
The Documentary: Part 1 - The History of the Australian Startup Ecosystem: Documentary
12/19/22 • 41 min
In this episode, we explore the seed phase of the Australian startup ecosystem, tracing its roots to some of the earliest catalysts to what we see today. Australian pioneers started innovating well before anything resembled an ecosystem and before the term "startup" was used. We tell the story of trailblazers like the Nucleus Group in 1964, Fairlight in 1975, Computershare in 1978 and much more.
We look at how the macroeconomic conditions in the late 70s and early 80s encouraged the "first great wave" of Australian startups, only for global capital markets to collapse suddenly in 1987. As the new millennium approached, we highlight how the mainstream adoption of the internet gave rise to some of our most recognisable dot com juggernauts, the likes of Seek, REA and Carsales, leading up to the dot com boom.
This series was made possible by our sponsors and partners.
Thanks to MYOB, AWS Startups, Investment NSW & CSIRO.
We would like to acknowledge our earliest sponsors who decided to get involved with this story when it was just an idea on a piece of paper.
Special thanks to UTS Startups & Murray Hurps for being our first sponsor, Western Sydney University’s LaunchPad and the Guild of Entrepreneurs.
ANSTO, Canberra Innovation Network, Curtin University, University of South Australia, LaunchVic, The South Australian Government's Department of Industry, Innovation & Science, The University of Adelaide’s ThincLab, The University of Newcastle’s Integrated Innovation Network, Flinders University’s New Venture Institute, UNSW Founders, UQ Ventures & James Cook University.
And to our promotional partners who have helped get this series in front of the startup community.
Startup Daily, Fishburners, Spark Festival, River City Labs, Stone & Chalk and Spacecubed.
Mentioned in this episode:
NTP Technology Recruitment Company
NTP is the technology recruitment company that values community and who are invested in seeing the growth of Australia's local tech community.
This podcast uses the following third-party services for analysis:
Chartable - https://chartable.com/privacy
Podder - https://www.podderapp.com/privacy-policy
This podcast uses the following third-party services for analysis:
Podtrac - https://analytics.podtrac.com/privacy-policy-gdrp
Spotify Ad Analytics - https://www.spotify.com/us/legal/ad-analytics-privacy-policy/
In this episode, we explore the seed phase of the Australian startup ecosystem, tracing its roots to some of the earliest catalysts to what we see today. Australian pioneers started innovating well before anything resembled an ecosystem and before the term "startup" was used. We tell the story of trailblazers like the Nucleus Group in 1964, Fairlight in 1975, Computershare in 1978 and much more.
We look at how the macroeconomic conditions in the late 70s and early 80s encouraged the "first great wave" of Australian startups, only for global capital markets to collapse suddenly in 1987. As the new millennium approached, we highlight how the mainstream adoption of the internet gave rise to some of our most recognisable dot com juggernauts, the likes of Seek, REA and Carsales, leading up to the dot com boom.
This series was made possible by our sponsors and partners.
Thanks to MYOB, AWS Startups, Investment NSW & CSIRO.
We would like to acknowledge our earliest sponsors who decided to get involved with this story when it was just an idea on a piece of paper.
Special thanks to UTS Startups & Murray Hurps for being our first sponsor, Western Sydney University’s LaunchPad and the Guild of Entrepreneurs.
ANSTO, Canberra Innovation Network, Curtin University, University of South Australia, LaunchVic, The South Australian Government's Department of Industry, Innovation & Science, The University of Adelaide’s ThincLab, The University of Newcastle’s Integrated Innovation Network, Flinders University’s New Venture Institute, UNSW Founders, UQ Ventures & James Cook University.
And to our promotional partners who have helped get this series in front of the startup community.
Startup Daily, Fishburners, Spark Festival, River City Labs, Stone & Chalk and Spacecubed.
Mentioned in this episode:
NTP Technology Recruitment Company
NTP is the technology recruitment company that values community and who are invested in seeing the growth of Australia's local tech community.
