THE BRIDGE

Startups

Japan’s connected furniture startup Kamarq snags $3.2M to manufacture ‘smart’ tables

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See the original story in Japanese. Kamarq Holdings is a startup to offer the high quality and connected furniture brand Kamarq. The company recently announced on Thursday that it has secured a total of about 350 million yen (about $3.2 million) from Energy & Environment Investment, Saison Ventures, iSGS Investment Works as well as angel investors. Saison Ventures is the investment arm of Japanese leading credit card company Credit Saison (TSE:8253). The funds will be used for product development, systems development or human resources. Coinciding with this funding, the firm also announced the launch of its first product called Sound Table, and started accepting pre-orders on the Makuake crowdfunding site. The backers can receive the product before the day of general release, and can purchase it at 80% of the normal price. Sound Table is a wooden IoT (Internet of Things) table capable of playing music or environmental sounds in accordance with the weather, controllable with a mobile app. It offers a product line-up of two types of dining table, low table and bedside table in three colors each. In our previous interview with Kamarq CEO founder and CEO Ken Machino last year, he  indicated that he wanted to develop a…

soundtable_featuredimage

See the original story in Japanese.

Kamarq Holdings is a startup to offer the high quality and connected furniture brand Kamarq. The company recently announced on Thursday that it has secured a total of about 350 million yen (about $3.2 million) from Energy & Environment Investment, Saison Ventures, iSGS Investment Works as well as angel investors. Saison Ventures is the investment arm of Japanese leading credit card company Credit Saison (TSE:8253). The funds will be used for product development, systems development or human resources.

Coinciding with this funding, the firm also announced the launch of its first product called Sound Table, and started accepting pre-orders on the Makuake crowdfunding site. The backers can receive the product before the day of general release, and can purchase it at 80% of the normal price. Sound Table is a wooden IoT (Internet of Things) table capable of playing music or environmental sounds in accordance with the weather, controllable with a mobile app. It offers a product line-up of two types of dining table, low table and bedside table in three colors each.

soundtable-dining-table
Dining table
soundtable-low-table
Low table
soundtable-bedside-table
Bedside table
soundtable-plugs-and-switch
Power source and USB sockets on table top plate

In our previous interview with Kamarq CEO founder and CEO Ken Machino last year, he  indicated that he wanted to develop a voting platform for furniture design availed by the public, and a ‘smartdoor’ which implements sensors or devices for Internet connection. Starting with this Sound Table, a variety of IoT furniture products will be released in the future.

In Indonesia, custom-made furniture e-commerce site Fabelio, which targets the expanding middle-income segment, had succeeded in fundraising in February. Although the targeted market differs a bit, the needs for high quality furniture have been rapidly increasing. If defining IKEA or Nitori (Japan’s major furniture retailer chain) as fast fashion-like SPA (Specialty store retailer of Private label Apparel) in the furniture industry, Kamarq or Fabelio may be considered as the third-wave SPA. Like the innovative designfinder platform for shoes Rooy, which recently expanded into Japan from Seattle, a cooperative business with distribution channels to conventional face-to-face sales players may be expected in the furniture industry, portending a new trend.

Translated by Taijiro Takeda
Edited by “Tex” Pomeroy

Japan’s DeployGate, test marketing tool for mobile developers, taking on the US market

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See the original story in Japanese. Japan’s DeployGate, offering a test marketing tool for smartphone app development under the same name, announced last month that it will establish a US subsidiary. DeployGate provides a testing and marketing function that allows mobile developers to distribute beta version of their apps to testing users and collects feedbacks from them before the official launch. Spun off from Japanese internet company Mixi (TSE:2121) just a year ago, DeployGate has been providing this service for more than three years. Currently, it proposes service plans for individuals or SMEs (small and medium-sized enterprises) as well as the ones for big companies managing multiple apps or many developers involved. It has been adopted by various Japanese internet companies such as Mixi, Recruit (TSE: 6098) and Cookpad (TSE: 2193), in addition to some major game developers. Together with AppBroadCast, a Japanese media company focused on helping mobile gaming developers reach potential users, DeployGate released a test marketing specialized service for these developers called SakiPre. Conventionally, development of console games often required prolongation in order to raise the degree of perfection thoroughly because user reactions or feedbacks could be obtained only after the launch. However, as the game industry…

deploygate_featuredimage

See the original story in Japanese.

Japan’s DeployGate, offering a test marketing tool for smartphone app development under the same name, announced last month that it will establish a US subsidiary.

DeployGate provides a testing and marketing function that allows mobile developers to distribute beta version of their apps to testing users and collects feedbacks from them before the official launch. Spun off from Japanese internet company Mixi (TSE:2121) just a year ago, DeployGate has been providing this service for more than three years. Currently, it proposes service plans for individuals or SMEs (small and medium-sized enterprises) as well as the ones for big companies managing multiple apps or many developers involved. It has been adopted by various Japanese internet companies such as Mixi, Recruit (TSE: 6098) and Cookpad (TSE: 2193), in addition to some major game developers.

Together with AppBroadCast, a Japanese media company focused on helping mobile gaming developers reach potential users, DeployGate released a test marketing specialized service for these developers called SakiPre. Conventionally, development of console games often required prolongation in order to raise the degree of perfection thoroughly because user reactions or feedbacks could be obtained only after the launch. However, as the game industry gradually shifts toward the mobile field, it has realized a new development method which facilitates beta testing so that games are elaborated on by both developers and consumers, or sales promotion conducted before the launch.

DeployGate CEO Yuki Fujisaki commented on the positive response for their product:

Recently, people in the game business often tell me that they have been using DeployGate. The shift toward mobile in the game industry had much influence on DeployGate in providing them a new development environment.

The number of consumers who had downloaded apps from Saki-Pre has already exceeded 40,000. Also from clients, we have been receiving testimonials such as “it became possible to predict whether the game will be a big hit or not before launch” and “for a game which scored more than 3.5 at the Saki-Pre questionnaire, an average of 3.9 on GooglePlay store can be expected” as well as “since the response rate of Saki-Pre participants is more than 30%, points to be improved can be pinpointed at the last minute for the launch.”

