Description
During this file with regards to entrepreneurial ecosystems around the globe and company growth dynamics.
Entrepreneurial
Ecosystems Around the
Globe and Company
Growth Dynamics
September 2013
Report Summary for the Annual Meeting of the New Champions 2013
Industry Agenda
AMNC13_Entrepreneurial_Ecosystems.indd 1 04.09.13 09:01
© World Economic Forum
2013 - All rights reserved.
No part of this publication may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means,
including photocopying and recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system.
The views expressed are those of certain participants in the discussion and do not necessarily
re?ect the views of all participants or of the World Economic Forum.
REF 030913
Stanford University Team:
George Foster and Carlos Shimizu [Project Leaders],
Steve Ciesinski, Antonio Davila, Syed Zahoor Hassan, Ning Jia, Sandy Plunkett
Ernst & Young Team:
Maria Pinelli, John Cunningham, Rebecca Hiscock-Croft, Michelle McLenithan
Endeavor Team:
Linda Rottenberg, Rhett Morris
Project Editor:
Diane Lee, Stanford University
AMNC13_Entrepreneurial_Ecosystems.indd 2 04.09.13 09:01
3 Entrepreneurial Ecosystems Around the Globe and Company Growth Dynamics
Contents
4 Executive Summary
6 Section 1: Focus of the Report and
Information Sources Underlying
the Analysis
9 Section 2: Entrepreneurial
Ecosystem Differences around the
Globe as Perceived by
Entrepreneurs
11 Section 3: The Relative Importance
of Entrepreneurial Ecosystem
Pillars to Entrepreneurs: The Big
Three of Accessible Markets,
Human Capital and Funding &
Finance
14 Section 4: Company Growth
Accelerators and Growth
Challenges for Early-stage
Companies around the Globe
20 Section 5: Large Companies as
Leverage for Early-stage
Companies: Navigating through
the Pitfalls
22 Section 6: The Growth of
Entrepreneurial Ecosystems:
Lessons from Buenos Aires and
Istanbul
24 Section 7: The Role of Government
and Regulatory Policies in
Entrepreneurial Ecosystems:
Growth Accelerators or Growth
Inhibitors?
28 Appendices
29 Executive Case Study – Capillary
34 Illustrative Executive Cases
AMNC13_Entrepreneurial_Ecosystems.indd 3 04.09.13 09:01
Executive Summary
AMNC13_Entrepreneurial_Ecosystems.indd 4 04.09.13 09:01
5 Entrepreneurial Ecosystems Around the Globe and Company Growth Dynamics
Entrepreneurs are key drivers of economic and social
progress. Rapidly growing entrepreneurial enterprises
are often viewed as important sources of innovation,
productivity growth and employment (small and medium-
sized enterprises account for 97% of all jobs in emerging
economies). Many governments are therefore trying to
actively promote entrepreneurship through various forms of
support.
The World Economic Forum, in collaboration with Stanford
University, Ernst & Young and Endeavor, surveyed over
1,000 entrepreneurs from around the globe with the goal
of better understanding how successful entrepreneurial
companies accelerate access to new markets and become
scalable, high-growth businesses.
Summary of Key Findings
1. Major differences in entrepreneurial ecosystems exist from
one region to the next. While entrepreneurs do consider
expansion opportunities beyond their country or region,
there is a potential alignment issue with governments
who often adopt a strong country/regional focus in their
entrepreneurial ecosystem policies.
2. Entrepreneurs view three areas of an entrepreneurial
ecosystem as being of pivotal importance – accessible
markets, human capital/workforce and funding &
?nance. This report is the ?rst large-scale study of
ecosystems that systematically examines which pillars
of an ecosystems matter most to entrepreneurs when
it comes to the growth of their companies. A potential
alignment issue can arise between the time horizon of an
entrepreneur and the time horizon of a politician, with the
latter’s typically following the electoral cycle.
3. In most regions, often only a small number of breakout
companies are the dominant contributors to a healthy,
growing early-stage company sector. There are also
substantially more similarities than differences in the
issues facing entrepreneurs around the globe. These
similar issues can be observed in all regions and have an
impact on the major growth accelerators as well as the
major growth challenges for early-stage companies.
4. Large companies in the overall business ecosystem have
the potential to provide important leverage for early-stage
companies in their growth and development. However,
the relationship is subject to mine?elds, swamps and
choppy waters. The report highlights areas for productive
relationships as well as areas where the relationship can
inhibit growth or even be the source of revenue and job
losses in an early-stage company.
5. Entrepreneurs themselves can play multiple important
roles in the build-out of an entrepreneurial ecosystem.
Using case studies from Endeavor, ?ve important roles
are illustrated – mentorship, inspiration, investment, new
founders and new employees.
6. Government and regulatory policies are viewed by
entrepreneurs as both potential growth accelerators and
potential growth inhibitors. The report highlights examples
of case studies from different geographical regions that
re?ect both the positive and negative impact economic
policies can have on entrepreneurs. In some cases,
entrepreneurs believe that government/regulatory policies
aimed at supporting economic growth can actually be
counterproductive to the growth of their early-stage
company.
AMNC13_Entrepreneurial_Ecosystems.indd 5 04.09.13 09:01
6
Two questions on entrepreneurial ecosystems are central to
this report:
Question 1 – What do entrepreneurs perceive to be the
differences between entrepreneurial ecosystems around the
globe in terms of the ready availability of the various pillars
that make up an ecosystem?
Question 2 – Which pillars of an entrepreneurial ecosystem
do entrepreneurs view as most important to the growth/
success of their companies?
Exhibits 1-1 and 1-2 of the report illustrate the eight
pillars considered to make up an ecosystem and the
individual components of each pillar. By jointly examining
these two questions, this report advances the debate on
entrepreneurial ecosystems in two important ways.
The ?rst is that entrepreneurs were systematically polled
to address both of the report’s two central questions. By
contrast, many existing analyses of ecosystems do not use
evidence gathered directly from entrepreneurs as their core
evidence. Making public sector investments in ecosystems
Section 1: Focus of the Report
and Information Sources
Underlying the Analysis
Entrepreneurial Ecosystems Around the Globe and Company Growth Dynamics
Exhibit 1-1: Entrepreneurial Ecosystem
without systematic input from entrepreneurs runs the risk
of making misinformed decisions, leading to outcomes
that differ greatly from the rapid surge in entrepreneurial
activity desired. Politicians often ?nd it convenient to make
ecosystem recommendations with an electoral cycle
mentality, a mentality which can differ greatly from that of
entrepreneurs who are aiming to scale a new venture in a
sustained way.
The second advance to the debate is that both questions
were put to the same set of entrepreneurs. Much of the
evidence to date has been focused on the ?rst question.
However, it is the second question that provides pivotal
information about what an entrepreneur views as important
to the task of growing a company. The more policy-makers
understand what entrepreneurs view as important, the
greater the potential for policies to be better aligned with
the actions of companies, which are the engine of a vibrant
entrepreneurial sector. The report also shows that there are
three pillars within an ecosystem which entrepreneurs around
the globe consider to be the most important for the growth
of their companies, namely accessible markets, human
capital/workforce and funding & ?nance.
Accessible
Markets
ENTREPRENEURIAL ECO-SYSTEM
Funding and
Finance
Human
Capital
Workforce
Regulatory
Framework
and
Infrastructure
Education
and Training
Major
Universities
as Catalysts
Mentors
Advisors
Support
Systems
Cultural
Support
AMNC13_Entrepreneurial_Ecosystems.indd 6 04.09.13 09:01
7 Entrepreneurial Ecosystems Around the Globe and Company Growth Dynamics
Exhibit 1-2: Components of Entrepreneurial Ecosystem Pillars
COMPONENTS OF ENTREPRENEURIAL ECO-SYSTEM PILLARS
Accessible Markets
Domestic Market – Large Companies as Customers
Domestic Market – Small/Medium Companies as Customers
Domestic Market – Governments as Customers
Foreign Market – Large Companies as Customers
Foreign Market – Small/Medium Companies as Customers
Foreign Market – Governments as Customers
Human Capital/Workforce
Management Talent
Technical Talent
Entrepreneurial Company Experience
Outsourcing Availability
Access to Immigrant Workforce
Support System
Mentors/Advisors
Professional Services
Incubators/Accelerators
Network of Entrepreneurial Peers
Education and Training
Available Workforce with Pre-University Education
Available Workforce with University Education
Entrepreneur-Speci?c Training
Cultural Support
Tolerance of Risk and Failure
Preference for Self-Employment
Success Stories/Role Models
Research Culture
Positive Image of Entrepreneurship
Celebration of Innovation
Funding and Finance
Friends and Family
Angel Investors
Private Equity
Venture Capital
Access to Debt
Regulatory Framework and Infrastructure
Ease of Starting a Business
Tax Incentives
Business-Friendly Legislation/Policies
Access to Basic Infrastructure (e.g. water, electricity)
Access to Telecommunications/Broadband
Access to Transport
Major Universities as Catalysts
Major Universities Promoting a Culture of Respect for
Entrepreneurship
Major Universities Playing a Key Role in Idea-Formation for
New Companies
Major Universities Playing a Key Role in Providing
Graduates for New Companies
Two very different sources of information were analysed for
this report:
– Responses to an online survey from over 1,000
individuals with extensive experience in early-stage
companies. The Stanford Graduate School of Business’
alumni database was used to seek responses to a two-
phase survey. The response rate was approximately 10%
of the alumni polled. Many in the alumni database have
not had experience as an executive of an early-stage
company, so the response rate from the target population
is sizably higher than 10%. We also supplemented the
survey using several additional databases, e.g. from
Endeavor, Pakistan and from Australia. Exhibit 1-3 (Panel
A) gives an overview of the respondents. The ?rst part
of the online survey, which focused on entrepreneurial
ecosystems, is analysed in Sections 2 and 3 of this
report. The second part of the online survey, which
focused speci?cally on the respective early-stage
company of the respondent, is analysed in Sections 4, 5
and 7 of this report.
– Executive cases include the responses by founders
and senior executives from 43 early-stage companies
to a standardized set of questions about their company
growth and the role of entrepreneurial ecosystems in that
growth. Exhibit 1-3 (Panel B) provides a geographical
breakdown of these executive cases, which cover 23
different countries.
AMNC13_Entrepreneurial_Ecosystems.indd 7 04.09.13 09:01
8
Entrepreneurial Ecosystems Around the Globe and Company Growth Dynamics
Exhibit 1-3: Key Information Sources Collected and Analysed
Respondents’ Years of Experience in Early-stage Companies
Years of Experience Respondents
1-5 222
6-10 195
11-15 171
16+ 332
Not Noted 122
Grand Total 1,042
Panel A: Entrepreneurial Ecosystems Survey
Breakdown of Respondents by Continent
Continent Respondents
North America 664
Europe 160
Australia/New Zealand 28
Asia 117
Middle East/Africa 20
South America and Mexico 53
Grand Total 1,042
Panel B: Executive Cases
Breakdown of Cases by Continent
Continent Number
North America 11
Europe 5
Australia/New Zealand 1
Asia 15
Middle East/Africa 7
South America and Mexico 4
Grand Total 43
AMNC13_Entrepreneurial_Ecosystems.indd 8 04.09.13 09:01
9 Entrepreneurial Ecosystems Around the Globe and Company Growth Dynamics
Section 2: Entrepreneurial
Ecosystem Differences
around the Globe as
Perceived by Entrepreneurs
Based on prior research and extensive interaction with
entrepreneurs, investors, government of?cials and
politicians, this report uses an eight-pillar characterization
of an ecosystem (see Exhibits 1-1 and 1-2). A prior World
Economic Forum report on global entrepreneurship provided
extensive evidence on growth accelerators and growth
inhibitors for early-stage companies.
1
Existing research on
ecosystems was also examined to develop the eight-pillar
characterization.
2
Individual components underlying each
pillar were also identi?ed. An important part of de?ning
these components was identifying some key areas where
the de?nition of an ecosystem from an entrepreneur’s
perspective extended beyond a single geographical area;
for example, the accessible markets pillar includes separate
components for both domestic customers and foreign
customers. This “global perspective” of many entrepreneurs
can lead to alignment differences between what
entrepreneurs view as important and what a government
views as important regarding the build-up of a thriving early-
stage entrepreneurial sector in an economy.
Entrepreneurs were asked to identify which of the eight pillars
of an entrepreneurial ecosystem were readily available to
them as they built their venture. The higher the percentage
of respondents indicating ready availability, the stronger that
ecosystem pillar is considered to be in that region. Analysis
was conducted for various groupings of the 43 countries
represented by the respondents. Results are presented as
a heat map, using three basic colours: blue, yellow and red.
The darkest blue is for the pillars with the highest percentage
of respondents citing ready availability, while the darkest
red is for the pillars with the lowest percentage. Exhibit 2-1
shows the results when the respondents are grouped by
continent and Exhibit 2-2 provides the results when grouped
by country. Similar heat maps are presented in the full report
for several other country categorizations. Each heat map
also includes separate columns for: (i) Silicon Valley (de?ned
as the broader San Francisco Bay Area); and (ii) the US
excluding Silicon Valley. The very sizable differences across
regions of the globe in the ready availability of ecosystem
pillars can be clearly seen in both Exhibit 2-1 and Exhibit 2-2.
Accessible Markets
ViiCare (China) – information technology solutions for
hospitals:
“The healthcare industry in China has much room for growth.
Most hospitals in China are owned or controlled by the
government, including central and local health authorities,
state-owned enterprises and the military. In 2009, the
Ministry of Finance initiated a long-term health reform to
achieve the objective that “everyone can have access to the
essential healthcare service”. Signi?cant investments were
made to develop the healthcare system in China, creating
substantial market opportunities for ViiCare. The domestic
market in and of itself is big enough. We are striving to
secure a strong foothold in the Chinese market before
tapping into foreign countries.”
Regulatory Framework and Infrastructure
Interpark (South Korea) – online shopping mall market:
“Our growth was not so fast in the early stages. There were
many problems related to online shopping, such as the
delay in the proliferation of Internet infrastructure, the slow
speed of the network and ineffective methods for calculating
rates. Businesses connected to the value chain of online
shopping malls, such as logistics systems and payments,
had dif?culties, too. An express delivery service was in its
initial phase of growth, and the use of Internet banking,
credit cards and security programmes for accounts was
minimal. The economic environment was very tough and
Korea applied to the International Monetary Fund for a
bailout in 1997, the very year we started our business. Our
growth started to speed up in earnest in 1999. The main
factor behind this growth was an improvement in the speed
of the Internet. ADSL had spread very fast following a drive
by the government. The government and carriers focused
on Internet business and invested large amounts of capital.
As a result, our con?dence that the Internet would be the
common network proved well founded, even though it came
a little bit later than we had expected.”
AMNC13_Entrepreneurial_Ecosystems.indd 9 04.09.13 09:01
10
Entrepreneurial Ecosystems Around the Globe and Company Growth Dynamics
Interestingly, Silicon Valley had the highest average
percentage of respondents citing ready availability of
ecosystem pillars, but the one pillar well below the other
seven was the regulatory framework/infrastructure. There are
also strong differences within continents. For example, and
as shown in Exhibit 2-2, within Europe, the United Kingdom
has the highest average percentage of respondents citing
ready availability of ecosystem pillars and Spain has the
lowest, while in Asia, Singapore has the highest and India the
lowest.
Major Universities as Catalysts
Polyera (USA) – materials science:
“In January 2005, I was scouting for technologies in US
universities with the goal of ?nding the seed for an audacious
technology company. I met Prof. Antonio Facchetti and
Prof. Tobin Marks at Northwestern University and was
introduced to the ?eld of printed and ?exible electronics.
Antonio and Tobin were working on new classes of
electronic materials that could enable novel form factors
and manufacturing processes. After conducting some due
diligence, it became clear that many of the world’s leading
electronics manufacturers were extremely interested in
the ?eld of printed and ?exible electronics, but that a key
bottleneck was the availability of suitable materials. Polyera
was founded to address this bottleneck and enable the next
generation of electronics. Because we spun-out Polyera from
Northwestern, we decided to establish our labs 10 minutes
away from the University. Such close physical proximity
was a big advantage to the company in its early days as we
were able to leverage equipment at Northwestern at low
costs and avoid signi?cant capital investments. In addition,
Northwestern’s material science department consistently
ranks as one of the top 10 in the world, and the University
has been a great source of talent. We also continue to
sponsor research at the University and bene?t from new
ideas which originate from these programmes.”
Exhibit 2-1: Entrepreneurial Ecosystem Heat Map by Continent/Region: Pillars Readily Available in Your Region
Pillar
US - Bay
Area
US -
Other
Cities
United
States
United
Kingdom
Switzer-
land
Ireland Spain
Singa-
pore
Pakistan India Australia Mexico
Accessible Mar-
kets
92% 83% 86% 82% 89% 79% 67% 70% 78% 72% 71% 52%
Human Capital
Workforce
93% 87% 90% 79% 67% 74% 90% 50% 92% 72% 79% 65%
Funding and Fi-
nance
91% 76% 82% 68% 61% 53% 43% 65% 22% 44% 67% 52%
Mentors/Advisers/
Support Systems
91% 72% 79% 68% 56% 53% 29% 40% 58% 28% 54% 48%
Regulatory Frame-
work/
Infrastructure
67% 57% 61% 57% 61% 63% 48% 80% 31% 28% 54% 52%
Education and
Training
80% 62% 70% 61% 61% 37% 62% 40% 39% 22% 33% 30%
Major Universities
as Catalysts
88% 67% 75% 68% 67% 37% 38% 65% 22% 11% 38% 35%
Cultural Support 90% 64% 75% 50% 39% 42% 24% 40% 25% 17% 29% 22%
Average Score 86% 71% 77% 67% 63% 55% 50% 56% 46% 37% 53% 45%
Exhibit 2-2: Entrepreneurial Ecosystems Heat Map by Country: Pillars Readily Available in Your Region
Pillar
US - Silicon
Valley
US - Other
Cities
North
America
Europe Aus/NZ Asia MEA
South/Central
America and
Mexico
Accessible Markets 92% 83% 85% 72% 69% 68% 68% 62%
Human Capital
Workforce
93% 87% 90% 81% 81% 73% 50% 71%
Funding and Finance 91% 76% 82% 57% 69% 44% 55% 45%
Mentors/Advisers/
Support Systems
91% 72% 78% 52% 58% 38% 36% 35%
Regulatory Frame-
work/Infrastructure
67% 57% 62% 54% 54% 39% 55% 42%
Education and Train-
ing
80% 62% 70% 60% 38% 34% 32% 27%
Major Universities as
Catalysts
88% 67% 75% 52% 42% 30% 23% 27%
Cultural Support 90% 64% 75% 33% 35% 26% 45% 16%
Average Score 86% 71% 77% 58% 56% 44% 45% 41%
Heat Map Key
Highest % of Respondents
Approximately Half % of Respondents
Lowest % of Respondents
AMNC13_Entrepreneurial_Ecosystems.indd 10 04.09.13 09:01
11 Entrepreneurial Ecosystems Around the Globe and Company Growth Dynamics
Section 3: The Relative
Importance of Entrepreneurial
Ecosystem Pillars to
Entrepreneurs: The Big Three
of Accessible Markets, Human
Capital and Funding &
Finance
A small number of breakout companies are the dominant
contributors to a healthy, growing early-stage company
sector in many economies. The following bar graphs show
the results presented in a prior World Economic Forum
report on global entrepreneurship
3
.
Across 10 countries and from a survey of over 360,000
early-stage companies, it should be noted that the top 1%
of early-stage companies contribute 44% of total sector
revenues created in Year 5 of a company’s life, while the top
5% contribute 72% and the top 10% contribute 84%. The
results for job creation show a similar pattern.
Entepreneurs were asked to indicate which pillars of
the ecosystem are most important to the growth of
their company. Respondents, on average, indicated
approximately 2.8 pillars as being most important. Exhibits
3-1 (by continent) and Exhibit 3-2 (by country) show the heat
maps for different ecosystems. Dark blue in the heat maps
represents the most important contributors to company
growth, while dark red represents the least important
contributors. The heat maps show a consistent pattern, in
stark contrast to the heat maps in Section 2 for the ready
availability of pillars. The top three rows in Exhibits 3-1 and
3-2 have the darkest areas of blue. Accessible markets (row
1), human capital/workforce (row 2) and funding & ?nance
(row 3) are the three ecosystem pillars considered to be the
most important contributors to the growth of early-stage
companies.
