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Wednesday, August 30, 2006

Indian Web Startups Quiz - Answers

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Ok...ok....I am posting the answers at the fag end of the day following some requests to delay my answers as long as possible as the efforts were still on to track down all of the answers. I think the wait has been long enough. The original post is here
  1. Which online Indian startup focusing on the travel and hospitality industry, has the tag line "Great Deals. Always"
  2. Which 2 Indian startups are giving Google News India a run for the money in the area of news aggregation?
  3. What is the common area of interest between the Indian Startups HumDigg, IndiaVote, IndianPad, PutVote and IndiaGram?
    • They are all social bookmarking sites that aim to capture interests of Indians.
  4. Which Indian company has a offline search software - one that allows you to search the Web even when you are not connected to the Internet?
  5. An Indian startup took the world of Internet search by storm when it was launched in March 2006. The startup offered a search for visual information by actually matching your key search terms to traits of million of photos on the Web. What company am I referring to?
  6. Which Indian telecom company took to providing live 2006 Wimbledon coverage for mobile phone users in India?
  7. Which Indian startup is on the verge of releasing an Open Source Web Conference tool that allows people to host and walk though their presentations online to a distributed audience ?
  8. Which Chennai based Telecom company released a low cost wireless broadband system named Cordect in Nov 2005 that is expected hasten Internet connectivity in rural India?
  9. Presumably the first Indian startup to offer photo sharing, printing and delivery of photos across India. Which company am I referring to ?
  10. What Indian startup has an Uncle Sam imitating Indian asking "What do you have to say today?" on its home page?
    • Shunya.in - A community based tech news sharing portal.
  11. With what Indian online company do you associate this smiling face ? [ Hint : The company received extortion threats recently]
  12. Venky Harinarayan and Anand Rajaraman, both alumni of Stanford University set up a new search engine that rocked the online community, with some even terming it as the next Google. What search engine is being referred to here ?
  • Of the 30 odd entries I received, the one with the most correct entries is of Pooja. Amazingly she has got all of them right.
  • The next best entry got 10 right. It was from Kaps of Sambhar Mafia fame.
Congratulations to the winners and to the participants coz I considered the level of this quiz to be higher side and you all deserve compliments for having attempted the quiz. Thanks for the response. Till next time...keep tracking the Pulse of IT in India


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Monday, August 28, 2006

Technology & Innovation can end Monopoly

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"Technology and innovation can be a monopoly killer". This statement made by one of the professors was still resounding in my ears as my thoughts raced across to the telecom sector in India. BSNL (Bharat Sanchar Nigam Limited) in the socialist 70s and 80s was the state owned monopoly in fixed land lines and had developed an extensive mesh of lines that criss-crossed the country linking Assam to Gujarat and Kashmir to Kanyakumari. Competition never threatened BSNL as it had the blessing of the central governement to run its business in a way that profited it the most.

Then came the liberalization era in the 1990's and classic capitalist ideas started gaining the upper hand. Every sphere started opening up and competitive markets started becoming the norm of the day. A host of new players entered the market initially providing wireless cellular services which was an area that did not have monopoly players yet. Technology played its role too as it was the same time the world as a whole was facing a telecom wireless revolution in terms of mobile phone miniaturization, feature intensification and cost reduction.

Once these new entrants namely Airtel, Tata Indicom and Reliance gained a foothold in the cellular wireless market they embarked on a plan of diversification and this was when they used technology to topple BSNL from the distinct status it held of being the only firm to have land lines across India. Reliance and Tata Indicom used technology to lay high bandwidth optical fiber cables (OFC) across the country. BSNL was forced to adopt similar measures. However the gap between BSNL and the new entrants was still a chasm.
Enter Wireless Local Loop (WLL) technology. Reliance and the Tata group quickly jumped the wagon . This enabled them to lay optical fiber cables between major towns and villages and avoid last mile connectivity issues which incidentally is what requires the most capital investment. Instead WLL enabled them to erect towers in towns and villages and still issue the subscribers land line phones that connected wirelessly to these towers. The same door-to-door access that BSNL had achieved over a span of 2-3 decades by laying phone cables right till the subscriber's doorstep was achieved by the new entrants in a span of half a decade. Today the Tatas and Reliance groups boast of a network comparable in size to BSNL and still be proud of the fact that it was done at a fraction of the cost that BSNL incurred. And in doing so, it also marked the end of monopolistic market practices of one of India's telecom behemoths.

