
• Silicon Valley's DNA resides in Silicon Roundabout and London's
new TechHub
• Startup cluster grows 700% in three years
FOR GENERAL RELEASE
LONDON: London's new
TechHub, the space for the
technology community, is acting as a catalyst for the
increasingly active startup scene, which is exploding in the area
around Old Street roundabout, known to locals as Silicon
Roundabout.
Built like a members club for technology startups (apply to
join here) - where the 100 megabit-per-second wifi is
considered more important by members than the expensive Club
Sandwich found in the average London club - the recently launched
TechHub is rapidly becoming
the meeting place
for entrepreneurs from across Europe, in London. And it has
research to back up this claim.
In July 2008 a crowsourced Google map put up by UK startup Dopplr
(
bit.ly/siliconroundabout),
and featured by the Evening Standard newspaper, showed 15
technology startups in the area. Later, a survey by Wired
magazine in 2009 found,
at first 42, and later
85
companies.
But some three years later,
TechHub's in-house research
has identified over 100 tech oriented companies (107 to be exact)
based in the area around the Old Street roundabout. On
the raw numbers alone this represents a 700% growth of technology
companies in the area, representing a huge leap in the innovation
coming out of this part of London.
While San Francisco has Silicon Valley and New York has "Silicon
Alley", London's Silicon Roundabout is staking its claim as the
new tech start-up hub of the moment.
The cluster of young web and tech companies in EC1 dates back to
dotcom days, attracted by the cheaper rents and a vibrant
nightlife, but more recently the startup "space", TechHub, has
recently arrived to help act as a lightning rod for the
technology community in the area, creating the "serendipitous
connections" where innovation thrives. These are the connections
written at length about by Steven Johnson's new (2010) book,
"
Where
Good Ideas Come From: The Natural History Of
Innovation."
It's clearly working.
Los Angeles-based
Mobile
Roadie opened its London office in July 2010. The firms'
Stephen O'Reilly says "
Over the last four months Techhub
has been an invaluable resource and destination for networking,
sharing and learning. I always take the opportunity to
call in after work to see what's happening at Techhub. I have met
some great people at many of the Techhub nights and we even
managed to recruit a new team member. We would highly recommend
Techhub as a great destination in the heart of the silicon
roundabout for any tech startups wanting to do business in the
UK."
Danny Bull,
Digi Nut,
chimes in: "There's nowhere else quite like the Silicon
Roundabout in London where you can be at the center of so many
interesting startups and companies. TechHub is quickly becoming
the place where startups congregate, from lone entrepreneurs to
growing businesses. It's affordable, accessible and
inspirational."
Any community needs its heroes and one still based in the Old St
area is
Last.fm, the online music
community bought by CBS for $280m (£140m) in 2007, one of the
largest UK web company buyouts of recent years.
Cofounder Martin Stiksel was interviewed by the Financial times
saying: “Old Street was a seemingly unlikely place to build a web
company when we came here six years ago, but there’s no doubt
it’s now becoming a hive of tech activity. The noise, vibrancy,
and underground attitude of East London certainly rubs off on
you, and inspires fresh perspectives – something I think all
these start-ups share."
Slap bang on Silicon Roundabout is
Moo.com, which prints business cards based
on photos from sites such as Flickr or Facebook, and other
real-world products based on virtual content. Founder and
chief executive Richard Moross says the affordable local offices
are not just the point of the area, but the community.
Matt Biddulph of the startup
Dopplr - last year bought by Nokia for a
rumoured $15 million - says “For me it’s all about the community
here. We moved in because our friends did too.” (FT).
"Printing, music, advertising and even the parking industry are
being disrupted by London’s most innovative internet start-ups
around the Silicon Roundabout. TechHub serves as the nerve
centre of the UK internet community," says Anthony
Eskinazi, founder of
Parkatmyhouse.co.uk, a TechHub
member.
As well as TechHub running events for startups and
technology communities, the area is also home to a vibrant
network of cafes and has a strong local art scene.
Early stage tech startups find that, especially if you are
starting up for the first time, being able to have access to a
network of peers is extremely important.
That cluster of peers is clearly one of the major attractions of
Silicon Roundabout, and of TechHub in particular.
The peer-mentoring that takes place, especially in the technology
space which is very geared towards innovation through information
sharing, is key. This is at the core of TechHub's philosophy and
why its network of members is growing at a pace.
More views from TechHub members and
startups:
"Techhub is the much needed focus for what could turn out to the
the second most important industry for London, behind Finance.
