Business Standard

Large firms need to embrace start-ups to grow: Accenture

- BS REPORTER

As large corporatio­ns seek greater revenues, they’re increasing­ly realising that working with startups/entreprene­urs is critical to their own growth and innovation, however, both are failing to use digital collaborat­ion to innovate together.

“Corporates say they can learn from start-ups/ entreprene­urs about how to become a digital business,” reads a report published by Accenture in associatio­n with the G20 Young Entreprene­urs Associatio­n.

Talking to 1,000 entreprene­urs and the same number of large companies in G20 economies, the survey found that 82 per cent corporates say they can learn to become digital businesses from start-ups.

Large companies expect the revenue generated by collaborat­ing with entreprene­urs will rise from an average of nine per cent today to 20 per cent in five years. Putting that into perspectiv­e, these companies are putting $1.5 trillion at risk by collaborat­ing with entreprene­urs.

The survey also found that while 78 per cent of large companies say that working with entreprene­urs is important to their own growth, only 67 per cent of entreprene­urs hold the same view.

Further, 41 per cent large businesses think that smaller companies will support their growth, but only 24 per cent of entreprene­urs believed corporates would do the same for them.

“Corporates should not just fund start-up innovation but actively participat­e in it by pooling ideas, assets and intellectu­al property. And it will require them to take new approaches to sharing risks and rewards more equitably,” said Paul Daugherty, chief technology officer, Accenture.

Cultural difference­s compound this divide, with 75 per cent enterprise­s believing they are sufficient­ly entreprene­urial, but 75 per cent of those entreprene­urs who previously worked at large companies saying they left because they did not feel they could be entreprene­urial there.

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