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IESE: Corporate Venturing in Deep Tech on the Rise in East and Southeast Asia

  • 77 innovation leaders took part in IESE Business School�s new report, revealing their biggest challenges innovating with deep-tech start-ups
  • Japan, South Korea, mainland China, Singapore, Hong Kong and Thailand are the East and Southeast regions with the highest adoption rate of corporate venturing
  • 71% of analyzed companies expect to increase their collaboration with deep-tech start-ups during the next 5 years

HONG KONG--(BUSINESS WIRE)--IESE Business School releases today a new report on corporate venturing in deep tech in East and Southeast Asia, which finds that the region�s largest companies are stepping up their collaborations with start-ups at the cutting edge of technology.

The study covers the regions of Hong Kong, Indonesia, Japan, mainland China, Singapore, South Korea, Taiwan, Thailand and Vietnam, and looks at how companies are working with start-ups on the frontlines of innovation.

�Deep tech refers to emerging technologies based on scientific discoveries or engineering innovations, seeking to tackle some of the world�s fundamental challenges�encompassing work in expanding fields such as artificial intelligence, biotechnology, blockchain, robotics, and quantum computing,� co-authors Josemaria Siota and Prof. M� Julia Prats explain in the report.

The study found that among the analyzed companies, corporate venturing � the practice of established companies innovating with start-ups � has increased 2.8 times in the past five years, while deep-tech cooperation has gone up 4.2 times.

This growth puts East and Southeast Asia ahead of Latin America but still behind the United States in terms of corporate�start-up innovations among corporate giants. On average, East and Southeast Asia have a 57% adoption rate of corporate venturing, compared to Latin America with 40% and the United States with 90%.

The study also looked at obstacles to this type of cooperation. Based on 77 interviews, the study identifies seven areas that keep chief innovation officers up at night, ranging from technology evaluation, corporate short-term view over deep-tech start-ups, silos between R&D and corporate venturing teams, regulation, to top-down innovation approach.

The report is being released in Hong Kong at the Corporate Innovation Summit organized by the Hong Kong Science and Technology Parks Corporation (HKSTP), which is discussing corporate innovation trends and best practices.

More on the study�s findings.

Contacts

Mallory Dees

IESE Business School

[email protected]

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