This document provides statistics on Business Innovation Centers (BICs) in France and compares them to BICs across the European Business and Innovation Centre Network (EBN) in 2010. Some key findings:
- There were 36 BICs in France participating in the survey out of a total of 148 potential participants across the EBN network.
- French BICs had 311 total staff compared to 1,865 across the network. Their areas of expertise focused more on promotion of SMEs/regions and advanced ICT compared to the network's focus on R&D/university spin-offs and high-tech SME support.
- Most French BIC income came from public sources through national
The document provides statistics on Business Innovation Centers (BICs) in Belgium and compares them to BICs across the European Business and Innovation Centre Network. Some key findings are:
- There were 8 BICs in Belgium that participated in the survey, out of a total of 148 potential participants across the network.
- Belgian BICs had a total of 93 staff members and supported over 850 jobs at tenant companies.
- Belgian BICs hosted 236 tenant companies on average and helped raise over €26 million in capital for supported businesses.
- The statistics benchmark Belgian BIC activities and performance against the broader European BIC network.
This document provides statistics on Business Innovation Centers (BICs) in Germany and compares them to BICs across the European BIC Network in 2010. It finds that in 2010 there were 6 BICs in Germany that participated in the survey, representing 66.66% of German BICs. On average, German BICs had 46 tenants, employed 231 people, and had 41 contacts for enterprise creation, compared to averages of 31 tenants, 181 employees, and 318 contacts across the European BIC Network. The document provides additional details on the funding, services, training events and outcomes of the German BICs compared to the overall European network in 2010.
The document provides information about tools that will be showcased at the 1st EBN Tools Exchange Forum in Berlin from November 28-29, 2011. It summarizes 6 tools:
1) The Pandora Risk Management Tool which helps prevent undisclosed risks from threatening companies.
2) The StartupWheel which is a visual toolbox for start-up decision making and planning.
3) The IBCS incubator management software which helps manage innovation/business centers.
4) The Innovation Zone which aims to improve collaboration through open information access.
5) Innocall which is an internet-based tool for managing business centers and incoming calls.
6) The Benchmarking Tool which allows
The document provides statistics on Business Innovation Centers (BICs) in Portugal and compares them to BICs across the European Business and Innovation Centre Network (EBN) in 2010. Some key findings:
- There were 10 BICs in Portugal participating in the survey out of 148 total BICs in the EBN network.
- On average, Portuguese BICs had 32 staff members compared to an average of 1865 staff across the EBN network.
- Portuguese BICs assisted 61 companies in fundraising and helped raise over €4.4 million in estimated capital, while the overall EBN network assisted 2,968 companies and helped raise over €316 million.
- The main
The document provides statistics on Business Innovation Centers (BICs) in Italy and compares them to BICs across the European BIC Network in 2010. Some key figures: There were 20 Italian BICs participating in the survey out of a total of 148 potential participants across the network. Italian BICs organized 390 events promoting entrepreneurship that were attended by over 16,800 people and provided 167 training events for new and existing SMEs attended by over 3,200 people. The majority of both Italian and network BICs receive public funding and focus on supporting local SMEs and innovation.
Gentle Introduction to Dirichlet ProcessesYap Wooi Hen
This document provides an introduction to Dirichlet processes. It begins by motivating the need for nonparametric clustering when the number of clusters in the data is unknown. It then provides an overview of Dirichlet processes and discusses them from multiple perspectives, including samples from a Dirichlet process, the Chinese restaurant process representation, stick breaking construction, and formal definition. It also covers Dirichlet process mixtures and common inference techniques like Markov chain Monte Carlo and variational inference.
Bayesian Nonparametric Topic Modeling Hierarchical Dirichlet ProcessesJinYeong Bak
This is presentation slide files in machine learning summer school in Korea.
http://prml.yonsei.ac.kr/
I talked about dirichlet distribution, dirichlet process and HDP.
The Chinese Restaurant Process is a non-parametric Bayesian process for clustering data. It models data points as customers sitting at tables in a restaurant with infinite seats. The first data point sits at the first table. Each subsequent point sits at a new table with a probability proportional to the number of occupants of existing tables, or a new empty table with some fixed probability. This allows the number of clusters to be learned from the data. The Chinese Restaurant Process can be extended to hierarchical models to allow sharing of clusters between groups.
The document provides statistics on Business Innovation Centers (BICs) in Belgium and compares them to BICs across the European Business and Innovation Centre Network. Some key findings are:
- There were 8 BICs in Belgium that participated in the survey, out of a total of 148 potential participants across the network.
- Belgian BICs had a total of 93 staff members and supported over 850 jobs at tenant companies.
- Belgian BICs hosted 236 tenant companies on average and helped raise over €26 million in capital for supported businesses.
- The statistics benchmark Belgian BIC activities and performance against the broader European BIC network.
This document provides statistics on Business Innovation Centers (BICs) in Germany and compares them to BICs across the European BIC Network in 2010. It finds that in 2010 there were 6 BICs in Germany that participated in the survey, representing 66.66% of German BICs. On average, German BICs had 46 tenants, employed 231 people, and had 41 contacts for enterprise creation, compared to averages of 31 tenants, 181 employees, and 318 contacts across the European BIC Network. The document provides additional details on the funding, services, training events and outcomes of the German BICs compared to the overall European network in 2010.
The document provides information about tools that will be showcased at the 1st EBN Tools Exchange Forum in Berlin from November 28-29, 2011. It summarizes 6 tools:
1) The Pandora Risk Management Tool which helps prevent undisclosed risks from threatening companies.
2) The StartupWheel which is a visual toolbox for start-up decision making and planning.
3) The IBCS incubator management software which helps manage innovation/business centers.
4) The Innovation Zone which aims to improve collaboration through open information access.
