Stellar Coach & Grow Programme to continue receiving funding

Ministry of Finance pumps in RM4 mil (US$895k) to CGP programme to assist startups. To date, CGP graduates have collectively generated US$285 mil in revenue


BEAM Team

19 Jan, 2017

Stellar Coach & Grow Programme to continue receiving funding | BEAMSTART News

- From our Sponsors -

MALAYSIA’S Coach & Grow Programme (CGP), a private-public partnership between Cradle Fund Sdn Bhd and industry partner Proficeo, held its annual graduation cum awards ceremony on Jan 18 where entrepreneurs from its third cohort (2015/2016) ‘graduated’ and were recognised for their achievements.

Also at the event was Secretary General of Treasury Mohd Irwan Serigar Abdullah, who announced that the government will continue to provide funding to CGP this year, though the amount – RM4 million (US$895,000) – will not change.

Irwan, using the Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2015/2016 Global Report as reference, said that Malaysia is doing well in terms of its entrepreneurship and government support for entrepreneurs. Malaysia is ranked fifth out of 62 countries for government entrepreneurship programmes, compared to the US at 36, and is ranked first for entrepreneurial financing.

“Last year was a challenging year, but this year we are going to do a lot. It will be a good year,” he predicts.

CGP, which started in 2011, is designed to bring together key players in the entrepreneurial ecosystem to provide entrepreneurs the support to scale their businesses. At the conclusion of the third season of the programme, CGP has helped a total of 366 companies and 1,235 entrepreneurs.

Helping good companies grow

According to CGP’s chief coach Dr V Sivapalan, the idea behind running such a coaching programme is to provide a real impact that short term courses cannot. “While short term programmes pass on knowledge, they don’t actually help companies to grow by helping them implement what they have learned.”

CGP has one of the largest number of coaches coaching entrepreneurs at 73 coaches, along with 88 external trainers. Sivapalan also pointed out that there are 60 CGP alumni who returned to provide training and experiential sharing, something he is proud of.

Proficeo co-founder and CEO Renuka Sena said that individualised coaching assists entrepreneurs at any stage of their business’ growth to build sustainable scalable businesses and go on to successfully raise funds for growth.

Revenue generation

CGP tracks the growth of companies using market leading indicators such as their revenue and other customer metrics to help them scale. To date, CGP graduates have collectively generated US$285 million (RM1.27 billion) in revenue, with many doubling their growth during and post coaching. Of this, US$33.3 million (RM148.2 million) is export revenue. CGP companies have successfully penetrated 92 export markets since the programme’s inception.

There are two types of companies in the CGP programmes: startups, which are very early-stage companies, and scaleups, which already have products in the market and customers and are now growing. Ninety-six percent of the revenue generated was by scaleups.

“Startups are important but we have to move them to the next level. That’s our role in the CGP – take startups and move them to scaleups. Scaleups are the ones that generate the most revenue,” said Dr Sivapalan.

Taking companies international

Nazrin Hassan (pic, above), Group CEO of Cradle, said that CGP has been instrumental in helping good technology companies become great performers and regional and global players.

“This is only possible because all CGP coaches are entrepreneurs, investors or senior management from corporate Malaysia who have first-hand experience of how to build companies from the ground up. It is this advice and guidance that is invaluable at accelerating the growth of Malaysian tech companies,” he said.

The export revenue for this third season of CGP (CGP3) is 25% - US$ 10.9 million (RM49 million) – of the total revenue of US$44.4 million (RM198 million), a large jump from the first two years where export revenue was at 12% of the total.

Sivapalan explained that the increase is due to the fact that for CGP3, more focus was given to helping companies go overseas. “We will continue to focus on this to help our companies regionalise.”

Funding

Though not a key performance indicator, CGP also tracks how much funding its companies raise. CGP companies have raised US$72.1 million (RM321.4 million) over the three seasons – 25% by scaleups and 75% by startups.

“This is very good, because you have to fund the startups to move them up to scaleups,” said Sivapalan.

Private funding made up 33% or US$23.6 million (RM105 million) of the total funding raised, made up of grants and other government funds. Private funding made up 21% - angel investors, venture capitalists and other private funds – 29% from loans and 17% from self-funding.

CGP3 is the first time private funding has surpassed public funding, showing that the private sector is putting more money into CGP companies. “It is interesting to note that we are doing and the government is doing to get more private investors is working,” said Sivapalan, adding that things like the government-approved tax incentive for angel investors and equity crowd funding also do help.

“I personally believe that companies should only depend on the government for funding sometimes; when you have a prototype and it’s risky, go to the government. When you want to grow in scale, you should move on to private funding,” he shared.

Reaching goals

Sivalapan said that Malaysian entrepreneurs are fortunate to have such strong support from the government. “The Malaysian government recognises that entrepreneurship is the key to our future. It is entrepreneurs who will make this country great again.”

“Entrepreneurship is the way forward,” agreed Irwan. “I am giving a lot of time to entrepreneurship because I truly believe that Malaysia has the resources and the people to make it work. He added that as the government takes the economy forward towards the goal of achieving a GDP of RM3 trillion in the next seven years, it needs the support of entrepreneurs to grow the economy.

Speaking Malaysia’s ability to succeed in the international arena, Irwan said: “We are credible and we are incredible.”

This article was first published on DigitalNewsAsia 

- From our Sponsors -

Latest Jobs

Senior Product Manager

Vahan

Bengaluru, India, United States

Full Time

USD 2500000 — USD 4500000 yearly

Revenue Director (Go-to-market areas)

Pulppo

Mexico City, Mexico, United States

Full Time

USD 50000 — USD 80000 yearly

🤝🏼 Talent Lead

Replo

San Francisco, United States

Full Time

USD 100000 — USD 130000 yearly

People Partner Intern

Finku

Jakarta, Indonesia, United States

Internship

Salary Undisclosed

Full Stack Engineer

kapa.ai

United States

Full Time

USD 80000 — USD 119998 yearly

JavaScript Automation Intern

HiOperator

San Francisco, United States

Internship

USD 17 — USD 25 yearly

Supplier Quality Engineer, Energy Storage

Moxion Power Co.

Richmond, CA, United States

Full Time

Salary Undisclosed

Senior Product Designer, Graphing

BioRender

Toronto, Canada, United States

Full Time

USD 130 — USD 240 yearly

Snr. Software Engineer (Backend)

SkyLink

New York, United States

Full Time

USD 125000 — USD 155000 yearly

QA Engineer - Intern

Peakflo

Singapore, Singapore, United States

Internship

USD 360000 — USD 600000 yearly

BEAMSTART is a hub for everything Startups, Entrepreneurship, and Innovation. Connect with a global community of people, and stay updated with the latest startup jobs, news, and discussions.

 
© 2016 - 2024 BEAMSTART. All Rights Reserved (Legal).