March 15, 2011

Bookmark php Immigrants behind Silicon Valley’s tech supremacy

By Francis Moran and Leo Valiquette

In his book, The Way Ahead: Meeting Canada’s Productivity Challenge, , RBC professor for the commercialization of innovation at the University of Ottawa’s , talks about the “social contract between science and society in the U.S.” that arose in the late 1940s and gave rise to that bookmark php unique ecosystem we know today as Silicon Valley.

The basis of this contract is found in , a 1945 report to U.S. President Harry Truman by visionary Vannevar Bush that outlined a U.S. post-war science and technology policy that would ultimately result in the creation of the National Science Foundation. In the years that followed, military-funded unclassified R&D in the private sector, driven by the pressures of the Cold War and the space race, laid the foundation for Silicon Valley and made Bush’s vision a reality.

The story of Silicon Valley’s evolution, which is obviously far beyond the confines of this series, continues to support the misconception that the U.S. is somehow better at producing successful entrepreneurs and multinational technology enterprises than other countries. As if the “right stuff” is somehow genetically encoded as result of being born on American soil.

But as Duke University adjunct professor  observed in  in the March 2009 issue of BusinessWeek, the success bookmark php of Silicon Valley in fact refutes this stereotype.

“Despite the fact that they constitute only 12 per cent of the American population, immigrants have started 52 per cent of Silicon Valley’s technology companies and contributed to more than 25 per cent of our global patents. They make up 24 per cent of the American science and engineering workforce holding bachelor’s degrees and 47 per cent of science and engineering workers who have PhDs,” Wadhwa wrote.

A multinational ecosystem that is bigger than any one country

What has been created in Silicon Valley is an ecosystem with the critical mass to attract the top people from around the world and provide them with the varied resources they need to build success. There are also cultural elements here that bear noting; namely, an appetite for risk and an acceptance that failure is a fundamental building block of business success. But again, one can argue these characteristics define the multinational culture of Silicon Valley itself, as opposed to the U.S. in general.

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“It is very easy to go down the road of confirming stereotype,” said , general partner at , co-founder of the  and an ex-pat Canadian who has been south of the border since 1988.

“What Silicon Valley has done is create an ecosystem and a brand, a model, that bookmark php allows anyone from anywhere in the world to come and execute.”

Simply put, for startup entrepreneurs of whatever origin, Silicon Valley is where it’s at.

, managing partner of  and co-founder of the C100, is another ex-pat Canadian immersed in the U.S. VC and startup scene. From his view, Silicon Valley offers the broad cluster innovation, professional services and veteran expertise needed to support risk-taking, along with “a level bookmark php of global customer intimacy that one just doesn’t see anywhere else on the planet.”

The tens of thousands of talented individuals who have been drawn to Silicon Valley represent a rich resource for startups from almost any country in search of the counsel, capital and resources they need to bring technology to market. India and Israel are two outstanding examples of countries that have leveraged the large ex-pat communities they have in the Valley.

In Canada’s case, there are 300,000 ex-pats living in the orbit of California’s technology sector.

“We must find out how to tap into all these Canadians and ask their help,” said , president and CEO of Waterloo’s .

Incubation from the grass roots: The C100

In March 2010, a number of Canadian ex-pats decided to make that task easier. They pooled their resources to create the C100.

C100 is a non-profit, member-driven organization dedicated to supporting Canadian technology entrepreneurship and investment, comprised of a select group of Canadians based primarily in the Valley, including executives of leading technology companies, experienced startup entrepreneurs and venture capital investors.

“We’re trying to give Canadians as much of an unfair advantage as we can,” said Lee. “We are trying to leverage the talent pool down here to provide that success path, to provide mentors, connections and access to funding.”

Within its first five months, the C100 earned the support and sponsorship of government, economic development agencies and technology incubators across Canada, from  and , to ,  and Communitech. Seventy Canadian companies were introduced in the Valley and five secured VC investment — a total of US$45 million. And that was just the start.

“We’re still small and still growing,” said Lee.

And this is important to a new or growing tech venture because…

is CEO of , a Waterloo startup that is among the scores of companies to date that have been introduced in the Valley by the C100. To him, the C100 is a “business mentoring program on steroids” that can help a startup “go beyond becoming a company to becoming a globally competitive company that can scale.”

Achieving this global perspective it critical in two ways.

First, to bring technology to market, startup entrepreneurs must think globally in terms of which markets they should target. Second, they must also think globally in terms of how far afield they should look for the help and resources they need to reach those markets.

As the C100 demonstrates, there is an overwhelming array of resources out there for company incubation and growth. The only way for a startup to tap into this is to realize that the value chain for bringing technology to market transcends borders. Entrepreneurs must look beyond their own backyards and connect with as many people as possible.

What is your view on the value of “plugging into the Valley?” What do you consider to be the essential ingredients for, as Campbell put it, going “beyond becoming a company to becoming a globally competitive company that can scale?” Please share your thoughts through the comment section below.

In our next instalment, we will discuss startup incubation from the perspective of how economic development is best handled at the community and regional level.

This is the fifth article in a continuing series that examines the state of the ecosystem necessary to successfully bring technology to market. Based on dozens of interviews with entrepreneurs, venture capitalists, angel investors, business leaders, academics, tech-transfer experts and policy makers, this series looks at what is working and what can be improved in the go-to-market ecosystem in the United States, Canada and Britain. We invite your feedback.

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