Vietnamese start-ups continue to pull in investment hinh anh 1

 

 

In a report, it pointed out that Vietnam saw the highest increase in share in the region, from 4 percent of investment in Southeast Asia in 2018 to 18 percent last year after surging from 284 million USD to 741 million USD.

This was attributed to the fact it had more late-stage companies such as e-commerce platform Sendo.

Sendo, owned by Sen Do Technology JSC, completed a 61 million USD series C funding round.

Besides existing investors, this round also saw the participation of two new investors, Indonesia’s EV Growth and Thailand’s Kasikornbank.

Last year Sendo had mobilised 51 million USD in the series B round.

Tran Hai Linh, Sendo’s general director, said the company would use the money to expand its services and invest in AI and machine learning technologies.

JupViec.vn received several millions of dollar worth of investment from STI Holdings.

It supplies domestic hourly and daily help and post-construction industrial cleaning service to more than 10,000 customers in Hanoi and HCM City through its network of 3,000 maids.

By applying modern technologies in the recruitment, training and management of workers, JupViec.vn has created a new model of technology-based hourly domestic help who have been screened and trained to meet certain standards.

Elsa Speak, an English learning app, successfully raised 7 million USD in a series A round in February from investors led by Gradient Ventures, a Google fund for AI.

It raised the total investment in Elsa Speak to 12 million USD.

Elsa Speak was co-founded in 2015 by Van Dinh Hong Vu and Portuguese national Xavier Anguera, an AI and voice recognition expert.

It now has four million users in 101 countries, making it one of the top five AI apps along with Microsoft's Cortana and Google's Google Allo.

Grab, one of Southeast Asia’s leading apps, last month announced the launch of Grab Ventures Ignite in Vietnam, an accelerator programme for early-stage start-ups.

It will nurture and support promising Vietnamese start-ups in line with the government’s strategy to create at least five billion-dollar tech firms by 2025 and 10 by 2030./.

Investment in Vietnam-based start-ups grows sharply in 2019

Investment in Vietnam-based start-ups grows sharply in 2019

Investment in Vietnam-based start-ups grew sharply in 2019, according to Singapore-headquartered venture capital firm Cento Ventures.

2020 key for tech start-ups in Vietnam

2020 key for tech start-ups in Vietnam

Like many other Asian countries, Vietnam is racing its regional counterparts to spur economic innovation with artificial intelligence (AI). Experts say voice recognition technology, AI, blockchain and big data will be major trends in 2020.