AMNC13_Entrepreneurial_Ecosystems.indd 11 04.09.13 09:01
12
Accessible Markets
TaKaDu (Israel) – providers of software to promote ef?cient
water use:
“The market need is huge and global, especially when
considering the inadequate level of innovation in this ?eld
during the past few decades. There is an enormous and
growing global need for solutions to make water supply
sustainable. As an indication, in its 2013 Global Risks report,
the World Economic Forum ranked ‘water supply crises’
second out of 50 risks in terms of impact. Insuf?cient water
supply can trigger food shortages, demographic changes,
political strife and even armed con?ict. On the practical level,
while the demand for water is continuously growing, more
water is wasted through leakage as water infrastructure
ages and deteriorates. Water utilities worldwide suffer from
a deteriorating infrastructure in drastic need of capital. This
forms a great opportunity for technologies that provide
superior operational performance at lower costs. This is
one of the key growth drivers for TaKaDu, which by using
a software-as-a-service (SaaS) delivery model, helps water
utilities to increase their operational ef?ciency while involving
no upfront investment or capital cost.”
Human Capital/Workforce
Green Biologics (United Kingdom) – industrial biotechnology:
“Our workforce is extremely multinational and multicultural.
This is perhaps a function of the area around Oxford where
we are located being a magnet for scientists, as well as
the UK’s historic openness to scienti?c researchers from
overseas. This has been a real advantage in allowing the
company to have a culturally positive approach in the
countries where it operates. This has been reinforced by
early on having a business development person (hired locally)
in each country. It has also helped that I and other members
of the team have had extensive international experience
in the target markets and so are able to draw on previous
networks in these areas.”
Entrepreneurial Ecosystems Around the Globe and Company Growth Dynamics
Funding and Finance
Wild?re (USA) – social media marketing platform:
“We bootstrapped the business from inception until the end
of 2008. At that time, we were awarded a US$ 250,000
grant from Facebook, which was enough for us to hire a
couple more developers, launch the product out of beta and
achieve pro?tability without raising money. As a pro?table
company, there were all kinds of funding available to us and
we raised series A funding through a venture capital ?rm in
the area. We felt great about the team the venture capital
?rm had and it seemed like a good ?t. When we changed the
business model, we raised insider series B funding.”
Regulatory Framework and Infrastructure
Capillary Technologies (India and Singapore) – cloud-based
software for customer engagement:
“Moving HQ to Singapore: Singapore is becoming the Silicon
Valley of Asia; start-ups are popping up all over, attracting
substantial investment where there is potential in the
technology and innovation space. Investors, shareholders
and entrepreneurs are all realizing Singapore’s advantages
especially businesses looking to take advantage of the fast
growth and untapped markets that the developing Asian
markets have to offer. In addition, favourable regulations and
extensive government support for start-ups made Singapore
a very attractive choice for our new corporate HQ location in
early 2012.”
AMNC13_Entrepreneurial_Ecosystems.indd 12 04.09.13 09:01
13 Entrepreneurial Ecosystems Around the Globe and Company Growth Dynamics
Exhibit 3-1: Entrepreneurial Ecosystems Heat Map by Continent/Region:
Pillars Most Important to the Growth/Success of Your Company
Pillar
US - Silicon
Valley
US - Other
Cities
North
America
Europe Aus/NZ Asia MEA
South/
Central
America
and Mexico
Average
Score
Accessible Markets 44% 59% 53% 59% 74% 65% 68% 57% 60%
Human Capital Workforce 63% 70% 67% 64% 41% 67% 59% 63% 62%
Funding and Finance 64% 62% 63% 49% 56% 56% 55% 63% 59%
Mentors/Advisers/
Support Systems
35% 24% 29% 23% 33% 27% 14% 22% 26%
Regulatory Framework/
Infrastructure
10% 11% 11% 21% 19% 27% 14% 33% 18%
Education and Training 10% 14% 12% 17% 15% 23% 18% 9% 15%
Major Universities as
Catalysts
17% 9% 13% 9% 7% 5% 5% 0% 8%
Cultural Support 31% 19% 24% 10% 7% 11% 32% 11% 18%
Exhibit 3-2: Entrepreneurial Ecosystems Heat Map by Country:
Pillars Most Important to the Growth/Success of Your Company
Pillar
US - Bay
Area
US - Other
Cities
United
States
United
Kingdom
Switzerland Ireland Spain Singapore Pakistan India Australia Mexico
Avg.
Score
Accessible
Markets
44% 59% 52% 53% 61% 84% 48% 53% 89% 44% 72% 43% 59%
Human
Capital
Workforce
63% 70% 67% 67% 50% 68% 67% 53% 80% 61% 36% 61% 62%
Funding and
Finance
64% 62% 64% 73% 44% 42% 19% 47% 49% 67% 56% 78% 56%
Mentors/
Advisers/
Support
Systems
35% 24% 29% 10% 33% 21% 33% 26% 34% 22% 36% 30% 28%
Regulatory
Framework/
Infrastructure
10% 11% 11% 20% 28% 21% 24% 42% 11% 28% 20% 39% 22%
Education
and Training
10% 14% 12% 7% 11% 0% 24% 0% 31% 28% 12% 4% 13%
Major
Universities
as Catalysts
17% 9% 13% 7% 11% 5% 10% 11% 6% 11% 8% 0% 9%
Cultural
Support
31% 19% 24% 7% 11% 16% 10% 21% 6% 17% 8% 13% 15%
Heat Map Key
Highest % of Respondents
Approximately Half % of Respondents
Lowest % of Respondents
AMNC13_Entrepreneurial_Ecosystems.indd 13 04.09.13 09:01
14
Sections 2 and 3 examined early-stage company growth
through the lens of an eight-pillar characterization of an
entrepreneurial ecosystem. This section looks at company
growth from the perspective of individual company decision-
making. Respondents to the online survey provided answers
in their own words (as opposed to selecting from preset
answers) to questions about the growth accelerators and
growth inhibitors for their company. Exhibit 4-1 presents
a categorization of 16 different growth accelerators and
growth inhibitors developed based on prior research.
4
Each
of the accelerators and inhibitors cited by respondents
were classi?ed in one of these 16 categories. Exhibit 4-1
shows the respondents’ top four of the 16 categories when
grouped by continent, country and industry. The central focus
of this section is the similarity in issues facing early-stage
entrepreneurial companies across the globe.
Exhibit 4-1 shows that the same four categories of growth
accelerator – market opportunity, top management, human
resources and funding & ?nance – come ?rst regardless of
whether the respondents are grouped by continent, country
or industry.
Section 4: Company Growth
Accelerators and Growth
Challenges for Early-stage
Companies around the Globe
Entrepreneurial Ecosystems Around the Globe and Company Growth Dynamics
Market Opportunity
Victoria Seeds (Uganda) – full-line seed company:
“The source of the initial idea was the observation that the
majority of the yields achieved by Ugandan farmers were
much lower than those realized at research levels – at times
one third lower…. A government body was formed – the
National Agricultural Advisory Services (NAAS) – to facilitate
members of the private sector, such as ourselves, to go
out and provide input to small farmers. The NAAS provided
subsidies to farmers to allow them to demonstrate proof
of concept and subsequently generate enough income
to become self-sustaining. It was very exciting because
the demand was there for growing improved seed. By
incentivizing the private sector to participate, farmers
adopted hybrid maize at levels that we didn’t have before.
Demand grew from just 100 metric tonnes per annum in
2004 to over 2,000 metric tonnes today. It was a huge
improvement, and the policy environment was right.”
Exhibit 4-1: Relative Importance of Growth Accelerator/Growth Challenge Categories
Category
By Continent (Exh. 4-2) By Country (Exh. 4-3) By Industry (Exh. 4-4)
% Rank % Rank % Rank
Market
Opportunity
56% 1 49% 3 46% 3
Top Management 48% 2 50% 1 48% 1
Human
Resources
42% 3 47% 2 44% 2
Funding &
Finance
36% 4 34% 4 42% 4
Top Four Growth Accelerator Categories
AMNC13_Entrepreneurial_Ecosystems.indd 14 04.09.13 09:01
15 Entrepreneurial Ecosystems Around the Globe and Company Growth Dynamics
Top Four Growth Accelerator Categories
Category
By Continent (Exh. 4-9) By Country (Exh. 4-10) By Industry (Exh. 4-11)
% Rank % Rank % Rank
Funding &
Finance
52% 2 55% 1 56% 1
Human
Resources
53% 1 40% 2 45% 2
Market
Opportunity
32% 4 33% 3 32% 3
Gov’t &
Regulatory
36% 3 27% 4 29% 4
Categories of Growth Accelerators and Growth Challenges
Classi?cation Description
I
Market Opportunity – Customers & Competitive
Landscape
II Top Management/Board/Networks
III Human Resources/People/Organization Culture
IV Funding & Finance – Cash Flow/Liquidity
V Strategy/Business Model/Pricing
VI Operations Management/Execution/Systems
VII Marketing/Branding
VIII Sales/Distribution
Classifcation Description
IX
R&D/New Product Development/
Technology/Patents
X Products/Services/After-Sales-Related
XI Partnerships/Joint Ventures
XII Acquisitions/Mergers
XIII Capital Markets/Financial Reporting
XIV Legal/Lawsuits
XV
Government/Regulatory/Taxation/ Country
Infrastructure
XVI
Macroeconomic/Social/Political/Events and
Impacts
Human Resources
9F Group (China) – ?nancial services:
”In order to maintain sustainable growth, we pay very close
attention to our talent pipeline, making sure we develop and
maintain a steady stream of people to turn to when it’s time
to hire. We build channels with major universities in Beijing
and in other provinces to create a viable candidate pool and
actively recruit via campus interviews. Currently, 98% of our
company’s employees have at least a Bachelor’s degree, and
20% are graduates from top-tier universities in China. We
have a particularly good relationship with Peking University
as most of our top management are alumni of this institute.”
Human Resources
Digitouch (Turkey) – digital marketing agency/af?liate
marketing network:
“Our top problem in the company is human resources. It’s
actually my number one problem. We do have a full-time
internship programme in which our employees get paid.
Within the ?rst two to three months, we try to identify if they
are good for the start-up business or not….. One of the
key problems that we see in any market, but much more in
Turkey, is a lack of talent.”
Funding and Finance
Heartland Payment Systems (USA) – credit card payments
company:
“Funding was a bit of a rollercoaster ride. In addition to
the US$ 1 million that Heartland Bank invested to co-
found the company, they provided about US$ 7 million in
debt ?nancing to help fund our initial growth. In December
1999, they dropped the bomb that they had to withdraw all
advances to non-banking clients before year-end, forcing
us to pursue outside sources of capital, and fast. In the
end, we sold one third of our merchant portfolio to a third
party, and repaid the debt on 31 December. Needless to
say, our relationship had changed, so we then undertook
a management buy-out, in which I granted Heartland Bank
rights to the cash ?ow from half of our merchant portfolio
in exchange for their 50% ownership in the company. The
environment was imperfect, but, with complete control over
the business, it did enable Heartland to access the private
equity ecosystem, which ultimately allowed the company to
?ourish.”
AMNC13_Entrepreneurial_Ecosystems.indd 15 04.09.13 09:01
16
Entrepreneurial Ecosystems Around the Globe and Company Growth Dynamics
Exhibit 4-2 presents the percentage of respondents across
continents that cite a given accelerator category as one
of the three major growth accelerators. The consistency
across regions of the globe as regards the top four growth
accelerators is readily apparent. The same ?nding occurs
across countries and industries. There is therefore much
similarity in which growth accelerators entrepreneurs across
the globe view as important.
Exhibit 4-2: Relative Importance of Individual Growth Accelerator Categories by Continent
AMNC13_Entrepreneurial_Ecosystems.indd 16 04.09.13 09:01
17 Entrepreneurial Ecosystems Around the Globe and Company Growth Dynamics
Exhibit 4-3 provides a word cloud for the top 40 words
mentioned by survey respondents as growth accelerators.
The top ?ve words from our survey were “market”,
“customers”, “funding”, “companies” and “capital”.
5
Exhibit 4-3: Word Cloud for Company Growth Accelerators
Respondents were also asked to indicate the “most
important accelerators in building your revenues in countries
outside your domestic market”. Exhibit 4-4 provides a
word cloud for the top 40 words mentioned as “growth
accelerators beyond the domestic market”. The top ?ve
words from our survey were “market”, “customers”, “local”,
“partners” and “products”.
Exhibit 4-4: Word Cloud for International Company Growth Accelerators
AMNC13_Entrepreneurial_Ecosystems.indd 17 04.09.13 09:01
18
Entrepreneurial Ecosystems Around the Globe and Company Growth Dynamics
As regards growth challenges, the same categories – funding
& ?nance, human resources, market opportunity and
government & regulatory – appear in the top four regardless
of whether respondents are grouped by continent, country or
industry (see Exhibit 4-1). Exhibit 4-5 shows the percentage
of respondents across continents that cite a given growth
challenge category as one of the top three.
Exhibit 4-5: Relative Importance of Company Growth Challenges by Continent
AMNC13_Entrepreneurial_Ecosystems.indd 18 04.09.13 09:01
19 Entrepreneurial Ecosystems Around the Globe and Company Growth Dynamics
Again, there is notable consistency across continents.
This same consistency can also be seen across countries
and across industries. As with growth accelerators,
entrepreneurs in many parts of the world face a similar set
of growth challenges. Exhibit 4-6 provides a word cloud
for growth challenges. The top ?ve words from our survey
were “funding”, “customers”, “market”, “companies” and
“products”.
Exhibit 4-6: Word Cloud of Company Growth Challenges
Exhibit 4-7 shows a word cloud for “the most important
challenges in building international revenues”. The top ?ve
words from our survey were “local”, “customers”, “market”,
“cultural” and “regulation”.
Exhibit 4-7: Word Cloud of International Company Growth Challenges
The growth accelerator and growth challenge ?ndings
presented in this section reinforce the ?ndings in Section 3
that entrepreneurs view accessible markets, human capital/
workforce and funding & ?nance as the three most important
pillars of an ecosystem in terms of contributing to the
growth of early-stage companies. This consistency when
considering both the pillars of entrepreneurial ecosystems
and company growth accelerators/growth challenges across
various groupings and regions increase con?dence in the
reliability of these ?ndings.
AMNC13_Entrepreneurial_Ecosystems.indd 19 04.09.13 09:01
20
Large companies can play many important roles in
accelerating the growth of early-stage companies. This
section develops information on the relationships between
large corporations and entrepreneurs and their impact, using
two key sources: (i) the online survey – respondents were
asked for examples of productive relationships and of non-
productive relationships; and (ii) executive cases, in which the
role of large companies is discussed – typically in response
to questions about growth accelerators, growth challenges
or high/low moments.
Credibility Enhancement
Galaxy (USA) – baking products:
“Building our croissant business with Williams-Sonoma has
been great for both sides. We certainly couldn’t have done it
without them. They found the best croissants in the US, and
we gained access to their millions of loyal customers. In fact,
Oprah discovered our croissants in the Williams-Sonoma
catalogue. We were fortunate that the orders resulting from
our Oprah appearances all came through the Williams-
Sonoma infrastructure (call centre, website, order processing
system, etc.). We would have had an incredibly hard time
trying to handle that type of volume ourselves.”
Seven key areas were identi?ed where productive
relationships with large companies are possible:
1. Customer engagement – early customers to accelerate
growth
2. Credibility enhancement – lighthouse/tentpole customers,
brand display, references
3. Strategic investors and ?nancing partners – increasing
?nancial resource capacity
4. Mentorship and advice – insight into new markets and
industry structure
5. Go-to-market partners – distributors and resellers, access
to outlets, logistics
6. Operating capability enhancement – manufacturing,
software, technology, know-how
7. Licensing leverage – licensing start-up technology to
enter a new market
Section 5: Large Companies
as Leverage for Early-stage
Companies: Navigating
through the Pitfalls
Entrepreneurial Ecosystems Around the Globe and Company Growth Dynamics
Exhibit 5-1 provides example of quotations from the survey
respondents that illustrate the “customer engagement” area.
69% of the early-stage companies in our online survey have
large domestic companies as customers, while 43% have
large companies in foreign markets as customers.
Notwithstanding many productive relationships, a large
number end up in acrimony and are subject to high levels
of frustration. Early-stage companies need to adopt an
“eyes wide open” perspective both in negotiating with large
companies and in executing on partnerships. There are
many mine?elds, swamps, and choppy waters to navigate.
Challenges are often reported to arise in the following seven
areas:
1. Attracting attention – attracting attention from large
companies
2. Productively working together – coordination and
commitment from the large company
3. Value appropriation – challenges associated with value
creation and value capture
4. Maintaining focus – defocused start-up companies having
their attention and skills diverted
5. Imposed, not-so-hidden costs – imposing direct and
opportunity costs on start-ups
6. Predatory contracting and litigation – lawyers/lawsuits
undermine the progress of start-ups
7. Regulatory capture by large companies – creating a non-
level playing ?eld
Exhibit 5-2 provides examples of the challenge of “attracting
attention”.
AMNC13_Entrepreneurial_Ecosystems.indd 20 04.09.13 09:01
21 Entrepreneurial Ecosystems Around the Globe and Company Growth Dynamics
Exhibit 5-1: The Bene?ts of Customer Engagement
”We were able to secure a contract with a US$ 50 billion
chemical company that needed access to capacity quickly.
We had the only equipment that could successfully meet
their needs. This resulted in a substantial contract (greater
than 50% of our initial business) during the ?rst year of
our operation, and we were able to negotiate favourable
payment terms. As they wanted to enhance their throughput,
the chemical company entered into an agreement to help
?nance the new equipment for us. It allowed us to approach
banks with a guarantee from the chemical company. Good
for the bank, good for us.”
“We were one of the ?rst aluminium can manufacturers in
sub-Saharan Africa. When we came on stream with our
?rst plant, our growth was greatly facilitated by having large
companies as customers. Heineken, Diageo, SABMiller
and Coca Cola were all enthusiastic early supporters. Their
interest was in having access to domestic supply to simplify
their supply chain and reduce their supply risk, even with
pricing at import parity.”
“A large European telco (largest in its original location and
active in other locations) adopted our solution and concept
and even forced all its af?liates and then its roaming partners
to use it as well so as to interface effectively with their
systems. Needless to say, this was great for the growth of
our company.”
“A huge hi-tech company integrated our solution into their
suite of solutions. While this involved some integration and
development from our technical group, which took a while,
the result was that our sales really took off.”
Exhibit 5-2: The Challenge of Attracting Attention – Getting on the
Radar
“Without speci?c large joint customer opportunities, small
companies waste astounding amounts of energy trying to
gain their attention.”
“I believe large companies are indifferent to start-ups, even
to the point of not recognizing them as potential market
competitors, and therefore have little or no role in early-stage
?rms. The reason is simple. Working with or against a start-
up simply cannot move the quarterly EPS needle.”
“Early-stage companies are not part of the core business
of a large company and, therefore, not a ?rst priority. Large
companies introduce very bureaucratic procedures and
processes that are going to slow down the development of
an early-stage company. You can end up with a situation of
almost zero interest and focus.”
“Some large construction companies/homebuilders are
hesitant or very slow to start a business relationship with
a new mortgage company. Some think that banks may
remove funding lines from them for future projects if they
work with us. Also, it is just easier for homebuilders to work
with the banks as they have always done, and it seems hard
to show them how a new approach to loan origination can
add value for them and provide them with better business
options in the future.”
Riding the Wave with a Go-To-Market Partner
BYP (Mexico) – painting company:
“One of the most important factors that fueled BYP’s growth
was the relationship with some key customers. One of our
?rst clients was Sherwin Williams (the US headquartered
Fortune 500 company specializing in general building
materials) and we also started receiving orders from several
major distributors early on in the company’s history. We
understood the signi?cance of securing the key clients in the
market, including, of course, Home Depot (the largest US
retailer of home improvement and construction products).
We had been trying to sell to Home Depot since they started
operating in Mexico. After many attempts, we ?nally got a
chance when their then supplier failed to deliver orders on
time. The acquisition of a big customer like that is a game
changer for a small company like ours.
Of course, sales growth is the great bene?t of having a big
company as a client. In our case, Home Depot is one clear
example of such a customer. We have grown with them,
as the number of their stores has almost tripled during the
years we have been serving them. In some aspects, we have
structured the company around their needs and we were
proud to receive a “Vendor of the Year” award in 2009, a
recognition given to only one supplier each year.
