Publication Name: TechinAsia
Date: May 2015
Two years ago, Big V Telecom became the first startup in India to be incubated by Tata Elxsi, a global design firm under the umbrella of the Tata Group corporation. Think of Tata Group as something like the General Electric of India, with a market cap of over US$140 billion and a presence in over 80 countries. It created India’s first technology products startup incubator in the corporate sector, with an emphasis on products. Since then, Tata Elxsi has taken more startups under its wing as part of the Incub@te program, for a grand total of three.
Yes, just three. In two years.
To those familiar with startup incubators, that might sound a bit, well, unproductive. The typical accelerator or incubator program lasts three to six months – six months being on the long end. They take on average about 10 startups per batch. But Incub@te is decidedly atypical.
Tata Elxsi has no fixed application window and takes in startups that it finds worthy as they crop up for a period of 18 months. "The reason behind going for 18 months or so is because we are going to incubate companies who are working in the core technology space," says Rajesh Kumar, VP of strategic initiatives at Tata Elxsi. He explains that when it comes to working on medical electronics, internet of things, embedded systems, cloud telephony, and other core technologies, six months just isn’t long enough to experiment.
"The pace at which we try to force the startup to move itself becomes a cause for its demise," Kumar says. "Our 18 months is planned keeping in mind that we should be in a position to give the startup an opportunity to work through two or three versions of product and two or three versions of business model."
As a result, Incub@te has very few startups. The method is risky, Kumar admits, because a year-and-a-half is a lot of time to invest in so few startups that, statistically speaking, will probably fail. However, these types of startups have much less competition than their counterparts in sectors like social and ecommerce, and they don’t usually operate in zero sum winner-takes-all industries. Tata Elxsi wants to build the foundational technologies for tomorrow’s startups, and isn’t interested in making a quick buck.
Incub@te startups
Big V Telecom, for instance, is building cloud telephony solutions to be used by other apps and software. It’s not building an app for the end user, but the underlying technology similar to what Skype and Viber use to make voice calls possible over the internet.
Sismatik, a current incubee, works in a similar fashion. Upon first glance at its website, you might not be able to pinpoint exactly what it does. But it’s creating the backbone for delivering video content on smart TVs, be it video, games, podcasts, or music. An end user will probably never know that he or she is using Sismatik’s tech, but it’s present nonetheless.
The purpose of Street Smart, the other startup currently in Incub@te, is more immediately apparent. It makes a shopping app that uses location and push notifications to alert the user to discounts, loyalty programs, and special offers at brick-and-mortar retail stores and malls. The app prevents these retailers from accessing the user’s phone number and spamming them with irrelevant offers. While the app is all well and good, its real value lies in the emerging tech that brands and merchants use to communicate with shoppers via mobile device.
Playing the long game
Tata Elxsi has been around for 25 years and has worked with major technology companies the world over, as well as startups from Silicon Valley. So why is it interested in local Indian startups like these?
"Every year the number of new technologies that are coming into existence and the way they are changing the landscape, this is only increasing," Kumar says. "And if we try to do everything on our own, or if we get glued to a few customers and their requirements, at some point in time we’ll be taken by surprise."
Finding startups built around core technologies allows Tata Group to stay in touch with emerging tech and play the long game. "That’s where we feel we can do real value addition for our startups," he says.
Tata Elxsi sifts through both direct applications and those referred to it by the Nasscom 10,000 Start-ups program, a startup assistance initiative started by India’s tech outsourcing firms. "Every year we have a face-to-face interaction with 100-plus applicants," he says, and makes the program’s intentions clear.
"Many times when a corporate sector incubation center starts, there is a feeling that it’s a CSR [corporate social responsibility] activity," he explains. "In our case, right from the beginning, we are very clear that it’s not going to be a CSR activity. It’s for-profit. We take off about 10 percent [equity]."
Kumar says Incub@te is in the process of onboarding its fourth startup in the internet-of-things field, but he didn’t give its name.
Tata Elxsi has also partnered with Singapore-based incubator Get2Volume and investment firm AISB. They have set up a startup exchange program, in which startups looking to enter their respective markets can spend some time experimenting at each others’ incubation centers.