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The lessons an Aussie entrepreneur learnt from immersing himself in startup ecosystems around the world

A globe-trotting Aussie entrepreneur is on his way to one of the biggest tech conferences in the world after winning a Queensland pitching competition, fresh off becoming the first foreign startup to be accepted into French accelerator Numa. Corilla founder David Ryan says he has made a deliberate effort to immerse himself in different startup […]
Dinushi Dias
Dinushi Dias

A globe-trotting Aussie entrepreneur is on his way to one of the biggest tech conferences in the world after winning a Queensland pitching competition, fresh off becoming the first foreign startup to be accepted into French accelerator Numa.

Corilla founder David Ryan says he has made a deliberate effort to immerse himself in different startup ecosystems around the world and to put himself outside of his comfort zone, and says he has learnt a number of lessons from this process.

Corilla is a collaborative cloud platform for technical writers enabling them to author, manage and maintain documents at scale.

The open-source site provides end-to-end writing and publishing workflow with in-built editing, version control and on-demand publishing features.

At Numa, he says he was able to benefit from the Paris-based acceleratorโ€™s specific focus.

โ€œThey focus on culture, culture, culture,โ€ Ryan tells StartupSmart.

โ€œThe first rule of accelerators is no one is like the other.โ€

After completing the Paris acceleration program, launching a beta and returning to Brisbane he was invited off-the-cuff to present his startup at a live event.

He later discovered it was for a pitching competition at Advance Queenslandโ€™s innovation summit where the top prize was a free trip to world renowned TechCrunch Disrupt.

Following months and months of pitch practice with the Paris accelerator, Ryan was more than prepared to present a compelling case for Corilla, with globally-enriched knowledge to answer any nitty-gritty questions.

During a previous role as a technical writer at Red Hat, Ryan says he quickly moved to make is role more innovative.

โ€œI made myself the startup guy,โ€ he says.

โ€œI used up all my leave exploring the ecosystems in Europe, the US and India.โ€

Ryan says these international ecosystems are all โ€œwonderfully differentโ€ and provided him with useful insights into what makes a great startup community.

โ€œIf we think of Silicon Valley as the sun and weโ€™re all orbiting it, what are the planets doing?โ€ he says.

He says that while the startup capital is world-leading, Australian founders should consider also exploring ecosystems around the world like Amsterdam, France and India.

โ€œThere is a strong advantage to immerse in other ecosystems,โ€ Ryan says.

In India, he was amazed by the massive interest and turnout of people at startup events.

He says the startup ecosystem there has a big culture of self-sustainability with a great amount of support between people in the community.

โ€œTheyโ€™re actually inclusive communities,โ€ he says.

As a guest speaker at various startup events, Ryan says there was a distinct friendliness, openness and thirst for knowledge in growth and improvement.

โ€œItโ€™s โ€˜how as a community can we level upโ€™, โ€˜what is the lesson youโ€™ve learnedโ€™, โ€˜how can we apply this at scaleโ€™,โ€ he says.

Ryan says there are amazing opportunities and startup developments occurring in other ecosystems like France.

โ€œThe belief [there] in the power of French startups is stunning,โ€ he says.

โ€œYou see how strongly they support each other.โ€

Going in as a couple of folk from down under sparked a new light at Numa.

โ€œWith Corilla, we basically walked in and said, โ€˜Gโ€™day mateyโ€™,โ€ he says.

Bringing in their affable Australian nature, they openly shared with fellow startups in the program what theyโ€™d learned, what they messed up and what they were doing well as they developed.

โ€œCultural clichรฉs aside, Australia is a very cooperative community,โ€ he says.

โ€œFranceโ€™s schooling system is about perfection and excellence so while it is friendly, itโ€™s very competitive.โ€

On his return to Brisbane, Ryan says he was more than impressed by the amount of government and policy changes like Advance Queensland to grow the local startup community.

โ€œIt has grown so rapidly based on the hard work of people driving this on their lunch break, working overtime and on weekends,โ€ he says.

After travelling to ecosystems across the globe, Ryan says Australia needs to move past the tall poppy syndrome.

โ€œIf we support ourselves even when it looks like weโ€™re competing with US giants, we might see some other opportunities that the US companies canโ€™t see,โ€ he says.

Photo: Creative Mornings London

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