An amazing story of empowering rural India

Sriram Raghavan, Co-founder & President, Comat Technologies.

 

 

February 18, 2008

 

The new breed of India's best innovators is set to take the world by a storm. 
Young, intelligent, and ambitious these dynamic entrepreneurs might well conquer

the world with their innovative ideas, products and services. 

 

rediff.com brings to you a special series on India's best innovators and 
entrepreneurs, winners of the latest Nasscom Innovation Award 2007. 

 

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A successful social entrepreneur, he has built a remarkable business model that 
is transforming the lives of millions of people in rural India. As the 
co-founder

of Comat Technologies, leading provider of e-governance solutions, Sriram 
Raghavan initiated the concept of rural business process outsourcing units and

rural business centres.

 

"Last year, we served nearly 75 lakh (7.5 million) rural customers and 
currently provide government and business services to over 10 lakh (1 million) 
citizens

per month," says Raghavan, who is also an advisor to the Government of India on 
strategic initiatives for the rural sector.

 

He believes that India is a land of young entrepreneurs and it is important to 
empower the youth. Comat passes on the benefits of information technology

to rural India with business centres and BPO projects across the country.

 

The company has bagged contracts to set up rural business centres in Uttar 
Pradesh, Uttarakhand, Haryana, Tripura and Sikkim.

 

One of the firm's most remarkable projects in Karnataka, Bhoomi involved 
digitization of over 20 million land records benefiting nearly 7 million 
farmers.

 

Raghavan takes you through Comat's exciting journey through rural India in an 
interview with Assistant Editor Manu A B.

 

What won you Nasscom's prestigious award for innovation this year?

 

Comat provides easy and affordable access to information-based government and 
business services in rural communities in India through our Rural Business

Centres (RBCs). Rural citizens dealing with the governments do not receive 
services they are entitled to, and have limited or no choice for financial and

educational services.

 

We have found three innovations to solve these fundamental problems.

 

Use technology to de-skill complicated tasks: Modelled after the best practices 
of user-friendly designs, we have created a much simpler interface for 
operators.

 

Identify corporate partners who will use the center to deliver services through 
the center using their own personnel: For e.g., a fertilizer company that

markets fertilizers and offers advisory services to farmers.

 

Identify high revenue activities for the computer platform in kiosks during 
off-hours: We currently deliver checque truncation services for US banks.

 

How long did it take to develop the award winning rural business centre? How 
does it work? How many people are benefited by this?

 

In Karnataka, nearly 800 RBCs were made operational in six months under the 
Nemmadi project. Last year, we served nearly 75 lakh rural customers and 
currently

provide government and business services to over 10 lakh citizens per month.

 

Ever since the start of this project in October 2006, there has been a 30 per 
cent increase in the demand for government services in Karnataka.

 

How difficult was the task? What hurdles did you face? How do you ensure 
connectivity in rural areas?

 

We faced a few major hurdles like human resource and cash management, working 
with multiple layers of the government, finding good investors and handling

customer expectations.

 

We have put in place innovative technological mechanisms for tracking employee 
attendance, grievance management and tracking of cash.

 

Connectivity is VSAT-based. We have found this to be most reliable so far.

 

What are your views on innovation in India? How important is innovation for a 
country like India?

 

I have come across a lot of innovation across the globe -- both good and bad. 
Innovations in pubic policy and in ways NGOs (non-governmental organisations)

function are encouraging. Unfortunately, there is also innovation in corruption 
and ways of breaking set processes and protocol.

 

As the economy progresses and younger minds become more aware, further 
innovative thinking will be spurred. I am also looking forward to alternate 
sources

where innovation can spring from SMEs, rural citizens and young entrepreneurs, 
rather than from traditional strongholds like universities.

 

What are the major rural projects Comat is working on?

 

We are focussing on starting RBCs in other states. We have tied up with 
coaching centres to provide CET (Common Entrance Test -- for admissions to 
engineering

and medical colleges) coaching to students in rural Karnataka. Training from 
Bangalore will be beamed live through satellite using broadband connectivity

across Nemmadi centres. CCNA (Cisco Certified Network Associate) training for 
over 70 students is being carried out at 12 centres.

 

Medical transcription and English language training are planned to be rolled 
out shortly. We also plan to introduce other vocational and employability 
courses

in the future.

 

Among financial services, we plan to facilitate a collection of premiums -- RBC 
to be a channel providing easy access to existing consumers. RBCs can be

a collection centre for remittances and disbursing payments. Issuing 
agriculture loans to farmers is also in the pipeline.

 

What is the status of the rural BPO project?

 

We are currently doing cheque-processing work for Orbograph, a United 
States-based firm from our centers in and around Mysore. Plans are afoot to 
provide

rural BPO services under medical transcription as well.

