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Kyoto: A Blueprint
For Japan?
The ancient capital of Kyoto conjures
up images of temples, the tea ceremony, Zen gardens, and high-tech
venture companies. Well, OK, not everyone knows that Kyoto is a hotbed
for venture startups, but there's a growing group of people in the
city who are developing Kyoto's ambitious community of software developers,
content providers, and academic researchers into an engine for growth.
THE PEOPLE OF KYOTO'S
venture community are a unique breed: part techie entrepreneur, part
cultural
aesthete, and sometimes
two parts eccentric. They're drawn here because of the more laid-back
lifestyle -- it's "almost like the West Coast minus the sea," says
one entrepreneur -- and the freedom to do your own thing. In fact,
some entrepreneurs say Kyoto's strong sense of individualism and
dislike of alliances can be a drawback because it's hard to do things
on a big scale here. But one thing the Kyoto-ites are very sure about
is that they have no interest in trading the calm, creative atmosphere
of Kyoto for the more tapped-in yet more strung-out Tokyo.
When I first visited Kyoto
Research Park in 1989, it had just opened its doors. Telephone
cables still lay waiting for
connection on the carpet tiles, yet even at that time some of the
original tenants had already laid down some seriously ambitious plans.
A Kyoto University professor had founded software startup Kaba (Japanese
for "hippopotamus") to take on the US software industry, especially
in operating systems. While the professor is still pursuing his goals,
Kaba is long gone, a relic of the park's early days.
In 1999, I paid another visit to the park. The original
building was still familiar, but not the goings-on inside. The Internet
bubble was starting to grow in Japan, and the park was abuzz with
activity: Every table in the reception area was occupied, and the
area outside was almost all built up.
In May of that year, BusinessWeek ran
a cover story on Kyoto as a venture center with the headline, "Japan's High-Tech
Hope." The article concluded that the city's new breed of entrepreneurs
provides "a chance to write the rule book for Japan's new economy." Heady
praise, indeed, and I wondered how true it really was.
When I visited Kyoto Research Park this year, I wondered
in particular whether the early entrepreneurs had laid the groundwork
for something that could endure the current downturn and thrive later
on. Can Kyoto also succeed at the next level -- not just manufacturing
high-tech components and materials, which it may well continue to
dominate for the foreseeable future, but producing novel services
and software systems for the new economy as well?
On my visits to Kyoto's high-tech hubs, I found much
to be excited about, and many people dedicated to building Kyoto's
reputation. But first, some background.
The land on which Kyoto Research Park stands was formerly
owned by Osaka Gas and used for town gas production and storage,
which became redundant after the utility switched to natural gas
in the 1970s. Yasuo Akasaka, the president of KRP and -- like all
the other managers I met -- still an Osaka Gas executive, explained
that the company decided to use the land as a research park based
on the model of Philadelphia University's Science City Center, which
claims to be one of the largest science and incubator parks in the
world.
But Osaka Gas is regulated and has close ties
to the local government, making the profit motive a lesser factor
at the Kyoto park. Instead, a private-public partnership developed
here.
KRP is not only the largest privately funded venture
incubator park in Japan, but it's also an example of successful collaboration
between a private company, the government, and now, increasingly,
the academic sector. In the case of the Science City Center in Philadelphia,
the park is owned by a consortium of universities and research centers.
KRP is 100 percent owned by Osaka Gas, yet a good portion of the
site is effectively under the direction of local government bodies.
KRP turned a profit in 1996 and wiped out all its debt
in 1998. This July it opened its latest building, which now has 85
percent tenant occupancy. There are 170 tenant companies located
in the park, almost 40 of which belong to the Kyoto city government's
incubator service, Advanced Software Technology and Mechatronics
Institute (ASTEM). A total of 2,300 people work on the site, including
staff from Osaka Gas.
The park's most important relationship is with Kyoto
city, through ASTEM. Another public body renting space in the park
is Kyoto Soft Applications (Kysa), which is funded by the city government,
the Ministry of Economy, Trade, and Industry, and the Ministry of
Labor. Both ASTEM and Kysa offer highly subsidized office space to
early startups.
The Kyoto prefectural government
occupies another wing, from which it manages its lending support
program to small companies
and ventures. A government-funded research institute, the Kyoto Institute
of Industrial Research, occupies another wing, and offers industrial
testing services for smaller companies at a subsidized rate. Several
of the people who sit on committees and help to promote Kyoto as
a venture center also maintain offices in the park or use space for
their activities. KRP president Akasaka described their contributions
as "the actions and aspirations of enthusiastic people who want to
break the traditional mold."
