The Pak Banker

How fall of finance led to French tech's rise

- Pascal-Emmanuel Gobry

France is emerging as a major European tech hub: La French Tech, as it is known, is improbably beating out Germany and rivaling London for funding levels and company valuations. A significan­t portion of France's most talented young people now want to work in an innovation ecosystem rather than in secure jobs in government or traditiona­l industries. The reason for the shift is not Emmanuel Macron, the reformer who has become French president. It long predates his rise.

Instead, it has its roots in the 2008 financial crisis. In most countries, the dot-com bubble, for all the waste, at least left behind infrastruc­ture and a generation of battle-hardened entreprene­urs; in France, however, the adoption of the internet was delayed by the French government's home-grown substitute, the Minitel. The belief that the internet was a fad remained after the dot-com bubble burst, hurting investment and entreprene­urship.

Between London, with the built-in advantage of the English language for going internatio­nal, and Berlin, with its reputation as a hipster mecca, France was on no one's radar. But the collapse of Lehman Brothers and its repercussi­ons showed young French graduates that betting on entreprene­urship and innovation was not just exciting or potentiall­y rewarding, but actually less risky than more convention­al paths. I witnessed this firsthand as a student at a top French business school at the time, watching classmate after classmate spurn solid offers from top firms to go start a company, even in the midst of a historic downturn.

It's hard to underestim­ate the impact of such a cultural shift. Those who study Silicon Valley's success return to culture as the X factor; after all, so many other places have talent and capital but have failed to replicate its genius for innovation. Silicon Valley's unique blend of relentless pragmatism in trying new things, healthy disrespect for convention­al thinking, and eagerness to work very long hours contrasts with the cliché of the French conception of work, which prides security, hierarchy and work-life balance. But the new French entreprene­urs are of a different breed.

Entreprene­urial ecosystems mature over a long period of time. Silicon Valley became a global innovation powerhouse over many years, as startups followed Hewlett Packard in the 1970s and talent attracted more talent. France now seems to have momentum. According to market research firm CB Insights, 700 new venture deals happened in France in 2017 compared with 251 in just 2015. France has its own unicorns such as Criteo, an adtech firm that gives Google and others a run for their money, and car-share service BlaBlaCar, which is expanding internatio­nally after becoming a phenomenon in France.

There are now ventures that seek to spark other big successes. Xavier Niel, France's most notorious tech billionair­e, is behind transforma­tive initiative­s, such as Kima Ventures, a seed fund that shook up the space by investing small amounts of money in startups at a very high clip. There is also 42, an innovative engineerin­g school that, unlike the traditiona­l French grandes ecoles, focuses exclusivel­y on computer engineerin­g and draws on students from unconventi­onal background­s; and Station F, a lavish startup campus which claims to be the biggest incubator in the world.

France is a more hospitable place for entreprene­urs these days. Its reputation for red tape and onerous taxes is now less and less deserved; the past decade has seen real reforms.

These have been slow, gradual and unnoticed, but their cumulative effect is important. Ten years ago, getting in touch with someone about taxes involved collating countless paper forms and standing in line for hours at the tax office; today, anybody can log onto their account with the finance ministry, send an email and get an answer within the day. Incorporat­ing a business is much less tedious than it used to be. A myriad of these sorts of small changes can add up to a more significan­t shift than big-ticket reforms.

The French government hasn't stopped meddling, though, and its moves to encourage investment into innovative companies have been a mixed blessing, with frustratin­gly complex schemes and frequent changes putting a damper on certainty. But the ecosystem is still fragile: Most of the new investment comes from corporates and foreign investors, who will retreat if there is a global downturn of if France proves unable to reform. If the money dries up too soon, la French Tech might still be seen as just a fad. But if it doesn't, a lot of clichés about France might need updating.

 ??  ?? In most countries, the dot-com bub
ble, for all the waste, at least left behind infrastruc­ture and a genera
tion of battle-hardened entreprene­urs; in France, however, the adoption of the internet was delayed by the French government's...
In most countries, the dot-com bub ble, for all the waste, at least left behind infrastruc­ture and a genera tion of battle-hardened entreprene­urs; in France, however, the adoption of the internet was delayed by the French government's...

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