Leg up for financial technology start-ups
Incubator programme aims to foster technology innovation in the financial sector
At
the FinTech Innovation Lab Dublin launch were (from left) Enterprise
Ireland’s Kevin Sherry; Minister for Jobs Richard Bruton; Dublin’s
commissioner for start-ups Niamh Bushnell and Alastair Blair, Accenture
Ireland
Consultancy firm Accenture
will today launch a Dublin-based accelerator programme, aimed at
supporting start- ups in the financial technology field – or “fintech”
as it’s commonly called.
Accenture launched the first FinTech Innovation Lab in New York in
2010, and the 24 companies that have graduated in the four years since
have raised almost $100 million (€79 million) in venture financing.
Now, the company is bringing the programme to Dublin, and hopes to
accelerate tech innovation in the financial services industry and boost
economic and employment growth.
Applications will be accepted from today, and six early- stage
companies will be selected to participate in the programme. The lab will
run for 12 weeks from January to March, during which time the
entrepreneurs will develop and road-test their innovations under the
guidance of mentors.
They will receive office space and mentorship from senior executives at AIB, Bank of Ireland, Fexco, Citi, Google, PayPal, State Street, Realex Payments and Ulster Bank.
Organised approach
Programme head Graham Healy said the company had been involved with start-ups through Enterprise Ireland on an ad-hoc basis for the past few years.
“We wanted a more organised approach to helping start- ups . . . we had
this programme running in New York and more recently London. This year
we are bringing it to Dublin.”
According to Central Bank data, two-thirds of all new jobs are created
by start-ups in the first five years of existence, Minister for Jobs,
Enterprise and Innovation Richard Bruton said at the launch.
“Today’s announcement that Accenture is establishing the FinTech
Innovation Lab in Dublin, to provide top-class support to fast-growing
young companies, is a great boost. The fact that Dublin is hosting a
FinTech Lab, after New York, London and Hong Kong, is a great
endorsement of the environment that exists here for start-up
businesses,” he said.
Dublin’s Commissioner for Start-Ups Niamh Bushnell said it was
“fantastic” to see multinationals such as Accenture creating a forum to
bring together entrepreneurs, private industry and government.
“It’s only through this type of joint approach that we will be able to
create a reputation for Dublin as a great start-up city,” she said.
The programme is open to young Irish companies that are developing
cutting-edge technologies for the financial services sector,
particularly in mobile, data management, analytics, security, risk
management and social media.
To be accepted onto the programme, applicants must have a beta version
of their technology available, and demonstrate that access to
senior-level executives from the technology and financial services
industry would have a meaningful impact on the company’s growth
prospects.
At the end of the 12-week programme, participants will be given the chance to pitch to investors in Dublin and London.
The FinTech Innovation Lab Dublin is modelled on a similar programme
that was co-founded by Accenture and the Partnership Fund for New York
City. One participating company on the New York programme has since been
acquired for $175 million.
In 2012, Accenture and a dozen major banks in London launched the
FinTech Innovation Lab London, with support from the city’s mayor and
several government bodies, and earlier this year, the FinTech Innovation
Lab Asia-Pacific made its debut in Hong Kon
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