Take a bunch of IT stalwarts, throw in some serious money, add a healthy pinch of mentoring ability and what you get will be something very much like Reservoir Investment Managers. The Bengaluru-based investment management company that funds tech ventures is just a few months old but its credentials are impeccable. And it has got big plans for the Indian IT start-up space.
Pai then roped in another former colleague, V Balakrishnan, a 22-year Infy veteran and ex-CFO who quit as its board member in 2013. Bala, too, wears multiple hats — apart from being involved in the Aam Aadmi Party, he is chairman of peer-to-peer lending platform MicroGraam, as well as an investor (along with Pai) at Unitus Seed Fund. Pai and he will also be part of a fund that invests in mid-caps and a hedge fund that is of smaller size.
With two industry heavyweights already on board, Ghorpade reached out to another veteran, Girish Paranjpe, the former joint CEO of Wipro.
Joining Paranjpe was his Sydenham classmate and yet another tech heavyweight, Deepak Ghaisas, former CEO of i-flex. He is now the chairman of Gencoval Strategic Services and dental cell bank Stemade Biotech.
Initially, the fund is looking at taking a 10-20% stake in companies, where Exfinity will invest individually or co-invest with other firms. As companies scale up, it will look to consolidate its position in the following Series A round and exit investments in the next — Series B — round.
“Not that we will not invest in companies in the B2C space, but we understand the B2B space better, given the experience of all our partners. We know what it takes to scale a business in this space,” says Senthilkumar.
The partners also believe that since most companies they will invest in are likely to go after global markets, their experience in building global business will come in handy. “For product companies, global exposure is very important. We don’t always package and market our products correctly even if we have quality. In the product business, the manual is as important as the product itself,” says Ghaisas.