Startup accelerator
Organization that invests in startups
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Startup accelerators, also known as seed accelerators, are fixed-term, cohort-based programs, that include mentorship and educational components, and (sometimes) culminate in a public pitch event or demo day.[1] While traditional business incubators are often government-funded, generally take no equity, and rarely provide funding, accelerators can be either privately or publicly funded and cover a wide range of industries.[2] Unlike business incubators, the application process for seed accelerators is open to anyone, but is highly competitive.[3] There are specific accelerators, such as corporate accelerators, which are often subsidiaries or programs of larger corporations that act like seed accelerators.[4]
Distinctive qualities
The main differences between business incubators, startup studios,[5] and accelerators are:[3][6]
- The application process is open to anyone but highly competitive. For instance, Y Combinator and TechStars have application acceptance rates between 1% and 3%.
- Seed investment in startups may be made, in exchange for equity. Typically, the investment is between US$20,000 to US$50,000 in the US, or £10,000 to £50,000 in Europe.[3]
- The focus is generally on small teams, not on individual founders. Accelerators generally consider that one person is insufficient to handle all the work associated with a startup. However, a number of 'founder first' accelerators exist that focus on solo founders, including Entrepreneur First, Antler, Oneday and Underdog Accelerator.[7]
- The startups must "graduate" by a given deadline, typically after 3 months. During this time, they receive intensive mentoring and training, and they are expected to iterate rapidly. Virtually all accelerators end their programs with a "demo day", where the startups present to investors.[8]
- Startups are accepted and supported in cohort batches or classes (the accelerator isn't an on-demand resource).[9] The peer support and feedback that the classes provide is an important advantage. If the accelerator doesn't offer a common workspace, the teams will meet periodically.
The primary value to the entrepreneur is derived from the mentoring, connections, and the recognition of being chosen to be a part of the accelerator. The business model is based on generating venture-style returns, not rent, or fees for services.
Seed accelerators do not necessarily need to include physical space, but many do. The process that startups go through in the accelerator can be separated into five distinct phases: awareness, application, program, demo day, and post demo day.[3]
Accelerators provide enough funding to get a company to demo day, from which point the startup is on its own.[10]
History
The first seed accelerator was Y Combinator, started in Cambridge, Massachusetts, in 2005, and then later moved to Silicon Valley by Paul Graham.[3] It was followed by TechStars (in 2006), Seedcamp (in 2007), AngelPad (in 2010), Startupbootcamp (in 2010), Tech Wildcatters (in 2011), several accelerators of SOSV, Forum Ventures (In 2014), Boomtown Boulder (in 2014) and Antler (in 2017).[11]
In Europe, the first accelerator program was started by Accelerace in 2009 in Denmark (strongly subsidised by the Danish government) followed shortly after by Startup Wise Guys in 2012 in Estonia.
With the growing popularity of seed accelerator programs in the US, Europe has seen an increase in accelerators to support a growing startup ecosystem.[12]
Forbes published an analysis of startup accelerators in April 2012.[13] Since 2010 there has been a substantial growth of Corporate Accelerator programs, which are sponsored by established organizations but follow similar principles.[14]
Impact
Whether accelerators increase the success of accelerated firms is not always clear. A number of studies have shown that accelerated cohorts perform better than non-accelerated firms, but this is potentially due to the selection effect of programmes (i.e., the accelerators might be good at 'picking winners' rather than creating them). However, studies using regression discontinuity design show that accelerators can indeed have impact over and above their selection effect, and may also have wider ecosystem spillovers (although this does not necessarily apply to every program).[15]
Notable accelerator programs
The following table lists some of the largest and most prominent startup accelerator programs worldwide.
