China has seen the rise of a few impressive billion-dollar startups. Bytedance Inc’s TikTok, for instance, is so ‘hip’ that it makes Snap Inc look like a company catering to your parents.
Sensetime Group Ltd and Beijing Megvii Co are masters of creepily powerful artificial intelligence (AI) used in facial recognition and surveillance. Even in the old hardware sector, Bitmain Technologies Ltd has a niche in bitcoin; SZ DJI Technology Co dominates the market for drones; and UBTech Robotics Ltd makes an IronMan robot. Bitcoin, drones and robots - that is cool.
Indian unicorns
India’s four largest unicorn startups , however, are in the areas of online payments, e-commerce, ride-hailing and education. No shame in meeting the simplest of human needs.
Sarbvir Singh, managing partner at Waterbridge Ventures said that India' future unicorns will remove friction in areas where people are already spending.
Chalo, one of Waterbridges recent investments, offers commuters real-time bus timetables and locations. You can’t get more mundane than public transportation yet hundreds of millions of users take buses round the clock, and consumers are likely to open that app multiples a day.
It is not surprising, then, that nine of India’s top 10 unicorns by value are in the online-consumer space, according to data compiled by CB Insights. The outlier is ReNew Power, an independent wind and solar-energy producer. In China, three of the top 10 are online consumer companies, two are bricks-and-mortar businesses, and the rest are a mix of hardware and B2B.
Read: Azim Premji helps create India’s newest tech unicorn Icertis
The rise Icertis Inc
The latest Indian unicorn, however, could hint that a new sector is developing. Icertis Inc, which makes cloud-based contract-management software, raised $115 million, propelling it into the unicorn league. While it has its headquarters in Washington (USA) and Pune, the company has more than two-thirds of its staff in India where the product is developed.
Based on its current trajectory, Icertis has every chance of breaking out of the outsourcing model that made India’s IT sector famous over the past two decades. That’s because its making real software for enterprises to use, rather than employing thousands of people to run software on behalf of Western clients at a fraction of the cost.
India is going to need more of such companies, as big names in IT outsourcing, including Infosys Ltd and Tata Consultancy Services Ltd, face pressure from cloud services, stricter US visa rules, and a call to bring back Western jobs. If they weaken, then so too may India’s supply of foreign income. Of the 30 unicorns identified as having the potential to fetch a $1-billion-plus valuation by 2020, five are in enterprise tech. One of them, Druva Software Pvt, is a cloud data-protection provider with a suite of global clients. A $130 million round of funding last month subsequently raised the company’s valuation above $1 billion, a spokesperson said, which makes data-management software.
India’s startup scene is relatively new compared with China’s, and its economy is much smaller despite their populations being of similar size. That helps explain why there are 94 unicorns in China and 19 in India.
Still, I have no doubt that India’s tally will rise rapidly, hitting 50 by 2025, with a mix of companies that meet local consumer needs and businesses making crucial enterprise software for global clients. Contract management and food delivery may not be as chic as electric cars or artificial intelligence, but India is about to prove that you don’t need to be hip to be hot.
(The author, Tim Culpan, is a Bloomberg Opinion columnist covering technology)
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