FutureScot
Business & Economy

UK technology sector expands 2.6 times faster than the wider economy

Photograph: Explode/ Shutterstock.com

The UK’s digital tech sector continues to accelerate faster than the rest of the economy, according to Tech Nation 2018, the entrepreneurial network’s ‘state of the nation’ report. Turnover of digital tech companies grew by 4.5% between 2016-17 compared with UK GDP which grew by 1.7% over the same period.

At the same time the number of jobs in digital tech rose at five times the rate of the rest of the economy, demonstrating how the digital tech sector is one of the best performing sectors in the UK economy.

2017 proved to be a big year for the UK digital tech sector with some of the biggest fundraisings and exits seen in years, as international investors flocked to fund UK-based firms. British digital tech companies raised £4.5bn in venture capital investment during the year, according to Pitchbook figures, almost double the previous year.

Notable exits for the sector during 2017 included Matchesfashion.com which was sold to a private equity investor for almost £750m and Leeds-based CallCredit acquired by TransUnion for £1bn. There were also several so called ‘mega funding’ rounds during the year, with game development platform Improbable raising £370m from Japan’s Softbank, food delivery service Deliveroo raising £284m and mobile network Truphone raising £249m.

Some of the UK’s fastest growing tech companies include Improbable, Deliveroo, Farfetch, TransferWise, Funding Circle, Revolut, The Hut, Skyscanner, Fanduel, Oxford Nanopore, Benevolent.AI and Darktrace. DeepMind, acquired by Google in 2014, is a global leader in artificial intelligence and still based in London.

In total the UK has seen £42bn venture-backed exits between 2013 and 2017. Companies that have gone from startup to household names, with stock market listings worth billions of pounds in less than a decade, include Just Eat, Zoopla and Purplebricks. The proposed purchase of Zoopla by US investor Silver Lake for £2.2bn, announced last week, underlines the success and future potential of the UK’s digital tech businesses.

Tech Nation 2018 reveals that the digital tech sector’s workforce is older than commonly perceived and more ethnically mixed than the average UK workplace. However, the dearth of women in the sector remains a factor, albeit one that is beginning to be addressed by activities to tackle the recruitment and retention of women, said the report.

Scotland highlights: Edinburgh, Glasgow, and Dundee

Edinburgh’s thriving digital tech scene is conspicuously collaborative, with a strong sense of camaraderie. CodeBase, the UK’s largest tech incubator sits at the heart of Edinburgh’s tech scene, offering invaluable knowledge to local startups.

Glasgow used to play second fiddle to Edinburgh, but no longer, Glasgow’s lower saturation and cost of living have now placed it firmly on the digital tech map. Tech is transforming the city’s traditional industries like oil, gas and finance.

Creativity and innovation thrive in Dundee. The talent stemming from renowned computer science and gaming courses, including those at the University of Dundee and Abertay University, has enabled companies to stay ahead of the pack in games development, mobile apps and much more. For example, Abertay graduates have gone on to work for leading computer games companies including Sony, Microsoft, Electronic Arts and Rockstar North.

Dundee gaming entrepreneurs, Chris van der Kuyl and Paddy Burns, founders of 4J Studios, have

The Scotland-wide CivTech initiative goes from strength to strength, helping startups engage with, and solve, procurement challenges. UK entrepreneurs are overwhelmingly optimistic about the future of the UK’s digital tech sector:

The report reveals the “hidden underwiring” that is powering the growth of the digital tech sector across the UK. These informal meetups provide clues to the areas of digital tech that are “hot” right now:

Related posts

Glasgow data marketing agency launches ‘buck Brexit’ service for SMEs

Kevin O'Sullivan
July 16, 2019

Glasgow-based semiconductor company targets China with ‘new range’ of laser telecommunications products

Kevin O'Sullivan
August 6, 2019

Speyside distilleries to benefit from new green hydrogen energy hub

Kevin O'Sullivan
August 14, 2024
Exit mobile version