Moreover, the company has started providing linking functions with business chat tools such as Slack, Hipchat and Chatwork since July of 2015 for easier communication within companies that makes feedbacks for development smoother as well. They were nominated for CEDEC Awards 2015 in August, followed by having spread its service steadily among global developer communities while participating in conferences in the US such as WWDC or Google I/O as well as holding meetups in tandem with Crittercism, a crash reporting tool startup in San Francisco. The team had been communicating closely with developers at Crittercism or Github, and emphasizing service development for developers from a global perspective.

The service is currently being utilized in about 100 countries. Even at launch, developers with diverse backgrounds such as Americans, Europeans and Scandinavians had used it, while only half of the users were Japanese. Since starting the service for Android first, it has gained esteem from developers in countries with much Android share, like Brazil.

COO Kazuto Yasuda looks back on the first year:

We spent most of the year enhancing the business core. Thankfully we have finished the first period of second year in the black, and have been organizing systems for management and customer supports.

In this situation, the team felt the need for local bases to gain customer support and brush up the product leveraging opinions from local developers as reference for service plans aimed at enterprises. As the first step to global expansion, they announced the establishment of the US while appointing Yasuda as its CEO.

Also the team aims at function expansion while cooperating with other service operators for developers that are under consideration. These days, the service is being enhanced under the theme of ‘how much the development environment for app developers can be simplified’ such as implementation of automated building function from source codes,  called Dg Command. These updates can be checked out on the DeployGate blog.

The team is intended to continue operating their business on a bootstrap budget because they already have a good sales prospect and want to more focus on team building, investigating users’ needs, improving the product and user support.

To improve the product upon hearing feedbacks from developers using it directly, the company will set up an independent office this spring to make it easier to hold user meetups periodically. In addition to the three founders, the company has recently acquired new developers and designers, plus customer support representatives who work remotely from the office.

Fujisaki concluded:

DeployGate has grown as a tool essential for developers. Since there is substantial need not only in the IT industry but also in the game industry, many companies and developers are beginning to understand the importance of pre-launch test marketing.

By giving them more opportunities to communicate between developers and their users through our tool, we want to help developers continue developing apps that meet users’ expectations.

Translated by Taijiro Takeda
Edited by “Tex” Pomeroy

deploygate-team
The DeployGate management team: From left, COO Yasuda the second one, and CEO Fujisaki the third.

28-year-old launches $4.5M startup fund for western Japan city of Fukuoka

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See the original story in Japanese. Japanese seed startup incubator Samurai Incubate was founded in Tokyo, back in 2008. Since then this incubator has relocated its headquarters to a new building called Samurai Startup Island in Tokyo’s waterfront. Shota Morozumi, now 28 of age, had until recently been serving as a director for its incubation initiative. He started becoming involved in the startup scene through interviews on his personal blog Entrepreneurs’ Mind while attending university. After graduation, he continued to spend a lot of his time following Japanese entrepreneurs. He quit Samurai Incubate in January to move on to the next stage. Morozumi announced the launch of his own first startup fund called F Ventures today. The size of the funds is expected to be 500 million yen (about $4.5 million). He will spend almost a full year from now to raise more funds from investors. F Ventures, derived from the initial letter of Fukuoka where Morozumi was born and raised, is focused on participating in seed round investments, with amounts ranging from 5 to 15 million yen ($4.5 to $13.4 million) per investment deal. It sees local entrepreneurs, startups with a plan to relocate to Fukuoka and Asian startups…

See the original story in Japanese.

Japanese seed startup incubator Samurai Incubate was founded in Tokyo, back in 2008. Since then this incubator has relocated its headquarters to a new building called Samurai Startup Island in Tokyo’s waterfront. Shota Morozumi, now 28 of age, had until recently been serving as a director for its incubation initiative. He started becoming involved in the startup scene through interviews on his personal blog Entrepreneurs’ Mind while attending university. After graduation, he continued to spend a lot of his time following Japanese entrepreneurs. He quit Samurai Incubate in January to move on to the next stage.

Morozumi announced the launch of his own first startup fund called F Ventures today. The size of the funds is expected to be 500 million yen (about $4.5 million). He will spend almost a full year from now to raise more funds from investors.

f-ventures_logoF Ventures, derived from the initial letter of Fukuoka where Morozumi was born and raised, is focused on participating in seed round investments, with amounts ranging from 5 to 15 million yen ($4.5 to $13.4 million) per investment deal. It sees local entrepreneurs, startups with a plan to relocate to Fukuoka and Asian startups working closely with Fukuoka as their investees. They have already decided to invest soon in two Japanese startups and several Korean startups.

Leveraging the ability to act rather than experience or knowledge, Morozumi claims that he will be committed to providing investments in startups with hands-on support for public relations, not to mention human resource inculcation and development through partnership with programming schools and by holding hackathon events.

For the time being, he will spend half a month at East Ventures office in Tokyo and spend the remainder at Startup Cafe, a startup incubation hub run by the local city government in Fukuoka. Futhermore, CEO Shogo Sato of Tokyo-based producer nurturing company Qreator Agent, known for ex-manager of popular Japanese comedy duos Ninety-nine and London Boots Ichi-gō Ni-gō, will participate in the funds as an advisor upon finding promising startups and in supporting entrepreneurs.

Edited by “Tex” Pomeroy

Japan’s automatic pet feeder Petly wins Red Dot Design Award, plans global rollout

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See the original story in Japanese. A current model of the pet smart feeder named Petly from Tokyo-based Rinn has received one of the world’s most prestigious design awards, Red Dot Design Award, of Germany. See also: Japanese hardware startup Rinn introduces automatic pet feeder Petly The Red Dot Design Award is one of the largest design awards recognized globally, offered by the German Design Zentrum Nordrhein Westfalen to designs of products which have been manufactured within two years. Awards are made based upon nine criteria such as design innovation, functionality, human engineering, ecology or durability. As for 2016, 5,214 products were considered for the awards from designers or companies in 57 countries, and Petly was awarded the Product Design Award 2016 from among these. The award winning products will be displayed at the Red Dot Design museum as well as website. In Japan, some products labeled ‘Red Dot Design awarded’ are found in interior product and brand item stores. For products like Petly, winning this award will help the team in the future. Rinn had launched the original Petly in July of 2014. After that, it began publishing a life-style magazine entitled MILL Magazine, which focuses on life with…

petly_featuredimage

See the original story in Japanese.