| Program | Countries of operation | Year founded | Sectors | Key backers / founders | Notable alumni companies |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Y Combinator | United States | 2005 | General | Paul Graham, Jessica Livingston, Robert Morris, Trevor Blackwell | Airbnb, Dropbox, Stripe, Reddit, DoorDash, Coinbase, Instacart |
| Techstars | United States, United Kingdom, Australia, Germany, Canada, and others (worldwide) | 2006 | General | Brad Feld, David Cohen, David Brown, Jared Polis | SendGrid, DigitalOcean, PillPack, Sphero, ClassPass |
| MassChallenge | United States, Switzerland, United Kingdom, Israel, Mexico | 2009 | General | John Harthorne; corporate sponsors, government grants | Ginkgo Bioworks, DataXu, Kaminario |
| 500 Global | United States, and over 75 countries (worldwide) | 2010 | General | Dave McClure, Christine Tsai | Credit Karma, Twilio, Grab, Canva, Talkdesk |
| Plug and Play Tech Center | United States, Germany, Singapore, China, and 50+ countries | 2006 | General | Saeed Amidi (private) | Dropbox, PayPal, Lending Club, SoundHound |
| Seedcamp | United Kingdom, Europe-wide | 2007 | Technology | Reshma Sohoni, Saul Klein; European VC network | Revolut, UiPath, Wise, Hopin |
| Startupbootcamp | Netherlands, United Kingdom, Germany, Australia, Spain, and others | 2010 | General | Carsten Kolbek, Patrick de Zeeuw; corporate partners | Choco, Tempr, Mobbr |
| Entrepreneur First | United Kingdom, Singapore, Germany, France, Canada, India | 2011 | Deep Tech | Matt Clifford, Alice Bentinck; Reid Hoffman, Greylock Partners | Tractable, Magic Pony Technology, Monzo (early) |
| SOSV | United States, China, Ireland (worldwide) | 2012 | Deep Tech, Life Sciences | Sean O'Sullivan (private VC fund) | Formlabs, UPSIDE Foods, ReMilk |
| Antler | Singapore, Netherlands, Norway, Sweden, United Kingdom, United States, Germany, India, Australia, Kenya, and others | 2017 | General | Magnus Grimeland; institutional LPs | Kairon, Nory, Sherpa |
| AngelPad | United States (San Francisco, New York) | 2010 | Technology | Thomas Korte, Marin Varsavsky (ex-Google) | Buffer, Postmates, Vurb |
| Startup Wise Guys | Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, and others (Europe-wide) | 2012 | B2B SaaS | Cristobal Alonso; European Union funds, LPs | Mobi Solutions, Printify, TransferGo |
| Accelerace | Denmark | 2009 | General | Innovation Fund Denmark, Danish government | Lunar, Too Good To Go, Billy |
| FounderFuel | Canada | 2011 | Technology | Real Ventures; Montreal ecosystem investors | Breather, Proposify, Missive |
| Alchemist Accelerator | United States | 2012 | Enterprise Tech | Ravi Belani; Cisco, SAP, Salesforce | Rigetti Computing, Rescale, Zuora |
| HAX | United States, China | 2011 | Hardware, IoT | SOSV (parent fund), Duncan Turner, Benjamin Joffe | Makeblock, Airware, Seeed Studio |
| IndieBio | United States, United Kingdom | 2014 | Life Sciences, Biotech | SOSV (parent fund), Ryan Bethencourt | UPSIDE Foods, Clara Foods, Geltor |
| Dreamit Ventures | United States | 2008 | Health Tech, Security | Michael Levitis, Steve Barsh; corporate partners | Adaptly, SeatGeek, Ghostery |
| Capital Factory | United States (Texas) | 2009 | Technology, Defence | Joshua Baer; Texas investors, US DoD partnerships | Shipbob, AlertMedia, Nomad Health |
| gener8tor | United States | 2012 | General | Joe Kirgues, Troy Vosseller; Wisconsin economic development funds | Fetch Rewards, Filtrbox, Widen |
| Boomtown | United States (Boulder, Colorado) | 2014 | General | Toby Krout; corporate partners, angel investors | Havenly, ReadySet, Spherion |
| Creative Destruction Lab | Canada, United States, United Kingdom, France, India, and others | 2012 | Deep Tech, AI, Quantum | Ajay Agrawal; University of Toronto, university network | Sanctuary AI, Miovision, Kepler Communications |
| Forum Ventures | United States, Canada | 2014 | B2B SaaS | Michael Cardamone; institutional LPs | Humi, Certn, Snapcommerce |
| Rockstart | Netherlands, Denmark, Colombia, Ethiopia | 2011 | AgriFood, Energy, Health | Rune Theill, Martin Hartmann; Netherlands Enterprise Agency, development finance | Wercker, Codesmith, Wappsto |
