Accelerating Asia announces investments into ten startups for 7th cohort

Accelerating Asia, a Singapore-based venture capital accelerator focused on pre-Series A startups has invested in ten new companies from across Asia Pacific as part of its 7th cohort.

Accelerating Asia said in a statement the new investments take the venture capital accelerator’s portfolio to 60 startups who have raised a total of over $50 million, with Cohort 7 having raised $5.2 million prior to joining the accelerator program.

The new investments in Cohort 7 also have market traction and growth revenue with an average Gross Merchandise Value (GMV) of over $46,000 per month and an average monthly revenue of over $13,000.

Cohort 7 startups have a market presence in 9 countries across South Asia (Bangladesh, Pakistan), Southeast Asia (the Philippines, Myanmar, Singapore, Malaysia, Indonesia and Thailand, our first in the country), and East Asia (Korea, also our first in the country).

The startups cover a wide spectrum of verticals, including hospitality, enterprise software, telecommunications, entertainment, logistics, retail technology, healthtech, and ecommerce.

Collectively, 100 percent of the startups address at least one sustainable development goal.

The ten new startups also include 60 percent female co-founded startups, Easy Rice, Shoplinks, Kooky, BizB, Healthpro.id, and SafeTruck all have at least one female co-founder.

This is significantly higher than the average portfolio given just 17.2 percent of private capital Southeast Asia was deployed to female founded startups.

According to Amra Naidoo, General Partner at Accelerating Asia, this cohort has some of the most mature startups to date.

“What we’ve seen in Cohort 7 is a kind of success inflation: The ten startups we invested in have even more significant milestones in revenue, user acquisition, and other metrics than you would typically associate with early stage startups,

“We believe this is a positive sign for not only Accelerating Asia, but the ecosystem in Asia Pacific as a whole: Our startups are finding product-market fit faster than ever before, allowing them to focus on scaling toward market leadership,” said Naidoo.

Naidoo stated that the impressive success of Cohort 7 is attributable in part to the application process for startups.

According to her, since the launch of Cohort 1 in 2019, Accelerating Asia has seen startup applications grow rapidly with each cycle, culminating in over 600 for this latest batch, a growth of 232 percent in applications from the inaugural batch to the current one.

“When we started operations a few years ago, the idea of Accelerating Asia was still very much a forward-looking vision for Asia Pacific,

“Now I’m happy to see that it’s well on its way: More and more startups are scaling up quicker, thanks largely to the support system they can turn to, which includes everything from events and conferences to angel investors and syndicates,” she said.

Meanwhile, its Cofounder and General Partner Craig Bristol Dixon detailed how Cohort 7 continues the strengths of previous batches.

“Cohort 7 builds on our previous cohorts. We’ve got great founders, innovative products, and impressive financial traction. Teams like these are likely to succeed and deliver good investment returns for us and the other investors who back them,

“If you want to work with this caliber of founders, do consider partnering with Accelerating Asia – we are excited to work with stakeholders across the ecosystem,” he said.

Since the current investment climate is a hot topic, Dixon also wanted to emphasize that Accelerating Asia always invests in businesses that can make money today and its investment lens is focused on intelligent financial plans and founders who can monetise gaps in the market in the shorter term.

“When it comes to investments, we follow a simple strategy at Accelerating Asia. One, we back organizations that can monetise in any economic climate, and two, founders who can navigate through any market conditions,

“The most innovative organizations, after all, will succeed in any era,” he said.

Accelerating Asia launched Fund II in 2021, Cohort 7 is the third batch of investments for Fund II which will deploy capital across Southeast and South Asia pre-Series A startups.

Accelerating Asia is an accelerator venture capital that runs programs for early-stage startups and investors.

Licensed by the Monetary Authority of Singapore, Accelerating Asia’s early-stage venture capital fund focuses on pre-Series A startups with untapped potential that are 6-18 months away from institutional funding.

The venture capital accelerator invests up to $250,000 in pre-Series A startups, and the current portfolio covers over ten countries in Southeast and South Asia.

The list of cohort 7 startups:

Cocotel (Philippines) is a one stop solution for hotel reservation needs. The proptech company helps independent hotels and resorts with technology, property management, and digital marketing.

Hishabee (Bangladesh) is a full stack business solution that helps over 100,000 Bangladeshi small businesses save time and increase their revenue by selling online, and everything else they need to run efficiently.

K-link (Myanmar, Thailand) is a Omnichannel Cloud Contact Center Platform provider that supplies hundreds of global brands with high-end telecommunication services without any expensive hardware and complex telecom infrastructure. This enables savings of more than 200 percent when compared to traditional call center solutions.

Kooky.io (Korea) is an entertainment platform where superfans meet K-pop artists by turning their passion into active support that helps to grow their favorite artists.

Safe Truck (Malaysia) is an internet of things (IoT) fleet management system that tracks and collects telematics data, analyzes with an AI-powered application, and helps transporters get lower rates in end-to-end fleet procurement.

Shoplinks (Singapore) helps the largest supermarkets in South-East Asia monetize their transaction and loyalty data by delivering personalized promotions to shoppers through chat or apps for consumer brands, tripling their return on investment (ROI).

Easy Rice Digital Technology (Thailand) is an agritech company that digitizes and enhances quality assessment (QA) of staple food to make staple food delivery from farm-to-fork quicker, cheaper, and healthier.

HealthPro (Indonesia) is a healthtech platform to help healthcare facilities get their top quality on demand healthcare workers effortlessly.

BizB (Pakistan) is a re-commerce marketplace for the buying and selling of preloved apparel and accessories, helping women earn money, save money and contribute to making fashion sustainable again.

Ulisse (Singapore) is an IoT hardware and software platform which helps business decision makers save cost with commercial places that perform better with data.

Accelerating Asia announces investments into ten startups for 7th cohort

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