UMG Idealab, the venture capital arm of Myanmar trade conglomerate UMG Group, says it seeks potential co-investment opportunities with Indonesian VCs as it begins to explore investing beyond its pre-seed stage expertise.
“We are talking to fellow VCs for potential financing collaboration and also to scale up our potential,” said UMG Idealab venture partner Jefry Pratama.
Since it started investing in 2015, UMG Idealab has backed over 50 companies, mostly at pre-seed stage, having developed a knack for identifying and backing newly-founded, promising technology ventures.
While it has invested in different countries including Myanmar, Thailand and China, the bulk of its investments are in Indonesia, the home country of UMG Group’s founder and CEO Kiwi Aliwarga.
Having grown UMG to become one of the largest companies in Myanmar and the largest producer and distributor of agricultural tractor equipment in the country with over 5,000 employees, Aliwarga, a former Astra International employee, decided to make Indonesia the headquarters of his company’s tech-focused unit, which carries not only a venture capital function but also operates as a venture builder.
As far as investments are concerned, as many as half of UMG Idealab’s investments, which are deployed from its parent company’s balance sheet, have come from Indonesia, where it cuts cheque sizes ranging between $50,000 and $1 million per deal.
Among its more notable portfolio are healthtech startup ProSehat and travel marketplace SelenaGo, as well as agritech company Crowde, which has also received backing from Strive and Mandiri Capital, and e-fishery startup Aruna, which is said to have closed funding from East Ventures and SMDV, and reportedly also in fundraising talks with SoftBank.
So far, Pratama said, UMG Idealab has been working as a lone investor in sourcing and backing its investee companies. However, the firm now looks to team up with local VC firms that share the same goal.
“We want to invest together with investors that share our vision of supporting up and coming young founders that offer solutions and develop innovation in Indonesia,” he said.
With its parent company boasting eight offices in seven Southeast Asian countries, UMG Idealab’s strong regional network has been one of its biggest value-adds to its portfolio companies. By teaming up with other investors, the firm looks to provide investee companies with more complete additional support, Pratama added.
Keen eye on AI
While the firm has invested across different sectors, Pratama said it is particularly keen on supporting the development of AI technology in Indonesia.
So far, UMG Idealab has invested in three AI companies, namely chatbot developer Botika, speech processor BahasaKita and the newest AI venture Widya.ai.
Pratama said the firm has decided to go deeper into the field by setting up a programme in collaboration with the University of Indonesia and Tencent-backed robot-maker UB Tech to enable children – from as early as elementary school level – to be educated on artificial intelligence.
With the help of UBTech’s education division, which has implemented a similar programme in China, and University of Indonesia’s trained teaching staff, the UMG-funded initiative will give access to elementary, junior high and senior high school students to become familiarized with artificial intelligence, which is hoped will lead to better technological progress at university level and beyond.
Once higher levels of research and products are generated from the programme, UMG Idealab will refer them to its existing AI portfolio undergo arguably the most difficult part of a technological business: commercial packaging.
“There are many AI technologies that have not reached the commercialization stage. Things like voice recognition, image recognition and facial recognition here only reach the campus stage. Now, with the research center, we will connect these with our startups, who better understand the use cases and commercialization of these AI technology,” he said.