Hogan Lovells 2024 Election Impact and Congressional Outlook Report
The summit focused on key questions regarding growth opportunities and investment strategies for European technology companies:
Funding from the US is crucial – for now: While growth funding for AI & deep tech companies from European investors and initiatives from governments are on the rise, the harsh reality remains that companies looking for significant growth better peer for funders across the Atlantic until the European ecosystem fully evolves. Wise advice to founders by Itxaso Araque.
The war for talent will not be won on a payslip: European ecosystems will not be paying 300k salaries anytime soon. Which makes it even more important to focus on other aspects of happy employees: tax-optimized employee participation schemes, flexible work offerings, impact for individuals and teams – and the protection of Europe's USP of freedom, democracy and social security. Thanks, Amine Abidi, for your thoughts on circularity of talent.
Compute sovereignty is not a nice-to-have: Building and maintaining a sturdy and competitive EU-first infrastructure is the crucial basis for further AI & deep tech innovation and Europe's sovereignty. Thanks for the shoutout to European companies leading the way in terms of efficiency and sustainability, Norman Behrend.
Europe must leverage its strong corporates: Our strong established industry is not in contrast to AI & Deep Tech innovation but an excellent breeding ground with indefinite areas of application for AIoT and beyond. Cooperation and openness exist on both sides but should be prioritized. Sebastian Lach and ELTEMATE make a great example here.
EU tech law is here to stay: We better get out of denial stage. Investors and founders in any deep tech and AI related market need to upskill today and surround themselves with the right advisors to stay ahead of the curve.
Mindset is queen: Be it investors, companies, advisors or customers – we can all do better in embracing a bit more of this somewhat magic ingredient that creates thriving startup ecosystems and herds of unicorns. Thank you, Marcel Quennet, for bringing the topic to the agenda.
A particular highlight was the keynote speech by Michael Tobin, a British tech entrepreneur who was honored by Queen Elizabeth II with an Order of the British Empire (OBE) for his "services to the digital economy". He outlined a multi-layered picture of the European innovation landscape and highlighted the journey towards the future: In order to unlock the full potential of AI, companies need to invest in infrastructure, comply with regulations and prioritize sustainability. Tobin concluded that the race to utilize AI in line with ecological aspects has only just begun and that legal framework conditions are crucial for the social acceptance of AI.
The Hogan Lovells technology company ELTEMATE described practical use cases for the application of AI, particularly in the legal and compliance sectors.
External speakers and panelists
Amine Abidi, McKinsey; Itxaso Araque, Google; Jelena Bauer, McKinsey; Ties Boukema, Dawn Capital; Guy Conway, Koble; Dr. Catherine Cutts, KKR; Marisa Krummrich, b2venture; Dan Nechita, European Parliament; Dr. Marcel Quennet, Quantistry; Dr. Philipp Raidt, FGS Global; Dr. Stefan Schiefer, Genesis Cloud; Dr. Sebastian Schirber, Artefact; Michael Tobin OBE, Technology Entrepreneur; Matthias Wilkendorf, Goldman Sachs; Dr. Patrick Wollner, McKinsey
Hogan Lovells speakers and panelists
Lucie Arntz; Marcus Busch (ELTEMATE); Dr. Leopold von Gerlach; Dr. Sebastian Lach (ELTEMATE); Dr. Martin Pflüger; Dr. Falk Schöning; Dr. Stefan Schuppert; Dr. Jasper Siems; Thiemo Woertge; Dr. Nikolas Zirngibl
Panels
>>>> For more information: AI Investment Summit 2024 – Insights