It is fair to say that we pay pretty close attention to Silicon Valley and Alley. Perhaps we are even a little obsessed. Sure, the Valley/Alley matters. But they also represent only one slice of the
digital innovation pie. A hefty slice, but there is a lot more!
Many will have heard of the Silicon Roundabout in London, or have heard of it by its official name, “Tech City.” In an
area of London called Shoreditch, once a downtrodden bit of awfulness, there is now a growing and thriving digital innovation hub. It is in fact growing and thriving so much that many of its smaller
start-ups fear that rent hikes will start to prohibit them from staying in the area. There are over 1,000 start-ups currently concentrated here. Apart from rent hikes, the other challenge is that
London’s “City” (where the money lives) has apparently not yet really embraced start-uppery, leading to grumblings from entrepreneurs that finding money is not always easy.
Berlin has its own innovation hub in the Kreuzberg area (formerly part of East Berlin). It offers plenty of affordable housing and office space, and Germany has a long history of manufacturing and
engineering so you have access to skilled engineers and “makers.” Contrary to London’s government-sponsored Tech City approach, Berlin’s hub has kind of grown organically. The
biggest challenge here is that, at its heart, Germany is quite conservative, which means that finding risk-takers can be challenging.
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The Hebrew word for valley is Wadi, and hence Tel Aviv is
home to Silicon Wadi. According to data from October of last year (via Forbes) it is the number 2 start-up eco-system in the world, and is home to 61 companies that have found their way onto the
NASDAQ. Those are impressive stats. The comfortable links between the US and Israel provide an easy (financial) connection for doing business. Also, the government is always on the lookout to stay
ahead in technology and security, and spends accordingly. Israel apparently also boasts the highest number of engineers per capita. All this resulted in over $2 billion invested in Israeli start-ups
in 2013.
And so the list goes on. Sao Paulo, Shanghai, Singapore, Kiev, Moscow and all other cities in between today have their own start-up ecosystems. The African continent is now coming
along as well, with countries like Nigeria, Kenya and South Africa beginning to produce disruptive solutions and services.
An example of African innovation is a mobile payment system called
M-Pesa, Swahili for money. Vodafone, one of the world’s largest mobile phone operators, is now bringing M-Pesa to Europe, starting in Romania. PayPal, Square and all other payment systems: Be
warned.
On my many trips to Asia and Eastern Europe, I have met with many really smart start-ups who are all working as hard as (if not harder than) their Silicon Valley counterparts. I say
“working harder” because they simply have to. Their motivation is often to solve real problems rather than making an app to know where your private limo is. If you don’t have access
to “easy” money and still want to pursue your idea, you are going to have to be smarter, nimbler and really driven to succeed.
And as you already know, disruptors like Skype,
Last.FM, Summly, Candy Crush Saga and even Flappy Bird did not come from either the East or West Coast of the U.S.
So don’t be surprised if the next disruptor comes from an unexpected
corner of the world. In fact, expect that to happen.