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Category: BharatMatrimony

Deepak Kamra, General Partner, Canaan Interview

Posted on November 6, 2013

Deepak Kamra Canaan PartnersOPW INTERVIEW – Nov 6 – Deepak Kamra has been an investor with Canaan for 20 years. He invested in Match.com in 1995, Bharat Matrimony in 2006 and most recently Zoosk, earning him the nickname The Love VC. Here is our interview with Deepak. – Mark Brooks

How does a CEO of an iDating site get your attention now?
Online dating is only one of the areas I invest in. Over 20+ years in the industry I have invested in only three of them – Match, Zoosk and Bharat Matrimony. I am always interested in the latest dating concepts, and it’s a very creative entrepreneurial world out there right now. The best way to reach me is through an email via our website at www.canaan.com.

What are you looking for in your next iDating industry investment?
I am looking for the same things I have always looked for since we invested in the first round at Match.com. I am looking for ideas that can scale quickly and those that are highly monetizable. Taking advantage of new platforms like mobile, social and geo is a big advantage. It’s pretty easy and inexpensive to launch a dating site right now, but not so easy to grow it to a meaningful scale in a sustainable way. Also anything that attracts a younger audience is interesting, since it is the biggest and fastest growing part of the dating market, but someone needs to figure out a way to make money from that audience, and advertising alone is unlikely to suffice as a source of revenue.

It seems some people have time, and some have money?  Do you think dating sites could be charging more?  Are they leaving money on the table? 
Yes, yes and yes. But users are a skeptical bunch and need to perceive value for the money they are paying. And with competition from free sites, there is always pricing pressure. So you need to really offer something unique and useful to charge more. Or maybe you need to move away from the traditional monthly subscription business model?

Are you a fan of using facial recognition on Google Glass?  Is that the next killer app in iDating?
I think facial recognition would be awesome if it was available. From what I have heard, Google Glass is not planning to include it, at least not initially. And people would have to get over the creepy factor of strangers on the street knowing who they are and everything public about them. Instead of everyone being recognizable, there would have to have some sort of opt-in gate. A dating site is exactly the kind of quasi- private network which could allow the facial recognition feature to be of real value for those who wanted to participate. I think facial recognition has so many other uses outside of dating, for social and business applications, and I am looking forward to new entrepreneurial ideas in that space.

What else are you excited about in iDating, right now, and for the near future?
Mobile and Big Data are the trends I am following right now. Companies like Zoosk are busy working those angles and are phenomenally successful at it. There is lots of innovation at sites like Grouper, HowAboutWe and Coffee Meets Bagel, but it takes time to scale the offline, real world aspects of those businesses. Apps like Tinder are getting a lot of press, and I look forward to hearing about how they intend to make money.

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Deepak Kamra – The Love VC

Posted on October 8, 2013

Deepak kamraPANDODAILY – Oct 7 – Deepak Kamra has been an investor with Canaan for 20 years. He invested in Match.com in 1995, Bharat Matrimony in 2006 and Zoosk, earning him the nickname The Love VC. He’s been keeping his eye out for Match.com 2.0, for Web 2.0 and the 21st century. He believes he’s found it in Zoosk. He passed up Ok Cupid, which didn’t have the revenue, and eHarmony, which was too limiting to daters.

by Carmel DeAmicis
See full article at PandoDaily

See all posts on Zoosk
See all posts on BharatMatrimony
See all posts on Match.com

This post also appears on InternetDatingInvestments.

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Bharat Matrimony: The Best Priest In The Marriage Business

Posted on October 1, 2013

Bharatmatrimony logo June 13AFAQS – Oct 1 – Murugavel Janakiraman, who started the business of online matrimony as a section of his website in 1997. His company, Matrimony.com claims it has 60% of the estimated Rs 30Billion ($480M) online matchmaking market. The company runs 15 matrimonial websites under Bharat Matrimony and ~300 websites under Community Matrimony. The company now has 4K employees. Janakiraman says the company broke even and made a profit in 2009 and the compounded annual growth rate, in the last three years was ~30%. ~90% of its revenue comes from user subscription fee, which ranges from Rs 3,290 to Rs 50,000 ($52 – $800) for three months. It has 2.5M active members. The next big step would be an IPO. Sources say Canaan Partners, which invested $10M in tranches, would get around 10 times of its investment in its exit.

by Gireesh Babu
The full article was originally published at AFAQS, but is no longer available.

See all posts on BharatMatrimony

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myZamana Interview With CEO/Founder Ashish Kundra

Posted on July 30, 2013

OPW INTERVIEW – July 30 – In the future India will be one of the top three revenue-producing iDating markets. myZamana was started by a Meetmoi alumni and is doing well there now. Here’s our introduction to the founder Ashish Kundra and myZamana. – Mark Brooks

myZamana.com is a primarily Indian Dating site. I see that about 70% of your traffic on Alexa is in India.
Yes, that is correct.