But there are also other great bene?ts of having a large
client. Higher requirements in product quality (both level and
consistency), image and packaging, logistics and service
force us to become a better company. It raises the bar for
all our operations at every level. For new products, having
a certain guaranteed volume allows us to introduce a new
product line with a lower risk, and then offer it to other
customers.
Of course, it also poses some challenges and problems. Big
companies have strict policies and mistakes are not easily
forgiven. Moreover, there is a risk in having a large share of
sales in one client, as investments are made over the years
to serve it better and the health of the company – at least in
the short run – could be at risk if we were to lose the client.”
Challenge of Maintaining Focus
Cupola (UAE) – credit card processing:
“Our biggest disappointment was the collapse of a potential
joint venture in Saudi Arabia. We spent over 18 months
(2010-2011) identifying, nurturing and negotiating with a
potential partner to set up an integrated card personalization
centre and a contact centre. The failure was caused by two
factors. The ?rst was that, although the joint venture partner
had promised to provide business from their own businesses
and they had a lot of clout in the market, this value-add was
never quanti?ed or agreed upon explicitly. The second factor
was the restriction on visas for foreign workers imposed by
the authorities for our type of service industry.”
“As a start-up, even though we were able to develop a
product that was attractive to a certain large company, we
could not qualify as a vendor because we had not been in
business for three years and did not meet their minimum
revenue requirements.”
AMNC13_Entrepreneurial_Ecosystems.indd 21 04.09.13 09:01
22
Entrepreneurs in an ecosystem can play multiple important
roles. Endeavor, a non-pro?t organization, has much
experience in promoting these multiple roles in many parts
of the world. Starting in New York in 1997, it opened its ?rst
regional of?ces in Argentina and Chile (1978), followed by
Brazil and Uruguay (2000). Subsequently, it has expanded
into South Africa (2003), Colombia and Turkey (2006), Egypt,
Jordan and India (2008), Lebanon and Dubai (2011), and
Indonesia, Saudi Arabia and Greece (2012). Five important
roles of “high-impact entrepreneurs” that Endeavor has
tracked and helped facilitate for entrepreneurs starting and
scaling an early-stage company are:
1. Inspiration – inspiring other individuals to become
entrepreneurs;
2. Founder crucible – attracting and developing employees
who subsequently found other companies;
3. Employee crucible – attracting and developing employees
who subsequently become employees of subsequent
early-stage companies;
4. Investment source – using acquired wealth to invest in
subsequent new entrepreneurial ventures;
5. Mentor role – providing key support such as advice,
encouragement and access to a network.
Exhibit 6-1 shows the evolution of entrepreneurial networks
in Buenos Aires and Istanbul. The full report provides a
timeline for the evolution of these networks, with most
detail on the Buenos Aires network. Key lessons from
Endeavor’s extensive role in and observations of the growth
of ecosystems in each of these regions include the following:
1. Entrepreneurial ecosystems are not created
overnight. For example, the Buenos Aires technology
entrepreneurial ecosystem took its ?rst steps in the
mid-1990s, and it was only 15 years later that a rich
network emerged. This observation is consistent with
other regions. Silicon Valley evolved over a number of
decades.
Section 6: The Growth of
Entrepreneurial Ecosystems:
Lessons from Buenos Aires
and Istanbul
Entrepreneurial Ecosystems Around the Globe and Company Growth Dynamics
2. A few people play a central role. Networks require a
few nodes that activate and connect to the rest of the
in-network players. In the case of the Buenos Aires
network, entrepreneurs from three companies account
for a signi?cant share of the network activity.
3. Infrastructure initiatives such as incubators, accelerators,
large companies, investment funds and service suppliers
are complementary. They will not create a network on
their own, but they will provide the mechanisms for these
high-impact entrepreneurs to realize their importance,
activate the ecosystem and multiply their impact. They
should be encouraged to become investors, mentors
and board members to leverage the human capital that
they have accumulated through their experience and
their network.
4. Governments should design policies that facilitate the
growth of entrepreneurial ecosystems by empowering
private actors rather than public ones. Government-
run incubators and venture funds have a mixed track
record, and typically do no better than private ones in
picking winners and losers. Governments can support
opportunities for international studies, rational investment
and bankruptcy regulations, and fundamental scienti?c
research (along with the pathways to commercialization).
These policies, more than direct intervention, make it
more likely that the most important nodes will realize
their entrepreneurial visions, ?nd business success and
stay engaged in the ecosystem as mentors, advisers
and investors.
AMNC13_Entrepreneurial_Ecosystems.indd 22 04.09.13 09:01
23 Entrepreneurial Ecosystems Around the Globe and Company Growth Dynamics
Exhibit 6-1: High-Impact Entrepreneurs in Buenos Aires and Istanbul
Buenos Aires
Tech Network
Istanbul
Tech Network
AMNC13_Entrepreneurial_Ecosystems.indd 23 04.09.13 09:02
24
Governments and regulatory bodies can play an important
role in accelerating or inhibiting the growth of many
companies. This section illustrates and examines many of
the diverse aspects of the relationship between the different
arms of government and early-stage companies. The survey
respondents provided input on two questions relating to
the accelerator/inhibitor role of governments and regulatory
bodies:
(a) Accelerator question: What aspects of the government
policy/regulatory environment in your country/region
were most bene?cial to the growth of your company?
Exhibit 7-1 presents a word cloud for the top 40 words
cited in response to the accelerator question. The top 12
words and their percentage of the top 40 words were: “tax”
(11.0%), “companies” (7.2%), “regulation” (6.8%), “ease”
(6.2%), “business” (4.6%), “government” (3.8%), “market”
(3.8%), “incentives” (3.3%), “support” (3.1%), “policy” (3.1%),
“capital” (2.7%) and “law” (2.7%).
Section 7: The Role of
Government and Regulatory
Policies in Entrepreneurial
Ecosystems: Growth
Accelerators or Growth
Inhibitors?
Entrepreneurial Ecosystems Around the Globe and Company Growth Dynamics
(b) Inhibitor question: What aspects of the government
policy/regulatory environment in your country/region
were most detrimental to the growth of your company?
Government Regulations as a Growth Accelerator for
Human Capital
Bubbly (Singapore) – mobile social networks and messaging:
“Other aspects that really helped us include the very ef?cient
Singapore government – where I could literally call any MP
and get right to the top to get an answer or discuss how
the system should work. They gave us a US$ 1 million grant
early on to subsidize our engineering hiring and then another
US$ 1 million equity investment to keep our incentives
aligned longer term. They have also made it possible for us
to recruit from all over the world – not just in the small labour
market of Singapore. We have nearly unlimited visas, as long
as we’re hiring extremely high calibre engineers. We now
have an engineering team from 20+ different countries and
it’s literally the best, by far, in South-East Asia. “
Exhibit 7-1: Word Cloud for Government/Regulatory Policies as an Early-stage Company Growth Accelerator
AMNC13_Entrepreneurial_Ecosystems.indd 24 04.09.13 09:02
25 Entrepreneurial Ecosystems Around the Globe and Company Growth Dynamics
Political Naivety of Early-stage Companies
Reputation.com (USA) – online reputation and privacy
products: “Silicon Valley does not think enough about
Washington DC. It appears you have to get to behemoth
size to afford getting involved there. We have seen no
interest from DC in getting input or advice from us on
issues of reputation or privacy, in which we have built up an
expertise…. We haven’t been good at in?uencing regulators
and policy-makers. We have had this notion that we are
somehow above it, beyond it. That’s a big mistake.”
Exhibit 7-2 shows the comparable word cloud for the
inhibitor question. The top 12 words and their percentage
of the top 40 words were: “tax” (15.9%), “regulation”
(11.6%), “policy” (4.1%), “companies” (4.0%), “business”
(3.8%), “government” (3.8%), “laws” (3.2%), “cost” (2.8%),
“complexity” (2.7%), “capital” (2.2%), “requirements” (2.2%)
and “high” (2.2%).
Exhibit 7-2: Word Cloud for Government/Regulatory Policy as an Early-stage Company Growth Inhibitor
Governments and regulatory bodies can also play an
important role in either strengthening or weakening the three
pillars of entrepreneurial ecosystems that entrepreneurs
view as most important to the growth of their companies:
accessible markets, human capital/workforce and funding
and ?nance. By way of example, Exhibit 7-3 presents
quotations that pertain to the human capital/workforce pillar.
The survey responses in areas related to government/
regulatory policies revealed many areas where entrepreneurs
believe that government/regulatory policies were
counterproductive to the growth of their early-stage
companies. There was a high frequency of “red code words”,
i.e. words that have a negative connotation as regards
an early-stage company’s relationship with government
or regulatory bodies. Exhibit 7-4 provides a subset of the
many quotations that have “red code words” relating to big
company capture, bureaucracy, complexity, inconsistent
enforcement, lack of clarity, lack of transparency, regulatory
burden/overkill and regulatory uncertainty.
Government Policies that Limit Market Entry
SinoCare (China) – hospital management:
“China’s healthcare industry is subject to strong government
regulation. Prior to 2007, there was only limited access for
foreign capital to China’s healthcare industry, which was
a major challenge for us given our foreign background.
As a result, SinoCare did not experience strong growth
momentum in the early days. The situation changed after
2009 when the State Council launched a new policy to
encourage greater private and foreign capital involvement in
the nation’s hospitals and clinics as part of a health system
reform programme aiming to make affordable healthcare
available to the general public. Under the new policy, foreign
investors can now take up the majority shareholding of a
hospital, which enabled us to tap into more hospitals and
subsequently accelerated our growth.”
AMNC13_Entrepreneurial_Ecosystems.indd 25 04.09.13 09:02
26
Panel A: Growth Accelerators
– “Supply of well-educated workforce” (France, Web-based services)
– “Availability of strong technical talent in Monterrey” (Mexico, internet travel)
– “Investors available with speci?c industry knowledge and experience” (Sweden, transport)
– “Easy to bring in anyone from anywhere in the world on a visa” (UAE, fashion retail trade)
– “Limits in California on employee non-compete clauses facilitates labour mobility” USA, venture capital)
– “Ability to get top-notch accountants and lawyers who will provide services at big discounts for anticipated future relationships”
(USA, investments)
– “Government reimbursement for training in growing organizations” (USA, Web hosting)
Panel B: Growth Inhibitors
– “The granting of share options is treated as employee income at the time the option is granted” (Australia, electricity storage)
– “Immigration laws are a hurdle to recruiting foreign talent” (Austria, medical devices)
– “Archaic tax and labour structures” (Brazil, IT sales force management)
– “Rigid employment laws make it very dif?cult, costly and way too long to recruit the necessary staff” (France, consulting services)
– “Employment law does not allow us to hire and ?re freely” (France, electronics)
– “The dif?culty of providing employees with stock options given the current regulatory framework” (Mexico, retail consumer products)
– “Some aspects of social insurance are cumbersome for HR” (Switzerland, software)
– “Immigration policies prevent the free movement of quali?ed people” (UK, ?nancial advisory)
– “Dif?culty in getting work visas (H1-B) for foreign engineers” (USA, utilities)
– “Visa limitations on allowing foreign talent to stay in the US” (USA, venture capital)
– “So many rules and regulations. Not explained clearly enough. Not stable enough. Immigration policies – we cannot hire the people
when we want them and bring them here.” (USA, mobile tech company)
– “It’s sometimes scary to hire employees because of all the laws you have to comply with. Just one employee lawsuit in our early
years could have killed the company.” (USA, travel services)
– “Willingness to tolerate frivolous lawsuits around discrimination – if I hired someone and then ?red them six months later how can
that be discrimination?” (USA, enterprise software)
Entrepreneurial Ecosystems Around the Globe and Company Growth Dynamics
Exhibit 7-3: Human Capital/Workforce Ecosystem Pillar and Government/Regulatory Policies: Survey Quotations
Exhibit 7-4: Government/Regulatory Policies as a Growth Inhibitor for Early-stage Companies: Living in the “World of Red Code Words”
Big Company Capture
– “Government purchasing policies are biased towards big companies with ?nancial strengths in their selection criteria, bid bonds
and performance bonds” (France, consulting services)
– “Cash ?ow management dif?cult with a regulation de?ned to ?t large and stable companies’ needs” (Spain, engineering services)
– “Policies favouring the market incumbent that has a monopoly of the market and close ties to the government” (United Kingdom,
port logistics)
Bureaucracy/Red Tape
– “Red tape in Greece is impossible. Forming a company that was a subsidiary of a company with US investors was a nightmare. It
imposed impossible red tape deadlocks in the early stage.”
Collateral Damage
– “Anti-crime laws affect legitimate business” (Mexico, real estate)
Complexity
– “Complexity and cost of creating a business” (Italy, online travel agency)
– “Complex, costly tax regimes” (Spain, basic telecom services)
– “The myriad of state-level ?ling requirements… this is an unimaginable amount of non-value added work for a start-up. I’d be happy
to pay 20% of my pro?ts to a ‘state fund’ that got divided between everyone as long as I could avoid the insane overhead of 50
different requirements.” (USA, solar)
AMNC13_Entrepreneurial_Ecosystems.indd 26 04.09.13 09:02
27 Entrepreneurial Ecosystems Around the Globe and Company Growth Dynamics
Entrepreneurial Company Naivety or Ignorance
– “Regulators do not have an entrepreneurial mindset. They are more oriented towards big business.” (Japan, pharmaceuticals)
– “General ignorance about the entrepreneurial process” (USA, private equity)
Inconsistent Enforcement
– “No consistent enforcement of laws creating a non-level playing ?eld” (Singapore, venture capital)
Lack of Clarity/Opaque/Confusing
– “Lack of clarity on taxation of income earned by foreign companies in India” (India, private equity)
– “Lack of clarity regarding the application of laws and regulations. Tax code is burdensome.” (Mexico, self-storage)
– “Dif?culty and consuming sales tax regimes” (USA, merchant card processing)
Lack of Transparency
– “The government absolutely must do more to promote transparency and competition in the real estate industry” (USA, real estate)
Litigation Swamp
– “There is no penalty for ?ling a losing lawsuit. Lawyers always have an incentive to ?le and force a company to settle over
everything, no matter how small. If we were in a legal climate in which the loser was forced to pay all costs, and a regulatory climate
that did not penalize small to medium-sized companies that cannot afford batteries of compliance attorneys, we would be able to
grow twice as fast.” (USA, ?nance and investment)
Non-Growth Mindset
– “There is an anti-oil & gas posture. Our senior government of?cials are a bunch of ‘brake-tappers’ who seem to do everything they
can to detract from growth rather than help to accelerate it.” (USA, oil and gas exploration)
Redistribution Mindset
– “Operating in France is like operating in a place where the inmates are running the asylum. The marginal tax rate is now 75%. No
great surprise that wealthy entrepreneurs start to leave the country.” (United Kingdom, luxury vacation rentals)
Regulatory Burden/Overkill
– “Sarbanes-Oxley killed the IPO market. It’s too expensive to keep up with the big guys. Too much regulation. It has grown to
obscene levels. On a recent DARPA proposal we had to, among other things, certify that we weren’t doing business in Sudan.
Really!” (USA, communications networks)
– “The regulatory climate has put the burden of proof of innocence on ?nancial institutions. Rules issued by FINRA and SEC have
caused us to create dozens of compliance and legal roles.” (USA, investment advice)
Time Delays/Lengthy Approval Processes
– “Environmental licenses very slow to get. No centralized bureaucracy – have to deal at federal, state, city and union level.” (Brazil,
animal feed)
– “IRS regulations were not settled for several years” (USA, professional services)
Regulatory Uncertainty/Changing Regulations
– “Uncertainty in future revenue incentives and support” (UK, renewable energy)
– “The constant changing of federal tax regulations and the inability to predict the future” (USA, electricity services)
– “Uncertainty in future policies, sometimes even retroactive adjustments” (USA, solar power)
AMNC13_Entrepreneurial_Ecosystems.indd 27 04.09.13 09:02
Appendices
AMNC13_Entrepreneurial_Ecosystems.indd 28 04.09.13 09:02
29 Entrepreneurial Ecosystems Around the Globe and Company Growth Dynamics
Executive Case Study –
Capillary Technologies
Overview
Capillary Technologies provides easy-to-use, high-ROI
cloud software solutions that empower retail businesses
to engage intelligently with their customers in real time
through mobile, social, online and in-store channels. With
a vision to build the ?rst billion-dollar product company
out of India and to become a major player in the booming
mobile and retail sectors, the company got its start by
providing businesses in emerging economies (mainly
India and South-East Asia) affordable access to state-of-
the-art customer relationship and loyalty management
technology. By emphasizing paperless mobile technology,
real-time analytics and consumer engagement, marketing
life cycle automation and sophisticated, innovative analytics
that surpass capabilities of much larger, more expensive
and complex customer relationship management (CRM)
solutions, Capillary Technologies quickly attracted the
attention of large global retail brands – and venture capital.
Rapid growth has enabled the company to build out a
complete, end-to-end software-as-a-service (SaaS) CRM
platform, encompassing customer engagement, clienteling,
loyalty, big data analytics and social CRM suites. Capillary
Technologies now serves over 140 major global brands,
including Pizza Hut, Puma, Jack Wills, Marks & Spencer,
Benetton, Courts, Nike and Nokia, across 10,000+ stores
and over 70 million consumer interactions. Clients have
attributed up to 10% growth in same-store sales to Capillary
Technologies’ solutions. Capillary Technologies has received
numerous awards, including the Gartner 2013 Cool Vendor
award and Marketing Magazine’s CRM & Loyalty Silver
Agency of the Year Award 2013, and was also named one of
Forbes’ 12 Hidden Gems. Capillary Technologies is backed
by prominent institutional investors Sequoia Capital, Norwest
Venture Partners and Qualcomm Ventures.
Timeline/Key Events
Aug 2008
Receives US$ 30,000 seed loan from Entrepreneurship Cell,
IIT Kharagpur
Aug 2009
Wins ?rst client – Indus League (Future Group). Launched
Mobile CRM and Loyalty offering
Sep 2009
Obtains US$ 500,000 in funding from Qualcomm Ventures
(QPrize – India Winners & Global Runners Up) and angel
investors
Mar 2010
Launches instant in-store cross & up-selling for retail brands
Feb 2011
Wins ?rst international client – Store 21 (United Kingdom)
May 2011
Launches Capillary Customer Intelligence, Big Data Analytics
& Campaign Manager
Jan 2012
Launches Capillary Lifecycle Marketer, predictive intelligence-
powered customer engagement
Jul 2012
Launches Capillary Social CRM for better social
conversations, engagement and monetization
Sep 2012
Raises US$ 16.5 million in series A funding from Sequoia
Capital and Norwest Venture Partners
Dec 2012
Wins coveted awards: 2012 Red Herring Top 100 Global,
Forbes’ 12 Hidden Gems and Techcircle’s Top 10 SaaS
Companies India
Jun 2013
Named Gartner 2013 Cool Vendor in India, wins at Marketing
Magazine’s Agency of the Year Awards and named one of
SiliconIndia’s Top 10 most promising ventures founded by
Indians
Jul 2013
Powers 10,000+ stores for 140+ leading consumer brands,
engaging 70 million consumers across 16 countries; 11
of?ces globally employing staff of 15 different nationalities
Aug 2013
Launches Capillary Clienteling, store associate task
management & customer experience management solutions
AMNC13_Entrepreneurial_Ecosystems.indd 29 04.09.13 09:02
30
Quotations
Aneesh Reddy is co-founder and CEO of Capillary
Technologies. A visionary who believes that advances in
technology lead to signi?cant advances in business value
and ROI, Reddy works with enterprise consumer businesses
to help them put the right communications for the right
products into the hands of the right customers at the right
time. He is a featured entrepreneur in leading publications
such as Forbes, Harvard Business Review and The
Economic Times. Reddy is a frequently featured expert at
global retail, marketing and technology forums and premier
educational institutes such as Wharton and the Indian
School of Business. He participates in discussions around
entrepreneurship and major technology trends such as
cloud, mobile, social and big data. He is also an early-stage
investor in various ventures including Tynker, Studypad Inc.,
ANTfarm and Verious Inc. Reddy holds a Bachelor’s degree
in Manufacturing Engineering from the Indian Institute of
Technology, Kharagpur (IIT KGP).
Krishna Mehra is co-founder & CTO of Capillary
Technologies, where he drives product vision and strategy
for the company. As a technology evangelist, Mehra believes
that true innovation happens at the con?uence of technology
and business. At Capillary, he has created powerful products
that address large gaps in retail customer engagement and
enable hundreds of consumer-facing businesses worldwide
to embrace cutting-edge paradigms – including customer
engagement technologies based on real-time analytics
integrated mobile and social media.
