VilCap Mondays-Part 1

An effective marketing tool we have used over the past few months has been hosting different information sessions around the country called VilCap Mondays. These have be effective because we end up engaging a considerable amount of targeted  networking, marketing, and outreach within each city, culminating with an informal event. I wrote about our first event in Rotterdam in a previous post, now I’ll do my best to summarize the VilCap Mondays we have had since and highlight a few of the more interesting attendees.

VilCap Monday-Eindhoven
Eindhoven is best known for being the headquarters of Philips (the electronics company). With it’s roots in technology, it has become a breading ground for many different tech startups. In fact, several organizations (including one called Brainport Development)  are trying to make Eindhoven the “Silicon Valley of the EU.” While the city appears to have a growing ecosystem designed to support tech startups, limited support exists for social entrepreneurs. VilCap Monday-Eindhoven, hosted at Igluu (a beautiful co-working space in an old Philip lightbulb manufacturing plant), attracted an array of professionals in tech startups or related field.

One of the more interesting social enterprises that attended was Rural Spark. They are creating small-scale, decentralized, distributed, renewable energy grids in rural India. Rural electrification has become an issue that many companies are trying to address in India and many other emerging markets.

Here are some pictures from the event!
View from outside Igluu. It's inside an old Philips lightbulb manufacturing plant!
Igluu's main co-working space.
Sign as you enter the co-working space.
Welcome to VilCap Monday-Eindhoven
Challenges the attendees are currently facing in their job or company. Can you relate to any?
Listening to how Village Capital can help entrepreneurs address their most pressing challenges.
Discussing the Village Capital program and how their companies might fit.
Networking!
Even more networking!

VilCap Monday-Utrecht
Next stop was Utrecht, hosted by Utrecht Inc. at their great facility. Utrecht Inc. is a start-up incubator and, while they are  located at Utrecht University, they help people bring alive their business concepts, regardless of whether or not they are students or faculty.

This event was successful in attracting attention to Village Capital, but we discovered that most of the attendees were actually with a company designed support entrepreneurs. It was great to see different groups trying to promote entrepreneurship in Utrecht, such as the Economic Board, but we were hoping to see a few more entrepreneurs.

One of the more promising companies was Phytonext, which has developed a more efficient means for extracting vitamins and minerals from plant matter. Another was 1miljoenwatt, which has created a crowdfunding platform for community solar projects in The Netherlands.

Here are a few pictures:

Welcome to Utrecht Inc!
Follow the signs to Village Capital!
Starting on the peer-to-peer support.
Finding out more about who's here.

Stay tuned for more on VilCap Mondays in Enschede and Amsterdam…

Where do you find entrepreneurs?

Regardless of the marathon of training that Frontier Market Scouts receive, we are still essentially thrust into the world and told to “find entrepreneurs.”  In theory this is easy, especially coming from Silicon Valley, where randos in line at Starbucks will pitch to anyone within earshot.  In the rest of the world, people do not wear a, “Hello, I’m an entrepreneur” sign on their backs- so you have to go hunt for them.

One of the first places I checked out in Bombay were the co-working spaces.  These are all relatively new, but are taking off fast.  Here’s why I think they’re an extra-good idea in Bombay:

1. That little yellow triangle with an exclamation point

It is nearly impossible to find good coffee shops with reliable, fast, free wifi- eliminating one of the staple working spaces of entrepreneurs.

Note: If you do want a map of free wifi in the city, go here http://mumbaiboss.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/04/WifiMapFINAL.pdf

2.  Yes mom, I do mind if you watch Judge Judy right now

Working from home is kind of a drag.  Most entrepreneurs are young and unmarried (who has time to meet a spouse when you spend all day with your business plan?)  In India, this means you are probably living with your parents and in Bombay, space is at such a premium that you are all probably squished into a smallish apartment.  Getting out of the house is pretty nice.