5) Innocall which is an internet-based tool for managing business centers and incoming calls.
6) The Benchmarking Tool which allows
The document provides statistics on Business Innovation Centers (BICs) in Portugal and compares them to BICs across the European Business and Innovation Centre Network (EBN) in 2010. Some key findings:
- There were 10 BICs in Portugal participating in the survey out of 148 total BICs in the EBN network.
- On average, Portuguese BICs had 32 staff members compared to an average of 1865 staff across the EBN network.
- Portuguese BICs assisted 61 companies in fundraising and helped raise over €4.4 million in estimated capital, while the overall EBN network assisted 2,968 companies and helped raise over €316 million.
- The main
The document provides statistics on Business Innovation Centers (BICs) in Italy and compares them to BICs across the European BIC Network in 2010. Some key figures: There were 20 Italian BICs participating in the survey out of a total of 148 potential participants across the network. Italian BICs organized 390 events promoting entrepreneurship that were attended by over 16,800 people and provided 167 training events for new and existing SMEs attended by over 3,200 people. The majority of both Italian and network BICs receive public funding and focus on supporting local SMEs and innovation.
Gentle Introduction to Dirichlet ProcessesYap Wooi Hen
This document provides an introduction to Dirichlet processes. It begins by motivating the need for nonparametric clustering when the number of clusters in the data is unknown. It then provides an overview of Dirichlet processes and discusses them from multiple perspectives, including samples from a Dirichlet process, the Chinese restaurant process representation, stick breaking construction, and formal definition. It also covers Dirichlet process mixtures and common inference techniques like Markov chain Monte Carlo and variational inference.
Bayesian Nonparametric Topic Modeling Hierarchical Dirichlet ProcessesJinYeong Bak
This is presentation slide files in machine learning summer school in Korea.
http://prml.yonsei.ac.kr/
I talked about dirichlet distribution, dirichlet process and HDP.
The Chinese Restaurant Process is a non-parametric Bayesian process for clustering data. It models data points as customers sitting at tables in a restaurant with infinite seats. The first data point sits at the first table. Each subsequent point sits at a new table with a probability proportional to the number of occupants of existing tables, or a new empty table with some fixed probability. This allows the number of clusters to be learned from the data. The Chinese Restaurant Process can be extended to hierarchical models to allow sharing of clusters between groups.
The France - Bretagne Pavilion at CES 2017 in Las Vegas from January 5-8th featured exhibitors and visitors from technology companies in the Brittany region of France. Exhibitors included AMA, a company showcasing a video conferencing solution on smart glasses for telemedicine, KLAXOON with an interactive learning platform, and ADVALO with a people-based marketing platform. Visitors included companies in various technology fields such as Blue Com, EIT Digital, Energiency, and Niji. The pavilion was accompanied by organizations promoting the French Tech ecosystem in Brittany including Bretagne Commerce International, French Tech Rennes St Malo, and French Tech Brest.
French Expertise_Metalworking - Automation & Control divisions_Offre en Franc...SYMOP
Symop is a French trade association founded in 1907 that represents approximately 240 member companies in the manufacturing technology field. Together these companies employ 16,000 workers and generate €2 billion in annual revenue. Symop provides access to a network of suppliers that offer a wide range of production technology, automation, and control solutions to help improve competitiveness for French manufacturing industries. Member companies also work to promote expertise and training for employees in these fields.
Hugues Rey Digital Channel Management 2009 SolvayHugues Rey
Hugues Rey is a Belgian digital strategy expert with over 17 years of experience. He is currently the Chief Strategy Officer at MediaBrands Brussels. Rey has lectured widely at conferences on digital topics. He has held leadership roles in several industry organizations and has an MBA from Université Libre de Bruxelles. Digital channels in Belgium are dominated by social media, with the majority of internet time spent on sites like Facebook. E-commerce in Belgium has grown significantly in recent years but still lags other countries. Channel management involves defining goals, policies, and sales programs for each digital channel to most effectively reach customers.
You\'ll learn the assets of France and the Paris Region in Open Source and the way the Paris Region Development Agency can help you for free develop your business locally.
The evolution of Spain´s startup ecosystemStartup Europe
Spain's startup ecosystem has grown significantly in recent years, with VC investment up 40% in 2014 and larger funding rounds for companies like Job & Talent and PeerTransfer. Key areas of growth include digital/hi-tech startups, though Spain's investment levels remain smaller than the UK and France. Talent continues to emerge from top Spanish universities and research centers, but the ecosystem could still benefit from reducing risk aversion, improving value-add support for startups, and developing more funding options beyond the Series A stage. Exits have increased in recent years through M&A deals and IPOs on the MAB, demonstrating the maturing of Spain's startup scene.
Faire du e-commerce en France avec WordPresscorsonr
The document summarizes the state of e-commerce in France. Some key points:
- Online shopping by French internet users has grown significantly between 2005-2016, with over 80% of internet users now making purchases online.
- The most popular product categories purchased online are clothing, shoes, travel/tourism, cultural products, beauty/health, and technology products.
- WordPress and WooCommerce are very popular platforms for online stores in France, with WooCommerce being used by over 25% of online stores in France.
French Expertise_Metal working - Automation & Control divisions_Offre en Fran...SYMOP
Symop is a French trade association founded in 1907 that represents approximately 240 member companies in the manufacturing technology field. These companies employ 16,000 people and generate a total turnover of 2 billion Euros. Symop provides access to a network of suppliers that offer a wide range of production technology, automation, and control solutions to improve competitiveness in French manufacturing. Member companies also contribute to training the future workforce in France.