Q1: What was the source of the initial idea, and how did
that idea evolve into a viable growing company? How did it
change over time?
Reddy: “Capillary was founded during the global economic
recession (2008-2009) in the belief it could help emerging
economy retailers engage with customers better using CRM
technologies comparable in sophistication to those used
in more developed economies but made both simpler to
use and less expensive through cloud hosting. Unlike many
?rst-time entrepreneurs who wait to validate their million-
dollar ideas, we picked two areas – mobile and retail – which
were both ‘next big things’ in India at the time. We spoke to
many Indian retailers about their critical business problems
and identi?ed that even large retail chains had minimal
understanding of why customers were not returning to stores
to make additional purchases. E-commerce ?rms have the
advantage of knowing their customers well and we wanted
to bridge the knowledge gap for traditional bricks and mortar
retailers. This turned out to be a game changer for our early-
stage customers and was a key growth driver for Capillary.
Two aspects of the company stood out:
1. We carefully selected angel investors who could add
value as the company grew, bringing on board as many
as 17 angels over a period of three years, who were all
experts in their own ?elds, including Rajan Anandan,
Head of Google India; Venkat Tadanki, CEO of Secova;
and Harminder Sahni, MD at Technopark (previously KSA
Technopark).
Entrepreneurial Ecosystems Around the Globe and Company Growth Dynamics
2. We focused assiduously on both client and investor
acquisitions by selling assertively through relationships
and demonstrating our ability to win large companies as
clients.
As Capillary began delivering amazing results in tough
economic conditions, our Indian clients such as Pizza Hut,
Puma and so forth began referring us to their counterparts
in other markets such as Singapore, Malaysia and the
UK, enabling us to scale up globally. The key to Capillary’s
success has been our ability to keep delivering new products
that increase our customers’ sales revenues and their
marketing ROI, and to ensure the continued usefulness of
our product suite to customers.”
Mehra: “We started on this journey with a consumer-
focused product search and coupon idea. We wanted to
do something that combined mobile with retail. Mobile
was growing rapidly in India, and retail was beginning to
happen. Our ?rst idea was to launch an SMS-, location-
based discount search business. However, our early client
prospects told us that, while discounts are ?ne to attract
consumers, retailers really wanted more capabilities for
understanding, retaining, nurturing and engaging personally
with their customers. We shifted our focus drastically, from
building technology for consumers to building technology
for businesses that would help them to extract more value
from consumers using a cloud computing model. Over time
there have been many changes to our technology – we have
added major product streams, including social, big data and
instant engagement.”
Q2: What were the major growth accelerators for your
company in the early years of high growth?
Reddy: “Market focus: We started Capillary not with a ‘Big
Idea’, but rather with a vision of creating the ?rst billion-dollar
SaaS solution company out of India with an extraordinary
passion for being leaders in an entrepreneurial ecosystem.
That helped us enormously because, instead of ?xating on
a single idea, we took our direction from market forces and
found a unique focus in results achieved with early-stage
clients. We were acutely aware of the exponential growth
potential in India’s yet-to-be-organized or technology-
enabled retail sector. Our vision evolved to accelerating retail
growth via personalized and targeted customer engagement.
Availability of clients: Since our value proposition was built
on the core problem of driving sales during an economic
recession, we were able to quickly convince top Indian
retailers such as Pizza Hut, Puma, Madura Garments,
Raymond and so forth to come on board as EAA customers.
Our ‘land and expand’ strategy – opening accounts with
three month proof-of-concept trials – worked tremendously
well. Also, our well connected investors and advisers
delivered some of our best long-term customers.
Business model: Within months of launch, our clients
were seeing good success with Capillary, which enabled
us to build a fairly straightforward business model – a
hosted SaaS, pay-as-you-go solution, requiring no upfront
investment and placing a minimal burden on resources.
A retailer, for example, might agree to pay US$ 300-500
AMNC13_Entrepreneurial_Ecosystems.indd 30 04.09.13 09:02
31 Entrepreneurial Ecosystems Around the Globe and Company Growth Dynamics
per point of sale per month based on solutions chosen,
without any prohibitive hardware or other resource costs.
We empower clients to experiment with our platform in a few
stores for a three-month pilot engagement and then extend
use of the software to more stores and for longer durations,
depending on outcomes.
Funding & client references: We received the QPrize
recognition from Qualcomm Ventures and the US$ 500,000
from angel investors at the right time. This helped us to
invest substantially in our initial product offering, while the
Qualcomm brand association made us a household name.
Our international expansion started quite rapidly as domestic
clientele referred us to their offshore counterparts. For
example, Pizza Hut India led us to Pizza Hut accounts in
Singapore, Hong Kong, Thailand and the Middle East; Puma
India connected us to Puma businesses in Singapore and
Malaysia; Robinsons Singapore got us into their Malaysia
business; and Alok Industries in India took us to the UK
and helped us to obtain Store Twenty One as our ?rst
international client.”
Mehra: “The Capillary team: From the very beginning we
focused on building a strong, empowered organization. We
deliver exceptionally high-quality work, which differentiates
us from our competition and fuels our growth. Most of our
early hires were people we knew personally either from
previous workplaces or through collaboration in robotics,
entrepreneurship and other IIT KGP clubs. Hence, we knew
the passionate performers on our team even before we hired
them. Today we employ over 150 highly capable technology,
R&D and analytics professionals holding degrees from
premier technology and business institutions across India.
This has helped us lay an extremely strong foundation for our
technology, R&D and analytics functions: a highly capable
team, which has expanded without the need for big budgets
and through personal connections alone, which has always
been our key strength. With almost 400 employees in total,
we have virtually zero attrition, especially among staff at the
mid-senior level and above. Capillary’s core team has always
believed in giving complete freedom to its team members;
this keeps our talent engaged and focused on innovating at
all times.”
Q3: What role did key aspects of the entrepreneurial
ecosystem surrounding your company play in the growth of
your company?
Mehra: “The tactical shift in operations: We started the
company in Kolkata, a Tier 2 city in India that was in the early
stages of becoming an IT destination. We quickly realized,
however, that Bangalore – India’s Tier 1 IT hub city – would
provide a better ecosystem in which to build our company.
Indeed, moving to Bangalore turned out to be an important
strategic move for our company since it gave us access to
the right investors and advisers. It was in Bangalore that
we learned of Qualcomm’s Q prize at an open coffee club
and later went on to win the prize, providing a major boost
for our nascent company. We also made connections with
Qualcomm Ventures, which later invested in Capillary.
Availability of talent: India has one of the strongest
technology talent pools in the world, and since Bangalore is
home to most of the country’s R&D centres, there was an
abundance of talent available to help build our product suite.
We built a strong technology and R&D team by acquiring top
talent from noted companies such as IBM, Microsoft, Oracle,
Salesforce, Dunhumby, Fair Isaac, Box.net, Infor and Dell,
while also attracting fresh talent from the world famous IIT
and IIM educational institutions.”
Reddy: “The Great Recession: 2008 was quite an eventful
year for Capillary. Just as Lehman Brothers was ?ling for
bankruptcy, we were busy procuring a US$ 30,000 loan from
our alma mater IIT KGP to start our company. The recession
came as an unexpected boon for us – we did not have to
pay premium wages to attract outstanding talent and we got
great discounts on major upfront investments. We were also
able to position our solutions as a good recession strategy:
increase share of wallet, sell more high-margin items, cross-
and up-sell more assertively, identify and win back lapsed
customers, convert new customers to repeat business and
so forth. We had a winning value proposition amidst dif?cult
economic conditions.
Largest series A round: With all we had going for us,
Capillary was able to raise the largest series A funding for
Indian product start-ups (US$ 16.5 million) from leading
institutional investors Sequoia Capital, Norwest Venture
Partners and Qualcomm Ventures. These ?rms provide great
advisory services and have helped our leadership team
to acquire amazing con?dence, to build ambitious growth
plans for international geographies and to fund accelerated
product development.
Moving HQ to Singapore: Singapore is becoming the Silicon
Valley of Asia; start-ups are popping up all over, attracting
substantial investment wealth. Investors, shareholders and
entrepreneurs are all realizing Singapore’s advantages,
experiencing fast growth and gaining entry to Asia’s
untapped developing market economies. Favourable
regulations and extensive government support for start-
ups made Singapore a very attractive choice for our new
corporate HQ location in early 2012.”
Q4: What key aspects of the entrepreneurial ecosystem
surrounding your company that were absent (or existed only
in a weak form) created the greatest challenges for growing
your company? Please describe and discuss how you met/
were impacted by these gaps in the ecosystem and their
resultant challenges?
Reddy: “In 2008, India and the rest of the world were
experiencing economic recession – not a very encouraging
environment in which to start a business. However, we saw
this as an opportunity rather than a hurdle. We bootstrapped
for the ?rst three years and functioned with very little funding
because the investors were cooperating and customers
were willing to pay. In the early years, one of India’s largest
venture capital ?rms wanted to invest in Capillary, but they
also wanted to change our business model to focus on
consumers. Our core team believed ?rmly in our vision and
the direction in which Capillary was moving. We turned
down the investment offer and, despite limited funding, grew
rapidly over a very short time span by sticking to our focus
areas.
AMNC13_Entrepreneurial_Ecosystems.indd 31 04.09.13 09:02
32
Another prohibiting factor was friends and family and the
societal mindset in general. The start-up scene in India was
very young; most people were willing to work only for large
corporations that offered stable careers with job security,
which made it dif?cult early on to attract the right people.
Even when our top candidates were convinced to join
Capillary, peer and family pressures to settle down and avoid
risks caused many to back away from the opportunities we
offered. The solution we found was to nurture talent rather
than acquire it. Instead of focusing on job descriptions, we
focused on people, which led to outstanding early results.
Now, as we scale up, we are bringing on board senior
leaders across all departments to drive the next phase of
growth for Capillary. We intend to invest signi?cantly in the
professional and personal development of the people who
work for us.”
Mehra: “In the early stages, we faced a lot of infrastructure
and regulatory challenges, as is the case for most
entrepreneurs. But our focus on cloud technology helped us
to grow easily and to offer substantial value to customers,
while also maintaining great operating margins. But we
did spend a lot of our time doing things that were not
adding value, as we were part of the ?rst wave of young
?rst-time entrepreneurs in a country still bound by legacy
corporate environments and no successful history of product
technology companies.”
Q5: At what stage did you invest signi?cant resources
seeking to grow your company internationally/beyond your
domestic country or region? What factors were pivotal in
deciding when to seek growth internationally and where to
seek that growth?
Mehra: “After successfully rolling out our solutions for Indian
clients, stabilizing our client base and increasingly carving
out niche leadership positions domestically, we decided to
investigate neighbouring markets. We observed that retailers
in regions such as South-East Asia, the Middle East and
Western Europe were facing similar problems and using
solutions and technologies that were far behind best in class.
We knew our solutions could help these businesses and
were able to make strong business cases around potential
revenue opportunities. Early successes in international
markets inspired us to dramatically accelerate our offshore
market explorations.”
Reddy: “After our series A funding round, we decided to
invest signi?cantly in international markets. For some of
the early markets into which we ventured, for example the
United Arab Emirates and the UK, it took a long time to
deliver results and cost our company millions. Investing
in those markets was a very bold move for us, but we
stood by our decision and, by the time Capillary started
operations in Singapore, our international businesses had
begun generating signi?cant revenues and looked extremely
promising. In the early stages, much of our R&D investment
went to preparing our products for global markets. We
started slowly receiving proactive inquires from international
accounts and understood there was a strong market for our
products globally. Our ?rst few international clients came as
references from existing successful clients in India. Those
early experiences gave us the con?dence to quickly scale
offshore operations.”
Entrepreneurial Ecosystems Around the Globe and Company Growth Dynamics
Q6: What were the biggest challenges in building growth
internationally? How did you meet or adapt to those
challenges?
Mehra: “We initially found it dif?cult to build sales presence in
international markets. For a specialized industry like ours, it is
essential to attract sales talent that can build the company’s
brand with their existing know-how and business networks,
and are passionate about how entrepreneurial workplaces
thrive. Since we were looking at three large potential markets
– South East Asia, Western Europe and the United States –
we had to be careful not to spread our resources too thinly.
What has worked well for us is the three markets approach
– every year we decide to open three new territories. First we
stabilize the territories, put our teams in place and acquire
at least ?ve early-stage clients rapidly, and, in parallel, invest
aggressively in the three markets we opened the previous
year and that have now stabilized. Markets like Singapore,
the United Kingdom and the United States are showing great
results for us with such a focused expansion.”
Reddy: “One of the biggest challenges Capillary faced was a
lack of brand awareness outside India, which made it dif?cult
to generate new business leads. And while our Indian clients
helped us move to international locations through word of
mouth, this was not a model for fast growth. We solved the
problem by creating an inside sales team for lead generation
and a powerful outbound sales team operating out of India.
While we had always used a push sales format in India,
we found this did not work well in western countries. We
realised western retailers were looking for more consultative
approaches. We also found a large market gap; there
were plenty of very expensive CRM solutions aimed at the
Walmarts and Tescos of the world, but far fewer serving
lower enterprise and mid-market retailers. We positioned our
Intelligent Customer Engagement
TM
suite, which combines
CRM, big data analytics and campaign automation, to serve
these neglected markets in a cost-effective, value-driven
manner.
Another obstacle was hesitancy among large retail brands
to work with a very young, seemingly inexperienced team.
We overcame this hesitancy with a highly effective ‘land and
expand’ approach, initiating engagements via small, high-
ROI pilot projects to prove the ef?cacy of our products and
to close increasingly large deals with world-famous brands.
Over time, as we have worked with more than 140 retail
brands around the world, we have developed deep retail
trade expertise and extensive intellectual property, which
has become a unique selling proposition for us with larger
accounts.”
Q7: What major role, if any, did key aspects of the
ecosystem in the country (or countries) you ?rst sought
international growth either promote or impede your ability to
grow in those international markets?
Reddy: “Expanding to international markets had a great
impact on how our company functioned and made
decisions. As a young start-up, we followed the Jugaad
(frugal) innovation style, making short-term ?xes under tight
deadlines driven primarily by clients’ whims and priorities.
That made it dif?cult for us to stay focused on our long-term
AMNC13_Entrepreneurial_Ecosystems.indd 32 04.09.13 09:02
33 Entrepreneurial Ecosystems Around the Globe and Company Growth Dynamics
product development vision and may have cost us some
growth. As we became more internationally driven, we had
to drastically change our development and service delivery
style, aligning with our longer-term business strategy and
making a strong commitment to long-term planning, effective
project management and re?ective decision-making – taking
time but delivering high-quality work by agreed dates.
Our international expansion has also enabled us to bring
on board industry veterans from the CRM, analytics and
consumer loyalty domains, a group of experts to which we
did not have access in our domestic market and who have
made our corporate portfolio quite strong. Now we have the
right capacity to tackle large accounts and win massive deals
all around the world.”
Q8: Seeking international growth often has both high
moments and dark (low) moments. Brie?y describe one high
moment and one dark (low) moment in seeking international
growth.
Reddy: “High moment: The highest moment for us, so far,
was winning our ?rst international client, Store Twenty One
in the UK. It was an important milestone in our history and
we look upon the accomplishment with great pride. It had
a dramatic impact on the way we run our company and
completely transformed our long-term business plans. What
followed Store Twenty One was a series of early international
wins. I still remember one of the deals we won, which
was at ?ve times the market pricing and one of our ?rst
engagements in a new region and taught us a great deal
about how to compete with established competitors without
compromising on price. Today, we are not less expensive
than contemporary competitors but we do deliver much
greater value, faster and with less effort.
Low moment: We have experienced great learning on our
journey into international markets. For example, sales cycle
times were much longer than we had expected in early UAE
and UK market ventures. We spent millions and waited
months for decisions to be made. It took time for us to ?gure
out that we needed a combination of stable lead generation,
steady ?lling and strong management of our opportunity
pipelines and dedicated brand building to establish our
credibility in new markets. Patience and how to make
decisive, smart manoeuvres in complex sales processes are
two things we have learned along the way.”
AMNC13_Entrepreneurial_Ecosystems.indd 33 04.09.13 09:02
34
Entrepreneurial Ecosystems Around the Globe and Company Growth Dynamics
Illustrative Executive Cases
1. 9F (China) – ?nancial services company
2. Capillary Technologies (India and Singapore) – company
specializing in cloud-based software for customer
engagement
3. Interpark (South Korea) – online shopping mall market
4. PCH International (China and Ireland) – provider of
consumer electronics products
5. d-Light (USA) – manufacturer and distributor of solar
light and power products
6. Wild?re (USA) – social media marketing platform
7. Movile (Brazil) – mobile content company
8. Arteris (France and USA) – provider of semiconductors
9. Freelancer.com (Australia) – global marketplace for
outsourced services
10. TaKaDu (Israel) – providers of software to promote
ef?cient water use
11. Taste Holdings (South Africa) – vertically integrated
franchiser with strong brand focus
12. Victoria Seeds (Uganda) – full-line seed company
(The executive cases shown above include in-depth
interviews with the founder or Chief Executive Of?cer of each
company and can be found online at www.weforum.org.)
The full report also includes Executive Cases for the following
companies:
Abacus (Pakistan) – professional services company
Aemertis (USA and India) – renewable fuels and biochemical
company
AMC Juices (Spain) – chilled fresh juice processing company
Bubbly (Singapore) – provider of mobile social networks and
messaging
BYP (Mexico) – paint applications company
Cupola Group MEA (UAE/Dubai) – credit card processing
company
Delicious Bakery (Egypt) – provider of high-end bakery
products
Digitouch (Turkey) – digital market agency/af?liate marketing
network
Galaxy Desserts (USA) – manufacturer of baking products
Green Biologics (United Kingdom) – industrial biotechnology
company
Hangzhou Goudian Dam Safety Engineering (People’s
Republic of China) – provider of high technology products for
hydropower dams
Heartland Payment Systems (USA) – credit card payments
company
Inspirato (USA) – destination club for luxury travellers
LoopUp (United Kingdom) – provider of cloud product for
business conference calling and online meetings
NEP (Malaysia) – manufacturer and supplier of water ?ltration
systems
Netsol Technologies (Pakistan) – global provider of enterprise
IT solutions
NEXON (South Korea) – developer and publisher of free-to-
plat (F2P) online games
OpenDNS (USA) – provider of cloud-delivered Web security
services
Pintar International (Philippines) – manufacturer of bone china
(porcelain) ceramics
Polyera (USA) – materials science company
Pronto Promo (Pakistan) – promotional products company
QC (Mexico) – micro and small business loans company
Qualtrics (USA) – supplier of data collection and analysis
products
Reputation.com (USA) – provider of online reputation and
privacy products
Saham Finances (Morocco) – African-based conglomerate
offering ?nance products
SinoCare Group (People’s Republic of China) – hospital
management company
Southwestern Business Process Services (SWS) (Ireland) –
outsourced processing business
Tough Mudder (USA) – endurance challenge company with
large-scale events
United Security Services (USS) (Argentina) – security alarm
installation and monitoring company
Vision in HealthCare (ViiCare) (People’s Republic of China) –
provider of information technology solutions for hospitals
Zhejiang Huifeng Warp Knitting (People’s Republic of China)
– manufacturer of tricot fabrics
Endnotes
1
Global Entrepreneurship and the Successful Growth
Strategies of Early-Stage Companies. April 2011. New York:
World Economic Forum.
2
For example, Startup Ecosystem Report 2012, Startup
Genome and Telefonica Digital.
3
World Economic Forum, op. cit.
4
These 16 categories were used in Global Entrepreneurship
and the Successful Growth Strategies of Early-Stage
Companies, World Economic Forum, 2011 – see Section 2.
5
Word clouds give greater prominence to words that appear
more frequently in responses to speci?c questions.
AMNC13_Entrepreneurial_Ecosystems.indd 34 04.09.13 09:02
AMNC13_Entrepreneurial_Ecosystems.indd 35 04.09.13 09:02
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AMNC13_Entrepreneurial_Ecosystems.indd 36 04.09.13 09:02
doc_104841310.pdf
During this file with regards to entrepreneurial ecosystems around the globe and company growth dynamics.