This podcast uses the following third-party services for analysis:
Chartable - https://chartable.com/privacy
Podder - https://www.podderapp.com/privacy-policy
This podcast uses the following third-party services for analysis:
Podtrac - https://analytics.podtrac.com/privacy-policy-gdrp
Spotify Ad Analytics - https://www.spotify.com/us/legal/ad-analytics-privacy-policy/
Previous Episode

Emily Casey discusses the importance of visibility of the startup ecosystem
Emily Casey is the founder and director of What The Health, a health media company and community that aims to fuel the next generation of health innovation in Australia. Emily initially pursued a more traditional career in medicine before entering the startup world. In addition to What The Health, Emily has worked as a Community Coordinator for Stone & Chalk, a startup hub in Sydney. In her conversation with guest host Will Tjo, Emily discusses the reasons why she left a more traditional career path in medicine to enter the startup world, as well as the importance of the startup ecosystem having visibility within other industries such as the health industry.
What The Health: https://www.whatthehealth.io/ Stone & Chalk: https://www.stoneandchalk.com.au/Emily on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/emily-s-casey/
This podcast uses the following third-party services for analysis:
Podtrac - https://analytics.podtrac.com/privacy-policy-gdrp
Spotify Ad Analytics - https://www.spotify.com/us/legal/ad-analytics-privacy-policy/
Next Episode

The Documentary: Part 2 - The History of the Australian Startup Ecosystem: Documentary
Episode 2 begins in the aftermath of the dot com bust. We explore the story of LookSmart through the lens of its co-founder, Evan Thornley and the tough choices he had to make. Up until this point, founders largely worked in isolation, however, they began to meet up more frequently after the bust, often in pubs or cafes, thanks to community groups like Innovation Bay. Conferences such as TinSHED and Web Directions would shine a spotlight on the fledgling startup ecosystem. We tell the story of some of Australia's first high growth startups in the early 2000s. The likes of Atlassian in 2003, Campaign Monitor in 2004, Red Bubble in 2006 and many more. Startup infrastructure followed shortly after and we saw the country's first incubators, accelerators and co-working spaces emerge.
Just as things were finally looking up, another economic crisis had gripped the world once again. The Global Financial Crisis in 2008 undoubtedly caused a lot of grief, however, Australia was spared the worst of it. We highlight how the GFC held some unexpected benefits for Australian startups. As the end of the decade approached, new inventions like smartphones and social media and the mainstream adoption of Wi-Fi would come to touch every aspect of our lives, laying the foundation for a new wave of Australian startups - some of the most disruptive that Australia and the world would come to see.
This series was made possible by our sponsors and partners.
Thanks to MYOB, AWS Startups, Investment NSW & CSIRO.
We would like to acknowledge our earliest sponsors who decided to get involved with this story when it was just an idea on a piece of paper.
Special thanks to UTS Startups & Murray Hurps for being our first sponsor, Western Sydney University’s LaunchPad and the Guild of Entrepreneurs.
ANSTO, Canberra Innovation Network, Curtin University, University of South Australia, LaunchVic, The South Australian Government's Department of Industry, Innovation & Science, The University of Adelaide’s ThincLab, The University of Newcastle’s Integrated Innovation Network, Flinders University’s New Venture Institute, UNSW Founders, UQ Ventures & James Cook University.
And to our promotional partners who have helped get this series in front of the startup community.
Startup Daily, Fishburners, Spark Festival, River City Labs, Stone & Chalk and Spacecubed.
Mentioned in this episode:
NTP Technology Recruitment Company
NTP is the technology recruitment company that values community and who are invested in seeing the growth of Australia's local tech community.
This podcast uses the following third-party services for analysis:
Chartable - https://chartable.com/privacy
Podder - https://www.podderapp.com/privacy-policy
This podcast uses the following third-party services for analysis:
Podtrac - https://analytics.podtrac.com/privacy-policy-gdrp
Spotify Ad Analytics - https://www.spotify.com/us/legal/ad-analytics-privacy-policy/
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