Entrepreneurs Dialogue

The objective for this virtual forum is to facilitate discussions among entrepreneurs on Malaysian startup challenges and ideas, and to build a culture of sharing and community. 



Please use the startup lifecycle guide below to identify any challenges you've experienced within each stage or for any ideas to improve the current state. 

+4

Local market and disposable income

Yen Soon 10 years ago 0
Given weak local market and low disposable income, many IT-related services are difficult to gain the mainstream customers here.
+4

Don't just invest in ideas, invest in character building in entrepeneurs

Jef Ong 10 years ago updated by Warren Leow 10 years ago 4
Entrepreneurship is not just about taking risk. To build a sustainable business, the founder's character is tested in good times and bad times, leadership, patience, endurance, courage, confidence etc. The rise and fall is on the leader and government can put more resources in building good character leaders in the marketplace.
+3

Lack of clarity/ fragmented information on grants available.

TeAM 10 years ago 0
+3

Make it easier to hire foreigners on a temporary basis: change the Professional Visit Pass (PVP) requirements

Kal Joffres 10 years ago updated by Nur Azhar 10 years ago 5
In many cases, you'll want to get people in your foreign offices to get a handle on things by getting them to work at HQ for a while. However, getting Professional Visit Passes (PVPs) -- temporary work permits -- can't be done unless a company or university in the country of origin says they are employing this person or that they're studying there.
+3

Lack of support from our own Malaysian companies

TeAM 10 years ago updated by Siang Boon Goh 10 years ago 6
Malaysian companies prefer turning to foreign software/applications for their business
+3

Negative mentality towards VCs & Over reliance on govt grants

Anonymous101 10 years ago updated by Wong Wei Loon 10 years ago 5
+3

Lack of exit options

Anomally 10 years ago 0
strange. no one asked this question. 
+3

Telcos, Media Companies and Banks could be more supportive TOGETHER to build Jaguh Kampung first

Warren Leow 10 years ago 0
We need Telcos, Media Companies and Banks in Malaysia to do their part to cultivate local champions that can then go regional and international.

Being a Jaguh Kampung can be a curse and a blessing. For some businesses, it would make sense to build a foundation in Malaysia ASAP and use it as a springboard.

If MaGIC can get telcos, banks and media companies to work together by industry, instead of in isolation, Malaysia would be an ideal place to test many new ideas. Just like how South Korea was supercharged with heavy investments in broadband, we can lay the foundations for soft-wiring for the future.

Perhaps a structured way to highlight pre-filtered ideas and startups to them.

Scenarios that can supercharge Malaysia

  1. Telcos, media companies and banks encouraged to set up pools of venture capital in collectives and syndicates. E.g. In addition of having an incubator each, it would make sense for the telcos to commit a few million each into a centralised fund and test this as an investment model. Same goes for banks if we are talking fintech.
  2. Liberalised Payments: Easier mobile payments and in-app purchases- liberalise carrier billing and transaction costs in Malaysia!
  3. National App Store: Easier app discovery instead of just having to rely on Google Play Store and iTunes- help Malaysian app makers reach the first 100k downloads locally
  4. Coordinated marketing and cross promotion- get MediaPrima, Astro, The Star etc. to commit more to supporting startups in terms of coverage
+2

Insufficient domain knowledge at the governmental agencies that influence or govern the creative content industry

Low Huoi Seong 10 years ago 0
As Malaysia tries to attract international players to produce and co-produce here through new incentives like FIMI (Film in Malaysia Incentive), it is clear that a knowledge and skills gap exists at the agencies responsible for the facilitation of this.  The rationale and the incentives are correct but as usual, the implementation lets us down.  There is always a disconnect between intention, strategy and implementation.