I was recently asked if I wanted to speak at an upcoming event about what the Greater Bay Area (GBA) can offer startup businesses in 2021. I unashamedly responded to that invite like someone recruited to a team in a cheesy action movie with an enthusiastic, “Count me in!”
You see, while there has been a lot of discussion about the GBA, I don’t think people quite comprehend how incredible it really is beyond it’s physical size, which is immense. And I want the world to know. This geographical collective is the world’s perfect incubation chamber for the business leaders of tomorrow. Frankly, I’d go so far as to say it’s near impossible to overestimate the sheer potential presented by connecting the resources and talent of Hong Kong, Macao, Guangzhou, Shenzhen, Zhuhai, Foshan, Huizhou, Dongguan, Zhongshan, Jiangmen, and Zhaoqing.
The closest historical comparison to such collaborative might (as others have noted) is in the U.S., which has benefited hugely from two similar collective commerce nodes for decades. The New York metropolitan region on the east coast remains a financial powerhouse, while the San Francisco Bay Area on the west coast has been an incredible hub for technological progress. Yet, even when combined the economic and digital output of these giants pales in comparison with what the GBA is set to achieve.
In my opinion, the success of the GBA is going to be built on three major factors. Connectivity, talent, and exciting startups with fresh ideas.
Firstly there’s connectivity. The cooperation between territories in the GBA to grow closer has resulted in massive investments towards infrastructure and unified planning which will make logistics much easier. In Hong Kong, this includes the completion of projects like the Hong Kong–Zhuhai–Macau Bridge and the Tuen Mun–Chek Lap Kok Link.
When it comes to talent, not only does the GBA contain several top universities but there has been a strong push to pool the best of the best to drive R&D and commercialisation. For example, under the Greater Bay Area Youth Employment Scheme, 2,000 job placements (700 of which are innovation and technology posts) will be provided for Hong Kong university graduates to work in mainland GBA cities. In addition, Hong Kong’s HK$2B “Global STEM Professorship Scheme” is set to attract outstanding overseas R&D talent to the city, and by extension the GBA.
Which brings us to startups. The GBA has an incredibly high concentration of hi-tech start-ups (collectively totalling a value of around US$1.1T) with Hong Kong serving as a springboard to the global market. Hong Kong alone has over 3,360 startups, with a third of them believed to already maintain business operations across the GBA.
But this prosperity isn’t happening in a vacuum. Institutions are acting as key platforms for technology transfer and business incubation. Tsinghua University Science Park (TusPark) is one such institution, established to facilitate the growth of the city’s startup ecosystem and cultivate technology-based entrepreneurial cultures. It is this mission that’s behind TusPark’s hosting of the GBA Innovation Summit at the StartmeupHK Festival. The event aims to provide a glimpse of the GBA’s unleashed potential and enable innovators, business partners, governments, and other stakeholders to connect.
The GBA is going to be the place where the next generation of tech juggernauts will rise but it is also where the future of the planet will also be determined. Not only is it a place of unmatched innovation in the fields of communication and digital transformation but its also where the latest advancements in sustainability and conservation are being developed. That’s why not only will I be on that panel of speakers but why I think every business leader should pay attention to what happens there. GBA is calling. Join the team.