CIIE.CO

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CIIE.CO
FormerlyCIIE
Company typeVenture capital
IndustryStartup accelerator, Startup incubator
Founded2002; 22 years ago (2002) in Ahmedabad, India
HeadquartersIIM Ahmedabad, ,
India
Number of locations
5 (Ahmedabad, Jaipur, Indore, Bengaluru, Guwahati)
Key people
Kunal Upadhyay (CEO)
ServicesVenture capital, Investment
Websiteciie.co

CIIE.CO is an Indian startup accelerator and incubator that supports early-stage startups located at IIM Ahmedabad in Ahmedabad, India. It was founded in 2002 to promote innovation and entrepreneurship in India.[1] It is a Center of excellence set up at Indian Institute of Management Ahmedabad with support from the Government of India's Department of Science and Technology and the Government of Gujarat.[2]

It provides investments, incubation, acceleration, infrastructure, training and access to a network of collaborators. As of August 2022, it has accelerated nearly 1000 startups, funded 300 and mentored and coached over 5000 startups[1] across its various programs such as iAccelerator, Power of Ideas, Powerstart, India Innovation Growth Program, Start up Oasis, Bharat Inclusion Initiative.[3][4] CIIE.CO provides funding in the form of government grants, pre-seed, seed and series, an investment starting from around 10 lakh to 15 lakh of grand capital up to US$5 million.[4] It has similar incubation centres in Jaipur, Rajasthan and one facility in Indore, Madhya Pradesh.[4]

History[edit]

The CIIE previously stood for Centre for Innovation, Incubation and Entrepreneurship. It was originally set up in 2002 as a research institution with a grant pool from the Government of Gujarat, the Department of Science and Technology (India) and IIM Ahmedabad. In 2007, it became an incubation centre after its incorporation under Section 25 of the Companies Act, 1956.[2] In 2008, a non-profit organization, CIIE Initiatives, was registered to help the emerging startup ecosystem in India. It continues to operate as an academic centre at IIM-A. It was rebranded as CIIE.CO in 2018, with the 'CO' denoting the continuum.[5]

In 2009, CIIE started an accelerator program, iAccelerator, which focused on startups in information and communication technology. In July 2010, CIIE tied up with The Economic Times and the Department of Science and Technology, Government of India and launched 'Power of Ideas', a platform for aspiring and budding entrepreneurs.[6]

In 2011, it launched INFUSE (Indian Fund for Sustainable Energy), a cleantech and sustainability focused fund in collaboration with the Union Ministry of New and Renewable Energy (MNRE), BP Plc and Technology Development Board (TDB). A A 100-crore budget was allocated for the INFUSE Ventures.[7] The MNRE provided monetary support and guided the startups through policies and regulations. For institutional support, CIIE teamed up with the Asian Development Bank and the International Financial Corporation, both are part of the World Bank Group.[8]

In 2013, the Centre for Innovation, Incubation and Entrepreneurship formed an incubator, Startup Oasis, in partnership with the Rajasthan State Industrial Development and Investment Corporation (RIICO), Government of Rajasthan.[2][9] Startup Oasis is based in Jaipur and has incubated 202 startups as of 2019.[10]

In 2017, CIIE.CO launched Bharat Innovation Fund, a US $150-million fund announced in late 2015 by Prime Minister Narendra Modi during his visit to Silicon Valley.[11] Bharat Innovation Fund is a public-private-academia partnership set up by the CIIE at IIM Ahmedabad in collaboration with the Ministry of New and Renewable Energy, Department of Industrial Policy and Promotion, Department of Science and Technology and Tata Trusts.[8]

In December 2021, the Innocity Startup School, a 14-week non-residential programme, was started to help early-stage startups.[12] In partnership with Bajaj Electricals, CIIE.CO launched a new incubation centre, Anant Bajaj Limitless Ideas Hub, in Jaipur in August 2021.[13]

iAccelerator[edit]

In 2009, CIIE.CO launched iAccelerator, which was the first accelerator program in India for startups offering mentorships, market connections and access to capital.[14][15] iAccelerator program provides three-month residential mentorship and guidance to the batch of selected startups. During the three-month stay, these startups get investment, infrastructure and business mentoring from experts, mentors, investors, and tech enthusiasts. At the end of the incubation program, these startups pitch their innovation to early-stage angels and venture capitalists on the demo day.[16][17]

