BSI Innovation blogs about Innovation, Money, Venture Capital, Grants, Exports and Research and Development (R&D)
Alliance Partners
Monday, August 06, 2018
Startups and Young Entrepreneurs love Engine House
Monday, July 30, 2018
Overcoming Imposter Syndrome as an Entrepreneur
Recently, I was called up on stage at a prestigious university—after dropping out of college nearly 20 years ago—to get an honorary doctorate. The other recipients there were, well, astounding human beings.
There was a Nobel Prize winner in chemistry (who also heads up the Johns Hopkins Malaria Research Institute). There was a pioneer of automated DNA sequencing and recipient of the National Medal of Science. There was a Harvard professor fighting the forces behind climate change denial. And a geneticist who identified a breast cancer gene. And an internationally recognized advocate for social justice.
Then, there was me. A guy who started a software platform called Hootsuite that helps people and companies manage their social media. As I got my honorary laws degree and made my way to the podium to give a speech to the graduating class, I wondered what right I had to be there. What advice could I possibly give, when so many more capable people were waiting in the wings.
Do I deserve to be here?
It turns out that “imposter syndrome”—the feeling that you don’t belong and haven’t earned your place—is common among entrepreneurs. This makes sense. There’s no bar to clear to be an entrepreneur, after all. No standardized training. No fancy degree to prove your worth.
Also, you rarely get the external validation that comes with other careers—promotions, titles, a neat ascent up the org chart. Entrepreneurs improvise their own path, without those familiar signposts. You make risky decisions that don’t always pan out. You leap into the unknown. You hustle. You scrape by … and hope that you can make payroll at the end of the month. Sometimes, you end up with a big payday to “prove” you made it. Many times, you don’t.
It’s easy to lose sight of a fundamental truth. Being a good entrepreneur is really hard and really important. I say this with all humility, but I absolutely think it’s worth remembering—especially for young entrepreneurs out there, who can sometimes feel they don’t deserve a seat at the table with colleagues from more established professions. (This is also part of the reason I started League of Innovators, a charity to build entrepreneurial acumen and confidence among youth.)
Defeating the inner imposter
You may not have to pass a special exam to be an entrepreneur, but you’re tested, relentlessly. There are the physical tests of long days and sleepless nights. There are the mental tests—decisions made with limited information, deadlines met with limited resources. There are psychological tests of self-doubt, regret, uncertainty and setbacks. And you face these trials without so much as the assurance of a paycheck at the end of the week.
Add to this another challenge: the tendency to dismiss entrepreneurship as “just about the money.” Unlike a doctor or scientist, the argument goes, an entrepreneur doesn’t really serve the greater good. I can see where this view comes from. Selling software certainly isn’t healing the sick or feeding the hungry. But I also don’t think it’s quite that simple.
Entrepreneurs push innovation forward. Whether we’re talking about transportation or artificial intelligence or medical therapies, it’s entrepreneurs who popularize new technology and make it accessible. Electric cars languished for decades before Elon Musk found a way to mass produce and market them. Access to genetic testing was largely limited to the select few until Anne Wojcicki and her cofounders started 23andMe. By finding a market for invention, entrepreneurs in turn spur an ongoing cycle of research and development.
Entrepreneurs—at least, successful ones—also provide jobs. In the U.S., small businesses (with fewer than 500 employees) account for 49 percent of all private-sector employment. It’s worth pausing on that figure. The livelihood of tens of millions of people traces to the energy and capability of entrepreneurs. This is no small feat. Of course, these relationships flow both ways. I’d be nothing without the energy and passion of my team. Every successful company is the sum of its parts—all the people who believe along the way—not just the inspiration of one individual.
In some cases, entrepreneurs even have a chance to change a whole ecosystem. As businesses grow, they can form the heart of thriving hubs, spinning off more businesses and more jobs—changing the face of whole cities and even countries. This happened in Silicon Valley with technology.
The same phenomenon is happening in my backyard in Vancouver.
But it’s easy to say these grandiose things. Believing them—when you’re up on stage surrounded by Nobel Prize winners and geniuses—is another matter. For all our bluster and braggadocio, deep down entrepreneurs can be very insecure. Does what I’m doing actually matter? Or am I just chasing the next customer?
After I spoke to the graduating class, a few students came up to me. They were engineers who had grown up in the area and followed Hootsuite over the last decade as it grew from a social media startup to a company with more than 1,000 employees. They shook my hand and thanked me—for speaking, but also for everything we’d done to build a tech scene locally and show them that a path forward existed right here.
It was a timely reminder why what I was doing mattered, and why it's so critical to remember not to give in to imposter syndrome as an entrepreneur.
