Nov 27, 2008

Terror attacks in Mumbai


Last night I happened to be working late on e-mails, while waiting for Peter. He was supposed to check out from the Taj Mahal Hotel in Colaba by 10 pm; we would then come to my house to drop a parcel and from here go to the airport to catch his plane back to his country. Then, we got a call from another friend, informing us of the events going on in the city and it was not hard to guess that Peter was still trapped in the hotel. After a very intense night, thank God now he is safe and resting.

It is really sad to see the amount of terrorism that is going on in the world and very particularly in India itself. Violence cannot be justified by any reason and especially terrorism is a form of violence which goes beyond any limit.

I don't know which their reasons for doing this were, and you can be sure that I do not agree with what they have done. But, if something should be learnt from the terrorists, is their capacity and efficiency with which they planned and executed their attack. I'd wish that all of us were able to work with the same intensity and effort as they did, but for good causes and through good and legal means.

I really hope I'm not misunderstood here. What I mean is that, if there were many more entrepreneurs in the world who worked with the same eagerness to achieve their goals as the terrorists do, but using means which are legal, charitable, socially responsible, and full of other values, I'm sure the world would improve in matter of no time.

Similarly, I'd like that entrepreneurs would learn from the policemen last night; especially of course, those who gave their lives in combat. Certainly, entrepreneurs will not go to die in an encounter, but we should be willing to spend our lives working hard to create more business. If this effort is done not thinking just of oneself, but thinking of society as the policemen were doing last night, their reach in helping society would be as great, even if less known to others.

I know this post is a little off the line of the other posts, but I thought it would be great if all of us bloggers came out to say how we condemn terrorism and what should be done about it... this is my small contribution towards that.

Nov 26, 2008

Legal: About Sole Proprietorship, Partnership Firm and Private Limited

Last Friday, after posting on the blog, I had a meeting with my college-friend with whom I'm setting up the new business. We were deciding whether to go directly for a private limited, or to start by a partnership firm or sole proprietorship for some months before registering the company at the ROC.

Prior to this meeting I had read some information about the two proposed forms of business but still had some doubts, hence we went to visit his CA.

This meeting again proved is important to do your homework... I could understand everything thanks to what I had learnt in the morning.

Either partnership firm or sole proprietorship have the same unstable or shaky or at least non-corporate look to other companies, while a private limited looks more reliable to your possible clients.

However, the difference in costs is quite significant. The upfront cost to set up a Private Ltd is at least Rs.15,000 to 20,000 (very minimum); for a partnership firm is about Rs.8,000; finally, for a sole proprietorship is nil: you just need to go to the bank and open your account in the company's name.

This is, as you can read here, because the sole Proprietorship depends directly on its owner, both for liability as well as taxes; in fact, the company and its owner are one. The same way, it is very similar for a partnership firm but the profits and liability is distributed among the partners.

Our conclusion is that for a business which is beginning and a large amount of investments has already been done, you should go for the Sole Proprietorship or Partnership Firm. But if you have time and money is better to go for Pvt. Ltd. as it will give a much more reliable outlook to your enterprise.

Update on 23-02-11: Would you like to see the Spanish translation? Click here!

Nov 21, 2008

Legal process to start the company

When setting up a new business you would like to start giving your service or selling your product immediately so as to begin receiving returns very soon. And it is in deed possible (at least that's what I did), but you must take care that your legal frame is in place as early as possible; if you don't, you will have one more worry (and perhaps a headache) to cope with when your project is already running.

Mainly, what you will need is to register your company with the ROC (Registrar of Companies) of your city. Or, if you would like to start in a smaller (and more economical) scale you may register a Partnership Firm or a Sole Proprietorship (in fact, I'm about to start a new business this way... later on will be converted into a Private Limited).

Registering your company is not really difficult and you can do great part of it on your own. But if you are willing to spend some few extra thousands of Rupees by giving out the work entirely to a Certified Company Secretary (or just CS) the process would be really smooth... in fact, it's the best thing to do. In my case the process was made longer because I didn't know about CS (which eventually becomes essential) and went instead through a lawyer. The lawyer I chose is a wonderful man but that was not the right way to go, hence the project got delayed.

In brief, the steps to registering your Private Limited company are the following:
  • Get a digital signature
  • Get a DIN (Director identification number) for your directors.
  • Apply to ROC for the name of your company (Form 1A). You can know availability here.
  • Draft MoA (Memorandum of Association) and AoA (Articles of Association)
  • Stamping and payments required for documents
  • Submit Forms 1, 18 and 32 along with the documents stamped and signed earlier.

I will go through each of these steps, mainly telling you about my experience as well as giving links to a site which I have found, written by experts which will help you further. To know about all these steps in general, do visit this other site by clicking here.

