BY AKSHAY KUMAR
Morpheus will invest Rs 5 lakh in each company under its portfolio from the fund, said its co-founder Sameer Guglani.
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Bangalore-based startup incubator Morpheus Venture Partners (MVP) is considering raising Rs 1-2 crore ($200k-500k) venture capital fund. The company is planning to target high net worth individuals (HNI) to raise the proposed amount.

Speaking to VCCircle, Sameer Guglani, co-founder of MVP, said that “work on raising the fund is expected to begin in next three months, wherein we would be targeting an investment of Rs 25-30 lakhs ($50-60,000) from each investor.” Guglani had earlier co-founded Madhouse.in, an online DVD rental company, which was funded by Mumbai Angels. It was later sold to Seventymm.com.

MVP will invest Rs 5 lakh ($10,000) in each company under its portfolio, once the targeted fund is raised, added Guglani.

The company, as of now, runs a 4-6 months Business Acceleration Programme (BAP), during which it extends assistance, as a limited co-founder to start-up organizations under its portfolio in areas like product development and launch, team building, devising a revenue model, customer relations, and other nitty-gritty’s in exchange of 4% to 8% stake.

MVP recently announced the beginning of batch 3 of its BAP, which consists of ten new start-ups.

The batch 3 companies are very diverse in nature, as the business area varies from education domain, apparel, automotive, advertising and financial services. Companies under batch 3 portfolio are - Adscoot, Easy Square Feet, Interview Street, Naabo, Picsean, ReachTax, Retail Vector, RobotsAlive, Scopial and VeriCAR.

The number of companies under the MVP portfolio has increased to 20 in 2009 from four companies it had in its first batch, which commenced in January 2008.

Of the 20 companies under its portfolio, three firms, Instablogs, CommonFloor and Crederity have raised venture capitalist funding.

Indus Khaitan, a Silicon Valley technology evangelist and entrepreneur, has recently joined founders Sameer Guglani and Nandini Hiranniah as a partner at MVP.

Comments

Soham Das

Almost forgot that there is a comment section, went straight out ahead and tweeted my reaction. Will just copy that.

#Is it just me or the size is really low?Assuming its a 3member team,the company can survive a year if they take 15k as their monthly salary

#15k??? Is it commensurate with the risk you put in? Either reject a bad investment idea outright or give it a considerable "respect"($$$)

#5lakhs will then only pay for the infra and the shebang and not for salary.

#Well,to give proper respect to those investors,a lot of Indian startup ideas are plain junk. Not a bash tweet, but kinda true.

Anil Tiwari

The concept of MVP is appreciated but fund amount is peanut even to think business than start.

Rohit Maina

MVP has good companies in the portfolio but I am surprised why enterpreneurs are so gullible to give away 4-8% just for gyan.

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