seedcamp Berlin - come and join !

Seedcamp

Mini Seedcamp Berlin -  April,14th

 Mini Seedcamp Berlin is a one day event aiming to connect the 20 best web-tech, mobile and software talent with some of the leading entrepreneurs, developers, and experts from the German and European tech ecosystem. If you are not familiar with the Seedcamp events or would like to know more about the process, please check reports from previous eventsabout & investment terms, and our FAQs pages. We will be bringing together 20 of the region's best seed stage tech start-ups with experienced entrepreneurs, investors, and developers from Germany and all over Europe to participate in a day of intense mentoring, panel discussions and presentations at the Berlin's finest hi-tech co-working space - BetahouseCheck out our blog postsvideos and follow us on Twitter and Facebook to see what we’re looking for, what teams get out of it and what you can do to improve your chances in winning a spot at one of the most prestigious and rewarding web tech events in Europe today. Spending the time to fill out the application comprehensively is key and communicating to us clearly your idea and strengths of your team is critical for consideration, so no skimping here!

 As a team in Mini Seedcamp Berlin you will: 

·       Get access to a world-class network of advisors to help you with every aspect of your business

·       Be recognised as one of the 20 best start-ups in the region

·       Open a direct route to seed and venture capital

 

Top 10 Tech Investing Trends For 2011

This post by 500 Overlord Dave McClure was originally published on Reuters.

I bring you the top 10 tech trends for 2011:

1. (Way too many) Groupons, social games and photo-sharing apps

Unimaginative VCs — which is to say, all of us — tend to start the new year off throwing good money after bad on last year’s tired and expired ideas. 2011 will be no exception for “innovation imitation” with more group-buying ecommerce plays, more social game startups, and yet even more ways to do photo-sharing on Facebook and Twitter, now new and improved with 37 shades of yellow-gray filters. Bah humbug. My first easy and obvious prediction is that VCs will waste a ton of money chasing hundreds of new “me-too” startup ideas. Nothing new here Kmart shoppers… let’s move along.

2. Commerce and coupons for location-based services (LBS), aka “The $5 check-in”

While there have been a “bajillion” startups pitching “check-ins” and location-based services in 2010, I really believe 2011 is the year we see this category finally get some legs and take off. Why? Because companies are finally starting to provide discounts and coupons to customers via mobile devices. And once the affiliate market develops for exchanging location and profile data, we should see more people adopting check-in behavior to qualify for discounts and loyalty programs for their favorite online services. As I wrote earlier this year in a post called “Check-ins are coupons”, once financial incentives are combined with existing game mechanics, we’ll start seeing mainstream usage for services like Foursquare and Facebook Places. Going forward we will see an explosion of LBS innovation after Google, Facebook, and other platforms begin pushing revenue incentives for apps that facilitate location data.

3. Crowdsourcing: The Web-enabled mass assembly line

The Internet is a great platform for distribution, but now you can use it to reach not only customers, but also workers — it’s called crowdsourcing. While Amazon Mechanical Turk has been around for a few years enabling access to thousands of remote workers, new startups like Crowdflower (disclosure: I’m an investor) offer platforms for managing the distribution of small, specific tasks to a large and scalable workforce around the world.  By combining the Web with an “on-demand” workforce companies can grow rapidly, remixing both digital and human to weave an entirely new fabric of business services.

4. URLs for IRL: enabling the Internet of “things”

Yet another innovation around integration: the offline world is quickly becoming stapled into the future by combining physical representations with digital ones. Imagine if everything you touched, held, or viewed in real life became a separate online addressable entity… kind of like slapping a sticker with a URL onto anything and connecting it to the Web. Not quite cyberspace, rather this augmented reality is how we are building out the real world online, and subsequently can deliver benefits of identification, indexing, categorization, discovery, and location to the offline world. This new and enhanced Internet enables offline discovery and navigation of many previously hidden real-world resources.

5. The Emergence of global languages and geographic arbitrage

Current estimates suggest more that two billion people around the world use the Internet via PCs, and including mobile phones perhaps three billion people are online, or around half the entire population of the earth. As shown by this infographic, English and Mandarin dominate the online conversation with close to 500 million speakers online and more than a billion offline. Also growing in online influence: Spanish, Arabic, Hindi, and Portuguese. What’s interesting is that these languages also seem poised to drive cultural trends globally. Looking at average GDP and Internet penetration by language, we can map out a geographic playbook for any Internet startup to prioritize how they lay the online smackdown on the planet, and use geographic arbitrage to move the point of innovation, production, and transaction to optimal locations.

