Why can't Indians build a great product in India?'

March 03, 2008
Their simplicity hits you in the face. So does their brilliance and gumption.

First, their simplicity: You think you are going to meet entrepreneurs who have 
built a world class product in India and expect them to be nattily dressed,
polished in their manners and a bit arrogant. When you meet them you are 
surprised to find them dressed in sandals and sneakers that mismatch their 
clothes,
manners that are down to earth and a modesty shaped by their background.

Now their brilliance and gumption: All three had cosy jobs in one of the 
world's most respected software companies with jobs that earned them a bomb. But
the emotion of "building a world-class Indian product by Indians" and the 
entrepreneurial bug bit them and they decided to call it a day.

"We essentially wanted to build a huge organisation from scratch and my 
ambition was to get cutting-edge technology to India," says one of the three 
partners
of Druvaa, a start-up that says it has built a world class data backup software 
product that will cost companies one-sixth the price quoted by the number
one company in the data protection domain.

Ramani Kothandaram, Milind Borate and Jaspreet Singh, three former Veritas 
employees, have built a product that will help big companies protect their 
crucial
data from corruption resulting out of any emergency. "If you compare our 
product with the best in the domain then more than 80 per cent of their features
are identical," they say, confident of adding that remaining 20 per cent in 
about another six months.

"If Indians can build great products for foreign companies in India then why 
can't an Indian build as great a product in India for an Indian company?" 
reasons
Milind who has four patents in the storage domain space in his name and 
awaiting 11 more patents in the same field.

While Milind has done his MTech in computer science from IIT Bombay, Jaspreet 
is a computer science grad from IIT, Guwahati. Interestingly, Ramani has no
background of computer science for he is a BTech from the Agriculture 
Engineering College, Jabalpur. He later did his Master's from the Cranfield 
University,
UK on an
ODA scholarship

Rediff.com's Prasanna D Zore spoke to Druvaa's Ramani Kothandaram and Milind 
Borate about their cutting-edge product, how they managed to do it and the
challenges this 'Made in India by an Indian for an Indian company' product will 
face. Jaspreet was in New Delhi on business when this interview was conducted.

How do you explain your product to a layperson?

Ramani: We have two products: Druvaa Replicator and Druvaa In Sync.

Let us say that you have a computer. If your computer crashes then you take a 
back up of the data on that machine so that you don't lose important data.
When we do this time is not so important. But when the servers of large banks 
and BPOs crash they can't lose business by closing their servers. Also, how
fast and till what point-in-time can you restore and recover data on your 
original servers is also very important.

Thus, data replicators like Druvaa's helps an organisation continue its 
business even if there is a disruption or breakdown of their main servers for 
whatever
reasons. For instance, Druvaa's Replicator and In Sync can help computers in 
ten different locations mirror or replicate their data in case of any disaster
on a single computer anywhere in the world.

About your start up days and challenges

Milind: The start-up days were the most exciting days. We had a new idea, we 
were excited about it and we wanted to do something pathbreaking. Those were
the days when we did not have any feedback so we thought everything that we did 
was right.

As we moved along we built the first version, went to customers and tried to 
get their feedback on our product. It is then we started to realise the market
realities. Then came the phase when we started to question ourselves -- if we 
had the right dreams or not. But the intensity kind of always grew.

When we started going to customers and as they started liking our product it 
gave a tremendous boost to our confidence. We realised that we had a very good
product and people wanted to buy it. However, we couldn't market our product 
aggressively. Those were the challenging days for us.

As we started convincing our investors about our product and got more 
investments we again started believing in ourselves.

How did you three come together?

Ramani: We are all ex-Veritas employees. Milind had left Veritas before I 
joined but still we came to know about each other. In fact Veritas still has a
lot of file systems and lot of products whose development and architecture was 
done by Milind. He was a technical director at Veritas. Milind had authored
a book Windows Undocumented. In a way Milind is a who's who in the storage 
domain. So it was easy to find and know about Milind.

