What Startup Accelerators Really Do

Similar documents
Innovation, Incubation and Acceleration: The national picture. Chris Haley Head of New Technology & Startup Research Nesta

Software Startup Ecosystems Evolution The New York City Case Study

Business acceleration schemes for start-ups

WOMEN S PARTICIPATION IN BUSINESS INCUBATORS AND ACCELERATORS. REPORT March 2017

Highlight. Stop hesitating: Learn how to invest in startups like a pro. 13 July 2016

New Zealand Startup Ecosystem Analysis

Connecting Startups to VC Funding in Canada

Innovative Commercialization Efforts Underway at the National Renewable Energy Laboratory

ENTREPRENEURSHIP & ACCELERATION

Final Thesis at the Chair for Entrepreneurship

GATEWAY TO SILICON VALLEY SAMPLE SCHEDULE *

Vote for BC. Vote for Tech.

VISION 2020: Setting Our Sights on the Future. Venture for America s Strategic Plan for the Next Three Years & Beyond

How Start-ups are Disrupting the World Economy? The Oasis500 Experience and Initial Results

2017/ /20 SERVICE PLAN

BUSINESS PLAN COMPETITIONS

Starting New Ventures Chap 2 Recognizing Opportunities and Generating Ideas.

START-UP VISA CANADA. Strengthening the entrepreneurship ecosystem

The Ultimate Guide to Startup Success:

European Startup Monitor Country Report Portugal

British Columbia Innovation Council 2016/ /19 SERVICE PLAN

US Startup Outlook Key insights from the Silicon Valley Bank Startup Outlook Survey

Building Effective Startup Ecosystems. Presented by: Tim Rowe February 16, 2017

Program Objectives. Your Innovation Primer. Recognizing and Organizing for Innovation THE INNOVATIVE ORGANIZATION

Recipes for Creating Entrepreneurial Growth: It s more than the Ingredients

Going to Scale: The Global Entrepreneur-in-Residence Program

FROM TEXAS ENTREPRENEUR NETWORKS THE TEXAS ENTREPRENEUR NETWORKS STARTUP EQUITY CAPITAL REPORT FOR EARLY STAGE COMPANIES

TURN YOUR IDEA OR SIDE PROJECT INTO A MILLION DOLLAR BUSINESS

US Startup Outlook 2018

Sourcing Innovation From the Migration of Companies To, From and Between Emerging Markets

Technion Technology Transfer Connecting Partners to Find Solutions

enture Accelerators in U.S

itechpreneurship Creating Chaos to Avoid Chaos

Startup Ecosystems. Bjoern Lasse Herrmann, Founder of Compass & Startup Genome Bitspiration Conference, Krakow

Startup Ecosystem Infrastructure

Annual Report 2017 CHOSON E X C H A N G E. Published February 28, 2018 Choson Exchange. Compiled by Geoffrey See, Nils Weisensee, and Ian Bennett

SILICON VALLEY IMMERSION PROGRAM

22-29 JULY 2018 LAKE SEVAN, ARMENIA THE PROGRAMME

ARTICLE VENTURE CAPITAL

Fintech 101. The definitive uncensored guide to the open access economy. Private Investments. Made Simple.

Nowcasting and Placecasting Growth Entrepreneurship. Jorge Guzman, MIT Scott Stern, MIT and NBER

ACCELERATION IN INDIA: INITIAL DATA FROM INDIAN STARTUPS

STate of the SGB Sector Executive Summary

Table of Contents. Page1. Toronto Vancouver

ESTONIA STARTUP ECOSYSTEM REPORT

From Technology Transfer To Open IPR

STACK. A global internet-based service based on Venture Capital funding? Various remarks. Jarmo Malinen. August 2, 2011

Are you taking entrepreneurial action to create positive impact in the world? You could be our next Oxford MBA Skoll Scholar!

INDrone AERO SYSTEMS- ELEVATE 2018 winners. Our Partners. October edition. K L E - C T I E Page 1

Economic Value of the Advertising-Supported Internet Ecosystem

The Entrepreneurship Ecosystem the Why, the How and the Who. Paul Collits

1. SUMMARY. The participating enterprises reported that they face the following challenges when trying to enter international markets:

Jerome Jerry Engel. The Lean Startup Lean LaunchPad Journey 6/20/2013. Jerry Engel June BizBarcelona 2013

12 APRIL, 2017

U.S. Startup Outlook 2017

ITU-TRCSL Training on ICTs for promoting Innovation & Entrepreneurship

Programme Curriculum for Master Programme in Entrepreneurship

CHAPTER 6. Starting Your Own Business: The Entrepreneurship Alternative

Can shifting sands be a solid foundation for growth?

