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Indextools: the catch-22 of innovation policy

This morning while reading an OECD survey of the Hungarian economy I came across an interesting admission. Among other elements of the Hungarian economy, the report described Hungary’s efforts to encourage innovation, which for the most part the OECD views favorably.

This is the bit that caught my attention:

“[M]any documestic manufacturing firms operate on a relatively small scale, often probably too small to warrant formal R&D activities. Though these firms may indeed be innovative, and may benefit from spillovers in knowledge and know-how from the large high-tech producers, these processes probably do not get fully recorded in statistics on innovative activity.”

That description exactly fits my last employer, Indextools. It also describes the dilemma policymakers face trying to reproduce this kind of success.

In my experience (and I mean career experience) a great deal of innovative activity comes from tiny startup companies like Indextools. When I joined the company in early 2004, it consisted of ten Hungarian developers, the founder and an extremely harried Australian woman who handled all of the sales, support and marketing communication. And yet the company was already beginning to compete against North American heavyweights in the Web Analytics industry.

Founded in 2000, Indextools started life as free web traffic counter developed by two young Hungarian friends, Marton Szoke and Peter Galantha. The two developed their service into a commercial product providing performance statistics to webmasters. With a fanatical dedication to developing their product, Indextools was able to address more and more sophisticated customers.

Meanwhile, Indextools? competitors in other markets were undergoing a similar evolution. The difference was that many of these companies had easier access to venture capital (for example Websidestory) while others had the advantage of being geographically near to key customers (Webtrends, Coremetrics and others).

At first glance you might assume that Indextools? chief advantage is cost. I would argue that the quality of the programming talent available to Indextools is also a big factor as well as, in particular, the savvy determination of the founders to develop their product. In 2005, the major differentiator in among web analytics vendors was the sophistication of each company?s feature set. Indextools was able to compete against larger, better-funded organizations operating in more sophisticated markets, based mainly on the company?s ability to continually innovate.

The irony, of course, is that Indextools isn?t even on the map of innovation policymakers. The company doesn?t employ an R&D staff because, in fact, the entire company is dedicated to product research and development. Nor is Indextools likely to apply for a Hungarian grant or a European Commission project. The application process is too complicated and bureaucratic for small, innovative companies like Indextools, which would rather put every spare moment of time into competing and winning new business.

I think one solution is publicize companies like Indextools and make them examples for others to emulate. Another approach is to make Hungary a better environment to do business ? for example by lowering the ludicrously high employee taxes business owners pay in this country. I hope to explore these and other themes in my next few posts.

Strategies for success in FP6

Directly related to this website are the events we hold in Hungary, Czechia and Slovakia to help local business people get connected to FP6 funding programs. Last night I held such an event here in Budapest, for an audience of about 40 people - a mixture of MBA students, entrepreneurs and business people. FP6 is the EU’s program to fund tech R&D.

One strong impression from last night: there’s a vast disconnect between the murky, bureaucratic logic of FP6 and how people actually do business. It takes ages to explain these procedures to intelligent people!
Continue reading ‘Strategies for success in FP6′

View from the NCP’s desk

Yesterday I met Vilmos Bognar, Hungary’s National Contact Point (NCP) for FP6 IST. Mr Bognar has agreed to be the keynote speaker at my upcoming First Tuesday event (Jan 31). In the course of our discussion he offered a few insights about Hungary’s FP6 participation.

The good news, according to Mr Bognar, is that Hungary could well lead Central Europe in research and development in as little as two years. The caveat, of course, is that the region as a whole has a lot of catching up to do.
Continue reading ‘View from the NCP’s desk’

Any eLearning breakthroughs in Hungary?

I was recently contacted by Jedlet, an eLearning group in Canada, for comments on an article, discussing eLearning developments in Hungary.

The conclusions? The best you could say is the need is growing, but according to local experts it’s still too early to talk about any kind of ‘breakthrough’.

The most interesting insight came from Dr. Arpad Balogh from the College of Nyiregyhaza:

“We have the largest IT centre in Hungary’s northeastern region, and recently student enrollment has increased from 3,000 to 15,000 students. In order to cope with this increase, we are developing our e-learning initiative rapidly in the hope that the demand on our physical resources will decrease while providing flexibility to both professors and students.”

The page also offers links to an article called eLearning at home: what’s stewing in our saucepans?.

Hungary’s hotspots

Two years ago an old friend visiting from New York asked me for a list of local wireless hotspots and I just laughed at him. We searched downtown Budapest together and discovered just two.

My how times have changed.