Truly "Technology and Innovation can convert monopolistic markets to competitive ones"

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Friday, August 25, 2006

Cutting the Cellular Pie in India

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Attempt the Indian Startups Quiz
Last Date: 30th Aug 2006


It is no less than a bloodbath that is happening in the Indian cellular phone service provider scene. With about 5 players namely BSNL (the state owned enterprise), Airtel, Hutch, Tata and Reliance, who can truly boast of nationwide coverage and umpteen local providers, the fight that is on to garner the maximum number of cellular subscribers is only getting intense.


Two things are distinctly adding fuel to the raging fire and driving competition to dizzying levels.
  • India is credited with being the world's fastest growing cellular subscriber market
The Indian cellular service subscriber base especially on the GSM front has been swelling by about 3-4 million new customers every single month and has touched 82.4 million in July 2006. With this kind of a spectaular growth, it is a story of the golden egg laying hen that is surrounded by a host of farmers ready to grab the egg as it comes out.

The customers are equally finicky about the service they get and will not hesitate to switch given the slightest incentive. Quite understandable considering the economics of the market that is booming and teeming with players offering every service that you could name.

One of my professors was mentioning that it takes roughly about 2 years for a cellular company to extract all the cost investment that goes into acquiring a new customer. That set me thinking on whether the fact holds true in a volatile market like India that will surely not see stability anywhere in the near future. My take on the matter, given the fact that customer loyalties in India last just till the customer faces the slightest disruption of services, is that the large volumes that keep getting churned out in the market every day, more than offset the need for a hefty two years to recover investment costs on a new customer. The concept of the need for two years might eventually come to dictate the market dynamics of the mobile services market once the markets have stabilized and the companies get a chance to tone down their frequent 'at-war-rhetorics'
  • Technology driven industry + Highly tech savvy consumers = High volatility
Mobile companies in India are also one of the most technology focused companies anywhere in the world. With highly technology savvy consumers biting at their heels, Indian cellular companies are introducing newer and newer gizmos with ever more features and services packed into each device to satiate the Indian market. Airtel that dished out a $1 billion contract to Ericsson to setup new wireless facilities across the country is just one example.

Another thing to be observed here is that the Indian mobile market consists of about 85% of youth in the age bracket of 18 to 35 who just want the best that technology offers them. This keeps the mobile cos on their toes.

New Technologies
I can only imagine how the competition can drive the market nuts with a host of new technologies that are pervading the market. Consider WiFi and WiMax that allow citywide and district wide wireless Internet services to be operated. With Internet enabled phones, it won't be long before customers could access the Internet via these phones and maybe make a VOIP call to their friend halfway across the world and still incur only the data charges that their local cellular company levies on them. It definitely looks like a threat to cellular companies. The same can be iteratively applied to the local market and you suddenly have a market where cellular companies are no more cellular companies but wireless Internet providers who just have been left high and dry because no person wants to use their call routing services when the Internet can do it for them at a fraction of a cost.

Even the SMS model might dramatically collapse if people decide sending an email from one's mobile to another person who will definitely have access to his mail box over his Internet enabled phone makes more sense than a SMS. What if a company comes out with a killer app that marries off Email and SMS to inherit the best of both worlds. Quite scary if I am the head honcho of a cellular company.

I can only see two possibilities. Either the bloodbath goes into hyper mode and players get gobbled up by the big fish. Or the smaller fry just find the model unsustainable economically and quit the market giving more room for the other players to stretch out. Classic marketing principles would definitely win at the end though the path towards that point would be ridden with big time corporate foresights that might either send a company spiraling towards glory or towards a not-so glorious downfall, making up for some interesting case studies at the B-schools across the globe. 'Cellularizing' one sixth of the world's population is sure to resemble an action paked Bollywood movie


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Photo Courtesy: Hindu Business Line

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Tuesday, August 22, 2006

Indian Web Startups Quiz - How well do you know them?