What’s your background? You worked at MeetMoi?
I did, I interned at MeetMoi during college. It was my first exposure to the dating space. When I graduated I moved to Boston, and started programming various sites. My sister was single and looking for a date.  I thought, “Why don’t I build her a service?”  That’s how it all got started.

What did you learn from MeetMoi? That seems really relevant to the Indian Market. 49% of all Internet usage is on mobile in India.
Yeah, MeetMoi was definitely very early on in the mobile dating space. It was an unfamiliar concept to people at that time. Now the mantra is “Mobile First.”

How did you start of? How many users do you have now?

Initially, it started like JDate for Indians. The focus was primarily on the US market, which in retrospect was the completely wrong way. My goal is to build a very large, long-term, mainstream site, and it turns out the Indian market is much larger than the Indians in the US market. There are four million South Asians in the US and a billion in India.

First we signed up 10K users from large metropolitan areas in US. Then I started seeing an influx of users from India until I really just couldn’t ignore it. Within a few months most of our users were in India, and I started doubling down in that market.

You mentioned that half of the population of India is under 25 at this stage. What are their thoughts on the likes of Shaadi and Bharat Matrimony?
It depends on the person’s background. If you are from a rural area and don’t have Internet connection then obviously all of this is irrelevant to you. If you are from a more traditional household, then Bharat Matrimony and Shaadi might be good options for you. If you are living in a city, you might want to choose your own date and not want to be subjected to the kind of patriarchal system of arranged marriages, which I see Shaadi and Bharat Matrimony as synonymous to.  

What is myZamana’s fit in the market?
We are basically a mainstream service that helps people meet new people.

Who would you class as your competitors in India?
There are a couple of startups going after the dating/meet new people market, but there isn’t one competitor we really look at.

You are at 1.2 million users so far.
We want to be one of the leaders in this market. It’s really early days, only 11% of the market is online, so we are patient.  

How is the infrastructure though? Are you finding most of your users in mobile as well?
Surprisingly, most of our users have mobile devices,  but we still get a lot of traffic from the web. Android is definitely the biggest app platform there.

The payment infrastructure is very recent, so it’s really hard to accept payments. We don’t, we are a free site. We are ad supported, and we really like that model. It works well for us.

3 or 4 years ago we did some work with a group dating app called Ignighter. They started in USA and got popular in India. Now they are bases out of India and changed their name to StepOut. What is your take on that?
India is very interesting market given how rapidly it’s changing and how large it’s eventually going to be. It was a wise decision for them, and they are a pretty significant player in the market.

What’s your end goal? Where will you be in 2 years time?
In 2 years time, if we grow maybe the order of magnitude or two, we’ll be definitely a pretty big player in the meeting new people/dating space. It really depends on the Internet penetration in India which is now 11%.

In terms of monetization, what are the options that are becoming available now? What do you think it’s going to look like in a couple years time for means of payment?
Currently there are four options. Mobile payments where carriers take 75% fee and  the transactions are capped at around $2, so it’s really not worth it. Your second option is brick and mortar payment collections, which is what Shaadi and Bharat Matrimony do. The third option is credit card payments online. But the credit card penetration is around 4%. Fourth option is advertising, that’s what we’re really big fans of. In the future the credit card penetration will pick up.

Have you thought about monetizing the diaspora?
We don’t really spend a lot of time thinking about that.  It’s probably a pretty good short-term business opportunity, but in the long run I don’t see it as a viable option. We want to invest things where we see a presence in 10 years. The US market is shrinking. ,South Asians here will not forever want to marry only South Asians.

Would you describe myZamana as a social discovery site? Is that a good title for this section of the industry?
Yea, I think that could work.

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Getting VC-funded Is Like Getting Married

Posted on July 22, 2013

Matrimony muruga janakiramanTECH CIRCLE – July 21 – VCCircle India Angel Summit 2013 was a two-day initiative. The first day was all about the Startup Walkabout. ‘Lucky’ participants were taken to the ‘offices’ of India’s six top venture capital funds and innovative companies in Mumbai for interactive workshops. The second day was loaded with exciting keynotes, debates and special sessions. One of the sessions was an interview with Murugavel Janakiraman, founder and CEO, Matrimony.com. Getting VC-funded is similar to getting married. When you get the money, the company and VC seem to be on a honeymoon. Once that dies down, what follows is a series of disagreements. But with time they come to an understanding and start working together. Matrimony.com owns BharatMatrimony.com, EliteMatrimony.com and CommunityMatrimony.com, as well as online real estate site Indiaproperty.com. Marriage is a very big market in India. Over 10M people are getting married every year. So the company wants to focus on wedding-related services.

