Boosting Startup Support: the Dado Banatao Incubator

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The Philippine startup scene is booming, with around 500 promising companies recorded by the Department of Trade and Industry. Since technology is the focus of many of these startups, the business aspect is sometimes neglected to the detriment of their growth and long-term survival. To assist with this problem area, the Dado Banatao Incubator (DBI) officially opens at the Asian Institute of Management (AIM) with support from Microsoft Philippines.

“Our partnership with Microsoft is a strategic step in developing the startups at The Incubator,” said Prim Paypon, Executive Director of AIM-DBI. “Microsoft’s expertise in cloud solutions allows our startups to constantly improve its business processes and services to be customer-intuitive and responsive while being technologically advanced.”

Physical space

The partnership is a much-needed boost for Filipino startups intent on leveraging technology to expand and enrich their operations. The AIM-DBI is the country’s first incubator housed in a business school. It provides rent-free office space where startups create their technologies and run their businesses. Startups may also access to the graduate school’s campus facilities to better equip them in developing their day-to-day operations.

The incubator is particularly interested to work with startups geared towards science, technology or engineering that introduce new alternative solutions to existing and emerging problems. Through a committed community of professors and industry leaders, founders can access world-class mentorship, customized trainings, and startup management programs that would best fit their actual needs.

Startup program

The curriculum provided by the Microsoft and AIM-DBI partnership has three phases: the Nesting Program, Building Program, and Scaling Program. The Nesting Program provides startups with digital assistance through cloud tools, while the Building Program introduces startups with technology architecture creation, peer-to-peer collaborative consultation, and building. The final phase, the Scaling Program ensures that startups are market-ready with a marketplace for selling through Microsoft’s network of business partners.

“Startups at The Incubator are provided with cloud enabled tools to help them digitally transform their businesses to become more competitive in their respective industries,” Eileen Ong, Director for Commercial Partners and Small Medium Corporate Business Unit of Microsoft Philippines, said. “With Microsoft technologies empowering local startups, Microsoft’s overarching goal is to prepare startups for global competitiveness,” Ong said.

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