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PRIVACY
Tech

Why the South West's tech sector has been a saviour of the Covid-19 crisis

If there is one sector which does not seem to have been affected by the coronavirus pandemic, it is our region’s varied and agile tech industry

Toby Parkins, chairman of Tech South West and co-founding director of software firm Headforwards in Pool, Cornwall

For many businesses, having to find new ways to do business, which in many cases has included offering new contactless and online forms of payment, upgrading their website or pivoting their business entirely to full e-commerce, South West tech businesses, have not only avoided the Covid crunch but may well have saved many others too.

Dan Pritchard, Tech South West co-founder, believes the regional tech cluster, which has more than 2,000 business members from the Isles of Scilly to Bristol, is best placed to reap the benefits of rapid digital transformation brought about by the pandemic.

He believes new opportunities and innovation are well underway.

Dan said: “Technology has saved businesses. Uncertainty leads to opportunity and it’s already happening; companies pivoting, shifting their offering, finding new markets.”

According to Tech South West, some 4,170 online shops opened in the South West during the pandemic, more, in relation to the total number of businesses in the region, than any other part of the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ.

With a new £5m innovation centre set for Taunton, expansion at Exeter and Plymouth Science Parks, the breakthrough of more tech startups from Falmouth University’s Launchpad programme, the new Centre of Technology and Innovation Excellence in North Devon and Gravity development at Junction 23 of the M5, the long term future looks bright for the region’s tech industry.

Toby Parkins, chairman of Tech South West and co-founding director of software firm Headforwards in Pool, said: “Tech companies are making big decisions.