6. YouTube killed the video star: Distribution and monetization of online video

After years of free online video via YouTube, you’d think it’s impossible for anyone to make money online. But on the contrary: Apple, Netflix, and Hulu are laughing all the way to the bank, and even YouTube itself is rumored to be close to break-even. Massive distribution and monetization platforms are now a reality for online video, which should translate into tremendous opportunities for startups. Expect more innovation and development to come in the future, particularly as millions of iPad and other tablet devices become more common mainstream. Here’s lookin’ at you, kid.

7. More iPads, iPhones, iOs Apps and more Android on the way

Apple continues to be an irresistible force of nature when it comes to consumer computing devices and application platforms. Bloggers are already arguing whether Apple will “only” ship 45 million iPads in 2011, or whether they’ll exceed 50-60 million units. Nice problem to have for a product that’s barely a year old, eh? At the same time Android devices are growing in popularity, and seem likely to compete effectively with Apple for mobile application dominance. Regardless, both platforms will be driving huge amounts of user and developer activity, and the future couldn’t look brighter for startups focused on mobile apps and services.

8. Design is the new black: The growing importance of user experience and design

Along with Apple’s success — or perhaps because of it — design has become a critical skill for startups. Apple-fanatic obsession with simplicity and user experience has also become a priority for consumer-focused startups in particular. The most notable example of this is one of my former portfolio companies, Mint.com, acquired by Intuit in 2009. As with Apple, the Mint team had a never-ending passion for design and UX (user experience), and many people attribute much of Mint’s successes to their unique and compelling Web design. I expect the design trend to continue and even accelerate; look for growing and continuing investment in design-driven and UX-driven products.

9. Family 2.0: Apps for kids and grandmas

Better design and better user experience has made it easier for new audiences to start using the Web, particularly the young and the old. My kids – now 3 and 5 – have become big fans of using the iPhone and iPad, and when I watch them their experience is so natural and easy. They never had to read a manual, they just started touching and swiping and pinching – it was magical. But while kids have become easy and eager adopters of these devices, there remains quite a large amount of education content and apps to deliver. And not just for kids, but also for older folks too. More seniors are also getting on board with new devices, so expect a growing market for users of all ages.

10. Facebook is dead. Long live Facebook.

Some folks continue to complain that Facebook is overvalued, or Facebook has jumped the shark, or Facebook app development is challenging and the rules change constantly. To these folks I say: stop whining, get over yourselves, and get to work. Facebook is an unstoppable juggernaut that is dominating our online experience. While Twitter certainly has grown by leaps and bounds, it’s impossible to ignore how significant Facebook has become as a familiar and frequent online environment… for everyone. And generally, this is a good thing. While the idiosyncrasies of the Facebook platform change all the time, it’s worth the effort. And regardless of whether you’re building games or productivity, there is no question that enabling access and distribution through the Facebook ecosystem is a positive benefit for both developers and users. Expect more Facebook Connect and “like” buttons popping up in a neighborhood near you.

via : http://blog.500startups.com/

The Emerging Online Giants

Internet investment's new champions

DST, Naspers and Tencent have made promising internet investments in many emerging markets. Now even Western internet financiers are emulating them

THEY may not have the name recognition of a Google or a Yahoo!, but they can claim to belong in the same league. The websites of Digital Sky Technologies (DST) account for more than 70% of page-views on the Russian-language internet. Naspers is Africa’s biggest media group, both offline and online. And Tencent is China’s largest internet company by market capitalisation—and the third-largest in the world.

Now these firms are increasingly making their presence felt beyond their home markets. Between them they have invested in dozens of internet firms around the globe. The most adventurous of the three, DST, has already moved west—and paid top dollar for stakes in fast-growing American companies, notably Facebook, the world’s biggest social network.

At first glance the three firms could not look more different. DST was created in 2005 when two Russian internet investors, Yuri Milner and Gregory Finger, pooled their interests in mail.ru, a Russian web portal. Today the firm controls many of the country’s leading websites and boasts an interesting mix of owners, including Goldman Sachs and Alisher Usmanov, a Russian billionaire, who holds 27%.

