National Post

Report urges feds to put more focus on supporting high-potential firms

Fostering global giants necessary, paper outlines

- Murad Hemmadi For more news about the innovation economy visit thelogic.co

The federal government must provide significan­tly more support to a select few high-growth firms if it wants to foster more globally competitiv­e business giants, according to an unpublishe­d report by former Ryerson University president Sheldon Levy.

In December 2018, Small Business Minister Mary Ng appointed Levy to advise her on how to help small- and medium-sized firms scale up, a key priority for the Liberal government in its first term. Innovation-economy executives and industry associatio­ns have long awaited the results of his work.

Though Levy submitted his findings in July 2019, Ottawa has yet to release them publicly. After The Logic obtained a copy, however, Levy — who remains in the pro bono advisory position — said in an interview he thinks “the government responded on a lot of it,” and that while “COVID changed everyone’s priorities … we haven’t stopped on the work of the report.”

“Canada is home to a collection of promising highgrowth firms that are on the verge of becoming global players,” Levy wrote in the report, which The Logic obtained via access-to-informatio­n request. Titled “Getting to Scale: Accelerati­ng Canada’s high-growth companies,” it argues that such businesses have outsized impacts on job creation and economic growth, while encouragin­g technology adoption and boosting productivi­ty. But as they grow, these firms find it more difficult to hire staff, as well as to access major financing, government support and new markets.

The report was based in part on consultati­ons with more than 50 executives at startups and large firms as well as with senior leaders at 13 scale-ups including Carboncure, a Halifax-based cleantech firm, and Devfacto, an Edmonton-headquarte­red tech consultanc­y.

The companies Levy consulted expressed concern that Ottawa is “diluting the impact of government support and funding by spreading it too thinly among too many recipients.” The report proposed government­s at all levels adopt an “Own the Podium” strategy of prioritizi­ng “select high-potential sectors and individual companies” that can be “boosted past their peers and become future anchor firms and internatio­nal successes.”

In an interview Monday, Levy said such companies “require much more of a concierge service to support them,” as well as a “Team Canada” approach that brings together help from government­s, public-sector organizati­ons, large firms and financiers.

The country’s scale-up executives told Levy and his team they faced barriers to accessing financing. “Canada risks lagging behind its peers (in) the supply and availabili­ty of growth capital,” the report stated, citing data from the Canadian Venture Capital & Private Equity Associatio­n showing the total raised in later-stage deals grew from $1.4 billion in 2016 to just $1.8 billion in 2018. (The correspond­ing figure for 2020 was $2 billion, with another $147 million in growth equity).

The report recommends that Ottawa launch a latestage version of its Venture Capital Catalyst Initiative — which seeds funds-of-funds and VC funds — focused on investors raising funds of $400 million or more.

The 2021 federal budget allocated $450 million for a new round of the program, although the government did not specify that it would back later-stage funds.

Finding domestic customers to adopt their technology “turned out to be the most significan­t (problem) that was preventing companies from scaling,” said Levy.

While the Liberals establishe­d the $100-million-peryear Innovative Solutions Canada initiative to buy from startups, it and similar programs aren’t linked to the $22 billion the federal government spends annually on goods and services, or to procuremen­t spending by provinces, territorie­s and municipali­ties. The report recommende­d establishi­ng such connection­s, and matching department­s directly with relevant scale-ups.

“There were a lot of issues (around) domestic adoption, (which provides) the validation of your own home market that (gives) you the credibilit­y and the references to be able to go internatio­nally,” said Levy.

But he said in the healthcare sector, in particular, Ng has done “a tremendous amount of very good work” to address that problem.

Ottawa spearheade­d the CAN Health Network, which has branches covering five provinces. The 16 participat­ing health-care systems work with high-potential firms on their real operating needs. Levy said Ottawa is now looking to apply the approach to other sectors.

Companies Levy consulted also expressed concern about a shortage of senior talent in areas such as sales, marketing, engineerin­g and developmen­t. They reported difficulty hiring executives with experience scaling businesses, and that larger and multinatio­nal companies are poaching experience­d technical staff from scale-ups, pushing salary expectatio­ns beyond their means.

The report recommende­d that government­s expand and adapt work-integrated learning programs and industry-led upskilling initiative­s for the needs of highgrowth firms.

The Liberals made scaleups a major focus of their first term. Ottawa directed major federal distributo­rs of business-support funding such as the regional developmen­t agencies to back growth-stage firms, and targeted R&D and commercial­ization programs including Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Technology Canada and the Industrial Research Assistance Program at larger projects. In the 2017 federal budget, the government promised to double the number of high-growth companies in Canada to 28,000 by 2025, with tech being a major driver.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s original August 2018 mandate letter to Ng instructed her to “help scale Canadian (small- and medium-sized enterprise­s) seeking to grow, scale up, and become more productive, more innovative and more export-oriented.” But the department­al plan for Innovation, Science and Economic Developmen­t Canada (ISED) for the 2021–22 fiscal year dropped the high-growthcomp­any target. And Ng’s updated mandate letters no longer cite helping firms scale among her top priorities.

“We are taking a Team Canada approach to ensure (Canadian businesses) can own the podium with their innovation­s across Canada and around the world,” Ng said in a statement to The Logic on Monday.

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