And, the nascent but fast growing Indian start-up system wants to understand why.
Nasscom, the body representing the $108-billion Indian information technology-business process management sector, is set to take its first delegation to Israel, to collaborate with the start-up ecosystem there.
“We were approached by the Israel Trade Council and they wanted to see how the two countries can collaborate and start a bridge building exercise that can benefit companies in both geographies,” said Ravi Gururaj, chair-Nasscom Product Council, at a panel discussion on ‘Opportunities and challenges faced by Indian tech product start-ups’, part of the recently concluded Nasscom Product Conclave in Pune.
While Nasscom is yet to decide when the first delegation visits Israel, it has planned two annual interactions.
“In the first half of the year, we will visit Israel; later in the year at the NPC, we will invite a delegation from there to India,” said Gururaj.
Nasscom wishes to learn how start-ups in Israel have managed to connect with academicians and Silicon Valley in the US, what policies will be helpful and so on.
In 2013, almost 40 start-ups in Israel were acquired.
According to PwC Israel, the value of M&A deals was up 16 per cent at $6.45 billion. Waze, a crowd-source navigation firm, was acquired by Google for $1 billion.
Six technology product start-ups at the NPC panel discussion agreed that although the ecosystem for start-ups was building, several hurdles remained.
One reason for the success of Israeli firms is a tech-savvy local market.
So, for product firms, the small domestic market works like a lab.
In India, however, getting the first customer on board is extremely difficult and, hence, many prefer to tap the developed markets.
Toshinder Sharma, founder and chief executive, Wegilent, an IIT Bombay-incubated
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