Jaspreet is our young entrepreneur. We found that Veritas had a product called 
Veritas Volume Replicator and there were some challenges for people to use
this product. It had some performance and deployment issues. You needed a 
Veritas engineer to deploy the product. Jaspreet and Milind came up with this
whacky idea of developing a similar product that will be easy to use and deploy.

Jaspreet, who is a born entrepreneur, was studying in Germany [
Images]
.. I pulled him in because he too is as ambitious as we are and that's how we 
all came together.

Milind: For the last 15 years I have been developing software for American 
companies out of which I worked for Veritas for seven years. I thought it was
about time I start doing it for an Indian company. I met Ramani who had similar 
ambitions. We essentially wanted to build a huge organisation from scratch
and my ambition was to get cutting-edge technology to India. That's how we came 
together.

How long will it take for Druvaa to bring the cutting-edge technology to India? 
How soon will you be able to convince the advantages of your product to
Indian users?

Milind: We are not in a one or zero kind of a situation. We are trying to build 
it in parts. We are not saying we will build the whole product first and
then try to sell it. What we have built till now is a plain replicator in which 
data from here goes to the other site. What we want to do next is essentially
continuous data protection.

So instead of having one copy of your data and the replication site we want to 
have point-in-time copies so that businesses can go on about their work 
seamlessly
even if there is data corruption or damage due to any emergency.

Suppose there is a virus attack on your primary data centre at 12 o'clock. And 
you knew about it only after four hours. However, you want all the data as
it existed at 12 o'clock because after that it got corrupted and you want 
point-in-time copies of that data. That's the next thing that we want to do and
we are sure we will do it in the next six months.

How much money was brought in to build this product?

Ramani: Initially we funded the project with our own funds and help from 
friends and relatives. (According to
Rehan Yar Khan
of the
Indian Angel Network
the IAN has invested Rs 1 crore (Rs 10 million) in Druvaa). While we never had 
any estimation of how much money will be required to build this product we
have spent only Rs 35 lakhs (Rs 3.5 million) till now. We spent another Rs 20 
lakhs (Rs 2 million) for establishing the company and getting hardware to
test the product.

What's your role in Druvaa?

Ramani: While Milind is the chief architect and decides on the direction that 
the product should take I decide on how the company should grow, which direction
the company should take, the overall strategic decision-making.

Jaspreet is helping us in the business development area; all through he has 
been the product manager. He is the interface between Milind and me.

What was your initial reaction when you realised you have developed a world 
class product?

Ramani: I was thrilled because for me developing an end-to-end product from 
scratch in India and taking on the global bigwigs is what I had always dreamt
of. The moment I realised that we have this first product in hand we took it to 
St Gobain and deployed it there. It worked successfully in the test environment.

It was a day when it rained heavily in July 2007 but I still came to the Siddhi 
Vinayak temple (the famous Ganesha shrine in Mumbai) to offer my thanks
to God.

Your early lives...

Ramani: I come from a very middle class family. My father was in defence 
accounts and so we moved across Indian cities after every one, two years. Before
joining college I had traveled across eight Indian states. Later I did my BTech 
in Agriculture Engineering from Jabalpur; then I did my Master's from Cranfield
University, UK. I got an ODA scholarship to do my Master's.

When I came back to India I was a scientist in the Department of Space and a 
senior officer in the Cabinet Secretariat. Then I worked with TCS [
Get Quote]
 as a group manager. Later I left India and went to Australia and worked with 
IBM Australia for 5, 6 years. Then I came back to India and joined Veritas
as managing partner, operations.

Milind: I was born and brought up in Pune. I did my early schooling in a 
Marathi medium school. I did my Bachelor's from The Pune Institute of Computer
Technology in 1993. Then I joined IIT Bombay to do my MTech after three years. 
That's where the transition happened. I came across students from across
India who could not speak Hindi or Marathi.

In Pune it was not necessary to speak English. The first two months when I 
started to learn the Queen's language were a bit difficult. I passed out in 1998
and joined Veritas where I worked for about seven years. After that I started a 
services company Coriolis Technologies.

