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Japan port city of Kobe, 500 startups showcase 18 teams at 3rd batch Demo Day

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See the original story in Japanese. Kobe City along with 500 Startups held a Demo Day for the 3rd batch of the 500 Kobe Accelerator program in December. The Program held a Pre-Demo Day in Kobe the week prior, while the actual Demo Day took place in Tokyo with the intention of introducing the companies to investors and corporate open innovators. The organizers announced that some 400 people participated. Beginning with mentoring, the majority of the program content for the 3rd batch took place over a month and a half from October 29th to December 1st at the Design Creative Center Kobe (KIITO). There were 237 applicants for the 3rd batch, of which 20 teams (14 from Japan, 6 from overseas) were selected and participated (from which 18 pitched at the Demo Day). The following is a short description of the teams and service content (based on materials provided by 500 Startups) in the order that they took the stage. Tokyo Techies by Tokyo Techies (Tokyo) … offers a professional education service for cybersecurity, personalized data science and AI for companies and individuals Bonyu by Bonyu (Tokyo) …. analyzes the makeup of breast milk and provides dietary guidance and supplements…

See the original story in Japanese.

Kobe City along with 500 Startups held a Demo Day for the 3rd batch of the 500 Kobe Accelerator program in December. The Program held a Pre-Demo Day in Kobe the week prior, while the actual Demo Day took place in Tokyo with the intention of introducing the companies to investors and corporate open innovators. The organizers announced that some 400 people participated.

Beginning with mentoring, the majority of the program content for the 3rd batch took place over a month and a half from October 29th to December 1st at the Design Creative Center Kobe (KIITO). There were 237 applicants for the 3rd batch, of which 20 teams (14 from Japan, 6 from overseas) were selected and participated (from which 18 pitched at the Demo Day).

The following is a short description of the teams and service content (based on materials provided by 500 Startups) in the order that they took the stage.

  • Tokyo Techies by Tokyo Techies (Tokyo) … offers a professional education service for cybersecurity, personalized data science and AI for companies and individuals
  • Bonyu by Bonyu (Tokyo) …. analyzes the makeup of breast milk and provides dietary guidance and supplements to reduce mother’s stress and give healthy breast milk to children
  • Kiara by Jenio (Tokyo) … a video conferencing tool suppoting simultaneous interpretation with subtitles in 120 languages
  • Beacon by Lizuna G.K (Tokyo) … an app using big data to detect and prevent online fraud
  • Honey Magazine by Okko (Tokyo) … offers virtual novels for iOS and Android, mainly dealing with love comics for women
  • T-ICU by T-ICU (Ashiya) … allows remote ICU physicians to monitor the condition of a patient at ICU (intentive care unit) 24/7 and propose appropriate medical treatment to the patient’s non-ICU phyisician
  • TeamFinder by Noborder (Tokyo)  … An AI-powered recruiting platform that allows companies to build the best team
  • ExCamp by Forent (Tsukuba) … a sharing economy service for using idle land as campgrounds
  • BuyandShip by E-Buy Global (China) … an integrated sales and distribution platform for cross-border e-commerce linking Asia and the world (see related article here)
  • Doot! by Doot! (South Africa) … a matching service for visitors to Japan to experience traditional food and culture throughout the country
  • Clarity by Clarity (Tokyo) … a word-of-mouth platform/database that makes the work environment for companies transparent and allows users to search for jobs based on what it is like to work for the company
  • Web2ship by Web2ship (US) … helps online shoppers in Southeast Asia and the US choose an optimal shipping method
  • Sagri by Sagri (Hyogo) … a SaaS platform that analyzes and visualizes tacit knowledge of farmers along with space and agricultural land data
  • Elxr by Elxr (Singapore) … a fitness support app based on DNA analysis
  • Shokunin-san.com by Shokunin-san.com (Kobe) … a job matching site for construction workers
  • Pisces by Pisces (Tokyo) … a 3D online business communication tool for teams with their people working remotely
  • Visual Design Cafe by Visual Design Cafe (Kobe) … an online library of 3D models to improve the speed and quality of game development
  • GPU Eater by Pegara (US) … offers hardware and operating system as PaaS (Platform as a Service) for machine learning (deep learning)

The following two teams were unable to present due to unforeseen circumstances.

