Monday 12 January 2015

Block 71 San Francisco: S'pore start-up incubator sets up US hub

Block 71 San Francisco is a place for techies to network and brainstorm
By Sandra Davie, Senior Education Correspondent In San Francisco, The Straits Times, 10 Jan 2015

THE tech community around the world sat up and took notice when The Economist magazine dubbed Block 71, Ayer Rajah Crescent last year as the "world's most tightly packed entrepreneurial ecosystem".

Even as Block 71 - run by JTC Corporation and housing more than 200 high-tech start-ups and several incubators - is being expanded, it is also going overseas.

A slice of it is being taken to the South of Market district in San Francisco, California. The district, often just called Soma, which is in the city, is fast becoming another hotbed for start-up activity in the Bay Area, after Silicon Valley.

The National University of Singapore's (NUS') entrepreneurial arm and the investment arms of SingTel and Infocomm Development Authority (IDA) - which are involved in Block 71 - have set up an incubation space to enable Singapore student start-ups and other companies which they support to access the market in the United States.

The 5,000 sq ft facility, called Block 71 San Francisco, which started operating this year, provides co-working space, brainstorming rooms and a gathering area for community events.

The three groups will organise community events for Singapore- and US-based tech companies, professionals, students and investors to network and explore business opportunities. NUS Enterprise, Infocomm Investments and SingTel Innov8 will also have offices within the facility to provide backing and support to the companies they have invested in.

Dr Lily Chan, chief executive officer of NUS Enterprise, said: "We are happy to be partnering two of Singapore's iconic investment entities to extend Singapore's entrepreneurship community into the San Francisco Bay Area."

The setting up of Block 71 strengthens the role of Infocomm Investments as an ecosystem builder to help local innovation-driven tech start-ups scale up fast, said its head, Dr Alex Lin.

He added: "There is no doubt that the Bay Area houses some of the best tech talents and communities, and we want to provide the collaborative space for our local tech start-ups to churn big ideas and push the boundaries further."

Mr Edgar Hardless, chief executive of SingTel Innov8, noted a steady rise in the number of US-based companies and venture funds seeking access to the South-east Asian market. Likewise, start-ups and venture funds in South-east Asia are looking towards Silicon Valley.

Mr Hardless said: "Beyond funding, SingTel Innov8's mission is to nurture and develop a vibrant innovation ecosystem in the region. Block 71 San Francisco will help create synergies for the greater ecosystem."

Indonesian-born serial entrepreneur Himawan Gunadhi, who is a consulting professor for NUS' overseas college programme to nurture entrepreneurs, said that for some start-ups, the US, especially Silicon Valley, is the place to be.

"Very few places in the world have the concentration of talent that Silicon Valley has," said Dr Gunadhi, who is based in the area.

Tech start-ups from Singapore are excited by this new initiative. One company, NUS student start-up Patsnap, will be operating temporarily from Block 71 in San Francisco at the end of this month.

NUS biomedical engineering graduate Jeffrey Tiong, 31, who founded the patent search and analysis firm, said he and his staff plan to hot-desk at the new facility while they search for a permanent office to base their US sales and marketing team.

He said: "The establishment of Block 71 comes at an ideal time for Patsnap as we are now looking at the US market, specifically for clients, partners and investors. We expanded to China with the help of the NUS incubator in Suzhou, now we hope to access the US market, again with the university's help.

"I am excited. The US is a big market and San Francisco and Silicon Valley are where the action is."





Start-up success for students with gumption
An NUS programme that puts undergrads in entrepreneurial hubs is winning fans in Silicon Valley
By Sandra Davie, Senior Education Correspondent In San Francisco, The Sunday Times, 11 Jan 2015

Royston Tay and Wu Wen-xiang are both 32 and multimillionaires. The National University of Singapore (NUS) graduates say that never in their wildest dreams did they imagine they would create a high-tech start-up and go on to sell it for millions of dollars.

Mr Tay was an electrical engineering student when he signed up for the NUS Overseas Colleges (NOC) programme that sends students to international business hubs for a year.

He thought it was a cheap way to go on a student exchange to Stanford University, as his expenses would be covered by the salary from a start-up there.

