Technology solutions for SMEs
Technology solutions for SMEs
Chennai: Nikhil Gandhi doesn’t store all phone numbers on his cellphone. He usually enters them in a diary that has gradually grown to hold more than 4,000 phone numbers.
“There are few companies looking at this segment since most businessmen in this category are cost conscious, kanjoos (miserly) and wouldn’t want to spend crores of rupees on a system," says Gandhi, who claims to have collated contact information of thousands of ancillary companies in Chennai’s booming auto sector while completing his MBA at Great Lakes Institute of Management, 55km outside Chennai.
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His biggest fear is losing his mobile phone and the numbers within it. A mistake he cannot afford and hence his diary of contacts.
Gandhi and his three friends, engineering graduates who worked in the IT sector in Pune, Maharashtra, started Pineapple Innovative Solutions Pvt. Ltd in 2009 by pooling in ₹ 6 lakh of their savings.
“We are constantly looking out for companies who have scaled beyond the smaller model and getting some number of pilot customers on board and shows us a wide variety of possibilities and not just the low hanging fruits," says Rajesh Srivathsa of Ojas Ventures, a $35 million India-focused early stage venture fund. “But honestly, I don’t know if businesses based on enterprise resource applications are compelling enough."
Gandhi, who last year zeroed on a ₹ 10-lakh, one-year MBA education programme, found the college to be a great networking platform where a visiting faculty helped him win one of his first overseas clients, a US university wanting to link up different departments and track student information.
The Pineapple Group assured nearly 25% cost savings to the university by internalizing a payment gateway for their bookstore, previously managed by someone else for a fee. They also advised the university to outsource delivery of books, getting rid of overheads of maintaining a van and a driver. This project worth ₹ 7 lakh will hopefully help them get more deals that will hasten the company’s target to achieve a revenue of ₹ 3 crore by 2012 from the current ₹ 50 lakh. Overseas projects garner four times as much as Indian contracts.
Three month ago, even as Gandhi wrapped up his final term at Great Lakes by partying away through weekend nights with his classmates, largely drinking mocktails as he doesn’t consume alcohol, he could not help hope that he didn’t have this ₹ 10-lakh baggage in the form of an education loan.
“We may not be ready yet to waive loans but we may think of investing in these ideas and take a stake in companies incubated at Great Lakes," says S. Sriram, executive director at Great Lakes Institute of Management.
The company’s technologically inclined founders take several measures to keep afloat. Only two promoters who devote full time to the venture are on the payroll besides the seven-member software development team. And in the absence of industry knowhow, they hired two consultants with nearly two decades of experience in the manufacturing sector to talk and convince clients.
The idea is to target manufacturing companies in India and streamline IT systems at a relatively lower cost than systems offered by SAP and Oracle. But that doesn’t prevent Pineapple Group from taking on low-paying jobs of website development as it pays monthly bills.
“My parents tell me that I am not Azim Premji (of Wipro) or Narayana Murthy (of Infosys)," says Gandhi, whose grandfather and father ran grocery stores that had seasonal rakhi or a firecracker counter in Pune. “They don’t understand the risk and the benefits. They don’t understand that five years down the line, this business will give me 10 times as much money as the job."
Quick Facts
Company Name
Pineapple Group
Founder
Nikhil Gandhi and friends
Industry
Automotive and manufacturing
Product company or services or both
Product and services company
Founded
November 2009
Number of founders and employees
Three founders, six employees
City
Pune
Investment to date
Rs 6 lakh, mostly self-funded and some from family
The next closest milestone they plan to accomplish
Reach a revenue target of ₹ 1 crore by end of 2011
Pineapple Group was among the finalists of the NEN First Dot Student Startup Showcase.
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