Based in Cape Town, Naspers is nearly 100 years old and is the publisher of the Daily Sun, South Africa’s biggest newspaper. But it is one of the most ambitious old-media companies anywhere in its move online. It still makes most of its sales—28 billion rand ($3.6 billion) in the year to March—from print and pay-television, but it uses the cash to buy online firms.

Tencent hails from Shenzhen, near Hong Kong. Founded in 1998, it had revenues of $1.8 billion in 2009. Although best known for QQ, a popular instant-messaging service with 567m users, much of its profits come from online games and a virtual currency, called Q coins. Users purchase this with real money and use it to buy digital wares, such as virtual weapons to increase the powers of their avatars.

Despite their differences, the three firms can be seen as a block. For one thing, they are financially intertwined. Naspers owns part of mail.ru and was an early investor in Tencent, of which it now holds 35%. In April Tencent invested $300m in DST, giving it a stake of more than 10% and DST a valuation of about $3 billion. Tencent also has an interest in the Indian arm of MIH, Naspers’s internet division.

What is more, the firms are on the same mission: finding promising internet companies in countries where Western investors rarely dare to go. DST’s territories are Russia and its neighbours, most of which are home to one of its collection of companies; these include social networks such as VKontakte.ru and Nasza-Klasa.pl. Naspers has the largest portfolio of internet firms in developing countries, for instance in Brazil (BuscaPé, a comparison-shopping site), India (ibibo, a social network) and at home in South Africa (24.com, a portal). Tencent has so far been the most cautious of the three. Besides its recent investment in DST it has some minority stakes in games companies, such as VinaGame in Vietnam.

This international presence allows the firms to apply lessons they have learned in one country to another. “We spend an enormous amount of time on sharing knowledge,” says Antoine Roux, the boss of MIH. For its part, DST knows which web businesses work and how much room for growth they still have, given a country’s GDP and internet penetration. Alexander Tamas, a partner at DST, calls this “geographical arbitrage”.

In Russia DST has seen how quickly social networks can grow: latecomers to the internet, many Russians skipped e-mail and went right to social networks to communicate online. With advertising roubles in short supply, DST’s companies also experimented early with other ways of making money from social networks and online games, such as charging for services and selling virtual goods. In December it merged mail.ru with Astrum Online, a gaming firm—in effect forming a Russian Tencent. Free communication tools such as instant messaging create the audience that then pays for other services and virtual goods, Mr Tamas explains.


Tomorrow, the world

It was only a question of time before one of the three firms tried to apply these emerging-market lessons in the West. DST has been the pioneer, for several reasons. Its partners learned their trade in America. It intends to go public one day. And it saw an opportunity: after the financial crisis, conventional investors were cautious and did not fully realise how fast social networks, for instance, would grow.

One further factor was essential in helping DST to gatecrash the party of the handful of private-equity funds, such as Elevation Partners, TCV and Silver Lake Partners, which typically provide successful American internet firms with additional cash. DST’s corporate structure allows it to act quickly, and to make offers that are hard to refuse. In the case of Facebook, it agreed to what at the time seemed a high valuation, waived any right to special treatment should things go wrong and was willing to buy stock from employees. That is especially popular with young internet firms. It allows founders and key employees to make money without having to sell the company or go public prematurely. “This is an IPO substitute,” explains Mr Milner, adding that DST’s investments give firms more time to focus on their product rather than thinking about a flotation.

Will DST’s strategy work? Buying into Facebook certainly looks like a smart move. DST has spent an estimated $800m for a stake of about 10%. When Elevation Partners recently invested $120m in Facebook, that deal put the company’s value at $23 billion, implying that DST’s investment has almost trebled.

In contrast, analysts say, DST may have overpaid for Zynga, the world’s largest online-gaming service, and for Groupon, a website that aggregates buyers and gets them special deals. Yet sceptics may again underestimate how quickly both can grow and what Zynga, for instance, is worth in combination with Facebook: taken together they look much like Tencent. In May, after lengthy negotiations, both firms agreed that Facebook Credits, the social network’s currency, would be accepted in Zynga’s games.

A bigger problem for DST may be that some see it as Russian—and thus “murky”. To counter this the firm has gone to great lengths to be open, inviting executives from firms in which it wanted to invest to Moscow to look at its books. The success of this strategy is demonstrated by the quality of its recent deals and its co-investors, which include such noted venture-capital firms as Accel Partners and Andreessen Horowitz. Even so, DST’s national origin could still matter as the firm makes further investments. Authorities in Washington, dc, are reportedly worried about DST’s latest acquisition: ICQ, an instant-messaging service previously owned by AOL.