Bharat Inclusion Initiative[edit]

Bharat Innovation Fund is a public-private-academia partnership set up by the CIIE.CO in 2017 in collaboration with the Ministry of New and Renewable Energy, Department of Industrial Policy and Promotion and Department of Science and Technology. In August 2018, as a part of Bharat Inclusion Initiative, CIIE.CO and J.P. Morgan collaboratively set up a $9.5 million financial inclusion lab, under which J.P. Morgan announced to provide up to $7 million over the next four years, making it the largest philanthropic commitment made by the banking giant outside the US. The financial lab was started to incubate and support the startups and entrepreneurs working to help the lower and middle income (LMI) segment in financial inclusion, health and education.[18]

It has received a pledge of US$12.5 million from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, the Michael and Susan Dell Foundation, Omidyar Network and Tata Trusts.[19]

Projects[edit]

The organisation published Stay Hungry Stay Foolish, a non-fiction bestseller by author Rashmi Bansal, an alumnus of IIM-A. The book featured stories of 25 MBA IIM Ahmedabad graduates who left their jobs to pursue entrepreneurship. It has reached over a million readers.[20][21]

In 2015, it conducted the 'Innovate for Digital India challenge' with Intel, the Department of Science and Technology and MyGov.in.[22]

In May 2022, CIIE.CO came up with another book, Startup Compass: How Iconic Entrepreneurs Got It Right, published by HarperCollins, written by IIM-A alumni Ujwal Kalra and Shobhit Shubhankar. The book is based on the 'How to Start a Startup' series at IIM Ahmedabad and has comprehensive interviews by 15 Indian entrepreneurs, including Sanjeev Bikhchandani (Naukri.com), Deep Kalra (MakeMyTrip), Sachin Bansal (Flipkart), Falguni Nayar (Nykaa), Kunal Shah (CRED), Sahil Barua (Delhivery), Raghunandan G. (TaxiForSure). It has a foreword by Infosys founder N. R. Narayana Murthy.[23]

Portfolio[edit]

Some of the notable ventures backed by CIIE.CO, through its various initiatives and programs, includes Ridlr, CreditVidya, FireCompass, Detect Technologies, Recruiterbox, Chara Technologies, Forus Healthcare, MechMocha, SalesKen, Tookitaki, Zumutor Biologics and Razorpay.[3][24][25][26] Razorpay, a payment gateway platform later turned into a unicorn startup, was incubated by CIIE.CO in Jaipur, at Startup Oasis.

From 2018 to 2021, CIIE.CO has conducted various craft-centric startup programs and supported more than 46 craft startups, out of which 17 startups received funding from the CIIE, including startups such as Khadigi, Kosha, Golden Feather, Fabriclore, Fabricmonde, P-Tal, Kalaghar, Dressfolk, Abira, Country Clay, Claybotik, Baansuli, Guddee.[27] In July 2022, it announced to support over 100 early-age craft startups by the year 2025. The craft vertical at CIIE.CO offers over 15 craft companies with access to portfolio support through sprints, incubation and acceleration, seed funding and catalytic capital support of up to 50 lakh. In 2022, it also published a report on the crafts sector, outlining the startup opportunities in the sector.[28]

People[edit]

Kunal Upadhyay is the CEO of CIIE.CO and Managing Partner of Bharat Fund.[29] 35 to 40 people work from the office at IIM-A, while the rest operate from different parts of the country.[4]

Research[edit]

The CIIE was set up as a research institution back in 2002.[2] It has a team for research like management research, identifying trends and innovations, publications and thematic reports. In 2021, CIIE conducted a research study on the cultivated meat sector in India in partnership with The Good Food Institute, India.[30]