Friday, July 27, 2018
Cryptos are still the main game

Tuesday, July 10, 2018
Q-CTRL gets support of Sequoia
The Q-CTRL Scientists
What is it
Q-CTRL is part of a global network of companies and organisations, which are given access to IBM’s quantum computing systems and collaborate together on building the technology together with tech a network of researchers and tech companies, such as JP Morgan, Samsung, and Oxford University.
Quantum computers are designed from tiny pieces of matter too small to be seen by the naked eye, and Biercuk and team will try to harness and control these quantum bits or "qubits”
Q-CTRL essentially improve the overall performance of the quantum algorithm” according to the founder. It does this by offering a cloud-based software solution designed to work with any quantum computer, which extracts more performance from quantum devices and combats decoherence.
Decoherence occurs where transferred quantum information gets lost or degraded when the quantum system is not perfectly isolated, leading to lost “quantum behaviour”.
Q-CTRLs technology is hardware agnostic and "can work with nearly every company working to bring quantum hardware to market".
Why they Invested
James Hardiman, a partner at DCVC in San Francisco, told The Australian Financial Review his fund backed Q-Ctrl because Professor Biercuk is "a force of nature" and the team of scientists and software developers he has assembled at Q-Ctrl is "as impressive as they come".
"Any time you have foreign cash inflows from organisations that are extremely competitive like Sequoia China or like DCVC or Horizons, that's an indication that we are doing something right," says founder Michael Biercuk
He said Q-Ctrl can itself become one of the word's biggest technology companies just by selling the control software – which will be turned into quantum computer "firmware" in later versions by embedding it into quantum computer controller chips – to all of the world's quantum computer makers.
Atrium and Justin Kan - how does he attract such an amazing investor base ?
The Atrium Team
How to write a white paper for an ICO

- Who are you? Introduction/Team
- What are you creating? Solution/ Product/Tokenomics
- Why should I care? Problem/ Industry Overview/Market Inefficiencies /Technical Overview
- How are you going to deliver what you’ve promised? Roadmap / Tokenomics /Token Utility/MVP/Use Case.
Wednesday, July 04, 2018
Life is like riding a bicycle
Tuesday, July 03, 2018
Immigration easing for startups
Saturday, June 30, 2018
Appen riding the tailwind of Artificial Intelligence
The Appen share price has seen shareholders collect returns exceeding 200 per cent over the past year and 2000 percent since listing (200X return ) and is showing little sign of slowing!
Revenue is up 50 per cent to $166.6M for the financial year 2017, with an EBITDA of $28.1M.
Appen’s CEO, Marc Brayan, (serial CEO of listed companies) says the sharemarket will reward you if you have strong financial performance and a clear value proposition that is easy to understand (a killer 30 second pitch)
How it started
As 50 something empty nesters, 20 years ago, Julie and Chris Vonwiller founded Australia’s fastest growing listed company on the ASX !
Julie (a renowned Linguist) set up a small consulting business called Appen, while her husband Chris helped out while working his day job as a senior executive at Telstra.
Who knew that asking Apple's Siri virtual assistant to "call mum", or a teenage girl's obsession with finding out which outfit looks best by asking Amazon's assistant Alexa could help propel Appen to such great heights?
So what does Appen do?
Appen’s mission is to be the world’s leading provider of search relevance services.
They develop human-annotated data sets for machine learning and artificial intelligence, providing nine of the top 10 global technology companies with the data necessary to develop machine learning algorithms and improve their search function.
It has a crowdsourced global model employing 30k to 40k team of contractors that train the companies machine learning capabilities. It provides their clients “data sets” that mimics a human function - speech sight or a complex decision.
CEO, Mark Brayan, has said there continues to be a massive appetite and demand for Appens services - and there is an opportunity to ride the tailwind of the AI and machine learning opportunity.
Acquisition Trail
Appen have just invested $105.3m in 2 companies that develop advanced, machine learning-based toolsets to streamline and automate data collection.
Leapforce Inc and Raterlabs Inc
These investments will add “scale and scope” to Appen’s plans to have a bigger impact on the growing artificial intelligence market
About Leapforce
Leapforce specialises in search relevance with a highly automated, proprietary end-to-end technology platform and generated US$58 million in revenue and US$13.6 million in EBITDA in 2017.
About Raterlabs
Raterlabs Inc facilitate working from home services that seek to evaluate search engine results.
Wednesday, June 27, 2018
PropertyGuru founder on the real reason he stepped down, hard lessons, and new adventures
From Tech In Asia


Image credit: Tech in Asia
Entrepreneurs often have a defining moment that leaves an indelible mark on them.
For Steve Jobs of Apple, it was a trip to India in the 1970s, at the height of the hippie movement.
For Howard Schultz of Starbucks, it was a trip to Milan where he tried the local coffee.