  • Vaak by Vaak (Tokyo) … leverages computer vision and deep learning to prevent shoplifting and constructing unmanned stores
  • Driver Design Studio by Driver Design Studio (Thailand) … allows auto manufacturers to propose products and services to customers based on data collected from their cars.
Web2ship by Web2ship
Visual Design Cafe by Visual Design Cafe
Tokyo Techies by Tokyo Techies
TeamFinder by Noborder
T-ICU by T-ICU
Shokunisan.com by Shokunin-san.com
Sagri by Sagri
Pisces by Pisces
Kiara by Genio
Honey Magazine by Okko
CPU Eater by Pegara
ExCamp by Forent
Elxr by Elxr
Doot! by Doot!
Clarity by Clarity
Buyandship by Buyandship
Bonyu by Bonyu
Beacon by Lizuna G.K

Translated by Amanda Imasaka
Edited by Masaru Ikeda

Tokyo Office Tour: 500 Startups Japan further engages with entrepreneurs from new base

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See the original story in Japanese. This is part of our ‘Tokyo Office Tour’ series (RSS), a modest attempt to better understand how folks in the local startup scene are working every day. On July 1st, Global Business Hub Tokyo (GBHT) officially opened in Otemachi, the city’s financial district near Tokyo station. Thus, a new startup hub has additionally appeared in the area filled with various co-working spaces or event spaces such as Egg Japan, FINOLAB and 3×3 Lab Future. 500 Startups Japan, a 500 Startup’s micro-fund for the Japanese market, bases itself at this GBHT, and will likely frequently hold events like an “office hours” with entrepreneurs or a meet-up utilizing the public space, a bragging right for GBHT. See also: Tokyo’s FinTech startup hub FINOLAB holds its first growth hack seminar In the first $30 million-sized fund launched by 500 Startups Japan last September, Mixi, Mizuho Bank, Mistletoe and angel investor Kotaro Chiba participated as LP (limited partner), and recently it was revealed that Egg Japan and Mitsubishi Estate (which is also part of GBHT’s management matrix) had joined the LP. Although 500 Startups Japan is a fund originated in Silicon Valley, it is also a ‘made-in-Japan startup…

See the original story in Japanese.

This is part of our ‘Tokyo Office Tour’ series (RSS), a modest attempt to better understand how folks in the local startup scene are working every day.

On July 1st, Global Business Hub Tokyo (GBHT) officially opened in Otemachi, the city’s financial district near Tokyo station. Thus, a new startup hub has additionally appeared in the area filled with various co-working spaces or event spaces such as Egg Japan, FINOLAB and 3×3 Lab Future. 500 Startups Japan, a 500 Startup’s micro-fund for the Japanese market, bases itself at this GBHT, and will likely frequently hold events like an “office hours” with entrepreneurs or a meet-up utilizing the public space, a bragging right for GBHT.

See also:

In the first $30 million-sized fund launched by 500 Startups Japan last September, Mixi, Mizuho Bank, Mistletoe and angel investor Kotaro Chiba participated as LP (limited partner), and recently it was revealed that Egg Japan and Mitsubishi Estate (which is also part of GBHT’s management matrix) had joined the LP. Although 500 Startups Japan is a fund originated in Silicon Valley, it is also a ‘made-in-Japan startup fund’ in whicn most of the LPs are composed of Japanese companies or investors.

Since the fund’s launch last fall, 500 Startups Japan unveiled that it had invested in meeting space-sharing service Spacee, followed by Pocket Menu which runs an O2O (online-to-offline) service for restaurants named Pocket Concierge (series A round), a virtual reality content developer Dverse (seed round) and Sora, which runs MagicPrice that emanated from Tech Lab Paak 3rd batch (seed round).

See also:

gbht-500-startups-japan-james-riney-yohei-sawayama

According to partners James Riney and Yohei Sawayama of 500 Startups Japan, two strategies upon investment are pointed out as factors for differentiating 500 Startups Japan, other than financials and its mentor network.

One is the “time machine” business. Like Spacee or Pocket Menu cases in their portfolio, some kind of business synergy are sought with startups in the same profession which already exists in US 500 Startups’ portfolio. Or, another case can be considered where US startups aiming to expand into Japan cooperate / combine / purchase Japanese startups in advance in the Japanese market. It is based on the idea of ‘buying time.’ Looking at 500 Startups as a whole, plural startups in the portfolio are able to associate and provide one worldwide services quickly, resulting in higher valuation.

The other corresponds to Dverse. Even if startups focusing on edge (specialized) technologies have the potential for global development, it is not unusual that they are not good at marketing. To support such tech-focused startups to enable global marketing by leveraging a network of journalists around the world is one of 500 Startups’ mission.

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When The Bridge started up its English version under the name of SD, I mentioned that Western investors who do not speak Japanese see the Japanese startup community as a black box. Riney and Sawayama noted that 500 Startups Japan has close ties to Silicon Valley which wants to make its ability to act becoming a guide for global investors as one of the company’s strength in order to make them more interesting to the Japanese startups and to call in further investment activities.

