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Queensland launches $40 million fund for new tech businesses

The Queensland government has announced a $40 million co-investment fund aiming to encourage a โ€œstartup revolutionโ€ in the state. Queensland premier Annastacia Palaszczuk announced the fund during the CEDA state of the state address on Tuesday and said itโ€™s an effort to โ€œkickstart Queenslandโ€™s next wave of startupsโ€ by turning โ€œgreat ideas into commercial realitiesโ€. […]
Denham Sadler
Denham Sadler
Queensland launches $40 million fund for new tech businesses

The Queensland government has announced a $40 million co-investment fund aiming to encourage a โ€œstartup revolutionโ€ in the state.

Queensland premier Annastacia Palaszczuk announced the fund during the CEDA state of the state address on Tuesday and said itโ€™s an effort to โ€œkickstart Queenslandโ€™s next wave of startupsโ€ by turning โ€œgreat ideas into commercial realitiesโ€.

โ€œQueenslanders, and Australians in general, havenโ€™t had the appetite in the past to provide venture capital to startup businesses,โ€ Palaszczuk said.

โ€œIn Queensland, my government is changing that.โ€

The fund will match contributions from private investors from $125,000 up to $2.5 million and an independent investment panel will assess each application, with up to $5 million in investments available for startups from the fund.

Itโ€™s all about giving the stateโ€™s early-stage businesses a launching pad, according to Palaszczuk.

โ€œIf you build the right business model and meet the criteria, we will back you, because my government has a lot of confidence in what Queensland has to offer,โ€ she said.

โ€œIf we can show that our best ideas, our best innovations, our best biomedical advances and our best discoveries are business-worthy, then that investment pool will grow.ย 

โ€œWe want to lead the way when it comes to investing, to point those angel investors in the right direction.โ€

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A step in the direction

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The Queensland startup community has reacted positively to the announcement, with Black Sheep Capital innovation investment manager Anthony Musumeci saying itโ€™ll help grow the ecosystem.

ย โ€œItโ€™s going to have a positive impact and really help to grow a critical mass of early-stage companies which are operating out of Queensland,โ€ he says.

ย FunCaptcha founder Kevin Gosschalk says the state government is on the right track.

ย โ€œIt seems like a good initiative at first glance,โ€ Gosschalk says.

ย โ€œFor our state economy to prosper the government needs to invest and encourage innovation.โ€

ย Brisbane-based Tappr CEO Brett Hales says finding early-stage funding is a very difficult task in Brisbane at the moment.

ย โ€œThe startup community in Queensland has been known to be fragmented and without a lot of direction for startups looking to attract investment, and this shows that the government is proactive and listening to the community,โ€ Hales says.

ย โ€œThe program has the capacity to stimulate early-stage investors into investing in innovative businesses in Queensland.โ€

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Keeping local talent

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A major impact of the fund could be that more homegrown startups chose to stay put in Queensland, Hales says.

โ€œThe program will be beneficial in keeping promising startups in Queensland, which is a great thing for the community,โ€ he says.

โ€œThis type of investment is essential if we want to attract and retain superior startup talent. It gives startups a more reasonable incentive to stay in Queensland than just the nice weather.โ€

Musumeci agrees, saying at the moment most early-stage businesses have to look elsewhere for funding.

โ€œPlenty of startups come to raising capital and usually have to search interstate and overseas to get it over the line,โ€ he says.

โ€œI think this is a really positive move from the government to help with that.โ€

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Run by investors

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The fund will be led by the private co-investors, who will select the businesses to back and the amount of money to chip in, with the government then matching this contribution.

This is a good method so long as the right people are included on the panel, Musumeci says.

โ€œThe structure theyโ€™ve identified is the right way to go about it, they just need to be cautious of making sure the right people are on the committee โ€“ that itโ€™s people from the community not consultants or academics.โ€

Itโ€™s also crucial that it can complete the process at a speed to keep up with the high-growth businesses, he says.

โ€œThe time to process the applications is critical,โ€ Musumeci says.

โ€œStartups are moving so quickly so the applications have to be processed quickly to allow them the best chance to succeed.โ€

Queensland-based startups can apply online from Tuesday next week. These applicants will then be shortlisted, with a handful then pitching to the panel.

The startups must be commercialising an idea or product, require seed or follow-on investment, have a realistic chance at being commercially successful and have a shot at creating jobs.

On the flip-side, the government wants the private sector investors to have a proven track-record of investing in early-stage startups, experience in providing support to them, a good reputation and the ability to manage fund reporting.

In announcing the fund, the Queensland state government pointed to a similar scheme that was implemented in New Zealand in 2006 โ€“ a $40 million co-investment fund that has attracted nearly $140 million in private investments through funding 116 companies, thanks to 14 seed co-investment partners.

Palaszczuk says entrepreneurs and startups are an important part of the economy.

โ€œThey are the innovators. They are the profit-makers,โ€ she says.

โ€œAnd above all, they are the job creators.โ€

This article originally appeared in StartupSmart.