Book Reviews | Gordon Campbell | News Flashes | Scoop Features | Scoop Video | Strange & Bizarre | Search

 


Born global best for NZ start-ups

Born global best for NZ start-ups

New Zealand technology start-ups should begin with global markets in mind and aim to have positive cash-flow from the outset, says AccelerateHK’s Stephen Forte.

by Bill Bennett
September 16, 2013
http://www.digitl.co.nz/789/born-global-nz-start-ups/

Hong Kong’s AcceleratorHK co-founder Stephen Forte says if NZ start-ups have one advantages over their overseas counterparts it is that they are “born global".

By this he means companies founded in New Zealand know they must export from day one. He says they have little choice given the tiny size of the local market, but that it is a good thing.

He says the smart strategy for a New Zealand-based start-up is to begin by “Conquering the English-speaking market. You need to exploit the fact that you’re in an English-speaking country”.

Forte says usually that means heading for Australia first then catching a plane to the West Coast of the US or to London.

NZ start-ups must grab revenue, not land

Forte’s second tip for Kiwi tech entrepreneurs is go for revenue straight away. This may seem obvious, but he says that’s not how US-based start-ups operate.

On the east side of the Pacific Ocean, there’s a well-worn path for start-ups operating in the shadow of the Silicon Valley venture capital machine.

There, conventional wisdom says first you need to go for what Forte calls the ‘land grab’. Financiers are looking for momentum, so the idea is that you need give your product or service away then increase the number of users by around 10 percent each week until you hit around a million customers. At that point you have to find ways to turn that user base into money.

Alienation

Forte says that process often means alienating many of the customers who contributed to the growth. Actually he used the term “pisses people off”.

He points at Instagram saying it’s not a pure example because the company was purchased by Facebook. However, it perfectly illustrates the principle.

Instagram got big by being the cool photo-sharing app. It was free. Before Facebook acquired the business it had 20 million users. Today that number is closer to 150 million. Facebook has decided Insgtagram will now start showing advertisements. That will make money, but the service faces the risk of losing many of its customers along the way.

NZ start-up culture somewhere between Asia and the US

The entrepreneur and investor was in New Zealand to speak at Microsoft’s TechEd conference last week. Forte is cosmopolitan. He is American by birth, was partly educated in the UK, runs a software business in Bulgaria and a start-up accelerator in Hong Kong. He is also active elsewhere in Asia.

He says Asian start-up culture is different from the US. Whereas American’s focus on web services, the main interest in Hong Kong is on mobile apps – the territory is the world’s most saturated mobile market. On the other hand Taiwanese start-ups tend to focus more on hardware.

Forte says, like New Zealand, start-ups in Asia are focused on exports and are more interested in see the cash-flow from the outset than building huge numbers of followers.

Find me on Google+

Related posts:

1. Lance Wiggs parlays Pacific Fibre experience into Punakaiki Fund
2. What’s happening in server sales?
3. Briefly: Punakaiki Fund opens, Gen-i building, Acer’s 4K smartphone

ENDS

© Scoop Media

 
 
 
 
 
Top Scoops Headlines

 

Hadyn Green: TPP: This Is A Fight Worth Joining

Trade negotiations are tense affairs. There are always interested parties trying to get your ear, long nights spent arguing small but technical points, and the invisible but ever present political pressure. So it was in Brunei late August where the latest ... More>>

Ramzy Baroud: Giap, Wallace, And The Never-Ending Battle For Freedom

'Nothing is more precious than freedom,” is quoted as being attributed to Vo Nguyen Giap, a Vietnamese General that led his country through two liberation wars. The first was against French colonialists, the second against the Americans. More>>

John Chuckman: The Poor People Of Egypt

How is it that the people of Egypt, after a successful revolution against the repressive 30-year government of President Mubarak, a revolution involving the hopes and fears of millions and a substantial loss of life, have ended up almost precisely where ... More>>

Harvey Wasserman: 14,000 Hiroshimas Still Swing In The Fukushima Air...

Japan’s pro-nuclear Prime Minister has finally asked for global help at Fukushima. It probably hasn’t hurt that more than 100,000 people have signed petitionscalling for a global takeover; more than 8,000 have viewed a new YouTube on it. More>>

Suzan Mazur: A Fake? -- "America's Souvenir To The Iranian People"

The big thaw in US - Iran relations has been compromised. The world's leading authority on antiquities fakes -- long-time Metropolitan Museum of Art Ancient Near East expert Oscar White Muscarella, who excavated throughout the 1960s in Iran -- has told me ... More>>

William Blum: Anti-Empire Report #121: The War On Terrorism … Or Whatever

Pity the poor American who wants to be a good citizen, wants to understand the world and his country’s role in it, wants to believe in the War on Terrorism, wants to believe that his government seeks to do good … What is he to make of all this? More>>

Franklin Lamb: Four Decades After The Tishrin: War Self-Delusion

Is Damascus this weekend and many other areas of Syria, citizens will celebrate the accomplishments of the October 6, 1973 19 day war launched jointly by Syrian and Egyptian armies to regain Arab land illegally occupied in 1967. More>>

Get More From Scoop

 
 
TEDxAuckland
 
 
 
 
 
Top Scoops
Search Scoop  
 
 
Powered by Vodafone
NZ independent news