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In recent months, Silicon Valley-based 500 Startups has been keeping a keen focus on Canada. The accelerator is setting the foundation of a national presence thanks to the growing 500 Canada team, which once fully established, wants to invest in one Canadian startup a week.
Now, 500 Startups is choosing Toronto and Waterloo Region as the first site for 500 Labs, a startup studio that will create a supportive environment for working on ideas that could potentially become spinoff companies for 500 Startups.
“A lot of the next big companies are coming from these newer ecosystems and maturing outside of the Valley.”
“One of the things we’re really pushing with 500 Labs is what we’re calling ‘growth by design’. So we’re trying to build a product people want, and then figuring out how to grow. We take this growth question into account at conception of the product and choose to continue with products that we know can grow really fast,” said Selcuk Atli, founding partner at 500 Labs.
People working out of 500 Labs – which will include developers and engineers — will be paired up to work on projects, and leverage 500 Startups’ growth marketing team to determine ideas that have the highest potential for growth. 500 Labs promises salary and resources in an effort to attract senior talent that may want to start their own company, but are afraid to take the leap for whatever reason.
Atli gave the example of a hypothetical University of Waterloo grad, which he says only has a few options should they choose to work at a startup: move to the Valley and join a company like Uber, where they can make money but not necessarily learn new things; join an early stage startup and get some equity; or take the financial risk of starting a company on their own.
“A lot of talented people will find it too risky or not the right time. Maybe they don’t have an idea that they’re excited about, maybe they want to pay bills or rent, maybe they’re still looking or other talented people. That is the opportunity were trying to give these people,” said Atli. “They can come in, there is essentially no failure risk. They work on project, we try validate fast, if the project doesn’t work they move on to the next thing.”
via betakit.com
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