A name that comes up often in this respect is Dr. Masao
Horiba, the founder of Horiba Corp. He is the honorary chairman of
ASTEM and active in almost every other area of the Kyoto venture
economy. Born in Kyoto in 1924, he founded his company straight out
of university after World War II. The company is now one of the top
makers of industrial instruments globally. Horiba personifies the
image of Kyoto as individualistic verging on eccentric. His office,
located not far from KRP, is rendered in traditional Japanese plastering.
In the corner stands a full tea ceremony set, and during our meeting,
bowls of maccha (tea ceremony tea) and tea sweets were served.
Horiba is one of several entrepreneurs who enjoys the
more refined side of Japanese culture while helping Kyoto develop
its venture economy in a different and more accelerated direction
than the rest of Japan. Others in this group include Kazuo Inamori,
the founder of Kyocera, and Yoshio Tateishi of the founding family
of Omron. Horiba describes them as the generation that carried the
backpacks to the eighth resting station of Mount Fuji. Now there
are only two stations left for the next generation to reach the top.
But Horiba is also an exception: He is a Kyoto
native. Most of Kyoto's successful venture entrepreneurs come from
somewhere else, yet all of them have an originality that borders
on eccentricity. It must be something in the Kyoto air, or in the
city's ability to fuse culture with learning. Kyoto people themselves
are not inherently risk-takers or entrepreneurial, the locals agree,
but they accept and appreciate originality.
When talking of earlier efforts
made by the government and universities to assist businesses, Horiba
uses the analogy of
a "bad masseur massaging the wrong point." The active participation
of industry is necessary to direct the hands of the masseur to the
right spots, he says. He laments most of all the loss of the postwar
spirit of working for a higher goal. Young people don't have dreams,
he says, and education is the key to changing this.
Horiba believes the structure in place after World War
II, which linked industry, government, and academia in a partnership
called san-kan-gaku, needs to be revived to help university
graduates again. In his view, the system stopped working after the
student uprisings at the end of the 1960s. Trust between the university
sector and industry broke down then, Horiba says, but now conditions
at the universities are changing, and once again he believes they
are producing a type of graduate ready to tap into what he calls "the
Kyoto spirit."
Reform of the education sector will play a vital role
in the rebirth of the san-kan-gaku relationship, Horiba says. He
believes that the government's efforts to stimulate economic recovery
by giving more support to the small company and venture sectors has
largely forced a re-evaluation of the university's role. The government
is considering legislation that would give state universities control
over budgets, salaries, and benefits, making Japan's campuses more
competitive -- and more like private companies.
Kyoto boasts the largest concentration of colleges and
students in Japan as a percentage of population. Leading the way
is the University of Kyoto, which is famous for having produced five
of Japan's 10 Nobel Prize laureates -- further evidence of Kyoto's
originality.
In Kyoto, the third sector (academia) has moved ahead
faster than elsewhere in Japan by establishing the Kyoto Consortium
of Universities, which was incorporated as a public foundation in
1998, comprising over 40 institutes of higher education. Among its
innovations is a mutual credit system, which allows students from
one university to receive credits when attending lectures in another,
and an intern program to make it easier for students to gain work
experience in industry.
The consortium's most visible
project is the establishment of a large conference and events building
in front of Kyoto Station,
called Kyoto Campus Plaza. This was opened in September 2000 at a
cost of JPY12 billion. The plaza is strategically located next to
the bullet trains, facilitating access for visitors from other major
industry centers along the line. Some of Kyoto Research Park's venture
tenants also maintain "shadow offices" at the plaza so they can catch
the latest buzz.
KRP has proposed that the consortium rent the remaining
undeveloped land at the KRP site (18,000 square meters) to establish
a university-industry venture collaboration center. The reform of
the education system, which will allow universities like Kyoto to
set their own budget and investment plans, is likely to be enacted
by 2003.
The University of Kyoto is building a new campus facility called
the International Innovation Center in Katsura on the western side
of the city. The university describes it as "a new center for the
integration and transfer of knowledge and information." One goal
of the center is to help nurture and spin off business ventures.
Its director, Professor Kazumi Matsushige, is also in charge of Kyoto
University's Venture Business Laboratory, making him one of the city's
most influential venture backers. He is also one of the world's leading
researchers in semiconductor materials and has a laboratory named
after him. KRP's Akasaka has invited Matsushige to establish an office
at the park. Akasaka says that because KRP is halfway between Katsura
and the university's main campus, it is in perfect position to serve
as a hub.
