2021’s first unicorn, a $1-billion acquisition, and more

To put it succinctly — it was a helluva week.


On the back of WhatsApp’s privacy concerns, Sridhar Vembu’s Zoho is all set to launch a desi messaging app Arattai. After massive criticism from users across the globe, WhatsApp decided to delay the rollout of its new policy update to May 15.


Last week, Zerodha launched Rainmatter Climate while BYJU’S acquired Aakash Educational Services for $1 billion, signalling how successful Indian startups will pave the way in giving back. 


Then, Digit Insurance became India’s first unicorn of 2021. Now, India has more than 35 unicorn startups, around 11 of which were added in 2020 alone. 


Jyoti Bansal’s Harness, a San Francisco-based B2B startup, also raised $115M and attained unicorn status with $1.7 billion valuation.


Industry experts have predicted that India will have 100 unicorns by 2025. And given the rate at which new unicorns are being added, the Indian startup ecosystem seems to be well on track to achieve that. 

Zoho

The Interview 

Mercedes-Benz set up shop in India in 1994 and has a dominant market share of around 40 percent in the luxury car market in the country. Having been in the country for over a quarter of a century, Mercedes-Benz India Managing Director and CEO Martin Schwenk says the German automaker has studied Indian consumer behaviour closely — They (Indian consumers) look for value for money and that's even in a high-end product.


Here are some key takeaways from the interview:


  • Offering “value for money” products
  • Different usage 
  • Made in India luxury cars

Startup Spotlight

On-demand meat delivery startup is changing the way India consumes non-veg food


Upon his return to India in 2016, Siddhant Wangdi was concerned to see the lack of hygiene and safety standards in the way meat was procured, stored, and sold in the country. This led him to start Meatigo — an on-demand meat and seafood delivery platform — that ensures quality, variety, safety, and hygiene from farm to fork. Read more.

Meatigo snapshot

Infographic: YS Design


Editor’s Pick: D2C brands take on $2.5 billion counterfeit brand industry

Buying a fake product may not be new to consumers. But that it is a multi-billion-dollar industry may be news to some. According to Acviss, the counterfeit industry is easily a Rs 20,000 crore (around $2.7 billion) industry, or roughly less than 0.37 percent of the total retail pie in India. However, the good news is that new-age brands are already setting aside a portion of their income as legal fees to fight counterfeits, fakes, and imitations. Read more.

Fake Products

Fake products result in billions of dollars of loss to the economy


News & Updates



Before you go, stay inspired with… 

“I am very bullish about what technology can do for the edtech sector. Active learners are key. It’s the awareness that we are trying to create and are truly convinced about.”


Byju Raveendran, Founder and CEO, BYJU’s

BYJUs

Byju Raveendran, Founder and CEO, BYJU'S


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Link : https://yourstory.com/2021/01/2021-first-unicorn-zerodha-rainmatter-byjus-zoho
Author :- Saheli Sen Gupta ( )
January 18, 2021 at 06:00AM
YourStory

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