If you grew up in India any time before the turn of the millennium, you must have heard this at least once (more likely, twice a week) when you were growing up. “[Insert name] went to America with only his degree and [suitably small number] dollars in his pocket. All he had with him was his brain and [faith in god/ love for mom/ belief in himself]. Look where he is now. If you [study hard/ eat your vegetables/ stop fighting with your siblings], who knows, he may help get you a job over there.”
According to a study by researchers at Duke University, Berkeley and Stanford, titled Then and Now: America’s New Immigrant Entrepreneurs, there’s been a dramatic fall in the number of immigrant-funded start-ups in Silicon Valley, from 52.4% in 1995-2005 to 43.9% since 2005. But the number of companies in the region started by Indians has actually increased over the same period. Between 2006 and 2012, Indians accounted for 32% of immigrant-funded companies in Silicon Valley, up from 25.8% between 1995 and 2005 . That’s more start-ups than those by Chinese, British, Japanese and Canadian immigrants combined. And it’s way higher than the trend in the previous millennium. An earlier, 1999 paper that tracked immigrant entrepreneurs in the Valley between 1980 and 1998 had estimated only 7% of high-tech companies had been started by Indians.
The first fund was about investing around $1 million in a company for 18 months to two years, and sweating it out with the founders, helping them find the right product-market mix, build business development relationships and then find buyers. “If [seed accelerator] Y Combinator is like the village trying to raise a child with its vast ecosystem of sharp mentors and savvy investors, we are like a family raising a child. We are very involved with our companies; we nurture and support them for a long time,” Bhargava says. In less than three years, Tandem Habit I returned two-and-a-half times the $11 million fund.
The common connect: “There’s always a US-India thread in my companies”, whether it is as a full-fledged subsidiary or for running back-end operations. Sinha is convinced, though, that he couldn’t have started half as many companies had he been anywhere else other than the Valley. “If I had ended up in some other part of the US, I couldn’t have done this. This is the R&D capital of the world. Here, you’re never too far from a discussion on technology. You’re never too far from someone working on the next big thing.”
That’s what Ash Lilani is trying to do as well. As far back as 1998, he was visiting India regularly, drumming up support and enthusiasm for a venture capital ecosystem in the country. A great believer in Indian entrepreneurs, the Kenya-born Lilani, who moved to the US after graduation from Bengaluru University, has been a part of the Silicon Valley Bank (SVB) core team as it built relationships with tech entrepreneurs in India and China, taking a slow and steady approach to try and create a venture capital hub in these countries. “I have always been very bullish about India. We wanted leverage our strong connections in the Valley to develop the entrepreneurial ecosystem in India,” he says. In 2003, he brought over close to 20 VC fund teams to India, introducing them to the country and encouraging them to think of setting up operations here. Many of them did, and several operated out of SVB’s office in Bengaluru, leading it to be nicknamed “Sand Hill East”.
Although their numbers are still not very large (just 1% of the US population), Indian-Americans are among the best educated and most successful communities in the US. “But they aren’t taking their rightful place in society. They have neither the visibility nor the influence they should,” says Rangaswami. Indiaspora, which started with 100 members in September 2012, saw its first prominent event just a few months later, when it hosted a black tie inaugural ball to celebrate US president Barack Obama’s second term.