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Well, Quiz time again...After the overwhelming response to my first IT quiz, I was inspired to come out with quizzes that make it fun to follow IT news. This one's on Indian IT and ITES service based startups that have been making waves not just in the country but also across the world. See how well you keep tabs on the Indian IT Pulse...
  1. Which online Indian startup focusing on the travel and hospitality industry, has the tag line "Great Deals. Always".
  2. Which 2 Indian startups are giving Google News India a run for the money in the area of news aggregation?
  3. What is the common area of interest between the Indian Startups HumDigg, IndiaVote, IndianPad, PutVote and IndiaGram?
  4. Which Indian company has a offline search software - one that allows you to search the Web even when you are not connected to the Internet?
  5. An Indian startup took the world of Internet search by storm when it was launched in March 2006. The startup offered a search for visual information by actually matching your key search terms to traits of million of photos on the Web. What company am I referring to?
  6. Which Indian telecom company took to providing live 2006 Wimbledon coverage for mobile phone users in India?
  7. Which Indian startup is on the verge of releasing an Open Source Web Conference tool that allows people to host and walk though their presentations online to a distributed audience?
  8. Which Chennai based Telecom company released a low cost wireless broadband system named Cordect in Nov 2005 that is expected hasten Internet connectivity in rural India?
  9. Presumably the first Indian startup to offer photo sharing, printing and delivery of photos across India. Which company am I referring to?
  10. What Indian startup has an Uncle Sam imitating Indian asking "What do you have to say today?" on its home page?
  11. With what Indian online company do you associate this smiling face? [Hint : The company CEO received extortion threats recently]
  12. Venky Harinarayan and Anand Rajaraman, both alumni of Stanford University set up a new search engine that rocked the online community, with some even terming it as the next Google. What search engine is being referred to here?
Answers on 30th of August, 2006
Send your answers to vijayblogs@gmail.com





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India IT News Capsule - Aug 2006, Issue 3

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  • AOL coming to India: America Online or AOL as it is better known is all out to set up shop in India and bring to Indians that have made it a household name in the United States. AOL has not revealed a foray into Internet service providing business but speculation is rife that AOL would try and acquire Sify, one of the largest privates ISPs in India to jump start its India operations.
  • Google looking for India Internet startups: Google is reportedly looking out for Indian Internet startups to be acquired as part of its expansion plan in the country. On its India site, Google has invited applications from people who can “identify and evaluate acquisition opportunities across existing and future market opportunities, drive management team decisions, lead deal execution, and help manage post-acquisition integration and performance evaluation in the South Asia Region.” Google’s ideal candidate would be “a top performer with proven deal management,” said the site. A hint about what Google might be seeking to do in India comes in the form of investment experience that the candidate must have: Internet, communications, or e-commerce.
  • Airtel offering MS-Office products on its mobile network: Airtel, the leading cellular phone service provider has tied up with Microsoft to allow its mobile users access to Microsoft Office products over their mobile phones. Airtel subscribers can access MS Word, Outlook, Excel, Powerpoint and Internet Explorer on their mobile devices. Beside, users will also get access to several other multimedia applications, including camera, video recording and MP3. The MS Windows Mobile 5.0 will be available to customers on the HP I-Paq and I-Mate handsets, priced between Rs 16,000 and Rs 65,000. Whereas, the service will be offered under plans ranging from Rs 399 to Rs 799.With this association Bharti Airtel thus joins 115 existing mobile operators who currently offer the Windows Mobile solution worldwide.
  • Indian Company launches Podcast services for corporates: Chennai PR Club, a PR professionals association, and Prime Point Foundation, an NGO, jointly launched 'Podcast' service for corporates on Monday. Podcast is the distribution of audio stream, which can be downloaded and played through any MP3 player.
  • NIIT - IIM to offer Management courses over Internet: NIIT Ltd., Asia's largest IT trainer, and one of India's top management colleges plan on offering management programmes through broadband.Content would be provided by Indian Institute of Managment, Ahemadabad while infrastructure would be NIIT's hold. NIIT will initially set up six computer centres in as many cities and the number will subsequently rise to 75. IIM will design two programmes meant for professionals having at least five years of work experience. They will be priced at 50,000 rupees ($1,076) for 60 hours of training and 180,000 rupees for a course lasting 150 hours.

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Friday, August 18, 2006

New safety measures on Indian Railways

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Security is a scalding topic with the railway minister Lalu Prasad these days. The good part is that he is doing whatever in his power to elevate security among passengers of the railway networks in India.



Two news items in the Hindustan Times and Sify have detailed the new security related developments that would soon find their way into railway stations concourses.

  1. X-Ray machines to be installed at major Northern Railways' stations. This includes New Delhi, Delhi and Nizamuddin. The machines would be similar to the ones at airports and would revel the contents of luggages to the security personnel. The 2.75 crore project would target both passenger and parcel luggages.
  2. CCTVs (Close Circuit Televisions) also are being installed at 13 railway stations in Mumbai. This comes in the wake of the recent July 11, 2006 Mumbai serial blasts that ripped 7 different suburban trains killing nearly 200 people.

Though the measures are commendable, the railways need to realize that they have an uphill task to adequately secure the thousands of railways stations across India and make way for safer rail travel to the millions of Indians for whom railways are the mode of life.


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