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Incubator Initiative - Global

Countries

Brazil, India, United States

Regions

Global, Africa

Programme Summary

In 2002, The Information for Development Program (infoDev) of the World Bank launched the 3-year Incubator Initiative in an effort to enhance entrepreneurship, innovation, and competitiveness of the small business community in developing countries. This initiative aims to establish a network of incubators of small businesses and similar programmes in these countries, and through them to stimulate the emergence and growth of information and communication technology (ICT)-enabled small enterprises. The initiative also seeks to foster international dissemination of successful business incubation practices. The provision of grants - operational, capacity-building, and planning - and the creation of knowledge-sharing networks are key programme strategies.

Communication Strategies

The Initiative promotes economic growth by supporting shared knowledge bases and experience exchange; offering technical, strategic planning, and evaluation assistance; and creating opportunities for capacity building. Recognising that interventions might be appropriate at different levels given different national objectives and priorities and varying levels of private sector development, the initiative involves activities that are designed as modular components of a global programme. Depending on the activity, infoDev may work with central or local governments, small or large corporations, investment banks, and universities or research centres in developing countries.

Concretely, the Initiative was implemented through a phased approach, each phase of which involved a specific Request for Proposals (RFP). As part of Phase 1 - development of the Incubator Support Center (iDISC) - an RFP invited ideas related to the development of a common repository of knowledge and experiences relevant to incubators in the developing world. A panel of experts evaluated all proposals that were submitted; the contract was awarded to a joint proposal submitted by the Brazilian Association of Science Parks and Business Incubators (ANPROTEC) and the International Business Incubators (IBI), based in the United States. Using the iDISC website as a focal point, this phase of the Initiative focused on:

  • providing access to studies, collections of successful practices, toolkits, and methodologies;
  • disseminating knowledge through the website, seminars, and other initiatives; and
  • coordinating and delivering training and online advisory services.

In Phase 2, established incubators (working for at least 2 years) were invited to apply for grants aimed at improving their performance, sustainability, outreach, and growth. Eligible groups included non-profit business development service centres, science parks, consortiums, and networks of incubators. Incubators may have different types of needs, including:

  • reassessment of the strategy or activity focus of the incubator
  • re-organisation or re-engineering of its own activities
  • re-definition of incubator's governance structure, partnerships, or operational guidelines
  • training and/or capacity building activities
  • strengthening of incubator's networking or computing facilities
  • restructuring of incubator's funding mechanisms
  • creation of new seed funding mechanisms

Phase 3 aimed at assisting startup incubators and organisations launching new business incubation programmes in countries that cannot draw on adequate private sector development environments. infoDev provides technical assistance and support such as setting up strategies, assessing the developmental impact and success criteria, and drawing feasibility studies supporting the planning of new ICT Incubators in particularly challenging environments. infoDev provides strategic consulting services and expert intervention via a dedicated incubator hotline, discussion forums, and management exchange programmes.

With the completion of a new round of grant allocations in June 2004, the Incubator Initiative is now supporting 43 incubators in all developing regions.

Throughout these phases, networking has been a core programme strategy. The Initiative facilitates incubators' communication in order to draw on the potential of North-to-South, South-to-North, and South-to-South flows of information. For example, in October 2004 a Global Forum held in New Delhi, India brought together more than 300 innovators and entrepreneurs from over 50 countries. The objective was to share lessons among incubators, business experts, and policy makers; the outcome was the creation of a "Global Network on Business Incubation for Development" to facilitate continued knowledge sharing. A second Global Forum is scheduled to take place in September 2005; this event will provide a platform for sharing experiences and strengthening relations among the network. In addition to such global events, special consideration is given to formulating best practices and lessons learned by incorporating a regional focus and addressing national and regional issues.

Research efforts to understand and assess incubation have also characterised this initiative. One of the first project activities was to generate an overview of the incubators that already exist in several developing countries. In addition, to capture and disseminate the salient elements and lessons learned from the Initiative, infoDev is designing several information collection tools, including a baseline study, which will provide a standard reporting mechanism for the infoDev-supported incubators to gather baseline data for subsequent monitoring and evaluation efforts.

Development Issues

Technology, Small Business Development.

Key Points

Used since the 1980s to nurture small firms, "business incubation" is providing qualifying new start-up businesses with a set of facilities - physical space, shared services, business and legal advice, and financial inputs - to facilitate their creation and assist them until they have the capacity to "survive" in the outside competitive environment.

infoDev claims that, despite the large number of studies conducted on business incubation, there is very little information regarding the demand for and impact of incubation in developing countries. They explain that incubators in both developed and developing countries tend to focus on their own activity and exchange very little information about evaluation and developmental impact, as well as on best practices.

infoDev was launched in 1995 with the objective of addressing the obstacles facing developing countries in an increasingly information-driven world economy. It is a global grant programme managed by the World Bank.

Partners

The World Bank, with support from the Government of Japan.

Contact

Incubator Initiative

infoDev Program

MS F5P-503

1818 H Street NW

Washington, DC 20433 USA

Tel.: (202) 458-5153

Fax: (202) 522-3186

infodev@worldbank.org

infoDev website


The World Bank, with support from the Government of Japan.

Source

Posting sent from Rafael Hernandez to the Global Knowledge for Development (GKD) list server on December 5 2003 (click here for the archives); and Incubator page on the infoDev website.


Placed on the Communication Initiative site December 22 2003
Last Updated September 26 2007



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