China Daily (Hong Kong)

Chinese startups, investors looking at India

- By SIVA SANKAR siva@chinadaily.com.cn

India is now an important startup destinatio­n, and even small and medium-sized Chinese enterprise­s, venture capital firms and angel investors are eyeing it, and seeking local insights, experts said at an entreprene­urship forum in Beijing on Tuesday.

The event, which focused on topics like what kind of Chinese startup ideas can succeed in India, was organized by Google-backed Startup Grind, the world’s largest startup community that educates and connects 1.5 million entreprene­urs in more than 365 cities in 115 countries.

Chinese investors and startups with relevant products and services should consider expanding into India, said Kunal Shah, a serial entreprene­ur best known as founder of the Freecharge app, which was bought for $400 million in 2015.

The time has come for founding cross-border startups that can serve the two markets of China and India, said Prateek Sharma, who oversees Sequoia Capital’s early stage investment­s in firms in the consumer internet and educationa­l technology sectors.

While mass-sharing apps are popular, there are cultural nuances behind why food delivery and livestream­ing apps have not taken off in India as they have in China. Voice-driven searches and “how-to” content are likely to see bright prospects in India, experts said.

They highlighte­d the lessons that can be drawn from both the failure of WeChat, which commands nearly 1 billion users in China, to outcompete messaging and content apps such as WhatsApp and Hike in the Indian market, and the early success of the Alibaba-backed UC internet browser.

Chinese entities can make the most of the ongoing digitaliza­tion drive in India that is creating digital IDs for more than 1 billion people, thereby spawning tremendous opporgigan­tic

tunities for online services. Also, the plummeting cost of access to 4G mobile data is a big game-changer, Sharma said.

Indian startup founders are evolving into broad-minded thinkers with can-do spirit, and are picky about investors. They are open to partnering with Chinese investors, who tend to back quality ventures but drive hard bargains for startup stakes, Shah said.

Chinese investors’ expertise in ensuring the startups they fund are productive is highly valued in India, more so because young Indian entreprene­urs are not “dam-builders but river-detectors” and

travel a lot to learn from startup ecosystems in markets like China, he said. “I hire 15 interns in China just to understand the local nuances.”

Chinese startups can teach a thing or two to their Indian counterpar­ts about being data or fact-driven, and in process and knowledge management, Sharma said.

Prakhar, an informal investor scout in China for Indian startups, said Chinese investors are no longer fixated on funding startups in the ASEAN region, Europe and North America, but are serious about investing in India.

Hanson Hu, an associate at Morningsid­e Venture Capital, which has invested in successful Indian startup, said: “We haven’t experience­d any troubles like slow bureaucrac­y. The going so far has been smooth and promising. It’s fun to work with Indian startup founders.”

Shah said: “Entreprene­urship isn’t about hiring a co-working space, networking and having chilled beer. It’s about being opportunis­tic and understand­ing consumer behavior. It’s about using technology to enable the motivation to do something. In this respect, Chinese investors can share their phenomenal experience­s with Indian startups.”

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