by Anand Rai
See full article at Tech Circle

See all posts on Matrimony.com

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Consim Info Is Now Matrimony.com

Posted on June 11, 2013

Matrimonycom logoBUSINESS-STANDARD – June 11 – Chennai-based privately-held Consim Info, which owns BharatMatrimony.com, has changed its name to Matrimony.com. With this, the company would offer all its matrimony services under Matrimony.com. The company is planning to raise $100-$125M through an IPO this year. The company was running various matrimony brands under different names. (EliteMatrimony, PrivilegedMatrimony, AssistedMatrimony and PopularMatrimony). This would help it to offer various matrimony platforms and services under a single brand. So far, Matrimony.com has raised ~$20M.

by Bibhu Ranjan Mishra
See full article at Business-Standard

See all posts on BharatMatrimony

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Parents Play Matchmakers

Posted on May 13, 2013

Thejmomlogo new May 13NY TIMES – May 9 – “It’s almost like outsourcing your online dating to your mom,” said Kevin Leland, CEO of TheJMom.com, a Jewish matchmaking site. Mothers, fathers and even grandmothers share online profiles of their ready-to-wed children. Duo is a traditional matchmaking service based in South Korea. 80% of the members are mothers inquiring on behalf of their sons. Annual fees can range from $2K – $5K, and include 7-9 introductions and parents monitor the dating progress of their children. Posting and browsing on TheJMom.com is free, and a six-month subscription package, which provides contacts and connections, starts at $78. The $199 premium service, the Personal Profile Concierge, provides mothers with a makeover of their own profile and their child’s online profile and one-on-one attention from someone at the company. Indian families are known to begin the matchmaking process by collecting a prospect’s “bio-data,” which is a résumé of someone’s marital qualifications — from the basics like age, weight and height, to information about a prospect’s job and character. There are a number of matrimonial sites including BharatMatrimony.com, Shaadi.com, and SecondShaadi.com (for second marriages).

by Ji Huyn Lee
See full article at NY Times

See all posts on TheJMom        See all posts on BharatMatrimony
See all posts on Shaadi            See all posts on SecondShaadi

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Many Parents Disapprove Of Indian Dating Sites

Posted on April 24, 2013

Twolymadlydeeply logoNY TIMES – Apr 23 – A new generation of young Indian professionals has refused to follow the arranged-marriage route, with its emphasis on caste, family ties, wealth and skin color. Parents, while trying to respect their children’s wishes, are trying other measures, like online singles networks such as Floh and TwolyMadlyDeeply. Floh has 500 members, some parents paid $300 annual subscription on their kids’ behalf. Online matchmaking sites have been around in India for quite some time, like Shaadi.com or Bharatmatrimony.com, but they are long shot in a country of a billion-plus people. Many parents disapprove of Indian dating sites as they have a highly skewed to males, and can be crammed with unverified identities. Singles networks like Floh and TwolyMadlyDeeply, with their “verified” memberships, appeal to parents because they promise the exact opposite of digital anonymity. TwolyMadlyDeeply’s members are vetted on the phone before they can join and can only then interact online or through real-time events.

by Saritha Rai
See full articleat NY Times

See all posts on Shaadi
See all posts on BharatMatrimony

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On Matrimony.com, India’s Arranged Marriages Hit The Web

Posted on April 8, 2013

Bharatmatrimony logoBUSINESS WEEK – Apr 5 – Bharat Matrimony has brokered ~2M marriages. It helps parents arrange marriage by caste, complexion (dark to fair), and religious values (orthodox to liberal). Its Elite Matrimony unit, an offline service for the wealthy who don’t want their children’s profiles floating around the Web, can cost up to 400K rupees ($7,370) for a three-month subscription that provides a “relationship manager”. For the less affluent, the company is rolling out new products such as lists of 10 potential suitors for 1K rupees. The BharatMatrimony.com website has had 20M customers to date, with 10% finding partners via the site. Marriage is the stated goal, many posts are managed by parents. Matchmaking via the Web has become a big part of India’s $37 billion wedding industry.

by Adi Narayan
See fulll article at Business Week

See all posts on BharatMatrimony

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BharatMatrimony.com Plans $100 Million IPO

Posted on January 23, 2013

Bharatmatrimony logoREUTERS – Jan 23 – India's Consim Info, owner of BharatMatrimony.com, a matchmaking portal, plans an IPO to raise between $100-125M later this year.

See full article at Straits Times

See all posts on BharatMatrimony

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