Iceland review - 2013, Side 104

Iceland review - 2013, Side 104
102 ICELAND REVIEW Invest In Iceland Leading the Race NSA ventures is Iceland’s leading venture capital fund, directly investing in innova- tive, internationally-oriented Icelandic startup companies which have the potential for substantial future growth. It’s an evergreen fund, using the proceeds from its successfully exited companies to reinvest in the local economy and startup scene. “I look at the investment process as a relay race,” says NSA CEO Helga valfells. “We provide the first major investment in a company, help with product develop- ment and the first stages of export. Then we hand off the baton to others when the company is ready to really scale up.” The majority of NSA’s investments are in the fields of information technology and life sciences. Both Marorka, a leading provider of energy management technology for the shipping industry, and CLARA, a software company which generates detailed analy- ses of companies’ user communities, are among NSA’s recent success stories; emerging pharmaceu- tical companies such as the antimicrobial therapeu- tics-focused Akthelia and Lífeind, a biotech company which developed through research at the University of Iceland, are still growing with NSA support. NSA has invested in over 100 diverse companies since its inception in 1998. NSA has success- fully exited companies ranging from the popular children’s Tv show LazyTown, to Nikita, a women’s clothing company specializing in snowboarding gear. Among the varied companies in their current portfolio are gogoyoko, a ‘social music marketplace’ which prioritizes artists’ rights and has developed a creative, musician-controlled marketplace for music to be sold and streamed online. There’s also Andrea Maack, a perfume company which draws its scent inspiration from the founder’s own conceptual art, and Star:Oddi, one of the world’s primary producers of electronic signals and measuring devices used in sea animal research. “There has been a lot of grassroots activity [in Iceland] since the crash,” says Helga, referenc- ing such entrepreneurial organizations as Startup Reykjavík and the upcoming Startup Iceland confer- ence. “It’s an exciting environment to be in. Iceland is known for its creativity and resilience and those qualities translate well in the venture space.” She believes that investors and entrepreneurs ben- efit from a ‘value-added’ environment in Iceland. In
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