However DST fares, it seems to attract copycats. Before Elevation Partners invested in Facebook, it had already cut what is now called a “DST deal” with Yelp, a fast-growing user-review site for local businesses. And although Naspers does not intend to make any investments in Western countries, Tencent may follow DST in doing so. Martin Lau, Tencent’s president, recently said it would step up its forays abroad—which has led to talk that it may be interested in buying Yahoo!.

Conversely, the apparent success of the three emerging-market internet pioneers may prompt Western venture firms to take more interest in developing countries. Tiger Global Management, a New York hedge fund that is also a shareholder in DST, has already specialised in investing in start-ups beyond the West’s well-known technology clusters. Clearly, internet investing is going global and the West is losing its monopoly, not just in thinking up clever ideas for web businesses but in financing them.

via : The Economist - http://www.economist.com/node/16539424

Congrats to the appnexus crew...

Realtime ad bidding network AppNexus today announced that it raised $50 million in a Series C financing. Investors include Microsoft, Venrock, Kodiak Venture Partners and First Round Capital. The round brings the total capital raised by AppNexus since its founding to $65.5 million. The company first raised an angel round in 2007 from Ron Conway, Marc Andreesen, Ben Horowitz, Khosla Ventures, and First Round Capital. AppNexus is based in New York City, and was founded by Brian O’Kelley, who was also a co-founder of Right Media. (Yahoo purchased Right Media in 2007 for about $700 million). AppNexus calls itself a realtime bidding platform for advertisers. It allows advertisers to bid for display ad spots across the Internet through 15 different ad networks. Advertisers can optimize for cost-per-clicks, cost-per-impressions, and other metrics.

Big Money Bet on Display Ad Tech

Tens of millions of dollars in venture capital flows into ad technology

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The banner ad is the Web's original advertising format, but many have viewed it as a disappointment. Prices for display ads quickly tumbled, and marketers fell in love with targeted search options. That's not to say display units are on their way out. On the contrary, tens of millions of dollars in venture capital is flowing into ad technology. Investors are betting that a market the Interactive Advertising Bureau pegged at $8 billion in 2009 can quickly grow five times or more with the help of better machinery. (See also: "Display Ads Aim for a Banner Year.")  "If you take the logic behind targeting to the extreme, it's all about discovering hidden tier-one inventory," said Terence Kawaja, managing director of GCA Savvian Advisors. "There's a lot of inefficiency in inventory pricing." Inventory aggregator AdMeld is the latest company to benefit from this belief, closing a $15 million Series C round of funding that brings its backing to $30 million. Norwest Venture Partners led the round, which included AdMeld's previous VCs as well as a strategic backing from Time Warner Investments.
 
AdMeld operates a tech platform that publishers use to maximize the amount of money they make from display ads. Publishers like Discovery, Fox News, Reuters and Pandora use its yield-optimization software to determine how best to package display ad inventory for audience-based buys. "It's a huge market no matter how you slice it," said Michael Barrett, AdMeld's CEO. "It's a market that's growing. There's a very clear problem that appears to be able to be solved through technology." Currently, online publishers have two classes of ad inventory that are defined not by crunching data but by how they are sold. The top tier is what its sales force sells; the remnant is the rest that's unloaded through resellers, typically ad networks. The advent of audience-targeted real-time buying systems, whether ad exchanges like those operated by Google and Yahoo or inventory aggregators like AdMeld, promises a bigger market by matching advertisers to the specific audience they want. That would get the online world closer to its promise of matching the right ad to the right person at the right time. That's led to a flood of investment in the many players building this new display ad architecture. AdMeld competitor The Rubicon Project has raised $42 million. Several demand-side platforms have received venture funding, most recently Triggit with a $4.2 million round. The hope is an exit like Invite Media, which Google bought for a reported $81 million. A leading player in data is expected to close a significant funding round this week. The result is a crowded market. Kawaja has a slide that illustrates the point, showing more than 50 intermediaries between the ad buyer and publisher. Ad-buying transactions are not as complex as might be thought through such a slide, Barrett said, but there is clearly a need for fewer players. "The market will contract more the next 12 months," he said. "The leaders will separate from the rest of the pack."
The vast amount of investment going into new technology should pay off with a larger market, Kawaja said. Neal Mohan, the vp of product management at Google who leads its display ad efforts, believes the display ad market could be five times the size it is today, if the system for buying ads was more efficient and the performance measurement was better. "It can be done, frankly, a lot better than it is today," Mohan said, noting Google now has "hundreds" of engineers working on display advertising technology. The hope is the lessons learned in targeting and efficiently processing banner ads can be used in other media as they digitize. There are already video exchanges popping up, and Interpublic Group trading desk Cadreon recently said it's begun buying cable TV ads through a partnership with Visible World, an addressable TV system. "All the innovations are taking place in the online world, but one could see them applying to much larger budgets," Mohan said.

