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Giving Startups a Spring In Their Step - 91Springboard

Giving Startups a Spring In Their Step - 91Springboard

Tuesday March 05, 2013 , 5 min Read

Hardcore coders are known to work in complete silos. But best ideas often come when you are contemplating under the shade of silence. Even Archimedes was alone in the tub when the “eureka” moment had come. So what do you make of startup co-working spaces that have done well in the Silicon Valley, and are now slowly making inroads into the Indian startup ecosystem?

There are teams of different startups, there’s great hullabaloo all around the place, and midst all this chaos, cross-pollination of ideas takes place. And its not just ideas, the quid pro quo arrangement for almost anything that can be exchanged freely and mutually benefit both the parties. This aspect is one of the main cause behind, the trend of a “startup co-working space” fast catching up in India.

Here we cover 91Springboard, a startup co-working space and incubator, that provides space to startups and a number of service providers to work towards together to build their businesses. And, under their incubation program, they also provide funding and hands-on support.

The Co-working Space

91springboard1

The space provides plug-and-play office infrastructure where startups can work and interact with other entrepreneurs. While they have a capacity for 150, 91Springboard can comfortably house 25-30 startups. The space is also open to freelancers/small firms that provide services such as design, PR, digital marketing, development, accounting, HR, legal, and administrative support. It operates purely on a rental basis, there is no equity involved (although there is a screening process).

91Springboard welcomes early stage startups, generally around 3-5 people, idea-only startups or even no-idea founders. The space is also open to freelancers and small firms whose services are often in demand from startups.

91springboard2

Incubation Program

For the incubation program, 91Springboard is looking for startups still in the product development or product-market fit testing phase. Although sector agnostic, they do weed out companies that cannot achieve a meaningful milestone with the resources they provide (eg. startups with very high capex requirements).

In a nutshell, the incubation program provides four things

  • Funding: For early stage startups it can range anything from Rs 5-20 lakhs to 1cr.
  • Mentorship: Experienced entrepreneurs are present full time on site and work with startups on every aspect of their business to get to market and get initial traction.
  • Space, services, other startups: Incubated companies need to work out of the co-working space (at least initially), thus increasing the interaction among large number of startups.
  • Networks: Connections shall be made to advisors, potential customers, strategic partners, and potential later round investors.

For the incubation program, 91Springboard is looking for early stage startups. The applications are accepted on a on-going basis, and there is system of batches.

The Team

Team 91Springboard
Team 91Springboard

The idea began with Varun Chawla, who is one among the six "on-site entrepreneurs" 91Springboard has. He had sold his last startup to Makemytrip and found himself spending a lot of time with first time entrepreneurs giving advice on topics ranging from how to get customers to pay their bills to where to find cheap office space. These informal chats sowed the idea behind 91Springboard. The first team member, Apurv Agrawal had just graduated from VIT when he was introduced to Varun through a mutual friend. So when Varun wanted him to join his team, more than Apruv, he had to convince his parents about his idea.

The next member is Anand Vemuri, had just returned to India after four years at a startup in the US. He knew Varun from school and began dropping by the office to check things out. And at some point they decided to take him aboard! Girish Khera was exiting his last startup and just like Anand had one day come to chat about a new idea he had with Anand. Three of Girish’s ideas were trumped by the idea of starting up a co-working space cum incubator, and the team rolled out their plan.

“91Springboard”?

The team put in lot of efforts to make a hip and happening place for startups. When you have so many interesting people working together, interesting things keep happening. Even the name, 91Springboard has an interesting story. It came up in a brainstorming session in the days leading up to filing the legal paperwork. “Springboard” captured the team’s vision to create a platform for launching startups in India. And 91 is borrowed from the country code for India.

When asked about their monetization strategy, Anand says, “The rent from the co-working space keeps the lights on at the centre. We’re putting off the Vegas trip until our first $1 billion exit from the incubation program.” The early response in the first month of launch has been decent; they have about 40 people (not including their own team) in the co-working space already.

All said and done, how many entrepreneurs do actually think startup co-working spaces are truly needed? We recently had the Founder of Playce, a startup co-working space provider, talk about top 5 reasons why entrepreneurs choose to work from a co-working Space. Share your experiences in comments.