A current model of the pet smart feeder named Petly from Tokyo-based Rinn has received one of the world’s most prestigious design awards, Red Dot Design Award, of Germany.

See also:

The Red Dot Design Award is one of the largest design awards recognized globally, offered by the German Design Zentrum Nordrhein Westfalen to designs of products which have been manufactured within two years. Awards are made based upon nine criteria such as design innovation, functionality, human engineering, ecology or durability.

As for 2016, 5,214 products were considered for the awards from designers or companies in 57 countries, and Petly was awarded the Product Design Award 2016 from among these. The award winning products will be displayed at the Red Dot Design museum as well as website.

petly-reddot-design-award-winner-2016

In Japan, some products labeled ‘Red Dot Design awarded’ are found in interior product and brand item stores. For products like Petly, winning this award will help the team in the future.

Rinn had launched the original Petly in July of 2014. After that, it began publishing a life-style magazine entitled MILL Magazine, which focuses on life with cats, while starting a branding business called Mill Creative, for products related to cats.

mill_screenshot
MILL Magazine

Masahiro Ryohara, CEO of Rinn, commented on his prospects for the future:

Within this year, we will start sales of Mill overseas including EU, Asia and the US, and also will enhance sales of Petly globally. We had planned from the onset to expand sales of MILL for cities seen having large demands for Petly as well. In 2017, we will be placing an IoT (Internet of Things) product on the market too.

While emphasizing the design properties, Rinn has been developing various products and businesses. We look forward to further details of the IoT product planned for launch.

Translated by Taijiro Takeda
Edited by “Tex” Pomeroy

NYC high-end fashion startup Material Wrld bags $9M series B from Start Today, Nissay

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See the original story in Japanese. Based out of New York City, Material Wrld provides a high-end marketplace for used clothes. Launched in 2012, the company avails a secondary circulation focused on luxury fashion items. Women can thus update the content of their closet according to events and seasonal changes. See also: Closet shopping for material girls: Material Wrld makes its public debut The company announced on Wednesday that it has secured $9 million from Start Today (TSE:3092) and Nissay Capital in a series B round. Start Today is a Tokyo company behind Japan’s largest fashion e-commerce site Zozotown, while Nissay Capital is the investment arm of a leading Japanese insurance company which participated in the previous funding round. With the latest funding, the American company has secured a total of $13 million to date. In October of 2015, Materal Wrld unveiled a prepaid debit card for luxury shoppers called Material Wrld Fashion Trade-In Card. Through the Discover Card network, this card allows users to buy new clothes at more than 700 fashion retailers both online and offline using trade-in values they got upon selling their used clothes, handbag and shoes to Material Wrld. Available retailer chains include Bloomingdale’s, Nordstrom,…

Material-Wrld-debit-card

See the original story in Japanese.

Based out of New York City, Material Wrld provides a high-end marketplace for used clothes. Launched in 2012, the company avails a secondary circulation focused on luxury fashion items. Women can thus update the content of their closet according to events and seasonal changes.

See also:

The company announced on Wednesday that it has secured $9 million from Start Today (TSE:3092) and Nissay Capital in a series B round. Start Today is a Tokyo company behind Japan’s largest fashion e-commerce site Zozotown, while Nissay Capital is the investment arm of a leading Japanese insurance company which participated in the previous funding round. With the latest funding, the American company has secured a total of $13 million to date.

In October of 2015, Materal Wrld unveiled a prepaid debit card for luxury shoppers called Material Wrld Fashion Trade-In Card. Through the Discover Card network, this card allows users to buy new clothes at more than 700 fashion retailers both online and offline using trade-in values they got upon selling their used clothes, handbag and shoes to Material Wrld. Available retailer chains include Bloomingdale’s, Nordstrom, Intermix and Seven Alan.

Since Material Wrld clienteles using this card buy new items worth 2.5 times more than what they have sold, the company has received high praise from department stores because of the win-win situation created for both these stores and the clienteles. Going forward, the company wants to expand awareness of the unique debit card system in the fashion industry.

material-wrld-founders
Material Wrld founders: Rie Yano (left) and Jie Zheng (right)

Material Wrld co-counder Rie Yano and Jie Zheng offered their comment in a statement upon unveiling a new platform they are currently working on:

We will launch a new online platform in the US in several months from now. It will be a one-stop solution that allows people to submit their luxury brand items for trade-in, purchase new brand arrivals as well as second-hand items situated in others’ “closets.”

This is the first investment in the North American market for Start Today. This company wants to not only provide financial cooperation but also explore cross-border synergy in global business operations by sharing the experience of their secondhand fashion commerce service Zozoused in addition to leveraging the brand image and the vast network of Material Wrld.

Translated by Masaru Ikeda
Edited by “Tex” Pomeroy

Japan’s talent search startup BizReach gets $33M to offer hiring management platform

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This is the abridged version from our original article in Japanese. BizReach, the Tokyo company providing an online talent search platform under the same name, announced today that it has fundraised about 3.73 billion yen (about $32.9 million) in the second funding round. This round was led by YJ Capital, the investment arm of Yahoo Japan, investing 1.6 billion yen ($14 million), with participation from Salesforce Ventures, Sumitomo Mitsui Trust Investment, Dentsu Digital Holdings, Gree, Rakuten, Link and Motivation, EFU Investment Limited, East Ventures, and IMJ Investment Partners. BizReach, the Tokyo company providing an online talent search platform under the same name, announced today that it has fundraised about 3.73 billion yen (about $32.9 million) in its second funding round. This round was led by YJ Capital, the investment arm of Yahoo Japan, investing 1.6 billion yen ($14 million), with participation from Salesforce Ventures, Sumitomo Mitsui Trust Investment, Dentsu Digital Holdings, Gree, Rakuten, Link and Motivation, EFU Investment Limited plus East Ventures, in addition to IMJ Investment Partners. The funds will be used to further develop their employment search engines and job listing services including StanBy, which was launched last year. Coinciding with this announcement, the company unveiled their plan…

soichiro-swimmy-minami
BizReach founder and CEO Soichiro Swimmy Minami

This is the abridged version from our original article in Japanese.