Why france and paris region is good for api economyCécile Delépine
The Paris Region Economic Development Agency is a nonprofit organization established in 2001 to support foreign companies expanding in the Paris Region. It has over 60 employees located in Paris and international offices. The agency acts as a bridge for companies to access the Paris Region's market, skills, and innovative environment, which includes a vibrant open source community and entrepreneurs. The agency can assist companies with finding office space, recruiting, getting into the market, setting up, investing in R&D, and addressing environmental needs. The Paris Region is an attractive location due to its large concentration of Fortune 500 companies and multinational firms and its position as a center of the European economy.
Portugal has experienced steady economic growth in recent years, with GDP and GDP per capita rising between 2012-2017. Ecommerce has also grown significantly, with B2C ecommerce turnover increasing by over 10% annually. The top online shopping categories are mobile/electronics, fashion/jewelry, and sports/leisure. eBay, Amazon, and Booking are among the most popular ecommerce websites in Portugal.
The document is an internal campaigns report from Omniture Suite between June 21, 2009 and August 4, 2009. It shows the top 8 internal campaigns for a company and the number of instances of each. The most instances were for an "acqcommBASICS" campaign at 53 instances, followed by "acqcommSUPPORT" at 33 instances. The report allows adding notes to record and communicate analysis of the data.
1) GAUSSIN and BA Systèmes are developing automated robots and vehicles for future ports as part of the French "Investments for the Future" program, which is providing €8.8 million total for the project.
2) The project, called VASCO, aims to create the first fully automated system without any infrastructure needed for transferring containers between port terminals using 3 automated vehicles.
3) The universities of Lille and Nantes will work on automating and guiding the vehicles as well as supervising the system, while GAUSSIN and BA Systèmes will build a demonstration fleet and power exchange system to be tested starting in 2017.
Bebats Digital Ecosystem - Connected Brains 2018LoQutus
Business processes don’t stop at organisational boundaries in this connected world. Bebat shares how LoQutus improved their battery collection process by connecting customers (collection points), partners (transporters), suppliers (processors) and ‘things’ (telemetry). We will also share a glimpse of the future on how to improve productivity with conversational bots.
CWA 16046, Adoption programme for increased electronic invoicing in European ...Friso de Jong
This document summarizes the processes established for an online platform called the E-Invoice Gateway. The platform aims to build a community of practice around electronic invoicing in Europe. Key processes include:
1) Enlisting organizations involved in e-invoicing who can publish their profiles.
2) Establishing a lead point of contact (called a Country Information Manager) for each European country to provide e-invoicing content and promote the platform.
3) Collecting country-specific information on technical, legal and organizational aspects of e-invoicing through the managers.
4) Providing workgroups collaborating on e-invoicing standards a way to publish results on the platform.
5
The cluster gathers yet prestigious protagonists like the CEA LIST or the CNRS LAAS, but also various innovative start-ups, recognized experts of their fields, like Gostai, Robotswin or Workfly. Even though, Aldebaran Robotics was clearly the star company in the Genesics2 forum, held in Paris on the 7th of February 2011, many promising French companies showed up and exhibited their robots to the audience. Most of these robots are a...
The French government developed the Passport to the Digital Economy initiative to accelerate ICT adoption among small businesses. Through partnerships with organizations serving small businesses, the program provides ICT training and support to help small businesses integrate digital technologies. Over 170,000 small businesses have participated in the program. Evaluations found French small businesses' PC adoption rose from 72% to 98% between 2006-2010 and total program revenues for participating businesses increased by nearly 50%. The program is expanding within France and abroad.
This document provides information on 74 mobility projects funded by the Leonardo da Vinci programme in 2008 in Lithuania. The projects supported the mobility of trainees in vocational education and training, people in the labor market, and vocational education and training specialists. A variety of organizations participated in the funded projects, including vocational schools, enterprises, associations, and government institutions. The projects aimed to improve participants' skills and help them adapt to the needs of the labor market.
E-Commerce Developments in Europe - Walter Devenuto, President EMOTAWalter Devenuto
EMOTA represents 3,500 multi-channel retailers in 16 European countries with €250 billion in annual turnover. E-commerce contributes significantly to economic growth and job creation across Europe, though penetration and spending varies greatly between countries and sectors. While the largest online retailers in Europe are mostly multi-channel, cross-border sales remain low due to legal, tax, and payment barriers. The EU has launched initiatives to remove these barriers and further facilitate e-commerce growth across Europe.
This document provides earnings results and highlights for APIMEC for the first quarter of 2006. Some key points:
1) Traffic grew 0.7% in 1Q06 compared to 1Q05, with Autovias up 2.4% and Centrovias down 1.8%.
2) Net revenue increased 12.3% year-over-year to R$97 million.
3) Adjusted EBITDA grew 19.6% to R$62.4 million, while the EBITDA margin expanded 3.9% to 64.3%.
4) Net income was R$17.6 million, an 18.1% net margin.
This document provides statistics about Business Innovation Centers (BICs) in Spain in 2010, benchmarked against data for the European BIC Network. It finds that 96.4% of Spanish BICs participated in the survey. Most Spanish BICs (85.2%) are hosted within existing organizations, compared to 63.3% across the network. The majority of Spanish BICs have a legal identity as an association (30%) or foundation (26%), while most network BICs are associations (29.8%) or public bodies (9.7%). Spanish BIC ownership is mostly public, with public shareholders making up 71.4% of the total, compared to 67.5% across the network
This document provides statistics about Business Innovation Centers (BICs) in the United Kingdom and compares them to BICs across the European BIC Network in 2010. Some key findings:
- 11 BICs were operating in the UK, representing 72.3% of potential participants in the survey.
- In the UK, 37.5% of BICs were hosted in existing organizations, while 62.5% were new entities. Across the network, the percentages were 36.7% and 63.3% respectively.
- The majority (66.7%) of UK BICs had a legal identity as a public body under special law, compared to 34% across the network.