For Steve Melhuish, co-founder and vice chairman of PropertyGuru, it was a six-month sojourn in Southeast Asia with his wife, Liz.
“We were living in London at the time, and I was running this telecom cable company,” says Melhuish. All his clients were in the telecoms, internet, and mobile content industries. “It was also the time of the post-dot-com bust. All my clients were going through downsizing, and I had to basically downsize my team every six months.”
Melhuish always preferred building things rather than dismantling them. “I took a six-month break and went traveling with my wife,” he recollects. The two went off the beaten track in Nepal, Laos, Cambodia, and Vietnam, spending four to five weeks in each country.
“We saw extreme poverty, which was very humbling,” he adds, recalling his Laos visit. He also remembers that their guide “had 15 kids, but only two survived.” The others were lost to “malnourishment and unclean drinking water,” Melhuish says.
This experience left him with no doubt as to where he wanted to be next.
Singapore calling
Inspiration, they say, comes from the most mundane of sources.
For Melhuish, his eureka moment was when he tacked a Post-it on his bathroom in London.
It read,
“Digital media, Asia, Startups.”
“It really did drive everything that I did and saw me push closer to Asia.” He still has that note.
The initial plan was to head out to China with Liz’s job. But a chance reorganization at her company changed their plans – and their destiny. Liz’s company brought her to Singapore instead, and the couple decided to start here. “It’s easier to go from Singapore to China rather than London to China,” they thought.
As the family settled in, Steve dove straight into work and explored the startup scene. “I was bitterly disappointed because there was hardly anything.
This was way back – almost thirteen and a half years ago. The digital space was defined by Yahoo and Microsoft competing with their messenger software.”
PropertyGuru
Steve started work with Singaporean startup ComiAsia, but he soon gave that up in 2007 when circumstances led him to launch PropertyGuru.
“My wife and I were renting a property in Emerald Hill. In 2007, the government opened its doors to immigration and the population exploded from 4.3 million to 5.5 million very quickly. So the doors opened, immigration happened, and it put an immense amount of pressure on housing and infrastructure. There was a definite crunch,” he recalls.
“The property was up for an en bloc sale. So we had to move out very fast. I went online to find a new place but there wasn’t anything,” he says.
This surprised Melhuish as he thought that Asians, in general, were obsessed with property. Many Asian families dream of owning their first property to live in or as an investment. But he couldn’t find an extensive online listing portal and had to rely on clunky classified ads.
An investor friend, however, made an auspicious introduction, connecting Melhuish with Jani Rautiainen, who was then “working in tech in India.” As Melhuish explains, “We said, ‘If we are to do this right, we’ll need to focus our energies full-time on this.’ We thought, ‘How do we give more power to the consumer?’ We then put all the listings in five markets online to give people some transparency.”
PropertyGuru was officially born.
Tough lessons
As PropertyGuru took off, Melhuish and co- founder Rautiainen were learning some hard lessons.
1. Growing too fast
“First, we decided to expand from one market to four markets in four months. I wouldn’t do that now. We took this Singapore team and asked them to make four different websites in four different markets with 12 new apps. Our product team was churning out this stuff, which was fantastic. But it suddenly ground to a halt as the team was stretched to literally the breaking point trying to do everything.”
For two or three years, Melhuish and Rautiainen were doing a lot by themselves. “Both my partner and I are very competitive people so when we decide to do something, we expect everyone else to do it too. Which is naïve and unreasonable. So, it was very unfair to people.”
2. Don’t compromise in your values
The second lesson for Melhuish was to not compromise on values even if the business is in its early days. He cites an experience involving sales staff.
We were held to ransom by two sales guys
“We were in the middle of raising money, and these two guys – who between them controlled 80 percent of our revenue – said, ‘Either double our money or we’ll leave.’ I had sleepless nights around that, and I ended up compromising my values by saying, ‘We’ll do what you say, let one person stay and we’ll have to let one person go.’ We then spent six months trying to build a team around this person to dissolve the power that he held. And I really hated myself for doing that,” he shares.
The professional and the personal
As PropertyGuru expanded and raised funds through several rounds, Melhuish faced a personal struggle.
“Liz and I had our twins about five years after we started trying to have children. 2012 to 2014 was particularly challenging because I was living on a plane or somewhere else.”
There’s often a time in a person’s life when priorities that once seemed important will fade away. His children, Emily and Jake, were celebrating their second birthday when this dawned on him.
“I wanted to spend more time with the kids. I didn’t want to wake up when they turned 11 and they had no idea who I was.” He made a commitment to his wife that he would devote more attention to the kids by their fifth birthday.