Another of the "masseurs" working
to nurture venture businesses in the region is Professor Ken-ichi
Imai of the Stanford
Japan Center in Kyoto. Chairman of several committees charged with
formulating the venture infrastructure in Kyoto, he has spent the
last 10 years running the Stanford center, making him an authority
about the challenges and opportunities for Japan in trying to trace
the road taken by Stanford 40 years ago. He is firm in his belief
that Kyoto cannot adopt the Stanford model.
"The concept of a venture business in Japan and the
US is totally different," Imai says. "In Silicon Valley, a company
which can get venture financing can get access to the best people
-- marketing, legal, software, and so on. They can leap to the No.
1 position by bringing the best human resources together. This doesn't
work in Japan because people are attached to a big company. So in
Japan, to make a similar leap you have to tie up with a big company."
Still, Imai believes Kyoto offers a special climate
for startups. For example, he says, Kyoto has never been the home
of a big bank, like Osaka and Tokyo, so it never had an economy dominated
by keiretsu affiliations and a top-down business structure.
While there may be a freer business climate for entrepreneurs
in Kyoto, Imai says some things don't work well in the former capital.
There is little cooperation or integration among companies, he says,
and the people are fiercely independent and individualistic (by Japanese
standards). Kyoto-ites don't like to cede control to larger entities.
In short, they would rather go their own way and survive in a niche
than grow in every direction, nurtured by government, big business
links, and special banking relationships.
To illustrate his points about Kyoto's unique problems,
he pointed to the Keihanna Science City project in the south of the
prefecture. As noted in the September issue of J@pan Inc,
the Keihanna project is a wonderful concept, but is stranded in the
middle of nowhere, and suffers particularly from an absence of strong
linkage within and between its various research and venture community
parts. Imai wants to help create a clustering phenomenon in Kyoto
similar to the cluster of research centers around Stanford University.
Imai and many others I met
in Kyoto also spoke of the power of what they call the "Kyoto brand." They
suggest that Kyoto has enough allure to make companies and especially
foreign business
people willing to visit. While Tokyo has been a magnet for companies
from all over Japan, companies in Kyoto tend to stay put. Despite
being overshadowed by the large, economically and politically powerful
Tokyo, Kyoto retains a self confidence suitable to a nation's cultural
capital. Seen from its own point of view, Kyoto is the center of
Japan.
The new Kyoto station seems to personify this confidence.
The soaring structure looks like a Bond Street shopping mall lifted
onto a space station, rising over the 19th century railway tracks.
Around this status symbol of cultural superiority, the city would
like to create a new center more in keeping with the ideals espoused
by KRP than with the tourist industry. As if to oblige, Omron recently
moved its head office from the western suburbs next to the station
precinct. It explained that it wanted to be better connected to the
flow of information by being stationed near the bullet train tracks
connecting to other main industry centers.
While Kyoto is underpinned by its university
culture and strong brand image, it faces the same problems of access
to the markets and buzz of Tokyo that other regional centers face.
Tokyo simply has the biggest market, the most information, the most
software coders, and the best access to finance. It has also received
the full influx of foreign financial institutions and legal and marketing
firms. The Kyoto brand and lifestyle have not been able to bring
in global service companies. The sheer size of Tokyo creates an imbalance
that saps the ability of regional economies to expand.
One of the exceptions to this
is a new venture capital advisory set up by Richard Okuno, of Japanese-Irish
descent. He worked
for 15 years in the securities business for blue-chip firms such
as Morgan Stanley, and moved to Kyoto earlier this year to start
his venture capital business. "The ideal is to live and work in Kyoto
and visit Tokyo one day a week," he says. "Tokyo is faddish -- it
runs with the crowd. Here people go their own way, so there is less
risk of getting taken in."
According to Okuno, Kyoto-based
companies have a harder time accessing venture capital than many
of their Tokyo counterparts. "The
missing link in Kyoto is access to US-style VC, which exists in Tokyo,
but not here." But, he adds, "If you are local, you can tap the opportunities." He
has rented space in KRP to do just that.
More financing options are beginning to appear in Japan's
cultural capital. Future Venture Corp., for example, is a US-style
investment boutique established in 1998 by a former employee of a
large Tokyo-based VC firm. It has raised a total of JPY4 billion,
or about $33 million, for four funds, and has invested in 67 companies,
28 percent of them in Kyoto and 71 percent in Kansai. In October
it went public on Nasdaq Japan.
Kyoto is growing into its role as one of Japan's most
important high-tech hubs because of the efforts of a few entrepreneurs
like Okuno. And several of those leading the charge come from foreign
shores.
One foreign pioneer -- and
an original in the Kyoto tradition -- is a Canadian, Ian Shortreed,
owner of Mercury Software
Japan. He came to the region in 1980 as a Kyoto University student
with a focus on natural language research. He set up Mercury in 1988
and has since earned himself a place in the local software industry.