Entrepreneurial
Ecosystems Around the
Globe and Company
Growth Dynamics
September 2013
Report Summary for the Annual Meeting of the New Champions 2013
Industry Agenda
AMNC13_Entrepreneurial_Ecosystems.indd 1 04.09.13 09:01
© World Economic Forum
2013 - All rights reserved.
No part of this publication may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means,
including photocopying and recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system.
The views expressed are those of certain participants in the discussion and do not necessarily
re?ect the views of all participants or of the World Economic Forum.
REF 030913
Stanford University Team:
George Foster and Carlos Shimizu [Project Leaders],
Steve Ciesinski, Antonio Davila, Syed Zahoor Hassan, Ning Jia, Sandy Plunkett
Ernst & Young Team:
Maria Pinelli, John Cunningham, Rebecca Hiscock-Croft, Michelle McLenithan
Endeavor Team:
Linda Rottenberg, Rhett Morris
Project Editor:
Diane Lee, Stanford University
AMNC13_Entrepreneurial_Ecosystems.indd 2 04.09.13 09:01
3 Entrepreneurial Ecosystems Around the Globe and Company Growth Dynamics
Contents
4 Executive Summary
6 Section 1: Focus of the Report and
Information Sources Underlying
the Analysis
9 Section 2: Entrepreneurial
Ecosystem Differences around the
Globe as Perceived by
Entrepreneurs
11 Section 3: The Relative Importance
of Entrepreneurial Ecosystem
Pillars to Entrepreneurs: The Big
Three of Accessible Markets,
Human Capital and Funding &
Finance
14 Section 4: Company Growth
Accelerators and Growth
Challenges for Early-stage
Companies around the Globe
20 Section 5: Large Companies as
Leverage for Early-stage
Companies: Navigating through
the Pitfalls
22 Section 6: The Growth of
Entrepreneurial Ecosystems:
Lessons from Buenos Aires and
Istanbul
24 Section 7: The Role of Government
and Regulatory Policies in
Entrepreneurial Ecosystems:
Growth Accelerators or Growth
Inhibitors?
28 Appendices
29 Executive Case Study – Capillary
34 Illustrative Executive Cases
AMNC13_Entrepreneurial_Ecosystems.indd 3 04.09.13 09:01
Executive Summary
AMNC13_Entrepreneurial_Ecosystems.indd 4 04.09.13 09:01
5 Entrepreneurial Ecosystems Around the Globe and Company Growth Dynamics
Entrepreneurs are key drivers of economic and social
progress. Rapidly growing entrepreneurial enterprises
are often viewed as important sources of innovation,
productivity growth and employment (small and medium-
sized enterprises account for 97% of all jobs in emerging
economies). Many governments are therefore trying to
actively promote entrepreneurship through various forms of
support.
The World Economic Forum, in collaboration with Stanford
University, Ernst & Young and Endeavor, surveyed over
1,000 entrepreneurs from around the globe with the goal
of better understanding how successful entrepreneurial
companies accelerate access to new markets and become
scalable, high-growth businesses.
Summary of Key Findings
1. Major differences in entrepreneurial ecosystems exist from
one region to the next. While entrepreneurs do consider
expansion opportunities beyond their country or region,
there is a potential alignment issue with governments
who often adopt a strong country/regional focus in their
entrepreneurial ecosystem policies.
2. Entrepreneurs view three areas of an entrepreneurial
ecosystem as being of pivotal importance – accessible
markets, human capital/workforce and funding &
?nance. This report is the ?rst large-scale study of
ecosystems that systematically examines which pillars
of an ecosystems matter most to entrepreneurs when
it comes to the growth of their companies. A potential
alignment issue can arise between the time horizon of an
entrepreneur and the time horizon of a politician, with the
latter’s typically following the electoral cycle.
3. In most regions, often only a small number of breakout
companies are the dominant contributors to a healthy,
growing early-stage company sector. There are also
substantially more similarities than differences in the
issues facing entrepreneurs around the globe. These
similar issues can be observed in all regions and have an
impact on the major growth accelerators as well as the
major growth challenges for early-stage companies.
4. Large companies in the overall business ecosystem have
the potential to provide important leverage for early-stage
companies in their growth and development. However,
the relationship is subject to mine?elds, swamps and
choppy waters. The report highlights areas for productive
relationships as well as areas where the relationship can
inhibit growth or even be the source of revenue and job
losses in an early-stage company.
5. Entrepreneurs themselves can play multiple important
roles in the build-out of an entrepreneurial ecosystem.
Using case studies from Endeavor, ?ve important roles
are illustrated – mentorship, inspiration, investment, new
founders and new employees.
6. Government and regulatory policies are viewed by
entrepreneurs as both potential growth accelerators and
potential growth inhibitors. The report highlights examples
of case studies from different geographical regions that
re?ect both the positive and negative impact economic
policies can have on entrepreneurs. In some cases,
entrepreneurs believe that government/regulatory policies
aimed at supporting economic growth can actually be
counterproductive to the growth of their early-stage
company.
AMNC13_Entrepreneurial_Ecosystems.indd 5 04.09.13 09:01
6
Two questions on entrepreneurial ecosystems are central to
this report:
Question 1 – What do entrepreneurs perceive to be the
differences between entrepreneurial ecosystems around the
globe in terms of the ready availability of the various pillars
that make up an ecosystem?
Question 2 – Which pillars of an entrepreneurial ecosystem
do entrepreneurs view as most important to the growth/
success of their companies?
Exhibits 1-1 and 1-2 of the report illustrate the eight
pillars considered to make up an ecosystem and the
individual components of each pillar. By jointly examining
these two questions, this report advances the debate on
entrepreneurial ecosystems in two important ways.
The ?rst is that entrepreneurs were systematically polled
to address both of the report’s two central questions. By
contrast, many existing analyses of ecosystems do not use
evidence gathered directly from entrepreneurs as their core
evidence. Making public sector investments in ecosystems
Section 1: Focus of the Report
and Information Sources
Underlying the Analysis
Entrepreneurial Ecosystems Around the Globe and Company Growth Dynamics
Exhibit 1-1: Entrepreneurial Ecosystem
without systematic input from entrepreneurs runs the risk
of making misinformed decisions, leading to outcomes
that differ greatly from the rapid surge in entrepreneurial
activity desired. Politicians often ?nd it convenient to make
ecosystem recommendations with an electoral cycle
mentality, a mentality which can differ greatly from that of
entrepreneurs who are aiming to scale a new venture in a
sustained way.
The second advance to the debate is that both questions
were put to the same set of entrepreneurs. Much of the
evidence to date has been focused on the ?rst question.
However, it is the second question that provides pivotal
information about what an entrepreneur views as important
to the task of growing a company. The more policy-makers
understand what entrepreneurs view as important, the
greater the potential for policies to be better aligned with
the actions of companies, which are the engine of a vibrant
entrepreneurial sector. The report also shows that there are
three pillars within an ecosystem which entrepreneurs around
the globe consider to be the most important for the growth
of their companies, namely accessible markets, human
capital/workforce and funding & ?nance.
Accessible
Markets
ENTREPRENEURIAL ECO-SYSTEM
Funding and
Finance
Human
Capital
Workforce
Regulatory
Framework
and
Infrastructure
Education
and Training
Major
Universities
as Catalysts
Mentors
Advisors
Support
Systems
Cultural
Support
AMNC13_Entrepreneurial_Ecosystems.indd 6 04.09.13 09:01
7 Entrepreneurial Ecosystems Around the Globe and Company Growth Dynamics
Exhibit 1-2: Components of Entrepreneurial Ecosystem Pillars
COMPONENTS OF ENTREPRENEURIAL ECO-SYSTEM PILLARS
Accessible Markets
Domestic Market – Large Companies as Customers
Domestic Market – Small/Medium Companies as Customers
Domestic Market – Governments as Customers
Foreign Market – Large Companies as Customers
Foreign Market – Small/Medium Companies as Customers
Foreign Market – Governments as Customers
Human Capital/Workforce
Management Talent
Technical Talent
Entrepreneurial Company Experience
Outsourcing Availability
Access to Immigrant Workforce
Support System
Mentors/Advisors
Professional Services
Incubators/Accelerators
Network of Entrepreneurial Peers
Education and Training
Available Workforce with Pre-University Education
Available Workforce with University Education
Entrepreneur-Speci?c Training
Cultural Support
Tolerance of Risk and Failure
Preference for Self-Employment
Success Stories/Role Models
Research Culture
Positive Image of Entrepreneurship
Celebration of Innovation
Funding and Finance
Friends and Family
Angel Investors
Private Equity
Venture Capital
Access to Debt
Regulatory Framework and Infrastructure
Ease of Starting a Business
Tax Incentives
Business-Friendly Legislation/Policies
Access to Basic Infrastructure (e.g. water, electricity)
Access to Telecommunications/Broadband
Access to Transport
Major Universities as Catalysts
Major Universities Promoting a Culture of Respect for
Entrepreneurship
Major Universities Playing a Key Role in Idea-Formation for
New Companies
Major Universities Playing a Key Role in Providing
Graduates for New Companies
Two very different sources of information were analysed for
this report:
– Responses to an online survey from over 1,000
individuals with extensive experience in early-stage
companies. The Stanford Graduate School of Business’
alumni database was used to seek responses to a two-
phase survey. The response rate was approximately 10%
of the alumni polled. Many in the alumni database have
not had experience as an executive of an early-stage
company, so the response rate from the target population
is sizably higher than 10%. We also supplemented the
survey using several additional databases, e.g. from
Endeavor, Pakistan and from Australia. Exhibit 1-3 (Panel
A) gives an overview of the respondents. The ?rst part
of the online survey, which focused on entrepreneurial
ecosystems, is analysed in Sections 2 and 3 of this
report. The second part of the online survey, which
focused speci?cally on the respective early-stage
company of the respondent, is analysed in Sections 4, 5
and 7 of this report.
– Executive cases include the responses by founders
and senior executives from 43 early-stage companies
to a standardized set of questions about their company
growth and the role of entrepreneurial ecosystems in that
growth. Exhibit 1-3 (Panel B) provides a geographical
breakdown of these executive cases, which cover 23
different countries.
AMNC13_Entrepreneurial_Ecosystems.indd 7 04.09.13 09:01
8
Entrepreneurial Ecosystems Around the Globe and Company Growth Dynamics
Exhibit 1-3: Key Information Sources Collected and Analysed
Respondents’ Years of Experience in Early-stage Companies
Years of Experience Respondents
1-5 222
6-10 195
11-15 171
16+ 332
Not Noted 122
Grand Total 1,042
Panel A: Entrepreneurial Ecosystems Survey
Breakdown of Respondents by Continent
Continent Respondents
North America 664
Europe 160
Australia/New Zealand 28
Asia 117
Middle East/Africa 20
South America and Mexico 53
Grand Total 1,042
Panel B: Executive Cases
Breakdown of Cases by Continent
Continent Number
North America 11
Europe 5
Australia/New Zealand 1
Asia 15
Middle East/Africa 7
South America and Mexico 4
Grand Total 43
AMNC13_Entrepreneurial_Ecosystems.indd 8 04.09.13 09:01
9 Entrepreneurial Ecosystems Around the Globe and Company Growth Dynamics
Section 2: Entrepreneurial
Ecosystem Differences
around the Globe as
Perceived by Entrepreneurs
Based on prior research and extensive interaction with
entrepreneurs, investors, government of?cials and
politicians, this report uses an eight-pillar characterization
of an ecosystem (see Exhibits 1-1 and 1-2). A prior World
Economic Forum report on global entrepreneurship provided
extensive evidence on growth accelerators and growth
inhibitors for early-stage companies.
1
Existing research on
ecosystems was also examined to develop the eight-pillar
characterization.
2
Individual components underlying each
pillar were also identi?ed. An important part of de?ning
these components was identifying some key areas where
the de?nition of an ecosystem from an entrepreneur’s
perspective extended beyond a single geographical area;
for example, the accessible markets pillar includes separate
components for both domestic customers and foreign
customers. This “global perspective” of many entrepreneurs
can lead to alignment differences between what
entrepreneurs view as important and what a government
views as important regarding the build-up of a thriving early-
stage entrepreneurial sector in an economy.
Entrepreneurs were asked to identify which of the eight pillars
of an entrepreneurial ecosystem were readily available to
them as they built their venture. The higher the percentage
of respondents indicating ready availability, the stronger that
ecosystem pillar is considered to be in that region. Analysis
was conducted for various groupings of the 43 countries
represented by the respondents. Results are presented as
a heat map, using three basic colours: blue, yellow and red.
The darkest blue is for the pillars with the highest percentage
of respondents citing ready availability, while the darkest
red is for the pillars with the lowest percentage. Exhibit 2-1
shows the results when the respondents are grouped by
continent and Exhibit 2-2 provides the results when grouped
by country. Similar heat maps are presented in the full report
for several other country categorizations. Each heat map
also includes separate columns for: (i) Silicon Valley (de?ned
as the broader San Francisco Bay Area); and (ii) the US
excluding Silicon Valley. The very sizable differences across
regions of the globe in the ready availability of ecosystem
pillars can be clearly seen in both Exhibit 2-1 and Exhibit 2-2.
Accessible Markets
ViiCare (China) – information technology solutions for
hospitals:
“The healthcare industry in China has much room for growth.
Most hospitals in China are owned or controlled by the
government, including central and local health authorities,
state-owned enterprises and the military. In 2009, the
Ministry of Finance initiated a long-term health reform to
achieve the objective that “everyone can have access to the
essential healthcare service”. Signi?cant investments were
made to develop the healthcare system in China, creating
substantial market opportunities for ViiCare. The domestic
market in and of itself is big enough. We are striving to
secure a strong foothold in the Chinese market before
tapping into foreign countries.”
Regulatory Framework and Infrastructure
Interpark (South Korea) – online shopping mall market:
“Our growth was not so fast in the early stages. There were
many problems related to online shopping, such as the
delay in the proliferation of Internet infrastructure, the slow
speed of the network and ineffective methods for calculating
rates. Businesses connected to the value chain of online
shopping malls, such as logistics systems and payments,
had dif?culties, too. An express delivery service was in its
initial phase of growth, and the use of Internet banking,
credit cards and security programmes for accounts was
minimal. The economic environment was very tough and
Korea applied to the International Monetary Fund for a
bailout in 1997, the very year we started our business. Our
growth started to speed up in earnest in 1999. The main
factor behind this growth was an improvement in the speed
of the Internet. ADSL had spread very fast following a drive
by the government. The government and carriers focused
on Internet business and invested large amounts of capital.
As a result, our con?dence that the Internet would be the
common network proved well founded, even though it came
a little bit later than we had expected.”
AMNC13_Entrepreneurial_Ecosystems.indd 9 04.09.13 09:01
10
Entrepreneurial Ecosystems Around the Globe and Company Growth Dynamics
Interestingly, Silicon Valley had the highest average
percentage of respondents citing ready availability of
ecosystem pillars, but the one pillar well below the other
seven was the regulatory framework/infrastructure. There are
also strong differences within continents. For example, and
as shown in Exhibit 2-2, within Europe, the United Kingdom
has the highest average percentage of respondents citing
ready availability of ecosystem pillars and Spain has the
lowest, while in Asia, Singapore has the highest and India the
lowest.
Major Universities as Catalysts
Polyera (USA) – materials science:
“In January 2005, I was scouting for technologies in US
universities with the goal of ?nding the seed for an audacious
technology company. I met Prof. Antonio Facchetti and
Prof. Tobin Marks at Northwestern University and was
introduced to the ?eld of printed and ?exible electronics.
Antonio and Tobin were working on new classes of
electronic materials that could enable novel form factors
and manufacturing processes. After conducting some due
diligence, it became clear that many of the world’s leading
electronics manufacturers were extremely interested in
the ?eld of printed and ?exible electronics, but that a key
bottleneck was the availability of suitable materials. Polyera
was founded to address this bottleneck and enable the next
generation of electronics. Because we spun-out Polyera from
Northwestern, we decided to establish our labs 10 minutes
away from the University. Such close physical proximity
was a big advantage to the company in its early days as we
were able to leverage equipment at Northwestern at low
costs and avoid signi?cant capital investments. In addition,
Northwestern’s material science department consistently
ranks as one of the top 10 in the world, and the University
has been a great source of talent. We also continue to
sponsor research at the University and bene?t from new
ideas which originate from these programmes.”
Exhibit 2-1: Entrepreneurial Ecosystem Heat Map by Continent/Region: Pillars Readily Available in Your Region
Pillar
US - Bay
Area
US -
Other
Cities
United
States
United
Kingdom
Switzer-
land
Ireland Spain
Singa-
pore
Pakistan India Australia Mexico
Accessible Mar-
kets
92% 83% 86% 82% 89% 79% 67% 70% 78% 72% 71% 52%
Human Capital
Workforce
93% 87% 90% 79% 67% 74% 90% 50% 92% 72% 79% 65%
Funding and Fi-
nance
91% 76% 82% 68% 61% 53% 43% 65% 22% 44% 67% 52%
Mentors/Advisers/
Support Systems
91% 72% 79% 68% 56% 53% 29% 40% 58% 28% 54% 48%
Regulatory Frame-
work/
Infrastructure
67% 57% 61% 57% 61% 63% 48% 80% 31% 28% 54% 52%
Education and
Training
80% 62% 70% 61% 61% 37% 62% 40% 39% 22% 33% 30%
Major Universities
as Catalysts
88% 67% 75% 68% 67% 37% 38% 65% 22% 11% 38% 35%
Cultural Support 90% 64% 75% 50% 39% 42% 24% 40% 25% 17% 29% 22%
Average Score 86% 71% 77% 67% 63% 55% 50% 56% 46% 37% 53% 45%
Exhibit 2-2: Entrepreneurial Ecosystems Heat Map by Country: Pillars Readily Available in Your Region
Pillar
US - Silicon
Valley
US - Other
Cities
North
America
Europe Aus/NZ Asia MEA
South/Central
America and
Mexico
Accessible Markets 92% 83% 85% 72% 69% 68% 68% 62%
Human Capital
Workforce
93% 87% 90% 81% 81% 73% 50% 71%
Funding and Finance 91% 76% 82% 57% 69% 44% 55% 45%
Mentors/Advisers/
Support Systems
91% 72% 78% 52% 58% 38% 36% 35%
Regulatory Frame-
work/Infrastructure
67% 57% 62% 54% 54% 39% 55% 42%
Education and Train-
ing
80% 62% 70% 60% 38% 34% 32% 27%
Major Universities as
Catalysts
88% 67% 75% 52% 42% 30% 23% 27%
Cultural Support 90% 64% 75% 33% 35% 26% 45% 16%
Average Score 86% 71% 77% 58% 56% 44% 45% 41%
Heat Map Key
Highest % of Respondents
Approximately Half % of Respondents
Lowest % of Respondents
AMNC13_Entrepreneurial_Ecosystems.indd 10 04.09.13 09:01
11 Entrepreneurial Ecosystems Around the Globe and Company Growth Dynamics
Section 3: The Relative
Importance of Entrepreneurial
Ecosystem Pillars to
Entrepreneurs: The Big Three
of Accessible Markets, Human
Capital and Funding &
Finance
A small number of breakout companies are the dominant
contributors to a healthy, growing early-stage company
sector in many economies. The following bar graphs show
the results presented in a prior World Economic Forum
report on global entrepreneurship
3
.
Across 10 countries and from a survey of over 360,000
early-stage companies, it should be noted that the top 1%
of early-stage companies contribute 44% of total sector
revenues created in Year 5 of a company’s life, while the top
5% contribute 72% and the top 10% contribute 84%. The
results for job creation show a similar pattern.
Entepreneurs were asked to indicate which pillars of
the ecosystem are most important to the growth of
their company. Respondents, on average, indicated
approximately 2.8 pillars as being most important. Exhibits
3-1 (by continent) and Exhibit 3-2 (by country) show the heat
maps for different ecosystems. Dark blue in the heat maps
represents the most important contributors to company
growth, while dark red represents the least important
contributors. The heat maps show a consistent pattern, in
stark contrast to the heat maps in Section 2 for the ready
availability of pillars. The top three rows in Exhibits 3-1 and
3-2 have the darkest areas of blue. Accessible markets (row
1), human capital/workforce (row 2) and funding & ?nance
(row 3) are the three ecosystem pillars considered to be the
most important contributors to the growth of early-stage
companies.
