TEP Times 2016 | Page 3

TEP CONFERENCE • INTERNATIONAL WEEK Welcome Welcome to the 2016 TEP Conference! Start Alliance International Expansion has Never Been Faster or Cheaper By New York International D ay by day our digitalized world grows closer together. In turn, it becomes more and more important for traditional businesses to constantly adapt to the new needs and requirements that are necessary to compete in a global market. This is an especially crucial task for SMEs, Germany’s “Mittelstand.” Manufacturing trade is still the most important part of the bilateral trade relations between Germany and the United States. Startup companies in both countries understand the importance of digital transformation. They will have to support traditional businesses in their transition period and beyond as they lead the way in innovation and entrepreneurship, especially here in New York. It is vital for traditional businesses to take the opportunities that lie within the digital challenge. The TEP Conference in New York will give you the opportunity to gain a unique insight which will foster and improve the transatlantic partnership in the long run. I wish you all productive and informative days in NYC. Brita Wagener Consul General of the Federal Republic of Germany S tephan Beyer, Chief Financial Officer at BigRep—the Berlin startup for large-scale, commercial 3D printers—impressed everyone at Brooklyn’s New Lab back in August. He had shipped a huge box from Berlin to New Lab with BigRep’s newest and biggest 3D printer and was ready to install it for the first time. BigRep started working with New Lab just this year, and the partnership has benefitted both. “We are the center for design and new manufacturing in New York City. Having the BigRep team with us provides our members with impressive new printing capabilities,” said Scott Cohen, cofounder of New Lab. For Stephan Beyer it was an easy choice. New Lab is part of the Start Alliance initiated by the cities of Berlin and Brooklyn and enables BigRep to expand to the US faster and cheaper than before. “Entering the US market is challenging for everybody. Having the Start Alliance enabled us to concentrate on our business and worry less about the basics.” Like New York, Berlin is the booming urban startup scene in Europe. Young founders, creative disruptors, and innovative thinkers have become a driving economic force to inspire a new culture of networking. Multinational and local businesses in Berlin, from mid-sized companies to big industry players, are working closely with startups across the field, seeking their advanced digital expertise. In return, established companies share their many years of market experience. This combination has become an innovative formula for success. The Start Alliance, under the leadership of Berlin’s trade promotion agency, Berlin Partner, is taking this to a new level by implementing a global exchange program in the world’s leading startup capitals. The initiative has so far been successfully launched in Tel Aviv, New York, Shanghai, and Paris. “Within a year we brought four major tech hubs to the table. We built the base by supporting founders with their international expansion and agreed to foster a collaboration among global tech cities,” said Stefan Franzke, managing director at Berlin Partner, who initiated the alliance. The concept is simple: young founders get the opportunity to test out a new startup ecosystem. Globally, Berlin Partner is collaborating with the most in-demand co-working hubs in partnering markets, and together they offer participating young founders free co-working space for a limited time period. Stefan Franzke, CEO of Berlin Par tner for Business and Technology is the initiator of the Start Alliance.© Fotostudio Charlottenburg A s one of the organizations that helped launch this annual conference in 2011, the American Council on Germany is delighted to partner with New York International, Berlin Partner, and the German Consulate General, among others, again this year. We are especially pleased to have the opportunity to round out this year’s conference with additional sessions on Thursday focused on the nexus of policy, entrepreneurship, and the global economy. Much as the founders of the American Council on Germany were forward-looking in 1952 when they recognized that it was critical to strengthen ties between Germany and the United States in order to en