"Several startups have had to scale back operations lately. It is not an ecosystem issue, but plain silly investor pressure to have a multi-city strategy that is creating these problems," Screwvala, who is now leading seed fund Unilazer Ventures, told PTI.
The startup space has been attracting billions of hot money from scores of PE firms and other foreign investors like SoftBank of Japan and Chinese online retailer Alibaba, jacking up values within months.
In the last few weeks, several startups, including restaurant discovery platform Zomato, food ordering platform TinyOwl, and online real estate portal Housing.Com, have attracted bad press for sacking hundreds of their employees and pulling back operations.
While Zomato confirmed it is laying off 300 as of last month, Housing.Com let go of more than 200 recently.
TinyOwl has also fired employees, shrunk its operations, and is restructuring the business model. The agitated employees of TinyOwl had reportedly even took its chief executive hostage for a couple of days, demanding unpaid wages.
problem and not an ecosystem problem and "there is nothing to react".
"There will be news of 20 to 50 more such companies in the next few years. It is, however, not an ecosystem problem. It does not mean they shouldn't scale up," he said.
Screwvala, who through his Unilazer Ventures has invested in an online educational startup UpGrad, reiterated that startups should think of scale or they won't be able to succeed.
"You have got to think of your ideas at scale, and that is a unilateral point of view. This doesn't mean that a boutique operation isn't great, but you have got to define your particular scale," he said.
While this has been bad publicity for many of these startups, he said this doesn't signal that the companies would go burst.
"Customers are only concerned about services. If a company can retain that it should not matter," he said.
On valuations, he said there will always be aberrations, and anything that reaches a limit will be a problem.
"In the e-commerce business, Amazon has doubled its valuation in the last four months; what it hasn't done in the last eight years. What's the logic to that? But is everyone in America is a fool? I don't think so," he said.
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