From having the âCEO of Doglapanâ as a judge on the debut season to facing allegations of only funding profitable start-ups, the judging panel of Shark Tank India has been swimming in troubled waters. However, now Shaadi.com founder, tech investor and one of the memeable Shark Tank India judges, Anupam Mittal, has broken his silence.Â
Mittal comes off as no less than a PR spokesperson for the finance reality show at this point as he has been constantly defending Shark Tank India online since February 2023.
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Then, on June 10, Twitter (arguably the only online platform suited for the Shark Tank demographic after LinkedIn) harboured an argument where another entrepreneur claimed that he procured some information from a handful of Shark Tank India contestants. What beans did these ex-Shark baits spill?
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These contestants claimed that the judges were delaying funding to several start-ups even after these start-ups received promises of funding on camera. Now, 18 days later, Mittal took to Twitter and LinkedIn to offer his own answers.Â
In (perhaps) an AI-generated artwork that he shared on Twitter, Mittal seemed to pitch a new show for the showâs haters, aptly titled âBARK TANKâ. With a strange caption that read âIYGIYGI ⊠If not, here is the cheat sheetâ. Even the Gen-Z peers of the writer of this article are not aware of what the abbreviation âIYGIYGIâ stands for. (Although looks like it is If You Get It You Get It, get it?)Â
Coming to his âcheat sheetâ, Mittal had linked it to a LinkedIn post where he offered his and the judgesâ side of the story.Â
Addressing the multiple allegations right from the start, Mittal opened his statement with,
Without naming him, Mittal questioned the claims that erupted from entrepreneur Anmol Sharmaâs viral Twitter thread from June 10. He questioned how the allegation of âdelayed funding scamâ is an âill-intentioned narrativeâ rooted in âno data, no real namesâ.Â
In terms of data and facts, Mittal pulled off a below-the-belt jab at sarcasm saying âyes, there is such a thingâ. The Shaadi.com head honcho added that Shark Tank India offers an unscripted narrative of integrity and this can be measured through the Completion Ratio (CR).
For those unacquainted with Shark Tank lingo, CR is an aggregate of data that gauges how many deals on the show actually went through.Â
To quote Mittal, âGlobally, but more specifically in US Shark Tank, ~60% of the deals go through. Shark Tank India S1 saw the completion of 2/3rds of the deals, which is a record of sorts. S2 CR will be available in August and based on deal momentum, I am confident it too will be healthy.â
Mittal also tried breaking down the CR process in the LinkedIn post, mentioning how many of the contestantsâ proprietorships need to be formally converted into companies first. He then added that some deals canât be completed in case the founder has a change of mind or if the company fails some legal and financial parameters.Â
Further, some founders of the selected companies can renegotiate or shop for other deals that can also delay a dealâs completion. âPersonally, I donât encourage this but am always open to finding win-win structures as many of my investees will attest to,â Mittal writes.Â
The LinkedIn post has understandably gone viral and everyone on the LinkedIn start-up community has something or the other to say about Mittalâs replies.
Ex-Shark Tank India contestants who managed to gain funding also commented on Mittalâs LinkedIn post to express their positive experience with the show. These young entrepreneurs also managed to throw in some self-promotion along the way.Â
For instance, Season 2 contestant Arth Chowdhary expressed the gratitude he got for his drone-manufacturing company insideFPV. Specifically impressed by CarDekho CEO and Season 2 judge Amit Jain, Chowdhary mentioned, âShark Tank has given entrepreneurs like us an incredible platform to showcase our innovative ideas and visionary businesses like insideFPV.â
14-year-old Anoushka Jolly, who made her Shark Tank debut at the age of 13, also had similar words of praise for the judges. Mentioning how she secured funding from Jain and Mittal who were also very communicative after the deal, Jolly said, âMy venture was perhaps the smallest and the one which would not have given a great upside, but still the support is great. Shark Tank gave me exposure, PR and great confidence.â
The teenager secured Rs 50 lakh in funding for developing an anti-bullying mental health app called Kavach. Subtly promoting the appâs follow-up Kavach 2.0, Jolly defended Mittal by saying that the critics arenât investors or entrepreneurs themselves but just âtroubled soulsâ. She added, âMy mental health app Kavach 2.0 will really help them.â
Ninad Vengurlekar, the CEO of an ed-tech start-up called Utter, offered some solutions that can help in making Shark Tank India come off as more transparent.
Instead, he suggested that a better idea would be to announce that Sharks are willing to offer a term sheet for their investment ventures that can be subjected to due diligence.Â
âWhile this may reduce the excitement quotient of the show, it represents what truly happens with any financial investment in a startup.â
Further, the ed-tech executive also suggested that each Shark Tank India episode can throw in a 5-minute segment that tells audiences who the successful start-up founders are doing now and why some founders were unable to close funding.Â
Talking about numbers and transparency, digital marketing specialist Atishay Jain asked for âmore specific data on the completion ratio and deal momentum for Shark Tank India Season 2â.
Mittal replied that the numbers are still not out there as âAugust is the best time to take stockâ.Â
As for Anmol Sharma, the man who started the delayed scam debate based on his alleged interactions with contestants, he is yet to pen a reply. Are we seeing an intense âLinkedIn finance dudebro debateâ? Seems like it!