BizReach, the Tokyo company providing an online talent search platform under the same name, announced today that it has fundraised about 3.73 billion yen (about $32.9 million) in the second funding round. This round was led by YJ Capital, the investment arm of Yahoo Japan, investing 1.6 billion yen ($14 million), with participation from Salesforce Ventures, Sumitomo Mitsui Trust Investment, Dentsu Digital Holdings, Gree, Rakuten, Link and Motivation, EFU Investment Limited, East Ventures, and IMJ Investment Partners.

BizReach, the Tokyo company providing an online talent search platform under the same name, announced today that it has fundraised about 3.73 billion yen (about $32.9 million) in its second funding round. This round was led by YJ Capital, the investment arm of Yahoo Japan, investing 1.6 billion yen ($14 million), with participation from Salesforce Ventures, Sumitomo Mitsui Trust Investment, Dentsu Digital Holdings, Gree, Rakuten, Link and Motivation, EFU Investment Limited plus East Ventures, in addition to IMJ Investment Partners.

The funds will be used to further develop their employment search engines and job listing services including StanBy, which was launched last year. Coinciding with this announcement, the company unveiled their plan to launch a cloud-based hiring management platform called HRMOS (pronounced ‘harmos’) in May, not to mention continuing operation of aforementioned services as well as an applicant tracking system (ATS) called StanBy Company.

BizReach was launched back in April of 2009 by Soichiro Swimmy Minami, one of the founders of the Rakuten Eagles, an expansion baseball club in the Japanese professional league. The latest round follows the company’s first funding round having raised 200 million yen from Japanese investment firm Jafco in March of 2010. Minami founded a members-only premium outlet e-commerce site Luxa as a business operating under BizReach in August 2010 but spun it out in October of 2010 because BizReach shifted its focus to the job hunting and talent search field. Since Japan’s leading telco KDDI gained a majority stake in Luxa in April of 2015, it is said that Minami has plowed much profit from the sales of the stocks into the BizReach business.

Translated by Masaru Ikeda
Edited by “Tex” Pomeroy

18 startups from around the world compete at B Dash Camp pitch arena in Fukuoka

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This is a combined abridged version of the first article and the second article. As seen in this year’s theme ‘change,’ B Dash Camp 2016 Spring in Fukuoka was held earlier this month with a program agenda which differs a bit from conventional ones. From this time forward, the selection criteria for preliminary document screening was raised and the selection for finalist was conducted within the main session, while the selection had been conducted in a track behind the main session until last year. In this article, 18 teams including four finalists that all gave pitches at the arena have been described. The top winner was scheduled to be announced earlier this month. The five judges on the selection panel were as follows. Yu Akasaka (CEO, Eureka) Naoki Aoyagi (SVP, Global Operations and Business Development) Yusuke Asakura (Visiting Scholar, Stanford University) Hironao Kunimitsu (CEO, Gumi) Takuya Miyata (General Partner, Scrum Ventures) Award Winners Pitch Arena winner / Paypal Award winner: SmartHR by KUFU (Japan) Supplementary awards: Mentoring on product marketing and development (presented by Google) Amazon Fire Tablet (presented by Amazon Web Services) 1 million yen-worth of ads on Japanese career transition magazine Doda, arranging startup events for free at…

bdash-camp-2016-spring-pitch-broaderview-2

This is a combined abridged version of the first article and the second article.

As seen in this year’s theme ‘change,’ B Dash Camp 2016 Spring in Fukuoka was held earlier this month with a program agenda which differs a bit from conventional ones. From this time forward, the selection criteria for preliminary document screening was raised and the selection for finalist was conducted within the main session, while the selection had been conducted in a track behind the main session until last year.

In this article, 18 teams including four finalists that all gave pitches at the arena have been described. The top winner was scheduled to be announced earlier this month. The five judges on the selection panel were as follows.

  • Yu Akasaka (CEO, Eureka)
  • Naoki Aoyagi (SVP, Global Operations and Business Development)
  • Yusuke Asakura (Visiting Scholar, Stanford University)
  • Hironao Kunimitsu (CEO, Gumi)
  • Takuya Miyata (General Partner, Scrum Ventures)

bdash-camp-2016-spring-pitch-judges-2

Award Winners

Pitch Arena winner / Paypal Award winner: SmartHR by KUFU (Japan)

bdash-camp-2016-spring-pitch-winner-smarthr

Supplementary awards:

  • Mentoring on product marketing and development (presented by Google)
  • Amazon Fire Tablet (presented by Amazon Web Services)
  • 1 million yen-worth of ads on Japanese career transition magazine Doda, arranging startup events for free at startup community space Dots. in Shibuya (presented by Intelligence)
  • 50,000 bonus miles each for three people (presented by Japan Airlines)
  • 90,000 yen-worth of accommodation for the Atami Sekaie hot spring resort, plus a travel voucher for a two-day one-night trip for each of all team members (presented by Relux)
  • 1 million yen-worth of credits for Paypal transactions or product marketing (Presented by Paypal Japan)

SmartHR is an automation tool of employment insurance or social insurance for SMEs. It has already been adopted at 650 companies in three months since its official launch. It targets 4.19 million SMEs existing in Japan, employing in total 27 million people workers. In early March, the web application function for government office use was also launched upon cooperation with e-Gov API.

