Startup Scene in India 40,000 startups STATS In India, 7,200 - - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
Startup Scene in India 40,000 startups STATS In India, 7,200 - - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
Startup Scene in India 40,000 startups STATS In India, 7,200 startups emerged in 2018. 108% Growth in total funding From $2 billion in 2017 to $4.2 billion in 2018. 120% funding growth for AI startups $150 million investments made in
STATS
From $2 billion in 2017 to $4.2 billion in 2018.
108% Growth in total funding
$150 million investments made in this field in 2018.
120% funding growth for AI startups
In India, 7,200 startups emerged in 2018.
40,000 startups
STATS
Post 2017, investment into startups has increased by
- ver 100 per cent, from $2.03
billion in 2017 to $4.2 billion in 2018. The Chinese have invested majorly in the
- ecommerce. $200 million round investment in
Paytm Mall from Alibaba and SAIF Partners (2017). The biggest, was the $1.4 billion that Tencent, Microsoft and eBay put into Flipkart (also 2017). The seed stage funding of Indian has declined from $191 million in 2017 to $151 million in 2018.
STATS
Startups with a woman founder or co- founder between January and September 2018 comprised 5.2% of the $9.14 billion raised in overall funding, but is more when compared to 2% in 2017. 45% of the freelancers were being hired by startups/SMEs in 2016-17. The trend has changed in 2018-19 by 42% of them working for consulting firms. An increment from 17% to 39% has been noticed in the
- nes working for large corporate/MNCs.
STATS
In 2018, Bengaluru tops the charts with 68 deals and around $920 million in funding (In 2017 Bengaluru saw 55 deals worth around $358 million). Delhi-NCR follows with 45 deals and value of around $532 million (with 58 deals and $376 million funding in 2018 during the same quarter).Mumbai was the third. While, Pune and Chennai followed. $33.62 BILLION that’s how much investors have poured into the Indian startup ecosystem since 2014.
FAILED INDIAN STARTUPS IN 2018
eBAY
The abeyance of ebay was a part of a business strategy and not a breakdown as stated by the officials. After its possession of Baazee.com for $50million ebay was launched in 2005, though terminated soon in the August of 2018.
eBAY
The US-based company failed to set its foot in the market over its competitors like Flipkart, Snapdeal and ShopClues in India. Impotent to outcast its competitors Ebay sold its business to Flipkart for $150 million.
eBAY
Epitomizing its business it bought its adversary Flipkart for a cost of $514 million with 5.4% stake and continue in the Indian retail pool. Previously it intend to make a profit of $ 1.1 billion by selling its share in the future.
eBAY
But later when Flipkart decided to shut down eBay.in, with plans to launch its own platform to sell refurbished goods. Ebay decided to end its crucial partnership and focus on cross- border trade.
COINSECURE
A reason for Coinsecure’s rapid growth was its strong services when compared to the other cryptocurrency exchange companies. The company offered a strong elucidate to provide security to prevent forgery or hacking in the company.
COINSECURE
Coinsecure was shutdown after a case of hacking on 9th April,2018. It led to a loss of over BTC 438 worth $3.3 million to the company. Its chief security officer, Amitabh Saxena, was suspected for the international theft . The CEO, Kalra requested to seize his passport.
COINSECURE
If the stolen funds are not restored the company is likely to witness bankruptcy..
ZEBPAY
Another cryptocurrency exchange and trading startup with zero trading fee Zebpay India set its foot in 2014 in India. It announced the closure of all its activities after 5 months of RBI’s unsympathetic statement in April 2018, which prohibited the trade of cryptocurrency exchange with finance companies and banks.
ZEBPAY
Tight regulatory supervision in India is forcing multiple cryptocurrency exchanges like Coinsecure, BTCXIndia, MoneyTrade, Bitconnect to close their ventures in 2018 after appealing again the order of Supreme Court.
ZEBPAY
“However, the recent past has been extremely difficult. The curb on bank accounts has crippled our, and our customer's, ability to transact business
- meaningfully. At this point, we are unable
to find a reasonable way to conduct the cryptocurrency exchange business,“ the company said in a blog.
ZEBPAY
"You are free to deposit and withdraw coins/tokens into your wallet," it added. The company claimed to have the largest crypto users in India before its closure is now trading internationally in 130 countries excluding India with its headquarters in Singapore.
OFO
Ofo, the Beijing based bicycle rental company started in 2014. It expanded its business to India in 2017, but soon terminated after a stretch of 7 months. The Alibaba-backed bike-sharing service received $866 million from Alibaba Group in March 2018, but failed to continue its India operations.
OFO
According to a statement by Rajarshi Sahai Director, Public Policy and Communications, Ofo it completed 1 million rides across 7 cities in only 10 weeks. As per their marketing strategy , though India had huge potential in the rental bike segment but compared to their international expansion it was not a profitable market.
OFO
"We are shutting down our country
- peration. It is part of a global strategy to
shrink the footprint,“ he added. From internal sources of media it was said that Ofo is witnessing immense cash flow pressure which is leading to its closure in the unprofitable countries.
OFO
From internal sources of media it was said that Ofo is witnessing immense cash flow pressure which is leading to its closure in the unprofitable countries.
OFO
There have been multiple talks and guessworks about the company being hijacked by capital. An Ofo spokesperson put the predictions to rest by saying that the company’s rapid expansion in the last year gave it a better understanding of its international business. And this is why they started focusing on profitable markets.
MONKEYBOX
Like a majority of Indian startups Monkeybox, a consumer service company started in Bengaluru with partnership of Sanjay Rao and Sandeep Kannambadi in 2005. The company turned up with a concept
- f supplying nutritious vegetarian meal to
school students and claimed to have 6k subscribers.