Upon locating its genuine base, 500 Startups Japan is currently recruiting a Marketing & Community Manager for management of events including office hours, meet-ups or for deepening engagement with startups, as well as an Executive Assistant or intern. Do check them out if interested.

gbht-community-space

Translated by Taijiro Takeda
Edited by “Tex” Pomeroy

Japan port city of Kobe launches pre-accelerator program with 500 Startups

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See the original story in Japanese. Silicon Valley-headquartered VC firm 500 Startups and the City of Kobe, Japan today announced the establishment of a collaborative pre-accelerator program. It will be run at the Kobe Institute of Computing located near Kobe-Sannomiya station from 1 August to 9 September. On the last day of the program, a Demo Day will be held for participant teams to show the result of the program, to which partners of 500 Startups will be invited, namely, Dave McClure, Christine Tsai, Zafer Younis, Marvin Liao and Mat Johnson. The City of Kobe and 500 Startups just started today accepting applications from participant startups via the program’s website. Eventually 15 to 20 teams will be selected from among them, and allowed to join the pre-accelerator program over a one month period. Applicants are limited to startups at seed stage inside / outside Japan, and covering fields including BI (business intelligence) tool, commerce, FinTech, EduTech, healthcare, IoT (Internet of Things), SaaS (Software as a Service) and so on. In particular, for cases on themes which focus on regional challenges in the Kobe area, the teams will be allowed to enter into partnership with sponsoring big companies (as part of Open…

dave-mcclure-in-kobe-city
500 Startups founding partner Dave McClure at the Kobe city office. (Photo from his Instagram timeline)

See the original story in Japanese.

Silicon Valley-headquartered VC firm 500 Startups and the City of Kobe, Japan today announced the establishment of a collaborative pre-accelerator program. It will be run at the Kobe Institute of Computing located near Kobe-Sannomiya station from 1 August to 9 September. On the last day of the program, a Demo Day will be held for participant teams to show the result of the program, to which partners of 500 Startups will be invited, namely, Dave McClure, Christine Tsai, Zafer Younis, Marvin Liao and Mat Johnson.

The City of Kobe and 500 Startups just started today accepting applications from participant startups via the program’s website. Eventually 15 to 20 teams will be selected from among them, and allowed to join the pre-accelerator program over a one month period. Applicants are limited to startups at seed stage inside / outside Japan, and covering fields including BI (business intelligence) tool, commerce, FinTech, EduTech, healthcare, IoT (Internet of Things), SaaS (Software as a Service) and so on. In particular, for cases on themes which focus on regional challenges in the Kobe area, the teams will be allowed to enter into partnership with sponsoring big companies (as part of Open Innovation support).

As in a former case where 500 startups had engaged in incubation by tying up with local government, one may be reminded of the joint activities with the City of Osaka in 2013. Taking this as an opportunity, currently various events or programs related to startup acceleration have been carried out in the Osaka area, such as an annual startup conference every February like the collaboration HackOsaka, a 4.8 billion yen (about $44 million)-fund Hack Ventures backed by Osaka City / Osaka-based companies, incubation efforts conducted mainly at OIH (Osaka Innovation Hub) / GVH (Global Venture Habitat) in front of Osaka station, or a startups dispatch program to Silicon Valley.

See also:

On the other hand, the City of Kobe has been running startup competition Kobe Global Startup Gateway or a startup support business called Kobe Startup Office which gathers promising startups from within or outside Japan from last year. Looking at startup support activities by local government in Japan other than Tokyo, they are in fierce competition with each others in trying to differentiate their own support plans or to capture startups. For example, Fukuoka City aims at globalization of the community by inviting startups from Taiwan, which is rather close geographically.

It is likely that Kobe decided to rely upon 500 Startups for ‘globalization’; the word also can be seen in the name of the startup competition KOBE Global Startup Gateway which was started as of last year. We hope the startups from Kobe will enhance their presence in global startup hubs including Silicon Valley, triggered by the establishment of this pre-accelerator program.

Translated by Taijiro Takeda
Edited by “Tex” Pomeroy

Indonesia’s Touchten Games secures series C round funding from Gree and 500 Startups

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See the original story in Japanese. Touchten Games is a Jakarta-based game studio which has developed mobile games like Ramen Chain and Sushi Chain, a gamified O2O (offline-to-online) platform called Touchten Platform, and it also conducted a successful Kickstarter campaign for Target Acquired, a side-scrolling run and gun mobile game. The company announced today that it has fundraised from Japanese mobile game giant Gree and Silicon Valley-based startup investment fund 500 Startups in a series C round. Details of the investment have not been disclosed but we were told that it is worth around 7-figures in US dollars according to unnamed sources. This is followed by their series B round back from November of 2013 to March of 2014, funding from Japan’s CyberAgent Ventures, Japanese anime studio TMS Entertainment, Singapore’s UOB Venture Management, and Indonesia’s Ideosource. The Bridge spoke with Touchten Games Co-founder and CEO Anton Soeharyo: We’ve been developing game titles to date, but we want to be a game publisher with a platform as well as keeping developing gaming titles. With the platform, we can invite many game developers in Indonesia and create business opportunities for them. To make this possible, we are adding several social features to…

touchten-three-cofounders-at-gree
CEO Anton Soeharyo (third from left), COO Rokimas Soeharyo (third from right), and CTO Dede Indrapurna (second from left)

See the original story in Japanese.

