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Sumitomo Mitsui launches open innovation space in Tokyo’s most vibrant startup hub

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See the original story in Japanese. Sumitomo Mitsui Financial Group (SMFG, TSE:8316) earlier this month launched their first open-innovation base named Hoops Link Tokyo in central Shibuya, Tokyo. The group utilizes the venue to hold pitch events, meet-up, and seminars tying up with external organizations related to the startup ecosystem. At the beginning of the press conference held on the launch day, Jun Ota (Executive Vice President, SMFG) who presides over open-innovation activities of the group made an opening speech. Since established IT Innovation Department in SMFG two year ago, the group has been financially participating various new business where synergy effects with financial service can be expected, in order to activate the whole digital transformation within the group: SMBC GMO Payment (payments processing joint venture with GMO Payment Gateway),  Brees (barcode-based payment service developing together with NEC), Polarify (biometric authentication system jointly developing with NTT Data and Daon), Financial Link (artificial intelligence- and robotic process automation- powered business process outsourcing service jointly developing with NEC, to be soon rebranded into NCore). The group has been mainly cooperating with large enterprises so far, but aims strengthening of coordination with startups on the occasion of the establishment of Hoops Link. Also,…

Board members of SMFG at photo session

See the original story in Japanese.

Sumitomo Mitsui Financial Group (SMFG, TSE:8316) earlier this month launched their first open-innovation base named Hoops Link Tokyo in central Shibuya, Tokyo. The group utilizes the venue to hold pitch events, meet-up, and seminars tying up with external organizations related to the startup ecosystem.

Jun Ota (Executive VP / Chief Digital Innovation Officer, SMFG makes opening speech at the press conference

At the beginning of the press conference held on the launch day, Jun Ota (Executive Vice President, SMFG) who presides over open-innovation activities of the group made an opening speech. Since established IT Innovation Department in SMFG two year ago, the group has been financially participating various new business where synergy effects with financial service can be expected, in order to activate the whole digital transformation within the group: SMBC GMO Payment (payments processing joint venture with GMO Payment Gateway),  Brees (barcode-based payment service developing together with NEC), Polarify (biometric authentication system jointly developing with NTT Data and Daon), Financial Link (artificial intelligence- and robotic process automation- powered business process outsourcing service jointly developing with NEC, to be soon rebranded into NCore). The group has been mainly cooperating with large enterprises so far, but aims strengthening of coordination with startups on the occasion of the establishment of Hoops Link.

Also, on the same day, SMFG announced the cooperation with Work-Bench running accelerator for enterprises in the US and StartX, the accelerator of Stanford University. SMFG also unveiled it will start a startup acceleration program in 2018. The detail of the program is still under consideration but is expected to partly adopt conventional activities including Mirai Hackathon or the Mirai incubation initiative which were presented by SMFG or Mitsui Sumitomo Bank.

As open-innovation venues run by major banks, there are some similar cases within Japan, such as The Garage by Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group (MUFG, TSE:8306) and Diagonal Run Tokyo by Fukuoka Financial Group (FFG, TSE:8354).  In addition, open-innovation activities can be seen recently in the whole financial service industry; Mizuho Bank established a lab within Finolab partnering with NTT Data for its open-innovation support program, Credit Saison (TSE:8253) launched DG Lab jointly with Digital Garage (TSE:4819) and others, JCB started operation of an acceleration program JCB Payment Lab supported by Quantum.

Interview with SMFG’s Goya Furukawa, Manager of Hoops Link Tokyo

Please tell us the history about how SMFG came to start Hoops Link Tokyo:

Goya Furukawa (IT Innovation Dpt., SMFG)

I had been sent to Los Angeles to study abroad until last year. In that neighborhood, there is Silicon Beach known as casual business base including Snapchat but I had received few information that startup business has become active in the Japanese financial industry.

By contrast, I daily heard news about the startups leading fintech or the fintech buyout by banks, such as Venmo known for the P2P money transfer.

Having an awareness of the problem about the difference between Japan and the US, I was assigned to a department in charge of fintech. The Japanese banks are still exclusive and our information given from Otemachi (where Sumitomo Mitsui Banking headquarters and fintech hub exist) will not reach to rising startups which we really deliver it to. To be closer with these startups, I thought we should establish a base in Shibuya.

What will you do in Hoops Link Tokyo?

The pure investment work is not main mission in Hoops Link Tokyo. Its first aim is to broaden business range or to be a base to create new business. Although we have a system covering strategic investment, I think it is important whether a startup deserves collaboration with us. Anyway, since our possible partners have not recognized it yet, our immediate aim is to meet them and stay close with them.

We will support doing something together or matching with another. If we received requests to collaborate with bank or group companies, Hoops Link Tokyo works as the window, as one and more SMFG staffers always stay there. We are also considering Office Hour-like service (walk-in consultation in the business hour) inviting staffers from group companies.

