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§ Private Profile · Singapore
Tinvio is a technology company.
Tinvio has raised $17.5M across 2 funding rounds.
Key people at Tinvio.
Tinvio has raised $17.5M in total across 2 funding rounds.
Tinvio provides a B2B transactions platform streamlining supply chain operations for businesses. Its core product enables merchants to efficiently manage orders, invoices, and payments with their suppliers. The platform integrates capabilities like sending and receiving orders, tracking deliveries, and handling financial transactions, often via a chat-led interface, digitizing procurement processes.
Founded in Singapore in 2019 by Ajay Gopal, the company's inception addressed prevalent inefficiencies in conventional B2B ordering and payment workflows. Gopal sought to resolve these operational bottlenecks by providing a unified digital solution, improving speed and transparency in critical business exchanges.
Tinvio primarily serves merchants, particularly in the restaurant sector, and their suppliers. The platform offers these businesses a consolidated system for operational and financial interactions. Its vision is to enhance the efficiency and clarity of procurement and payment processes across industries, fostering seamless B2B relationships.
Tinvio has raised $17.5M in total across 2 funding rounds.
Tinvio's investors include AppWorks, Global Founders Capital, MUFG Innovation Partners, Partech Ventures, Peak XV Partners (Sequoia Capital India), Partech, Rocket Internet.
Tinvio has raised $17.5M across 2 funding rounds. Most recently, it raised $12.0M Series A in July 2021.
| Date | Round | Lead Investors | Other Investors | Status |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Jul 1, 2021 | $12M Series A | AppWorks | Global Founders Capital, MUFG Innovation Partners, Partech Ventures, Peak XV Partners (Sequoia Capital India) | Announced |
| Apr 27, 2020 | $5.5M Seed | Peak XV Partners (Sequoia Capital India) | Global Founders Capital, Partech, Rocket Internet | Announced |
Key people at Tinvio.
Tinvio is a Singapore-based technology company founded in 2019 that builds a B2B transactions platform streamlining orders, invoices, and payments for small to medium-sized merchants and suppliers, primarily in food and beverage supply chains.[1][2][3][4] The chat-led interface integrates messaging, payments, and financial tools into one familiar workflow, reducing reliance on spreadsheets, texts, or paper, and boosting productivity and profitability for businesses managing high-volume recurring orders like restaurants, bakeries, and retailers.[1][2][3] With around 54-59 employees, $18.5M in total funding (including a $12M Series A led by AppWorks), and backers like Sequoia Capital India, Partech, and MUFG Innovation Partners, Tinvio has gained traction across Asia (Singapore, Australia, Taiwan) and shows steady growth without chasing unchecked scale.[1][3][4][5]
Tinvio was founded in 2019 by Ajay Gopal, who drew from his investment banking and product strategy background to address fragmented supply chains he observed firsthand, especially in food and retail where businesses juggled disjointed texts, spreadsheets, and delayed payments.[3] Key early leaders include CTO Amitkumar Nandi and COO Tedo Esmu Ziraga, with country directors like Alfie Pham (Vietnam) and Ryven Barrio (Philippines).[1][4] The idea emerged from simplifying order cycles to feel intuitive; within the first year, it attracted hundreds of merchants in multiple Asian cities, focusing initially on high-recurrence small businesses before expanding regionally and raising funds for reliability-focused growth.[3]
Tinvio stands out in B2B supply chain tech through these key strengths:
(Note: As of recent data, Tinvio's core features appear integrated into Jaz, a broader accounting platform, suggesting evolution or acquisition.[6])
Tinvio rides the e-invoicing and B2B fintech wave in Southeast Asia's fragmented supply chains, where digital tools automate accounts payable, cut paper, and enable real-time insights amid rising F&B demands.[2][3] Timing aligns with post-pandemic efficiency pushes and regional growth in food/retail, fueled by investors targeting underserved SMEs; market forces like supplier-merchant friction and financing gaps favor its all-in-one model.[3][5] It influences the ecosystem by onboarding small players into digital commerce, competing in a crowded field (e.g., Food Market Hub, Silo) while pushing embedded finance, potentially accelerating adoption in high-growth markets like Asia-Pacific.[1][2]
Tinvio is poised to expand financial services like supplier financing and payments amid Southeast Asia's booming B2B digital shift, leveraging its $18.5M war chest for deeper market penetration in Australia, Taiwan, and beyond.[3][4][5] Trends like AI-driven invoicing, regulatory e-invoicing mandates, and supply chain resilience will shape it, especially if integrating further with platforms like Jaz unlocks accounting synergies.[2][6] Its influence may grow by empowering SME productivity, evolving from transactions to full-stack fintech—unlocking smarter merchant-supplier collaboration as originally envisioned.[1][3]