Investors need to take a long-term
view when backing new tech start-ups in the UK according to leading fund
manager Neil Woodford, speaking as part of the BBC's Tech Talent
coverage.
He says small companies are not receiving the funding required to grow.

"We have been appallingly bad at giving those minnows the long-term capital they need," said Mr Woodford.
On the BBC, Tech Talent coverage is asking whether the UK can compete in the global tech industry.
The UK is a magnet for entrepreneurs - around a third of them come from abroad.
But
according to Mr Woodford and others, home-grown tech entrepreneurs are
not turning promising starts into leading global companies.
What's wrong?
On Monday, the BBC will look at the vibrant and growing UK tech scene and ask why it has failed to find a Google or Facebook.
A
variety of reasons have been put forward, including a digital skills
shortage, a lack of leadership experience and difficulties in raising
finance.
Rohan Silva, a tech entrepreneur and former adviser to
David Cameron when he was prime minister, says funding for start-ups has
"long been seen as a big problem in the UK".
"There's two types
of funding," he told the BBC. "There's the funding that comes from
friends, family and fools: the start-up money - £50,000, £100,000 - to
get going. There we've really made a big difference in the UK. We've
created the world's most generous tax breaks for that kind of
investment."
The second type is "scale-up cash" to help companies grow, which is still proving "a big challenge".
"There
is a big role for government in providing a bunch of that funding,
particularly when it comes to research in the laboratory and helping
that go to market," he says.
Mr Woodford agrees that financing is a major constraint.
"We
have four of the top 10 universities in the world, 29 of the top 200.
We do science and research really, really well in the UK and we're
generating lots of little companies," Mr Woodford said.
According to him, it is after this stage that the problems emerge.
Mr Woodford argues that UK investors are too short-term and do not have the scale to support small technology firms.
Hussein
Kanji, co-founder of Hoxton Ventures, agrees: "It would still be hard
for something like an Uber to be born out of the UK because I don't
think there's a financing community that would give Uber the billions of
dollars that it has consumed to get to global stage."
Others point out that Silicon Valley has had longer to perfect the process.
Eileen Burbidge has worked at Apple and Yahoo and is now a venture capitalist based in London.
"They
[Silicon Valley] did have an ecosystem that was cultivated in the 1940s
and 1950s frankly by the US government and the defence industry that
were originally in that part of California."
Quick buck?
One problem, Mr
Silva says, is the UK's entrepreneur relief which gives a lower capital
gains tax when businessmen and women sell their company.
"The
problem is this relief perversely encourages you to sell out early. If
you did decide to try and build a Google or an Uber in this country,
you'd actually pay a much higher tax rate than if you'd sold out and
decided to live in a country mansion after a few years."
Mr Woodford also believes that UK entrepreneurs have been too quick to sell out once the business gets going.
But
this is not a path that Taavet Hinrikus, chief executive and co-founder
of London based peer-to-peer money transfer service TransferWise, is
intending to follow.
His company has become what is known as a
unicorn - a company set up since 2000 which is now valued at more than
$1bn (£770 mn). There are fewer than 20 in the UK.
He said he would not sell-up at the moment.
"We're
just getting started with the company so why should we stop now? What
would I do? I'd go on the beach for a day and then I would become
incredibly bored and I would have the same urge to change the world for
the better. I think starting over would be going backwards," Mr Hinrikus
said.
Academic drive
Another theory is that universities aren't being supportive enough.
"We
haven't been as opportunistic, adventurous and entrepreneurial as
others," said Annalisa Jenkins, boss of Dimension Therapeutics, a gene
therapy innovator.
"In the past academics have traditionally
viewed success, quite rightly, as their ability to publish their
research in leading journals... the notion of turning their inventions
into innovations that really drive value for people hasn't really been
rewarded and recognised in terms of the culture of our country in the
last 20 to 30 years," Ms Jenkins said.
You can listen to the
packages containing these interviews on the Today Programme on Monday.
Technology correspondent Rory Cellan-Jones, economics editor Kamal Ahmed
and North America technology reporter Dave Lee will all be involved in
the coverage of why the UK seemingly cannot match Silicon Valley.




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