Geodesic Capital (the fund known as being founded by ex-the US Ambassador to Japan John Roos) and ERA (Entrepreneurs Roundtable Accelerator) are in cooperative relationship with us and will introduce us investment / support targets in the US. I want to realize cooperative activities centered on Hoops Link Tokyo; we have these funds to introduce startups having technologies / idea adoptable to our service or we can support these startups when they advance into the Japanese market.

Can you tell us the hours of operation and the frequency of events?

The hours of operation of Hoops Link Tokyo is from 9am to 9pm on weekdays. We plan to hold about three events in a week, mostly at night. Setting the third week of September as “executive week”, we will provide sessions over five consecutive nights having guests who performs as mentors in Hoops Link Tokyo (accepting reservation for participation on the website).

We have to take priority of holding events initially, but I want everyone to recognize where we are and which kind of network we have. I will be glad if they think that bank is an open environment than expected or are concerned about the possibility of collaboration.

Do you have KPI (key performance indicator)-like measure for Hoops Link Tokyo?

We did not set KPI for Hoops Link Tokyo. However, it would be meaningless if it does not achieve any long-term outcome. To stretch a point, the final KPI of Hoops Link Tokyo will be the exit how we succeeded in business creation.

Photos of Hoops Link Tokyo

You can mark Shibuya West Branch of Sumitomo Mitsui Banking, next to Mega-Donki. Hoops Link Tokyo is on the 6th floor of the building.
Exiting the elevator, you can see the entrance decorated with photographs in sepia tone, bringing back memories of old good days.
Under the theme of challenges in difficult situations, Hoops Link Tokyo is designed in the motif of a bar in 1920s during prohibition. The bookshelf works as a hidden door.
Each meeting room is named after cocktails such as Grasshopper or Bluesky.
Kitchen will be useful in events, stocking a large amount of liquers.

Translated by Taijiro Takeda
Edited by “Tex” Pomeroy

Maipple ties up with Tokyo model agency, launches influencer matching platform for Asia

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See the original story in Japanese. Maipple, the Japanese startup developing and offering a fashion marketplace app for Taiwanese consumers under the same name, announced last week that it has an influencer marketing platform for Asia called Tag Asia. As th platform gets its start, Maipple will partner with Asobisystem, the Tokyo-based model agency best known for managing J-pop artist Kyary Pamyu Pamyu, with the agency handling the management contracts for influencers. In December of 2015, Maipple launched the influencer marketing-powered fashion marketplace app through its Taiwanese subsidiary Stylepick, subsequently switched gears to a luxury fashion marketplace. The company has formed a network of about 500 influencers in Japan, Taiwan and Hong Kong for the marketplace app, but extracted the marketing function from the app so that companies which are not even using Maipple can take advantage of it, and this is Tag Asia. Maipple’s founder and CEO Kotaro Nagamatsu shared the following. We were originally doing influencer marketing, but it was only introductory-based. The release of Tag Asia stems from the growth of our marketing needs due to the effectiveness of Maipple and other projects leveraging influencers. Meanwhile, for Asobisystem, whose models are a driving force behind Tokyo’s Harajuku…

See the original story in Japanese.

Maipple, the Japanese startup developing and offering a fashion marketplace app for Taiwanese consumers under the same name, announced last week that it has an influencer marketing platform for Asia called Tag Asia. As th platform gets its start, Maipple will partner with Asobisystem, the Tokyo-based model agency best known for managing J-pop artist Kyary Pamyu Pamyu, with the agency handling the management contracts for influencers.

In December of 2015, Maipple launched the influencer marketing-powered fashion marketplace app through its Taiwanese subsidiary Stylepick, subsequently switched gears to a luxury fashion marketplace. The company has formed a network of about 500 influencers in Japan, Taiwan and Hong Kong for the marketplace app, but extracted the marketing function from the app so that companies which are not even using Maipple can take advantage of it, and this is Tag Asia.

Maipple’s founder and CEO Kotaro Nagamatsu shared the following.

We were originally doing influencer marketing, but it was only introductory-based. The release of Tag Asia stems from the growth of our marketing needs due to the effectiveness of Maipple and other projects leveraging influencers.

Active influencers from around Asia on Tag Asia
Image credit: Maipple

Meanwhile, for Asobisystem, whose models are a driving force behind Tokyo’s Harajuku and “Kawaii Culture” and attend events worldwide, and their own Rina Tanaka being appointed a Taipei City Tourism Ambassador, the desire to appoint models and influencers from Japan with a focus on Taiwanese companies as a way to reach all of Asia is increasing. It is in the mutual interests of both companies, then, to use Maipple’s management contracts with influencers with Asobisystem’s models for influencer marketing.

In June 2016, Maipple revealed that the company had succeeded in raising seed funds from GX Incubate, which operates Gaiax’s Sharing Economy Fund, and three angel investors.