Mr Wu was doing computer engineering. He thought a year of taking courses at Stanford University and working in Silicon Valley would look good on his curriculum vitae and improve his chances of landing a job in a bank after graduation.

But that year in the red-hot competitive environment of Silicon Valley led to their business idea to create software which lets businesses chat online with customers via their websites in real time.

"We thought it just didn't make sense that businesses were still picking up phones to complete transactions," said Mr Tay.

They were on to a winning idea, but it took several more years of hard work to create the software, refine it and grow their firm Zopim, which they started in 2007, shortly after their stint in Silicon Valley.

It paid off handsomely last April for them and their three co-founders when American company Zendesk acquired Zopim for nearly US$30 million (S$40.1 million).

Both said their year overseas and the support of their professors were instrumental to their success.

Mr Tay said unreservedly: "Without my one year overseas, there would be no Zopim."

Mr Wu added: "If not for the NOC programme, I would have a boring job in a bank."

Their experience contrasts with early criticism of the university's plan to ignite the entrepreneurial spark in its students.

When NUS launched its plan in 2001, it held up Mr Sim Wong Hoo as the role model.

But Singapore's first information technology multimillionaire whose company, Creative Technology, listed on the United States stock exchange Nasdaq in 1992, sniffed at the idea. Entrepreneurs are born, not made, he said.

But NUS dons held on to the belief that if they picked students with guts and gumption and immersed them in the best entrepreneurial hubs of the world, it would work.

Six colleges were set up over the next 10 years - in the United States, China, Sweden and Israel. Each had a different focus with the aim of nurturing a diverse group of entrepreneurs. The first one, set up in Silicon Valley in 2001, was targeted at those keen on high-tech start-ups.

This year, NUS is setting up two colleges in Europe. With more colleges, 300 students will head overseas yearly on the programme, up from the current 200.

But although the context may change, the content of the programme will remain, said Associate Professor Teo Chee Leong who oversees the NOC programme.

Students will take up entrepreneurship courses in the partner universities and work full-time as interns in start-ups.

Although it aims to send more students overseas, the rigorous selection process will remain.

The 800 to 1,000 students who apply for the overseas colleges every year have to clear several rounds of interviews.

NUS must be doing something right, say several US-based entrepreneurs, who claim they are fans of the NOC programme.

Dr Himawan Gunadhi, an Indonesian-born entrepreneur based in San Francisco who acts as a consulting professor to the NOC programme, said it is impressive that more than 200 companies have been set up by NOC alumni.

Several have gone on to be successes, the two most notable ones being Zopim and tenCube, a data protection service reportedly bought for more than US$10 million in 2010 by US security technology giant McAfee.

Other NOC alumni start-ups to watch include Carousell, which raised US$6 million from investors led by Sequoia Capital two months ago.

A more recent NOC fan is Mr James Fahn, co-founder of Fellow Robots based in Plug and Play Tech Centre, a business accelerator in Silicon Valley, just a few doors away from the NUS Enterprise office.

Out of curiosity, he walked into the office one day to find out about the NUS set-up. He left wanting to hire the students.

He said mechanical engineering student Daniel Tang, 23, now a key member of his team, has been impressive.

Fellow Robots captured media attention recently after it put a robot in a hardware store in San Jose to greet shoppers, ask them if they need help and guide them through the store to the product.

Serial entrepreneur Vijay Tella, who is on to his fourth start-up, has employed several NOC students.

His last company Qik, which provided video streaming on smartphones, was acquired by Skype for more than US$100 million in 2011.

Singapore students have worked at Qik as well as at his current start-up Workato.

He said: "When I started Workato, I picked some of the best elements from my earlier start-ups, including a team of Russian engineers and NOC students."

He said of the students: "The most important thing in start-ups is that the team members are hungry and want to learn and grow. NUS students come with a built-in drive and hunger."

Professor Tom Kosnik, who teaches a course on new venture creation to NUS students at Stanford University, said by the end of their year there, the students come up with several unique business ideas and are raring to go.