Here’s a cool little interactive map of Hungary’s wifi hotspots. You can search by location, and it break downs the results into ‘free’ and ‘commercial’.

Who would have guessed that Hajd?szoboszl? has seven hotspots?

Semops: Launching an era of mobile payments

Europe developed an early lead in mobile telephony, in large part because the major players agreed on the GSM communications standard. Using one common standard made it easy for operators to share network infrastructure, and ensured that clients could easily roam from network to network, as well as from country to country.

In a similar manner, the FP6-funded SEMOPS project – led by a mostly Hungarian consortium of companies - has created an infrastructure for making payments with a mobile telephone, which they see as the first step toward an era of ubiquitous m-commerce.

A major barrier to the wider adoption of mobile payments is the lack of a cheap, secure and universally applicable payment infrastructure. Mobile payment systems that exist today are limited and proprietary solutions. Such systems are relatively expensive to build, and their application is limited to a single purpose. For example, in many cities, motorists may now pay their parking meters with a mobile telephone, however these solutions cannot be used at the flower shop round the corner. Continue reading ‘Semops: Launching an era of mobile payments’

Hydro-Go removes the H from H20

One of our goals at nowEurope is to profile innovative new companies and technologies in Central Europe. Hydro-Go is a small Hungarian company with a very big potential.

In an age of high energy prices and shrinking oil reserves, hydrogen holds out the promise of a cheap, clean and limitless supply of energy. Hydrogen is all around us in the form of water. The only hitch is how to extract that fuel in a cost effective manner.

Hydro-Go has developed a solution that extracts a higher amount of hydrogen than any other known solution, and the company is looking for a partner to take this technology to the market.

The invention is an advanced hydrolysis system, which is different from any other known hydrolysis systems. The compact size hydrolyzing reactor is built from conventional materials and uses off-the-shelf components and technology to separate oxygen and hydrogen from distilled water. It uses different excitation techniques (ultrasound, microwave, plasma) gradually exciting the molecules of water in several phases.

The estimated energy balance is positive - from 200% to as high as 400%. The reaction is sustainable and reproducible and while there are theories, the company admits they don’t know exactly how or why this works. Scientific examinations are currently being carried out by Hungarian and international institutions.

The company is seeking patent protection for this technology and is interested in talking to partners who can help take this to market. I will be happy to put interested parties in contact with the company principles. Email me at steve AT noweurope DOT com

Central Europe’s innovation dilemma

Central Europeans like to remind visitors of the great thinkers and innovators their countries have produced: inventors like Nikola Tesla, László Biró, Jozsef Murgaš and Edward Teller, composers such as Anotinín Dvorak and Miklós Rózsa, mathematicians like Benoit Mandelbrot and Pál Erdôs, and writers such as Józef Korzeniowski (Joseph Conrad) and Milan Kundera.

When pressed, Central Europeans will also concede that many of their greatest native sons – including those listed above – only achieved greatness in exile. This is the region’s historical dilemma: How to ensure that local innovators have an opportunity to be successful at home.

The most obvious piece of the puzzle is money. It takes capital to develop a novel idea into patentable intellectual property or a healthy, growing business.

The good news in 2006 is that money is now available – perhaps more than at any other time in the region’s troubled history. It is still an open question, however, whether Central Europe’s professional investors are ready to direct that capital toward riskier, early stage investments in innovative companies.

Continue reading ‘Central Europe’s innovation dilemma’

Hungary’s FP6 score card

How has Hungary fared in the European Commission’s Sixth Framework Programme? While data is only available for four of the six calls, it is still possible to draw some preliminary conclusions. This data was provided aby the National Research and Technology Agency, as well as the National Office for Research and Technology.

The good news is Hungary’s overall performance in FP6 has increased over the previous FP5 program. Unfortunately, the participation of small businesses has dropped significantly. It also seems clear that new Instruments introduced in FP6 have had the effect of excluding the participation of Hungary, and other New Member States (NMS).
Continue reading ‘Hungary’s FP6 score card’

How well does the Venture Academy format work?

Returning from Warsaw I jotted down a few notes about the experience I had coaching entrepreneurs this week at Europe Unlimited?s Biotech Venture Academy.

The venture academy format brings together leaders of young technology companies to pitch their businesses to a group of coaches, a group that included active venture capitalists, professional business advisors, and experienced entrepreneurs - including your correspondent. The project is funded by the European Commission, and the entrepreneurs can participate for free.

I enjoy this kind of exercise, however my interest was not merely academic. I?ve been asked to help bring the Biotech Venture Academy to Budapest in June this year. So how well does this format work?
Continue reading ‘How well does the Venture Academy format work?’

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