Archive

Posts Tagged ‘skilled workers’

How does Canada Compete with the U.S. for Immigrant Tech Entrepreneurs?

October 7th, 2009

A great post today by Suzanne Dingwall Williams of Venture Law Associates LLP in Toronto, regarding the recent considerations by the U.S. to increase the number of H1B visas for skilled foreign workers, apparently thanks to a push by venture capitalists.

The stats she quotes are startling: 

“A recently released study by the NVCA notes that (a) immigrants have started more than 25% of U.S. public companies that were formerly venture backed, and (b) more than 50% of the employment generated by U.S. public venture-backed companies has come from immigrant-founded companies like Intel, eBay, Yahoo!, and Sun.

The New York Times has also taken note, citing Harvard Law professor Vivek Wadhwa’s claim that 52.4% of today’s Silicon Valley startups have at least one foreign founder. US VCs are figuring that, to expand domestic deal flow, they need to expand the immigrant entrepreneur base.”

Having lived in six countries including the U.S., I can tell for a fact that the amount of energy I deployed to learn about and obtain the visas and other administrative passes giving me the right to stay and to work is stupendous. In volume, it easily equals the time required to launch the operations of a start-up. This truly is wasted time. If the U.S. had made it easier for me to stay after my years at Stanford, I’d likely be there. I truly love Canada and Toronto is my favorite city in the world – but on a professional level, for tech entrepreneurs the environment is just not comparable to California. So the main advantage of Canada over the U.S., as Suzie points out, is that it is easier to immigrate as a skilled worker here.

But if that advantage diminishes, what’s left to retain immigrant tech entrepreneurs in Canada?

Better public support for start-ups? More grants? Sure, that’s one thing we have over the U.S. But it’s also a double-edged sword: in the previous years and months, the government and semi-public/nonprofit bodies have rapidly enriched their offering to better support the local tissue of tech entrepreneurs. That part is great. But a problem that’s not often raised -no one wants to publicly irk the hands that feed them, I guess- is the increasing institutionalization of venture commercialization actitivities that came with it: internal competition between agencies and “nonprofits” (whose employees clearly profited from this boom) are now leading some of them to expand into the private sector’s realm, for example by offering free market research and consulting services for start-ups. That move even goes against the public service mandate, as those services are generally only available to handpicked “clients”.

Even though it is motivated by a will to better support start-ups, it troubles me that the government and the bodies it supports increasingly choose to nationalize this activity as opposed to supporting the private providers already present. I didn’t leave the most successful communist country in the world – I’m talking of France – to land back in a growingly soviet-like environment, and have to make a living by begging for public grants! Hubs and catalysts are much needed. But it is to complement and promote, not replace, our private entrepreneurial ecosystem.

Sure, there is a lot of good work done hand-in-hand by private, public and publicly subsidized nonprofit organizations here, but when it comes to actual commercialization projects, it’s been my experience again and again that someone with a guaranteed salary and an institutional job simply doesn’t deliver as much value as a private sector provider whose next job depends on the quality of the one at hand. But unfortunately for us, it’s hard to compete with free. ”Free” also creates the wrong culture up north, with start-ups getting used to focusing on the technology and not investing much in commercialization and marketing, which obviously comes back to bite them. The higher valuation Americans place on commercialization activities, in my opinion, is another characteristic of the U.S. entrepreneurial ecosystem that still makes it more compelling than the Canadian one. With higher quotas for H1B visas, it won’t just attract better entrepreneurs , it will also attract better professionals to support those entrepreneurs.

As for VCs in Canada, there are few left, and so companies here are forced to look south or reduce their fundraising expectations and go after angels (who have done a tremendous job filling the gap left by VCs in early stages, but simply don’t have the same financial firepower). Interestingly, the VCs that are left also tend to only provide small amounts and thus really start looking more like angels with extra overheads. Among the Canadian clients I helped this year, and other start-ups I know here that received term sheets from Canadian VCs, not one accepted them. They went for local angels or U.S. VCs. Canadian VCs are stuck in the middle.

Luckily for Canada, U.S. H1Bs are not as compelling as the permanent residence our country is handing over to skilled workers, since they are tied to employment – it’s E visas and green cards the U.S. should make easier for entrepreneurs to obtain (and perhaps they are working on that too, I haven’t checked). But if the great Canadian advantage in facilitating entry and residence of skilled workers goes away, there will be little left here for immigrant entrepreneurs. A Canadian spouse and public healthcare (also something the U.S. may address) as the main reasons for most of them to stay here doesn’t make for great headlines about the state of our entrepreneurial system.

Reblog this post [with Zemanta]

Canadian entrepreneurs , , , , , , , , , , , ,