The France - Bretagne Pavilion at CES 2017 in Las Vegas from January 5-8th featured exhibitors and visitors from technology companies in the Brittany region of France. Exhibitors included AMA, a company showcasing a video conferencing solution on smart glasses for telemedicine, KLAXOON with an interactive learning platform, and ADVALO with a people-based marketing platform. Visitors included companies in various technology fields such as Blue Com, EIT Digital, Energiency, and Niji. The pavilion was accompanied by organizations promoting the French Tech ecosystem in Brittany including Bretagne Commerce International, French Tech Rennes St Malo, and French Tech Brest.
French Expertise_Metalworking - Automation & Control divisions_Offre en Franc...SYMOP
Symop is a French trade association founded in 1907 that represents approximately 240 member companies in the manufacturing technology field. Together these companies employ 16,000 workers and generate €2 billion in annual revenue. Symop provides access to a network of suppliers that offer a wide range of production technology, automation, and control solutions to help improve competitiveness for French manufacturing industries. Member companies also work to promote expertise and training for employees in these fields.
Hugues Rey Digital Channel Management 2009 SolvayHugues Rey
Hugues Rey is a Belgian digital strategy expert with over 17 years of experience. He is currently the Chief Strategy Officer at MediaBrands Brussels. Rey has lectured widely at conferences on digital topics. He has held leadership roles in several industry organizations and has an MBA from Université Libre de Bruxelles. Digital channels in Belgium are dominated by social media, with the majority of internet time spent on sites like Facebook. E-commerce in Belgium has grown significantly in recent years but still lags other countries. Channel management involves defining goals, policies, and sales programs for each digital channel to most effectively reach customers.
You\'ll learn the assets of France and the Paris Region in Open Source and the way the Paris Region Development Agency can help you for free develop your business locally.
The evolution of Spain´s startup ecosystemStartup Europe
Spain's startup ecosystem has grown significantly in recent years, with VC investment up 40% in 2014 and larger funding rounds for companies like Job & Talent and PeerTransfer. Key areas of growth include digital/hi-tech startups, though Spain's investment levels remain smaller than the UK and France. Talent continues to emerge from top Spanish universities and research centers, but the ecosystem could still benefit from reducing risk aversion, improving value-add support for startups, and developing more funding options beyond the Series A stage. Exits have increased in recent years through M&A deals and IPOs on the MAB, demonstrating the maturing of Spain's startup scene.
Faire du e-commerce en France avec WordPresscorsonr
The document summarizes the state of e-commerce in France. Some key points:
- Online shopping by French internet users has grown significantly between 2005-2016, with over 80% of internet users now making purchases online.
- The most popular product categories purchased online are clothing, shoes, travel/tourism, cultural products, beauty/health, and technology products.
- WordPress and WooCommerce are very popular platforms for online stores in France, with WooCommerce being used by over 25% of online stores in France.
French Expertise_Metal working - Automation & Control divisions_Offre en Fran...SYMOP
Symop is a French trade association founded in 1907 that represents approximately 240 member companies in the manufacturing technology field. These companies employ 16,000 people and generate a total turnover of 2 billion Euros. Symop provides access to a network of suppliers that offer a wide range of production technology, automation, and control solutions to improve competitiveness in French manufacturing. Member companies also contribute to training the future workforce in France.
Why france and paris region is good for api economyCécile Delépine
The Paris Region Economic Development Agency is a nonprofit organization established in 2001 to support foreign companies expanding in the Paris Region. It has over 60 employees located in Paris and international offices. The agency acts as a bridge for companies to access the Paris Region's market, skills, and innovative environment, which includes a vibrant open source community and entrepreneurs. The agency can assist companies with finding office space, recruiting, getting into the market, setting up, investing in R&D, and addressing environmental needs. The Paris Region is an attractive location due to its large concentration of Fortune 500 companies and multinational firms and its position as a center of the European economy.
Portugal has experienced steady economic growth in recent years, with GDP and GDP per capita rising between 2012-2017. Ecommerce has also grown significantly, with B2C ecommerce turnover increasing by over 10% annually. The top online shopping categories are mobile/electronics, fashion/jewelry, and sports/leisure. eBay, Amazon, and Booking are among the most popular ecommerce websites in Portugal.
The document is an internal campaigns report from Omniture Suite between June 21, 2009 and August 4, 2009. It shows the top 8 internal campaigns for a company and the number of instances of each. The most instances were for an "acqcommBASICS" campaign at 53 instances, followed by "acqcommSUPPORT" at 33 instances. The report allows adding notes to record and communicate analysis of the data.
1) GAUSSIN and BA Systèmes are developing automated robots and vehicles for future ports as part of the French "Investments for the Future" program, which is providing €8.8 million total for the project.
2) The project, called VASCO, aims to create the first fully automated system without any infrastructure needed for transferring containers between port terminals using 3 automated vehicles.
3) The universities of Lille and Nantes will work on automating and guiding the vehicles as well as supervising the system, while GAUSSIN and BA Systèmes will build a demonstration fleet and power exchange system to be tested starting in 2017.
Bebats Digital Ecosystem - Connected Brains 2018LoQutus
Business processes don’t stop at organisational boundaries in this connected world. Bebat shares how LoQutus improved their battery collection process by connecting customers (collection points), partners (transporters), suppliers (processors) and ‘things’ (telemetry). We will also share a glimpse of the future on how to improve productivity with conversational bots.
CWA 16046, Adoption programme for increased electronic invoicing in European ...Friso de Jong
This document summarizes the processes established for an online platform called the E-Invoice Gateway. The platform aims to build a community of practice around electronic invoicing in Europe. Key processes include:
1) Enlisting organizations involved in e-invoicing who can publish their profiles.
