
A Next-Generation Tech Incubator
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Dan Criswell
このコンテンツについて
In the past, investors mostly wrote checks and attended board meetings. More recently, they’ve built elaborate support systems to assist the tech start-ups they back. But a next-generation tech incubator goes even further—it engages with start-ups at every stage of growth. These incubators develop deep connections across the ecosystem, enabling not just direct investments but also co-investments. They also build powerful support systems, including marketing teams that can thrive in competitive, open-market environments.
However, the bigger challenge isn't raising capital or offering solid support. The real test is identifying promising start-ups in an era of rapid, accelerating change. Innovation today moves at an exponential pace far steeper than it did 10 or 20 years ago. Keeping up with the rise of the Internet was hard enough—now we face a convergence of at least 10 “Internet-scale” technologies that are amplifying one another in unpredictable ways.
This complexity can feel overwhelming if viewed purely as a tech puzzle. But it becomes more approachable when the focus shifts to solving big, real-world problems. A problem-first mindset makes one less dependent on any single technology. For instance, Dropbox might falter when Amazon or Google enter the cloud storage space, because it offers a tool. But start-ups rooted in solving urgent problems can draw on a mix of new and existing tools, adjusting as needed to stay relevant and impactful.
©2025 Paramendra Bhagat (P)2025 Paramendra Bhagat