Jelena (on the left) represented ESBRI at GEC 2016. In this photo with startup Procleaner S.A.S., that manufactures environmentally friendly cleaning products. |
Two weeks ago I attended the Global Entrepreneurship Congress (GEC) in Medellín, the second largest city in
Colombia. Organized by the Global Entrepreneurship Network (GEN), the event has grown significantly during its eight-year
history. Starting off as a gathering of the organizations that host Global
Entrepreneurship Week, GEC now brings together policymakers, investors,
researchers, entrepreneurs and startup enthusiasts from all corners of the
world. Together, they help founders start and scale, while at the same time
working towards building one healthy global entrepreneurial ecosystem.
Organizing GEC is an excellent opportunity for a host
city to showcase its entrepreneurial and innovative landscape. And it is no
coincidence that Medellín was chosen as the host city of the GEC 2016. It is an
amazing example of a place that underwent a tremendous transformation – from
one of the world’s most dangerous cities to the ”Innovative City of the Year”
2013, according to the Wall Street Journal.
A view of cable cars in Medellín. |
The city’s response to violence and fear was investing in
infrastructure and education and shifting focus to the people of Medellín.
Medellín boasts an impressive urban area with well-built roads and the only
metro system in the country. However, there is still a less modern, poorer side
of the city on its outskirts, the so-called favelas. In an attempt to make
these parts better connected to the city, a cable car system has been built.
Another effort towards integration was building a big
library in the middle of a favela, to bring education closer to the poor. Spain Library is an
unusual structure, built with very small windows in order to isolate the space
from the dangerous world outside. As Mayor of Medellín pointed out during the
gala event organized for GEC delegates, the way forward is to continue
empowering the young generation by investing in education and entrepreneurship.
During the last day of GEC, the international delegates
got a closer look at Medellín’s thriving entrepreneurial scene. We visited
Fondo Emprender, Latin
America’s largest seed capital grant fund and met some of their amazing
startups. One of them is Row Tecnología, a construction company offering
environmentally friendly building solutions with focus on energy and
operational efficiency, and security. Another great startup is Soluciones
Roboticas Integrales – three young men who claim ”if you can imagine it, you
can make it”. One of the solutions they offer is mine detection and removal.
Coming back from Colombia, the main impression I take
with me is that of achieving the impossible. Just as Jonathan Ortmans pointed
out in his opening speech, entrepreneurship is now way beyond just commercial
purposes, it is about the ”possibilities of human endeavors”. And the city of
Medellín certainly proves this point.
/Jelena
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