By the way, regarding experts (a CA, CS, lawyer or anybody else)... before you meet them, try to do your homework, i.e. read and learn as much as possible from other sources (Google searches, blogs, etc) on your own. This way, when you meet the expert you won't be lost in the many words and high-fi sounding terms which they will use.

Nov 17, 2008

From the rising to the first fall of this entrepreneur


Yesterday, while drinking tea and listening to a CD of Carlos Santana, I was reading a chapter of The World is Flat by Thomas Friedman, where he talks about an African proverb which was posted by a manager translated into Mandarin in a Chinese Factory:

Every morning in Africa, a gazelle wakes up.
It knows it must run faster than the fastest lion or it will be killed.
Every morning a lion wakes up.
It knows it must outrun the slowest gazelle or it will starve to death.
I doesn't matter whether you are a lion or a gazelle.
When the sun comes up, you better start running.

Being an entrepreneur is not easy for anybody and even the biggest guys fall down once in a while. I guess that if you managed not to be eaten by the lion, you will get up, learn from your fall and become stronger, hoping not to fall again.

From my previous post, we had said that the target was to hire some few people to work with us full-time and have many more freelancers doing work for us. This is a system which was working well in Argentina, where we have part of our team, and which we thought could also work in India.

My first year, i.e. 2007, was a great experience in which I learnt many things of which I had no idea (and I will eventually share in this blog). I learnt legal stuff, human resources, production, sales.... the list of the things I learnt could go on, but later on I'll keep on writing on this.

Anyhow, we started only with freelancers and soon afterwards we also got some people sourced by a company in Goa which provides IT man-power (or I should say women-power as they mainly had girls in their team). By the end of 2007 we already had some few people in our team and we started looking for a place on rent in Pune. Even though at the beginning only 5 people would be working from there, the office would fit at least some 25 to 30 developers.

By that time we were running a project on .NET which was supposed to be finished by December 2007 and it was being developed by the guys in Pune who would eventually join the office at the beginning of 2008. The project got delayed, and delayed, and delayed.... and delayed. These delays made me realize that those guys in Pune were wonderful people, but were not the right ones to start a new development office with. In the end, the project was not properly delivered, we cancelled it, I had to say goodbye to those developers, say goodbye to the office we were about to rent, and in fact, due to the loses that we had in that project, we had to say goodbye to many of the other people in the team as well. From here onwards I had to look for a new way to start all over again. This was mid-Jan 2008.
The gazelle tripped and fell, but it was not caught by the lion. It got up, it learnt from its experience, and now runs faster and hopefully will not fall again, at least not in the same way as it did before.

Nov 12, 2008

The beginning of the venture

I graduated from Electronics Engineering in Mumbai University on June 2006. One year earlier, I had decided not to go for the placements offered at Campus in my College (CRCE), because sincerely, I thought I was not interested on the kind of jobs they were offering (basically, they were just about coding for big companies in which you become one more in the crowd of Engineers).

Admittedly, later on I went for the placement process of a couple of companies which came late for placements, but mainly so as to know what it all was about. I was called in for a couple of interviews and from the beginning I had to tell them I was not really interested in the job; then had good fun talking for a while to the recruiting people and answering their questions... after that, goodbye.

Few months after I left College (which I mainly spent studying and working with an NGO), I received an e-mail from Luis, a friend in Spain whom I met in 2003 when I went to Madrid for a studies trip. He was interested in opening a branch of his company in India (he had no clue about which city or anything of the sort) and had thought of me... after a long series of contacts he managed to get hold of my e-mail id and write me. Being an entrepreneur has been attractive to me since I was a child.

After a one-month trip in January 2007 to Madrid to know his company (which came up to be much smaller than I had thought, but growing a lot), I came back to Bombay ready to put up a team of developers to give technical support to Luis' company, which is specialized in the e-learning sector and has a leading LMS (Learning Management System) in Spain used by many of the largest corporations over there.

The target was that, by 2008 we would have a development office in India with about 30 full-time developers, plus some 70 people working as freelancers for us...

Nov 10, 2008

My first post

This is my first post to my new blog. It is also the first time I'm writing for a blog and I hope it will be interesting and mainly, useful, for many people.

I'll be writing about my experiences as a young-entrepreneur in Mumbai, setting up a company in partnership with a friend from abroad, loosing a lot, gaining a lot, becoming independent... a great experience which I hope will help many other people to take courage and start their own ventures; I'm sure this (starting a new company) will help them and ultimately help society a lot; of course, not without difficulties. But well... I'll talk about this later.

My plan is to upload short articles at least twice a week, so, if you are reading this, do visit this link again in the next few days for my first article.