Touchten Games is a Jakarta-based game studio which has developed mobile games like Ramen Chain and Sushi Chain, a gamified O2O (offline-to-online) platform called Touchten Platform, and it also conducted a successful Kickstarter campaign for Target Acquired, a side-scrolling run and gun mobile game.

The company announced today that it has fundraised from Japanese mobile game giant Gree and Silicon Valley-based startup investment fund 500 Startups in a series C round. Details of the investment have not been disclosed but we were told that it is worth around 7-figures in US dollars according to unnamed sources. This is followed by their series B round back from November of 2013 to March of 2014, funding from Japan’s CyberAgent Ventures, Japanese anime studio TMS Entertainment, Singapore’s UOB Venture Management, and Indonesia’s Ideosource.

The Bridge spoke with Touchten Games Co-founder and CEO Anton Soeharyo:

We’ve been developing game titles to date, but we want to be a game publisher with a platform as well as keeping developing gaming titles. With the platform, we can invite many game developers in Indonesia and create business opportunities for them.

To make this possible, we are adding several social features to the Touchten Platform, such as a gifting feature, a battling feature (gamification), and an analytics system which typically depends on third-party platforms.

But developing this analytics system costs so much. Unlike analytics for websites, measurements using sessions or links which typical third-party analytics platforms are offering will make no sense for mobile game apps. We need to add an analytic system to our gaming publishing platform.

When we can create the one useful for gaming developers, we would like them not only in Indonesia and other Southeast Asian countries but also in the rest of the world to use it for distributing their titles.

In Southeast Asia, there are many game developers but few publishers distributing the former’s titles, which is a recurring problem. So Touchten Games found a business potential here in the gap. With the partnership with Gree, Touchten will be able to leverage experiences for game publishing that Gree has acquired for many years in Japan. This will also give the Indonesian startup conveniences to develop and market localized versions of game titles from Gree. Furthermore, we were told that a reason behind the investment at this time includes Gree’s intention that they want to launch O2O businesses in the Southeast Asian region.

Touchten Games was founded in 2009. We are not yet familiar with their exit plan. However, seeing how Soeharyo have been recently speaking or behaving, I think he is getting more interest in nourishing a startup ecosystem in Indonesia and the one connecting Indonesia and Japan, rather than running a startup. It will be interesting to see how the success of Touchten Platform will help many game developers in the region better reach the global market.

Edited by “Tex” Pumeroy
Proofread by Kurt Hanson

Thai handmade marketplace Blisby raises $300K from DeNA, East Ventures, 500 Startups

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See the original story in Japanese. Blisby, a Thailand-based handmade marketplace focused on serving the Southeast Asian region, announced today that it has raised $300,000 in a recent round. This round was led by Japan’s DeNA and East Ventures with participation from 500 Durians and 500 Tuk Tuks, regiocentric funds focused on Southeast Asia and Thailand by 500 Startups. Since its launch back in November 2013, Blisby has acquired 1 million pageviews and 350,000 monthly active users as of March, increasing a user base in a month-over-month growth rate of 20%. The company will use the funds to expand their business beyond Thailand to other neighboring markets in the Southeast Asia region. Blisby’s founder Phuvadol Thongthavorn was born and raised in the U.S.; prior to launching Blisby, he worked at Yahoo and Sony in California. In 2010, he decided to move from California to New York but stopped for a short break in Thailand to ordain as a Buddhist monk, where his experience during the visit prompted him to launch Blisby in Thailand without going back to the U.S. by establishing a business of Thai contemporary arts that Thongthavorn had been looking at for a long time. There are many players fiercely competing in…

blisby_screenshot

See the original story in Japanese.

Blisby, a Thailand-based handmade marketplace focused on serving the Southeast Asian region, announced today that it has raised $300,000 in a recent round. This round was led by Japan’s DeNA and East Ventures with participation from 500 Durians and 500 Tuk Tuks, regiocentric funds focused on Southeast Asia and Thailand by 500 Startups.

Since its launch back in November 2013, Blisby has acquired 1 million pageviews and 350,000 monthly active users as of March, increasing a user base in a month-over-month growth rate of 20%. The company will use the funds to expand their business beyond Thailand to other neighboring markets in the Southeast Asia region.

Blisby’s founder Phuvadol Thongthavorn was born and raised in the U.S.; prior to launching Blisby, he worked at Yahoo and Sony in California. In 2010, he decided to move from California to New York but stopped for a short break in Thailand to ordain as a Buddhist monk, where his experience during the visit prompted him to launch Blisby in Thailand without going back to the U.S. by establishing a business of Thai contemporary arts that Thongthavorn had been looking at for a long time.

