Start ups collapse. With pandemic ravaging, 13 start-ups go belly-up in the deadpool

Rajesh Kurup Updated - December 06, 2021 at 07:17 AM.

Inability to raise the next round of funding at the opportune moment, lack of agility, need of talent and leadership conflicts played their part.

Close up of a man in blue drawing a start up sketch on a glassboard. Concept of planning and business development.

On the one hand, the country has been adding unicorns quickly, while on the other, it has dead-pooled many. As the pandemic ravaged, 13 start-ups founded in 2020 went belly-up between March 2020 and May 2021.

According to research firm Tracxn, the firms starting with SOLOSOS to Designing Mafia and SGB Global Tech were from across the country, while Uttar Pradesh topped the charts with five companies, followed by Tamil Nadu with two firms.

 

“The failure of some start-ups is not primarily on account of their business models not being viable, but instead is a combination of other factors also, amongst them the most crucial being their inability to raise the next round of funding at the opportune moment. Starts-ups generally tend to scale their businesses at a rapid pace, looking to achieve a leadership position, in their respective domains sooner than later,” banker and investor Rajiv Dadlani told

BusinessLine .

“As they rapidly accelerate growth, they tend to burn more cash, hence are dependent on constant fund-raising - such as Series A, B, C and D rounds,” Dadlani, who had invested in more than 50 companies, said.

The companies winding-up operations during these 14 months were much lower compared with fiscal 2020 (April 1, 2019-March 31, 2020), when 284 companies were dead-pooled in India. Of these, 278 startups were founded from 2010 onwards.

“One of the most important reasons is the start-ups’ lack of agility to transform in these Covid-19 times and rise to the expectations of the customers, with the absence of adequate talent and competency for execution as they never paid top dollars. Further, there were also leadership conflicts that led to many a failure, despite the fact those companies were successful in raising funds,” said Dhianu Das, co-founder, Agility Venture Partners, said.

“Also in certain cases, the founders lacked focus and concentration,” Das, an investor in 40 early-stage start-ups, said.

Fourteen startups, including Moglix, Urban Company, ChargeBee and Gupshup, among others have joined the unicorn club in this calendar year, the latest being Zeta, a banking tech startup co-founded by billionaire and serial entrepreneur Bhavin Turakhia.

Published on May 29, 2021 11:05