 

Tell us about some of the successful rural projects? How was the experience of 
the Bhoomi project? How many states has Comat covered so far?

 

Bhoomi in Karnataka involved digitization of over 20 million land records 
benefiting nearly 7 million farmers in the state. Computerised records are now

available over the counter in all Nemmadi centres for a standard fee.

 

We now provide nearly 40 different government and business services to rural 
citizens in Karnataka. Government services include caste, income, birth, death,

residence certificates, old age pension, horticulture and sericulture online 
application, et cetera, bill payment, bus ticket booking, mobile top-up, etc.

 

Comat has bagged contracts to set up rural business centers in Uttar Pradesh, 
Uttarakhand, Haryana, Tripura and Sikkim. We are planning to expand our reach

to Gujarat, Tamil Nadu, Maharashtra and Madhya Pradesh as well.

 

What was the inspiration to start this company?

 

Comat was inspired to be formed by a mentor who returned from the US and 
encouraged young people to become entrepreneurs. Once the path was set to form

an entrepreneurial organisation, the work of doing government projects to help 
citizens became a cause, a mission and a business.

 

What kind of hurdles did you face when you started your company? What are the 
challenges that you face now?

 

All the usual constraints and roadblocks -- like, capital, market acceptance, 
and long gestation periods. . . since we worked a lot with the government.

We have matured over the years and will learn as we go along.

 

Could you tell us about your company's growth over the years? What is your 
staff strength now? Do you plan to hire more people?

 

Comat has seen a lot of growth over the past two years, financially and in 
employee strength. Currently, we have nearly 300 employees on-roll and more than

3,000 employees on contract. As we expand into more states, plans are in place 
to hire a lot more employees.

 

Most people find finance a major constraint. How was it for you?

 

It was initially a huge challenge to educate investors about the viability of 
our business model. Today our strategic investors include industry leaders

like Intel and Hughes.

 

How do you like the role of an entrepreneur? Do you think India needs more 
entrepreneurs?

 

India is a land of entrepreneurs. But, the entrepreneurial environment is 
severely constrained by basic access to capital and a regulated environment. If

these are set then many more potential entrepreneurs in hiding will come to 
flourish.

 

Could you explain the reasons for your success?

 

Success is work in progress. It's a journey and not an end. My success is tied 
to the success of my company.

 

What would be your advice to budding entrepreneurs in India? 

 

Most young entrepreneurs are facing credit constraint. Therefore it's important 
for young entrepreneurs to be doing what they do best and to build a support

team and concentrate on few things rather than taking on too much.

 

What do you think about the quality of talent in India? Are you facing a 
shortage of talented people?

 

We have been considerably lucky in drawing talented employees. Our attrition 
rate has always been lesser than the industry average. Through the Nemmadi

project we have generated nearly 1600 new jobs in rural areas, of which more 
than 400 are women and nearly a 100 are differently-abled. Former Karnataka

chief minister Kumaraswamy has himself recommended many candidates to us 
through his Janata Darshan programme.

 

What are your company's future plans? Where do you see the company five years 
from now?

 

Over the next few years we plan to scale to 10,000 telecenters and expand to 
new regions across India. We also plan to vertically expand service offerings

through our centers. We are aiming to establish ourselves as the largest player 
in the privately run rural telecenter model and to be seen as a successful

for-profit social enterprise with an efficient and scalable business model.

 

What are your views on the Indian IT sector?

 

The Indian IT sector has evolved through stages. There was a big upswing and 
then came a plateau, et cetera. I think it is now time for the IT sector to

evolve into servicing the Indian consumer. IT companies will begin to move 
beyond software and hardware and begin to use technology to meet price points

of Indian customers.

 

Indian companies focus more on services than products. How important is a 
product-based innovation?

 

We are primarily a service economy and so we always look towards decreasing 
costs and increasing efficiency. Product-based innovation is important and large

scale players should concentrate on this.

 

Why are Indian firms not as good as Western ones at product innovation? What 
could be done to address this issue?

 

It's not right to say Indian companies are not as good as Western ones in terms 
of any innovation. We must understand that necessity is the mother of all

invention. India has always been a labour-rich country and so product-based 
ideas did not set in. With less manpower, Western companies were compelled

to innovate. However, India also now needs to concentrate on product-based 
breakthroughs to compete with the global market.

 

Do you think that the industry's boom can be sustained in the wake of a US 
slowdown?

 

The US economy is much too resilient, and probably after the elections will see 
an upsurge. The current slowdown is also not affecting the larger firms

very much as it might some of the smaller tier-II and tier-III companies. The 
Indian IT sector is still much coupled with its US counterparts.
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