MONKEYBOX
Monkeybox successfully acquired cold- pressed juice manufacturer and delivery firm RawKing and 75 In A Box, a corporate-focused healthy food delivery company. It also has raised funding of more than $2 million from investors such as NB Ventures, Nspira and Blume. Its shutdown was abrupt in allusion to its constantly expanding business.
MONKEYBOX
The company announced its shutdown and stated that the startup was unable to fulfill its promise to provide healthy meal to the kids due to constraints on their end and will work on new strategies before resuming the service. They terminated their operation on 23 March, 2018.
MONKEYBOX
Bharat Balachandran and Sahil Saini’s Mumbai based company Just buy live was launched in 2015. It offered a platform to Small and medium shopkeepers to directly buy from brands. The e-distributor came up with profitable business strategies for their clientele. They offered unsecured credit lending and working capital to let them buy branded products in all categories.
MONKEYBOX
The shutdown of the startup was sudden and no official statements were made. Until as per TechCircle Bharat Balachndran was approached, who stated that the company has only temporarily suspended its business and is awaiting fresh funding to resume it.
MONKEYBOX
The company raised $20 million and $100 million in Series A and Series B funding from Alpha Capital and Ali Investment Cloud which was claimed to be insufficient! The negative cash flow and distorted business model traced it’s failure.
MrNeeds
Another player in the startups which was doing well, but left soon was MrNeeds. The Noida based endeavor started in 2006 by the young entrepreneurs Hitashi Garg, Ravi Wadhwa, Ravi Verma and Yogesh Garg.
MrNeeds
It started with milk delivery service and later added bread, eggs, groceries and
- ther daily essentials to the list.
It claimed to serve more than 10 k households in Noida and parts of Delhi.
MrNeeds
No official statements were made by the
- wners to disclose the reason for its
shutdown. Despite being a tough competitor its failure to prevail over established enterprises like BigBasket and DailyNinja has been speculated as the reason behind its closure.
PORTDESK
Another case of a sudden shutdown, the startup started in 2014, from its Noida Headquarters. PortDesk dealt in offering e-portal software.
PORTDESK
PortDesk offered merchant vessels a single platform to manage all port- related costs through a proprietary port cost management system. In 2017, the company got a boost when it raised a seed investment. Alphard Maritime Group, a Singapore-based maritime services company, invested $2million in PortDesk.
PORTDESK
Startlingly, the company collapsed one year post its big lift-up in the early months of 2018. The founder did not announced any speculation behind the big step. But according to TechCircle, they received a message from the direct communicator that Portdesk had suspended operations.
CONTENTMART
The Gurugram based startup was successful in making a mark in the
- market. Though it collapsed after 3
successful years. Contentmart built India’s first content marketplace. Connecting 16,000 freelance content writers and 20,000 clients in less than a year in its initial stages it created its own market.
CONTENTMART
In addition to its services, it also provided translation services in more than 20 languages around the world. The Corporate strategy of Contentmart led to its failure. It failed to generate revenues to sustain the operations.
CONTENTMART
It announced its shutdown in the August
- f 2018. Though in interest of its
customers it continued provide its services offline.
TAZZO
Another startup from Bengluru, Tazzo
- ffered bikes for commuting.
The company launched its operation in January 2016. The co founders of Tazzo were Priyam Saraswat, Shivangi Shrivastava, Priyank Suthar and Vikrant Gosain .
TAZZO
The services was available online and
- ffline and was secured with the GPS
integrated bikes to keep a track of time as well. The rates were INR 5 per/km and conveyed the impressions of a successful business model.
TAZZO
The company raised a funding of $225k from DSG Consumer Partners in October 2016, but failed to add up as a profitable business model after a hefty investment. As stated by Deepak Shahdapuri, MD
- f DSG Consumer Partners, this was the
reason behind its failure. Its Co-founder, Priyam Saraswat said that the imbalance between the two parties also turned into a reason behind its closure
Shotang
The Bengaluru based startup Shotang emerged in 2013 by Anter Virk, and Anish Basu Roy. The concept was to offer a B2B marketplace for retailers, distributors and manufacturers.
Shotang
It offered services to transact online and catered to mobile and apparel
- categories. The transactions were
commissioned which was the interest of the startup. It punched the clock as a tough competitor when was heavily funded by $6.2 million in funding from investors like Patamer Capital and Exfinity Venture
- Partners. But the funds went into paying
debts.
Shotang
At the time before its closure it’s market valuation was $40 million. In an official statement the CEO Dinesh Agarwal said, “The decrease in sales and the effect of demonetization on the company are some of the reasons for the company’s shutdown.’’
BabyBerry
BabyBerry was a health tech online startup which provide new-age parents with content on parenting and helped them to take best care of their child. The Bengaluru based BabyBerry was lofted in 2014 by Bala Venkatachalam, Dev Vig and Subhashini Subramaniam.
BabyBerry
In February 2016, the company raised $1 million from industrialist Nitin Bangmane and a few undisclosed investors. Based on the company’s financial statement it had no revenue model.
BabyBerry
In the childcare marketplace many companies including BabyOnBOard, BabyDesitination, The Moms Co. came into view and brought BabyBerry to naught. Its obstruction was sudden and no inputs came from the company. Until in a statement to TechCircle Bala Venkatachalam said “We will look into the issue, identify it and get back to you.” Their comeback is still a mystery.
THIS MEANS YOU LOVE THESE KIND OF STUFFS, FOR MORE INTERESTING ENTREPRENEURIAL STORIES, RESOURCES AND ADVICE VISIT OUR WEBSITE www.LessonsAtStartup.com
WoW!!! You've made it this far
www.LessonsAtStartup.com