The Concept Behind the Corporate Venturing Framework
For many individuals, the concept of Corporate Venturing can be a blend of various elements such as investment funds, accelerators, innovation labs, hackathons, and startup competitions. However, it goes beyond mere terminology, encompassing the collaborative efforts between large corporations and startups, aimed at driving tangible business innovation. These efforts are spearheaded by experts within organisations (R&D, business development teams, product management divisions, and more). The demand for external assistance in these domains is poised to rise.
People working in large corporations admitted that the pace of these transformative changes renders internal management unfeasible. Consequently, the integration of startups becomes inevitable. However, the current corporate structure often lacks the flexibility needed to facilitate such collaborations, with professionals encountering obstacles like limited resources, inertia, mistrust, and protective mindsets.
Some key figures illustrate this threat*:
But do not worry, Laurent has got you covered. He addressed this challenge by developing a user-friendly framework . The aim is to support individuals contemplating collaboration with startups, mitigate risks, enhance efficiency, and facilitate internal scalability.
*Source: McKinsey & Company
Startups are invading the world
500 million entrepreneurs are active worldwide. That’s nearly half a billion individuals! Every three seconds, a new business emerges on the global stage. While not all these ventures qualify as startups or innovative endeavours, they highlight the deeply ingrained entrepreneurial spirit. Among this diverse landscape, an estimated 1.35 million ventures leverage technology to fuel their growth.
The vision is clear. Startups are emerging as pivotal players, reshaping industries and challenging traditional business models. Fueled by innovation, agility, and a relentless drive for disruption, they capture attention and investment like never before. Their nimble nature allows them to respond to market demands, harness emerging technologies swiftly, and capitalise on untapped opportunities. Moreover, the rise of digital platforms and the democratisation of information have lowered barriers to entry, empowering aspiring entrepreneurs worldwide to launch and scale their ventures.
Corporates are the only innovation catalysts
On the other hand, corporates are increasingly recognised as potent catalysts for startup innovation. Leveraging their resources, market reach, and industry expertise, established companies are forging strategic partnerships with startups to drive mutual growth and innovation. By providing access to capital, mentorship, and distribution channels, corporates empower startups to accelerate their development and scale their solutions. Simultaneously, startups inject fresh perspectives, agile methodologies, and cutting-edge technologies into corporate environments, catalysing organisational change and fostering a culture of innovation.
This symbiotic relationship not only fuels the evolution of traditional industries but also cultivates a dynamic ecosystem where collaboration and co-creation thrive, ultimately driving greater value for both corporates and startups alike.
The Corporate Venturing Framework
Corporate Venturing stands as not only beneficial but also imperative for the advancement of our world and the resolution of significant challenges. Serving as a crucial phase in the innovation journey, the collaboration between startups and established industry titans represents the fusion necessary to ignite transformative change. However, the challenge lies in how these industry giants execute their Corporate Venturing endeavours. Many find themselves hindered by outdated methodologies, tools, and approaches, or in some cases, lack any structured methodology altogether.
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Innovation professionals often go back to conventional project management frameworks designed for internal processes, such as dependencies and waterfall methods, which prove ill-suited for the dynamic nature of startups. Attempting to apply corporate-grade procedures to manage projects involving agile, fast-moving entities often leads to failure. While these professionals may lack alternative methodological references, the alarming failure rate, mirroring that of M&A operations, suggests a systemic issue within Corporate Venturing practices.
The Corporate Venturing Framework is threefold:
Why is Corporate Venturing important?
Considering the rapidly changing market context dominated by millions and millions of disruptive startups, corporate venturing is critical for accelerating corporate innovation and financial success. Here is why:
How does Corporate Venturing boost corporate innovation?
Discover a list of 100 ways startups can transform any organisation and 50 startup engagement models. These two lists are articulated around a canvas that will help innovation professionals unfold the blueprint of their open innovation activities: a clear strategy, smart objectives, relevant initiatives, a pragmatic road book and a versatile performance monitoring dashboard. Get your copy now .
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