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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.
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.
Yolanda Lee is the Co-Founder of Uncommon (Iterative Winter 2022), a Singapore-based private network for female leaders. Uncommon redefines professional development for female leaders through a powerful and trusted network of peers, group coaching, tailored masterclasses, 1:1 connections virtually and in person.
Alvin Ea is the Co-Founder of Haulio (Iterative Summer 2020), a Singapore-based container haulage platform, with the greater vision of connecting global trade to local first-mile transportation across ASEAN.
Liyen Tan is the Co-Founder of Hawkr (Iterative Summer 2021), a Malaysia-based food delivery marketplace for homemade food that is looking to reduce barriers to entry for anyone passionate about making a living through cooking and/or baking.
Part of our philosophy to fundraising is to talk to as many investors, in the shortest amount of time possible. In technical terms, you want to fundraise in parallel not serially. To achieve this, you need to be organized. Like all good sales teams (fundraising is sales), we use a CRM. Over the years, we’ve developed a template we used at our startups and now use with companies in the batch
We’re excited to announce the Visiting Partners for the upcoming Summer 2022 batch. They will be sharing their experience and insights with Iterative’s early-stage companies. They will host individual office hours, group office hours and help companies get ready for demo day.
We like to write a request for startups before the start of each batch. We’re surprised by the number of founders who don’t apply because they think we wouldn’t be interested in their idea and end up applying after reading our post.
Charles Lee is the Co-Founder of Coderschool (Iterative Winter 2021), a Vietnam-based edtech startup that is training and educating a whole generation of coders and data scientists through its courses.
He took a chance on four young college students with a poor idea and a lot of passion. Sometimes what people need the most is reinforcement that they can do something great and a kick in the right direction. With Iterative, we hope to be able to accomplish something similar with our batches.
Partner at AC Ventures, oversees the SE Asia Mobility Fund. Was the co-founder of Rukita, where he scaled the company to its first $3M revenue. He's also the Visiting Parter for Iterative's W23 batch.
Chinmay Chauhan is the co-founder of BukuWarung (YC S20). He raised $80M in funding and grew the organisation to 400 people. He's also a Visiting Partner for Iterative's W23 batch.
Tessa Wijaya is the Co-Founder and COO of Xendit, a leading payment gateway in Indonesia, the Philippines, and Southeast Asia. Xendit became a unicorn in 2021, making Tessa the only female unicorn founder in Indonesia.
How do you get to 100 *paying* customers? We asked three of our Iterative founders, and here were their answers.
Sia is the co-founder of Tranglo in 2008, a payment processing company that powers the last-mile cross-border payout for various banks and fintechs globally. In 2021, Ripple purchased a 40% stake in Tranglo for an undisclosed amount.
Before Iterative, Sylvia was the co-founder of Omnilytics, a retail insights platform. At Omnilytics, Sylvia led Customer Success, growing NRR to >100% and serving global clients like Uniqlo, Lenzing, and Lidl.
We've asked some of our portfolio founders on their experiences doing office hours during their time in the batch - and what they've learned.
Kum Hong is a business leader, GM and angel investor. He spent 10 years at Airbnb, starting as the APAC General Counsel before transitioning to run business and operations as the APAC Regional Director in 2017. Three years later, he was appointed as COO for Airbnb China.
There are a number of ideas or trends we’re particularly interested in. We thought it'd be helpful to be public about them in the hopes that it would (1) encourage founders working on these ideas to apply and (2) help people get started on ideas we think are interesting.
We pick 10 startups, share them with over 200+ investors and connect you with the investors that are interested.
In the past 3 months, we've met with over 220 companies from all over Southeast Asia and are excited to announce our Winter 2021 batch.
We started a podcast! Most of the time, we will be interviewing people who start, operate, and invest in startups, on how they got started and what their experience is like. Once in a while, like in the first episode, we'll be giving practical advice around a specific topic.
We're excited to host open online office hours for startup founders every Friday throughout the month of October. Office hours are 20-minute sessions between you and one of our partners, where they try to help you with your startup as much as they can. This is very similar to the partner meetings we hold with companies during the batch.
In three short months we met with 200 founders from all over Southeast Asia and narrowed it down to the eight startups you see here. We've also included a short blurb on why we're thrilled to have them as a part of our program.
For a startup to be successful, it needs to be solving an important problem.
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?