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b Mukherjee, Vasudha (3 August 2022). "Innovation-Driven Entrepreneurship Ecosystem". BusinessWorld.
  2. ^ a b c d Khan, Taslima (27 October 2013). "What makes IIM-Ahmedabad's incubation centre stand out". Business Today.
  3. ^ a b Khatri, Bhumika (19 July 2018). "CIIE's Bharat Innovation Fund Announces First Close Of $100 Mn Fund". Inc42.
  4. ^ a b c d Das, Kumud (20 April 2022). "CIIE.CO accelerates 1,000 startups, invests in 200". The Hans India.
  5. ^ Sinha, Ankur; Sharma, Supriya (February 2021). "The Innovation Continuum at IIM Ahmedabad". Faculty News - IIMA. IIM Ahmedabad.
  6. ^ "Power of Ideas: We're now bigger, better & have more power". The Economic Times. 22 June 2010.
  7. ^ "Rs 100-cr IIM-A fund to plug clean energy". Indian Express. 24 August 2011.
  8. ^ a b Singh Thakur, Angad (19 January 2017). "How Infuse Ventures is helping Bharat catch up with India". Forbes India.
  9. ^ Dutta, Vishal (11 April 2015). "Startups no longer concentrated in South India, extend to even Kutch desert". The Economic Times.
  10. ^ Soni, Yatti (22 November 2019). "Rajasthan Startup Hub: The Investors, Incubators Enabling Innovation". Inc42.
  11. ^ "PM announces $150 mn Bharat Fund to catalyse disruptive solutions for India". Business Line. 29 September 2015.
  12. ^ Basu, Sreeradha (3 December 2020). "Caspian Debt partners with CIIE to launch Innocity startup school". The Economic Times.
  13. ^ "Bajaj Electricals Limited And CIIE.CO - IIM Ahmedabad Launch 'Anant Bajaj Limitless Ideas Hub'". BusinessWorld. 14 August 2021.
  14. ^ Koujalgi, Sandeep; Chopra, Priyanka (12 July 2021). "What does it take to accelerate startups building for Bharat?". Tech Circle.
  15. ^ "iAccelerator searches for next Sergey Brin in India". Indian Express. 23 March 2010.
  16. ^ Millward, Steven (28 June 2013). "IIM Ahmedabad's iAccelerator Invites Fresh Batch of Startups". Yahoo News via Tech In Asia.
  17. ^ "IIM-A's CIIE launches third edition of iAccelerator". Business Standard. 20 January 2013.
  18. ^ Mukherjee, Jui (7 August 2018). "J.P. Morgan, IIM-A to set up $9.5 mn financial inclusion lab". Fortune India.
  19. ^ Sharma, Shweta (15 May 2018). "IIM Ahmedabad Incubator Hits First Close Of Bharat Inclusion Seed Fund". VCCircle.
  20. ^ Sahoo, Namrata (23 August 2013). "Young at heart and art". New Indian Express.
  21. ^ Vivek, TR (22 October 2008). "Book Review: Stay Hungry Stay Foolish". VCCircle.
  22. ^ "Intel, DST & CIIE launch Innovate for 'Digital India Challenge'". Business Standard. 25 May 2015.
  23. ^ "IIM Ahmedabad alumni launch 'Startup Compass' supported by CIIE CO". The Free Press Journal. 19 May 2022.
  24. ^ Kapur, Narinder (28 November 2019). "Accel, Bharat Innovation Fund Write Cheque To Biotechnology Firm Zumutor". VCCircle.
  25. ^ Bhatla, Prabhjeet (19 April 2021). "Deeptech Startup Chara Technologies Raises $850,000 From Kalaari Capital And CIIE.CO". Entrepreneur.
  26. ^ "CreditVidya raises $3 m from investors led by Bharat Innovation Fund". The Financial Express (India). 4 February 2019.
  27. ^ Bora, Garima (14 July 2022). "CIIE.CO to support over 100 early-stage craft companies by 2025". The Economic Times.
  28. ^ Bora, Garima (14 July 2022). "CIIE.CO to support over 100 early-stage craft companies by 2025". The Economic Times.
  29. ^ Sharma, Shweta (18 March 2021). "Sky is the limit for startups in a digitally transformed world: Kunal Upadhyay of CIIE.CO". TechCircle.
  30. ^ "How India can Lead in the Upcoming $25 bn Cultivated Meat Sunrise Industry". Indianretailer.com. 24 January 2022.

External links[edit]