Saturday, May 21, 2016

ENTREPRENEUR SPECIAL......Dream. Innovate. Build.

Dream. Innovate. Build.


India's startup successes are mostly about software firms
such as Flipkart and Ola, and rarely about hardware
product companies.
J Vignesh spoke with product entrepreneurs who have
been there and done that for lessons the industry can
tap into

When the founders of electric scooter maker Ather Energy and
medical diagnostics firm Achira Labs had not much more than
concepts of their eventual products, they turned to familiar
environments for direction. For Tarun Mehta and Swapnil
Jain, that was their alma mater, the Indian Institute of
Technology, Madras; and for Dhananjay Dendukuri of Achira
Labs, it was his employer.
“We reached out to one of our professors in engineering
design at IIT Madras and told him we wanted to build a
battery and maybe a full vehicle and put in a lot of
engineering effort doing that. He immediately offered to
support us 100%,“ said Mehta, chief executive of Ather
Energy that is set to roll out its S340 smart electric scooter
this year. “If we hadn't had that support, our starting would
have been 10x harder and 10x longer.“
Dendukuri got support from Connexios Life Sciences, where
he was a lead scientist; the company incubated his
microfluidics startup so he could tinker and experiment
with developing a low-cost diagnostics device.
That's lesson 1 on building a product startup, an area
where India has a woefully poor record. Unlike software
ideas, even simplistic ones, that can find ready backers,
products have to climb a steep arc to prove their worth in
a market not known for its manufacturing prowess.
Products have to evolve from being a concept to a physical
prototype and undergo various iterations before they can hit
the market. And then the market has to want the product.
Which is why getting that first person to believe in your idea
and give you the space to experiment is critical.
Product entrepreneurs should gain indepth understanding of
the problem that they want to solve and its magnitude, and
determine how it can be solved best.Niche problems might
seem exciting but may not earn your startup the money it
will need to sustain.
“We never started to become a medical device company.
We felt that the magnitude of preventable blindness was
really high. Then we went about understanding the limitations.
Why is there such a high prevalence of preventable blindness?“
said K Chandrasekhar, CEO of low-cost eye screening devices
maker Forus Health.“We were then convinced that technology
is the only way we can solve this problem.“
The next steps are finding a core team and raising funds,
because developing a product requires money. While seeking
funds, have a working prototype ready.“As a hardware company,
one of the trump cards that one has is to be able to show a
prototype--an actual, tangible, physical thing. The impact that
a physical product has is unparalleled. You cannot do the same
by making presentations,“ said Ather's Mehta.
Since the product startup sector is only picking up now,
finding core team members might need time along with
foresight and ingenuity. Find people who are as passionate
about the field you are working on as you are. Dendukuri
of Achira Labs went to various colleges to deliver lectures
and took in members who seemed passionate about
microfluidics. “I went to IIT-Delhi to give a talk.
Somebody there was doing his Ph.D in microfluidics.
He attended the talk and then he stayed back to ask questions
and now he's been with me through the entire journey,“ said
Dendukuri. “The other important pick we made was through
a scientific adviser.“
Dendukuri offers more suggestions: Scout for Indians abroad
who might be seeking interesting options at home to come
back to.Non-resident Indians working abroad come with
interesting expertise and cutting-edge knowledge, he said.
Also, hire consultants or advisers from the first generation
 of hardware companies as they will have experience in
managing an en tire product lifecycle.
Finding the right vendors for different components is a
challenge of its own. Understand the sourcing ecosystem
and reach out to vendors who can understand your vision
and will want to be involved for the long haul.
Akash Gupta, chief technology officer of robotics enterprise
GreyOrange, holds one advice from the company's experienced
Germany-based cofounder Wolfgang Höltgen close to his
heart--there is a lot of difference between cheap and
economical.“There is a big difference between a cheap
product and a viable product. Viable products cater to the
market, not the cheap. This was drilled into us by Wolfgang.
A lot of our supply chain is from Germany, Taiwan and Japan,
so it is possible to make products which have really good
components and still be viable enough,“ Gupta said.
It is critical to get the pricing right. Chandrasekhar reached out
to experts in the eye care industry to determine the pricing
for Forus's ophthalmic imaging devices. “We were able to
understand what would be a typical price a customer would
be interested (to pay) and we got a particular price point.
That price point was definitely not very profitable for us to
sell at that point of time, but then we went about announcing
it at that price point, which helped us to make inroads into
the market,“ he said.
Finally, as all success stories go, it is the underlying passion
that can take you through the arduous journey of building a
product startup.
“I started the company pretty late. Before that I was into
racing.We named the team as Tork and remained in that
space for fourand-a-half years. And then I had a bit of free
time (when) I built a prototype,“ said Kapil Shelke, founder
of Tork Motorcycles, a Pune-based maker of electric
motorcycles that is backed, among others, by Ola cofounders
Bhavish Aggarwal and Ankit Bhati. “The perception of
electric motorcycles was not good then. So I wanted to build
and show that it is possible.It worked well.“
J Vignesh

ET13MAY16

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