Asobisystem recently partnered with e-commerce platform Base and Candee’s “Live Shop!” in the field of live commerce where performers introduce products in a livestreamed video. For some time now the company has also been cooperating with C Channel, a Japanese video fashion media for women expanding into various Asian countries, and with the new partnership between Maipple and Asobisystem we can expect to see more advancement of their models throughout Asia.

Translated by Amanda Imasaka
Edited by Masaru Ikeda

Japan’s Tech Bureau raises $14.7M to boost blockchain apps, cryptocurrency exchange

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See the original story in Japanese. Tech Bureau, the Japanese startup offering cryptocurrency and blockchain technology, announced today that it has fundraissed 1.6 billion yen (about $14.7 million) from Tokyo-based enterprise software company Infoteria (TSE:3853) and investment firm Jafco (TSE:8595). According to the Nikkei, the funds will be used to enhance infrastructure and service development of Zaif, the company’s cryptocurrency exchange, also focusing on expanding Mijin and their other private blockchain-based products to the European and Asian markets. The company is about to launch a token sale on October 2nd for their COMSA platform for ICOs (initial coin offerings) while the Nikkei article says that the project has remarkably attracted over 120,000 registrants who manifest interest in the sale. The COMSA platform will raise funds through a token sale for improving the service environment of itself. So the funds in the latest announcement is cash injection into Tech Bureau rather than the COMSA platform, separately dealt with by the purpose of use. Speaking of the COMSA platform, Japanese financial information provider Fisco (TSE:3807), Nippon Technology Venture Partners (NTVP) and ABBALab have recently committed to investing in CMS (the platform’s token coin) and XEM (NEM cryptocurrency). Tech Bureau announced yesterday that…

See the original story in Japanese.

Tech Bureau, the Japanese startup offering cryptocurrency and blockchain technology, announced today that it has fundraissed 1.6 billion yen (about $14.7 million) from Tokyo-based enterprise software company Infoteria (TSE:3853) and investment firm Jafco (TSE:8595). According to the Nikkei, the funds will be used to enhance infrastructure and service development of Zaif, the company’s cryptocurrency exchange, also focusing on expanding Mijin and their other private blockchain-based products to the European and Asian markets.

The company is about to launch a token sale on October 2nd for their COMSA platform for ICOs (initial coin offerings) while the Nikkei article says that the project has remarkably attracted over 120,000 registrants who manifest interest in the sale.

The COMSA platform will raise funds through a token sale for improving the service environment of itself. So the funds in the latest announcement is cash injection into Tech Bureau rather than the COMSA platform, separately dealt with by the purpose of use.

Speaking of the COMSA platform, Japanese financial information provider Fisco (TSE:3807), Nippon Technology Venture Partners (NTVP) and ABBALab have recently committed to investing in CMS (the platform’s token coin) and XEM (NEM cryptocurrency). Tech Bureau announced yesterday that Japanese angel investor Kotaro Chiba has invested bitcoins worth $1 million US in the COMSA platform in the pre-sale phase.

See also:

Translated by Masaru Ikeda
Edted by “Tex” Pomeroy

WAmazing, offering free SIM cards for foreign visitors to Japan, secures $9.2 million

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This is the abridged version from our original article in Japanese. Tokyo-based WAmazing, the Japanese startup offering free SIM cards and tourism services to foreign visitors to Japan, announced today that it has secured funding in the latest round. Participating investors in this round were SBI Investment, Mizuho Capital, Sony Innovation Fund, Beenos, Opt Ventures and Shizuoka Capital, as well as two angel investors, Naoki Aoyagi (former Gree CFO) and Nobuhiro Ariyasu (founder of Coach United / member of Tokyo Founders Fund). Coinciding with loans from government-backed Japan Finance Corporation along with Mizuho Bank and Shizuoka Bank, WAmazing secured a total of 1 billion yen (about $9.2 million) in funding and debt but the financial terms have not been disclosed. The company claims that the funds will be used to enhance service development and human resources. See also: This startup offers free SIM cards at airport to help foreign visitors get around Japan The service packages together a SIM card, a tour guide app and information on reservations by working with smartphones. In addition to an iOS app which has been available since the launch of the service, they released an Android app back in August and expanded the locations…

Foreign visitors picking up a free SIM card from a WAmazing vending machine at Chubu Centrair Airport
Image credit: WAmazing

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

Tokyo-based WAmazing, the Japanese startup offering free SIM cards and tourism services to foreign visitors to Japan, announced today that it has secured funding in the latest round. Participating investors in this round were SBI Investment, Mizuho Capital, Sony Innovation Fund, Beenos, Opt Ventures and Shizuoka Capital, as well as two angel investors, Naoki Aoyagi (former Gree CFO) and Nobuhiro Ariyasu (founder of Coach United / member of Tokyo Founders Fund).