Melhuish with his family / Image credit: Steve Melhuish
And so began the search for a new executive leadership team and a CEO to replace him. “We’ve built PropertyGuru into Southeast Asia’s leading online property group, used by 22 million people monthly. We scaled to market leadership in five markets. We grew fast and became profitable, so I feel very proud of what the team has achieved.”
But once his executive leadership team was in place, Melhuish consciously decided to take a low-key role within the business. Despite this being his own decision, he says he discovered a lot about himself during that period.
“All the people I spoke with who had exited their businesses experienced a period of mourning, a period of loss – a crisis if you can call it that. I realized I went through it as well,” says Melhuish.
He got through that phase by surrounding himself with the right people. His children were his biggest motivators. “Whenever I went through the dark times, they were what kept me focused,” he relates. His wife suggested he could go back to running the company if that was what he wanted, but he chose to spend more time with his family. “That really saw me through the process,” he adds.
He has now carved out a different role for himself, which he says he enjoys. “I’m much more involved in strategy and business development and spend a lot of time on speaking engagements. I also really enjoy spending time with startups.”
Wavemaker Partners
But the work is far from over. For his latest adventure, he joined Wavemaker Partners part-time as a venture partner and says he’s looking forward to working with a team he admires.
“I’ve known [Wavemaker managing partner] Paul Santos for five years now and love what the team does. They’re very founder-friendly – more in a listening mode rather than telling mode. They’re one of the few VCs that have done five exits. And, they’re helping to build homegrown heroes in Southeast Asia, which historically has been in the shadows.”
Don’t get distracted by what the investors are saying.
He’s also devoting more time to social impact ventures, drawing from his experiences of traveling around Southeast Asia.
PropertyGuru has done “a lot of charity work with ‘Billion Bricks’, which is helping refugees and migrants. I want to do something in that space but haven’t quite figured it out.”
With all the ups and downs in Melhuish’s life, he has this advice for startup founders:
“Be yourself, be authentic and don’t try and please everyone. Focus on the reason why you started the business, which is solving a big pain point. Don’t get distracted by any shiny bright lights or what the investors are saying.”
Crowdfunded Jayride provides investors an exit

The first crowd-sourced equity funding raise was priced at 24¢ per share and was one of three rounds the company raised in this manner, equating to about $700,000.
Jayride listed earlier this year on the ASX at a 50c listing price raising $15m with “follow the seed”investing $8m

Access to capital is a key part in the startup world - and crowd funding is a great source says Maarbani
If funding is not found in Oz - they will go overseas .
The one that got away
"ThreatMetrix is a case in point . Raising capital in the USA and was sold for $US817 million and that growth story was lost to Australia," Mr Maarbani added.
So what is Jayride
It is an airport travel comparison service covering 2000 ground transport operators and 500 airports and most recently it recorded 28 per cent quarter-on-quarter revenue growth to $633,000 for the third quarter.
A crowd funding investor
Serial entrepreneur and Sydney Angel, Justin Butterworth, invested $50k into Jayride's first crowdfunding round as one of a portfilio of 25 “high risk startups” including Instaclustr, taxi booking app Ingogo, photography start-up Snappr and property tech venture Snug.com.
Mr Butterworth told AFRs Yolanda Redrup
"Investing in early stage businesses is a high-risk activity and investing smaller parcels with a trusted platform with quality deal flow like VentureCrowd helps minimise the downside risk,"
"It also gives opportunity for diversification and, in my view, gives you a better chance of a reasonable return for this class of asset."
Justin Butterworth founded home rentals business Rentahome, which was acquired by Fairfax Media for $29 million.
Crowd funding and Venturecrowd
Since being founded in 2014 , Venturecrowd has facilitated 45 deals (10 a year) raising about $25 million.
There are clearly a lot more backable deals out there - the question is how to find them, commercialise them and get them invested.
Crowd funding is a great way of funding - and will be part of the "traditional capital stack" for start-ups when legislation is enacted later this year, enabling public companies to take part in public crowdfunding.
In the UK, 24 per cent of all venture capital invested done through either of the two leading crowd funding platforms, giving the mum and dad an opportunity to invest and have the same opportunities as Angel investors and venture capitalists.
Venture capital investment returns can be significantly higher than traditional asset classes but also present high risk. With risk diversification and access to information, this risk can be mitigated.
If you get 10 per cent in superannuation you think your fund manager is a genius - here is an opportunity to invest in an asset class that can give you significant higher returns - albeit with higher risks - with the knowledge that you are supporting innovation and growth!
The Australian Superannuation is over $1 trillion - 1000 billion - 1pc invested in startups ($10b) would make Australia the world focal point of innovation .
Opportunities to watch
An investment opportunity to watch in the future is Anwar Khalil’s “My Recruitment Plus” increasing its annuity by $100k quarter in quarter! - watch this space for more details!