Tilburg Law School ACCELERATORS. Master Thesis LLM International Business Law. Alja Pecenko ANR: Thesis Supervisor: Ivona Skultétyová, LLM

Beeline Startup Incubator. Rules and Regulations

INVESTMENT NEW ZEALAND

World Bank Report: Tech Start Up Ecosystem in Beirut

Canadian Accelerators

Augusta Innovation District DR. ED EGAN, DIRECTOR MCNAIR CENTER FOR ENTREPRENEURSHIP AND INNOVATION

The Impact of Entrepreneurship Database Program

Innovation Academy. Business skills courses for Imperial Entrepreneurs

Programme Curriculum for Master Programme in Entrepreneurship and Innovation

STARTUP INCUBATOR: PAVING THE WAY FOR AUSTRALIAN ENTREPRENEURS

ABOUT. Total One-Time (Construction) Economic Impacts. Total Recurring Economic Impacts 1,571 jobs $70.0 million in salaries $209.2 million in output

How Corporate Research and Venture Capital can learn from one another

your pathway to ENTREPRENEURSHIP

A Multi-University Fed Post-Graduate Accelerator and a Model for Economic Development

MALAYSIAN INNOVATION SUPERCLUSTERS

ED28.1. MaRS Discovery. District. Yung Wu CEO. Cory Mulvihill Lead Executive, Policy & Public Affairs. MaRS OVERVIEW / 1

Business mission at India New Delhi & Bangalore November 2018

Economic Value of the Advertising-Supported Internet Ecosystem

The University of British Columbia

Adapting Global Entrepreneurship Acceleration Models to Clean Tech in Developing Countries:

AWS STARTUP TEAM DACH

European Startup Monitor Country Report Switzerland Prof. Dr. Adrian W. Müller, Yasemin Ayanoglu

WHY WOMEN-OWNED STARTUPS ARE A BETTER BET

On Corporate Startup Accelerators

Catalyzing an entrepreneurship ecosystem: The network effects of Tsinghua University's x-lab

Technology Transfer in the US: Present State and Current Issues

FinTech - InnoTribe Startup Challenge. Mike Sigal 500Startups (US)

ACCELERATION IN MEXICO: INITIAL DATA FROM MEXICAN STARTUPS

SPONSORSHIP PROPOSAL 2017

ACTION ENTREPRENEURSHIP GUIDE TO GROWTH. Report on Futurpreneur Canada s Action Entrepreneurship 2015 National Summit

What s Working in Startup Acceleration

Acceleration today: November ACCELERATION IN EUROPE 1. Ready when you are.

China Startup Outlook Key insights from the Silicon Valley Bank Startup Outlook Survey

Annika Steiber Sverker Alänge. The Silicon Valley Model. Management for Entrepreneurship. * ) Springer

An Empirical Study on Entrepreneurial Networks from an Adaptive Case Management Perspective Master Thesis Pascal Stegmann

Resource Inventory for Growth-Aspiring Women Entrepreneurs: Findings and Future Directions

Why Business Angels Do Not Invest. Why Business Angels Do Not Invest. Findings on obstacles preventing investment in startups

Crown Corporation BUSINESS PLANS. Table of Contents FOR THE FISCAL YEAR Innovacorp. Business Plan

A Study of Initiatives by Entrepreneurship Development Cell in Indian Institutes of Technology (IITs)

STARTUP ROCKSTARS ARE NEVER SILENT

Innovation-Driven Entrepreneurial Ecosystems: A New Agenda for Measurement and Policy. Professor Scott Stern MIT and NBER

Transcription:

ENTREPRENEURSHIP What Startup Accelerators Really Do by Ian Hathaway MARCH 01, 2016 The well-advertised boom in startups and venture capital in recent years has coincided with the emergence of new players in startup ecosystems. One of these, startup accelerators, has received a great deal of attention but also little scrutiny. Moreover, they are commonly misunderstood or mistakenly lumped in with other institutions supporting early-stage startups, such as incubators, angel investors, and early-stage venture capitalists. In a recent analysis published by the Brookings Institution, I tackle some of the confusion around startup accelerators by laying out a clearer picture of what they do, and how they differ from other early-stage institutions. I also provide a review of the research literature on the effectiveness of accelerators to achieve their stated aims, some best practices for accelerator programs, and some figures on the size, scope, and impact of these

organizations in the United States. Accelerators are playing an increasing role in startup communities throughout the United States and beyond. Early evidence demonstrates the significant potential of accelerators to improve startups outcomes, and for these benefits to spill over into the broader startup community. However, the measurable impact accelerators have on performance varies widely among programs not all accelerators are created equally. Quality matters. INSIGHT CENTER Entrepreneurship for the Long Term SPONSORED BY NORTHERN TRUST Set your company up for success. What are startup accelerators? Startup accelerators support early-stage, growthdriven companies through education, mentorship, and financing. Startups enter accelerators for a fixed-period of time, and as part of a cohort of companies. The accelerator experience is a process of intense, rapid, and immersive education aimed at accelerating the life cycle of young innovative companies, compressing years worth of learning-by-doing into just a few months. Susan Cohen of the University of Richmond and Yael Hochberg of Rice University highlight the four distinct factors that make accelerators unique: they are fixed-term, cohort-based, and mentorshipdriven, and they culminate in a graduation or demo day. None of the other previously mentioned early-stage institutions incubators, angel investors, or seed-stage venture capitalists have these collective elements. Accelerators may share with these others the goal of cultivating early-stage startups, but it is clear that they are different, with distinctly different business models and incentive structures. Yet the confusion is real, including within the startup sector itself. In fact, of the nearly 700 U.S.- based organizations that were identified as an accelerator or accelerator/incubator or similar either through self-identification or through leading investor databases I could confirm these four criteria in fewer than one-third of them. In other words, two of every three accelerators are not in