Coinciding with loans from government-backed Japan Finance Corporation along with Mizuho Bank and Shizuoka Bank, WAmazing secured a total of 1 billion yen (about $9.2 million) in funding and debt but the financial terms have not been disclosed. The company claims that the funds will be used to enhance service development and human resources.

See also:

The service packages together a SIM card, a tour guide app and information on reservations by working with smartphones. In addition to an iOS app which has been available since the launch of the service, they released an Android app back in August and expanded the locations of vending machines offering SIM cards from all three terminals at Narita Airport into Chubu Centrair Airport in central Japan, near Nagoya. The number of hotels that users can book through the app has reached 10,000 as of now.

In response to our question to Fumiko Kato, CEO of WAmazing, she told us the app had been installed 35,000 times and 12,000 SIM cards had been distributed as of the end of August. These stats are only for iOS app users and do not include that of Android users.

Kato shared their future outlook:

About 80% of visitors from Hong Kong and Taiwan, the demographics we are targeting, are using Android handsets. According to the survey we conducted among our 2,000 users, we found that about 70% of them had visited Japan at least once an year.

Since the interval between their visits to Japan is shorter than expected, we expect these repeat users to contribute more to our user growth. We aim to surpass 100,000 users by the end of next March.

The company recently added a payments function to its mobile app so that users can complete payments when booking a hotel online. Now they are planning to introduce a robot for distributing SIM cards to users at more locations, aiming to gain 80% of the market for foreign visitors using all airports across Japan within this year.

Translated by Masaru Ikeda
Edited by “Tex” Pomeroy

Japan’s Autok, AI chatbot assistant that schedules your meetings, raises seed round

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See the original story in Japanese. Tokyo-based Regulus Technologies, providing a AI-powered personal assistant chatbot named Autok and Autok Biz capable of schedule arrangement for plural attendants, announced on Wednesday that it had raised a seed funding from 500 Startups Japan and KLab Venture Partners. The secured amount was not disclosed but is estimated at several tens of millions of yen (several hundreds of thousands of dollars). Regulus Technologies was founded in December of 2016 by Tsubasa Ito (CEO) who formerly worked at We-b (currently known as Div running a programming course, TECH:CAMP) and Keisuke Tsukayoshi (Chief Design Officer). They had developed Autok for individual users and Autok Biz for enterprise users, and officially launched them this July. Integrating with Google Calendar or Outlook Calendar, Autok enables meeting date arrangement automatically just by sharing a unique URL with the persons to make an appointment with. Autok Biz has a function to collect user’s profile such as their name, desired location to work or working hours, realizing a reduction of workload at call centers for employment interview arrangement by companies which often hire part-time workers; this service has already been introduced to several Japanese listed enterprises including Neo-career. With the fund…

L to R: Keisuke Tsukayoshi (Chief Design Officer), Tsubasa Ito (CEO)
Image credit: Regulus Technologies

See the original story in Japanese.

Tokyo-based Regulus Technologies, providing a AI-powered personal assistant chatbot named Autok and Autok Biz capable of schedule arrangement for plural attendants, announced on Wednesday that it had raised a seed funding from 500 Startups Japan and KLab Venture Partners. The secured amount was not disclosed but is estimated at several tens of millions of yen (several hundreds of thousands of dollars).

Regulus Technologies was founded in December of 2016 by Tsubasa Ito (CEO) who formerly worked at We-b (currently known as Div running a programming course, TECH:CAMP) and Keisuke Tsukayoshi (Chief Design Officer). They had developed Autok for individual users and Autok Biz for enterprise users, and officially launched them this July.

Integrating with Google Calendar or Outlook Calendar, Autok enables meeting date arrangement automatically just by sharing a unique URL with the persons to make an appointment with. Autok Biz has a function to collect user’s profile such as their name, desired location to work or working hours, realizing a reduction of workload at call centers for employment interview arrangement by companies which often hire part-time workers; this service has already been introduced to several Japanese listed enterprises including Neo-career.

With the fund secured at this time, the team is going to enhance human resources recruitment for engineers, sales staffers and marketers, in addition to speeding up service development and business growth. Furthermore, the team will add various functions in the future with the aim to monetize through driving user traffic to meeting space rentals or restaurants, as well as advertising for an available time slot on their calendar.

Image credit: Regulus Technologies

In the field of auto-schedule arrangement with chatbot, there are some similar services: “M” of Facebook (available only in the US), X.ai which recently raised $10 million in series B round with a view to linking with Slack or Alexa (led by Fenox Venture Capital with participation from Silicon Valley Bank and DCM Ventures), and Kono provided by Korea-based Kono Laboratories. In Japan, there was a similar app named Subot shown in the Tech Lab Paak accelerator 3rd batch but the team has already ended its service.

