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Sunday, December 21, 2008 - 11:53 AM
Louis J. Sheehan, Esquire . IRFAN ALAM, a
27-year-old from the Indian state of Bihar, remembers clearly when he
first felt the thirst for entrepreneurship. Sitting in the back of a
cycle-rickshaw on a parched summer’s day in his hometown of Begusarai,
he asked his rickshaw-puller for a drink of water. He points out that
India’s rickshaw-pullers earn only a pittance after paying the rent on
their vehicles. http://louissheehan.bravejournal.com
Perhaps, he thought, they could make a bit extra by
selling drinks, newspapers or even mobile-phone cards to their
passengers. And since the average rickshaw covers 10km (six miles) a
day, perhaps it could also courier goods around town and advertise them
to passers-by.
These ideas
evolved into Sammaan (which means dignity), one of 30 Indian
enterprises shortlisted in a competition to find the country’s
“hottest” start-up. The contest, which attracted over 500 nominees, is
run by the National Entrepreneurship Network (NEN), which promotes the
spirit of enterprise on India’s campuses, and the Tata group, an Indian
conglomerate, which was a hot start-up 140 years ago. The competition’s
five winners, decided by a mixture of online voting and expert
judgment, will emerge in late December.
More than 75%
of the nominees are, like Mr Alam (pictured above), first-generation
entrepreneurs who do not hail from business families. Two-thirds of the
final 30 have masters degrees. In short, they have plenty of options.
Their enthusiasm for entrepreneurship represents a growing willingness
on the part of highly educated Indians to turn their backs on careers
in brand-name companies and strike out on their own. “In my early
years, your business card was very important,” says Kanwal Singh, one
of the competition’s advisers, who has carried the cards of Hindustan
Lever and Intel in his time. He now works for Helion Ventures, an
Indian venture-capital fund, which has seen some 1,500 proposals in the
past three years. Inside the NEN, “we call it a revolution in
middle-class aspirations,” says Laura Parkin, the network’s executive
director.
India, of
course, has a deep entrepreneurial tradition, exemplified by merchant
communities such as the Marwari baniyas, who have made money wherever
they go, trusting each other and bargaining hard with everyone else.
But the new generation of entrepreneurs follows a different creed. Its
members are inspired by figures like N.R. Narayana Murthy and Nandan
Nilekani, two of the founders of Infosys in 1981. According to Vir
Sanghvi, a journalist, they wanted to create an “un-Marwari” firm based
on merit and professionalism, not kith and kin.
One Infosys
employee, Rajesh Varrier, quit in 2006 to start his own firm,
activecubes, which also made the Tata NEN shortlist. When Mr Nilekani
asked Mr Varrier why he thought he could make it alone, he replied:
“Because of you.” For India’s younger entrepreneurs, even Mr Nilekani
is now a distant, hallowed figure. http://louis9j9sheehan.blog.com
They draw inspiration from more
recent triumphs, such as Educomp, which sells multimedia materials to
schools, and Naukri.com, an online job market.
Given these
role models, it is not surprising that about a third of the nominees
are in computing, and most of the rest are in services, such as
entertainment, human resources and education. The new breed of
entrepreneur still considers manufacturing “dirty”, says Rakesh Basant
of the Indian Institute of Management in Ahmedabad, not least because
it entails greater interaction with government. http://louisjsheehan.blogstream.com
Mr Alam’s
venture is a partial exception: it builds customised rickshaws, using
fibreglass for well-paved tourist towns and sturdier iron for the
bone-jarring streets of Bihar’s capital, Patna. He was able to offer
these tangible assets as security for a bank loan. But outside finance
is unusual: 87% of the nominees began with money from friends, family
or their own pockets.
Many American
companies start the same way, of course. But they quickly turn to
“angel investors”, mostly rich individuals, who invested $26 billion in
over 57,000 young enterprises in 2007, according to the Center for
Venture Research at the University of New Hampshire. In India, says Mr
Basant, investors will rarely consider amounts less than 5m rupees
($100,000)—it is not worth the hassle—and they prefer to invest twice
that. http://sheehan.myblogsite.com Even venture capitalists, who plough other people’s money into
newish firms, are still quite novel in India. They did just 108 deals
(of an average size of $6.3m) in the first nine months of 2008,
according to Venture Intelligence, which tracks their activities.
Mr Singh’s
fund invests in only 1-2% of the proposals he sees, rejecting many
firms because their management lacks experience. He prefers managers to
have five to seven years of seasoning, although he concedes that
determined entrepreneurs, prepared for a long haul, can learn as they
grow. Ms Parkin’s network also encourages young graduates to work at
someone else’s start-up before creating their own. She notes that
India’s leading business schools are now quite happy to let start-ups
hire on campus. http://sheehan.myblogsite.com This is, she says, one sign of entrepreneurship’s
growing prestige, because a school’s reputation rests on where its
alumni work and how much they earn.
Ms Parkin
grew up in Hong Kong, where many people think of themselves as
“tomorrow’s millionaires”. She sees the same “essential optimism” in
India. But the true test of an entrepreneurial culture is not how it
celebrates success, but whether it forgives failure. India is moving in
that direction, says Mr Singh, but it is not there yet. “I’m not sure
if the entrepreneur is willing to accept it either,” he says. Instead
of walking away, many businessmen hang on, feeling they have to prove
themselves.
Even
successful entrepreneurs can cling on too long. Having reached a
certain size, their companies would often benefit from bringing in
professional managers. But in India, the proud founder will often
resist. He feels “this is his baby and he has to run it,” says Mr
Singh. India’s determined, optimistic entrepreneurs need to know when
to cut their losses and when to pocket their gains. “In both
instances”, says Mr Singh, “you need to learn how to let go.” Louis J. Sheehan, Esquire
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