How corporate venturing squads are unlocking innovation
These partnerships have the potential to yield breakthrough innovation quickly and at a relatively low cost


Corporate venturing has been described as a David-and-Goliath cooperation in the business world. Established companies seek innovation by partnering up with agile startups via a range of mechanisms, including scouting missions, hackathons, venture clients, corporate incubators and accelerators.
These partnerships have the potential to yield breakthrough innovation quickly and at a relatively low cost, and in recent years, such efforts have become one of the mainstays of the innovation landscape.
But sometimes it pays to expand the relationship and get more corporations on board — even those that might be competitors. Such counterintuitive collaborations, and the innovation benefits they can create, are detailed in Open Innovation: Corporate Venturing Squads, co-authored by IESE Business School professor M. Julia Prats with Josemaria Siota, Carla Bustamante and Beatriz Camacho from IESE’s Open Innovation and Corporate Venturing Institute, in collaboration with the firm Kapita.
The major benefit, according to the industry professionals interviewed in the report, is better access to startup deal flow, in terms of both quantity and quality. Teaming up with other corporations can provide a more attractive corporate value proposition to startups than those working alone. Other key benefits include enhanced access to innovation networks, the sharing of knowledge and best practices, increased credibility and visibility, and reduced costs with reduced risk.
AB InBev, the brewing firm behind brands such as Corona, Budweiser and Stella Artois, was already investing in accelerator programs to improve on sustainability goals. Recognizing that they shared many of the same challenges, in 2021 they partnered with the Coca-Cola Company, Colgate-Palmolive and Unilever — an attractive offer for startups. This has led to 70 pilot projects in over 30 countries, focused on sustainability challenges like smart agriculture and water stewardship.
In the field of mobility, MobilityXLab in Sweden stands out as an innovation lab and expo space offering the opportunity to accelerate startups using strategic partnerships with global players in mobility and connectivity. Automotive companies such as CEVT, Polestar, Veoneer, Volvo Cars and Volvo Group, as well as ICT companies such as Ericsson and Zenseact, actively participate in this initiative.
Mexican multinational CEMEX Ventures launched the Construction Startup Competition in 2017, a consortium of 10 corporations that brings structure to the typically fragmented and less digitalized startup market in the construction sector.
The study was released at IESE"s 10th Open Innovation Conference with C-level speakers from TDK Ventures, IKEA, Acciona, Johnson Controls, Mondragon, Mapfre, Coca-Cola, Decathlon, among others. The initiative counted on the support of the EU-LAC Digital Accelerator as well as 19 dissemination partners such as the European Institute of Innovation and Technology, the University of Navarra, Tecnalia Ventures, Global Corporate Venturing, Endeavor, SpainCap, and more.
First Published: Jul 27, 2023, 12:14
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