2) Establishing a lead point of contact (called a Country Information Manager) for each European country to provide e-invoicing content and promote the platform.
3) Collecting country-specific information on technical, legal and organizational aspects of e-invoicing through the managers.
4) Providing workgroups collaborating on e-invoicing standards a way to publish results on the platform.
5
The cluster gathers yet prestigious protagonists like the CEA LIST or the CNRS LAAS, but also various innovative start-ups, recognized experts of their fields, like Gostai, Robotswin or Workfly. Even though, Aldebaran Robotics was clearly the star company in the Genesics2 forum, held in Paris on the 7th of February 2011, many promising French companies showed up and exhibited their robots to the audience. Most of these robots are a...
The French government developed the Passport to the Digital Economy initiative to accelerate ICT adoption among small businesses. Through partnerships with organizations serving small businesses, the program provides ICT training and support to help small businesses integrate digital technologies. Over 170,000 small businesses have participated in the program. Evaluations found French small businesses' PC adoption rose from 72% to 98% between 2006-2010 and total program revenues for participating businesses increased by nearly 50%. The program is expanding within France and abroad.
This document provides information on 74 mobility projects funded by the Leonardo da Vinci programme in 2008 in Lithuania. The projects supported the mobility of trainees in vocational education and training, people in the labor market, and vocational education and training specialists. A variety of organizations participated in the funded projects, including vocational schools, enterprises, associations, and government institutions. The projects aimed to improve participants' skills and help them adapt to the needs of the labor market.
E-Commerce Developments in Europe - Walter Devenuto, President EMOTAWalter Devenuto
EMOTA represents 3,500 multi-channel retailers in 16 European countries with €250 billion in annual turnover. E-commerce contributes significantly to economic growth and job creation across Europe, though penetration and spending varies greatly between countries and sectors. While the largest online retailers in Europe are mostly multi-channel, cross-border sales remain low due to legal, tax, and payment barriers. The EU has launched initiatives to remove these barriers and further facilitate e-commerce growth across Europe.
This document provides earnings results and highlights for APIMEC for the first quarter of 2006. Some key points:
1) Traffic grew 0.7% in 1Q06 compared to 1Q05, with Autovias up 2.4% and Centrovias down 1.8%.
2) Net revenue increased 12.3% year-over-year to R$97 million.
3) Adjusted EBITDA grew 19.6% to R$62.4 million, while the EBITDA margin expanded 3.9% to 64.3%.
4) Net income was R$17.6 million, an 18.1% net margin.
This document provides statistics about Business Innovation Centers (BICs) in Spain in 2010, benchmarked against data for the European BIC Network. It finds that 96.4% of Spanish BICs participated in the survey. Most Spanish BICs (85.2%) are hosted within existing organizations, compared to 63.3% across the network. The majority of Spanish BICs have a legal identity as an association (30%) or foundation (26%), while most network BICs are associations (29.8%) or public bodies (9.7%). Spanish BIC ownership is mostly public, with public shareholders making up 71.4% of the total, compared to 67.5% across the network
This document provides statistics about Business Innovation Centers (BICs) in the United Kingdom and compares them to BICs across the European BIC Network in 2010. Some key findings:
- 11 BICs were operating in the UK, representing 72.3% of potential participants in the survey.
- In the UK, 37.5% of BICs were hosted in existing organizations, while 62.5% were new entities. Across the network, the percentages were 36.7% and 63.3% respectively.
- The majority (66.7%) of UK BICs had a legal identity as a public body under special law, compared to 34% across the network.
The document summarizes key facts and figures from a 2010 survey of 148 Business Innovation Centers (BICs) across Europe. The survey was conducted as part of the European BIC Network's quality system to ensure BICs comply with quality standards. It provides data on BIC ownership, services offered, sectors supported, funding sources, staffing, and key performance indicators. The survey found that 86.5% of eligible BICs participated and provides a summary of their characteristics and operations.
In this issue: IQ — What is happening in the Middle East? Lebanon: an overview of Berytech visited within the BICBIC program by Al Urdonia Lil Ebda, Jordan. Palestine: the next year supporting the Palestinian ICT Incubator in Ramallah. QI — First feedback on the 2011 Quality process. QS — EC-BICs Experts on line: soon to come the “Ask the expert of the month” feature. QO — Showcase your BICs and your start-ups in the DIGIBIC Awards.
This issue of the European BIC Network's quality eMag discusses innovation and quality at Trentino Sviluppo, an Italian business and innovation center (BIC). It provides details on Trentino Sviluppo's history, services, facilities, and programs to support technology transfer and startup companies. It also introduces the EBN's new Soft Landing initiative to help BIC client companies establish international sales presences. Finally, it reminds readers about the upcoming EC-BIC questionnaire and welcomes new full members to the EBN.
The document summarizes information from a European BIC Network quality magazine. It discusses a visit by the Managing Director of University of East London's Knowledge Dock BIC to the BIC do Porto in Portugal. It also highlights the launch of the European BIC Network's YouTube channel to feature videos about innovation and entrepreneurship. Finally, it discusses how the BIC community supports SME internationalization, including by organizing events, assessing internationalization plans, and signposting members to resources like the European Enterprise Network.
The document discusses the EC-BIC quality criteria and process for business incubation centers seeking EC-BIC certification. It describes the criteria in four areas: general mission, organization, services, and performance evaluation. Centers complete a self-assessment questionnaire and may undergo an evaluation visit. Experts evaluate centers, write reports, and make accreditation recommendations to the BQMC committee. The process aims to boost quality, increase the network, and promote innovation and entrepreneurship.