With smart assistants and chatbots gathering more attention in the AI (Artificial Intelligence) field these days, the future growth of Regulus can be expected as well. As mentioned above, the team is looking for staffers in several openings.

Translated by Taijiro Takeda
Edited by “Tex” Pomeroy

“Gift Show Life x Design” exhibition in Tokyo underscores startup role in IoT sector

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This is a guest post authored by “Tex” Pomeroy. He is a Tokyo-based writer specializing in ICT and high technology. The Gift Show’s Life x Design exhibition was held from August 30 to September 2 at Tokyo Big Sight, where the startup role in the fast-growing Internet of Things (IoT) as related to gifts and other items closely related to daily life was underscored by a specialized corner which brought together several startups offering IoT solutions. At this corner, planned in cooperation with Japanese IT publisher ASCII, in addition to Mamorio, which keeps tabs on such items in one’s possession as keys and other products one might be liable to misplace, there were three other startups showcasing their products such as those monitoring infants. See also: Mamorio, major Japanese pharma tie up for dementia sufferer support Of particular interest was the startup Yukai Engineering, which engineers dental hygiene-use items such as robot-like toothbrush which is designed to motivate children as well as the elderly to brush their teeth and ensuring they are kept track of. As the average Japanese lifespan is extended, dental hygiene is said to be a benchmark to Quality of Life. Of particular interest was the startup…

This is a guest post authored by “Tex” Pomeroy. He is a Tokyo-based writer specializing in ICT and high technology.


Mamorio exhibits their botth at the Gift Show’s Life x Design exhibition.
Image credit: “Tex” Pomeroy

The Gift Show’s Life x Design exhibition was held from August 30 to September 2 at Tokyo Big Sight, where the startup role in the fast-growing Internet of Things (IoT) as related to gifts and other items closely related to daily life was underscored by a specialized corner which brought together several startups offering IoT solutions.

At this corner, planned in cooperation with Japanese IT publisher ASCII, in addition to Mamorio, which keeps tabs on such items in one’s possession as keys and other products one might be liable to misplace, there were three other startups showcasing their products such as those monitoring infants.

See also:

Mamorio
Image credit: Mamorio

Of particular interest was the startup Yukai Engineering, which engineers dental hygiene-use items such as robot-like toothbrush which is designed to motivate children as well as the elderly to brush their teeth and ensuring they are kept track of. As the average Japanese lifespan is extended, dental hygiene is said to be a benchmark to Quality of Life.

Of particular interest was the startup Yukai Engineering, which offers IoT products as exemplified by BOCCO robot-linked toothbrush for children and even the elderly, enabling them to be monitored. Speaking of toothbrushing generally in an observation unrelated to this specific product… especially with the average Japanese lifespan continuing to be extended, dental hygiene built up from early on can be considered to indicate the level of Quality of Life.

In addition, there were other startup exhibitors providing items that uses design to market itself and even those not design-oriented but able to use unique features as stressing traditional Japanese customs and utilizing brands from the past. Collaborations among different companies from various sectors were especially eye-catching.

Yukai Engineering’s robot-like toothbrush kit
Image credit: Yukai Engineering

Singapore’s micro-survey startup Happi now going global

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This is a guest post authored by “Tex” Pomeroy. He is a Tokyo-based writer specializing in ICT and high technology. Singapore-based micro-survey firm Happi is launching its 2.0 app over the Asia-Pacific region, starting with Southeast Asia, Oceania, India, Sri Lanka and Japan as well as Columbia. It has other locations in the pipeline now. Available in 11 languages, the app includes a self-service portal to enable partners and clients to conduct market research and consumer activation quickly, easily and inexpensively. Happi was founded by Greg Lipper in January of 2016 and has to date processed over 2.5 million survey responses from over 20,000 users – mostly university students – in Singapore and Manila. The Happi founder says, What turns this around from a marketing perspective is its ease and frequency. Instead of sitting through a 45-minute survey where you never hear from the company again, respondents only take a minute to answer questions, win prizes, and we can touch base with them anytime we want. This micro-survey app enables clients to understand, engage and converse at scale with precisely defined consumer segments. The surveys are quick and regular, enticing respondents back with opportunities to win prizes and contribute to their favorite causes…

This is a guest post authored by “Tex” Pomeroy. He is a Tokyo-based writer specializing in ICT and high technology.


Happi

Singapore-based micro-survey firm Happi is launching its 2.0 app over the Asia-Pacific region, starting with Southeast Asia, Oceania, India, Sri Lanka and Japan as well as Columbia. It has other locations in the pipeline now. Available in 11 languages, the app includes a self-service portal to enable partners and clients to conduct market research and consumer activation quickly, easily and inexpensively.

Happi was founded by Greg Lipper in January of 2016 and has to date processed over 2.5 million survey responses from over 20,000 users – mostly university students – in Singapore and Manila.