This era of lean startups which is exploding, due to cheap cloud
computing and great engineers, will be regarded as the golden era
for tech startups in London and Techub will be seen as the
epicenter." Keld Van Schreven, Diary.com
"For a new guy in town Techhub was very friendly place to start
working in London. Surrounding startups, events and nice
space were a great welcome and made my life much
easier." Viktor Marohnic, Shout'em (Slovenian startup with a
base in London via TechHub)
More About TechHub
TechHub (@TechHub on Twitter) is the new hub for the technology
community. Just 10 seconds walk from Old Street tube station,
TechHub London is aimed specifically at technology entrepreneurs,
startups and developers. Inside London’s main technology cluster
and close to the financial heart, it offers affordable permanent
desk spaces, a large member-based co-working area, meeting rooms
for hire, a large board room and a conference/event space for up
to 200 people. You can work all day on the 100mbps wifi and
connect with a great community of TechHub members. TechHub runs
its own events as well as being available to hire for tech or
developer events, conferences or meetups. Members are already
joining TechHub from all over Europe, Silicon Valley, the Middle
East and Asia to use TechHub as a base when they’re in London and
we’re arranging Member discounts at some of the great bars,
restaurants, cafes and hotels in the area too. TechHub facilities
include: 50 permanent desk spaces for monthly hire, pre-bookable
hotdesking, meeting rooms for hire by anyone (discounted for
TechHub members), A/V, whiteboards, kitchen facilities and
printing. Permanent deskspaces come with wifi/wired data, power
and a mailing address. Address: TechHub, Ground Floor, 76-80 City
Rd, London, EC1Y 2BJ. Old St tube (exit 5) and a short walk from
Moorgate Tube, Liverpool Street mainlines station, and close to
taxis and buses. TechHub was founded by Elizabeth Varley and Mike
Butcher.
Contact: Elizabeth Varley
Email: Info@TechHub.com
Contact TechHub:
Phone: +44 20 7490 0764 (or 020 7490 0764 within the UK)
TechHub London
Ground Floor
76-80 City Rd
London EC1Y 2BJ
UK
**** Technology startups in the "Silicon Roundabout" area
identified by TechHub's research include: *******
buildabrand is an online branding system that allows you to
create, manage and apply instant, personalised and strategically
correct branding to your business. buildabrand allows you to
instantly create a strategically accurate brand identity. It
requires no creative, design or branding skills. Services are
delivered online instantly from within the site, or as
downloadable digital files for home production. You can buy brand
design at any time in a convenient online environment. The
process is easy, quick and affordable. Create a personalised
brand and order your items in minutes.
“Roll your own Microblogging/Mobile Social Network” service.
Shout’Em enables businesses and individuals to start their own
mobile social networks, especially those devoted to a particular
niche. In its essence, Shout’Em is “Ning for mobile”. Shout’Em
enables users to create a simpler, mobile social network. The
service comes in two flavors: 1) a free solution for small
communities supported by our own advertising and 2) an enterprise
solution for mobile operators and more advanced online
communities such as news portals, local social networks and so
on.
My Neighbourhoods is an online service that allows users to find
out more about the area in which they live. Users can find local
information and reviews on such topics as eating out, pubs and
restaurants to health, schools, shopping, handy men and builders.
The site was created to take advantage of the collective power of
neighbours and provide people with a trusted source of help and
advice. Initially launched for the UK market, the site will soon
expand into other countries.
www.fastrades.com helps people Buy, Sell and Swap using Twitter.
Launching in London we enable Twitter users to buy, sell and swap
goods and services using the power of their trusted Twitter
social network.
Diary.com is a way to create private and shared diaries in a
Twitter-like interface which enables the posting of text, links,
pictures and video either privately, publicly or in shared
private environments for group collaboration, shared ideas,
scrapbooking and conversation.
PageDo is an online service for building and testing highly
effective landing pages for marketing, advertising and social
media campaigns. PageDo provides all the tools to build simple
landing pages that are optimized for gathering responses from a
specific target audience.
Siondo is a London-based software service vendor that supplies
owner managers and directors of small and medium-sized businesses
(SMB) with a set of integrated software applications that enable
simple and efficient management of all key business functions.
Siondo software is distributed through a secure monthly
subscription model via the Internet. All users need to run Siondo
is a PC or MAC with a Web browser and an Internet connection. Our
software works best with Microsoft Internet Explorer, Safari, or
Mozilla Firefox. Just open your browser, login and go - anytime
and from anywhere.
Mobile
Roadie (Based next door to TechHub)
Mobile Roadie allows anyone to create and manage their own iPhone
and Android apps. Founded by Brock Batten (Creative Director) and
Michael Schneider (CEO) in 2009, they have created over 600 apps
for musicians, authors, athletes, and businesses. Their offices
are located in Los Angeles and London.
7digital is a privately held company based in central London, UK
and is backed by Benchmark Capital, the venture capital firm
behind eBay and other leading technology companies. 7digital is
the UK’s leading digital media delivery company, catering for
record companies, artists, film and TV companies as well as other
digital media owners throughout the world. In March of 2008, the
company secured the first deal to exclusively sell Warner Music’s
full catalogue of DRM-free music across Europe.The site already
had a deal to sell EMI’s DRM-free music and is also negotiating
with Sony BMG and Universal.