This document summarizes a newsletter from the European Business and Innovation Centre Network (EBN). The newsletter discusses EBN visiting another business incubator called CE
The document summarizes interviews with three BIC directors - Luigi Campitelli of BIC Lazio in Italy, Joe Greaney of WestBIC in Ireland, and Pascal Hurel of Synergia in France - about their BICs' approaches to supporting internationalization, strategic alliances, financing, tools and best practices. Key points addressed include the importance of international cooperation from an early stage, facilitating partnerships between stakeholders, developing local networks of support organizations, and adapting services to local needs while sharing transferable tools and models. The directors provide examples of initiatives their BICs have created, such as business angel networks, startup competitions, and thematic incubators.
How to Get CNIC Information System with Paksim Ga.pptxdanishmna97
Pakdata Cf is a groundbreaking system designed to streamline and facilitate access to CNIC information. This innovative platform leverages advanced technology to provide users with efficient and secure access to their CNIC details.
Climate Impact of Software Testing at Nordic Testing DaysKari Kakkonen
My slides at Nordic Testing Days 6.6.2024
Climate impact / sustainability of software testing discussed on the talk. ICT and testing must carry their part of global responsibility to help with the climat warming. We can minimize the carbon footprint but we can also have a carbon handprint, a positive impact on the climate. Quality characteristics can be added with sustainability, and then measured continuously. Test environments can be used less, and in smaller scale and on demand. Test techniques can be used in optimizing or minimizing number of tests. Test automation can be used to speed up testing.
Goodbye Windows 11: Make Way for Nitrux Linux 3.5.0!SOFTTECHHUB
As the digital landscape continually evolves, operating systems play a critical role in shaping user experiences and productivity. The launch of Nitrux Linux 3.5.0 marks a significant milestone, offering a robust alternative to traditional systems such as Windows 11. This article delves into the essence of Nitrux Linux 3.5.0, exploring its unique features, advantages, and how it stands as a compelling choice for both casual users and tech enthusiasts.
Full-RAG: A modern architecture for hyper-personalizationZilliz
Mike Del Balso, CEO & Co-Founder at Tecton, presents "Full RAG," a novel approach to AI recommendation systems, aiming to push beyond the limitations of traditional models through a deep integration of contextual insights and real-time data, leveraging the Retrieval-Augmented Generation architecture. This talk will outline Full RAG's potential to significantly enhance personalization, address engineering challenges such as data management and model training, and introduce data enrichment with reranking as a key solution. Attendees will gain crucial insights into the importance of hyperpersonalization in AI, the capabilities of Full RAG for advanced personalization, and strategies for managing complex data integrations for deploying cutting-edge AI solutions.
Unlock the Future of Search with MongoDB Atlas_ Vector Search Unleashed.pdfMalak Abu Hammad
Discover how MongoDB Atlas and vector search technology can revolutionize your application's search capabilities. This comprehensive presentation covers:
* What is Vector Search?
* Importance and benefits of vector search
* Practical use cases across various industries
* Step-by-step implementation guide
* Live demos with code snippets
* Enhancing LLM capabilities with vector search
* Best practices and optimization strategies
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2. Introduction
The following graphs and tables reports the key facts and figures in 2010 of the French community of Business Innovation
Centers,
Centers benchmarking them with those of the whole EBN network
network.
The survey has been undertaken thanks to the yearly implementation of EBN’s Quality system which is primarily aimed at
ensuring the compliance of the BICs, EBN Full Members, to the BIC Quality Mark Criteria.
The Statistical characteristics of the survey
Total number of potential participants 148
Total number of potential participants in France 36
Percentage of BICs participating in the survey 86,5%
Percentage of French BICs participating in the survey 88,9%
Method: on-line self-evaluation questionnaire plus subsequent validation by EBN Quality Team
Source: EBN Quality System http://quality.ebn.be
Responsible for the publication: Mr. Philippe Vanrie, EBN CEO
Address: Avenue de Tervueren 168, B – 1150, Brussels
Tel: +32-2-7728900
Fax: +32-2-7729574
+32 2 7729574
E-mail: ebn@ebn.eu
Website: http://www.ebn.eu; http://quality.ebn.be
Date of publication: 31 May 2011
This report has been prepared by the EBN Quality team, led by Mr. Giordano Dichter and assisted by Ms. Chiara Davalli and Mr. Pierluigi Antonelli
3. The French Community of BICs
ACCET - CEEI Val d’Oise
d Oise CEEI 47
Web site: www.accet.asso.fr Web site : www.agropole.com
Aditec pad de Calais CEEI CEEI Alimentec
Web site: www.aditec.org Web site : www.alimentec.com
CEEI Alsace
Angers Technopole Web site : www.ceei-alsace.fr
Web site: www.angerstechnopole.com
C
CEEI de Nîmeses
BIC Montpellier Web site : www.ceei.nimes.cci.fr
Web site: www.invest-in-montpellier.com
BIC Plein Sud Enterprise CEEI d'Ille et Vilaine CREAT'IV
Web site: wwww.pleinsudentreprises.fr Web site : www.ceei-creativ.asso.fr
Bordeaux TechnoWest CEEI French Riviera France
