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Applications

Investors scout space spin-offs.

28/05/2010 1231 views 0 likes
ESA / Applications / Technology Transfer

Investors looking for promising opportunities in space spin-offs used ESA’s Investment Forum in Stuttgart, Germany, this month to meet 28 young entrepreneurial companies looking for financing to start their businesses.

Entrepreneur Meta
Entrepreneur Meta

Organised by ESA’s Technology Transfer Programme Office (TTPO) and managed by Europe Unlimited, this was the fourth Forum. Most of the companies were from the four ESA Business Incubation Centres in the Netherlands, Germany and Italy.

In parallel, the European Commission organised a workshop on satellite applications, underlining the role of the forum in bringing innovators, investors and industry together.

Frank M. Salzgeber
Frank M. Salzgeber

“In our incubation centres we help the entrepreneurs to get started,” said Frank M. Salzgeber, Head of TTPO.

“They come with great ideas and we provide them with office space, seed funding and contact with experts to mature their ideas and develop them into potential businesses.

“The next step is to find partners and investors who can support them with financing and target their business. At the forum they get the opportunity to present and discuss their business ideas and plans with venture capitalist and investors.”

Attracting investors

Entrepreneur and investor Anton Arts
Entrepreneur and investor Anton Arts

“There are a lot of technologies that were originally created for space applications that have profoundly changed the life of consumers, ranging from Earth observation to navigation,” added entrepreneur and investor Anton Arts, partner of New Venture Partners LLC.

“An example is the ambitious Google Earth, which has really changed the way that people think about their environment.

Investor Dr Bernd Geiger
Investor Dr Bernd Geiger

“As venture capitalists, we have a lot of experience in taking raw technology from the lab and adding a layer of commercial reality to those technologies, and moving them to actual businesses.”

Dr Bernd Geiger, of Triangle Venture Capital Group Management, noted: “The most important point is how entrepreneurs kick off their ideas, but it requires resources. You need to be ready to live for a year or more without getting any revenue.

“This is the proven truth of a young start-up company, and for that you need financing. That is the role of a venture capitalist, and to make sure that it takes only one year to acquire the first customer.”

Entrepreneur van Wylick
Entrepreneur van Wylick

Triangle also manages the recently launched Open Sky Technologies Fund, which ESA initiated and invests in. The fund has a target volume of €100 million to support space-to-non-space spin-offs.

During the forum, 28 start-up companies discussed their business ideas with the venture capital professionals, opening up the dialogue on obtaining investments.

Entrepreneur van Damme
Entrepreneur van Damme

To date, ESA’s Business Incubation Centres have created 50 companies, with 90% still in business. Some have grown significantly and a quarter have been acquired by other companies.

The next ESA Investment Forum will take place in Milan, Italy on 5 October 2010.

ESA Business Incubation Centres

ESA’s business incubation is one of the major initiatives of the Agency’s Technology Transfer Programme Office (TTPO). As part of its endeavour to encourage the transfer and commercialisation of space technologies, four Business Incubation Centres (BICs) have been set up in the Netherlands, Darmstadt and Oberpfaffenhofen in Germany, and near Rome in Italy. The centres support selected entrepreneurs with comprehensive commercial and technical assistance to help them start up businesses that use space technology in non-space industrial, scientific and commercial fields.

ESA’s Technology Transfer Programme Office

The main mission of the TTPO is to facilitate the use of space technology and space systems for non-space applications and to demonstrate the benefit of the European space programme to European citizens. The office is responsible for defining the overall approach and strategy for the transfer of space technologies, including the incubation of start-up companies and their funding. For more information, please contact:

ESA’s Technology Transfer Programme Office
European Space Agency
Keplerlaan 1
2200 AG, Noordwijk ZH
The Netherlands
Tel: +31 71 565 6208
Email: ttp@esa.int

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