AMNC13_Entrepreneurial_Ecosystems.indd 11 04.09.13 09:01
12
Accessible Markets
TaKaDu (Israel) – providers of software to promote ef?cient
water use:
“The market need is huge and global, especially when
considering the inadequate level of innovation in this ?eld
during the past few decades. There is an enormous and
growing global need for solutions to make water supply
sustainable. As an indication, in its 2013 Global Risks report,
the World Economic Forum ranked ‘water supply crises’
second out of 50 risks in terms of impact. Insuf?cient water
supply can trigger food shortages, demographic changes,
political strife and even armed con?ict. On the practical level,
while the demand for water is continuously growing, more
water is wasted through leakage as water infrastructure
ages and deteriorates. Water utilities worldwide suffer from
a deteriorating infrastructure in drastic need of capital. This
forms a great opportunity for technologies that provide
superior operational performance at lower costs. This is
one of the key growth drivers for TaKaDu, which by using
a software-as-a-service (SaaS) delivery model, helps water
utilities to increase their operational ef?ciency while involving
no upfront investment or capital cost.”
Human Capital/Workforce
Green Biologics (United Kingdom) – industrial biotechnology:
“Our workforce is extremely multinational and multicultural.
This is perhaps a function of the area around Oxford where
we are located being a magnet for scientists, as well as
the UK’s historic openness to scienti?c researchers from
overseas. This has been a real advantage in allowing the
company to have a culturally positive approach in the
countries where it operates. This has been reinforced by
early on having a business development person (hired locally)
in each country. It has also helped that I and other members
of the team have had extensive international experience
in the target markets and so are able to draw on previous
networks in these areas.”
Entrepreneurial Ecosystems Around the Globe and Company Growth Dynamics
Funding and Finance
Wild?re (USA) – social media marketing platform:
“We bootstrapped the business from inception until the end
of 2008. At that time, we were awarded a US$ 250,000
grant from Facebook, which was enough for us to hire a
couple more developers, launch the product out of beta and
achieve pro?tability without raising money. As a pro?table
company, there were all kinds of funding available to us and
we raised series A funding through a venture capital ?rm in
the area. We felt great about the team the venture capital
?rm had and it seemed like a good ?t. When we changed the
business model, we raised insider series B funding.”
Regulatory Framework and Infrastructure
Capillary Technologies (India and Singapore) – cloud-based
software for customer engagement:
“Moving HQ to Singapore: Singapore is becoming the Silicon
Valley of Asia; start-ups are popping up all over, attracting
substantial investment where there is potential in the
technology and innovation space. Investors, shareholders
and entrepreneurs are all realizing Singapore’s advantages
especially businesses looking to take advantage of the fast
growth and untapped markets that the developing Asian
markets have to offer. In addition, favourable regulations and
extensive government support for start-ups made Singapore
a very attractive choice for our new corporate HQ location in
early 2012.”
AMNC13_Entrepreneurial_Ecosystems.indd 12 04.09.13 09:01
13 Entrepreneurial Ecosystems Around the Globe and Company Growth Dynamics
Exhibit 3-1: Entrepreneurial Ecosystems Heat Map by Continent/Region:
Pillars Most Important to the Growth/Success of Your Company
Pillar
US - Silicon
Valley
US - Other
Cities
North
America
Europe Aus/NZ Asia MEA
South/
Central
America
and Mexico
Average
Score
Accessible Markets 44% 59% 53% 59% 74% 65% 68% 57% 60%
Human Capital Workforce 63% 70% 67% 64% 41% 67% 59% 63% 62%
Funding and Finance 64% 62% 63% 49% 56% 56% 55% 63% 59%
Mentors/Advisers/
Support Systems
35% 24% 29% 23% 33% 27% 14% 22% 26%
Regulatory Framework/
Infrastructure
10% 11% 11% 21% 19% 27% 14% 33% 18%
Education and Training 10% 14% 12% 17% 15% 23% 18% 9% 15%
Major Universities as
Catalysts
17% 9% 13% 9% 7% 5% 5% 0% 8%
Cultural Support 31% 19% 24% 10% 7% 11% 32% 11% 18%
Exhibit 3-2: Entrepreneurial Ecosystems Heat Map by Country:
Pillars Most Important to the Growth/Success of Your Company
Pillar
US - Bay
Area
US - Other
Cities
United
States
United
Kingdom
Switzerland Ireland Spain Singapore Pakistan India Australia Mexico
Avg.
Score
Accessible
Markets
44% 59% 52% 53% 61% 84% 48% 53% 89% 44% 72% 43% 59%
Human
Capital
Workforce
63% 70% 67% 67% 50% 68% 67% 53% 80% 61% 36% 61% 62%
Funding and
Finance
64% 62% 64% 73% 44% 42% 19% 47% 49% 67% 56% 78% 56%
Mentors/
Advisers/
Support
Systems
35% 24% 29% 10% 33% 21% 33% 26% 34% 22% 36% 30% 28%
Regulatory
Framework/
Infrastructure
10% 11% 11% 20% 28% 21% 24% 42% 11% 28% 20% 39% 22%
Education
and Training
10% 14% 12% 7% 11% 0% 24% 0% 31% 28% 12% 4% 13%
Major
Universities
as Catalysts
17% 9% 13% 7% 11% 5% 10% 11% 6% 11% 8% 0% 9%
Cultural
Support
31% 19% 24% 7% 11% 16% 10% 21% 6% 17% 8% 13% 15%
Heat Map Key
Highest % of Respondents
Approximately Half % of Respondents
Lowest % of Respondents
AMNC13_Entrepreneurial_Ecosystems.indd 13 04.09.13 09:01
14
Sections 2 and 3 examined early-stage company growth
through the lens of an eight-pillar characterization of an
entrepreneurial ecosystem. This section looks at company
growth from the perspective of individual company decision-
making. Respondents to the online survey provided answers
in their own words (as opposed to selecting from preset
answers) to questions about the growth accelerators and
growth inhibitors for their company. Exhibit 4-1 presents
a categorization of 16 different growth accelerators and
growth inhibitors developed based on prior research.
4
Each
of the accelerators and inhibitors cited by respondents
were classi?ed in one of these 16 categories. Exhibit 4-1
shows the respondents’ top four of the 16 categories when
grouped by continent, country and industry. The central focus
of this section is the similarity in issues facing early-stage
entrepreneurial companies across the globe.
Exhibit 4-1 shows that the same four categories of growth
accelerator – market opportunity, top management, human
resources and funding & ?nance – come ?rst regardless of
whether the respondents are grouped by continent, country
or industry.
Section 4: Company Growth
Accelerators and Growth
Challenges for Early-stage
Companies around the Globe
Entrepreneurial Ecosystems Around the Globe and Company Growth Dynamics
Market Opportunity
Victoria Seeds (Uganda) – full-line seed company:
“The source of the initial idea was the observation that the
majority of the yields achieved by Ugandan farmers were
much lower than those realized at research levels – at times
one third lower…. A government body was formed – the
National Agricultural Advisory Services (NAAS) – to facilitate
members of the private sector, such as ourselves, to go
out and provide input to small farmers. The NAAS provided
subsidies to farmers to allow them to demonstrate proof
of concept and subsequently generate enough income
to become self-sustaining. It was very exciting because
the demand was there for growing improved seed. By
incentivizing the private sector to participate, farmers
adopted hybrid maize at levels that we didn’t have before.
Demand grew from just 100 metric tonnes per annum in
2004 to over 2,000 metric tonnes today. It was a huge
improvement, and the policy environment was right.”
Exhibit 4-1: Relative Importance of Growth Accelerator/Growth Challenge Categories
Category
By Continent (Exh. 4-2) By Country (Exh. 4-3) By Industry (Exh. 4-4)
% Rank % Rank % Rank
Market
Opportunity
56% 1 49% 3 46% 3
Top Management 48% 2 50% 1 48% 1
Human
Resources
42% 3 47% 2 44% 2
Funding &
Finance
36% 4 34% 4 42% 4
Top Four Growth Accelerator Categories
AMNC13_Entrepreneurial_Ecosystems.indd 14 04.09.13 09:01
15 Entrepreneurial Ecosystems Around the Globe and Company Growth Dynamics
Top Four Growth Accelerator Categories
Category
By Continent (Exh. 4-9) By Country (Exh. 4-10) By Industry (Exh. 4-11)
% Rank % Rank % Rank
Funding &
Finance
52% 2 55% 1 56% 1
Human
Resources
53% 1 40% 2 45% 2
Market
Opportunity
32% 4 33% 3 32% 3
Gov’t &
Regulatory
36% 3 27% 4 29% 4
Categories of Growth Accelerators and Growth Challenges
Classi?cation Description
I
Market Opportunity – Customers & Competitive
Landscape
II Top Management/Board/Networks
III Human Resources/People/Organization Culture
IV Funding & Finance – Cash Flow/Liquidity
V Strategy/Business Model/Pricing
VI Operations Management/Execution/Systems
VII Marketing/Branding
VIII Sales/Distribution
Classifcation Description
IX
R&D/New Product Development/
Technology/Patents
X Products/Services/After-Sales-Related
XI Partnerships/Joint Ventures
XII Acquisitions/Mergers
XIII Capital Markets/Financial Reporting
XIV Legal/Lawsuits
XV
Government/Regulatory/Taxation/ Country
Infrastructure
XVI
Macroeconomic/Social/Political/Events and
Impacts
Human Resources
9F Group (China) – ?nancial services:
”In order to maintain sustainable growth, we pay very close
attention to our talent pipeline, making sure we develop and
maintain a steady stream of people to turn to when it’s time
to hire. We build channels with major universities in Beijing
and in other provinces to create a viable candidate pool and
actively recruit via campus interviews. Currently, 98% of our
company’s employees have at least a Bachelor’s degree, and
20% are graduates from top-tier universities in China. We
have a particularly good relationship with Peking University
as most of our top management are alumni of this institute.”
Human Resources
Digitouch (Turkey) – digital marketing agency/af?liate
marketing network:
“Our top problem in the company is human resources. It’s
actually my number one problem. We do have a full-time
internship programme in which our employees get paid.
Within the ?rst two to three months, we try to identify if they
are good for the start-up business or not….. One of the
key problems that we see in any market, but much more in
Turkey, is a lack of talent.”
Funding and Finance
Heartland Payment Systems (USA) – credit card payments
company:
“Funding was a bit of a rollercoaster ride. In addition to
the US$ 1 million that Heartland Bank invested to co-
found the company, they provided about US$ 7 million in
debt ?nancing to help fund our initial growth. In December
1999, they dropped the bomb that they had to withdraw all
advances to non-banking clients before year-end, forcing
us to pursue outside sources of capital, and fast. In the
end, we sold one third of our merchant portfolio to a third
party, and repaid the debt on 31 December. Needless to
say, our relationship had changed, so we then undertook
a management buy-out, in which I granted Heartland Bank
rights to the cash ?ow from half of our merchant portfolio
in exchange for their 50% ownership in the company. The
environment was imperfect, but, with complete control over
the business, it did enable Heartland to access the private
equity ecosystem, which ultimately allowed the company to
?ourish.”
AMNC13_Entrepreneurial_Ecosystems.indd 15 04.09.13 09:01
16
Entrepreneurial Ecosystems Around the Globe and Company Growth Dynamics
Exhibit 4-2 presents the percentage of respondents across
continents that cite a given accelerator category as one
of the three major growth accelerators. The consistency
across regions of the globe as regards the top four growth
accelerators is readily apparent. The same ?nding occurs
across countries and industries. There is therefore much
similarity in which growth accelerators entrepreneurs across
the globe view as important.
Exhibit 4-2: Relative Importance of Individual Growth Accelerator Categories by Continent
AMNC13_Entrepreneurial_Ecosystems.indd 16 04.09.13 09:01
17 Entrepreneurial Ecosystems Around the Globe and Company Growth Dynamics
Exhibit 4-3 provides a word cloud for the top 40 words
mentioned by survey respondents as growth accelerators.
The top ?ve words from our survey were “market”,
“customers”, “funding”, “companies” and “capital”.
5
Exhibit 4-3: Word Cloud for Company Growth Accelerators
Respondents were also asked to indicate the “most
important accelerators in building your revenues in countries
outside your domestic market”. Exhibit 4-4 provides a
word cloud for the top 40 words mentioned as “growth
accelerators beyond the domestic market”. The top ?ve
words from our survey were “market”, “customers”, “local”,
“partners” and “products”.
Exhibit 4-4: Word Cloud for International Company Growth Accelerators
AMNC13_Entrepreneurial_Ecosystems.indd 17 04.09.13 09:01
18
Entrepreneurial Ecosystems Around the Globe and Company Growth Dynamics
As regards growth challenges, the same categories – funding
& ?nance, human resources, market opportunity and
government & regulatory – appear in the top four regardless
of whether respondents are grouped by continent, country or
industry (see Exhibit 4-1). Exhibit 4-5 shows the percentage
of respondents across continents that cite a given growth
challenge category as one of the top three.
Exhibit 4-5: Relative Importance of Company Growth Challenges by Continent
AMNC13_Entrepreneurial_Ecosystems.indd 18 04.09.13 09:01
19 Entrepreneurial Ecosystems Around the Globe and Company Growth Dynamics
Again, there is notable consistency across continents.
This same consistency can also be seen across countries
and across industries. As with growth accelerators,
entrepreneurs in many parts of the world face a similar set
of growth challenges. Exhibit 4-6 provides a word cloud
for growth challenges. The top ?ve words from our survey
were “funding”, “customers”, “market”, “companies” and
“products”.
Exhibit 4-6: Word Cloud of Company Growth Challenges
Exhibit 4-7 shows a word cloud for “the most important
challenges in building international revenues”. The top ?ve
words from our survey were “local”, “customers”, “market”,
“cultural” and “regulation”.
Exhibit 4-7: Word Cloud of International Company Growth Challenges
The growth accelerator and growth challenge ?ndings
presented in this section reinforce the ?ndings in Section 3
that entrepreneurs view accessible markets, human capital/
workforce and funding & ?nance as the three most important
pillars of an ecosystem in terms of contributing to the
growth of early-stage companies. This consistency when
considering both the pillars of entrepreneurial ecosystems
and company growth accelerators/growth challenges across
various groupings and regions increase con?dence in the
reliability of these ?ndings.
AMNC13_Entrepreneurial_Ecosystems.indd 19 04.09.13 09:01
20
Large companies can play many important roles in
accelerating the growth of early-stage companies. This
section develops information on the relationships between
large corporations and entrepreneurs and their impact, using
two key sources: (i) the online survey – respondents were
asked for examples of productive relationships and of non-
productive relationships; and (ii) executive cases, in which the
role of large companies is discussed – typically in response
to questions about growth accelerators, growth challenges
or high/low moments.
Credibility Enhancement
Galaxy (USA) – baking products:
“Building our croissant business with Williams-Sonoma has
been great for both sides. We certainly couldn’t have done it
without them. They found the best croissants in the US, and
we gained access to their millions of loyal customers. In fact,
Oprah discovered our croissants in the Williams-Sonoma
catalogue. We were fortunate that the orders resulting from
our Oprah appearances all came through the Williams-
Sonoma infrastructure (call centre, website, order processing
system, etc.). We would have had an incredibly hard time
trying to handle that type of volume ourselves.”
Seven key areas were identi?ed where productive
relationships with large companies are possible:
1. Customer engagement – early customers to accelerate
growth
2. Credibility enhancement – lighthouse/tentpole customers,
brand display, references
3. Strategic investors and ?nancing partners – increasing
?nancial resource capacity
4. Mentorship and advice – insight into new markets and
industry structure
5. Go-to-market partners – distributors and resellers, access
to outlets, logistics
6. Operating capability enhancement – manufacturing,
software, technology, know-how
7. Licensing leverage – licensing start-up technology to
enter a new market
Section 5: Large Companies
as Leverage for Early-stage
Companies: Navigating
through the Pitfalls
Entrepreneurial Ecosystems Around the Globe and Company Growth Dynamics
Exhibit 5-1 provides example of quotations from the survey
respondents that illustrate the “customer engagement” area.
69% of the early-stage companies in our online survey have
large domestic companies as customers, while 43% have
large companies in foreign markets as customers.
Notwithstanding many productive relationships, a large
number end up in acrimony and are subject to high levels
of frustration. Early-stage companies need to adopt an
“eyes wide open” perspective both in negotiating with large
companies and in executing on partnerships. There are
many mine?elds, swamps, and choppy waters to navigate.
Challenges are often reported to arise in the following seven
areas:
1. Attracting attention – attracting attention from large
companies
2. Productively working together – coordination and
commitment from the large company
3. Value appropriation – challenges associated with value
creation and value capture
4. Maintaining focus – defocused start-up companies having
their attention and skills diverted
5. Imposed, not-so-hidden costs – imposing direct and
opportunity costs on start-ups
6. Predatory contracting and litigation – lawyers/lawsuits
undermine the progress of start-ups
7. Regulatory capture by large companies – creating a non-
level playing ?eld
Exhibit 5-2 provides examples of the challenge of “attracting
attention”.
AMNC13_Entrepreneurial_Ecosystems.indd 20 04.09.13 09:01
21 Entrepreneurial Ecosystems Around the Globe and Company Growth Dynamics
Exhibit 5-1: The Bene?ts of Customer Engagement
”We were able to secure a contract with a US$ 50 billion
chemical company that needed access to capacity quickly.
We had the only equipment that could successfully meet
their needs. This resulted in a substantial contract (greater
than 50% of our initial business) during the ?rst year of
our operation, and we were able to negotiate favourable
payment terms. As they wanted to enhance their throughput,
the chemical company entered into an agreement to help
?nance the new equipment for us. It allowed us to approach
banks with a guarantee from the chemical company. Good
for the bank, good for us.”
“We were one of the ?rst aluminium can manufacturers in
sub-Saharan Africa. When we came on stream with our
?rst plant, our growth was greatly facilitated by having large
companies as customers. Heineken, Diageo, SABMiller
and Coca Cola were all enthusiastic early supporters. Their
interest was in having access to domestic supply to simplify
their supply chain and reduce their supply risk, even with
pricing at import parity.”
“A large European telco (largest in its original location and
active in other locations) adopted our solution and concept
and even forced all its af?liates and then its roaming partners
to use it as well so as to interface effectively with their
systems. Needless to say, this was great for the growth of
our company.”
“A huge hi-tech company integrated our solution into their
suite of solutions. While this involved some integration and
development from our technical group, which took a while,
the result was that our sales really took off.”
Exhibit 5-2: The Challenge of Attracting Attention – Getting on the
Radar
“Without speci?c large joint customer opportunities, small
companies waste astounding amounts of energy trying to
gain their attention.”
“I believe large companies are indifferent to start-ups, even
to the point of not recognizing them as potential market
competitors, and therefore have little or no role in early-stage
?rms. The reason is simple. Working with or against a start-
up simply cannot move the quarterly EPS needle.”
“Early-stage companies are not part of the core business
of a large company and, therefore, not a ?rst priority. Large
companies introduce very bureaucratic procedures and
processes that are going to slow down the development of
an early-stage company. You can end up with a situation of
almost zero interest and focus.”
“Some large construction companies/homebuilders are
hesitant or very slow to start a business relationship with
a new mortgage company. Some think that banks may
remove funding lines from them for future projects if they
work with us. Also, it is just easier for homebuilders to work
with the banks as they have always done, and it seems hard
to show them how a new approach to loan origination can
add value for them and provide them with better business
options in the future.”
Riding the Wave with a Go-To-Market Partner
BYP (Mexico) – painting company:
“One of the most important factors that fueled BYP’s growth
was the relationship with some key customers. One of our
?rst clients was Sherwin Williams (the US headquartered
Fortune 500 company specializing in general building
materials) and we also started receiving orders from several
major distributors early on in the company’s history. We
understood the signi?cance of securing the key clients in the
market, including, of course, Home Depot (the largest US
retailer of home improvement and construction products).
We had been trying to sell to Home Depot since they started
operating in Mexico. After many attempts, we ?nally got a
chance when their then supplier failed to deliver orders on
time. The acquisition of a big customer like that is a game
changer for a small company like ours.
Of course, sales growth is the great bene?t of having a big
company as a client. In our case, Home Depot is one clear
example of such a customer. We have grown with them,
as the number of their stores has almost tripled during the
years we have been serving them. In some aspects, we have
structured the company around their needs and we were
proud to receive a “Vendor of the Year” award in 2009, a
recognition given to only one supplier each year.
But there are also other great bene?ts of having a large
client. Higher requirements in product quality (both level and
consistency), image and packaging, logistics and service
force us to become a better company. It raises the bar for
all our operations at every level. For new products, having
a certain guaranteed volume allows us to introduce a new
product line with a lower risk, and then offer it to other
customers.