The Happi founder says,

What turns this around from a marketing perspective is its ease and frequency. Instead of sitting through a 45-minute survey where you never hear from the company again, respondents only take a minute to answer questions, win prizes, and we can touch base with them anytime we want.

Happi CEO Greg Lipper

This micro-survey app enables clients to understand, engage and converse at scale with precisely defined consumer segments.

The surveys are quick and regular, enticing respondents back with opportunities to win prizes and contribute to their favorite causes in return for answering 5-question surveys.

Chief Happiness Officer Lipper said,

We have a relationship based on daily conversations with consumers – not a drive-by survey.

Happi recruits users through alliances with a wide range of charities, teams, clubs, community and student activity groups, offering them a risk-free, cost-free and community-building way to raise funding.

Lipper adds,

This gives businesses and individuals around the world the power to ask precisely profiled consumers what they really want, and then deliver a tailored promotion to them based on those exact preferences, adds Lipper.

Happi’s new self-service portal enables clients to define their segments, check on the number of responders who meet that profile, launch surveys and see their results in interactive reports.

Notes Lipper,

Traditional market research is expensive, complex, and resource intensive, meaning only the largest of Asian companies and multinationals are able to include formal market research in their planning and development. Happi makes market research faster, easier and cheaper so that a broader range of companies can use it. This ‘Research Lite’ approach is the first step on the path to more sophisticated marketing plans and digital engagement strategies for SMEs across the region.

Award For Academic Startups ceremony held at Innovation Japan gathering in Tokyo

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This is a guest post authored by “Tex” Pomeroy. He is a Tokyo-based writer specializing in ICT and high technology. The Award for Academic Startups, marking its fourth year, held its presentation ceremony at Tokyo Big Sight’s East Hall 1 on the opening day of “Innovation Japan.” The annual two-day event is sponsored by the Japan Science and Technology Agency (JST) in cooperation with the New Energy and Industrial Technology Development Organization (NEDO). The 2017 ceremony in particular was special in that the award category came to include an “Early Edge” Award which is for startups that had been launched within the last three years and headed by someone aged 30 years old or younger. The winner of this newly-instituted award was Lily MedTech, headed by Shiho Azuma with support provided by the University of Tokyo. The firm is offering a system for an easier-to-use breast cancer screening based on research results from JST’s Center Of Innovation program. The fact that the young lady CEO’s mother had passed away from breast cancer added extra weight to the need to promote this new technology. Conventional screening methods are detested by women despite the fact that it is a prevalent form of cancer…

This is a guest post authored by “Tex” Pomeroy. He is a Tokyo-based writer specializing in ICT and high technology.


L to R: Takashi Azuma (Prof. of Mechanobio Engineering, the University of Tokyo), Shiho Azuma (CEO of Lily MedTech), Shuichi Matsuda (Chair of Award Selection Committee / Prof. Emeritus, Waseda University)

The Award for Academic Startups, marking its fourth year, held its presentation ceremony at Tokyo Big Sight’s East Hall 1 on the opening day of “Innovation Japan.” The annual two-day event is sponsored by the Japan Science and Technology Agency (JST) in cooperation with the New Energy and Industrial Technology Development Organization (NEDO). The 2017 ceremony in particular was special in that the award category came to include an “Early Edge” Award which is for startups that had been launched within the last three years and headed by someone aged 30 years old or younger.

The winner of this newly-instituted award was Lily MedTech, headed by Shiho Azuma with support provided by the University of Tokyo. The firm is offering a system for an easier-to-use breast cancer screening based on research results from JST’s Center Of Innovation program. The fact that the young lady CEO’s mother had passed away from breast cancer added extra weight to the need to promote this new technology. Conventional screening methods are detested by women despite the fact that it is a prevalent form of cancer which can be life-threatening.

There are some two thousand university-linked startups in Japan but the country is still far behind the US for example in terms of robustness and vigor for this category of startups. The Award for Academic Startups looks to find and highlight technologies based on “own ground” research and development rather than relying on non-Japanese work. Minister Motoo Hayashi in charge of the industry portfolio were among the dignitaries in attendance at the ceremony this year.

Cyfuse Biomedical presented their proprietary 3D bio-printing technology.

Other awards, categorized after the heads of JST, NEDO and the Japan Venture Society as well as the ministers in charge of Education/Science & Technology and of Economy, Trade & Industry, were given to such medical field startups like ORTHOreBIRTH which in tandem with Nagoya Institute of Technology produced an artifical sponge-like bone product – cleared by FDA for use in the United States – as well as Cyfuse Biomedical, along with Saga University, realizing 3D printing of blood vessels and internal organs.

Of interest for me were the power device development plans announced by FLOSFIA as backed by Kyoto University and the University of Tokyo’s Edge Capital plus the development of a new transparent (thermal) insulation material (called SUFA) by tiem factory utilizing Kyoto University research findings and working with materials company YKK AP. The remaining award was given to the University of Tokyo-affiliated PKSHA Technology using an algorithm for furthering Deep Learning.