fact accelerators, based on this criterion. Accelerators in the United States Silicon Valley based Y Combinator launched the first seed accelerator program, in 2005, in Boston, followed closely by TechStars, which was founded the next year in Boulder, Colorado. Both programs have evolved over the years and have traditionally been considered the two premier accelerator programs globally. Growth in U.S.-based accelerators really took off after 2008, as it did for startups, early-stage capital, and venture investment more broadly. The number of U.S.-based accelerators increased by an average of 50% each year between 2008 and 2014. I was able to identify 172 U.S.-based accelerators in existence during the 2005 2015 period. Collectively, they invested in more than 5,000 U.S. startups. During this period, these companies have raised a total of $19.5 billion in funding, a number that will surely increase as accelerator programs continue to turn out companies and recent graduates work their way to maturity.

Accelerator graduates that went on to raise additional venture capital investment had a median valuation of $15.6 million during this period, and an average valuation of $90 million. Some very wellknown companies belong to this group, including unicorns AirBnB, Dropbox, and Stripe, among others. Why Startup Accelerators Accelerators have clearly taken hold in recent years. But what is it about what accelerators do that makes them so different from other early stage investors and support organizations and so valuable to the startups that are apparently falling over each other to be in their ranks? I recently posed this question to Brad Feld, a cofounder of TechStars, and he likened the accelerator experience to immersive education, where a period of intense, focused attention provides company founders an opportunity to learn at a rapid pace. Learning-by-doing is vital to the process of scaling ventures, and the point of accelerators, suggests Feld and others, is to accelerate that process. In this way, founders compress years worth of learning into a period of a few months. Feld s explanation seems sensible to me, but what evidence is there? The relative novelty of accelerators means that little systematic research exists on the effect they have on the participating companies and on the broader startup community. Four papers stand out as contributing to our understanding. Here s what they ve found: When matched with a comparable group of companies that didn t participate in accelerator programs, those that graduated from top programs saw an acceleration in reaching key milestones, such as time to raising venture capital, exit by acquisition, and gaining customer traction. However, these positive effects dissipate when looking at a broader sample of

accelerators: many programs do not seem to accelerate startup development, and in some cases may even slow them down. A comparison of graduates of top accelerators with a set of similar startups that instead raised angel funding from leading angel investment groups found that the accelerator graduates were more likely to receive their next round of financing significantly sooner and were more likely to be either acquired or to fail. Additional research indicates the channels through which accelerators aid venture development, demonstrating that it is primarily about learning in the accelerator experience, not potentially confounding factors such as credential signaling to future investors, selection bias, or previous founder experience at top companies. In other words, the value of accelerators seems real and likely comes from the intensive learning environment itself. Accelerators have a positive impact on regional entrepreneurial ecosystems, particularly with regard to the financing environment. Metropolitan areas where an accelerator is established subsequently have more seed and early-stage entrepreneurial financing activity, which appears not to be restricted to accelerated startups themselves, but spills over to non-accelerated companies as well occurring primarily from an increase in investors. To summarize, accelerators can have a positive effect on the performance of the startups they work with, even compared with other key early-stage investors. But this finding is not universal among all accelerators and so far has been isolated to leading programs. Early evidence also shows that accelerators may have a positive effect on attracting seed and early-stage financing to a community, bringing spillover benefits to the wider regional economy. Considering the growth of accelerators in recent years, this evidence is encouraging. By and large, accelerators seem to be a positive addition to startup ecosystems across the country and the world. Some may not make much of a difference, but many clearly do, and the best ones are poised to meaningfully improve the odds of success for the startups that graduate from them. What Startup Accelerators Really Do Ian Hathaway is a Nonresident Senior Fellow at the Brookings Institution. He can be followed on Twitter @IanHathaway

This article is about ENTREPRENEURSHIP FOLLOW THIS TOPIC Related Topics: Comments Leave a Comment P O S T 8 COMMENTS robert jasper 4 months ago All that is great, but also Accelerators mostly only evaluate and take on TECH or IT related start ups. Other industries, like e.g. innovative medical device start ups are seldom considered, as investors are IT start up pattern "framed". Wish this would change too... Robert Jasper, Business Start up consultant, Orlando, FL REPLY 0 0 JOIN THE CONVERSATION POSTING GUIDELINES We hope the conversations that take place on HBR.org will be energetic, constructive, and thought-provoking. To comment, readers must sign in or register. And to ensure the quality of the discussion, our moderating team will review all comments and may edit them for clarity, length, and relevance. Comments What Startup that are Accelerators overly promotional, Really mean-spirited, Do or off-topic may be deleted per the moderators' judgment. All postings become the property of Harvard Business Publishing.