The Poor, Pilloried Tech IPO

A decade ago, tech IPOs ruled the stock markets and Silicon Valley. They were the end-all and be-all for ambitious entrepreneurs and venture capitalists looking to become instant billionaires, or at least millionaires. That was many booms and busts ago. The IPO market never came back, and the multiple financial meltdowns which brought on Sarbanes-Oxley and other regulations made going public even less appealing to shoot-from-the-hip entrepreneurs. The founders of the most successful tech companies today—Facebook, Skype, LinkedIn—are pushing off the inevitable IPO for as long as possible. And for smaller tech companies, IPOs seem hardly worth the bother.

And those companies which are going public simply are not the cream of the crop. IPO returns across all sectors this year are down 3 percent, according to Renaissance Capital.  And over the past three years, IPO returns are basically tracking the S&P 500, which hardly justifies the added risk of investing in them.

Even venture capitalists are souring on IPOs. In a post this morning titled “IPOs Just Aren’t What They Used To Be,” Fred Wilson laments: The cost is just too high and the benefits are just too low for most companies these days.

Wilson shares two anecdotes. One was of a startup which prepared to go public, but couldn’t and was still stuck with a $3.5 million bill it couldn’t afford. The other was of a “successful” tech IPO which raised $75 million, but gave the company a lower valuation than it might have gotten in a “late stage private financing.” (He doesn’t name either company). In his opinion, “only the very best companies” should attempt an IPO: The exit of choice for most startups, he suggests, is selling to a larger company.

And that describes exactly the market today, where the best possible exit for most startups is to be acquired by Google, Microsoft, or (more recently) Apple. And instead of going public, the best tech startups like Facebook, Zynga, and Groupn are getting early payouts for founders and employees via late-stage, private DST-type financings.

But limiting exits to M&A might not be the best thing for venture returns. At TechCrunch Disrupt, technology banker Frank Quattrone argued: “For the VC market to produce above average returns you need there to be an IPO market.” An important part of venture returns come from holding onto some shares after an IPO and riding the public markets a while. “If you lose those longtail returns you lose a lot of the returns,” he concluded.

Quattrone seems to think this problem will be solved when the new standard bearers of the Web decide to go public, as opposed to the lackluster offerings so far:

There are probably 40 to 45 IPOs on file. They are not the category-defining, earthshaking companies the market wants to see. The market wants to see Facebook, Twitter, Zynga, LinkedIn, Skype. They want to see the companies that are changing the way we live.

I’m not sure a few iconic IPOs will bring back the Netscape years. First of all, it might still be a couple years before we see a Facebook IPO, and even longer for a Twitter IPO. But even if and when those kinds of tech companies do go public, the IPO option for lesser startups will remain limited for the reasons Wilson outlines. Unless, of course, a Facebook IPO makes public investors irrational once again and we get another bubble. But nobody wants that, or do they?