| Impact Hub | Worldwide (100+ cities) | 2005 | Social Enterprise, Sustainability | Jonathan Robinson; member-owned network, Omidyar Network | Fairphone, ShareTheMeal, Ecosia |
| Microsoft for Startups | Worldwide | 2017 | Technology, Cloud, AI | Microsoft | Kareo, Benefytt Technologies, Finastra |
| Google for Startups | Worldwide | 2011 | Technology, AI, Cloud | Google (Alphabet) | UiPath, Dataiku, Wayve |
| Station F | France | 2017 | General, Technology | Xavier Niel (Iliad/Free) | Doctrine, Descartes Underwriting, Heetch |
| FoundersFactory | United Kingdom, Germany, South Africa, and others | 2015 | General | Aviva, EasyJet, L'Oréal, Henry Lane Fox | OpenBlend, EDITED, Luminance |
| Wayra | Spain, United Kingdom, Brazil, Colombia, Germany, Chile, Mexico, Peru, Argentina | 2011 | Technology, Telecoms | Telefónica | Satalia, Sherlock Biosciences, Signaturit |
| Axel Springer Plug and Play | Germany | 2013 | Media, Technology | Axel Springer, Plug and Play | reBuy, Bonify, Catawiki |
| Techstars Berlin | Germany | 2012 | General | Techstars; local corporate sponsors | Kreditech, SoundCloud (early-stage), Delivery Hero (early-stage) |
| Berlin Startup Academy | Germany | 2013 | Technology | German Federal Government, Berlin Senate Department | Blinkist, Orderbird, Contorion |
| Startupbootcamp FinTech | United Kingdom, Netherlands, Australia, United Arab Emirates | 2012 | Fintech | Mastercard, Rabobank, Intesa Sanpaolo, corporate sponsors | Receipt Bank, Inpay, Glia |
| Entrepreneur First Bangalore | India | 2018 | Deep Tech | Entrepreneur First; Nasscom, Indian government partnerships | Stochastic, SigTech, Rewise |
| 1871 | United States (Chicago) | 2012 | Technology | Merchandise Mart Properties, Illinois Tech, Chicago civic leaders | Braintree (alumni), Belly, Orbitz (alumni) |
| Launchpad LA | United States (Los Angeles) | 2009 | Technology, Media, Entertainment | Mark Suster (Upfront Ventures), LA tech community | Maker Studios, Ad.ly, NationBuilder |
| Global Founders Capital | Germany, United States, and others (worldwide) | 2013 | General | Oliver Samwer, Marc Samwer (Rocket Internet) | Canva, Slack, Clio |
| Velocity | Canada (University of Waterloo) | 2008 | Technology, Deep Tech | University of Waterloo; donors, government grants | Thalmic Labs, Tulip Retail, Miovision |
| Nest.vc | United Kingdom | 2012 | Technology | Private investors; later Techstars partnership | EagleView Technologies, Holvi, Qubit |
| Ignite | United Kingdom | 2011 | Technology | Newcastle University, private investors | Response Tap, Codethink, Chattermill |
| Springboard | United Kingdom | 2009 | Technology | Jon Bradford; private investors (later merged with Techstars) | SwiftKey, Erply, Tweetdeck (alumni) |
| R/GA Ventures | United States, United Kingdom, Australia | 2013 | Media, Marketing Tech | R/GA (IPG subsidiary); corporate partners | Giphy, Lively, Cogito |
| Nike Accelerator | United States | 2013 | Sports Tech, Consumer | Nike | Strava (partnership), Bodhi, Invertex |
| BioGenerator | United States (St. Louis) | 2003 | Life Sciences, Biotech | BioSTL, St. Louis regional philanthropies, Cortex Innovation Community | Confluence Life Sciences, Indigo Agriculture, LabKey |
| HealthBox | United States | 2012 | Health Tech | HIMSS, healthcare system investors | CancerIQ, Silversheet, ChicagoEHR |
| Merck Accelerator | Germany | 2015 | Life Sciences, Pharma | Merck Group (Merck KGaA) | Oncotelligent, Saverna Therapeutics, Secarna |
| The Brandery | United States (Cincinnati) | 2010 | Consumer, Marketing Tech | Cincinnati corporate community; Procter & Gamble ecosystem | Lisnr, Roadtrippers, FlyWheel Sports |
| Fintech Innovation Lab | United States, United Kingdom, Hong Kong | 2010 | Fintech | JPMorgan Chase, Citi, Barclays, Bank of America, Accenture | Behavox, Opensee, SynApp.io |
| Cedars-Sinai Accelerator | United States (Los Angeles) | 2016 | Health Tech, MedTech | Cedars-Sinai Medical Center | Viz.ai, Cognoa, Gauss Surgical |