Findings from the World Economic Forum (WEF) highlight a shift in how early-stage ventures grow from pilot projects into fully operational businesses.
Evidence gathered from more than 200 start-ups by UpLink, the early-stage innovation initiative by WEF, alongside investors and policymakers, suggests that scaling no longer depends primarily on innovation itself, but on the conditions enabling deployment.
Core and emerging technologies already exist across sectors, yet barriers remain in market adoption, coordination, and institutional readiness.
Resilience has moved from a strategic ambition to an immediate operational requirement. Start-ups are increasingly built around urgent, clearly defined problems, allowing them to adapt quickly in volatile environments shaped by geopolitical tensions, supply chain disruption, and climate pressures.
Strong partnerships have emerged as a central priority, with a significant majority of ventures seeking collaboration with larger corporate actors to gain access to infrastructure, regulatory pathways, and credibility.
Collaboration at early stages is proving essential in reducing risk and accelerating adoption. Traditional scaling models, based on proving technology before securing buyers, are losing effectiveness in complex sectors with high institutional risk.
Commercial viability has also become central to scaling success. Impact alone is no longer sufficient, as investors and buyers increasingly prioritise measurable financial outcomes such as cost efficiency, risk reduction, and resilience.
Market signals, including early contracts and partnerships, now outweigh funding rounds as indicators of credibility.
Why does it matter?
The WEF analysis underscores that scalable growth depends less on innovation alone and more on coordinated ecosystems that turn pilots into real-world adoption.
Would you like to learn more about AI, tech and digital diplomacy? If so, ask our Diplo chatbot!
