Three rival countries have already offered to house million-dollar Australian startup Disrupt, whose co-founder was deported earlier this month for not picking fruit for three months.
Disrupt COO Chris Bailey was deported by the Border Force for lying about having completed the three months of regional work needed to extend his working holiday visa, with the startupโs co-founder Gary Elphick saying his company wasnโt eligible to sponsor Baileyโs visa.
Elphick says offers have already been flowing in from other ecosystems, with representatives from the US, UK and China all trying to get the startup to relocate its operations.
โTheyโve jumped in and offered to help, and some have been quite aggressive about it,โ Elphick tells StartupSmart.
โTheyโve all said something along the lines of, โwe canโt believe this happened, this is crazyโ. Letโs talk and weโll sort out visas for all the teamโ.โ
The elephant in the room
Elphick says he is yet to make a decision about whether to relocate his startup but says he may be forced to now his co-founder is working out of a bedroom in Wales.
โWeโre still firmly grounded in Australia and want to stay here, but if things donโt work out weโre keeping all our options open,โ he says.
โThereโs no way we can operate with three hours of communication between our head of operations and the rest of the team. Itโs an elephant in the room at the moment.โ
He says itโs heartening to have the support from other startup ecosystems around the world, and if Australia doesnโt improve in this area it will continue to lose potentially lucrative startups overseas.
โItโs great to know that people are out there looking,โ Elphick says.
โItโs really competitive on a country-by-country basis to get the best access to talent and everyone wants the tax dollars.
โAustralia isnโt even supporting their own startups with immigration and these countries are out there actively recruiting startups to come into their countries. Theyโre protecting their own as well as actively pursuing startups in other countries.โ
Elphick says he has also enjoyed support from the local ecosystem, with several other founders telling him that they also have employees that are risking deportation.
โAt least 10 other founders have reached out and said theyโve also got someone hiding in their business as well,โ he says.
โThey wonโt be going overseas now either. Thatโs crazy to me.โ
โMaking the best of a bad situationโ
While the team weighs up its various options, UNSW – where Bailey and Elphick volunteered as mentors – has helped to erect a large TV in the Disrupt office, where Bailey video conferences with his employees for a few hours each day.
โWeโve dressed that up and put a little jacket on it,โ Elphick says.
โBut itโs just putting plaster over something. We can continue to operate for now without customers being any the wiser but itโs not a long-term viable solution.
โHe was definitely in the wrong and thereโs nothing we can do about that but weโre making the best of a bad situation.โ
The long-term impact
He says he wants the discussion to centre on the long-term ramifications of Australiaโs immigration policies rather than the actions of Bailey.
โI was angry and frustrated when it happened, now Iโm just a bit more disappointed,โ Elphick says.
โWe were not in the right. From the get-go we said he was in the wrong. But when youโre backed into a corner and have no other options as a startup you do what you need to in order to survive.โ
โItโs not about moaning about what happened – yes he should pay for the consequences of it. Itโs more about what we can do for future startups, for new companies starting out.”
He says he hopes the government takes a close look at its immigration policies and the potential entrepreneurial visa.
โWe need to facilitate the greatness weโve already got in the country with recent graduates, students and highly-skilled people in corporations,” Elphick says.
“We need to facilitate these people getting into high-growth startups and then look to attract other companies and talent from overseas.
โWe need to sort out our own stuff first. The government is spending millions of dollars on an ideas boom media campaign but it needs to look at how it can actually put some substance behind it.โ
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