- The likes of Razorpay, Meesho, Licious and Dunzo attend Binny Bansal’s school for startups. All with $150+ million valuations
- xto10x is a bootcamp for Series-B+ funded startups to get around scaling challenges
- But Bansal and his two co-founders envision xto10x as a software as a services company. It has a tool in mind to start with
- xto10x is entering a space that is flooded with such tools. That too for a process that has a near-100% failure rate
Enter your email address to receive a daily summary of all our stories.
What do Indian startups like Razorpay, Meesho, Cleartax, MyGate, and Vedantu have in common? A school called xto10x. Let us explain.
Most people would agree that all they have successfully reached initial product-market fit—they’ve found a large set of customers who have an urgent problem and developed a product that solves it in a meaningful way.
In startup lore, reaching product-market fit is considered as a rite of passage. A majority of startups fail to cross this “chasm of death” and the ones that do, find themselves courted by investors chasing the next big thing.
So all the startups mentioned above have duly raised tens of millions of dollars from marquee investors at valuations well north of $100 million.
But startups are hard.
Crossing the product-market fit hurdle does not make things easier. Most of these startups’ challenges pertain to scale—the topline without sacrificing margins, its product portfolio without losing the core original value proposition, the organisation itself to handle hypergrowth?
There are no easy answers to any of these questions and getting even one of them wrong can potentially derail a startup.
So what did Razorpay, Meesho, Cleartax, MyGate, and Vedantu do?
They all enlisted themselves into the startup school xto10x Technologies. Founded by Binny Bansal, Flipkart’s co-founder and former chief executive, along with some former colleagues from the e-commerce company, xto10x is a Bengaluru-based entity. It helps companies like the ones named above manage scale and growth.
So far, this nearly-one-year-old company has been a bit of an enigma. Most people in the startup ecosystem that we reached out to—from startups to venture capitalists—didn’t even know about it. We were met with responses like “I have no view on it” or “I have no idea about it”.
But the most interesting part about xto10x is not what it is, but rather what it isn’t.
It is not an investor.
It is not an accelerator.
Neither is it the “SAP of startups” providing enterprise software tailored for growing startups.
It wants to, however, build software.
Credits
Written by Arundhati Ramanathan, Sumanth Raghavendra
Share this article with your network
Send the article link to friends or colleagues who might find this story interesting or insightful.
Send the article link to friends or colleagues who might find this story interesting or insightful.