- Up to 50 startups and SMEs to receive equity-free funding of up to €100k
- European Commission commits €7.1m into data driven innovation, and €4.8M to directly fund startups and SMEs over the next 3 years
- Startups will work with data from established businesses to tackle top industry and societal challenges
- Data Pitch follows the lead of Open Data Incubator Europe (ODINE), whose 57 successful projects generated €16M in sales and investment since its launch in 2014, and created 268 jobs
- The three-year project will be delivered by the Open Data Institute, The University of Southampton, Portuguese innovation company Beta-i and French data marketplace platform Dawex. It is funded by the European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme.
Announced today, Data Pitch is a new European-funded project bringing together established businesses and startups to meet today’s challenges with data.
Data Pitch will provide up to 50 European startups and SMEs with world-class business support including: up to €100K equity-free funding, expert mentoring, investment opportunities, and access to data from established businesses and the public sector.
Data Pitch is also recruiting businesses and other organisations to share their data via a new, secure data innovation lab, based at the University of Southampton. They will also help define the challenges along with the Data Pitch team and a range of industry experts spanning from agriculture to health. Startups will be encouraged to use this data to address the challenges by developing innovative products and services.
Startups and SMEs will be able to apply for a place on Data Pitch from 1 July 2017.
Successful startups will be selected in October and November 2017, and the first cohort will join in December 2017. Each startup will be on the programme for six months.
The ambition is to create an innovation ecosystem for Europe, where larger organisations work closely with agile startups to innovate and learn from each other, using data as an enabler to solve problems.
Elena Simperl, Professor at University of Southampton and Data Pitch project Director said:
Data Pitch will create a European ecosystem for data-driven innovation. In the digital age, every organisation – public or private, big or small – generates and owns substantial data assets. Not all of them have the opportunity to use this data effectively. With Data Pitch, we take an established open innovation model and apply it at European scale – we pair some of the most creative entrepreneurial minds in 28 countries and help them to solve data challenges that matter – for the economy, for the environment, for science, and for society as a whole.
Jeni Tennison, CEO at the ODI said:
Startups have the skills, agility and energy to create novel and innovative solutions using data. Corporates need to understand the benefits of publishing and sharing data to take advantage of this innovation and realise the efficiencies, product opportunities and increased productivity that effective use of data can bring. Data Pitch will allow both corporates and startups to experiment with ways of encouraging open innovation using data in a safe environment.
Data Pitch will begin by running online and offline ‘datathons’ in Spring 2017, around themes including smart cities, health and wellbeing, and food and agriculture. Ideas for the datathons will be crowdsourced and put forward by data providers, bringing together startups, data scientists and experts to work on a case during a hackathon.
For more information go to: www.datapitch.eu