Europe's tech entrepreneurs- Blooming- The Economist

MENTION the name of a big European technology firm in Silicon Valley and chances are the reaction will be a mixture of pity and disparagement. SAP, the German software heavyweight? Past its prime. Finland’s Nokia, the world’s biggest maker of handsets? Missed the boat on smart-phones. Ericsson, of Sweden, the leading vendor of gear for mobile networks? Clobbered by the Chinese. Turn the conversation to start-ups, though, and ears prick up. When will Spotify, a popular London-based online music service, be available in America? Why did Playfish, whose online games attract tens of millions, sell out to Electronic Arts, an American giant? And what will happen to Skype, whose software handles nearly 10% of international telephone calls, after its divorce from eBay, an online auctioneer? Californians’ interest is most piqued by a French company, vente-privee.com, the pioneer of “private flash sales”: members—and members only—can pounce when told they have a few days to buy this Prada bag or that Dior perfume at a discount of up to 70%. This year the firm’s revenues are expected to reach €850m ($1 billion), a quarter more than the previous year. It already has dozens of imitators. Even Silicon Valley entrepreneurs have been heard saying they would like to do something “like vente-privee”. In the tech heartland, this is the ultimate compliment. You may joke that America is at last discovering Europe. But that reflects a change in European entrepreneurial potential more than in American attitudes. In recent years, a lively environment for young companies has emerged in Europe, complete with serial entrepreneurs, experienced venture capitalists and the necessary supporting infrastructure, such as law firms and PR agencies. And it is most visible where Europe has been considered weakest: the internet and other parts of the information-technology industry. Granted, it is not yet clear whether Europe’s tech industries will become big enough to do the things that its entrepreneurs, venture capitalists and policymakers dream of: not just producing brilliant ideas, but turning them into lucrative commercial reality; creating a lot of jobs; and yielding the sorts of innovations that revolutionise old industries and spawn new ones. Nevertheless, the change is palpable. Hermann Hauser, co-founder of Amadeus Capital Partners, a pioneer of Europe’s venture capital (VC) industry, says that a dozen years ago most of the start-ups his firm financed were led by first-time entrepreneurs. Amadeus, based in Cambridge, had a hard time finding like-minded venture capitalists. Today 70% of the chief executives are repeat entrepreneurs, and there are enough good venture capitalists around to team up on financing. “The progress has been spectacular,” he says, “particularly in Cambridge.”

Other places are blooming too. Europe has a collection of specialised clusters—a bit like Silicon Valley, but spread over a much bigger area. Cambridge resembles Santa Clara, where many big chipmakers are based. For London read Sand Hill Road, the place with the densest concentration of venture capitalists. Berlin is reminiscent of South of Market in San Francisco, the preferred habitat of more artsy start-ups.


Strength in diversity

Europe’s diversity may once have been a disadvantage, a clash of cultures and languages rather than a healthy mix of skills. Now firms have learned to exploit it and providers of capital see it as a strength too. “People from different countries are good in particular roles. Germans tend to excel at business development, Russians at developing software, the French at user interfaces,” says Danny Rimer, who established the London office of Index Ventures, a VC firm. As the internet becomes less dominated by American tastes, he adds, European skills, for instance in design and branding, are becoming more valuable. Kristian Segerstrale, co-founder of Playfish, sees a further advantage in Europe’s diversity. “When you have to be international from day one, you build your business in a way that later allows you to exploit a truly global market such as the internet.” Mr Segerstrale is Finnish; the other founder, Sebastien de Halleux, is Belgian. Product development is spread evenly across studios in America, Britain, China and Norway. The games themselves are hosted on computers in America.

At Playfish, it may even seem that the idea of a “European” start-up has lost much of its meaning. The same goes for Plastic Logic, which has developed a high-end e-reader meant to replace paper. It is run from Cambridge, but marketing is based in Silicon Valley, much of the software is developed in India and manufacturing is done in Dresden as well as China. “Without videoconferencing and other online collaboration tools, such a structure wouldn’t work. Being attuned to cultural differences, Europeans are better at working in this environment,” says Richard Archuleta, the company’s (American) boss. A further sign of Europe’s new liveliness is Seedcamp, a programme to train entrepreneurs set up by Saul Klein, a partner at Index Ventures. The list of its events this year reads like a modern Grand Tour: Barcelona, Berlin, Copenhagen, Prague, Zagreb. In recent years both the continent’s leading technology conferences, LeWeb in Paris and Digital, Life, Design in Munich, have become networking fests every bit as animated as their American equivalents. The halls are packed with venture capitalists looking for deals, entrepreneurs explaining their business plans and representatives from big companies trying to make sense of it all. When Loïc Le Meur, a French entrepreneur, started LeWeb in 2005, it attracted only 250 participants and most speakers were American. Last December ten times as many came and on the stage were plenty of Europeans, including Marten Mickos of MySQL, a maker of databases now owned by Oracle, a software giant, Marc Simoncini, founder of meetic.com, Europe’s largest dating site, and Niklas Zennstrom, who started Skype. “There are now enough success stories. You no longer have to defend yourself for being an entrepreneur,” says Mr Le Meur. Some successful entrepreneurs have become “angel investors”: rich individuals who put money into start-ups in their early stages. Mr Simoncini has earmarked €100m of his fortune for this. Others include Lukasz Gadowski, founder of Spreadshirt, a shopping site, and Brent Hoberman, co-founder of lastminute.com, a travel site, who is a partner in PROfounders, an early-stage investment firm. In March Mr Zennstrom said he had raised $165m for his new VC firm, Atomico Ventures. All of them explain their enthusiasm by remarking that established VC outfits have virtually abandoned early-stage firms. “When it took us more than a year to get financing for Skype, we knew what line of business we eventually had to get into,” says Mr Zennstrom. Yet those older VC firms, most of them based in London, have not stood still. Some of the funds set up by big American firms in the early 2000s have stayed and thrived, notably the subsidiary of Accel Partners, which has invested in 42 European start-ups. “Silicon Valley no longer has the monopoly in innovation,” says Kevin Comolli, the managing partner.