Web site: www.technowest.com Web site : www.antipolis.fr
Carrefour Entreprise Sarthe CEEI Gers-Gascogne
Gers Gascogne
Web site : www.sarthe.com/carrefour-entreprise Web site : www.ceei-gers.org
Castres-Mazamet Technopole CEEI Limousin APOGEE
Web site : www.castres-mazamet-technopole.fr Web site : www.limousin-expansion.fr
CCI de Lyon Equipe d'animation NOVACITE CEEI Provence
Web site : www.lyon.cci.fr Web site : www.ceei-provence.com
4. The French Community of BICs
CEEI Quimper-Cornouaille PREMICE
Web site : www.tech-quimper.fr Web site : www.premice-bourgogne.com
CEEI Synergia - La Technopole Caen-Normandie Promotech Nancy
Web site : www.synergia.fr Web site : www.promotech.fr
CEEI Synergie Réseau départemental des ruches d'entreprises du Nord
Web site : www.synergie-ceei.com Web site : www.reseau-ruches.fr
CEEI Théogone (Parc Technologique du Canal) Conseil Général
Web site : www.theogone.com
SAVOIE TECHNOLAC
Web site : www.savoie-technolac.com
IRPC – ETINCEL
Web site: www.etincel-pc.fr
SEINARI
Web site: www.seinari.fr
Le Havre Développement
Web site: www.havre-developpement.com
Technopole de l'Aube en Champagne
Marseille Innovation Web site : www.technopole-aube.fr
p
Web site : www.marseille-innov.org
Martinique Technopole THESAME- Mécatronique & Management
Web site: www.technopolemartinique.org Web site : www.thesame-innovation.com
Nantes Atlanpole
Toulon Var Technologies
Web site: www.atlanpole.com
Web site : www.tvt.fr
5. Nature and Legal Status of BICs
France 31,25% 68,75%
Network 63,28% 36,72%
BIC as new entity BIC hosted in existing organization
BICs in hosting
BICs as new entities
organizations
Legal Identity
France Network France Network
Equity based (with shareholders) 10,00% 36,84% 9,09% 21,28%
Foundation 0,00% 7,89% 0,00% 2,13%
Association 80,00% 29,82% 45,45% 23,40%
Cooperative 0,00% 2,63% 0,00% 4,26%
Public body under special law 0,00% 9,65% 0,00% 34,04%
Other
Oh 10,00%
10 00% 13,16%
13 16% 40,91%
40 91% 14,89%
14 89%
100,00% 100,00% 100,00% 100,00%
6. BICs’ Ownership
Ownership: Public / Private Breakdown
France Network
Public Private Public Private
Total Number of Shareholders 215 326 659 1119
Weight over the network 78,44% 21,56% 67,50% 32,50%
Voting rights (%) Voting rights (%)
Public shareholders France Network Private h
P i t shareholders
h ld France
F Network
N t k
National/federal government 1,53 3,20
Private financed R&D structures 0,31 1,42
State (s) in federal organized states 0,00 1,22
Chambers of Commerce 1,93 1,65
Regional G
R i l Government
t 14,60
14 60 18,85
18 85
Employers associations 0,99 1,72
Local Government 27,25 14,15
Trade Unions 0,20 0,53
Municipalities 12,43 7,66
Economic development not for profit
4,70 2,62
Specific governmental agencies 0,78
0 78 3,35
3 35 entities
100% publicly financed R&D Enterprises 9,82 11,27
7,06 5,32
structures
Private owned capital funds 0,24 4,10
Public owned companies 0,35 2,40
Banks 1,45 4,11
Chambers of commerce (if public)
Ch b f bli ) 9,94
9 94 4,48
4 48
Public owned capital funds 0,26 1,07 Private people 1,78 4,24
Others 4,55 2,27 Others 0,13 0,84
7. BICs & territory
Acknowledgement by the public sector Main catchment areas
France Network
100% publicly financed R&D 19%
structures 30% City 6,25% 4,69%
Specific governmental agencies 28%
47%
Region / province 84,38% 84,38%
Municipalities 88%
76%
100% State (federal
Local Government
91% organised 0 3,91%
countries)
Regional Government 81%
77%
State (s) in federal organized states 0% Nation
N ti 0 3,91%
3 91%
79%
National/federal government 25%
35% Other 9,38% 3,13%
Other 22%
33%
Total 100,00% 100,00%
France Network
8. Alliances & Cooperation
Strategic Alliances Cooperation
Private
consultants/public
lt t / bli
6%
BSO in business
Large Companies
development
34%
Cooperation with Cooperation with
38% the EEN Network business schools
Universities/other R&D
Institutions
88%
88% Database of
Chambers of Commerce and Involvment in
research and
RDA/LDAs clusters
61% technology centers
Private
72% consultants/public
No cooperation agreements BSO in intellectual
8% property
t
Network
France
France Network
9. BICs’ Team
France Network
Total N. of BICs’ Staff
311 1865
Breakdown by role External experts (day/year)
France (%) Network (%)
k
63%
Management 9,09 9,18
50%
Administration 15,21 14,61
Entrepreneurs guidance 34,13 27,41
16%
16%
17%
16%
7%
6%
9%
0%
Project management 10,96
10 96 14,04
14 04
< 50 50 - 99 100 - 199 200 - 299 > 300
Incubator management 12,62 11,72
Communication & events 9,89
9 89 8,27
8 27 Size of BICs
Training 3,282 4,53
31%
28%
23%
23%
22%
21%
20%
16%
14%
3%
Other 4,82
4 82 10,23
10 23
2
2
1
1
3
3-6 7-9 10 - 14 15 - 25 > 25
Total 100 100
Network France
10. Key qualifications & Services
Areas of expertise Additional services
75%
34% Financial engineering
Promotion of SMEs or Regions 68%
41%
Advanced use of ITC for SMEs 31% Specialized technology support
S i li d h l 63%
development 49% for enterprise creation 73%
Human resources development 44% 66%
35% Specific training know-how
73%
Policy making advice/Project 38%
Design and Management 45% Structural cooperation with 47%
other EC Networks 62%
Access to funding 78%
79% International B2B or i
i l 2 investment 47%
experience 62%
Legal advice to enterprise 56%
creation 57%
Set-up / implementation 59%
International cooperation / SME
e a o a coope a o S 53% (inter)national projects 75%
internationalization 68%
3%
R&D / University spin-off / High- 88% No services offered
95%
tech SME creation & support 84%
25% 72%
Other Other
24% 77%
France Network France Network
12. Financial Assessment
BICs’ Income BICs’ Expenditures
p
Private sponsorship 1%
2% 0%
Financial costs (from loans etc.)
