What do entrepreneurs really need to succeed?
Passion. Drive. A good idea. A network. Passion. Funding. Passion. Customers. Yeah, yeah, yeah.
But what about power? And I’m not speaking metaphysically here. I’m talking the real thing: electricity running through wires to reach a lab, an office, or a factory, with consistency and predictability. Power.
Journalists occasionally ask me what the government can or should do to improve the conditions for entrepreneurs in India. And every time I answer, I feel that I am somehow disappointing them. “Changing the laws to encourage angel funding?” some prompt hopefully. “Sure,” I respond. After all, some entrepreneurs need angel funding.
But generally I focus on the basics: power, roads and water would be a good place for the government to start. All entrepreneurs need power. Not all entrepreneurs need venture capital.
And the cost of building what they should be able to purchase disproportionately affects the new entrepreneur. It doesn’t hurt Infosys too much, these days, to run their own buses, generators, water purifiers and university. In fact, for them it’s an advantage to have these resources, when new entrepreneurs do not.
But it does hurt a new entrepreneur to shell out 2.5 lakhs (~ $5300) on a 25KVA diesel generator. Or 1.16 lakhs for 10 tubular batteries plus a UPS, like we did (~ $2500). Let me put this in context: the cost of backup power equals anywhere from 4 months to 8 months of salary for a junior programmer. That’s a lifetime in a startup. Do you think Silicon Valley startups are trading manpower for lights?
Ok, full disclosure: I’m writing this in the middle of a power shortage. Bangalore is badly crunched right now, though certainly not as badly as some.
To preserve our batteries, we don’t use the printers, and we unplug all the laptops. There are no AC’s, fridge, or water (when we forget to turn on the pump during the moments with power). The only good thing is that no power means no power point presentations.
And we’re the lucky ones. I was talking to a young entrepreneur from Hubli the other day. His company serves clients in the manufacturing sector of northern Karnataka. His clients suffer power cuts (euphemistically called “load-shedding”) for over 8 hours per day. How do they manage? Some drive their teams to perform 8 hours of work in 4 hours. They have no choice. But is this the way to achieve 6 – 8 % GDP growth?
Building the entrepreneurial ecosystem means investing in the basics, and perhaps the entrepreneurial community should help highlight this priority.
Don’t even get me started on the roads.
About the columnist: Laura Parkin is co-founder and CEO of the National Entrepreneurship Network, promoted by the Wadhwani Foundation. Prior to NEN, Parkin worked with the Ashoka Foundation, did a stint as a venture capitalist and started four companies. She is Harvard University alumni and currently lives in Bangalore. Visit her blog at Venture Out.
This post has been re-produced at Startupcentral with prior permission from Laura Parkin.
Image Courtesy: NEN


Dear mam, what you said is very true….budding entrepreneurs not only fight with biggies and others in market..but they need to survive in the low standard infrastructure also…hope scenerio would change one day’//
hi
yours is good research no doubt ,but we need funding
can you give some advice on that
Bang on! I shifted my 20 ppl team to Bombay only because of unreliable and poor quality power
In noida
We spent two months outlay on finding power solutions and then were cheated by a landlord who stole the precious electricity when it was there!
Of course, when I can I will shift again – to a country, city, fiefdom which has better traffic and roads and sanitation etc
In Bombay we pay top dollar for an office space which has suddenly got a garbage dump outside so now we’ll shift again ! That’s more money down the drain!
Enterprise in India is despite of poor governance so one expects nothing at all from the feeble minded bribe swigging clan promoters who are our politicians
Saurabh