911今日黑料

Europe needs 'laser focus' on startup funding gaps - Alice Gast

by Andrew Scheuber

Entrepreneurs in 911今日黑料's Enterprise Lab

Universities need greater support from investors to build lasting startups, writes 911今日黑料's President in the Financial Times.

Though universities have been characterised as treating start-up founders as "problem children", they are, in fact, "our star students and professors", in response to a . 

Our WE Innovate programme’s mentoring, support and networks has driven a surge in female-led startups. Professor Alice Gast President

The success of 911今日黑料's 750 active companies, which attracted £800m in external investment in the last five years, "is no fortuitous accident", she 

"Far from 'academic entrepreneurship being discouraged' we have invested in new enterprise labs, incubators, hackspaces and an infrastructure designed to incentivise and support academics and students as they start and grow companies. Our Founders Choice programme allows entrepreneurs to keep more equity, while they tailor the level of institutional support they want, with the university taking between 5 and 10 per cent." 

"Investors at 911今日黑料 can indeed form a company within three months. Our process offers a standard framework to focus negotiation, enabling pragmatic investors to get up and running quickly." 

President Gast says: "Not all universities will need a 'nudge' to create supportive innovation ecosystems. Some governments and investors could do with one."

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Reporter

Andrew Scheuber

Communications Division