In the future, SmartHR aims to establish a health insurance society on its own in order to lower insurance fees on user SMEs. Moreover, it also plans provision of big data to insurance companies or cooperation businesswises with pharmaceutical companies.

bdash-camp-2016-spring-pitch-smarthr-3

See also:

Pitch Arena Runner-up: Gozal by BEC (Japan)

bdash-camp-2016-spring-pitch-runner-up-gozal

Supplementary awards:

  • 50,000 bonus miles each for two people (presented by Japan Airlines)

Gozal pursues back office automation for SMEs. Generally, SME managers are said to spend 30 days a year for back office works, yet they wonder uneasily whether the business operation had been carried out appropriately. This tool automates the back office operation utilizing machine learning as a cloud service. Currently, it supports 10 types of procedures online, and has been adopted by 1,000 companies. Gozal aims to enable completion of 100 types of procedures online by 2017.

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See also:

Sakura Internet Award winner: Nine by Lip (Japan)

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Supplementary awards:

  • a two-day one-night trip to Sakura Internet’s Ishikari Data Center in Hokkaido for all team members (Presented by Sakura Internet)

Since the Tinder matching app connects people only with profile photos, sometimes it gives matching results that are unbalanced. On the other hand, this Nine works linking with Instagram; extracting the user’s 9 photos from Instagram which were most highly rated, it aims to match by showing his/her daily life or personality to other users. Since each user’s instinctive profile is made automatically by AI (artificial intelligence) from Instagram containing a treasure trove about user personality, a rich stock can be brought in as chat-use topics after matching.

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See also:

Finalist

HelloWings by Outland (Taiwan)

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Taiwan-based HelloWings, formerly known as Tixchart, is a price comparison website focusing on LCC (low-cost carrier) tickets. It provides information about ticket prices comparing 3,000 LCC companies in 107 countries in real-time, such as ticket prices on a specific date and time, or the lowest price throughout a year including surcharges.

Compared to similar services like Skyscanner connecting to GDS (global distribution systems) for airline companies, such as Amadeus, Sabre or Galileo, this HelloWings differentiates itself through acquisition of data by directly crawling the airlines’ website. Thus, it proposes the best ticket combination across a plurality of LCC companies only by inputting departure points, destinations, date and time. The team is backed by Kuala Lumpur-based Tune Labs, the startup incubator of Malaysian LCC company AirAsia Group.


The following are 14 teams which unfortunately did not make the final round but had made excellent pitches.

Chikyu (Japan)

chikyu

Chikyu provides both CRM (customer relationship management) services focusing on management of customers/negotiations and MA (marketing automation) services focusing on SME-use mail distribution/lead scoring/workflow. Company founder Toshihiro Asai had formerly been involved in product sales for items that faced poor demands at his previous job. After he had conducted various analyses and tried improvement there, the monthly sales scales had increased by 3.6 times, and that made him realize that database marketing could produce results. On the other hand, only 15.9% of companies overall had implemented CRM. Judging that the cause of this poor implementation rate is the absence of simple and effective CRM services, Asai started this business.

Senses by Mazrica (Japan)

bdash-camp-2016-spring-pitch-senses-2

Eiji Kurosa, the founder of Mazrica, formerly had been in charge of supervisory manager of sales, marketing and customer support in UzaBase, the company behind Japanese curated news app Newspicks. In that company, he had keenly realized a problem: every personnel relocation requires handover of business knowledge or procedures, all work came to depend on individual skills of those who had become deeply versed in the work, and that motivated him to develop this business support tool Senses. Managing visit history, communication history or feedbacks by every item unit, it supports business handover or reduction of communication losses, and also links with groupware including Gmail.

SkyRec (Taiwan)

bdash-camp-2016-spring-pitch-skyrec-1

Taiwan-based SkyRec offers a Google Analytics-like service under the same name for real stores. It allows users to gain information about which spot, how often and how long customers stayed in at stores visually, and especially exhibits powers upon analyzing customer guideline/bestseller products, improving display methods or selecting items for elimination. According to the team, a certain store had shown a 10% improvement for traffic in-store plus an 18% improvement for monthly sales. SkyRec was born out of the 11th batch of AppWorks, a Taiwanese startup acceleration.

Jumpy (Taiwan)

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Jumpy is a smartwatch targeting 5 to 8 year-old kids, installing interactive games pitting parents against children. In addition to being the first in the world, daily schedule notification or messaging functions have been included so that parents can grasp how their children are spending their time via smartwatch. By publishing open SDK (software developer kit), third parties besides development source JoyRay have been launching brand-new apps almost every month. Jumpy was established by Jerry Chang who had been involved in smartphone sector at Taiwanese electronics manufacturing giant Foxconn, and also born out from the 9th batch of AppWorks.

SevenHugs (France)

bdash-camp-2016-spring-pitch-hugone-1

France-based IoT startup SevenHugs offers two products named HugOne and SmartRemote. HugOne is an IoT device for sleep tracking and one can purchase it at major retail stores in France. The latter SmartRemote is an easily remote- control device for smart home devices that works just by pointing.

The weakness of typical smarthome devices is the difficulty in intuitive operations which requires an app to be started by mobile devices or tablets. With position and acceleration sensors combined, SmartRemote recognizes where the user is pointing and enables control of targeted devices. Established in 2014 the Gallic firm has fundraised 2.25 million euros (about $2.5 million) for seed funding.

Collabee (Korea)

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Generally, with communication tools such as Slack it is difficult to ascertain what issues are being discussed and if they have been solved, because messages are displayed in chronological order as posted. Collabee, developed by a Korea-based startup having the same name, classifies messages into threads by issues, and the discussion content about each issue are managed in individual windows. Therefore, it becomes easier to fathom states of discussion or progress of the situation. Retrieval function is not only available using keyword or file name but via task, decision or image as well. It can also operate seamlessly with e-mail.

Pocket SuperNova (Japan)

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Pocket SuperNova developed a video edit app for mobile movie creators called PocketVideo. It aims to solve the problem of long tail creators hardly being monetizable due to the shortage of video apps focusing on specified use cases. As of now, 60,000 creators have been registered, and US-based Japanese actor Masi Oka has invested in this service as an angel investor. The post money valuation of the firm is estimated at $20 million, having secured $5 million so far. In addition, one Japanese investment company has also promised to invest $3.5 million.