There are many players fiercely competing in this space, including Etsy and Fab in the U.S., Pinkoi in Taiwan, in addition to Anders/Creema,Tenote and Minne, not to mention Iichi in Japan. Particularly, Etsy will be listed at NASDAQ next Wednesday, which may be the largest for a New York-based technology company in 16 years.

Edited by “Tex” Pomeroy

Japan’s Beenos joins $2M investment round in India’s e-commerce enabler KartRocket

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Tokyo-based Beenos (previously Netprice.com) announced today that it has participated in a $2 million investment with India’s Nirvana Venture Advisors and 500 Startups in New Delhi-based Bigfoot Retail Solutions, the company behind India’s e-commerce enabling platform KartRocket. For Beenos, this follows their investments in other companies in the Indian e-commerce industry, such as ShopClues (January 2013) and Citrus Pay (December 2013). Beenos had also invested in Indonesia’s biggest e-commerce platform Tokopedia in its early days in 2012, and the former company unveiled yesterday that it had earned about $4 million in profit by transferring some Tokopedia shares to Softbank and Sequoia Capital. KartRocket provides an e-commerce platform that enables retailers to launch their online storefronts easily in a way that is similar to what Shopify does in the US. The company was serving only about 100 online stores a year ago, but that number has now jumped to 1,900. KartRocket previously fundraised an undisclosed amount in angel funding from 5ideas Startup Superfuel and 500 Startups, with participation from Jatin Aneja, a partner at India’s largest law firm Amarchand Mangaldas, in July 2013.

kartrocket_featuredimage

Tokyo-based Beenos (previously Netprice.com) announced today that it has participated in a $2 million investment with India’s Nirvana Venture Advisors and 500 Startups in New Delhi-based Bigfoot Retail Solutions, the company behind India’s e-commerce enabling platform KartRocket.

For Beenos, this follows their investments in other companies in the Indian e-commerce industry, such as ShopClues (January 2013) and Citrus Pay (December 2013). Beenos had also invested in Indonesia’s biggest e-commerce platform Tokopedia in its early days in 2012, and the former company unveiled yesterday that it had earned about $4 million in profit by transferring some Tokopedia shares to Softbank and Sequoia Capital.

KartRocket provides an e-commerce platform that enables retailers to launch their online storefronts easily in a way that is similar to what Shopify does in the US. The company was serving only about 100 online stores a year ago, but that number has now jumped to 1,900.

KartRocket previously fundraised an undisclosed amount in angel funding from 5ideas Startup Superfuel and 500 Startups, with participation from Jatin Aneja, a partner at India’s largest law firm Amarchand Mangaldas, in July 2013.

Korea’s VCNC raises funds from 500 Startups and Global Brain

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Korea-based VCNC, the startup that operates the couples app Between, announced today it has raised series C funding from 500 Startups and Japanese VC firm Global Brain. Details were not disclosed but the funding looks to be worth several millions of dollars according to TechCrunch Japan. Prior to this funding, the company also raised funds from Japanese internet company DeNA back in February, following rapid user growth fueled by a new version of their app. The company recently hired a local employee in Taiwan in an effort to reach out to more users in South East Asian regions. Using these new funds, the company will intensify marketing in Japan with an eye to expanding to the US market as well. via TechCrunch Japan

vcnc-500startups-globalbrain-logos_leadimage

Korea-based VCNC, the startup that operates the couples app Between, announced today it has raised series C funding from 500 Startups and Japanese VC firm Global Brain. Details were not disclosed but the funding looks to be worth several millions of dollars according to TechCrunch Japan.

Prior to this funding, the company also raised funds from Japanese internet company DeNA back in February, following rapid user growth fueled by a new version of their app.

The company recently hired a local employee in Taiwan in an effort to reach out to more users in South East Asian regions. Using these new funds, the company will intensify marketing in Japan with an eye to expanding to the US market as well.

via TechCrunch Japan

In conversation with Whill, the Japanese personal mobility startup on a roll in Silicon Valley

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Based on the original article, written in Japanese Whill is a Japanese startup developing next-generation personal mobility vehicles. Currently they’re based in Silicon Valley having been selected by 500 Startups to participate in its incubation program. Kiyo Kobayashi recently spoke with CEO Satoshi Sugie for us to learn more about their product and its launch. Kobayashi: Can you give me a brief introduction about Whill. Sugie: We are developing next-gen personal mobility. Our mission is to make mobility fun and smart for everyone. Kobayashi: You are based here in San Francisco now. What is the advantage of having the office here? Sugie: We have more users here. The market here is nearly eight times bigger than the Japanese market. We thought we would eventually have to expand in the US even if we had started in Japan. But then we thought it would be better to start in the US from the beginning, as we were getting more inquiries from American users. So this was a natural decision. And there are many more early adopters and gadget enthusiasts here. It could be a good idea to export our products from the US to Japan. Kobayashi: What is the most challenging…

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Based on the original article, written in Japanese

Whill is a Japanese startup developing next-generation personal mobility vehicles. Currently they’re based in Silicon Valley having been selected by 500 Startups to participate in its incubation program. Kiyo Kobayashi recently spoke with CEO Satoshi Sugie for us to learn more about their product and its launch.

