Who says you can't create a global software company based in Europe? The Dutch have done it before and look poised to do it again. Just three years old, Tridion, a privately held content-management software firm in Amsterdam, is ranked as a "visionary" company by the tech consultancy Gartner Group and boasts blue-chip customers like Akzo Nobel, Carrefour and KLM. Analysts say its market share in Europe is growing faster than that of any comparable company. When it comes to content-management software, "Tridion is the rising star in Europe and will soon have a global reach," says Andrew Warzecha, a senior vice president in the Chicago office of META Group, an IT research and consulting firm.
Tridion is one of 20 companies pitching to some 60 foreign venture capitalists on the Dutch Tech Tour, which is taking place in and around Amsterdam May 22-24. The events are organized by the European Tech Tours, a not-for-profit association that attempts to link Europe's best tech companies with foreign capital. Among the scheduled guest speakers at the Dutch tour are the CEOs of CMG and Exact Software, two Dutch success stories, and Jan Baan, co-founder of the once-hot software maker Baan. After spectacular success, Baan faced management problems, an industry downturn and questions about its finances that caused its stock to collapse. What remained was eventually sold to Invensys.
MARCO BAKKER/HOLLANDSE HOOGTE for TIME
INNOVATORS: Tridion’s Van Gent with CEO Joost Dikhoff
Nonetheless, Jan Baan continues to have an influence
on the software market. He is now preparing to launch
several new software companies through Vanenburg Group,
a Dutch holding company he co-created with his brother
Paul. One of his ventures is Cordys, which will offer
Web-based software to let a company collaborate online
securely and in real-time with its business
partners. "Dutchmen are known for being pioneers, exploring
boundaries and discovering greenfields," says Baan,
Cordys' ceo. "The rise of information technology in
that regard is not much different from the voyage to
the west of a Dutch East India Company ship some 400
years ago. The route changes during the trip, and the
weather both cooperates with and jeopardizes the realization
of your plans." Baan believes making mistakes is part
of being an entrepreneur. "Today, within the Vanenburg
Group," he says, "we are still making mistakes and taking
risks with an almost endless motivation to be successful
in execution."
Whether the new ventures are successful or not, "we
owe a lot to Baan some 5,000 people got their
training there," says Roland Slot, 39, leader of the
Dutch Tech Tour. Slot is co-founder of four Dutch software
companies, including three on the tour: Tridion, Fredhopper,
which makes software to ease online navigation, and
Adnovate, which produces software allowing customers
to create and deliver print advertising digitally. All
three of the companies have hired former Baan employees.
Among other lessons, Slot says, Baan's troubles have
taught Dutch software entrepreneurs to keep a tighter
grip on their finances.
Slot is also founder of WARP Equity Partners, a Hilversum
company that acquires majority stakes in Dutch software
companies and helps them become international players.
He created WARP with longtime business partner Patrick
Van Gent.
Highlights
Of Holland
Software
is by far the Netherland's biggest tech strength.
The Tech Tour selection committee rated these
start-ups highly:
COMPANY: Augeo
CEO:
Ernst Jilderda
Location:
Nijkerk
What it does: makes professional-services
automation software that does real-time management
and analysis of projects and resources. Operates
across Europe and has a North American presence
in partnership with J.D. Edwards.
COMPANY: Fredhopper
CEO:
Paul Konijnendijk
Location:
Amsterdam
What it does: produces next-generation enterprise-search
software that makes it easier to navigate
online catalogs. Customers include Thomas
Cook, Argos and Philips.
COMPANY: VoCognition
Dir.:
Rodolphe Becker
Location:
Amsterdam
What it does: makes real-time, voice-controlled
order-processing software for warehouses,
for such tasks as storing and order picking.
Operates in seven European countries with
clients including Carrefour
The two earned their fortunes through the sale of a Web consultancy they founded called Twinspark, which was sold at the height of the tech bubble. They are reinvesting their money in other start-ups, including Tridion, which was spun off from Twinspark. Slot currently serves as Tridion's board chairman, Van Gent as its vice president of marketing.
Through WARP, Slot says he hopes to build five Dutch software companies over the next 10 years that will first become European leaders and then global players. He expects Tridion to be one of them. "I am passionate about the opportunity called Europe for local technology companies," Slot says, "and I have learned the importance of establishing strong and lasting pan-European personal networks to create the next generation of European technology leaders." The Dutch Tech Tour could give companies like Tridion the contacts and the venture capital to do just that.
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