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Caster (Japan)

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Caster aims to realize at-home dispatching business in order to form a suitable remote work environment. In an environment where the term “staff-shortage bankruptcy” appeared, shorthanded companies have been faced with a severe and critical situation. On the other hand, the number of registration of dispatched workers has been low due to the recently soiled image of conventional dispatching business.

Caster had obtained the online dispatching business license. For three months since launch in last November, the number of registrants has exceeded 1,000. Many of them are women in their 20s to 40s living in provincial towns. The major clients are mainly Japanese IT companies, namely Chartwork or SMS. The team’s goal is to acquire 100 new client companies during 2016, and to realize an environment where 10,000 registrants can make their living just through remote work until 2020.

Nutte by State of Mind (Japan)

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Nutte is an apparel marketplace where one can order manufacturing of one-of-a-kind fashion items. In Japan, there are tens of thousands sewing craftsmen dealing with sample products or costumes for the stage. However, they have few opportunities to take on as work except for introduction from within the industry, so that their incomes are unstable.

Since its launch last February, Nutte has constructed a network of more than 500 craftsmen, and the current agreement rate of transactions exceeds 80%. If contracts are agreed upon, 20% of transaction amount is charged for mediation. 5,000 companies/people have been registered as Nutte users. It responds to not only business use; one can order a stage costume for a pop star, for example.

Ancar (Japan)

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In the used car distribution industry in Japan, 30% of the price is charged as total handling fees from a point of trading-in to resale in stores. Nevertheless, 90% of used cars is distributed without being repaired and maintained. In order to eliminate unnecessary intermediary margins and consumption taxes, Ancar networks with maintenance factories throughout Japan, and has been enhancing the environment for advance evaluation and maintenance. At the moment, the service supports three prefectures in Kanto area including Tokyo.

Although the used car industry is an exclusive field, the founder/CEO of the firm Kazuhiro Joh’s grandfather was a founding member of the industry organization, and that made it possible to start this business smoothly. In addition to used car distribution business, it plans to enter the after-sales service market until 2016. Also it will launch a matching app for maintenance factories named Repea in March, and a business management tool for maintenance factories named BizMart in May.

ST Booking by Hakodate Ventures (Japan)

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ST Booking, started by a former associate of East Ventures Shota Morikawa, is a matching platform for connecting students who desire to study abroad in East/Southeast Asia to Japanese educational institutions. Tying up with 50 language schools or business colleges in Japan, and more than 20 agencies in Thailand or Vietnam, ST Booking approaches with both B2B via agencies and B2C by directly acquiring students.

The recent Japanese government’s effort to attract 300,000 international students a year by 2020 is having a positive impact on the service. It monetizes with a “results reward” model; educational institutions will be charged 15 to 25% commission of the school fees. In the future, it aims to develop a CRM to optimize sponsorship relations with companies for employment after graduation or studying abroad processes. So far it has fundraised from Beenext or If Angel.

ODIN by Panair (Japan)

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Due to liberalizing the electricity retail market this spring in Japan, ODIN supports reduction of operation costs for power companies. As API connection to wide area network became available, Japan’s Panair has developed an operation platform utilizing AI based on Ruby. Automatically gathering electricity consumption data from contractors’ smart meters, it predicts highly precise demand using AI.

With these dashboards, only one individual can run electric power business. Moreover, Panair also plans to construct “OEM power” chain, so that power companies as users can procure electric power from new major power generation at lower price than conventional power supplies.

Scorer by FutureStandard (Japan)

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Scorer by Japan’s FutureStandard is a cloud service for image analysis automatically in real-time. With normal video cameras on the market, it allows easy analysis on visitors, number of people in procession, moving direction or number of passers near the store. Cooperating with distribution industry or power companies in order to construct camera networks, it has been installing cameras at large scale retailers or utility poles. Analyzing images photographed by one camera, it provides an environment where plural clients can utilize the acquired data for plural uses.

Since the application requires various kinds of image analysis technologies, FutureStandard has prepared a marketplace where third party can provide each technology. For a month since launch, it has been carrying out a trial with six companies. Having secured 130 million yen (about $1.1 million) from Incubate Fund, YJ Capital and Primal Capital, the firm aims at overseas expansion within this year. It was born out from the 8th batch of Incubate Camp.

Styler (Japan)

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In the annual sales of fashion industry marking 180 billion yen (about $1.5 billion), most of these tradings are completed by offline. Styler proposes improvement of the experiences of purchasing fashion items offline. It launched a platform app under the same name for iOS on 10th December, and has achieved 10,000 results matching retailers with potential customers. It has acquired 130 stores registered so far.

At this pitch, STYLER also announced the cooperation with Yahoo Japan. While currently Styler is attracting customers from its owned media named Styler Mag, it will start providing these contents to Yahoo Japan in addition to partnering with Japanese fashion news portal FashionSnap.com. Also it plans business development to the vicinity of China including Taiwan in summer of 2016.

Translated by Taijiro Takeda
Edited by “Tex” Pomeroy

Japanese mobile in-line video ads startup App-CM secures $1.2M seed round funding

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See the original story in Japanese. The round in the title was updated based on the claim from App-CM (May 13th, 2016). Tokyo-based App-CM, the Japanese startup developing in-line video ads platform for smartphones, today announced that it has secured about $140 million yen (about $1.2 million) from Yeahmobi and several angel investors in a series A seed round. Yeahmobi is one of the world’s largest ad networks based out of China. App-CM was founded by Atsufumi Otsuka whom we previously introduced in our story about mobile video-viewing app Vimet. After launching App-CM, Otsuka handed over the management of Emet Creation, which developed the Vimet app, to So Yanagimoto, president and representative director of Emet, so he could devote himself to developing a video player engine for mobile at App-CM. Typical video ad networks for mobile use the CSS Sprites format to display in-line ads in a mobile web browser. The format makes sense in terms of allowing users to stay in a web browser while viewing video ads without switching to other video viewer apps. However, it displays a video clip consisting of independent still images in a manner similar to playing a flip book animation, its data volume…

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App-CM team on the roof of their office located opposite the University of Tokyo.
CEO Atsufumi Otsuka stands second from the left in the back row. (Courtesy: App-CM)

See the original story in Japanese.

