Startup Idea For Indian SMB Channels
Sramana Mitra
Founder and CEO of One Million by the One Million (1Mby1M) Global Virtual Accelerator
If you are trying to sell B-to-B software to Indian SMBs, you know that it’s a very big market, and by and large, inaccessible.
There are hardly any mature channels through which to cater to this audience of customers profitably.
There are a couple of companies that have successfully scaled their businesses by selling to Indian SMBs: Greytip (payroll SaaS) and Knowlarity (virtual telephony). You can read my Entrepreneur Journeys interviews with Girish Rowjee of Greytip and Ambarish Gupta of Knowlarity and also listen to Ambarish at our 263rd roundtable for more on those two companies.
VC after VC will tell you that they don’t invest in India facing B-to-B SaaS ventures because the channels are not developed to scale fast-growth businesses. Sasha Mirchandani (Kae Capital) and Sandeep Singhal (Nexus Venture) discussed these issues at our roundtables recently.
So, what is to be done to unlock this market and make it accessible to SaaS vendors? And to flip the point of view, why should millions of SMBs in India not get the benefit of software? After all, software is eating the world, delivering incredible productivity gains all across the board!
Well, I see opportunity here for a different class of startups: not just the SaaS vendors, but the value added resellers who could build for themselves nice businesses by working with a portfolio of SaaS vendors to bring their technologies to specific regional SMB clusters. Whether it is CRM, HR, ERP, or any other type of software that can help these SMBs, there is clearly an opportunity for VARs to advise, select, implement, and train.
Each VAR should focus on a specific region, and a specific size of SMB and deeply understand the needs of that class of SMBs. This includes understanding the cost structures, the opportunities for delivering ROI with the introduction of software, training needs to fully deliver the benefits thereof. Effectively, for these SMBs, the VARs would be operating as business transformation consultants.
Some numbers:
There will be different segments of SMBs with different budget levels for buying technology. Some will be able to afford $500/month, some $1000/month, some $1500/month and some $2000/month.
Assuming a 40% commission structure, a VAR focused on the $500/month budget segment will need to service ~400 customers to get to $1M. The $1000/month segments will need ~200. The $1500/month segment will need ~150. The $2000/month segment will need ~100.
India has over 50 million SMBs. Only 40% of these are currently using technology in any meaningful way. Even that is 20 million SMBs. So the numbers I am talking about (100-400) are relatively small and quite doable.
In fact, if we can systematically stimulate 100,000 VARs to focus on developing their practices, and build systems and methods to manage 100-400 SMBs effectively, it would be an enormous value creation opportunity for India’s technology future.
And, each of these VARs would become good solid livelihood generating million dollar businesses.
If this interests you, and you’d like to start such a VAR (or scale one that you have already started), please feel free to come discuss further at one of our free 1M/1M roundtables.
Looking For Some Hands-On Advice?
For entrepreneurs who want to discuss their specific businesses with me, I’m very happy to assess your situation during my free online 1M/1M Roundtables, held almost every Thursday. You can also check out my free Bootstrapping course on Lynda.com here, and follow my writings here.
Photo credit: Andrés Nieto Porras/Flickr.com.
COO @ Modi Naturals | MBA | The Doon School
8 年The biggest problem with getting SMB's to move to SaaS software is trust. I am not going to outsource a critical part of my business , for instance, billing, or order taking, to a SaaS service provider as it tremendously increases my business risk. If the vendor, for whatever reason, were to suffer a shutdown of the software, I would lose a couple of crores in business. If the service provider were to go out of business, I would be left holding the can. I feel the biggest issue is the stability of small and relatively new companies. This is also the reason why ERP SaaS sales are difficult to make.
ICS/OT Cybersecurity Practitioner | R&D | Product Security | Threat Modelling | Security Architect | OT GRC | Community Builder | LLM & AI in Cybersecurity
8 年Indeed a true situation of Indian SMB and cracking it has been a humongous challenge for anyone big or small leave alone new startups. It will be very interesting to watch how this would work out. Need of proper transparent channels will go a long way. Usual methods is through trade conventions and industry bodies and government dept who regularly conduct some or other roadshows or new schemes for SMB. How successful such endeavours are no m one knows because accurate data is not available.