Wednesday, 19 December 2018

Quikr acquires India Property

Online classifieds platform Quikr has acquired Chennai based startup India Property Online Private Limited, a real estate platform, for an undisclosed amount.

The acquisition signals Quikr’s strategy to build the transaction business on top of classifieds. The company has sought to grow through acquisitions since 2015 and has acquired 14 companies so far across categories. The Tiger Global-backed Quikr operates in segments such as real estate, auto, jobs, goods and services.
Founded in 2012, India Property offers in-depth information on property buying, selling and renting. The platform lists more than 6 lakh properties and 8,000 verified builder projects across 15 cities in India. It enables property search, diligence, financing, and transactions.

The startup backed by venture capital fund Bertelsmann India Investments and Mayfield has also built an analytics platform using street-level transaction data for residential properties and covers 5 million properties in south India. Till date, the company had raised $19 million cumulatively. Quikr operates two models in the real estate segment -- a co-living rental business and brokerage business for home buying.

Thursday, 13 December 2018

Walmart Labs acqui-hires Int.AI

Walmart Labs, the local product development division of US retail giant Walmart has acqui-hired Delaware based data analytics and machine learning startup Int.AI, its second acqui-hire in India in three months, as it looks to strengthen its engineering team.

Int.AI was founded in 2016. It analyses data and shares it with targeted users over email as well as team messenger tools like Slack. In September, Walmart Labs brought the entire team of engineers from Bengaluru-based Appsfly onboard, which built a system for micro apps to get hosted and streamed on any platform.
Walmart move highlights its keen urge to deepen its presence in the country. The US-based retailer has been investing heavily in the country this year, starting with the game changing $16 Bn acquisition of Indian ecommerce unicorn Flipkart. The company also opened its 23rd wholesale store in Visakhapatnam recently. It claims 19 of these centres have already achieved break even.

Globally, acqui-hiring has been used by large companies to get talent in a new domain it looks to test waters. In 2017, Google acquired Halli Labs, a four-month-old startup out of Bengaluru that was developing artificial intelligence and machine learning solutions. In October, Airtel acqui-hired Authme ID services, an AI-based solution firm.

Wednesday, 12 December 2018

Google acquires “Where is My Train”

Global search giant Google has made its first product acquisition in India with Bengaluru based startup Where is My Train, which provides live train updates through an app without the use of Internet and the Global Positioning System (GPS).
Where Is My Train has been founded by five former executives of the US based technology entertainment company TiVo Corporation. The acquisition comes after reports in August in which Google and smartphone maker Xiaomi were said to be competing to acquire the company for nearly $30 Mn- $40 Mn. With the acquisition, Google may further amplify its presence in tier 2, 3, and 4 cities along with remote parts of the country where internet penetration is negligible.

Where Is My Train’s mobile app has recorded more than 10 Mn downloads and uses information from the cell tower instead of the internet or GPS to locate trains in real time. The app also helps people select the train after selecting their source and destination on the app. The services are currently available in English as well as eight regional languages including English, Hindi, Bengali, Marathi, Malayalam, Kannada and more.

The company’s mission is to use “technology to improve the lives of millions of Indian train travellers.” India boasts the fourth-largest railway network in the world with a total route length of 67,368 km (according to Indian Railways statistics from 2016-17) and 8,116 Mn originating passengers annually. However, Indian trains are perpetually getting delayed or cancelled. In such a scenario, an app may well be a boon for passengers.

Tuesday, 11 December 2018

Zomato acquires TechEagle

Online food delivery company Zomato has acquired TechEagle Innovations, a Lucknow based startup that works exclusively on drones. TechEagle will help Zomato move towards offering drone based food delivery in India, by creating a hub-to-hub delivery network powered by hybrid multi-rotor drones.
TechEagle was founded in 2015 by IIT Kanpur alumni. It works with a prime focus on custom-made drones capable of carrying up to 5 kg payloads. It is worth mentioning that the Ministry of Civil Aviation (MoCA) recently legalized flying commercial drones and also announced a policy called Drone Regulations 1.0. While these guidelines banned the use of drones for delivery of goods and food, on September 19, minister of state for civil aviation hinted at including a clause on the application of drones for ecommerce and food delivery in the draft Drone Regulations 2.0.

India is currently in the early stage of aerial innovations and is taking baby steps towards building a future where users can expect a drone to deliver the food they ordered online. Zomato currently delivers 22 Mn monthly orders and is leaving no stone unturned as far as last-mile delivery is concerned. The company boasts a last-mile delivery fleet of 1.5 lakh partners and has over 75,000 restaurant partners offering food delivery services across 100 cities in India.

So far, Zomato has made 12 acquisitions globally. In the last two years, Runnr (September 2017) and TongueStun ($18 Mn, September 2018) have been its prime acquisitions aimed at boosting its food delivery and logistics network. Other startups acquired by Zomato include MapleGraph, Sparse Labs, NexTable, Mekanist, Urbanspoon, Cibando, LunchTime, Obedovat, Menu Mania, and gastronauci.pl.