Latecomers
to the digital age, big German companies have started teaming up with
start-ups to shake up their conservative business culture and keep pace
with a world increasingly dominated by nimble tech giants.
More
than half of the firms on Germany’s blue-chip DAX index trace their
roots back to the 19th century or earlier. The youngest corporate, SAP,
was founded 43 years ago. In contrast, around half of the top 30
companies on the Nasdaq were set up in the 1980s or later and the
fourth-biggest firm, Facebook, was established about a decade ago.
German
companies are the engine of Europe’s biggest economy, which is the
financial bedrock of the euro zone. But government officials and company
executives fear they could fall far behind if they cannot swiftly
identify and adopt innovations in web and smartphone technology that
have driven the success of Google, Apple and Amazon.
Mindful
of the danger, companies such Metro, Bayer, Evonik, Merck KGaA and
Deutsche Telekom are now investing in start-ups – seeking to gain
digital expertise, as well as to embrace newcomers whose innovations
could represent threats to their own businesses.
This
trend could help address a shortage of venture capital that has stunted
innovation. Although investment in German start-ups more than doubled
to $1.74 billion last year, this was less than the amount raised by U.S.
car-sharing company Uber alone. In contrast, U.S.-based start-ups drew
$49.39 billion, according to Thomson Reuters data.
“What’s
missing is that companies like ourselves open up their resources to
help others to grow,” Metro Chief Executive Olaf Koch told Reuters at an
Innovation in Retail Meetup event on the retailer’s campus in
Duesseldorf.
“We can make small companies big.”
VENTURE FUNDS
The
cash-and-carry chain will choose 10 start-ups for an “accelerator”
programme in which it will supply its business experience, as well as
use of its sales force.
Among
those hoping to catch Koch’s eye at the informal Duesseldorf Meetup
were POSpulse, which uses crowdsourcing and smartphones to conduct
market research, Dinnery, an online high-end meal delivery service,
Bauerntuete, an online farmers’ market, and KptnCook, an app that
combines daily recipes with shopping lists for local supermarkets.
Healthcare
firms Bayer, Merck and Boehringer Ingelheim, Deutsche Telekom and
chemicals group Evonik, meanwhile, have all set up multi-million euro
in-house venture funds. Deutsche Telekom has pledged to invest 500
million euros ($542 million) in Germany’s start-up scene over the next
five years.
Companies
that have seen digital innovations savage the business models of
industries such as telecoms and media are desperate not to snooze
through the next revolution, said Christian Miele, of Germany’s Start-up
Association.
“Every big corporate has the problem of being too slow to adapt and move at the same speed as a startup,” he said.
“If
a WhatsApp comes around the corner, disrupts your business and kills a
billion dollars in revenue for every telco in the world, you start to
think, what did we not see here?”
Fewer
than half of Germany’s top 500 companies have a comprehensive digital
strategy, according to a study by Accenture. Moreover, just 11 percent
use social media and only 6 percent cloud computing, the European
Commission’s Digital Economy Index published at the end of February
showed.
RISK-TAKING
Mail
order company Otto’s catalogue model, for example, meant it was ideally
placed to capitalise on the online shopping boom, but the 66-year-old
firm has been steadily losing market share to digital upstart Zalando
and Amazon.
The
company announced plans in February to invest a high double-digit
million euro sum in a venture capital fund over the next business year.
The
German government – seeking to encourage the kind of game-changing
innovation that saw Daimler disrupt the horse-carriage industry at the
end of the 19th Century – has announced plans to try to promote
startups. They include a pre-market web platform to connect young
companies with investors.
But critics say the measures do not go far enough.
“We
must make venture capital investment in Germany easier and, above all,
more attractive in terms of taxation. This would strengthen the
country’s innovative capability and would also be an important step
towards more growth and new jobs,” Bayer boss Marijn Dekkers said last
month.
Chancellor Angela Merkel believes a bigger obstacle may be an entrenched fear of failure.
“This
culture of investing in start-ups … of taking risks and of being able
to live with the fact that only one in 10 projects will end successfully
… is something that is perhaps more pronounced in the United States and
maybe even in South Korea,” she said in her weekly podcast this month.
Still,
Christoph Keese, executive vice president at media group Axel Springer,
dismisses the notion that Germans lack the national character for
risk-taking and insists the country can make up digital ground.
“We’ve lost the first round but that doesn’t mean we can’t win the second or third round.”
Posted by : Gizmeon
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