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Startup

The Plunge!

Remember the humble old Toyota Qualis? Well have you ever wondered why Toyota must have pulled the plug on Qualis production at a time when it was selling like hot cakes and was at the peak of its sales and also had established its leadership in the segment? Well after ten years since this happened, we all now know the answer. For the greater good!! However, I will suffice this towards the end of the post.

It’s been quite a decision to downsize. The more you loved your business the more you dread these empty spaces.

I have been an avid automotive enthusiast all my life but in contrary right now my gig is in the software industry. Strangely for a petrol head like me I am gradually falling in love with information technology. I constantly look for new innovative technologies try understanding their purpose and try deriving a business sense out of it . Smartmonk Innovations happened roughly a year ago – we are a team of three tough, smart and an illustriously super cool bunch you will never ever come across in the management cabins.  We are a data analytics and a business intelligence company and have been offering bespoke services to clients both large and small.

This stretch once brimmed with raw energy and analyzed a zillion sets of raw data!

We have been doing fairly well and had grand plans of scaling up in the next couple of years and little did we know that somehow our focus had been gradually moving towards building a product. A couple of months ago I had read somewhere in a startup magazine that this situation we right now face is a classic product – service dilemma that many technology companies face. It also had listed out the following three cases to further explain the dilemma.

  • The startup runs for years to come as a services company
  • The core team wants to build a product and then focuses on both, the services as well as product.
  • The company stops services and focuses completely on the product.

The above cases listed out by the magazine couldn’t be more precise and how. We have absolutely experienced each of those situations. We believe we now absolutely understand the uncertainties, the unpredictability, the chances, the fickleness, the market and most importantly the business as a whole. We now are at the later stage in the situations listed, ‘TO STOP SERVICES AND COMPLETELY FOCUS ON THE PRODUCT’ –  the decision has surprised one and all and more importantly our beloved resources who have had great trust and supported us throughout.

It is kind of weird when we forward a potential lead to a competitor (whom we now call partners) or to say ‘we are not accepting projects anymore’.  This phase now has its own set of challenges. Firstly, an outright end to the regular inflow of funds into the company, which in-turn means there’s not going to be a penny in your pocket from day one. Though downsized the few resources and team who still have stuck to us have to be paid every month no matter what and I am at a fork as I write this, I still do not have an answer to their question, which is a simple ‘how’?

It was a risk we were willing to take. That is how much we trust our product, the experience in building a product and seeing it take shape with every line of code you write is enthralling. Nothing else comes to your mind, your social, financial or even personal sacrifices are rewarded righteously through the output. This I promise!

We are calling our product ‘4c’ as in foresee. An engine that is in the making and is bound to make analytics super affordable when unleashed. I shall keep you all posted with our core development updates and the real time challenges through my next posts.

Oh by the way before I end this, a question that lingered on many keen business observers’ minds when Toyota stopped production of their hot selling MUV at a time when it was doing extremely well in the market, was ‘why would Toyota do that?’. Well to make way for a more modern and customer-value driven vehicle. A vehicle that could better its predecessor in every way.  We all know how the Innova has reshaped the market and how amazingly and astonishingly right the top bosses at Toyota were, back then in 2005.  

Though not very similar to our business case, this somehow kept springing up in my head from the time I started writing this post. 

Good Day!

@preddy555        

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7 Comments

  1. there is something so poignant about this post, yet so easy to relate, pratheek…

    i know other rodinhooders who have downsized and moved offices. and i know they are focussing on building something relevant.

    i shall really really look fwd to your showcase post for 4c on trh.

    all the best! may the force be with you. 

    what a debut post. thank you for sharing your story with us 🙂

  2. ps: pratheek – i will need you to add your twitter handle at the end pls! helps me mention you while tweeting!

  3. My pleasure Asha!

    I am glad I discovered this community. Thanks a lot for your kind words and best wishes. 

    Will keep you all posted.

  4. hi pratheek,

    your images are broken. pls fix! thanks!!

  5. Nice Post Pratheek !!! I can very much relate to your thoughts. I truly wish you and your team good luck in your product. I had same dilemma exactly in January 2015. We had been developing educational SAAS ERP eduZilla for over 2 years but all our revenues were coming from services. I felt we can never make it as a product company till we give up on our services arm. It was quite emotional decision as I remember how much I persuaded in winning each clients, one at a time. But finally we said Good Bye to them in mid 2015. We kept servicing just a couple of them with whom we had developed strong bonding and they were the once we could rely on for our limited source of revenues. It’s been over 8-9 months and we are slowly gathering pace on selling our SAAS product. The last 8 months was the most exciting phase of our life. We could focus so much on our product that every customer request was given right attention and we could improve our product 10 times faster than before. Today I feel happy for that decision, it was right thing to do, a step to fulfill our dreams. Managing cashflow in this phase was the most challenging task but luckily the team stay put and we managed with limited resources we had. We have started branching out another version of software for schools – CAMPUSZILLA for which trials are already going on with one school.

  6. wow yogesh – you seem to have quite a story to share yourself!

    do feel free to feature campuszilla in our showcase section. 

    a post on learnings from eduzilla would really help other rodinhooders.

    good luck and looking fwd to reading your post soon!!

  7. hey happy b’day pratheek! trust all’s rocking at your end? would love to hear an update!

    have an awesome one and stay in touch!!

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