Had fun doing a live video yesterday. Appreciate e27 and their audience.
I could talk for an hour – might have to do a session of my own and see if people join it.
Anyone interested in a live ask SeedPlus video? Leave comments.
radical candour from a deep generalist
Had fun doing a live video yesterday. Appreciate e27 and their audience.
I could talk for an hour – might have to do a session of my own and see if people join it.
Anyone interested in a live ask SeedPlus video? Leave comments.
Ran into these guys last night :: http://www.thefrenchcellar.sg/
Great idea. Good French wines delivered at home each month for a decent price.
Love it. Thought I would give it a whirl.
You can use my referral code to get the 79 SGD a month deal :: http://thefrenchcellar.refr.cc/RFWQP4F
Enjoy.
I’ll be fielding questions and hopefully we can take some live as well.
Enjoy your coffee
Another Mumbrella post about HOOQ :: http://www.mumbrella.asia/2016/11/hooq-to-launch-in-singapore-in-january/
I have, obviously, talked about this before :: http://www.nokpis.com/2016/11/08/growing-pains-comical-excuse-for-the-truth/
A couple of things in the new post that are interesting. It seems the CXO churn is starting to hurt a little bit and HOOQ is now deciding to try and comment on it some. I think Krishnan is actually being pretty honest here:
Rajagopalan conceded: “We’ve had our share of churn.”
“It’s been combination of what’s natural for a startup, and the unique context of Hooq as a brand. It’s a startup that has deep-pocketed investors who have certain expectations. That has contributed to churn in certain ways, as has different personalities that have joined us.”
High churn has meant that Hooq has taken longer than previously to bring in new people.
“We’ve been careful about replacing the CXO suite. This time we want to make sure have the right people in place,” said Rajagopalan, who said that Hooq staff needed to be comfortable in both a startup and corporate environment.
I think the issue with HOOQ is that people go there expecting it to be like a startup. Unfortunately it is nothing like a startup except for the fact that it is a new company. What happens is employees, like myself, join expecting to work in a place similar to a startup but not knowing that there are three shareholders that are nothing like a startup. All that is okay but HOOQ is essentially just a mini video arm of Singtel and we all know Singtel is not a startup. This culture clash has probably been the major driver of churn across the CXO suite and into many of the other groups at HOOQ. Such is life.
It is also smart that they are being careful about how to replace the CXO team with folks who understand what they are signing up for.
Then this:
He pointed to Singtel’s acquisition of marketing business Amobee, which the telco acquired in 2012, as an example of another company that took a while to settle in to corporate life with the telco giant.
Hard to know from the outside how Amobee is doing. It may take years to know how it all went.
https://adexchanger.com/publishers/amobee-sunsets-ssp-lays-off-around-5-employees/
Lots of ad exchanges are struggling so the layoffs might be needed to compete globally. It is a tough space for sure.
As to HOOQ entering Singapore – this part I am baffled by. I have a hard time understanding how a product that makes sense for the emerging markets, Singapore is NOT an emerging market, would do well in Singapore.
However I think this is actually more akin to what HOOQ is becoming. Just a video product for Singtel to use in their network. Potentially that is the future of HOOQ – as a subsidiary of Singtel, yes it is JV but run like a subsidiary, to be the video product for the Singtel network. This might be a great business – who knows yet. However it means competitors like iFlix are starting to run in a league of their own as they move to be in all emerging countries regardless of their telco partnerships.
This then points to a larger debate to have. Is the OTT market in emerging markets going to be won by a large player cutting across many regions? Will the Netflix/Amazon’s of the world slowly be the global player? Or will a company like HOOQ, focused on servicing their telco parent, be the model? I don’t know.
I wouldn’t profess to see the future but I tend to think that a proper startup might have a better chance but at the same time the global players will probably have the best tech and the best content. However the telcos in Asia are quite powerful.
Let the games begin.
Just saw this today :: http://www.mumbrella.asia/2016/11/hooq/
Senior staff churn at Hooq put down to startup growing pains as OTT firm parts ways with CSO
What does parts ways mean anyway? I won’t get into that line but man the spin machines are running on high speed today.
Startup spends lots of money recruiting good talent.
CMO from Flipkart
CTO from Spuul (okay not a big name)
CSO from NatureBox and Netflix.
CFO from Electronic Arts.
CTO gone. CFO gone. CSO gone.
See a pattern here?
Lots of middle management and worker bees gone as well. Lots.
I myself have never seen churn like this and it is not about being a startup.
Sad. It could have been much more.
New promo video out today.
Use my promo code if you so desire :: SMITTY25
Wrote this earlier today :: http://www.nokpis.com/2016/11/03/interesting-times/
I always watch the Prof Galloway winners and losers video weekly, you should to.
The latest is here :: https://www.l2inc.com/video/scott-galloway-att-vs-the-hot-girls
And guess who is in it! Singapore’s very own Pie!
Alibaba buys Lazada.
Amazon supposedly tried to buy Redmart. For the record – I would have took that deal.
Now Lazada buys Redmart. I don’t know the deal specifics but clearly this was not a sale from a position of strength. Redmart needed cash and I think this was the best option – versus going out of business.
Now Amazon announces they are coming to Singapore. Personally I am stoked. It is hard to not want some sort of Prime Singapore situation. I buy stuff from Lazada from time to time but it is kind of a crappy experience. It works but it is not amazing. Give me fresh, books, video and Alexa all working locally and I think it will be awesome.
Globally no one is equipped to rival that. No one. Sure Alibaba has some of the pieces and they may weave together something similar from the remnants of Lazada, Redmart and all the other products/properties they own but I doubt it can rival Amazon. I also doubt I will have any interest in it.
Some may see this a harbinger of things to come – the global guys coming in but for me I see this as something deeper and far more exciting. SEA is now on the map big time. It’s an ecosystem big enough to care about and if you happen to be here, building for this scene. Cry tears of joy.
Carry on.
https://www.startupbootcamp.org/blog/2016/10/the-future-of-fintech/
Nice post about Fintech from my partner at SeedPlus, Gabriel.
Enjoy and if you want to chat more – holler.
Met Hemant today for coffee and discussed this article some.
Interesting viewpoint.
https://techcrunch.com/2014/12/14/unicorns-vs-dragons/
Enjoy!