Kobayashi: Can you give me a brief introduction about Whill.

Sugie: We are developing next-gen personal mobility. Our mission is to make mobility fun and smart for everyone.

Kobayashi: You are based here in San Francisco now. What is the advantage of having the office here?

Sugie: We have more users here. The market here is nearly eight times bigger than the Japanese market. We thought we would eventually have to expand in the US even if we had started in Japan. But then we thought it would be better to start in the US from the beginning, as we were getting more inquiries from American users. So this was a natural decision. And there are many more early adopters and gadget enthusiasts here. It could be a good idea to export our products from the US to Japan.

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Kobayashi: What is the most challenging part of running your business here?

Sugie: Um… English.

Kobayashi: I am struggling with that as well.

Sugie: This is something very basic, but it was hard to launch an office here. I had no idea and it would be such a huge challenge for me. But fortunately, we could join 500 Startups, and we were referred to lawyers and banks.

Kobayashi: My understanding is that 500 Startups has many B2B startups, but not many hardware markers. As a hardware maker, did you benefit a lot by joining 500 Startups?

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Sugie: Maybe not so much. (laughs) But 500 Startups has an amazing network. As Japanese guys who came all the way to North America, people usually wonder, who are those guys? But 500 Startups turned us into something, giving us huge credability. We pitched to investors on DemoDay, and because they knew we are in 500 Startups, the chance they would meet with us increases a lot. […] Investors take it as an indicator that a startup’s business is beyond a certain level.

Kobayashi: I heard patent issues are quite tough.

Sugie: We put our first priority on patent-related matters. Our CTO Muneaki Fukuoka has experience handling patent issues at Olympus in the past. So along with him and the international patent office, I work on these matters. We pay a lot of attention to the safety level of the product too. There is an international standard, which we have passed, in order to make our products reliable, safe, and durable.

Japanese engineering still has a high reputation for durability and high quality, and people have such a positive image of Japanese products. We created promotion video, and one American even told us to put the caption ‘Japanese engineering’ in it. I cannot think of any better advantage than that.

Kobayashi: Very interesting.

Sugie: It would be nice to produce locally for local consumption. And the best combination is made-in-USA and Japanese engineering. That’s what I heard.

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Kobayashi: According to your AngelList page, about 20 angels have funded your company, is that right?

Sugie: The ratio is 50% Japanese, 40% American, and 10% Taiwanese. We decided to accept those who have a strong network here or have strength in manufacturing.

Kobayashi: Investors are from 500 Startups network?

Sugie: I heard they looked for hardware startups from the portfolios of 500 Startups, Y-Combinator, and such.

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Kobayashi: Were there any services which were particularly helpful when launching your business?

Sugie: AngelList helped a lot. Not only in terms of fundraising, but also for hiring as well. We have five or six applications for internships every week.

Kobayashi: What skill sets do you see the most in those applicants?

Sugie: Those who want to launch a startup. And Stanford students.

Kobayashi: I remember you said you want to work with someone who has a specific vision rather than someone who is interested in money.

Sugie: Vision and skills are important. We ask for resumes and cover letters from the applicants. On cover letters, applicants write about the reason why they want to work for us.

Some people copy and paste things for their cover letter. Some letters don’t even have the Whill name on it. We screen them, and set Skype interviews for selected people.

For example, one of our team members, Chris, told us at the beginning that he had been thinking for a long time why wheelchair design was not so appealing. His father used a wheelchair and had many difficultires. I learned from him that wheelchairs can even have an influence over the users’ families.

Yet, we don’t hire right away. We let them work with us, like helping us at exhibitions and such. We spend a few months before making the final hiring decision.

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Kobayashi: I see.

Sugie: Another member, Julia, is the fourth Whill customer. She experienced an accident and started using a wheelchair, and gives us comments from the perspective of a real user.

These members have passion and actively share their ideas. We look for the type of members who can share the same mission and help establish good culture in our small team.

Kobayashi: Who are your target users?

Sugie: Our initial target users are those who are somehow self-conscious. Stylish people. We assume, our initial users are those who have a lot of interests in society or politics and who are working with people without a handicap. Or perhaps they are relatively well-off people who are thinking of buying a nice wheelchair for their kids or parents.

We want to get these early adopters and hopefully spread their influence to other users by making the product more public. When it can be more recognized by the masses in this way, we can move on to the next step and could reduce the production cost and the price.

Kobayashi: Very interesting.

