Ā鶹ֱ²„app

A young man interested in entrepreneurship speaks to representatives from MaRS at the 2015 Startup Career Expo. "Ā鶹ֱ²„app is increasingly a ā€œdriving forceā€ for startups", says Ilse Treurnicht, CEO of MaRS Discovery District.

Canada Next: MaRS CEO on the future for startups

Canada is good at creating startup companies but not enough of them are high-growth enterprises, the so-called gazelles of the industry, says Ilse Treurnicht, CEO of the MaRS Discovery District.

But the good news, she says, is that Ā鶹ֱ²„app is increasingly a ā€œdriving forceā€  for startups, helping them not just to thrive but to succeed in Canada so that the economic benefits accrue to this country. 

The Global Entrepreneurship and Development Institute recently released a global entrepreneurship index that placed Canada second, behind the United States.

Ā鶹ֱ²„app News asked Treurnicht for her analysis of the survey and her views about some recent stories in the media about Canada and entrepreneurship, including an op-ed piece in the Globe and Mail co-authored by President Meric Gertler: ā€œSouthern Ontario should be an innovation cluster, not a farm team.ā€

The survey, she said, was a valid one and ā€œanother indication that entrepreneurship is important everywhere, and that Toronto has some good fundamentals in place, and that we have some areas where we can probably grow.ā€

photo of Ilse TreurnichtData on startups in Canada is relatively sparse but statistics from the U.S. and the U.K. suggest ā€œthat out of 100 startups somewhere between four and 10 become high-growth industries, the so-called gazelles.ā€ 

Treurnicht  (pictured at left) described a gazelle as a company that that increases its revenues by at least 20 per cent annually for four years or more, starting from a revenue base of at least $1 million. 

Gazelles ā€œgrow quite quickly and are major job creators, major contributors to revenue and economic growth,ā€ Treurnicht said. ā€œStarting up a company is important but it is not sufficient, you have to start more robust companies and more of them have to grow to scale.

ā€œCanada is pretty good at starting companies but we donā€™t have enough of them that grow to scale.ā€

Our companies face ā€œsmall local markets, and eco-systems that are still maturing,ā€ she said. ā€œWe donā€™t have the serial entrepreneurs that they have in Silicon Valley.ā€  

In Canada, the capital contributions made to startups is about one-third of what it is in the U.S.

ā€œA lot of startups have to be international companies because the markets are so small here," she said. There are good reasons why so few become gazelles. ā€œItā€™s not like we are stupid.ā€ 

Still, there are grounds for optimism, Treurnicht said.

ā€œOver the last 10 years Ā鶹ֱ²„app has helped build the ecosystem in Toronto and the GTA. There is now a huge appetite among students to participate in such companies, and a growing appreciation among faculty, especially young faculty, to participate.ā€

The survey suggests Canada is poised to do great things, she added. 

Treurnicht said the barriers to starting a company are very low, especially in the high-tech field. Companies focused on health care, ā€œadvanced materialsā€ or artificial intelligence&²Ō²ś²õ±č;ā€“&²Ō²ś²õ±č;firms with ā€œhard-core intellectual property heft"&²Ō²ś²õ±č;ā€“&²Ō²ś²õ±č;take a bit longer to develop so they require more investment.

But the ā€œdeep technology competency and the feeder systemā€ coming out of Ā鶹ֱ²„app ā€œis as good quality as the rest of the world,ā€ she said. That means that more companies ā€œwill grow right here, with the economic benefits accruing to Canada.ā€

ā€œThis is a story about the growing momentum of Ā鶹ֱ²„app being a key force in making startups more successful. That is the message we want to get out. Stay tuned. There is a lot more come.ā€

Three to Watch

The majority of companies that have homes at the MaRS centre ā€œhave serious roots back to Ā鶹ֱ²„app,ā€ Treurnicht said. They include Nanoleaf, Teabot and Chipcare.

 
 
Gimmy Chu, one of the University of Toronto alumni behind startup success Nanoleaf, with the revolutionary light bulb backed by investors around the world. Photo by Johnny Guatto.
 

 

 

 

 
 
teaBOT, the brainchild of U of T aerospace and robotics PhD candidate Rehman Merali and engineer Brian Lee, is part of the JOLT business incubator at MaRS Discovery District. Photo courtesy teaBOT.
 

 

 

 

 

 

 
 
University of Toronto researchers James Dou and Stewart Aitchison founded ChipCare, an affordable and efficient lab-on-a-chip that can revolutionize HIV monitoring in developing countries. Rendering courtesy ChipCare.
 

 

There are difficult challenges that startups face, she said, but tackling those ā€œis Ā鶹ֱ²„appā€™s thing. That is the sweet spot.ā€

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau recently announced a $20-million grant to the Centre for the Commercialization of Regenerative Medicine at MaRS ā€“ the commercialization arm of Medicine By Design.

GE Healthcare, a global company, also invested $20 million.

When global companies such as GE or make major investments here it shows they ā€œwant to interact with high-quality young companies, and they also want the proximity to outstanding research and the talent pipeline that comes out of Ā鶹ֱ²„app and its partner hospitals,ā€ Treurnicht said.

ā€œIt is not Ā鶹ֱ²„app just pushing out discoveries and startups but also the university being a magnet for global companies that recognize the strength of Toronto and the strength of Ā鶹ֱ²„app and its partners.ā€

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