Nick Freer: How to build more tech success in Scotland
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The usual suspects from Scotland’s tech scene were in attendance at CodeBase – Informatics Ventures, CodeClan, the Scottish Government’s digital team and a smattering of start-up founders including the CEO of Krotos, a University of Edinburgh technology spin-out that builds audio software creating imaginary creature noises for Hollywood blockbusters like Avengers and The Jungle Book.
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Hide AdOrfeas Boteas, CEO and founder of Krotos, hails from Greece and, like many of our start-up founders, in Scotland is a non-UK national.
Brexit was a common theme in the pre-event chat and a few in the gathering expressed disappointment at opening another excellent report from the Tech City UK team to see a picture of Theresa May and a foreword from her stating how committed the UK government is to supporting our most promising young tech companies.
Before another CEO of a fast-growing Scottish tech company had the chance to fully explain his view that a lower valued currency boosting exports will not make up for a post-Brexit talent drain, Tech City UK CEO Gerard Grech was already up on stage taking us through the overall UK findings and how Scotland fits into the equation.
While it was no great surprise to hear how well we’re doing in all things digital, backed up by strong numbers on jobs growth, average wages and economic impact, the really interesting bit for me was when the panel began talking about what has made Edinburgh such a hotbed of start-up activity and is punching above its weight in producing tech unicorns like Skyscanner and FanDuel.
One of the panellists suggested we have “good people” at the heart of our ecosystem; people who give back to the earlier-stage companies and founders by providing mentoring and other forms of support including, in the case of Skyscanner, monthly access to their legal team.
One of FanDuel’s co-founders has seven rule-of-thumb tips for start-ups that I know have inspired many of the next generation of wannabe tech stars in Scotland: one, get back on your bike and keep pedalling; two, pick your founders well and be willing to pivot around them; three, put processes in place for when your start-up starts to scale; four, hire people who can adapt as the organisation changes; five, adopt a “lean start-up” culture; six, don’t be afraid to fail, and: seven, don’t fall in love with your product to the extent that you’re not willing to tear it up and start again.
I consider myself hugely fortunate to have advised classic Scottish start-ups like Blackcircles.com and Skyscanner for a number of years – very probably during the most exciting times — and also a bunch of the next generation of start-ups who have followed in their golden wake.
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You need a newsworthy story. When healthtech start-up snap40 CEO and founder Chris McCann announced his last funding round, the story revolved around not only it being the largest-ever angel investment into a Scottish start-up, but also that he left his medicine degree to make his entrepreneurial leap. If you’re light on newsworthiness, find a way to tap into trending industry news.
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• Nick Freer runs communications and business advisory agency, the Freer Consultancy