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    K2 Photonics founding team: Justinas Pupeikis, Benjamin Willenberg, Prof. Ursula Keller, and Lukas Lang

    K2 Photonics secures Seed Funding to simplify frequency comb technology for global industries

    Do. 06.11.2025, 16:40

    K2 Photonics, an ETH Zurich spin-off, has closed its seed funding round, paving the way for broader deployment of its laser and frequency comb technology across industrial and scientific sectors. The company aims to make this advanced technology more practical and accessible for a range of applications worldwide....Read more

    The seed round was led by Paeonia Capital, a Singapore-based family office providing strategic support for global expansion and access to Asian markets. The funding will accelerate the development and scaling of K2 Photonics’ laser systems, which leverage advances in laser physics and noise optimization within femtosecond oscillators. These innovations allow passive stability, reducing reliance on complex control systems and simplifying integration for industrial users.

    Frequency combs—precise tools for measuring time and frequency—are critical in applications such as environmental monitoring, semiconductor characterization, metrology, and quantum timing systems. Historically, frequency comb solutions were large, expensive, and difficult to deploy. K2 Photonics addresses these challenges by offering compact laser modules and measurement sub-systems that maintain high-quality light properties while lowering barriers to integration.

    The company has already established installations across four continents and completed proof-of-concept demonstrations in multiple application areas. Its core laser technology is well-established and designed for efficient scaling, supporting rapid adoption across diverse industries.

    Reflecting on its journey, K2 Photonics recognizes the support received from the Swiss startup ecosystem, including Venture Kick and the Gebert Rüf Stiftung, during its pre-seed phase. With this new funding, the company is set to expand its footprint and make frequency comb technology more accessible to industries worldwide.

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    BTRY raises USD 5.7 million to industrialize ultra-thin solid-state batteries

    Do. 06.11.2025, 09:05

    Swiss startup BTRY AG has closed a USD 5.7 million oversubscribed seed round to scale production of its ultra-thin solid-state batteries. The company develops compact, fast-charging, and temperature-resistant cells designed for connected labels, sensors, and wearables....Read more

    BTRY’s thin-film solid-state batteries combine rapid charging, temperature stability, and nonflammable safety in one of the world’s thinnest formats. Drawing from semiconductor production methods, the company has engineered batteries that outperform conventional lithium-ion cells. They operate safely at temperatures up to 150°C, where standard cells degrade or catch fire, and can fully charge within one minute—directly powering wireless transmissions without additional components.

    The new funding will support the transition from lab-scale production to industrial roll-to-roll manufacturing. BTRY is now focusing on setting up its production lines, refining industrial processes, and securing integration agreements for upcoming device generations.

    Targeting high-value applications such as connected labels, industrial sensors, and light consumer electronics, BTRY addresses power supply needs where miniaturization and durability are crucial. Its solvent-free production process also minimizes material waste, offering a more sustainable approach to battery manufacturing.

    Developed in Switzerland, the engineering startup has been ranked among the Top100 Swiss Startups, won Venture Kick, and participated in Venture Leaders. Aiming at global markets, BTRY introduces a new step in compact and reliable energy storage.

    “Venture Kick gave us the kick we needed to grow. The program challenged us to define our market, sharpen our story, gain visibility, and gave us the confidence to move fast," highlighted Co-founder and CEO Moritz Futscher. "Venture Leaders was a great experience connecting with fellow entrepreneurs and leading investors, exchanging insights and receiving valuable feedback that helped us refine our fundraising strategy and think bigger about scaling BTRY.”


    BTRY team picture

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    USD 42M Series A for DeepJudge’s AI knowledge platform for law firms

    Di. 04.11.2025, 14:00

    DeepJudge, ranked third at the latest Top100 Swiss Startup Award, has raised USD 42 million in Series A funding to redefine how law firms manage and retrieve knowledge. The Zurich-based ICT company, founded by former Google search engineers with PhDs in AI from ETH Zurich, has developed an AI platform tailored for the legal sector’s most complex data challenges....Read more

    Legal professionals rely on institutional knowledge accumulated across countless cases, clients, and jurisdictions. Yet, this information is often fragmented across dozens of systems, from document repositories to email archives. As a result, crucial context for legal decisions remains hidden. Conventional AI tools struggle with questions such as “Have we negotiated this term before?” or “Which clients does this regulation affect?”—queries that require precise, context-aware retrieval.

    Third-place finisher at the Top100 Swiss Startup Award and Venture Kick winner, DeepJudge takes a retrieval-first approach, connecting AI workflows to the full scope of a firm’s knowledge base. Every precedent, clause, and internal memo becomes instantly accessible within the firm’s secure environment. For law firms, this capability turns static archives into a living, searchable system of expertise.