Benjamin Joffe from Shenzhen-based accelerator HAX shared the latest trends in hardware startups.

Japan’s Anri launches $56M third fund

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See the original story in Japanese. Tokyo-based Anri, the startup-focused investment fund led by Anri Samata, revealed on Thursday that it has formed Anri Investment Fund Limited Partnership No.3. Participating investors in this fund include Yahoo Japan, SME Support JAPAN, Mizuho Bank, and Seibu Shinkin Bank as well as existing investors such as Mixi, Gree, Adways in addition to Voyage Group. The fund is worth about 6 billion yen, or $55.6 million US. The fund also unveiled that it will form an in-house team with expertise necessary to build and manage companies, aiming to give their portfolio companies intensive follow-on support from the aspects of legal affairs, intellectual property, team management, public relations, marketing strategy, among others, which we have seen at US firms like Andreessen Horowitz offering to their investee companies. The fund currently has two offices in Shibuya (Tokyo’s largest startup neighborhood) and Hongo (near the University of Tokyo), each of which has teams undergoing incubation. It plans to add some locations to nourish more seed startups which are typically comprised of one to three team members. Samata says that his firm has invested in 47 companies through its No.1 and No.2 funds. Renowned investees include UUUM (multichannel…

Anri Samata (right), Masahiro Samejima (left)

See the original story in Japanese.

Tokyo-based Anri, the startup-focused investment fund led by Anri Samata, revealed on Thursday that it has formed Anri Investment Fund Limited Partnership No.3. Participating investors in this fund include Yahoo Japan, SME Support JAPAN, Mizuho Bank, and Seibu Shinkin Bank as well as existing investors such as Mixi, Gree, Adways in addition to Voyage Group. The fund is worth about 6 billion yen, or $55.6 million US.

The fund also unveiled that it will form an in-house team with expertise necessary to build and manage companies, aiming to give their portfolio companies intensive follow-on support from the aspects of legal affairs, intellectual property, team management, public relations, marketing strategy, among others, which we have seen at US firms like Andreessen Horowitz offering to their investee companies. The fund currently has two offices in Shibuya (Tokyo’s largest startup neighborhood) and Hongo (near the University of Tokyo), each of which has teams undergoing incubation. It plans to add some locations to nourish more seed startups which are typically comprised of one to three team members.

Samata says that his firm has invested in 47 companies through its No.1 and No.2 funds. Renowned investees include UUUM (multichannel network offering business opportunities to YouTubers), Raksul (on-demand printing), Coincheck (bitcoin exchange), Coiney (SaaS-based credit card processor), Smart Drive (automobile data tracking), Schoo (online learning for business skills), Kanmu (rewarding platform for credit card holders), Clue (drone service), and Hacosco (instant VR solution). The firm has made an exit regarding five startups from the No.1 fund by selling their stake, namely Mery (women-focused fashion curation site), Mamari (mom-focused Q&A app), U-note (collaborative event summary platform), and Anydoor (crowdsourced translation).

Actively supporting “high-maintenance” seed stage companies

Uuum: IPO-ed as of August 30th

Six years since the establishment of Anri’s first fund, it was Uuum, which IPO-ed on the TSE Mothers Market on August 30th, that began to attract significant attention to the company. Four years ago and before YouTuber-related businesses heated up, Uuum secured seed round funding from Anri and successfully led the Japanese livestreaming sector. According to Uuum’s securities report, Anri has a about 17% stake in the YouTuber management startup.

Samata explained that the company’s style will not change, holding 10% in the seed round, raising that to 15% to commit to the business as the lead investor, and after additional follow-on investment their plan is to keep the final shareholding ratio at about 25%. It is a concept that includes actively engaging in the business without taking over the big corporate decisions.

On one hand, this method requires a lot of work. If we look at the investment style of other funds, the IPO (TSE) ranges from a 10 billion yen ($91M US) to 20 billion ($181M US) yen scale, or with acquisitions the range is in the tens of billions of yen. By making a big commitment to businesses, investors can expect a big return upon exiting, or they can invest many times and take a hands-off approach.

However, at the young age of 33, Samata chose such a thorny path out of the desire to show himself working hard as an entrepreneur. Since the size of the fund increased this time around, the company is prepared to offer up to 500 million yen (about $4.5M US) as a follow-on investment.

The potential of collaborations with ICO funding

Eiji Tsukiyama, CEO of Sapeet, one of Anri’s portfolio companies

Another characteristic of Anri is their belief in aggressive investment in technology-centric seed companies. Some of these examples include Hacosco (instant VR solution) and Smart Drive (car telematrics), as well Sapeet (avatar-based 3D try-on) launched by Eiji Tsukiyama, a student majoring in fluid mechanics at the University of Tokyo. According to Samata’s explanation, although seed companies in these technological and research areas have administrative funding support, for most there is a deep “valley of death” situated between them and a series A round when these startups can finally turn their idea into a market-ready product.

