Thursday, January 14, 2016

STARTUP SPECIAL ................True Colours

True Colours


Robot maker GreyOrange is the only Indian startup focused on solving etailers' supply chain problems
                               
The best startups are those that are born out of passion. GreyOrange is one of them.
When Akash Gupta and Samay Kohli were studying at Birla Institute of Technology & Science-Pilani, they developed what was per haps India's first home-grown humanoid called AcYut.They travelled the world competing at and winning many robotic competitions at top universities including Stanford and UC Berkeley. After completing their engineering, instead of chasing a corporate career the duo started an education and training company in the robotics space. They soon decided to venture into industrial robot manufacturing. If their startup is called GreyOrange, it is for a reason: Grey is a proxy for experience and Orange for the fun quotient. “We are one of the very few companies in the world and the only one in India focused on solving etailers' supply chain problems,“ says Gupta.
A few broad thoughts shaped their startup. The founders wanted to build a hardware product capable of tackling a problem that had massive scale potential.“Representing India and competing at the international level gave us a very global approach to building our business,“ says Kohli. The duo looked at many industries from logistics to oil & gas before zeroing on the warehousing needs of etailers. Today, it builds robots -of three kinds, called Profiler, Sorter and Butler -that operate in the warehouses of etailers and logistics firms, helping them gain efficiencies and minimise errors. GreyOrange competes with global players like San Jose-based Fetch Robotics (in which SoftBank entered as an investor in mid-2015) and Kiva Systems, which was acquired by Amazon for $775 million.
GreyOrange has a staff strength of 300-odd employees, operates out of three cities in India and has two offices in Singapore and Hong Kong. It claims that it dominates the logistics automa tion business India with an over 90% market share and has 12 clients, 10 in India including Flipkart, Amazon, Jabong, Del hivery, Gojavas and DTDC. “They offer competitive solutions that are attuned to the Indian environment,“ says Abhishek Chakraborty, executive director, DTDC Express.
GreyOrange is now thinking big as it readies a world class 1,200-seater R&D facility in Gurgaon equipped with a prototype centre. Having raised $35 million from investors like Tiger Global, Blume Ventures and a few angel investors since inception, it is ini tially looking to expand overseas into markets like Japan and China and later South East Asia, the Gulf and Europe. “Yes there are older and bigger robotic companies overseas. But our tech nology is much more on the cloud, and advanced.
We are disrupting the market. It is easier for a new player to do it,“ says Kohli.
Developing and manufacturing products in In dia, GreyOrange will have some cost advantages they claim they are five times cheaper than other providers in India and two-and-a-half times glob ally. But that's not what the founders are looking to exploit. “It is not the price but the technology that will give us the competitive edge,“ Kohli says. As they plan to scale up from a headcount of 300 to over 500 in a year, people issues are their biggest chal lenges, they say. “We will have people joining us from different cultures and regions. As an organisation, we need to assimilate them and drive the team around the same vision. It is a big challenge,“ says Gupta.

ETM3JAN16

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