AMEE (Based next door to
TechHub)
AMEE’s aim is to map, measure and track all the carbon and energy
data on Earth - to address the largest threat facing humanity.
Business, Consumer and Government applications are “Powered by
AMEE” to ensure compliance with authoritative international
standards. The AMEE platform is used internationally by many
organisations including The UK Government (Defra/DECC), The Irish
Government, The Welsh Assembly, PricewaterhouseCoopers, CNN,
Google, Morgan Stanley, Nesta, the Energy Saving Trust, BRE,
Radiohead, Sun Microsystems, plus numerous other IT,
consultancies, agencies, business services and software
companies.
Last.fm (Based 5 mins from
TechHub)
Last.fm is a social networking company which revolves around its
music recommendation engine. Recommendations are made by
comparing user data to the rest of the Last.fm user community.
Unlike competitor Pandora, Last.fm’s recommendations are not
generated by matching similar musical attributes. However, its
community driven engine gives it more potential to grow into
media other than music. This is most likely a reason why media
giant, CBS, acquired Last.fm for $280 million in May of 2007.
Last.fm grew from very modest funding compared to its competitors
Pandora, ilike, MyStrands and others.
Located in London, Moo prints “MiniCards” from your photos which
can be uploaded directly or accessed through Flickr, Bebo or one
of Moo’s other partner sites. Every single MiniCard can have a
different image on it, which has turned them into somewhat of a
collectors item. Moo says they “dream up new tools that help
people turn their virtual content into beautiful print products”
and indeed they have. After originally only offering MiniCards,
Moo now offers NoteCards and stickers. Moo, which raised $5
million from Atlas Venture and Index Ventures in April 2006, has
sold “several million cards” to customers in 143 countries -
including North Korea.
Musicmetric offers detailed analytics and trend forecasting for
the music industry. Musicmetric is creating software tools and
services using machine learning algorithms designed to measure
online buzz and deliver relevant analytics. Their tools enable
deep analysis of marketing performance, designed to add
efficiency and accurate campaign targeting. Additionally, their
software offers predictive trend forecasting for artists, genres
and sales within the mainstream label, indie and unsigned sectors
of the music industry.
Shutl (Based 5 mins from
TechHub)
Shutl is a web-service that brings delivery up to speed by
letting shoppers get what they want, when they want it. Shutl
lets shoppers choose to receive online/in-store purchases within
as little as 90 minutes (“Shutl Now”) or within a 1 hour delivery
window of their choice (‘Shutl Later”). Shutl delivers 24 hours a
day, 7 days a week. The service is currently being trialled in
London. Think Kozmo.com and Urban fetch but with a 2.0 business
model… The company was founded by Tom Allason the founder &
former CEO of eCourier.co.uk in 2008. The company launched at Le
Web on 9th December 2009.
Skimlinks is a London-based company started in 2006. Their key
product is SkimLinks, a simplified affiliate marketing tool for
publishers. It helps blogs, forums, and content sites the ability
to earn revenue from affiliate marketing with no technical or
admin effort. Skimlinks turns links on content sites into their
affiliate marketing link equivalents on-the-fly, so publishers
can focus on creating quality content rather than creating and
maintaining affiliate links. Skimlinks is integrated with 23
international affiliate networks,with more than 11,000 merchants
in its system. Skimlinks has won numerous awards for their
innovative technology; in 2009, Skimlinks won Best New Entrant,
Best Use of Technology in Affiliate Marketing and Innovative
Affiliate of the Year at the A4U Awards, and was shortlisted in
the NMA Awards and The LinkShare Golden Link Awards, while CEO
Alicia Navarro was a finalist for Entrepreneur of the Year at the
National Business Awards. In 2010, Skimlinks was named a Smarta
100 winner, won the Linkshare Golden Link Awards Technology
Genius prize, and were named number 24 in the Startups.co.uk Top
100.
Launched October 2007 by co-founders Ian Hogarth, Michelle You
and Pete Smith, Songkick is an online database of concerts for
music enthusiasts. Has $4.52M in funding.
TweetDeck is an Adobe Air desktop application, currently in
public beta, that looks to capture the abundance of social media
and display it in a unique columned user interface. In recent
months there has been an explosion in social media with hundreds
of services offering an abundance of information to the masses.
TweetDeck is a realtime application that allows users to monitor
that information in a single concise view. TweetDeck currently
integrates services from Twitter, Twitscoop, 12seconds,
Stocktwits and now Facebook. $3.8m in funding.
FURTHER LINKS SHOWING SILICON ROUNDABOUT IS
GROWING
Innovation occurs when ideas from different people bang against
each other.
(Picture from Wired UK)
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