Subscribe to Iterative Insights, the newsletter that helps you get smarter about being a founder in Southeast Asia.
We're excited for you to meet our Summer 2024 batch, comprised of 15 amazing companies! This batch, we’ve raised the bar even higher, with the acceptance rate dropping to 1.8% from 2.7% in Winter 2024.
We’d like to do a little bit more before the end of the year, and hopefully meet you in the process!
Join one (or all!) of our events and initiatives this month, exclusively for women founders.
We took our list of 1,270 people and 551 funds, enriched it with information like investment stage, location, etc. and are making it available to everyone.
Introducing Startup Academy, a free collection of courses, guides and templates on how to build startups in Southeast Asia.
Join our validation program to confidently convince yourself to move forward as a founder with a startup idea that is worth investing in.
Read this before applying to Iterative, where we break down some of our questions in the application form.
This is our fourth year of running Iterative and our seventh batch of companies - but it feels like we're just getting started.
For a startup to be successful, it needs to be solving an important problem.
We answer your top 5 questions on Iterative's deal terms, so you can have a better understanding of how we structure our deals for all companies accepted into the accelerator.
We're excited to announce that for the Summer 2023 batch, we have seven amazing Visiting Partners - welcome back Jessica Chao and Chinmay Chauhan, and welcome Aaron Yip, Dayana Yermolayeva, Karine Hsu, Rob Liu and Zach Cheng!
We asked Shiyan Koh, the Managing Partner of the Hustle Fund, and Hsu Ken Ooi, Managing Partner of Iterative, to give their take on how founders in Southeast Asia should tackle fundraising in this current climate.
Not all capital is equal. What are some of the things founders need to look out for when fundraising?
The key things founders should keep in mind (like the questions you should be asking, and what good investors look like) when raising capital.
What does the economic downturn mean for founders in Southeast Asia who are looking to fundraise? Shiyan Koh from the Hustle Fund and Hsu Ken Ooi from Iterative shares more in this podcast.
From raising money to getting investors to talk to them to making negotiations.
From services for the middle class to the search for acquisition channels, here are major trends ready for innovation in Southeast Asia
Copying ideas from other markets: the good, the bad and the how
In this episode of The Iterative Podcast, Hsu Ken and Brian talk about why hiring is important, why most founders get it wrong, what hiring is like as your startup grows, what to qualities and roles to hire for and more. This is Part 1 of 3 episodes on recruiting.
An obvious but overlooked difference between founders and investors is, founders are concerned with how to make their startup successful, and investors are concerned with how to tell if someone else’s startup will be successful. I find that thinking of each startup as a line, is a helpful mental model for assessing whether they will be successful.
Computer vision startups need a lot of data to be successful in the long run. However, I've talked a to few startups trying to go from zero data to one billion datapoints instead of taking the first steps from zero to a hundred pieces of labeled data.
Thomas Jeng is the General Manager of Aspire, a leading fintech startup based in Singapore. He was previously the Head of Sales there, leading the firm's expansion across Singapore and Southeast Asia.
Jessica Chao is a Visiting Partner at Iterative, where she leads healthcare investments. She's also a Venture Partner at SVLC, a Latin America focused venture fund, as well as a Biotech Advisor to Berkeley SkyDeck, UC Berkeley’s official startup accelerator.
Exploring the unspoken emotional journey that comes with fundraising: rejections, and what founders' fundraising processes were like and how they handled rejections.
In this episode, we invited Yolanda Lee back to the Iterative Podcast to discuss exactly this: how to find confidence as a female leader.
We asked our founders from the Summer 2022 batch: "What's the most surprising thing about being a founder?" Here's what they had to say.
Eric Dadoun is the co-founder of DeZy, a crypto-enabled high yield savings platform that simplifies decentralised finance.
David Marquez is the CTO of Shipmates, a courier platform that connects online stores to different couriers.
Adrien Jorge is the Founder and CEO of Propseller, a tech-powered real estate agency offering the most reliable way to successfully and efficiently sell, buy or rent a property.
We're excited to announce the very first Iterative Founders Retreat. It’s open to all Iterative Founders from any batch. If you’re from one of the first 6 batches who didn’t get an in-person orientation, this is your chance.
Upcoming 2-week cohort-based program: Should You Start a Startup? Everything you need to know about starting a startup to make an informed decision. Sign up by 25 August 2024.
Introducing the Iterative Scout Program, a new initiative designed to streamline the process of discovering the next Iterative Founders by enabling existing Iterative Founders.
Apply to Iterative by Friday, 3 May to be eligible for Pre-Batch Office Hours with Hsu Ken. In that office hour, you'll work on what the 3 to 5 metrics to optimize for should be, set weekly targets for those metrics and prioritize a list of 2 to 3 things they should work on for the next few weeks.
For this batch, we received 1,000+ applications and had 500+ calls interviewing companies. From there, we selected these 24 companies. Read the article to read more about them and why we invested.
Explore job opportunities from our portfolio of 100+ companies with Iterative's Startup Job Board.
What do we look for when deciding to invest in startups?
The most important thing for a startup, and by extension the engineers at the startup, is iteration speed.
Here are the 3 questions I ask myself when trying to answer this question and what to do about it.
Fundraising is slow right now. My hunch is fundraising both will pick up in the second half of this year. Here's why.
Interestingly enough, 'product market fit' is a term often used by founders starting out but almost never by more experienced founders. Why?
A year ago, I wrote our first Request for Startups - and I'm revisiting the themes again to see what I got right or wrong.
A common question we get is: “Which is more important in fundraising: a strong story or strong traction?” But what is a strong story and strong traction — and why are they important?