There is even a handful of European VC firms of a similar scale to American ones, with both the capital and the expertise to take start-ups global. These include Mr Hauser’s Amadeus, Northzone Ventures, Wellington Partners and Index Ventures, perhaps the leading European fund in internet investments. It has funded several of the continent’s most successful start-ups, notably Skype, MySQL and Last.fm, an online music service.

Despite all this excitement, Europe’s tech breeding ground is still much smaller than Silicon Valley’s: in 2009 young European companies received €2.2 billion in seed and start-up capital (see chart 1), less than their American peers were given in the first quarter of this year alone. Europe lags behind Silicon Valley largely because it started much later and from a much lower base. For entrepreneurship to thrive, several specific conditions must be in place. “It’s like a biological cell where everything depends on everything else,” says Jeff Skinner, executive director of the Institute of Innovation and Entrepreneurship at London Business School.


A tortoise stirs

There are at least half a dozen reasons for Europe’s slow and halting start, and they all still ring true to varying degrees. Top of the list are entrepreneurs themselves. Europe has never been short of talented people with good ideas, yet its entrepreneurs seem more interested in making products than making money; they take fewer risks and appear to be less driven—and maybe less greedy. American VCs in Europe chuckle when they tell of employees of start-ups who had to be talked into taking equity stakes or stock options.Doubtless this has much to do with Europeans’ preferences, but it surely reflects incentives too. In Europe starting your own company has long carried higher risks and lower rewards than across the Atlantic. In America, a failed start-up tends to be a badge of honour; in Europe, it often spells professional death. In some countries, the law prevents anyone who has gone bankrupt from running a company again. At the same time, taxes make shares and options much less attractive than a good salary. In Germany, for instance, any equity stake is taxed immediately. Second, Europe is more fragmented. In Silicon Valley meetings may be a car ride away; Europe’s tech entrepreneurs are likelier to board an aeroplane. More important, unlike American start-ups, European ones do not have the benefit of a huge homogeneous market that allows them to grow quickly. This is in spite of the European Union’s efforts to establish a single market among its members.

Third, European entrepreneurs must still contend with thick red tape. In Spain, for instance, labour law makes it “difficult to experiment”, in the words of Martin Varsavsky, founder of FON, based in Madrid, which has knitted a global network of Wi-Fi base stations. Firing is expensive, because of compulsory severance payments. Younger employees with fresher skills are the first to go because of seniority rules. Equally inhibiting, says Mr Varsavsky, is the difficulty of getting work permits for employees from non-EU countries. In contrast, most start-ups in Silicon Valley are run by immigrants, mainly from China and India, but also Europe. Fourth, the paucity of successful start-ups left Europe short not only of VC but also, more important, of the expertise that ideally comes with the money. In America, university endowments and other institutions with an interest in technology provide the VC industry with its financial foundation. Europe’s pool of capital available from such investors is about 8% of America’s, estimates Thomas Meyer of the European Private Equity and Venture Capital Association (EVCA).

Success breeds success: many American venture capitalists have run start-ups themselves. European ones tend to be bankers and lawyers with little operational experience and less appetite for risk. That is why they have focused on more mature companies rather than on young start-ups. Even there, they have done less well than their American colleagues. And it is why Europe’s new angels are determined to focus on infant firms.

Fifth, European consumers are little help. They are much less “venturesome” than Americans, to borrow a term from Amar Bhidé, a visiting scholar at Harvard University. Big American cities in particular contain a critical mass of early adopters eager to try new online services such as Twitter or Foursquare. Many Europeans still shy away from online shopping because they are afraid that their payment information could be intercepted. Finally, timing has been unkind. The European tech business started growing decades later than America’s, and first really got going only in the late 1990s—just in time for the bursting of the internet bubble. Entrepreneurial networks disintegrated, venture capitalists stopped funding infant companies, and the media ridiculed anything to do with the internet.


