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Tag: Venture Highway

  • General Catalyst merges with Venture Highway in India push | TechCrunch

    General Catalyst merges with Venture Highway in India push | TechCrunch

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    General Catalyst, a Silicon Valley-based venture capital group, is expanding its presence in India by joining forces with local venture firm, Venture Highway, and earmarking $500 million to $1billion for investments in the country.

    Venture Highway’s investments include social commerce startup Meesho and B2B industrial marketplace Moglix. The two firms were said to be in talks for a deal since January.

    The deal will see the combined entity plot a multi-stage investment strategy for General Catalyst in India, spanning early- and growth-stage startups across industries, Venture Highway’s founder, Neeraj Arora, and its GP, Priya Mohan, told TechCrunch in an interview. 

    Venture Highway, which raised $78.6 million for its second fund in 2020, has traditionally focused on early-stage investments. As part of the General Catalyst team, it will expand its remit to incubating startups. “Our vision is to be part of building a number of companies that will not only go public but also be needle-moving for the economy,” said Mohan.

    General Catalyst plans to invest between $500 million to $1 billion in India over the next three years, said Arora, who previously served as chief business officer at WhatsApp and played an instrumental role in the instant messaging app’s sale to Meta.

    The deal positions General Catalyst as one of the largest venture capital firms in India, alongside the likes of Lightspeed, Accel, Elevation and Nexus, which have each raised between $500 million and $700 million for their recent funds. Peak XV Partners (formerly Sequoia India and Southeast Asia) leads the pack, with a $2 billion fund earmarked for investments in the country.

    General Catalyst isn’t acquiring Venture Highway’s portfolio, but will consider them “very much part of the GC portfolio going forward,” Hemant Taneja, General Catalyst’s CEO, told TechCrunch.

    “We want to support them the same way we support any of our companies in India or anywhere else in the world,” he said. 

    The two firms began exploring ways to collaborate several years ago, but, Arora said, the timing was right at the moment. “We could have gone out and raised more capital. That was one of the options on the table. But thinking from first principles, when we think about the opportunity that is in India today, and what our ambitions are, it made sense for us to join hands with General Catalyst,” he said. 

    India has become one of the world’s fastest-growing major economies over the past decade, with its GDP rate touching 8.2% in the latest financial year. Favourable policy changes have spurred growth across industries, attracting some of the world’s largest investors.

    SoftBank, Tiger Global, Peak XV, Lightspeed, Accel and others have deployed about $100 billion in Indian tech startups in the past five years alone, and are beginning to see some returns as many of those firms go public. But “returns on capital in India have sucked historically,” Tiger Global’s Scott Shleifer said at a virtual gathering with Indian entrepreneurs last year.

    India is not new territory for General Catalyst, which has been investing in the country for over a decade. Its portfolio includes fintech unicorn CRED, used car marketplace Spinny, and healthtech startup Orange Health. The firm recently co-led a funding round with Indian conglomerate Tata that was raised by Alsym Energy, a company developing non-flammable rechargeable batteries.

    Taneja anticipates more partnerships with Indian conglomerates going forward. “I believe that many of the conglomerates in India are very entrepreneurial and will play a significant role in the growth opportunity of India,” he said. “Some of the opportunities we want to invest in or help build in India, it might make sense to radically collaborate with them.”

    “When you’re transforming industries, no matter where you are in the world, you have to team up with the industry leaders. We do that in healthcare here [in the U.S.] with a lot of healthcare systems; we are actively working with various governments when it comes to policy and issues and things like AI,” he added.

    Thursday’s announcement follows a similar move by General Catalyst in Europe last year, when the firm unveiled plans to merge with Berlin-based venture firm La Famiglia. Taneja declined to comment on whether his firm will seek to replicate the model in other markets.

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    Manish Singh

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  • Elevation Capital leads $15 mn funding in ex-Partner’s AI-SaaS start-up Drivetrain

    Elevation Capital leads $15 mn funding in ex-Partner’s AI-SaaS start-up Drivetrain

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    Former Elevation Capital Partner Alok Goel’s enterprise SaaS start-up Drivetrain, which helps businesses monitor and scale growth, has raised $15 million in fresh funding. The round was led by Elevation Capital, Jungle Ventures, and Venture Highway, along with participation from 25+ angel investors, advisors, founders, and start-up CXOs. These included ex-Googler Amit Singhal, Notion Co-founder Akshay Kothari, Chargebee Co-founder Krish Subramanian, Fareye Co-founder Kushal Nahata, among others. Prior to this, the company had raised an undisclosed seed round last year. 

    Founded in April 2021 by Alok Goel, Tarkeshwar Thakur (ex-Freshworks) and Saurav Bhagat (former lead of SaaS investments at Elevation Capital), Drivetrain operates a financial planning, budget-tracking, and growth monitoring platform for tech businesses. It plans to use the funds for new product development, market expansion, and fresh hires. 

    Drivetrain Co-founder and CEO Alok Goel calls the platform a “Google Maps for business growth”. It has built an AI-powered language called DTML – Drivetrain Modeling Language – that is capable of expressing nuances of how a particular business operates. At present, the platform integrates with over 200 workplace collaboration software, including Salesforce, Netsuite, Quickbooks, Workday, and Looker, among others, and aids course correction for decision-makers at mid-market enterprises. 

    Drivetrain Co-founders Tarkeshwar Thakur, Alok Goel, and Saurav Bhagat

    “Many leaders manage their business plans and multimillion-dollar budgets on spreadsheets that are cumbersome and error-prone. Gauging your business health in real-time and applying course corrections is impossible on spreadsheets. Instead, with Drivetrain, you can make better, confident decisions in days, not months,” Goel explained. 

    Drivetrain is one among several SaaS start-ups that are leveraging AI to build innovative products for other businesses. The AI-SaaS segment is projected to create $500 billion in market value by 2030, according to a report by Stellaris Venture Partners and IFC (arm of the World Bank).

    Deepak Gaur, Partner at Elevation Capital, said, “Today, finance teams spend up to four weeks every quarter tracking key business metrics and generating reports for their stakeholders. You can’t make decisions on such stale data. Drivetrain enables these companies to consolidate their data and get insights in near real-time. This helps them focus more on forward-looking questions during board meetings.”

    Bengaluru-based Drivetrain’s AI-led software assists businesses in predicting revenue growth and weeding out business imperfections before it starts affecting their financials. “We have struggled to put together Excel sheets for portfolio companies to predict revenue growth, structure the go-to-market plan, and understand levers that would affect revenue and margin growth. Drivetrain’s scientific approach to scaling business predictably resonated with us,” Priya Mohan, Partner at Venture Highway, stated. 

    Also Read: Elevation Capital to write larger early-stage cheques with new fund

    Also Read: India’s AI-SaaS start-ups likely to employ 5 mn people by 2030: Study

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