1%
Other i t i
Oth private income 2%
6%
7%
Income from client- 4% Cost of incubator building(s)
SMEs/Entrepreneurs 6% 12%
Income from housing + incubator 12%
services 22% Overheads (furniture, travel, 17%
energy, IT facilities etc.) 17%
Other public income 1%
5%
3%
Subsidies to entrepreneurs
p
Income from EU Programmes
I f P 3% 1%
(Framework Programme, Interreg,… 6%
Public Income through National & 7% Consultants and external 8%
Regional programmes 14% experts 13%
Other public subsidies 13%
5% 56%
Payroll
47%
EU structural Funds (e.g. ERDF, ESF) 9%
7%
9%
49% Other costs
From national, regional, local bodies 9%
27%
France Network France Network
13. Innovation & IP
nnovation
n
(% of entrepreneurial projects)
)
52,78 52,60
37,70
34,94
, Network
cus on In
France
12,28
12 28
o
Foc
9,70
Technological innovation Non Technological Innovation Other
roperty
495
Intellectual Pr
Network
France
232 227
138
Patents requested Patents granted
14. Services to new entrepreneurs & Incubation
Identification of ideal target
/ entrepreneur
Training for entrepreneurs Template for risk analysis
Assessment of training Entrepreneurial skill
needs asessment tool
Provision of business plan Network
Provision of incubation space
template France
Help in finding financial Helping to define the
support business model
Availability of database of Helping to write the business
financial tools plan
Support financial p
pp planning
g
and simulation
Physical Incubation activities France Network
Average square meters available for incubation activities of owned incubators (square
3824,38 7549,41
meters)
Average incubator space occupancy rate (%) 81,57% 78,11%
Average incubation time (years) 2,30 3,08
15. Services to existing SMEs
g
39%
37%
elivered
d
33%
32%
vices de
22%
21%
17% 17% 17%
Type of serv
s)
(% of BICs
6%
Designing and Innovation Internationalization Commercialization Access to finance
implementing diagnostics
innovative projects
Network France
16. Training & Events
2010 France Network
Number Average Median Number Average Median
Number of events
organised in 2010 to 583 18,22 13,5 3.925 30,66 15,5
promote entrepreneurship
Number of training events
in 2010 for either new
271 8,47 2 2003 50,85 14
entrepreneurs or existing
SMEs
Number of people that
attended events to promote 27.379 855,60 583 168.284 1.314.72 548.50
entrepreneurship
Number of people that
N b f l th t
4820 150,62 22,5 36.120 774.20 195.5
attended training events
pic
72% 70%
Training by top
65%
56%
53%
47%
Network
34% 34% 36%34%
France
g
23%
16%
(% of BICs)
Business Marketing Management Investment IP Rights Other
planning Readiness
17. Access to funding
Network France
N. of companies assisted in fund raising 2.968 344
Total estimated capital raised € 316.782.992,13 € 40.564.033,2
N. of companies assisted 2968 344
Estimated capital raised 2140425,6234507114,844
urces
akdown by
Network 35% 15% 27% 24%
Seed Capital
ding sou
Business Angels
Venture capital
Other
Brea
fund
France 51% 11% 31% 7%
18. KPIs,
KPIs Key Performance Indicators
France Network
Number Average Median Number Average Median
Number of tenants in incubators 1001 31,28 20,5 4.122 31,71 23,50
Total employment by tenants 6.420 191.45 87 23.587 181,44 95,50
Total numbers of contacts for enterprise creation 22.440 541,46 79,5 41.464 318,95 88,50
Number of feasibility studies created during the year 1.754 54,81 31,5 12.726 97,89 36,00
Number of enterprise creation projects during the
845 26,40 17 6.725 51,73 18,00
year
Number of business plans produced during the year 936 29,25 18,5 9.555 73,50 19,50
Number of start-ups created during the year 571 49,67 14 5.655 43,50 14,00
Number of jobs created in SMEs (client companies
1.544 48.25 30,5 5.854 45,03 15,00
of BICs)
Number of jobs created in Start-ups in the year 2022 63,18 35,5 11.051 85,01 33,50
Enterprise Survival Rate (within the incubation
N.A. 89,19% 95,00% N.A. 91,07% 95,00%
period)
Enterprise Survival Rate (3 years following
N.A. 85,21% 91,90% N.A. 89,04% 91,90%
graduation)
Existing SMEs supported during the year 1.745 54,53 50 11.000 90,41 50
19. Value for Money
Network France
Cost per job created with support of a BIC € 12.068,79 11.856,33 €
Public financial contribution per j
p job created € 8.338,79
, 9.563,77 €
,
Average number of start-ups per 100K€ of BIC income 2,80 1,51
Average number of jobs created per 100K€ of BIC income 8,29 9,44
Average number of business plans created per 100K€ of BIC income 3,08 2,48
Average number of companies assisted per 100K€ of BIC income 5,10
5 10 6,25
6 25
Average number of start-ups per FTE member of BIC staff 3,15 1,84
Average number of jobs created per FTE member of BIC staff 9,34 11,47
Average number of business plans created per FTE member of BIC staff 3,46 3,01
Average number of companies assisted per FTE member of BIC staff 5,74 7,59
* Full time equivalent
20. EBN’s Quality Team:
Giordano Dichter
Quality and Membership Manager
+32 (0) 2 761 1083
gdi@ebn.be
Chiara Davalli
Quality and Membership Officer
+32 (0) 2 761 1094
cda@ebn.be
The French Network – RETIS
Mr. Roman Detrie
+ 33-1-47.97.81.20
info@retis-innovation.fr