The round in the title was updated based on the claim from App-CM (May 13th, 2016).

Tokyo-based App-CM, the Japanese startup developing in-line video ads platform for smartphones, today announced that it has secured about $140 million yen (about $1.2 million) from Yeahmobi and several angel investors in a series A seed round. Yeahmobi is one of the world’s largest ad networks based out of China.

App-CM was founded by Atsufumi Otsuka whom we previously introduced in our story about mobile video-viewing app Vimet. After launching App-CM, Otsuka handed over the management of Emet Creation, which developed the Vimet app, to So Yanagimoto, president and representative director of Emet, so he could devote himself to developing a video player engine for mobile at App-CM.

Typical video ad networks for mobile use the CSS Sprites format to display in-line ads in a mobile web browser. The format makes sense in terms of allowing users to stay in a web browser while viewing video ads without switching to other video viewer apps. However, it displays a video clip consisting of independent still images in a manner similar to playing a flip book animation, its data volume being typically larger than that of QuickTime or MPEG video format because frame-to-frame delta compression is not applied.

To address this issue, App-CM has developed an original video format based on VP9, an open-source video compression codec originally developed by Google. Corresponding to in-stream video ads protocol VAST, the new format enables compression of up to one-tenth to one-twentieth in data volume compared to typical formats which are conventionally used for mobile video ad networks. During the first launch, a video viewing plug-in compatible to the App-CM format will be installed on a viewer’s mobile web browser. A video clip, which typically weighs 4 megabytes on average in a conventional video format, can be compressed down to 200 kilobytes while the compression efficiency depends on how many frames are sub-sampled out of 30 frames per second in the typical NTSC video format (see the video below).

Having been adopted on over 200 mobile media websites in Japan, App-CM leverages its unique video-player technology without requiring a large data traffic, planning to expand to emerging markets where mobile broadband is available on an uncertain basis. In addition to the expansion into the Chinese market in cooperation with Yeahmobi, App-CM will be in a hurry to expand into the Indian market based on a partnership with Green House Ventures (GHV), the Indian local startup accelerator that the mobile video company partnered with last month.

Represented by CTO Miki Yagita, many students from Graduate School of Information Science and Technology, the University of Tokyo, has joined the engineering team to develop the App-CM platform. In order to strengthen the engineering resources, App-CM recently relocated its headquarters to opposite the Red Gate (aka Akamon) of the University of Tokyo. They are currently applying for a patent on their AI-powered optimized ad distribution algorithm and mobile video player engine.

Edited by “Tex” Pomeroy

Swingdo to-do management app updated to offer location-based task-prioritizing feature

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See the original story in Japanese. Tokyo-based BHI, the Japanese startup behind mobile solutions focused on protecting users from information overload, announced last week the iOS version 2.0 of to-do management app Swingdo. This app was originally released last year-end, but it has been quickly upgraded for four added functions of interest. The new functions are: If a task is registered in the app with being associated with a specific location, a user will be recommended to deal with it as priority by a GPS-enabled feature when he/she comes in there. A function to list unreplied emails. A “Like” icon for completing to-do tasks and a “paper airplane” icon for completing mail tasks. An enhanced integration to its sister app Swingmail upon creating tasks in Swingdo that leverages e-mail reply history in Swingmail. In addition to this iOS version, a Chrome extension of Swingdo was released during February. Therefore, the basic function of Swingdo can be used not only on mobile but on desktop. To-do updates will be synchronized between the Chrome extension and the iOS version. BHI CEO Yasuhiro Himukashi explained: Many users of Swingdo said they needed an interface, even as an extension, usable on desktop, so we…

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See the original story in Japanese.

Tokyo-based BHI, the Japanese startup behind mobile solutions focused on protecting users from information overload, announced last week the iOS version 2.0 of to-do management app Swingdo. This app was originally released last year-end, but it has been quickly upgraded for four added functions of interest.

The new functions are:

  1. If a task is registered in the app with being associated with a specific location, a user will be recommended to deal with it as priority by a GPS-enabled feature when he/she comes in there.
  2. A function to list unreplied emails.
  3. A “Like” icon for completing to-do tasks and a “paper airplane” icon for completing mail tasks.
  4. An enhanced integration to its sister app Swingmail upon creating tasks in Swingdo that leverages e-mail reply history in Swingmail.

In addition to this iOS version, a Chrome extension of Swingdo was released during February. Therefore, the basic function of Swingdo can be used not only on mobile but on desktop. To-do updates will be synchronized between the Chrome extension and the iOS version.

BHI CEO Yasuhiro Himukashi explained:

Many users of Swingdo said they needed an interface, even as an extension, usable on desktop, so we responded to this by offering a Chrome extension

The world’s top 3 to-do managers including Wunderlist are also used on Chrome Extension and smartphone by their users, so we followed their examples.

The exciting news is that they will release the desktop version of Swingdo for Mac in April and an Android version in May.

Meanwhile, we go back to June of 2013 when Swingdo’s antecedent was introduced with its (still) current sister app, Swingmail. They have modified the engine three times since they launched Swingmail for improved efficiency in messaging, and for automatic extraction / creation of task.

Himukashi said,

To be honest, the first- and second-generation engines were failures. Automated task creator leveraging email is globally still rare. The logic to associate / unassociate a contact or a history with each task was very difficult.

In addition to Swingdo, the company continues to update SwingMail and recently added new functions such as displaying only important emails and muting unimportant ones.

Although BHI secured series A round funding in April of 2014, the company has yet to disclose its amount and investors.

