Bulldog unbowed: UK climbs KPMG tech innovation rankings

Doug Woodburn
clock • 2 min read

KPMG says the core attributes that have made the UK tech sector so attractive remain in place

The UK has defied uncertainty surrounding Brexit by leaping from seventh to fourth place in a list ranking the most promising markets for technology breakthroughs.

The rankings, compiled by KPMG, asked 841 business executives at tech companies, venture capital firms and angel investors that focus on technology which country they felt shows the most promise for disruptive technology breakthroughs.

The UK placed fourth with a 10 per cent share of the vote, behind only the US (26 per cent), China (25 per cent) and India (11 per cent).

London also ranked at number five in the list of rising technology hubs respondents felt could challenge Silicon Valley, behind Shanghai, New York, Tokyo and Beijing.

Although the majority of UK techies felt Brexit would be bad for their industry - with high-profile vendors like Microsoft vocal in their backing of the Remain campaign - the tech sector here has proved its resilience by continuing to perform well and suck in investment, KPMG said in its commentary.

This confidence has been further bolstered by Google and Facebook's decision to hire more UK staff, Apple's decision to move to a new London HQ, and IBM's plans to open four UK datacentres, KPMG said.

It also praised the UK government for making tech a key priority of its new Industrial Strategy, singling out its £2bn R&D fund for emerging technology such as AI and robotics.

"Despite Brexit, the core attributes that have made the UK tech sector so strong and attractive remain in place, including an amazing talent base that has a long track record of creativity; great infrastructure and facilities; first class universities; a stable legal system; appropriate fiscal incentives; time zone advantages; and an ecosystem of advisers that support the needs of tech companies," KPMG stated.

Respondents were also asked which company they felt is the leader in driving technology innovation, with Google topping the pile on 20 per cent of the vote.

Apple finished second on 15 per cent, down on the 18 per cent share it garnered last year, with Microsoft (12 per cent) and IBM (seven per cent) completing the top four, ahead of Amazon, Tesla Motors, SpaceX and Alibaba.

You may also like
AI innovation is fuelling growth amongst Microsoft partners, report finds

Vendor

Microsoft partners are seizing "generational" AI opportunities, fuelling ecosystem growth

clock 22 March 2024 • 1 min read
CrowdStrike CEO George Kurtz on Microsoft's 'murky' breach details, Palo Alto Networks platform debate

Vendor

In an interview with CRN, Kurtz discusses Palo Alto Networks’ change in strategy and Microsoft’s explanation for its recent executive emails breach

clock 12 March 2024 • 11 min read
'Start-ups often approach problems in fresh, innovative ways': Avanade's chief innovation officer on channel strategy

Reseller

Annette Giardina tells CRN all about Avanade’s start-up strategy, AI skills and sustainability

clock 12 February 2024 • 4 min read

Sign up to our newsletter

The best news, stories, features and photos from the day in one perfectly formed email.

Highlights

Staff & Salaries 2022

Staff & Salaries 2022

A snapshot of pay and headcount trends in the UK channel

Doug Woodburn
clock 09 March 2022 • 1 min read
Midwich CEO on Nimans acquisition, 2021 results and return to pre-pandemic levels

Midwich CEO on Nimans acquisition, 2021 results and return to pre-pandemic levels

Stephen Fenby talks to CRN after Midwich’s 2021 results in which profitability exceeded pre-pandemic levels

Josh Budd
clock 08 March 2022 • 3 min read
4 more vendors suspend sales in Russia following Ukraine invasion

4 more vendors suspend sales in Russia following Ukraine invasion

IBM and Microsoft are among a number of vendors which have also announced that they will halt sales in Russia following the invasion of Ukraine.

clock 08 March 2022 • 3 min read