Korawad Chearavanont
Korawad Chearavanont (Thai: กรวัฒน์ เจียรวนนท์) is a Thai entrepreneur, founder and CEO of Eko, a communications app based in Bangkok, Thailand.
Korawad Chearavanont | |
---|---|
กรวัฒน์ เจียรวนนท์ | |
Education | The Lawrenceville School Columbia University |
Occupation | Internet entrepreneur |
Known for | Founding Eko Communications |
Title | CEO of Eko |
Relatives | Suphachai Chearavanont (father) Dhanin Chearavanont (grandfather) |
Family | Chearavanont family |
Biography
Chearavanont is the son of Suphachai Chearavanont, CEO of Charoen Pokphand Group, Thailand's largest private company where his grandfather Dhanin Chearavanont currently serves as senior chairman.[1] He was educated at the Lawrenceville School and Columbia University for two years, where he was a history major, before dropping out in 2015 to pursue a career in entrepreneurship.[2][3]
Eko Communications
Chearavanont founded Eko Communications as a mobile chat app in spring 2012, when he was 17 in his boarding school dorm in New Jersey and took a year off after high school to build his startup.[1][4] Upon entering college, however, he wanted to focus on his startup full-time so he made a deal with his family that he could quit college if he raised $5 million from major venture capitals.[4] In 2014, he secured $1 million seed funding from 500 Startups.[5] A year later, he received $5.7 million funding from Shanghai-based Gobi Ventures, the second-largest such funding for a Thai venture.[6] Having met the terms, Chearavanont put Columbia on hold in order to concentrate on his start-up full-time. In 2017, he raised $1 million from Japanese trading house Itochu.[7] In November 2018, he raised $20 million in B round funding from Sinar Mas Digital Ventures, the venture capital unit of the Indonesian conglomerate Sinar Mas Group, increasing the total funding to $28.7 million.[8]
In founding Eko, Chearavanont hopes to fill gaps in the enterprise collaboration market left by tech giants such as Slack, Microsoft, and Facebook by accommodating more users simultaneously in a group chat and by focusing on the operational and logistical aspects of the company as opposed to solely workplace chats and collaboration.[1][4] Furthermore, his business taps into the growing mobile market in Asia, whereas major tech firms are more attuned to the habits of Americans and Westerners in which desktops and laptops play a bigger role.[9] Since its founding, Eko signed on notable firms such as Bangkok Bank, Thanachart Bank, BEC-TERO, telecommunications firms True Corporation and Telekom Malaysia, and non-profit One Young World as clients, with five million active users across 100 enterprise clients throughout Asia, Europe, North America.[4][8][10][11] Most recently, his business has saw a 200% surge in revenue during the COVID-19 pandemic as demand for remote work technologies has boomed.[12] In June 2020, his company acquired a local AI chatbot firm, ConvoLab, and formed a new parent firm as part of its digital, and global expansion plan.[11]
In 2016, he was listed on the Forbes 30 Under 30 Asia under the Enterprise Tech category.[13]
References
- Nam, Suzy. "Thailand Billionaire Heir's Tech Startup Closes $20M Fundraising Led By Indonesia's 2nd Wealthiest Family". Forbes. Retrieved 2020-07-15.
- "Korawad Chearavanont '12 Provides "an App for That"". Lawrenceville School. 2015-11-23. Retrieved 2020-07-15.
- "Welcome to the real world". Bangkok Post. Retrieved 2020-07-15.
- "Thai tycoon's grandson takes on Slack and Facebook in work chat". Nikkei Asian Review. Retrieved 2020-07-15.
- Huang, Elaine. "[Update] Workplace chat app Eko secures US$1M from 500 Startups and others". e27. Retrieved 2020-07-15.
- Phoosuphanusorn, Srisamorn (August 28, 2015). "Office chat app developer Eko gets $5.7m funding". Bangkok Post. Retrieved 2020-07-15.
- "Itochu invests in Eko, brainchild of CP Group heir". Nikkei Asian Review. Retrieved 2020-07-16.
- "Workplace app Eko nets $20m funding from SMDV, AirAsia, and others". Tech In Asia. Retrieved 2020-07-16.
- "Eko chat app blends corporate email with mobile messaging". Digital News Asia. 2015-10-20. Retrieved 2020-07-16.
- Oster, Shai. "Billionaire's Dropout Grandson Wants to Kill Work E-mail". Bloomberg. Retrieved 2020-07-16.
- "Thai billionaire heir's Eko announces acquisition, new parent firm". Tech in Asia. Retrieved 2020-07-16.
- "Thai billionaire heir's startup Amity flourishes amid pandemic". Reuters. 2020-06-30. Retrieved 2020-07-16.
- "Korawad Chearavanont". Forbes. Retrieved 2020-07-15.