3.       Cash money

The most expensive space runs at about $430 a month, and others are available for as low as $50 a month.  Most offer some kind of tiered pricing option if you only need the space for a few days out of the month. At a minimum, spaces have internet, coffee and desk space without mom.  Winning.

So far, I’ve visited three of the co-working spaces in the city.

The Playce

Though not convenient for where I live, it is a nice space with a very colourful, youthful, Silicon Valley startup vibe to it.  Something about the desk arrangement, the whiteboard greeting wall, and the friendly atmosphere make it feel fun, collaborative and very entrepreneurial.  The presence of over twenty people working on a Saturday also let me know that it’s still a serious place to work.  Work hard, play hard.

The Playce

Our First Office

This new working space already has three locations in city hotspots Churchgate, Lower Parel and Nariman Point.  Their vibe is professional chic, and the founder, Milind Doshi, seems to be connected to all the entrepreneurs in the city.  More NYC than Silicon Valley, this is the type of place that makes you want to dress up, sit down, and work hard.

OFO Reception

Bombay Connect

A co-working space that caters mostly to social enterprises, the vibe here is akin to a newsroom, cramped, energetic, and informal.  The building interior is very “old Bombay”, with lots of wood, wrought iron and Indian décor.  Of all the co-working spaces, this one is the most Bombay of them all- you leave your shoes at the door and even the founders sit at the various little shared desks scattered around the room.

Bombay Connect

A Stinking Pile of … Paper

A Stinking Pile of … Paper

Today marks the end of my registration paperwork for setting up my phone and my apartment. It’s been a long journey. First I’ll complain a little, then I’ll tell you why it’s relevant to the greater discussion. Feel free to skip ahead.

Steps for Getting an Indian SIM Card

Option 1: Following the Rules

  1. Go to a shop that sells pre-paid SIM cards (You can’t do any of this online)
  2. Make sure you’ve brought your:
        • Original passport
        • Photocopy of your front page and visa page (make sure they are crystal clear)
        • Proof of address
        • One passport photo
  3. The shop will fill out the paperwork for the SIM card and give it to the distributor.
  4. Nothing happens
  5. Call the shop where you bought the SIM card
  6. Realize they don’t speak English
  7. Have your Indian roommate and two different Hindi/Marathi speaking friends call to figure out what’s up
  8. Get deflected to the distributor, who has realized that you are foreign, and holds your SIM card until you call him to inquire about why it has been five days and it’s not activated yet. When you call, he says that it “costs extra” for him to process a foreigner’s application for a SIM card. This fee needs to be paid in cash to him
  9. Threaten the distributor that you will report him to the police. It is imperative that you don’t actually do this or you will have invited another pile of paperwork and/or another bribe to pay.
  10. What should have taken 24 hours took almost a week, but at least it’s done

But wait, there’s more…

Adding value to your SIM card online is impossible without an Indian bank account. I’ve witnessed my roommate’s dealings with establishing and using her Indian bank account, so I know not to go there. It’s been over a month and while the bank allowed her to transfer all her money into her account from the US while skipping many steps in the formal process, they are holding it hostage and wont’ let her use the money until she has filled out many forms, waited over a month and traveled back to Delhi from Bombay. So I need to find a store that can add value to my phone, but not many stores in my area do this. I walked around and the 8th time was a charm. Now I have an Indian phone number that works.

Option 2: The Better Option/ the “Borrowed” SIM

  1. Complain to your friend that getting a SIM card is driving you crazy
  2. He calls his guy
  3. Guy delivers SIM card to house that same day
  4. SIM card works the next day

Lessons Learned

  • You gotta know a guy. Nothing in this town happens without a guy.
  • While buying local is usually the preferred option, sometimes the big box stores are a better option.
  • The law of unintended consequences is always at work.
  1. The type of standard local shop that I bought my SIM card from.  Great for consumable goods, not so great for services.