Translated by Minako Ambiru via Mother First
Edited by “Tex” Pomeroy

Japan’s Iichi, Taiwan’s Pinkoi join forces to make handmade marketplaces more vibrant

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See the original story in Japanese. According to Japan’s Hobby White Paper 2014 published by the Hobby Association of Japan, the market size of domestic handicraft items is estimated to be 867.3 billion yen (about $7.8 billion). Among these, the market size of handicrafts traded through C2C (consumer to consumer) transactions via the Internet has been reported at 69.8 billion yen (about $627 million). In Japan, various players such as Minne, Tetote or Creema have been competing on this market. See also: Japan’s Creema launches iOS app, gives users instant access to handmade items sellers Thai handmade marketplace Blisby raises $300K from DeNA, East Ventures, 500 Startups Handmade item marketplace Anders brings new Japanese-flavored designs every Monday Under such a situation, a game change has been wrought by Japan’s Iichi, running a handicraft e-commerce platform under the same name, and Taiwan-originated Pinkoi, the latter running one of the biggest designer markets in Asia. The two outfits announced last week an agreement as to a business partnership. With this partnership, Iichi implements a capital increase through third-party share increase with Pinkoi as the subscriber. As a result, Pinkoi becomes the top shareholder of Iichi, with Iichi CEO Kentaro Iinuma joining Pinkoi…

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L to R: Kentaro Iinuma (CEO of Iichi), Peter Yen (CEO of Pinkoi)

See the original story in Japanese.

According to Japan’s Hobby White Paper 2014 published by the Hobby Association of Japan, the market size of domestic handicraft items is estimated to be 867.3 billion yen (about $7.8 billion).

Among these, the market size of handicrafts traded through C2C (consumer to consumer) transactions via the Internet has been reported at 69.8 billion yen (about $627 million). In Japan, various players such as Minne, Tetote or Creema have been competing on this market.

See also:

Under such a situation, a game change has been wrought by Japan’s Iichi, running a handicraft e-commerce platform under the same name, and Taiwan-originated Pinkoi, the latter running one of the biggest designer markets in Asia. The two outfits announced last week an agreement as to a business partnership.

Iichi
Iichi

With this partnership, Iichi implements a capital increase through third-party share increase with Pinkoi as the subscriber. As a result, Pinkoi becomes the top shareholder of Iichi, with Iichi CEO Kentaro Iinuma joining Pinkoi as a board member and named CEO of Pinkoi Japan.

Iichi started service under a business support program among Hakuhodo DY (TSE: 2433) group companies, and was officially established in 2011 with financial support from Hakuhodo (ad agency), Hakuhodo DY Media Partners (ad agency), Murashiki (cross-border e-commerce operator) and Kayac (TSE:3409, Yokohama-based internet service giant).

Iichi plans to globally develop its handicrafts marketplace business as a joint venture between Pinkoi and the Hakuhodo group. It will engage in the management of both Iichi and Pinkoi Japanese version services.

Pinkoi
Pinkoi

Pinkoi is a Taiwan-originated startup established in 2011. As a marketplace for design products to connect designers and customers throughout the world but mainly in Asia, it has grown to be one of the biggest Asian players with 2 million monthly users.

Pinkoi has expanded its service in 77 countries including Taiwan, Hong Kong, the US, China, Japan and Thailand, covering 5 languages and 12 currencies. It has fundraised a total of $11.1 million from Sequoia Capital and Infinity Venture Partners.

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So, how did this cooperation begin?

Iinuma explains:

Since we wanted to develop our business overseas from the onset, we had already prepared an English version. But some difficulties in local marketing came to light.

Although espying the difficulties, I recognized that high value placed on products from Japan and saw the Asian market as a business opening for cross-border EC services. Peter and I talked about such things over two days last October.

Meanwhile, Pinkoi had been thinking of ways to expand into Japan.

Notes Pinkoi’s CEO Peter Yen:

Since around 2014, we had gradually started research activities in Japan. Making teams and meeting designers, we started to investigate what issues they had and what we could do for them.

In these process, I met Iinuma-san and decided to cooperate with Iichi for our larger vision. We are going to support designers in Japan to advance into the world, not just remain domestic.

Iinuma adds:

Pinkoi’s ability to create services and to advance globalization is what Iichi needed. On the other hand, while Pinkoi wanted to access Japan’s manufacturing market, it is not easy to directly access Japanese creators from overseas. As Iichi plays that part, we can create an ideal complementary relationship.

After this agreement, Iichi’s team will handle the management of both Iichi and Pinkoi in Japan. Since the characteristics of users differ between the two, the team has to develop services in each category. As for marketing in Japan, it aims to improve user recognition together with Hakuhodo.

If the two manage the services hand-in-hand henceforth, the synergy in the context of not only business but also the companies’ culture may become rather important.

Yen agreed on this point:

We both have two cultures. The first one is being a ‘people-first’ community. We are providing value to design-conscious people seeking products with good design.

The second one is the quality of design. Not anybody can sell one’s products on Pinkoi. It is not open but is being curated. Specifically, only one in ten can be registered as a crafter.

Through the curation for designers, Pinkoi is filled with various products where design-conscious people can find what they are really looking for.

A community formed by both designers who have high quality and users who seek their products leads to the value of Pinkoi. The Pinkoi CEO told me that the most important thing for maintaining this status is to have passion to support designers.

Sharing such similar mindsets as to treating crafters kindly, and an attitude to pursue design quality or passion in the team, Iichi and Pinkoi were able to reach this agreement.

The emphasis on the community and the quality of design which is common to both companies will translate into a competitive edge of the services.

Peter continued:

We get top designers in various countries to participate in Pinkoi’s community, so that the community can gain unifying power and attract more designers.

As a result, a lot of design-conscious users are attracted to purchase these designers’ products. While they have good eyes for fashion, good designers want to sell the products to the users as well.

Our advantage is having both the top designers and the design-conscious users.

Iinuma continued:

I think Japanese crafters or designers excel in their abilities. As they enter Pinkoi’s community, the unifying power of the community will be raised further.

In Asia including Taiwan, Hong Kong and Thailand, handicrafts or design products have been gathering more attention. Pinkoi and Iichi empower designers in Japan, and assist them to advance into the emerging Asian market.

Translated by Taijiro Takeda
Edited by “Tex” Pomeroy