Weeding and fertiliser still required

Europe has gone some way to overcoming these difficulties. According to an index compiled by the OECD, establishing a company has become easier (see chart 2). Perhaps surprisingly, some European countries score better than America. But America’s mark is dented by the lack of competition in its network industries, such as telecommunications and utilities. Regulation in Europe remains more onerous than in the United States. Bureaucracy is not European entrepreneurs’ only grumble. These days their biggest gripe is about finding the right employees. “It sometimes is a challenge to get people to move from Cambridge to Bristol [150 miles, or 240km],” jokes Stan Boland, boss of Icera, a maker of radio chips for mobile devices. “Europe lacks this mixture of technology and business acumen. People mostly stay in their silos,” says Stephan Uhrenbacher, founder of Qype, a website for user reviews of local services. Despite the strides Europe has made, it has produced few world leaders—and certainly no equivalent of Google or Facebook. European start-ups tend to sell themselves early and mostly to American firms. Last.fm was bought for $280m by CBS; Electronic Arts paid $400m for Playfish. Amazon is said to be willing to fork out $3 billion for vente-privee. For this there are several possible explanations. Many venture capitalists cite a lack of “exit options”. Only a few European start-ups can hope for a big flotation at home. No stockmarket in Europe is a match for the NASDAQ, where most American technology companies are listed. In addition, Europe’s big IT firms still mostly prefer to develop new technology themselves rather than buy it. Europe also lacks executives with the experience to turn a start-up into a big company, says Hussein Kanji, formerly of Accel’s European branch, who is now raising capital for a new early-stage venture fund.

It is tempting to wonder what governments might do to help. The answer may be: not all that much. “You cannot build an ecosystem, you have to grow it,” says Mr Skinner of the London Business School. Simon Levene, formerly of Accel Partners Europe, adds: “These things take time. Europe is now where Silicon Valley was in the early 1990s.”

Still, government intervention has helped IT industries in the past. Without it, Silicon Valley might not be what it is today, argues Josh Lerner, a professor at Harvard Business School. Particularly in its early days, he says, public funding played a key role. In Israel, which has several thriving high-tech firms, the state also helped, mainly by jump-starting a VC industry.

Europe has all kinds of programmes to inject public money into VC. The European Investment Bank and the EU jointly own the European Investment Fund, a “fund of funds” placing money with other funds rather than directly in start-ups, which by the end of 2009 had invested €4.1 billion. Some national governments have been even more generous. In France, citizens get all kinds of tax breaks for investing in VC funds or directly in start-ups. Among other things, they can cut their wealth tax by up to 75% if they invest an equivalent amount. Not surprisingly, France has plenty of VC: nearly €2 billion was thus raised last year. State programmes do leave a mark. Bristol, in the west of England, would not be home to so many semiconductor companies had the government not poured tens of millions of pounds into a chipmaker a few years ago. The firm was a financial disaster, but spawned several start-ups. Yet this shows that a lot of money is wasted along the way. In France a good slice goes to big banks and insurers, which operate most funds and charge hefty fees: on average, 38% of the initial investment over eight years, according to a report by the French finance ministry. Public funding tends also to distort the market, being loaded with political objectives and preferences for certain technologies, as the EVCA noted recently. Worse, despite high hopes, private money did not follow the public lead and, in the wake of the credit crunch, is even leaving the market. The EVCA said that Europe’s VC industry was “in deep crisis” and that a new regulation debated in Brussels would make life even harder by burdening funds with “punitive disclosure requirements”. Still, the high-tech industry has moved up the political agenda, notably in Brussels. The EU now has an innovation commissioner, Maire Geoghegan-Quinn. She heads a group of commissioners which, this autumn, is to produce a “research and innovation plan” to make life easier for European technology start-ups. If history is any guide, the commission will mainly suggest throwing more public money at innovation, fears Ann Mettler, executive director of the Lisbon Council, a Brussels think-tank. To keep up with America and Asia, she says, Europe instead has to become more adventurous: entrepreneurs and venture capitalists must take more risks, politicians stop protecting vested interests, incumbent companies be open to experiment and consumers try more new things. The much-needed cultural revolution in Europe’s tech industries is not yet complete.