    The type of standard local shop that I bought my SIM card from. Great for consumable goods, not so great for services.

Relevant Discussion: The Law of Unintended Consequences

India developed all of these extra steps because it has increasingly been a hotspot for terrorism. Starting with the partition of India and Pakistan and the border war that followed, there has been a long history of violence, and not just from Muslim extremists like the Indian Mujahideen. You could make a laundry list of different violent religious and political groups in India. More recent events like the 2002 Gujarat Riots, the 2003 Gateway of India Bombings, the 2006 Mumbai Train bombings, the 2008 Mumbai Attacks, the 2010 German Bakery Bomb, the 13/7 Mumbai Bombings in 2011 and the 2013 Hyderabad Blasts make clear the need for anti-terrorism measures to be taken, but it is unclear what measures will be effective. Since most of the attacks were coordinated with prepaid phones, the extra steps are supposed to be a measure that prevents prepaid phones to get into the hands of terrorists.

There are many problems with this:

  1. Anyone determined to kill people as a political statement is not going to be deterred by the process of getting a SIM card.
  2. Rules only work when they can be enforced AND when there are no loopholes.
  3. People who would otherwise try to follow rules will become frustrated with Option 1 and seek Option 2 out of convenience, reinforcing a lack of respect for rules and regulations. This logic applies widely.
  4. These types of rules make it harder to do business, which hurts the economy.
India Ease of Doing Business, World Bank (Click on Image for Clarity)

India Ease of Doing Business, World Bank (Click on Image for Clarity)

End Relevance

Before the SIM Card There Was the Apartment

Before I could experience all of this SIM card fun, I had to get an apartment for proof of address. In order to rent an apartment here, you must find a broker, who will charge a month’s rent to find you an apartment. Finding a good broker is a bit of a pain, and recommendations from friends come in handy. Things like Craigslist are mostly used by brokers, so there aren’t too many direct deals between landlords and tenants. This is probably due to the amount of paperwork/appointments needed to rent a place. I’m okay not knowing how hard things would have been without the broker.

In order to rent a place on a formal lease (this is the last time I will ever put my name on paper for this here), you must negotiate the lease terms in a thirty page document. Once the terms are agreed upon, you submit copies of passports, visas, photos, proof of employment, contact info for proof of employment, fingerprints, proof of previous addresses and post-dated checks for rent. If you are single women trying to rent a place, there needs to be some kind of appropriate parental presence to validate that you aren’t prostitutes (seriously, this is the assumption of many people- in this case, my roommate’s dad came to meet our landlords). Paperwork gets submitted to the police on behalf of the landlords, and a separate police check is necessary for the housing society (similar to an HOA). Later, all the renting parties and all of the owning parties need to show up together at the police station to have a photo and fingerprint taken. This whole process takes forever and requires much negotiation, time, and paperwork. Fortunately, in the end, you have a place to live that’s a ten minute walk from the sea, and has a coffee shop on the corner.

Relevant Discussion, or “How to Feel Guilty for Complaining”

I’m actually blessed to have paperwork. I was able to furnish countless passport photocopies and verification to these businesses, middlemen, and government entities that demanded them. Between my files and the internet, I can trace most of my life in a big paper trail that most of us take for granted. Many people do not have this luxury. According to Unicef, only 58 percent of children born in India are registered at birth, and of those registered, not all have birth certificates, meaning that millions of people don’t have access to the cycle of documentation.

For example, you need a birth certificate to get a ration card and you need a ration card to get a driver’s license. Many of the papers that people have in rural areas are invalid when they move to a city- a big problem in an age of increasing urbanization. This means that before people can even think about waiting in the registration office to validate a lease, they must somehow acquire new identification. Judging by how difficult all the rest of registrations are, I’m certain that the process of acquiring new ID is near impossible or requires lots of “fees”. I can’t imagine the frustration. If you want to know more, see this article: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-asia-india-18141584. End Relevance