Immigrants Building The Future

As we enter the era of a new generation of critical technologies, from AI and AR/VR to EVs and robotics, the technical and entrepreneurial horsepower of immigrants will be more important than ever for Silicon Valley.

Yesterday, I had the opportunity to attend Entrepreneur First‘s first-ever demo day in San Francisco. Folks in the US and India might not be too familiar with EF – they are one of Europe’s top incubator programs, with a particularly strong presence in London and programs now in Paris, New York, and Bangalore.

Reid Hoffman at the EF Demo Day in SF

EF’s model is interesting – they operate in the -1 to 0 stage, spotting deeply technical founders, mostly in their early-to-mid 20s with many straight out of college, and help them identify and incubate a startup idea that aligns with their core technical skillsets and achievements.

And they are definitely spotting some outlier talent. Within this cohort, I saw everything from a Math Olympiad gold medalist, a Material Science PhD from Cambridge, and a 3rd year PhD dropout in Brain-Computer Interfaces to a Formula 1 aerodynamics engineer, someone who built systems for the US Department of Defense and another who worked on JP Morgan’s first AI systems.

This is what made the demo day super interesting for me. With the advent of AI, Europe is gaining prominence in the global tech scene courtesy of excellent technical universities and research institutions that produce some of the most cutting-edge research talent. A majority of EF cohort companies are in deeptech/ applied sciences and therefore, this demo day in a way, gave a glimpse into the future that leading AI research can potentially bring to life.

My 1 line takeaway from seeing these 32 companies pitch – the future is brighter, and full of “tech magic”, than we can probably imagine right now. Get a load of some of the ideas that are already in early productization:

1/ World’s first AI training processor using photons (directly taking on Nvidia).

2/ Optimizing farming 24×7 with low-cost swarms of Roomba-like robots that live in fields and spray everything from fertilizers to pesticides.

3/ AI platform that does automatic product placement within creator videos (a YouTuber can place everything from a Nike shoe to a Fiji bottle within a video in a matter of minutes).

4/ AI-powered real-time language translation that freelancers in non-English speaking nations can use to work with clients across geos.

5/ Exponentially simplifying going from a 3D render to a detailed pre-manufacturing drawing & design for any production process.

6/ Non-invasive neural links that can help soldiers in a hot zone communicate with each other without talking (telepathy brought to life?).

The raw intellect of these founders, combined with the product progress they appeared to have made in a short period, makes me think that many of these ideas are not that far away from commercialization.

What EF is smartly doing is relocating this entire batch to Silicon Valley, where the founders will live full-time, building product and raising capital. Seeing the ambition level of ideas the cohort is taking on, they definitely need the risk appetite and vision-backing mindset of the Bay Area. Can’t think of any other ecosystem in the world where such technically complex and capital-intensive ideas can be backed by a combination of talent, risk capital, institutional knowledge, and diverse networks.

Which brings me to another thought – how talented immigrants continue to move to the Bay Area to build the future. Imagine such unique outlier talent from places like Europe and India choosing to uproot themselves from their home countries, moving to the Valley, and offering their unique skills & knowledge to companies here. This makes me super-long on the Bay Area and clearly shows that the Silicon Valley immigration flywheel is still as strong as ever.

This macro trend is what also makes me equally excited about India’s emergence as a key supplier of founder talent for the world. And not just to the US, but also to regions like SE Asia, the Middle East, and Australia. I believe the Indian diaspora will make a defining impact on the global knowledge economy over the next 20 years. Combine this with the rise of a new generation of critical technologies (AI, EVs, AR/ VR, robotics, semiconductors, etc.), and this transforms into a generational opportunity that energizes me as a venture investor in the US-India corridor.

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Author: Soumitra Sharma

Operator-Angel I Product Leader I US-India corridor I Believer in Power Laws I Love building & learning

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