NOC alumnus Varun Sivamani, one of the three co-founders of Semantics3, a thriving data analytics company in San Francisco, said NUS' support was vital to growing his idea of providing data to help businesses figure out their pricing strategies.

He and his co-founders, all NOC alumni, spent a year incubating their idea in Singapore.

By the end of 2012, their idea was good enough for them to be accepted into an accelerator programme run by Y Combinator, a prestigious Silicon Valley incubator.

Soon after, it received US$500,000 funding from angel investors in Silicon Valley.

Now his company has 150 clients and is "very profitable", said Mr Varun. He called the NOC programme "transformational".

"I would have ended up as a researcher if not for the NOC," said the former Pioneer Junior College student.

NUS entrepreneurship professor Wong Poh Kam said one measure of the effectiveness of the programme is that 7 to 9 per cent of NOC alumni go on to try setting up a business, whereas only 1 to 2 per cent of other NUS students do so.

He said one must also consider those who go out to work in other start-ups or in the wider job market. Over the years, several management consultancies and government agencies, such as the Economic Development Board, have hired several NOC alumni.

"Not everyone will go on to be an entrepreneur. But the programme would have met its objective if everyone thinks and acts like an entrepreneur," said Prof Wong.

Dr Lily Chan, chief executive officer of NUS Enterprise, the unit which oversees all programmes to nurture entrepreneurship, said the university is convinced the NOC programme can help driven and passionate young people.

"Students may go on the NOC wanting to beef up their CV to work in a bank, but they come back changed - bubbling with ideas and wanting to do their own thing. Never mind the job in a bank or MNC (multinational corporation)."





NUS building an 'enterprise ecosystem'
By Sandra Davie, The Sunday Times, 11 Jan 2015

A National University of Singapore (NUS) programme to mould young entrepreneurs by setting up colleges in different business hubs around the world is set to expand.

The NUS Overseas Colleges (NOC) programme has sent 1,800 young people to work and learn in Silicon Valley, New York, Stockholm, Tel Aviv, Beijing and Shanghai over the last 13 years.

Two more will be set up this year and the university is considering London, Munich and Zurich as the locations. With more colleges, more students will head overseas.

Currently only 200 of the 800 to 1,000 applicants each year are chosen for the overseas stint. Over the next few years, the number will go up to 300.

Alumni of the overseas programme are dubbed "NOCs" and, so far, they have created about 200 companies.

Professor Lily Chan, who heads the NUS unit tasked with developing an entrepreneurial culture, said the one-year immersion in start-ups is aimed at getting students to discover business possibilities they might not otherwise have considered.

NUS has found that NOCs are more likely than other graduates to start a business, and about a third have done so. The rest have been snapped up by employers, including the Economic Development Board and consulting companies which note their go-getter qualities.

Besides providing overseas immersions, NUS has over the years built a support system for student start-ups - from providing incubation spaces to helping them source seed funding and gain access to overseas markets.

It provides incubation space on campus and nearby at Block 71, Ayer Rajah Crescent, the centre of Singapore's start-up scene. Currently there are about 1,000 students involved in entrepreneurial activities on campus. NUS plans to provide more incubator space to grow this community to 2,500.

Among the new incubator spaces is the recently announced Block 71 in San Francisco. NUS set up the facility in partnership with the investment arms of the Infocomm Development Authority and SingTel, and it will be used to support student start-ups which want to launch products in the US market or seek investors there.

The 5,000 sq ft facility, located in San Francisco's South of Market district, will provide co-working space and meeting rooms for start-ups. There will also be networking events for Singapore and US companies.

NUS president Tan Chorh Chuan said all these initiatives are aimed at building in NUS the "most vibrant university enterprise ecosystem in Asia".

He said that while Singapore continues to attract multinationals from overseas, going forward, it has to develop its own products and have home-grown companies that will be successful beyond Singapore. "For this to happen, you need more people with the entrepreneurial bent and the NUS programmes have been shown to nurture that can-do attitude in young people," he said.

He added: "We aim to be a major contributor to Singapore's plan to create a vibrant and productive enterprise ecosystem - one which spawns innovation and creates new economic opportunities and jobs."


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