right now, in terms of valuation has become the team and the market/product positioning of the team. If both of these are there then the company, is relatively in very good terms. Considering that the market is yet maturing, and there are very few players offering products, most of these companies have yet to decipher the art of market capturing and all, but for now, it is not a much critical skill. Alliances with the media – because of the spurge and growth in that sector – makes getting a slot much easier and joint advertisement campaigns arent that tough as they are in more matured, saturated markets.
Let me put it this way: If a team and product positioning is what is crucial, and i believe it is, most of the companies that do come to Protohave that. Or they have that within a timeline of about 6 months. What does it take, to take that company from there, to a point where a full-fledged VC firm could sit down and work out their financials? That’s the gap, I am talking about. There is absolutely no one as of now – except for the likes of Mentor Partners, and a few other firms who are looking at such a niche gap.
I personally think there should be more of those.
I hear talks of Angel investment funds trying to setup incubation centres and a couple of VC firms wanting to establish incubation centres or linkages with incubation centres to get their creme de la crop. I am not sure if thats the best strategy to go about. Spot potential and nurture it. We cant get into this vicious game of spotting the one in a million anamoly and positioning ourselves to pounce on it at first sight. There is a responsibility for a lot of VC firms, to invest in this gap, and do something about it.
I do have some thoughts. Actually, quite a few long nights of being awake and scribbling have gone into it. In the true style of a blog, and what the comments section is meant for, we shall discuss it there, as the occasion arises.
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Yup Alok,
But the gap is much wider in India. The distance you have to go to prove your plan is much longer here.
It may be just me and my bplan but …
I maxed out my credit cards and savings some long time back. Still have to request HP response centre and other big companies to lend servers for testing.
We had to go to enterprise customers and convince them to try the product, and they very well knew about our size and stage.
Alok, unfortunately stats show otherwise. You must have seen the report below which clearly shows what’s missing in the Indian ecosystem – early/seed stage capital.
http://aparc.stanford.edu/publications/accessing_earlystage_risk_capital_in_india/
Arun, even in US, VCs dont provide the first money as a practice – its largely driven by personal savings, friends and family. The fact that early founders and employees (core team) are willing to work on close to zero salary for that duration helps minimize the burn in that period. As far as I know, incubators have not been very successful in bridging that gap. Angel investors have been more successful, in part due to the fact that angels tend to invest in areas they understand well and are willing to spend time in addition to money.
The interesting part is that, at least on the internet, the amount of money required to get to seed level is reducing dramatically. Sometimes, I do get a feeling that in India, companies are tending to spend more money at seed level *on an absolute basis* compared to similar companies in US.
The Gap is…. how many VC funds would take the risk of funding a garage stage startup. A lot of great ideas die at this stage ….what is neded is a support system which can help startups grow from garage to a seed level.
So, I am not sure what is the gap one is referring to… “Seemingly great teams and great ideas not finding money”? I have heard equally vocal opinions that “substandard ideas are getting money”… and I have heard both those not just in India, but in US as well. It is, then, a question of judgment and perspectives. Which is incidentally, a huge part of the VC evaluation process. Secondly, it is a question of whether there are VCs available, who collectively, understand all the interesting spaces well (its hard to invest in an area one doesn’t understand well). In all, the number and diversity of VCs is what must increase if we expect to see more and more diverse investments to happen. In my view, the Indian market is very nascent in that respect. I also believe that there is too little money in the Indian market – not in the sense that every fund should double up, but that more and more funds coming in will help build this diversity.
Jaspreet, congratulations on closing your investment round – just got to know of it yesterday, good job!
Vikas, its actually not very hard not to hang around forums like venturewoods, if that is what you are recommending above. Wonder why you wouldn’t follow your own recommendation – only to get link-ins?!