Saturday, September 24, 2011

EVC Speaker Series : Ranjith Boyanapalli


EVC Club invites you all to an informal talk by Ranjith Boyanapalli, founder of BuyThePrice.com this Sunday.Location : AC8 LT
Time- 5.00PM-6.00PM on Sunday 25th September
 Speaker Profile :  Ranjith Boyanapalli, is the Founder & CEO of buytheprice.com, the first shopping portal ever to introduce ecommerce 2.0. Launched in March 2010, Buytheprice.com has shown rapid growth and enormous acceptance thanks to its unique concept of distributing value back to the consumer and clear focus on consumer electronics. 

Buytheprice.com is angel funded by Rajan Anandan (MD of Google India), Sunil Kalra and others. It has won the award for best consumer product from ITsAP, and recognized in Top 20 hottest startups by Dataquest magazine.  In his earlier stint as the Head of eTailing, eYantra, he built a unique b2bc ecommerce model that enables various corporate employees to buy company merchandise and other white goods via intranet portals, which was a huge success.An alumni of CEG, guindy and IIM Indore, He has spent close to 5 years in the ecommerce domain, and is well experienced on merchandising mix, online advertising, consumer acquisition and overall brand building strategies

The Top 50 Entrepreneurship Programs

Babson College tops the grad list for the fourth year in a row.The Babson Park, Mass., school's Arthur M. Blank Center for Entrepreneurship began offering its program in 1967, making it one of the oldest on the list. The University of Houston's Wolff Center for Entrepreneurship comes in at the head of the class for undergraduate programs. Like Babson and many other schools that made the list, the Wolff Center's faculty is comprised entirely of entrepreneurs. The University of Houston also had the highest enrollment, attracting more than 2,000 students for the 2010-11 academic year.

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Entrepreneurship lessons from Biocon's Kiran Mazumdar-Shaw

If there is one clear distinguishing factor that will place India in good position in the coming years, it is the freedom that powers entrepreneurship in this country.
Today, entrepreneurial activity is changing the way the business is done in India.

India's largest listed biotechnology firm Biocon ’s chairperson and managing director Kiran Mazumdar-Shaw is one of India's most successful entrepreneurs. She has been named by Time Magazine as one of the most influential people in the world. Her pioneering efforts in biotechnology have transformed this sector and changed many lives.
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EVC Speaker Series :E Business in India

Two first generation entrepreneurs were on Campus yesterday. Shameek Chakravarty and Kalyan Manyam shared their views about how to build great E-businesses in India. 

Kalyan spilled the beans on India’s answer to Foursquare that has got top honchos at Microsoft and Nvidia excited.Shameek also an ISB alum talked about his Digital Marketing start-up which is making waves with their disruptive product offerings.

If anyone wants to get in touch with them in the future, we shall be happy to connect. :-)
 

Whimsia - An Entrepreneurial Journey (ISB Alum 2009)


Company: WHIMSIA CUSTOM WORKS (P) LTD.

Founder: Kunal Verma, Managing Director, Whimsia

Education:
MBA, ISB (Class of 2009)
Engineering, IIT (Roorkee)

Work Experience:
Texas Instruments
Aplion Networks

From the horse’s mouth:

If there is one thing I always wanted, it was a shot at doing something of my own. While this was always a thought there was no concrete action around it until my stay at ISB. I had gone into the MBA program thinking that I wanted to start something of my own and it took me several months of deliberation, primary market research and some soul searching to finally make the decision.

In December 2008, which was around Term five at ISB, I think, I had made up my mind that I am going to start out on my own. Dabbling with a few business ideas for a while helped me narrow it down to the idea of Customized Apparels and Merchandise for the Indian market. Several trips around the country meeting suppliers, potential partners and customers helped me understand things better.

WCED had started a program for helping entrepreneurs in their journey by supporting them in multiple ways through the EDI program. This was also a critical factor for me and I finally decided to take the plunge, applying to this program for support.

When Whimsia started, the idea was to have online retail combined with an offline sales channel. Some months of ground work and offline sales convinced me though, that it was better to postpone the online part for a while. Given the e-commerce readiness in our country, coupled with the investments required in technology, team and inventory, put some severe cost restrictions. Today, Whimsia creates and provides a wide range of customized apparels and merchandise to Companies, Colleges, event management firms and other clients that need such products in bulk quantities.

I had bootstrapped the business, starting with a paltry sum when I had done my first product order and I was soon able to multiply that number through offline sales. Early cash flows help when there is no external investment involved. There is always the dilemma of profit versus revenue in a bootstrapped business and one has to take a call as things progress. Working on low margins can starve a business for cash but high profitability means giving up some low margin sales. There are different management theories supporting either approach. For me, only one theory mattered: survival, followed by growth.

There are also external conditions that one has to factor in. In my case, it was the rising commodity and fuel prices which adversely affected my business in several ways. A typical month sees cycles of business development, managing operations, ensuring consistent quality levels, keeping costs low, managing finances and paying salaries.

The journey is long and rough but interesting and very fulfilling. While one has to plan ahead, you never know what lies in the distant future. The key point is to be an entrepreneur and not a slave to any particular business.

Saturday, September 10, 2011

How can India boost an Entrepreneurial Ecosystem

Setting up your own venture is always a difficult task. It requires many sacrifices, a strong commitment, perseverance, and determination. It is by no means, an easy task to choose between the security of a nine to five job and the uncertainty of a new venture - that may or may not succeed. Entrepreneurs are a rare breed, and their courage must be lauded; for with every venture that succeeds, there are many that die a silent death.

Daunting as it may seem though, entrepreneurship is essential for any economy. Small ventures and entrepreneurs play a significant role in bringing to the market new ideas, services and offerings, that many large organizations are either unwilling or feel too risky to pursue. In addition to this, there is of course the significant role that entrepreneurs and their ventures play in job creation, and in a developing economy like India, this becomes even more pertinent, as it generates employment at various levels.

It is therefore not only advisable, but necessary for entrepreneurship to be nurtured and promoted in the Indian economy. Read More : Click Here

Echoecho raises $750K from Google Ventures, lets you find your friends

Echoecho, a mobile application to help you find your friends, announced a $750,000 seed round from Google Ventures and UK-based venture capital firm PROfounders today.
 Have you ever been in an airport looking for a friend or get lost at a concern? Echoecho let’s you ping the person whose location you want and see where they are on a map. If they don’t have the free app, they will be prompted to download it, but can also access your location from a browser at home.
“We invest mainly based on how interesting the teams are,” Wesley Chan, partner at Google Ventures told VentureBeat in an interview.
 Read More : Click Here