Of course, it also poses some challenges and problems. Big
companies have strict policies and mistakes are not easily
forgiven. Moreover, there is a risk in having a large share of
sales in one client, as investments are made over the years
to serve it better and the health of the company – at least in
the short run – could be at risk if we were to lose the client.”
Challenge of Maintaining Focus
Cupola (UAE) – credit card processing:
“Our biggest disappointment was the collapse of a potential
joint venture in Saudi Arabia. We spent over 18 months
(2010-2011) identifying, nurturing and negotiating with a
potential partner to set up an integrated card personalization
centre and a contact centre. The failure was caused by two
factors. The ?rst was that, although the joint venture partner
had promised to provide business from their own businesses
and they had a lot of clout in the market, this value-add was
never quanti?ed or agreed upon explicitly. The second factor
was the restriction on visas for foreign workers imposed by
the authorities for our type of service industry.”
“As a start-up, even though we were able to develop a
product that was attractive to a certain large company, we
could not qualify as a vendor because we had not been in
business for three years and did not meet their minimum
revenue requirements.”
AMNC13_Entrepreneurial_Ecosystems.indd 21 04.09.13 09:01
22
Entrepreneurs in an ecosystem can play multiple important
roles. Endeavor, a non-pro?t organization, has much
experience in promoting these multiple roles in many parts
of the world. Starting in New York in 1997, it opened its ?rst
regional of?ces in Argentina and Chile (1978), followed by
Brazil and Uruguay (2000). Subsequently, it has expanded
into South Africa (2003), Colombia and Turkey (2006), Egypt,
Jordan and India (2008), Lebanon and Dubai (2011), and
Indonesia, Saudi Arabia and Greece (2012). Five important
roles of “high-impact entrepreneurs” that Endeavor has
tracked and helped facilitate for entrepreneurs starting and
scaling an early-stage company are:
1. Inspiration – inspiring other individuals to become
entrepreneurs;
2. Founder crucible – attracting and developing employees
who subsequently found other companies;
3. Employee crucible – attracting and developing employees
who subsequently become employees of subsequent
early-stage companies;
4. Investment source – using acquired wealth to invest in
subsequent new entrepreneurial ventures;
5. Mentor role – providing key support such as advice,
encouragement and access to a network.
Exhibit 6-1 shows the evolution of entrepreneurial networks
in Buenos Aires and Istanbul. The full report provides a
timeline for the evolution of these networks, with most
detail on the Buenos Aires network. Key lessons from
Endeavor’s extensive role in and observations of the growth
of ecosystems in each of these regions include the following:
1. Entrepreneurial ecosystems are not created
overnight. For example, the Buenos Aires technology
entrepreneurial ecosystem took its ?rst steps in the
mid-1990s, and it was only 15 years later that a rich
network emerged. This observation is consistent with
other regions. Silicon Valley evolved over a number of
decades.
Section 6: The Growth of
Entrepreneurial Ecosystems:
Lessons from Buenos Aires
and Istanbul
Entrepreneurial Ecosystems Around the Globe and Company Growth Dynamics
2. A few people play a central role. Networks require a
few nodes that activate and connect to the rest of the
in-network players. In the case of the Buenos Aires
network, entrepreneurs from three companies account
for a signi?cant share of the network activity.
3. Infrastructure initiatives such as incubators, accelerators,
large companies, investment funds and service suppliers
are complementary. They will not create a network on
their own, but they will provide the mechanisms for these
high-impact entrepreneurs to realize their importance,
activate the ecosystem and multiply their impact. They
should be encouraged to become investors, mentors
and board members to leverage the human capital that
they have accumulated through their experience and
their network.
4. Governments should design policies that facilitate the
growth of entrepreneurial ecosystems by empowering
private actors rather than public ones. Government-
run incubators and venture funds have a mixed track
record, and typically do no better than private ones in
picking winners and losers. Governments can support
opportunities for international studies, rational investment
and bankruptcy regulations, and fundamental scienti?c
research (along with the pathways to commercialization).
These policies, more than direct intervention, make it
more likely that the most important nodes will realize
their entrepreneurial visions, ?nd business success and
stay engaged in the ecosystem as mentors, advisers
and investors.
AMNC13_Entrepreneurial_Ecosystems.indd 22 04.09.13 09:01
23 Entrepreneurial Ecosystems Around the Globe and Company Growth Dynamics
Exhibit 6-1: High-Impact Entrepreneurs in Buenos Aires and Istanbul
Buenos Aires
Tech Network
Istanbul
Tech Network
AMNC13_Entrepreneurial_Ecosystems.indd 23 04.09.13 09:02
24
Governments and regulatory bodies can play an important
role in accelerating or inhibiting the growth of many
companies. This section illustrates and examines many of
the diverse aspects of the relationship between the different
arms of government and early-stage companies. The survey
respondents provided input on two questions relating to
the accelerator/inhibitor role of governments and regulatory
bodies:
(a) Accelerator question: What aspects of the government
policy/regulatory environment in your country/region
were most bene?cial to the growth of your company?
Exhibit 7-1 presents a word cloud for the top 40 words
cited in response to the accelerator question. The top 12
words and their percentage of the top 40 words were: “tax”
(11.0%), “companies” (7.2%), “regulation” (6.8%), “ease”
(6.2%), “business” (4.6%), “government” (3.8%), “market”
(3.8%), “incentives” (3.3%), “support” (3.1%), “policy” (3.1%),
“capital” (2.7%) and “law” (2.7%).
Section 7: The Role of
Government and Regulatory
Policies in Entrepreneurial
Ecosystems: Growth
Accelerators or Growth
Inhibitors?
Entrepreneurial Ecosystems Around the Globe and Company Growth Dynamics
(b) Inhibitor question: What aspects of the government
policy/regulatory environment in your country/region
were most detrimental to the growth of your company?
Government Regulations as a Growth Accelerator for
Human Capital
Bubbly (Singapore) – mobile social networks and messaging:
“Other aspects that really helped us include the very ef?cient
Singapore government – where I could literally call any MP
and get right to the top to get an answer or discuss how
the system should work. They gave us a US$ 1 million grant
early on to subsidize our engineering hiring and then another
US$ 1 million equity investment to keep our incentives
aligned longer term. They have also made it possible for us
to recruit from all over the world – not just in the small labour
market of Singapore. We have nearly unlimited visas, as long
as we’re hiring extremely high calibre engineers. We now
have an engineering team from 20+ different countries and
it’s literally the best, by far, in South-East Asia. “
Exhibit 7-1: Word Cloud for Government/Regulatory Policies as an Early-stage Company Growth Accelerator
AMNC13_Entrepreneurial_Ecosystems.indd 24 04.09.13 09:02
25 Entrepreneurial Ecosystems Around the Globe and Company Growth Dynamics
Political Naivety of Early-stage Companies
Reputation.com (USA) – online reputation and privacy
products: “Silicon Valley does not think enough about
Washington DC. It appears you have to get to behemoth
size to afford getting involved there. We have seen no
interest from DC in getting input or advice from us on
issues of reputation or privacy, in which we have built up an
expertise…. We haven’t been good at in?uencing regulators
and policy-makers. We have had this notion that we are
somehow above it, beyond it. That’s a big mistake.”
Exhibit 7-2 shows the comparable word cloud for the
inhibitor question. The top 12 words and their percentage
of the top 40 words were: “tax” (15.9%), “regulation”
(11.6%), “policy” (4.1%), “companies” (4.0%), “business”
(3.8%), “government” (3.8%), “laws” (3.2%), “cost” (2.8%),
“complexity” (2.7%), “capital” (2.2%), “requirements” (2.2%)
and “high” (2.2%).
Exhibit 7-2: Word Cloud for Government/Regulatory Policy as an Early-stage Company Growth Inhibitor
Governments and regulatory bodies can also play an
important role in either strengthening or weakening the three
pillars of entrepreneurial ecosystems that entrepreneurs
view as most important to the growth of their companies:
accessible markets, human capital/workforce and funding
and ?nance. By way of example, Exhibit 7-3 presents
quotations that pertain to the human capital/workforce pillar.
The survey responses in areas related to government/
regulatory policies revealed many areas where entrepreneurs
believe that government/regulatory policies were
counterproductive to the growth of their early-stage
companies. There was a high frequency of “red code words”,
i.e. words that have a negative connotation as regards
an early-stage company’s relationship with government
or regulatory bodies. Exhibit 7-4 provides a subset of the
many quotations that have “red code words” relating to big
company capture, bureaucracy, complexity, inconsistent
enforcement, lack of clarity, lack of transparency, regulatory
burden/overkill and regulatory uncertainty.
Government Policies that Limit Market Entry
SinoCare (China) – hospital management:
“China’s healthcare industry is subject to strong government
regulation. Prior to 2007, there was only limited access for
foreign capital to China’s healthcare industry, which was
a major challenge for us given our foreign background.
As a result, SinoCare did not experience strong growth
momentum in the early days. The situation changed after
2009 when the State Council launched a new policy to
encourage greater private and foreign capital involvement in
the nation’s hospitals and clinics as part of a health system
reform programme aiming to make affordable healthcare
available to the general public. Under the new policy, foreign
investors can now take up the majority shareholding of a
hospital, which enabled us to tap into more hospitals and
subsequently accelerated our growth.”
AMNC13_Entrepreneurial_Ecosystems.indd 25 04.09.13 09:02
26
Panel A: Growth Accelerators
– “Supply of well-educated workforce” (France, Web-based services)
– “Availability of strong technical talent in Monterrey” (Mexico, internet travel)
– “Investors available with speci?c industry knowledge and experience” (Sweden, transport)
– “Easy to bring in anyone from anywhere in the world on a visa” (UAE, fashion retail trade)
– “Limits in California on employee non-compete clauses facilitates labour mobility” USA, venture capital)
– “Ability to get top-notch accountants and lawyers who will provide services at big discounts for anticipated future relationships”
(USA, investments)
– “Government reimbursement for training in growing organizations” (USA, Web hosting)
Panel B: Growth Inhibitors
– “The granting of share options is treated as employee income at the time the option is granted” (Australia, electricity storage)
– “Immigration laws are a hurdle to recruiting foreign talent” (Austria, medical devices)
– “Archaic tax and labour structures” (Brazil, IT sales force management)
– “Rigid employment laws make it very dif?cult, costly and way too long to recruit the necessary staff” (France, consulting services)
– “Employment law does not allow us to hire and ?re freely” (France, electronics)
– “The dif?culty of providing employees with stock options given the current regulatory framework” (Mexico, retail consumer products)
– “Some aspects of social insurance are cumbersome for HR” (Switzerland, software)
– “Immigration policies prevent the free movement of quali?ed people” (UK, ?nancial advisory)
– “Dif?culty in getting work visas (H1-B) for foreign engineers” (USA, utilities)
– “Visa limitations on allowing foreign talent to stay in the US” (USA, venture capital)
– “So many rules and regulations. Not explained clearly enough. Not stable enough. Immigration policies – we cannot hire the people
when we want them and bring them here.” (USA, mobile tech company)
– “It’s sometimes scary to hire employees because of all the laws you have to comply with. Just one employee lawsuit in our early
years could have killed the company.” (USA, travel services)
– “Willingness to tolerate frivolous lawsuits around discrimination – if I hired someone and then ?red them six months later how can
that be discrimination?” (USA, enterprise software)
Entrepreneurial Ecosystems Around the Globe and Company Growth Dynamics
Exhibit 7-3: Human Capital/Workforce Ecosystem Pillar and Government/Regulatory Policies: Survey Quotations
Exhibit 7-4: Government/Regulatory Policies as a Growth Inhibitor for Early-stage Companies: Living in the “World of Red Code Words”
Big Company Capture
– “Government purchasing policies are biased towards big companies with ?nancial strengths in their selection criteria, bid bonds
and performance bonds” (France, consulting services)
– “Cash ?ow management dif?cult with a regulation de?ned to ?t large and stable companies’ needs” (Spain, engineering services)
– “Policies favouring the market incumbent that has a monopoly of the market and close ties to the government” (United Kingdom,
port logistics)
Bureaucracy/Red Tape
– “Red tape in Greece is impossible. Forming a company that was a subsidiary of a company with US investors was a nightmare. It
imposed impossible red tape deadlocks in the early stage.”
Collateral Damage
– “Anti-crime laws affect legitimate business” (Mexico, real estate)
Complexity
– “Complexity and cost of creating a business” (Italy, online travel agency)
– “Complex, costly tax regimes” (Spain, basic telecom services)
– “The myriad of state-level ?ling requirements… this is an unimaginable amount of non-value added work for a start-up. I’d be happy
to pay 20% of my pro?ts to a ‘state fund’ that got divided between everyone as long as I could avoid the insane overhead of 50
different requirements.” (USA, solar)
AMNC13_Entrepreneurial_Ecosystems.indd 26 04.09.13 09:02
27 Entrepreneurial Ecosystems Around the Globe and Company Growth Dynamics
Entrepreneurial Company Naivety or Ignorance
– “Regulators do not have an entrepreneurial mindset. They are more oriented towards big business.” (Japan, pharmaceuticals)
– “General ignorance about the entrepreneurial process” (USA, private equity)
Inconsistent Enforcement
– “No consistent enforcement of laws creating a non-level playing ?eld” (Singapore, venture capital)
Lack of Clarity/Opaque/Confusing
– “Lack of clarity on taxation of income earned by foreign companies in India” (India, private equity)
– “Lack of clarity regarding the application of laws and regulations. Tax code is burdensome.” (Mexico, self-storage)
– “Dif?culty and consuming sales tax regimes” (USA, merchant card processing)
Lack of Transparency
– “The government absolutely must do more to promote transparency and competition in the real estate industry” (USA, real estate)
Litigation Swamp
– “There is no penalty for ?ling a losing lawsuit. Lawyers always have an incentive to ?le and force a company to settle over
everything, no matter how small. If we were in a legal climate in which the loser was forced to pay all costs, and a regulatory climate
that did not penalize small to medium-sized companies that cannot afford batteries of compliance attorneys, we would be able to
grow twice as fast.” (USA, ?nance and investment)
Non-Growth Mindset
– “There is an anti-oil & gas posture. Our senior government of?cials are a bunch of ‘brake-tappers’ who seem to do everything they
can to detract from growth rather than help to accelerate it.” (USA, oil and gas exploration)
Redistribution Mindset
– “Operating in France is like operating in a place where the inmates are running the asylum. The marginal tax rate is now 75%. No
great surprise that wealthy entrepreneurs start to leave the country.” (United Kingdom, luxury vacation rentals)
Regulatory Burden/Overkill
– “Sarbanes-Oxley killed the IPO market. It’s too expensive to keep up with the big guys. Too much regulation. It has grown to
obscene levels. On a recent DARPA proposal we had to, among other things, certify that we weren’t doing business in Sudan.
Really!” (USA, communications networks)
– “The regulatory climate has put the burden of proof of innocence on ?nancial institutions. Rules issued by FINRA and SEC have
caused us to create dozens of compliance and legal roles.” (USA, investment advice)
Time Delays/Lengthy Approval Processes
– “Environmental licenses very slow to get. No centralized bureaucracy – have to deal at federal, state, city and union level.” (Brazil,
animal feed)
– “IRS regulations were not settled for several years” (USA, professional services)
Regulatory Uncertainty/Changing Regulations
– “Uncertainty in future revenue incentives and support” (UK, renewable energy)
– “The constant changing of federal tax regulations and the inability to predict the future” (USA, electricity services)
– “Uncertainty in future policies, sometimes even retroactive adjustments” (USA, solar power)
AMNC13_Entrepreneurial_Ecosystems.indd 27 04.09.13 09:02
Appendices
AMNC13_Entrepreneurial_Ecosystems.indd 28 04.09.13 09:02
29 Entrepreneurial Ecosystems Around the Globe and Company Growth Dynamics
Executive Case Study –
Capillary Technologies
Overview
Capillary Technologies provides easy-to-use, high-ROI
cloud software solutions that empower retail businesses
to engage intelligently with their customers in real time
through mobile, social, online and in-store channels. With
a vision to build the ?rst billion-dollar product company
out of India and to become a major player in the booming
mobile and retail sectors, the company got its start by
providing businesses in emerging economies (mainly
India and South-East Asia) affordable access to state-of-
the-art customer relationship and loyalty management
technology. By emphasizing paperless mobile technology,
real-time analytics and consumer engagement, marketing
life cycle automation and sophisticated, innovative analytics
that surpass capabilities of much larger, more expensive
and complex customer relationship management (CRM)
solutions, Capillary Technologies quickly attracted the
attention of large global retail brands – and venture capital.
Rapid growth has enabled the company to build out a
complete, end-to-end software-as-a-service (SaaS) CRM
platform, encompassing customer engagement, clienteling,
loyalty, big data analytics and social CRM suites. Capillary
Technologies now serves over 140 major global brands,
including Pizza Hut, Puma, Jack Wills, Marks & Spencer,
Benetton, Courts, Nike and Nokia, across 10,000+ stores
and over 70 million consumer interactions. Clients have
attributed up to 10% growth in same-store sales to Capillary
Technologies’ solutions. Capillary Technologies has received
numerous awards, including the Gartner 2013 Cool Vendor
award and Marketing Magazine’s CRM & Loyalty Silver
Agency of the Year Award 2013, and was also named one of
Forbes’ 12 Hidden Gems. Capillary Technologies is backed
by prominent institutional investors Sequoia Capital, Norwest
Venture Partners and Qualcomm Ventures.
Timeline/Key Events
Aug 2008
Receives US$ 30,000 seed loan from Entrepreneurship Cell,
IIT Kharagpur
Aug 2009
Wins ?rst client – Indus League (Future Group). Launched
Mobile CRM and Loyalty offering
Sep 2009
Obtains US$ 500,000 in funding from Qualcomm Ventures
(QPrize – India Winners & Global Runners Up) and angel
investors
Mar 2010
Launches instant in-store cross & up-selling for retail brands
Feb 2011
Wins ?rst international client – Store 21 (United Kingdom)
May 2011
Launches Capillary Customer Intelligence, Big Data Analytics
& Campaign Manager
Jan 2012
Launches Capillary Lifecycle Marketer, predictive intelligence-
powered customer engagement
Jul 2012
Launches Capillary Social CRM for better social
conversations, engagement and monetization
Sep 2012
Raises US$ 16.5 million in series A funding from Sequoia
Capital and Norwest Venture Partners
Dec 2012
Wins coveted awards: 2012 Red Herring Top 100 Global,
Forbes’ 12 Hidden Gems and Techcircle’s Top 10 SaaS
Companies India
Jun 2013
Named Gartner 2013 Cool Vendor in India, wins at Marketing
Magazine’s Agency of the Year Awards and named one of
SiliconIndia’s Top 10 most promising ventures founded by
Indians
Jul 2013
Powers 10,000+ stores for 140+ leading consumer brands,
engaging 70 million consumers across 16 countries; 11
of?ces globally employing staff of 15 different nationalities
Aug 2013
Launches Capillary Clienteling, store associate task
management & customer experience management solutions
AMNC13_Entrepreneurial_Ecosystems.indd 29 04.09.13 09:02
30
Quotations
Aneesh Reddy is co-founder and CEO of Capillary
Technologies. A visionary who believes that advances in
technology lead to signi?cant advances in business value
and ROI, Reddy works with enterprise consumer businesses
to help them put the right communications for the right
products into the hands of the right customers at the right
time. He is a featured entrepreneur in leading publications
such as Forbes, Harvard Business Review and The
Economic Times. Reddy is a frequently featured expert at
global retail, marketing and technology forums and premier
educational institutes such as Wharton and the Indian
School of Business. He participates in discussions around
entrepreneurship and major technology trends such as
cloud, mobile, social and big data. He is also an early-stage
investor in various ventures including Tynker, Studypad Inc.,
ANTfarm and Verious Inc. Reddy holds a Bachelor’s degree
in Manufacturing Engineering from the Indian Institute of
Technology, Kharagpur (IIT KGP).
Krishna Mehra is co-founder & CTO of Capillary
Technologies, where he drives product vision and strategy
for the company. As a technology evangelist, Mehra believes
that true innovation happens at the con?uence of technology
and business. At Capillary, he has created powerful products
that address large gaps in retail customer engagement and
enable hundreds of consumer-facing businesses worldwide
to embrace cutting-edge paradigms – including customer
engagement technologies based on real-time analytics
integrated mobile and social media.