According to Samata’s explanation, although seed companies in these technological and research areas have administrative funding support, for most there is a deep “valley of death” situated between them and a series A round when startups can finally turn their idea into a market-ready product.

Masahiro Sameshima, a partner participating in Anri, is originally from the University of Tokyo’s Edge Capital and has a deep knowledge of technical fields. Nonetheless, seed investment is difficult in that there is no guarantee of success 100% of the time.

I asked Samata about the possibility of using ICO (Initial Coin Offering) funding, which has become increasingly popular recently. In the US there is information that firms like Union Square Ventures and Winklevoss Capital are seeking to form a “hybrid” with VC funding.

In regards to this, Samata expressed his thoughts by referencing the investments in Branch, a matching service for children with developmental disorders and experts.

I believe a fund is a product of venture capital. For example, I, myself, am donating 10 million yen annually, but the problems that can be solved in the non-profit and for profit sectors are different. However, at first glance, it looks like even problems that can only be solved through donations may also be able to use VC funding. Currently information regarding this is being gathered through making donations.

The method of token sales is also fundraising, which also leads to the possibility of exit (management buy-out for entrepreneurs and, in some cases, dividends) for investors and backers.

This is my personal opinion, but I think that the destiny of the stock market includes always being under pressure from shareholders to “rise”. However, it is difficult to confirm every company involved in social activities, such as the above-mentioned Branch, with their advanced technologies in specialized areas, as a “rising” one. If the business is rich in variety, it stands to reason they should have more funding and exit options.

While the conversation never drifted to the discussion of concrete information this time around, Samata definitely demonstrated his deep knowledge of token sales. Anri aims to support 100 companies with their 3rd fund.

Translated by Amanda Imasaka
Edited by Masaru Ikeda

Money Forward, Japan’s SaaS accounting startup, files for IPO

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Tokyo-based Money Forward, Japan’s leading SaaS (software as a service) accounting startup, announced today that its IPO application to the Tokyo Stock Exchange (TSE) has been approved. The company will be listed on the TSE Mothers Market on 29 September with plans to offer 1,617,700 shares for public subscription and to sell up to 382,300 shares in over-allotment options, for a total of 931,000 shares. SMBC Nikko Securities will lead the underwriting. Led by the company’s CEO Yosuke Tsuji (19.95%), its major shareholders include Jafco (TSE:8595, 14.90%), board member Chihiro Asano (9.47%), CISO Takashi Ichikawa (6.60%), Monex Ventures (4.78%), Credit Saison (TSE:8253, 4.11%), and the company board member Toshio Taki (3.36%). According to the consolidated statement as of November 2016, they posted a revenue of 1.54 billion yen (about 14 million) with an ordinary loss of 882.6 million yen ($8 million) and a net loss of 890 million yen ($8.1 million). Money Forward was founded in May of 2012 under its previous name of Money Book. Since December of 2012, the company has been providing online personal accounting for individuals called Money Forward, allowing them to easily manage their daily expenses by integrating their bank passbook and credit purchase history…

Image credit: Takeshi Hirano

Tokyo-based Money Forward, Japan’s leading SaaS (software as a service) accounting startup, announced today that its IPO application to the Tokyo Stock Exchange (TSE) has been approved. The company will be listed on the TSE Mothers Market on 29 September with plans to offer 1,617,700 shares for public subscription and to sell up to 382,300 shares in over-allotment options, for a total of 931,000 shares. SMBC Nikko Securities will lead the underwriting.

Led by the company’s CEO Yosuke Tsuji (19.95%), its major shareholders include Jafco (TSE:8595, 14.90%), board member Chihiro Asano (9.47%), CISO Takashi Ichikawa (6.60%), Monex Ventures (4.78%), Credit Saison (TSE:8253, 4.11%), and the company board member Toshio Taki (3.36%).

Yosuke Tsuji, founder / CEO of Money Forward
Image credit: Takeshi Hirano

According to the consolidated statement as of November 2016, they posted a revenue of 1.54 billion yen (about 14 million) with an ordinary loss of 882.6 million yen ($8 million) and a net loss of 890 million yen ($8.1 million).

Money Forward was founded in May of 2012 under its previous name of Money Book. Since December of 2012, the company has been providing online personal accounting for individuals called Money Forward, allowing them to easily manage their daily expenses by integrating their bank passbook and credit purchase history with information obtained from their web bank and credit accounts. The service is also available for desktop, as well as iOS and Android platforms.

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Edited by “Tex” Pomeroy

Screenshot of Money Forward for Business
Image credit: Money Forward