Under Pressure To Perform, Deutsche Telekom Revamps T-Venture Strategy

Mike Butcher

Mike Butcher is the European Editor for TechCrunch. A former grunge rock drummer, he became a long time journalist, and has since written for UK national newspapers and magazines including The Financial Times, The Guardian, The Times, The Daily Telegraph and The New Statesman. Mike is also a co-founder and shareholder of TechHub, a co-working space/service/community with several locations... → Learn More

Tuesday, September 4th, 2012
T-Venture

Hot on the heels of news that Telefonica is ramping up its activity with a new fund for Latin America and an acceleration of its incubator network, comes the news that Deutsche Telekom is getting frustrated that its T-Venture arm isn’t performing as well as it might.

Bloomberg reports that owners Deutsche Telekom plan to revamp venture investment activities in order to allow T-Venture to acquire majority stakes in startups, adjusting how it works to “enable quicker decisions on attractive targets”.

T-Venture has a total budget of about €450 million ($566 million) for investments, with investments in roughly 80 companies. However, Deutsche Telekom managers are reportedly not satisfied with the progress so far and plan to step it up.

About €100 million of T-Venture’s current budget has been invested, while €240 million has been set aside for minority investments and early-stage startups, and €100 million can be spent on majority stakes and follow-up funding for existing investments, according to a spokesman Bloomberg quotes.

However, perhaps they just need to co-ordinate their efforts better?

Deutsche Telekom owns mobile network T-Mobile which now has its own incubator brand in Berlin
- hubraum – in a move which somewhat apes Telefonica’s Wayra network. Hubraum plans to put in up to €300,000 per startup and take in 10 to 15 companies every year. But it only has one outlet in Berlin so far. That’s not a lot of startups.

Meanwhile, T-Venture has been investing in bigger tech firms like Mobilisafe, Roamware, an Ubiquisys, as well as consumer startups like MyTaxi and Airbnb clone 9flats.