Sugie: Well, we’ll keep working on through trial and error. Honestly, we had no idea how things would work out. We’ve interviewed about 300 potential users. Eventually, we had a long talk with five people who showed big interest in buying the 1.5 million yen ($15,000) product and signed the contract.

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Kobayashi: Hearing too much feedback sometimes makes it difficult to find features to focus on.

Sugie: I went to a lot of meetups, even ones that were not quite related to our business. I go to work and to meetings with Whill. You don’t know when and where you will find opportunities, it could be even on the street. I do everything I can think of.

Kobayashi: I think it is important to try every single idea. We work with that motto too.

Sugie: That’s something a lot of people advise, but you really have to put everything on the line.

Kobayashi: I agree. “Lean startup“ sounds cool, but it really requires a lot of work.

Sugie: That’s why each member needs to be passionate about the mission. I’ve seen a lot of teams who fall apart, even within 500 Startups. Skills and background experience are very important, but first and foremost, you cannot join a startup without having strong passion.

Kobayashi: How do you find out if a person has that passion?

Sugie: I let all our members meet the applicant. And unless we all think that person has something, we don’t hire him or her. It is especially difficult to understand the person when they are not Japanese.

If there are 100 applicants, 100 of them will say “My past experiences are the best fit for Whill’s business” or “I am the best fit for Whill!“ (laugh) So I got a lot of advice regarding hiring from among people spread across various fields.

Kobayashi: I think that is a very important aspect. Thank you for your time today!

About the interviewer

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KiyoKobayashi

Kiyo launched his own business exporting food in 2004 while he was a university student, and succeeded in building new sales channels. In 2005, he founded In The Cup, a coffee e-commerce site. In 2009 he founded Nobot, and that company was subsequently acquired by KDDI in 2011. In December 2013, he founded Chanoma in the US. He is also a advisor for several VCs and startups, including The Bridge.

Big data startup Hapyrus rebrands as FlyData, raises $1.6M

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See the original story in Japanese. Silicon-valley based Hapyrus, a Japanese startup focused on developing big data solutions, announced yesterday that it has raised $1.6 million from investors in Japan and the US, including 500startups. Coinciding with these funds, the startup will rebrand itself as FlyData and set up a local subsidiary in Japan. The company is led by Japanese entrepreneur Koichi Fujikawa, who previously worked with a number of prominent Japanese startups like Dennotai (acquired by Yahoo Japan back in 2000), Simplex Technology (TSE:4340), and Sirius Technology (also acquired by Yahoo Japan, 2010). They launched a new service called ‘FlyData for Amazon Redshift’ back in February, allowing automatic uploading and migration of data to Amazon Redshift, Amazon’s data-warehouse service. The decision to rebrand reflects the company’s intention to focus on providing and developing its FlyData service. Fujikawa explained the rationale behind this change at a press briefing yesterday: We’ve been originally developing middleware solutions for Hadoop, but I was so surprised when I saw Amazon Redshift for the first time. I thought that no other options besides Hadoop could deliver big data solutions that work, but in fact Amazon Redshift can do it for about $1,000 an year –…

hareyama-fujikawa-saito
From the left: Kei Hareyama (country manager), Koichi Fujikawa (founder/CEO), and Daniel Saito (vice president)

See the original story in Japanese.

Silicon-valley based Hapyrus, a Japanese startup focused on developing big data solutions, announced yesterday that it has raised $1.6 million from investors in Japan and the US, including 500startups. Coinciding with these funds, the startup will rebrand itself as FlyData and set up a local subsidiary in Japan.

The company is led by Japanese entrepreneur Koichi Fujikawa, who previously worked with a number of prominent Japanese startups like Dennotai (acquired by Yahoo Japan back in 2000), Simplex Technology (TSE:4340), and Sirius Technology (also acquired by Yahoo Japan, 2010).

They launched a new service called ‘FlyData for Amazon Redshift’ back in February, allowing automatic uploading and migration of data to Amazon Redshift, Amazon’s data-warehouse service. The decision to rebrand reflects the company’s intention to focus on providing and developing its FlyData service.

Fujikawa explained the rationale behind this change at a press briefing yesterday:

We’ve been originally developing middleware solutions for Hadoop, but I was so surprised when I saw Amazon Redshift for the first time. I thought that no other options besides Hadoop could deliver big data solutions that work, but in fact Amazon Redshift can do it for about $1,000 an year – extremely cheaper than conventional technology. When Amazon’s mentor team came to visit 500startups where we were residing, they gave us a complimentary account for Amazon Redshift. When we tried it, it yielded 10 to 100 times better performance than Hadoop. It was then that we were convinced that we could not win with Hadoop.

