
Stripe co-founder and CEO, Patrick Collison. Photo credit: Stripe.
Stripe already counts Grab and Air Nippon Airways among its clients in Asia. Since going into private beta in Hong Kong, the US-based payments company has been on a roll in the region. After going public in Singapore, Stripe officially launched in Japan.
With Southeast Asia’s digital economy projected to grow six-fold to US$200 billion by 2025, and Japan’s expected to scale to US$150 billion by 2020, Stripe has plenty of potential for long-term growth in revenue and transaction volume. But Patrick Collison, co-founder and CEO of Stripe, goes beyond conventional metrics when assessing market health.
“The short-term vision is much more qualitative. If a market is not huge yet, is it just not a big market? Is it because our product is wrong? Because we haven’t waited long enough? In different markets, which answer will be true turns out to be different,” he says.
No Country for Old Assumptions
In a sense, Stripe market entry is an extension of “Collison Installation” – shorthand for personalized onboarding of potential users. The term was coined by Paul Graham, founder of Y Combinator and president of the accelerator, when Patrick and his brother John were building Stripe there.
Users in new markets get that same intense focus.
“We try to deliberately push against [US-centricity]. That’s why we have people on the ground in so many of these markets. That way we can be very honest and direct with ourselves so we can then have a more productive discussion,” Collison explains.
That approach has paid dividends in Japan already. A key component of the Stripe stack is support for payments in 130 currencies, meaning a user can set up international sales out of the box. When Stripe first started Japan preparations in 2014, such currency support did not exist, partly because of onerous technical and regulatory challenges.
It took the company two years to overcome those challenges. In the interim, Japan’s fintech industry caught fire and local startups like Spike and Pay.jp launched and quickly attracted users. Spike now boasts a full payment ecosystem including coupons and loyalty rewards. Pay.jp’s parent company even attracted investment from Mercari, a runaway success as a used-goods app.
But Stripe did not launch until it could provide Japanese users with its standard currency support. It is still the only service to offer such support. Despite the delay, Stripe in Japan is now better positioned to be an influential player in the local ecosystem.
Though Japan, Inc. has a deserved reputation for catering to its domestic base, Japanese startups are increasingly finding value overseas. A majority of Japan’s most-funded startups have already expanded overseas or are actively exploring international operations. Similarly, some of the most valuable exits in recent years (Gunosy, Gumi, Freakout, Akatsuki) have global aims.
Current and future generations of Japanese startups now have a tool that will make replicating, and possibly exceeding, the success of their predecessors easier.
On Community and Competition
Humility and user-focus are essential if Stripe is going to keep its forward momentum. The iron throne of the payments industry might be vacant, but there is no shortage of claimants to the title.
Back in Southeast Asia, Stripe will be facing a stiff challenge from heavy-hitters like Braintree and Adyen as well as startups like Omise and the Alibaba-backed Ascend Money.
Same as in Japan, Stripe will seek to provide startups with better tools to build their businesses. These efforts are not limited to online payments either. Project Atlas, Stripe’s bid to let anyone in the world incorporate a US-based company, is also live in Asia. It launched with over a dozen local VCs, including MaGIC, Beenext, Hubba, and Startup Stadium, in the global Atlas network.
Don’t expect this user-first, community-oriented approach to change anytime soon. After deploying into 16 European countries – a little over 60 percent of the company’s international territories – Collison knows what he needs to overcome the challenges of Asian expansion and adoption.
“Having the right team on the ground. These communities are small, close-knit, and kind of having the right people present who can contribute in the right way and be effective members makes such a difference,” he said.
This post Patrick Collison on Stripe, market expansion, and staying user-focused appeared first on Tech in Asia.
from Tech in Asia https://www.techinasia.com/stripe-asia-patrick-collison
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