In recent years, equity-based collaborations between large companies and startups, also known as Corporate Venture Capital (CVC), have increased significantly. According to CB Insights, CVC-backed funding around the globe increased from 70.1 billion dollars in 2020 to 169.3 billion dollars in 2021 (142% increase), and they recorded an all-time high in investment levels as well as in the number of newly established CVC units (221). These results reflect the fact that business leaders believe strongly in strategic corporate-startup collaborations as a means of achieving technological development and reaching market goals.
“Large companies have the technological and productive assets, the market expertise, the financial resources and the business networks. Complementarily, startups bring innovation, new ideas and the ability to challenge the status quo in their industry. When these two worlds meet, a powerful and dynamic collaboration that combines the best of both can emerge: the startups' innovative ideas and the established companies' experience, assets and reach,” says Associate Professor at CBS, Francesco Di Lorenzo.
He recently published an extensive report where he collected data on Corporate Venturing strategies and activities from leading Nordic companies in order to obtain a detailed understanding of how they find, structure, lead, achieve success in and evaluate their collaborations with startups, specifically focusing on Corporate Venture Capital.