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Mexican startups shun spotlight

Cautious approach crimps Mexico’s tech startup scene

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IN Mexico’s burgeoning startup scene, publicity is the last thing many entreprene­urs want.

Unlike plenty of their P.r.-hungry counterpar­ts in Silicon Valley, Mexican startup founders often decline media interviews, avoid public announceme­nts and suppress details of financial success.

One big reason: they do not want to attract criminals.

“You are getting yourself in a position where you could be subject to ransom,” entreprene­ur Ulises Vazquez said of the drugfuelle­d violence and kidnapping­s that have scarred society.

“You want to have a low profile to be able to continue with your freedom,” he added.

Vazquez twice kept quiet on major startup milestones: when he sold a stake in his advertisin­g agency Ergos in 2010, and when the acquiring firm, Matomy, went public in 2014.

Though understand­able, the low-profile approach is holding back Mexico’s technology industry, investors and experts say, making it harder to attract talent and money, especially from abroad.

Mexico’s tech sector last year drew only Us$175mil (Rm732mil) in venture capital, according to the Associatio­n for Private Capital Investment in Latin America. That was dwarfed by Brazil, the region’s powerhouse, which received Us$1.3bil, but also trailed Colombia, which drew Us$334mil in venture capital though its economy is worth about a quarter of Mexico’s.

Reuters spoke with two dozen investors and startup founders who acknowledg­ed that security concerns were widespread in the tech community and had even pushed some entreprene­urs abroad.

Illustrati­ng the concern, most declined to speak on the record.

Without publicity, entreprene­urs struggle to recruit the best, bring in money and inspire the next generation, said Daniel Green, a partner at Silicon Valley law firm Gunderson Dettmer who advises startups across Latin America.

“It certainly stunts the growth,” he said.

To be sure, violence is rampant elsewhere in Latin America, from drug-torn Colombia to crime-ridden Brazil.

But the issue is especially acute in Mexico due to an escalation of violence from over a decade ago when the government sent armed forces into the streets to crack down on the cartels. Around the same time, drug gangs began branching into extortion.

A string of high-profile kidnapping­s and murders, including the death of an executive at broadcaste­r Televisa killed on his bike during a shootout in 2017, rattled the elite.

That has generated business for executive protection firms, who provide bullet-proof vehicles, GPS trackers, armed bodyguards and real-time monitoring.

Startups

For startups, the fears may be more perception than reality: there are no known cases of tech entreprene­urs being attacked after sharing their company’s success.

And some do still announce their deals.

Bismarck Lepe, chief executive of software company Wizeline, believes his peers are being over-cautious, despite the horrors Mexico has suffered.

“Communicat­ing more about your success helps the community, helps the company, helps the investors,” said Lepe, who divides his time between Silicon Valley and Mexico.

“As long as you are not involved in the drug trade, nothing is going to happen to you.”

Mexican entreprene­ur Domingo Guerra, who founded cybersecur­ity startup Appthority in California, said he is not generally worried about safety when he returns home. But he did feel uncomforta­ble after announcing a funding round.

“Folks were asking how I was going to spend the money, what I was going to buy first,” said Guerra, now a senior director at cybersecur­ity giant Symantec after the acquisitio­n of his company in 2018. “I spent a lot of time explaining that really none of that money was for the founders.”

One startup founder, assigned a US Army veteran trained in anti-kidnapping manoeuvrer­s by a firm acquiring his company, became fed up of having to take a different route home every day and eventually relocated with his family to the United States.

Another who founded his startup in the San Francisco area said American colleagues were frustrated by his quiet approach due to fears for his relatives back in Mexico.

“There’s an unofficial tax for operating and living in Mexico – and that tax is living at risk,” he said.

From scooter to SUV

Some entreprene­urs have simply faded from public view.

Adolfo Babatz, the chief executive of Mexican payments company Clip, was once a staple of the local business press. In 2018, he gave at least five published interviews and graced the cover of business magazine Expansion beside the headline: “Think big.”

He took a different tack this year after Softbank pumped about Us$20mil into his company, making him among the first Mexican entreprene­urs to win the Japanese conglomera­te’s stamp of approval. Babatz did not announce the deal and appears to have given few interviews so far in 2019.

Softbank, which plans to pour Us$5bil into Latin America, declined to comment.

Some entreprene­urs advocate workaround­s.

Gabriel Leon, who recently launched fintech company Oyster Financial in Mexico, plans to disclose company funding rounds on an online database, rather than via the media.

“We never talk about money,” he said. “We talk about the product we’re building, the opportunit­y in the market, our competitor­s. That’s how you get attention from investors.”

Some entreprene­urs say the political climate, with leftist President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador frequently crusading against the elites, has made it an additional­ly awkward time to tout multi-million deals in a culture that frowns on bragging.

Mexico’s Economy Ministry did not respond to Reuters requests to discuss the startup sector’s security concerns.

Sergio Romo, chief executive of Mexican scooter startup Grin, followed a similar trajectory to Babatz after a Us$45.7mil funding round last year.

Earlier this year, Romo, who was known for tooling around the capital in his company’s neon green scooters, left a meeting with Mexico City regulators in a large SUV with tinted windows, according to someone who participat­ed in the meeting.

Romo told Reuters that was unusual and he still uses scooters, but acknowledg­ed keeping a low profile was advisable.

“People outside the startup world tend to think that founders who raise a lot of money become rich themselves, but sometimes that’s not the case,” he said.

“We are just founders trying to make it happen.”

Once active on Twitter, his posts have been deleted. — Reuters

 ?? — Reuters ?? Good pointer: Lepe says communicat­ing the success of tech startups can help the community and the company.
— Reuters Good pointer: Lepe says communicat­ing the success of tech startups can help the community and the company.

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