He thinks he is probably typical of many Kyoto graduates in liking
Kyoto and finding an opportunity to stay. "It's almost like a West
Coast lifestyle, minus the sea," he says.
Shortreed makes a point of
developing software products that are very culturally attuned.
His current products include software
to summarize text on the fly, a two-way input method to translate
Japanese to English and back again, and a virtual 360-degree tour
of Kyoto's most famous Zen gardens (the last one could soon be in
public teledisplay kiosks to welcome visitors arriving in Kyoto Station).
He says Kyodai, short for Kyoto University, is one of the 10 leading
centers for natural language research in the world, and he believes
the Information Science faculty at Kyodai is "probably the best in
Japan."
Another foreigner making a difference is William Maher,
the current coordinator and consultant for international business
at KRP. Maher is setting up a consulting business at the park to
assist local ventures looking for partnerships with companies overseas.
He has found 12 companies to back his new company, LinguaTech International,
and most of them will be early customers of his services. The new
firm will be based at the ASTEM incubator facility, in shouting range
of his old office and all of his contacts in the park. KRP has also
attracted Deloitte Touche Tohmatsu to provide accounting and other
consulting services.
While Kyoto-ites shy from large alliances, they
have no qualms about outsourcing. In fact, they've been doing it
since the city's kimono industry began to thrive centuries ago. Kimono
makers subcontracted work on each stage of the design and production
process. Today KRP has updated this tradition with a service called Yorozu,
which loosely translates as "Jack of all trades." The service offers
a database of 400 ventures and individuals who can do work on an
outsource basis for larger customers. All of its 170 tenants are
members.
Imai of the Stanford
Japan Center says the model of Kyoto's craft industry
-- which uses specialists at each stage of
development to complete a single product -- is adaptable to technology
that stresses modularity. "If you deconstruct a keitai, you
will find most of the parts are available from companies in Kyoto," he
says. Kyoto's strength lies today in the very specialized parts and
materials that form the building blocks of state-of-the-art IT appliances.
The leading high-tech companies in Kyoto -- with the exception of
Nintendo, which stresses content -- are all parts specialists. Software
and content are likely to sustain the expansion of the Kyoto venture
economy, although the high-tech manufacturing skills that define
Kyoto now will probably determine in many ways how this software
is applied, and the kind of unique products that will continue to
emerge.
The business of just over half of KRP's tenants is related
to multimedia, graphics, or software, making the park one of the
major software hubs outside of Tokyo. Some of the leading ventures
at the park are Langate, Mag Mag, and Interact. Another is Kai Graphics,
which has developed software that can deliver 3-D graphics as an
applet to a PC, doing away with the need for broadband connections
to the Web for sending data back and forth. The software makes it
possible to download a virtual car showroom and rotate a car to view
it from any angle. Yokosuka Research Park near Tokyo thinks enough
of KRP's software to have formed an alliance with it in mobile technology.
An agreement was signed two years ago to share information and promote
each other's technology. Yokosuka, which also houses NTT main research
laboratories, is the largest research park for mobile technology,
but almost all of its technology is hardware.
Imai believes one important area in Kyoto's future will
be interactive technology. He believes the human interactive software
being developed at the ATR labs will meld perfectly with Kyoto's
craft skills in miniaturization and produce a radically new technology.
It will result in a variety of new IT products with high levels of
human interface, convenience, and Kyoto-style grace.
Shortreed has his own take on the human-interface software
that could come out of Kyoto. He is passionate about the importance
of voice and language software, most of which is driven by the software
sciences of artificial intelligence. As he sees it, ATR is slow in
turning what it has into products. But he sees things starting to
change now.
Imai chairs a committee
under the auspices of Kyoto prefecture that is trying
to create a network of IT corridors which
will help integrate different industry and technology clusters. These
corridors are to have massive broadband capability and an information
exchange system or IT portal, which is currently termed the "Kyoto
IT Bazaar." When the system is operating -- and there are no concrete
plans to implement it yet -- anyone could connect interactively,
linking physically separated centers like ATR with other high-tech
hubs in the region.
Part of Kyoto's strength is its lack of stifling, centralized
structures. When the Imperial Court pulled up stakes and moved to
Tokyo after the Meiji Restoration, it left Kyoto free from the suffocating
effects of the central government, the keiretsu system, and other
large bureaucratic structures that are anathema to entrepreneurs.
The lack of these things has allowed interesting initiatives to thrive
here, and Kyoto's high-tech pioneers are trying to channel the city's
energy to make sure these initiatives grow.
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