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York Butter Factory lands $500,000 in government funding: Minister says a culture shift is required for Aussie startups to succeed

While announcing $500,000 of funding for YBF Ventures, small business minister Craig Laundy urged startups to collaborate more, and to celebrate failure.
Craig Laundy
Minister for small business Craig Laundy, in 2016. Source: AAP/Paul Miller

Melbourneโ€™s York Butter Factory (YBF) Ventures startup hub is getting an additional $500,000 in funding from the federal government, with small business minister Craig Laundy calling on the startup scene to take some lessons from the US, to collaborate more to learn to celebrate failure.

Announcing the investment this morning to an audience of startup founders, Laundy said, while the funding is officially categorised as a grant, he considers it more of an investment and is โ€œafter a returnโ€.

Heโ€™s looking for increased company tax receipts, increased numbers of employeesย โ€” and therefore PAYE tax receiptsย โ€” and is investing in โ€œhope that you will avoid the valley of death, and live a long life as a businessโ€, he said.

โ€œI hope you all make squillions,โ€ he added.

โ€œIโ€™m from theย government and Iโ€™m going to shove my hand in your pocket and take something.โ€

This investment is intended to expand the YBFโ€™s innovation hub, to focus on โ€˜Web 3.0โ€™ technology, changing web architecture to connect decentralised technologies. The funding will allow YBF to support 10 startups through its web 3.0-focused YBF Mesh Hub.

โ€œThis hub has a real focus in that particular space and we found that a very interesting proposition when considering to back it.โ€

However, one challenge Australian startups have always struggled with is โ€œthat collaboration pieceโ€, Laundy said.

Spaces like YBF can solve that problem โ€œin one fell swoopโ€, he added. Rather than competing, companies can sit side by side and collaborate with one another.

Laundy put the challenge around collaboration down to a โ€œcultural issueโ€ of business owners โ€œwanting to do everything themselvesโ€ and therefore reap all of the benefits.

โ€œThat lack of collaboration just slows things down, and can in fact lead to failure ultimately.โ€

Tall poppy syndrome an issue

Speaking to StartupSmart at the announcement, Laundy pointed to another cultural issue that could be holding Australian startups back.

โ€œFailure is seen as something to criticise and success is seen as something to criticise,โ€ he said, explaining Australiaโ€™s โ€œtall poppy syndromeโ€.

โ€œWhereas in the US, failure is something that people applaud, for having a go. And if you achieve success in the US, who knows, you ultimately could be elected president.โ€

However, itโ€™s those who take the risk that will be providing the jobs of the future, Laundy says.

โ€œDonโ€™t be scared to try and fail, and if you do try and fail, donโ€™t let it dishearten you,โ€ he said.

โ€œPick yourself up, dust yourself off, collaborate with those around you in workplaces like [YBF] and have another crack, because entrepreneurial flair is something, sadly, that we donโ€™t have enough of in this country.

โ€œAnd letโ€™s face it, at the end of the day, itโ€™s risk takers prepared to take on bank debt, back themselves and employ people that will generate jobs.

โ€œThatโ€™s the way itโ€™s always been, thatโ€™s the way it will be moving forward,โ€ he said.

NOW READ:ย Stone & Chalk chief says new innovation hub will unite Sydney and Melbourne against Singapore and Silicon Valley

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