Q1: What was the source of the initial idea, and how did
that idea evolve into a viable growing company? How did it
change over time?
Reddy: “Capillary was founded during the global economic
recession (2008-2009) in the belief it could help emerging
economy retailers engage with customers better using CRM
technologies comparable in sophistication to those used
in more developed economies but made both simpler to
use and less expensive through cloud hosting. Unlike many
?rst-time entrepreneurs who wait to validate their million-
dollar ideas, we picked two areas – mobile and retail – which
were both ‘next big things’ in India at the time. We spoke to
many Indian retailers about their critical business problems
and identi?ed that even large retail chains had minimal
understanding of why customers were not returning to stores
to make additional purchases. E-commerce ?rms have the
advantage of knowing their customers well and we wanted
to bridge the knowledge gap for traditional bricks and mortar
retailers. This turned out to be a game changer for our early-
stage customers and was a key growth driver for Capillary.
Two aspects of the company stood out:
1. We carefully selected angel investors who could add
value as the company grew, bringing on board as many
as 17 angels over a period of three years, who were all
experts in their own ?elds, including Rajan Anandan,
Head of Google India; Venkat Tadanki, CEO of Secova;
and Harminder Sahni, MD at Technopark (previously KSA
Technopark).
Entrepreneurial Ecosystems Around the Globe and Company Growth Dynamics
2. We focused assiduously on both client and investor
acquisitions by selling assertively through relationships
and demonstrating our ability to win large companies as
clients.
As Capillary began delivering amazing results in tough
economic conditions, our Indian clients such as Pizza Hut,
Puma and so forth began referring us to their counterparts
in other markets such as Singapore, Malaysia and the
UK, enabling us to scale up globally. The key to Capillary’s
success has been our ability to keep delivering new products
that increase our customers’ sales revenues and their
marketing ROI, and to ensure the continued usefulness of
our product suite to customers.”
Mehra: “We started on this journey with a consumer-
focused product search and coupon idea. We wanted to
do something that combined mobile with retail. Mobile
was growing rapidly in India, and retail was beginning to
happen. Our ?rst idea was to launch an SMS-, location-
based discount search business. However, our early client
prospects told us that, while discounts are ?ne to attract
consumers, retailers really wanted more capabilities for
understanding, retaining, nurturing and engaging personally
with their customers. We shifted our focus drastically, from
building technology for consumers to building technology
for businesses that would help them to extract more value
from consumers using a cloud computing model. Over time
there have been many changes to our technology – we have
added major product streams, including social, big data and
instant engagement.”
Q2: What were the major growth accelerators for your
company in the early years of high growth?
Reddy: “Market focus: We started Capillary not with a ‘Big
Idea’, but rather with a vision of creating the ?rst billion-dollar
SaaS solution company out of India with an extraordinary
passion for being leaders in an entrepreneurial ecosystem.
That helped us enormously because, instead of ?xating on
a single idea, we took our direction from market forces and
found a unique focus in results achieved with early-stage
clients. We were acutely aware of the exponential growth
potential in India’s yet-to-be-organized or technology-
enabled retail sector. Our vision evolved to accelerating retail
growth via personalized and targeted customer engagement.
Availability of clients: Since our value proposition was built
on the core problem of driving sales during an economic
recession, we were able to quickly convince top Indian
retailers such as Pizza Hut, Puma, Madura Garments,
Raymond and so forth to come on board as EAA customers.
Our ‘land and expand’ strategy – opening accounts with
three month proof-of-concept trials – worked tremendously
well. Also, our well connected investors and advisers
delivered some of our best long-term customers.
Business model: Within months of launch, our clients
were seeing good success with Capillary, which enabled
us to build a fairly straightforward business model – a
hosted SaaS, pay-as-you-go solution, requiring no upfront
investment and placing a minimal burden on resources.
A retailer, for example, might agree to pay US$ 300-500
AMNC13_Entrepreneurial_Ecosystems.indd 30 04.09.13 09:02
31 Entrepreneurial Ecosystems Around the Globe and Company Growth Dynamics
per point of sale per month based on solutions chosen,
without any prohibitive hardware or other resource costs.
We empower clients to experiment with our platform in a few
stores for a three-month pilot engagement and then extend
use of the software to more stores and for longer durations,
depending on outcomes.
Funding & client references: We received the QPrize
recognition from Qualcomm Ventures and the US$ 500,000
from angel investors at the right time. This helped us to
invest substantially in our initial product offering, while the
Qualcomm brand association made us a household name.
Our international expansion started quite rapidly as domestic
clientele referred us to their offshore counterparts. For
example, Pizza Hut India led us to Pizza Hut accounts in
Singapore, Hong Kong, Thailand and the Middle East; Puma
India connected us to Puma businesses in Singapore and
Malaysia; Robinsons Singapore got us into their Malaysia
business; and Alok Industries in India took us to the UK
and helped us to obtain Store Twenty One as our ?rst
international client.”
Mehra: “The Capillary team: From the very beginning we
focused on building a strong, empowered organization. We
deliver exceptionally high-quality work, which differentiates
us from our competition and fuels our growth. Most of our
early hires were people we knew personally either from
previous workplaces or through collaboration in robotics,
entrepreneurship and other IIT KGP clubs. Hence, we knew
the passionate performers on our team even before we hired
them. Today we employ over 150 highly capable technology,
R&D and analytics professionals holding degrees from
premier technology and business institutions across India.
This has helped us lay an extremely strong foundation for our
technology, R&D and analytics functions: a highly capable
team, which has expanded without the need for big budgets
and through personal connections alone, which has always
been our key strength. With almost 400 employees in total,
we have virtually zero attrition, especially among staff at the
mid-senior level and above. Capillary’s core team has always
believed in giving complete freedom to its team members;
this keeps our talent engaged and focused on innovating at
all times.”
Q3: What role did key aspects of the entrepreneurial
ecosystem surrounding your company play in the growth of
your company?
Mehra: “The tactical shift in operations: We started the
company in Kolkata, a Tier 2 city in India that was in the early
stages of becoming an IT destination. We quickly realized,
however, that Bangalore – India’s Tier 1 IT hub city – would
provide a better ecosystem in which to build our company.
Indeed, moving to Bangalore turned out to be an important
strategic move for our company since it gave us access to
the right investors and advisers. It was in Bangalore that
we learned of Qualcomm’s Q prize at an open coffee club
and later went on to win the prize, providing a major boost
for our nascent company. We also made connections with
Qualcomm Ventures, which later invested in Capillary.
Availability of talent: India has one of the strongest
technology talent pools in the world, and since Bangalore is
home to most of the country’s R&D centres, there was an
abundance of talent available to help build our product suite.
We built a strong technology and R&D team by acquiring top
talent from noted companies such as IBM, Microsoft, Oracle,
Salesforce, Dunhumby, Fair Isaac, Box.net, Infor and Dell,
while also attracting fresh talent from the world famous IIT
and IIM educational institutions.”
Reddy: “The Great Recession: 2008 was quite an eventful
year for Capillary. Just as Lehman Brothers was ?ling for
bankruptcy, we were busy procuring a US$ 30,000 loan from
our alma mater IIT KGP to start our company. The recession
came as an unexpected boon for us – we did not have to
pay premium wages to attract outstanding talent and we got
great discounts on major upfront investments. We were also
able to position our solutions as a good recession strategy:
increase share of wallet, sell more high-margin items, cross-
and up-sell more assertively, identify and win back lapsed
customers, convert new customers to repeat business and
so forth. We had a winning value proposition amidst dif?cult
economic conditions.
Largest series A round: With all we had going for us,
Capillary was able to raise the largest series A funding for
Indian product start-ups (US$ 16.5 million) from leading
institutional investors Sequoia Capital, Norwest Venture
Partners and Qualcomm Ventures. These ?rms provide great
advisory services and have helped our leadership team
to acquire amazing con?dence, to build ambitious growth
plans for international geographies and to fund accelerated
product development.
Moving HQ to Singapore: Singapore is becoming the Silicon
Valley of Asia; start-ups are popping up all over, attracting
substantial investment wealth. Investors, shareholders and
entrepreneurs are all realizing Singapore’s advantages,
experiencing fast growth and gaining entry to Asia’s
untapped developing market economies. Favourable
regulations and extensive government support for start-
ups made Singapore a very attractive choice for our new
corporate HQ location in early 2012.”
Q4: What key aspects of the entrepreneurial ecosystem
surrounding your company that were absent (or existed only
in a weak form) created the greatest challenges for growing
your company? Please describe and discuss how you met/
were impacted by these gaps in the ecosystem and their
resultant challenges?
Reddy: “In 2008, India and the rest of the world were
experiencing economic recession – not a very encouraging
environment in which to start a business. However, we saw
this as an opportunity rather than a hurdle. We bootstrapped
for the ?rst three years and functioned with very little funding
because the investors were cooperating and customers
were willing to pay. In the early years, one of India’s largest
venture capital ?rms wanted to invest in Capillary, but they
also wanted to change our business model to focus on
consumers. Our core team believed ?rmly in our vision and
the direction in which Capillary was moving. We turned
down the investment offer and, despite limited funding, grew
rapidly over a very short time span by sticking to our focus
areas.
AMNC13_Entrepreneurial_Ecosystems.indd 31 04.09.13 09:02
32
Another prohibiting factor was friends and family and the
societal mindset in general. The start-up scene in India was
very young; most people were willing to work only for large
corporations that offered stable careers with job security,
which made it dif?cult early on to attract the right people.
Even when our top candidates were convinced to join
Capillary, peer and family pressures to settle down and avoid
risks caused many to back away from the opportunities we
offered. The solution we found was to nurture talent rather
than acquire it. Instead of focusing on job descriptions, we
focused on people, which led to outstanding early results.
Now, as we scale up, we are bringing on board senior
leaders across all departments to drive the next phase of
growth for Capillary. We intend to invest signi?cantly in the
professional and personal development of the people who
work for us.”
Mehra: “In the early stages, we faced a lot of infrastructure
and regulatory challenges, as is the case for most
entrepreneurs. But our focus on cloud technology helped us
to grow easily and to offer substantial value to customers,
while also maintaining great operating margins. But we
did spend a lot of our time doing things that were not
adding value, as we were part of the ?rst wave of young
?rst-time entrepreneurs in a country still bound by legacy
corporate environments and no successful history of product
technology companies.”
Q5: At what stage did you invest signi?cant resources
seeking to grow your company internationally/beyond your
domestic country or region? What factors were pivotal in
deciding when to seek growth internationally and where to
seek that growth?
Mehra: “After successfully rolling out our solutions for Indian
clients, stabilizing our client base and increasingly carving
out niche leadership positions domestically, we decided to
investigate neighbouring markets. We observed that retailers
in regions such as South-East Asia, the Middle East and
Western Europe were facing similar problems and using
solutions and technologies that were far behind best in class.
We knew our solutions could help these businesses and
were able to make strong business cases around potential
revenue opportunities. Early successes in international
markets inspired us to dramatically accelerate our offshore
market explorations.”
Reddy: “After our series A funding round, we decided to
invest signi?cantly in international markets. For some of
the early markets into which we ventured, for example the
United Arab Emirates and the UK, it took a long time to
deliver results and cost our company millions. Investing
in those markets was a very bold move for us, but we
stood by our decision and, by the time Capillary started
operations in Singapore, our international businesses had
begun generating signi?cant revenues and looked extremely
promising. In the early stages, much of our R&D investment
went to preparing our products for global markets. We
started slowly receiving proactive inquires from international
accounts and understood there was a strong market for our
products globally. Our ?rst few international clients came as
references from existing successful clients in India. Those
early experiences gave us the con?dence to quickly scale
offshore operations.”
Entrepreneurial Ecosystems Around the Globe and Company Growth Dynamics
Q6: What were the biggest challenges in building growth
internationally? How did you meet or adapt to those
challenges?
Mehra: “We initially found it dif?cult to build sales presence in
international markets. For a specialized industry like ours, it is
essential to attract sales talent that can build the company’s
brand with their existing know-how and business networks,
and are passionate about how entrepreneurial workplaces
thrive. Since we were looking at three large potential markets
– South East Asia, Western Europe and the United States –
we had to be careful not to spread our resources too thinly.
What has worked well for us is the three markets approach
– every year we decide to open three new territories. First we
stabilize the territories, put our teams in place and acquire
at least ?ve early-stage clients rapidly, and, in parallel, invest
aggressively in the three markets we opened the previous
year and that have now stabilized. Markets like Singapore,
the United Kingdom and the United States are showing great
results for us with such a focused expansion.”
Reddy: “One of the biggest challenges Capillary faced was a
lack of brand awareness outside India, which made it dif?cult
to generate new business leads. And while our Indian clients
helped us move to international locations through word of
mouth, this was not a model for fast growth. We solved the
problem by creating an inside sales team for lead generation
and a powerful outbound sales team operating out of India.
While we had always used a push sales format in India,
we found this did not work well in western countries. We
realised western retailers were looking for more consultative
approaches. We also found a large market gap; there
were plenty of very expensive CRM solutions aimed at the
Walmarts and Tescos of the world, but far fewer serving
lower enterprise and mid-market retailers. We positioned our
Intelligent Customer Engagement
TM
suite, which combines
CRM, big data analytics and campaign automation, to serve
these neglected markets in a cost-effective, value-driven
manner.
Another obstacle was hesitancy among large retail brands
to work with a very young, seemingly inexperienced team.
We overcame this hesitancy with a highly effective ‘land and
expand’ approach, initiating engagements via small, high-
ROI pilot projects to prove the ef?cacy of our products and
to close increasingly large deals with world-famous brands.
Over time, as we have worked with more than 140 retail
brands around the world, we have developed deep retail
trade expertise and extensive intellectual property, which
has become a unique selling proposition for us with larger
accounts.”
Q7: What major role, if any, did key aspects of the
ecosystem in the country (or countries) you ?rst sought
international growth either promote or impede your ability to
grow in those international markets?
Reddy: “Expanding to international markets had a great
impact on how our company functioned and made
decisions. As a young start-up, we followed the Jugaad
(frugal) innovation style, making short-term ?xes under tight
deadlines driven primarily by clients’ whims and priorities.
That made it dif?cult for us to stay focused on our long-term
AMNC13_Entrepreneurial_Ecosystems.indd 32 04.09.13 09:02
33 Entrepreneurial Ecosystems Around the Globe and Company Growth Dynamics
product development vision and may have cost us some
growth. As we became more internationally driven, we had
to drastically change our development and service delivery
style, aligning with our longer-term business strategy and
making a strong commitment to long-term planning, effective
project management and re?ective decision-making – taking
time but delivering high-quality work by agreed dates.
Our international expansion has also enabled us to bring
on board industry veterans from the CRM, analytics and
consumer loyalty domains, a group of experts to which we
did not have access in our domestic market and who have
made our corporate portfolio quite strong. Now we have the
right capacity to tackle large accounts and win massive deals
all around the world.”
Q8: Seeking international growth often has both high
moments and dark (low) moments. Brie?y describe one high
moment and one dark (low) moment in seeking international
growth.
Reddy: “High moment: The highest moment for us, so far,
was winning our ?rst international client, Store Twenty One
in the UK. It was an important milestone in our history and
we look upon the accomplishment with great pride. It had
a dramatic impact on the way we run our company and
completely transformed our long-term business plans. What
followed Store Twenty One was a series of early international
wins. I still remember one of the deals we won, which
was at ?ve times the market pricing and one of our ?rst
engagements in a new region and taught us a great deal
about how to compete with established competitors without
compromising on price. Today, we are not less expensive
than contemporary competitors but we do deliver much
greater value, faster and with less effort.
Low moment: We have experienced great learning on our
journey into international markets. For example, sales cycle
times were much longer than we had expected in early UAE
and UK market ventures. We spent millions and waited
months for decisions to be made. It took time for us to ?gure
out that we needed a combination of stable lead generation,
steady ?lling and strong management of our opportunity
pipelines and dedicated brand building to establish our
credibility in new markets. Patience and how to make
decisive, smart manoeuvres in complex sales processes are
two things we have learned along the way.”
AMNC13_Entrepreneurial_Ecosystems.indd 33 04.09.13 09:02
34
Entrepreneurial Ecosystems Around the Globe and Company Growth Dynamics
Illustrative Executive Cases
1. 9F (China) – ?nancial services company
2. Capillary Technologies (India and Singapore) – company
specializing in cloud-based software for customer
engagement
3. Interpark (South Korea) – online shopping mall market
4. PCH International (China and Ireland) – provider of
consumer electronics products
5. d-Light (USA) – manufacturer and distributor of solar
light and power products
6. Wild?re (USA) – social media marketing platform
7. Movile (Brazil) – mobile content company
8. Arteris (France and USA) – provider of semiconductors
9. Freelancer.com (Australia) – global marketplace for
outsourced services
10. TaKaDu (Israel) – providers of software to promote
ef?cient water use
11. Taste Holdings (South Africa) – vertically integrated
franchiser with strong brand focus
12. Victoria Seeds (Uganda) – full-line seed company
(The executive cases shown above include in-depth
interviews with the founder or Chief Executive Of?cer of each
company and can be found online at www.weforum.org.)
The full report also includes Executive Cases for the following
companies:
Abacus (Pakistan) – professional services company
Aemertis (USA and India) – renewable fuels and biochemical
company
AMC Juices (Spain) – chilled fresh juice processing company
Bubbly (Singapore) – provider of mobile social networks and
messaging
BYP (Mexico) – paint applications company
Cupola Group MEA (UAE/Dubai) – credit card processing
company
Delicious Bakery (Egypt) – provider of high-end bakery
products
Digitouch (Turkey) – digital market agency/af?liate marketing
network
Galaxy Desserts (USA) – manufacturer of baking products
Green Biologics (United Kingdom) – industrial biotechnology
company
Hangzhou Goudian Dam Safety Engineering (People’s
Republic of China) – provider of high technology products for
hydropower dams
Heartland Payment Systems (USA) – credit card payments
company
Inspirato (USA) – destination club for luxury travellers
LoopUp (United Kingdom) – provider of cloud product for
business conference calling and online meetings
NEP (Malaysia) – manufacturer and supplier of water ?ltration
systems
Netsol Technologies (Pakistan) – global provider of enterprise
IT solutions
NEXON (South Korea) – developer and publisher of free-to-
plat (F2P) online games
OpenDNS (USA) – provider of cloud-delivered Web security
services
Pintar International (Philippines) – manufacturer of bone china
(porcelain) ceramics
Polyera (USA) – materials science company
Pronto Promo (Pakistan) – promotional products company
QC (Mexico) – micro and small business loans company
Qualtrics (USA) – supplier of data collection and analysis
products
Reputation.com (USA) – provider of online reputation and
privacy products
Saham Finances (Morocco) – African-based conglomerate
offering ?nance products
SinoCare Group (People’s Republic of China) – hospital
management company
Southwestern Business Process Services (SWS) (Ireland) –
outsourced processing business
Tough Mudder (USA) – endurance challenge company with
large-scale events
United Security Services (USS) (Argentina) – security alarm
installation and monitoring company
Vision in HealthCare (ViiCare) (People’s Republic of China) –
provider of information technology solutions for hospitals
Zhejiang Huifeng Warp Knitting (People’s Republic of China)
– manufacturer of tricot fabrics
Endnotes
1
Global Entrepreneurship and the Successful Growth
Strategies of Early-Stage Companies. April 2011. New York:
World Economic Forum.
2
For example, Startup Ecosystem Report 2012, Startup
Genome and Telefonica Digital.
3
World Economic Forum, op. cit.
4
These 16 categories were used in Global Entrepreneurship
and the Successful Growth Strategies of Early-Stage
Companies, World Economic Forum, 2011 – see Section 2.
5
Word clouds give greater prominence to words that appear
more frequently in responses to speci?c questions.
AMNC13_Entrepreneurial_Ecosystems.indd 34 04.09.13 09:02
AMNC13_Entrepreneurial_Ecosystems.indd 35 04.09.13 09:02
The World Economic Forum
is an independent international
organization committed to
improving the state of the world
by engaging business, political,
academic and other leaders of
society to shape global, regional
and industry agendas.
Incorporated as a not-for-pro?t
foundation in 1971 and
headquartered in Geneva,
Switzerland, the Forum is
tied to no political, partisan
or national interests.
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Tel.: +41 (0) 22 869 1212
Fax: +41 (0) 22 786 2744
[email protected]
www.weforum.org
AMNC13_Entrepreneurial_Ecosystems.indd 36 04.09.13 09:02
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