Premier league?

E-​​consultancy reports that Prime Minister Tony Blair paid a visit to Silicon Valley on Sunday:

Hopefully the PM will have left with some ideas about how to create an envir­on­ment in which dotcom and tech start-​​ups can flourish here in the UK.

The visit saw Blair urged to set up his own blog, as well to change atti­tudes to failure in business.

“In the US and espe­cially in Silicon Valley, if you have taken a risk and you fail, you in fact become more inter­esting and poten­tially more valuable because now you know some­thing,” said Sun Microsystems’ Jonathan Schwartz.

“Frankly, if you hop over the pond (to Europe) you end up with a very, very dif­ferent per­cep­tion of risk and how risk should be viewed.”

I think it’s worth drawing a clear dis­tinc­tion between those putting their live­li­hoods on the line to run a new business and the insti­tu­tions that are (or aren’t) backing them. I’d like to wave the flag (though not rattle the sabre) a little and point the authors to JigsawUK, a wiki detailing dozens of UK internet, mobile and tech­no­logy startups, some of which I’ve had the priv­ilege of talking to recently.

I’d say that the main dif­fer­ence is not that we don’t have a climate of innov­a­tion and the will­ing­ness to have a go, what we lack is a risk-​​taking invest­ment com­munity. Go to your UK bank and tell them you want £50K for a Web 2.0 startup and I’m not at all positive they won’t call security, as opposed to offering up the millions that one hears about US-​​based startups receiving every week to all sorts of com­panies.

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9 comments to Premier league?

  • You’re abso­lutely right Ian and it’s not just banks! I’m fairly close to the London business angel com­munity at the moment thanks to the ‘Creative Business Accelerator’ run by the London Business Angel network and my exper­i­ence is that the ste­reo­type of the British business angel as retired, male, grey-​​haired and largely risk-​​averse is quite accurate and does not sit well with the Web 2.0 startup com­munity and our needs for a tech-​​savvy invest­ment com­munity such as can be found in Silicon Valley.

    That having been said, I would also point out that perhaps we are in somewhat of a catch-​​22 in the UK. In order to launch, fund, grow and exit from a high-​​risk, high-​​growth Web 2.0 startup venture (many of which across the pond do not have revenue models) you must typ­ic­ally be highly motiv­ated for a trade sale exit. With less ‘activity’ in the Web 2.0 space over here, there is less per­ceived oppor­tunity for ‘enter­taining’ such a sale with the big poten­tial buyers, most of which are HQ’d in the States. Let’s hope all that is changing gradually.

    Having said all that, counter-​​intuitively I would also argue all that works in our favour. The US have a huge market of their own and are often reticent to cross the pond to Europe before gaining a major foothold over there (wisely). This gives the UK a tre­mendous advantage of a pro­tected market which can be lever­aged by the right opportunity.

  • Really valuable input, David.

    Cons: very low chance of invest­ment from most avail­able sources till you’re already proven.

    Pros: greater access to a market that isn’t being pandered to overseas.

    That could poten­tially mean more long-​​term success for UK Web 2.0 startups, and cer­tainly far less hype! You may not get the group hugs from the news sites, but will that really create suc­cessful businesses?

  • Hi Ian,

    Your point is well made and all too familiar (sadly).

    In regards to the same issue, NESTA’s new chief exec has just issued an inter­esting state­ment — Business support vital to bridging “equity gap” — that I’ve just posted about.

    Best,
    Deirdre

  • Thanks for the comment and bringing your blog to my atten­tion, Deidre. Love your latest headline!! ;) As one of the biggest incub­ators in the UK, post-​​bubble, it’s good to hear more about NESTA. I lost touch once FutureLab split from them.

  • Thanks Ian, i just stumbled upon your blog thanks to the good workings of Technorati. Perhaps Technorati should also be factored into NESTA’s ‘business support’ equation… no I mean really!

    As for Tony Blair blogging, that’s a definite “no comments” scenario ;-)

  • I think Private Eye’s parish news­letter already fills the post, eh?

    No RSS feed on NMK?? :(

  • I’ve been wanting RSS for over a year now, but we are a not-​​for-​​profit organ­isa­tion and making further enhance­ments /​ addi­tions to the NMK site’s func­tion­ality is very expensive and resource-​​intensive for us (but other things, like our range of events, have been getting better). It will happen eventually.…

  • I agree. The UK will be a slower, less hyped and more stable market compared to the US. We will focus more on proper business prin­ciples and as a result will have a lot of medium term ‘strong’ web per­formers but will be unlikely to fuel the next Google (and also there­fore WebVan!). Large gen­er­al­isa­tions but you get the point.

  • @Deidre,

    Here is a bodged work­around to creating a feed for latest articles that may help. I am so busy this morning, but can’t resist a chal­lenge. I made it here: http://www.wotzwot.com/rssxl.php

    http://tinyurl.com/jyw8h

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