While an abundant of solutions for cloud data processing are available, many companies have difficulty in uploading their data, and for many, their data remains in an on-premises environment. We found that there will be a pressing need to solve this issue, which led us to focus on our FlyData business.

flydata_logo

But it wasn’t easy reaching this conclusion. Fujikawa’s co-founders left the company because of a gap in their ideas about business strategy. But he believed in the potential of his business and raised $925,000 from investors in Japan and the US last summer. He succeeded in hiring competent workers through Japanese social recruiting platform Wantedly.

For companies, since FlyData technology uploads your data from an on-premise RDBMS (rational database management system) to cloud-based data warehouses like Amazon Redshift, you need to install a FlyData component on your RDBMS server. The component for MySQL is available for now, and components for PostgreSQL, Oracle, and Microsoft SQL Server will follow soon.

Since the 2013 launch, FlyData for Amazon RedShift has acquired more than 40 corporate users and has over 40% growth in sales every month. They’ve seen a striking increase in the growth here in Japan, across sectors like social gaming, ad tech, and digital marketing. Fujikawa noted that they have prominent clients like Brightroll, Upworthy, Datalot, Enish, and Tokyo Otaku Mode.

FlyData is also a qualified member of the Amazon Redshift Partners program, where we can find a number of their competitors, including Informatica, Talend, Attunity, and SnapLogic. Fujikawa explained a little more about their advantage over these competitors:

From my perspective, Informatica and Talend has many problems in supporting cloud platforms. And Attunity and SnapLogic have not yet made an impact in the Japanese market. In terms of a presence in Japan and the Asia Pacific region, I believe we have an advantage.

Furthermore, Amazon is good at cloud computing but is not as good with data located that’s located in a client’s on-premise environment. But we can handle it, so that we think we’re a good complementary service to Amazon. For the time being, we are currently providing the service for Amazon, which is leading this space, but partnering with other platforms like Google Big Query might be a potential option for us in the future.

Along with the launch of their subsidiary in Japan, a number of notable individuals have joined their management team. Their vice president of sales and international growth Daniel Saito co-founded Rimnet (one of Japan’s oldest internet providers, later acquired by PSINet) and was involved in launching MySQL K.K. Kei Hareyama was appointed as the country manager for the Japanese market, bringing over 12 years experience in the data analytics sector to the table.

In Japan, we’ve seen quite a few startups providing business centric services for global markets. On a related note, Treasure Data, another notable Japanese startup focused on big data solutions, also received angel investment worth $2.75 million back in 2012, with funds coming from several investors including Jerry Yang (Yahoo co-founder) and Yukihiro ‘Matz’ Matsumoto (the inventor of the Ruby programming language).

Next-gen Japanese wheelchair startup, Whill, closes seed funding with a total of $1,750,000

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See the original article in Japanese Whill is a Japanese startup that is currently developing a next-generation wheelchair. Earlier this week the startup unveiled that it has raised funds from Vegas Tech Fund, 500Startups, Mitsubishi UFJ Capital, and individual angel investors back on November 6th. The total amount of funding raised in this round is $750,000, completing the company’s seed funding of $1.75 million in total. Vegas Tech Fund, also involved in this most recent funding, includes Zappos’ Tony Hsieh as a partner CEO. Coinciding with the announcement, Whill has renewed its company website and has began online pre-orders. According to the CEO Satoshi Sugie, the company has already sold out the 50 available machines by pre-order, and there are over 100 users waiting to buy. They first plan to market the products in the US and are aiming to for a Japan release in late 2014. Sugie said that he wants to use the funding raised this time not only for Whill’s development but also to add some human resources, such as persons who can perform maintenance on the machine. He thinks it is very important to attain a high level of customer satisfaction. The company is also looking…

WHILL

See the original article in Japanese

Whill is a Japanese startup that is currently developing a next-generation wheelchair. Earlier this week the startup unveiled that it has raised funds from Vegas Tech Fund, 500Startups, Mitsubishi UFJ Capital, and individual angel investors back on November 6th.

The total amount of funding raised in this round is $750,000, completing the company’s seed funding of $1.75 million in total. Vegas Tech Fund, also involved in this most recent funding, includes Zappos’ Tony Hsieh as a partner CEO. Coinciding with the announcement, Whill has renewed its company website and has began online pre-orders.

According to the CEO Satoshi Sugie, the company has already sold out the 50 available machines by pre-order, and there are over 100 users waiting to buy. They first plan to market the products in the US and are aiming to for a Japan release in late 2014.

Sugie said that he wants to use the funding raised this time not only for Whill’s development but also to add some human resources, such as persons who can perform maintenance on the machine. He thinks it is very important to attain a high level of customer satisfaction.

The company is also looking for business development persons and field engineers. Anyone keen to get involved should consider getting in touch. Sugie is currently exhibiting at CES, the Consumer Electronics Show taking place in Las Vegas.

Seeing more and more Japanese startups trying to break into overseas markets is very encouraging for the other startups in Japan. We will also keep an eye on Whill to see how they progress.