Zilingo wasn’t just backed by Sequoia; it was practically incubated by it. The Menlo Park, California-based VC firm was among the first outsiders to cut a check to Bose in 2015. At that time, she was a 23-year-old analyst at Sequoia’s India office. She’d come from McKinsey & Co. where she’d been hired straight out of her economics undergraduate program at St. Xavier’s College in Mumbai in 2012.
Bose’s stint at Sequoia lasted less than a year. A visit to Bangkok’s popular Chatuchak market inspired her to create an online bazaar of cut-price dresses, bags, sunglasses and assorted bric-a-brac. The timing was right: The use of mobile phones for e-commerce was starting to go mainstream in Asia. She teamed up with Dhruv Kapoor, a 24-year-old software engineer she had met at a party, and incorporated Zilingo in Singapore to help small merchants of street fashion in Southeast Asia build scale. Kapoor handled technology, while Bose brought in her college schoolmate Aadi Vaidya, now the chief operating officer, to storm Indonesia, Southeast Asia’s largest economy. Sequoia didn’t dictate to Bose who she should hire.