Wednesday, 13 May 2009

Palo Alto has Attitude


The meeting in Palo Alto yesterday was upbeat. It says a lot about Americans approach to life. VC start up deals in 'the Valley' might be down by about 25% this year - but they still represent around USD 9 billion of new money. It backs up my post yesterday. It is all about size and scale.

It's also about attitude. Start ups looking for investment today have what was referred to as 'balls'. The fact that they are still actively pursuing funding in this market marks them out. Cheque books in this part of the world are certainly not closed at this point. Word on the street is that one NZ tech company is about to announce a major VC win here.

What I had not fully appreciated until my visit was the significance of the presence of Stanford University. Palo Alto is what it is because of Stanford. Tech spin outs and VCs have clustered around the University campus making this a key play in the US technology market.

The striking thing about this was how it mirrors Pingar's own engagement with the Universities of Waikato in NZ and Swansea in Wales. In both instances it might be small scale stuff by comparison, but the model is right. It reinforces my own view that this is one model that should be actively promoted in NZ. The structure is in place. It just requires significant extra funding. Is this possible?

I believe the answer is yes. Another key lesson learnt from yesterday is a changing perception and attitude towards high growth potential NZ tech companies by Valley-based VC. Our geography is no longer such an issue. The opportunity is. It's a message I will be taking back home. Right now, 'The Valley' is open for business.

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

Hey Peter

Great to hear your trip to SFO was successful. Im acutally going to Stanford in June for a summer school programme in entrepreneurship. An extension of this will be my observation of the university: local industry relationship which you speak about not to mention getting a feel for the start-up and investor communities. Reading your post has now made me even more eager to get on over there.

Cheers
Graeme