My grandfather was a farmer and my father studied till Class X in his village. 
My father then came to Pune and struggled a lot to continue with his education
there. I have imbibed my father's spirit to struggle and do something that was 
not previously done.

My mother has been running a school for the past 30 years that caters to the 
lower income group (he consciously avoids using "sophisticated and snobbish"
sounding words like 'underprivileged') who do not have enough money to go to a 
good school. I have got the patience and tenacity of my mother. It was my
father's spirit to struggle and succeed that I have inculcated since childhood.

What sparked your motivation to start on your own?

Ramani: I wanted to take on the best in the world.

If you see even today there is no Indian software product that sells across the 
world very well. There are some products like Ramco's ERP product, some
financial products developed by Infosys [
Get Quote]
 and TCS. But there is no product like the ones developed by Microsoft, Oracle 
or SAP. Though most of these products are today owned by American companies
they were developed by a majority of Indians working for these American 
companies.

Even in Symantec and Veritas the products with cutting-edge technology have 
been developed by Indians. This made me think that if Indians can build great
products for foreign companies in India then why can't an Indian build as great 
a product in India for an Indian company?

How promising is your product?

This is a very interesting question to answer. When we developed this product 
we were very confident of hitting the one-million dollar mark pretty soon.
But that's how all the start-up owners think. But when reality hits its 
different.

Although we have not yet made our first sale we are expecting to sell it to an 
Indian BPO company in Pune soon. Though it's not a very large BPO we think
that it is a good entry for Druvaa in the BPO space. We would like to address a 
lot of other verticals but the BPO industry will do to begin with.

How can you sell your product at one-sixth the cost of that of your competitor?

Ramani: It is like this. People use any software product not because it is 
ideal for them but because everybody else is using it.

For instance if I tell you that there is something better than Microsoft Word 
then you may not be interested because a) you are so familiar with Word that
you may not find it useful to learn how to use a new product and b) if you send 
that file across then the person at the other end should also have the
same software installed to run it.

So people use particular software for a lack of choice. When we developed our 
product keeping in mind the actual user requirement in India we realised that
it doesn't need all the sophisticated features that users hardly use. For they 
not only make the product complicated but also increase the cost for the
user.

The size of our entire software is only about 10 MB. It's so well-engineered 
that we can even e-mail across it to our clients.

Also to deploy any replication software you need a skilled engineer who works 
on a time-bound pay to deploy that software. Our replicator software can be
installed and deployed in an hour's time. The main purpose of our product is to 
replicate data in case of a crisis.

Our product is user-driven and feature-specific. Also maintenance of our 
product is very simple. Addressing these issues has helped us develop a low cost
software product that can give a tough time to our competitors.

Do you think you have a world-class product and it is only a matter of time 
before it is accepted across the world?

Milind: If you compare our product with the best in the domain then more than 
80 per cent of their features are identical. At the same time our product
has advantages in performance, usability and simplicity. But our product 
doesn't have other complicated features like n is to n replication (this 
technology
facilitates n number of computers under threat replicate data to n number of 
computers located anywhere in the world; in simple words this technology is
a scale up of Druvaa's one is to one replicator).

However, that is in our roadmap and once we include this feature into our 
product I think we will be the best.

It is only a matter of resources. We shall be able to achieve n is to n 
replication in another six months and then you could call our product the 
world's
best. We are four of us working on this feature now and we plan to hire four 
more engineers to develop the n is to n replicator product. You don't need
a huge team to build a world-class product; only a few technology geniuses can 
do it.

How soon will you ship your product to foreign companies?

Ramani: Sukanto Ganguly from the US, who is on our board of directors, will 
help us take our product to the US market soon. Also, my boss at IBM Australia,
Sharon Dempsey, has started her own company Certainty Soft. She plans to sell 
Druvaa products in the Australian market. So things, as we see, look bright
to us at Druvaa.
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