Stop comparing London to Silicon Valley. It's a waste of time. I moved from the UK to New York a few years ago (before the startup scene really got going in the UK) and you can't compare New York to Silicon Valley, either.<p>However, every place has strengths that Silicon Valley does not. Both New York and London are very well connected to other industries like media, banking and fashion. They're actually great counterparts to each other- London being a gateway to Europe, and New York being a gateway to North America.<p>I'd love to set up some sort of intercontinental exchange programs for NY+LON startups. Companies offering desk space to their transatlantic cousins for mutual benefit. Let me know (contact details are in my profile) if you'd be interested in something like this- I want to get to know some more startups "back home" in any case!
There are so many pieces on what is wrong with the London scene, because the real scene (full of crazy people) is in Silicon Valley. You cannot compete with the insane people there who are happy to destroy capital and jobs in the pursuit of notoriety, peer adulation and the odd $1bn exit.
Plenty of things are wrong with the London startup scene - Silicon Valley has the advantage of being close to great universities where you can recruit great talent (not that these companies don't go to the East Coast to recruit).<p>London doesn't have that, at least from a technical talent perspective - the area that comes close to matching that description in the UK is Cambridge (or Oxford, to some degree).<p>Secondly, even if you have people with good talent available, many of them see the London finance machine as their destination of choice (though they may not admit so openly). The finance culture has seeped into the startup culture as well - many of them see the finance companies as their potential clients (so that's not surprising) - but that has led to a gatekeeper culture that is prevalent to a lesser degree in the US (maybe I'm wrong here).<p>Lastly, the level of risk-aversion is generally higher in the UK than that in the States - the positive energy on the West Coast is _tangible_.<p>How many APIs have you seen coming out of London - and frameworks people can build upon? That is, raw technical products for the heck of it - not travel websites, shopping portals or phone-apps. Those are the things that form the bedrock that show the underlying passion of the startup community of an area. London (and the UK) sorely lacks that.
"It’s almost a daily thing now, reading blog posts from people sat behind desks somewhere in the world talking about “what’s wrong with the London startup scene” to drive traffic to their site. Consider this post two-fingers up to those people."<p>Touche!<p>Silicon Valley is unique and will always be. Trying to replicate this scene just won't happen. Fortunately places like London are so diverse (Americans, British, Brazilian... ) and things are happening.<p>You can find like minded people anywhere. If you have the enthusiasm and are willing to work - the money and people will find you.
<p><pre><code> ... talking about “what’s wrong with the London startup
scene” to drive traffic to their site. Consider this post
two-fingers up to those people.
</code></pre>
Two-fingers up?