    Leading international firms—including Freshfields, Holland & Knight LLP, Cozen O’Connor, ArentFox Schiff, and Schoenherr Attorneys at Law—are already integrating DeepJudge’s technology to strengthen decision-making and accelerate case preparation.

    The USD 42 million Series A round was led by Felicis, with continued backing from Coatue Management. The new funding will allow DeepJudge to expand its platform and scale its collaborations with global law firms.

    As the legal industry transitions toward data-driven operations, DeepJudge positions itself as a cornerstone of that evolution—offering precision, security, and speed in an area where accuracy is non-negotiable. The future of legal AI, as the company sees it, is not about replacing lawyers, but empowering them with the full knowledge of their institutions at their fingertips.


    Stefan Steiner (Top100 Director) and DeepJudge Co-Founder and COO Kevin Roth at the Top100 Swiss Startup Award 2025

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    Behind the Jury: Perspectives from Venture Kick Jury Member David Brown

    Di. 04.11.2025, 11:45

    Venture Kick plays a crucial role in transforming the startup ecosystem in Switzerland by providing essential support to ambitious entrepreneurs and accelerating high-potential ventures. A key component of this initiative is a diverse jury comprised of seasoned entrepreneurs, investors, and industry leaders who contribute their expertise, insights, and unwavering commitment at every stage of the selection process. In this interview series, we engage with members of the Venture Kick jury to explore their motivations, the criteria they use to identify promising startups, and their visionary ideas for the future of innovation in Switzerland. Meet David Brown, a former internet entrepreneur, now a deep-tech angel investor and member of the Innosuisse Innovation Council....Read more

    A brief introduction of David Brown
    David Brown co-founded an Internet startup (buyat.com) as the CTO in 1998 and survived the first Internet bubble and bust to then exit to AOL in 2008. Over the past two decades, he has established himself as an angel investor in deep-tech startups in Switzerland, while also serving on several boards. He was SECA angel investor of the year in 2016. Currently, Mr. Brown is a member of the Innosuisse Innovation Council and serves as the chair of the Bridge Proof of Concept panel. In addition to his leadership roles, he is updating his technical expertise by studying online in the Applied Data Science and Machine Learning program at the EPFL Extension School.

    David, can you tell us what brought you to the Venture Kick jury and what has kept you engaged over the years?
    It’s continually inspiring to see new generations motivated to solve meaningful problems as entrepreneurs. I believe in planetary boundaries, the need to move to a sustainable circular economy, and I believe that technological innovation, as promoted by Venture Kick, is a core part of that.

    What makes the Venture Kick program stand out in the Swiss startup ecosystem?
    It really is true to its name and “kicks” startups forward. It has done this at scale and consistently for a long time now.

    What do you enjoy most when interacting with founders during the jury sessions?
    You get to see forward-looking young people - they are not expecting my generation to fix the problems we caused/exacerbated, but are themselves powering ahead to fix them.

    In your opinion, what are the three key success factors a startup should fulfill?
    Any startup has to navigate 3 phases to be successful. Initially, it needs a compelling idea and a strong team to get momentum going. Then it has to determine the value it can bring to potential customers. Then, to grow, it has to figure out how to sell efficiently to these customers and scale up.

    Which global developments do you believe offer the most opportunities for Swiss startups today?
    Deep-tech is my general interest, and I think that Switzerland’s deep-tech ecosystem is nicely positioned to respond to an increasingly complex and technological world.

    What are some of the most pressing challenges that Swiss founders face today?
    I think that it’s mostly about navigating the 3 phases above. For the vast majority of startups, this means financing from investors, and it’s very easy to spend too much time on this instead of building the business.

    What keeps you optimistic about the next generation of startups?
    This is one of the great reasons for giving time to Venture Kick on the jury – Over 15 years, I’ve witnessed how each generation gets stronger.

    If you could add one thing to the Swiss startup ecosystem, what would it be?
    I believe it's essential to integrate the startup ecosystem with the broader economy. Established Swiss companies and the government should embrace innovation from startups by purchasing their products and services instead of viewing them as too risky. While this situation is improving, it is still not as seamless as it is in places like Silicon Valley.

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    FireDrone receives CHF 150,000 from Venture Kick to develop heat-resistant drones for extreme environments

    Mo. 03.11.2025, 12:10

    FireDrone has obtained CHF 150,000 from Venture Kick to roll out temperature-resilient drones. The engineering startup is setting new safety standards in emergency response and industrial inspection, deploying drones that protect lives, infrastructure, and the environment while working to make high-risk operations safer worldwide....Read more

    Firefighters and industrial safety teams face significant risks when assessing high-temperature environments such as burning buildings or industrial furnaces. These conditions expose workers to hazards including toxic smoke, structural collapse, and extreme heat. Conventional drones cannot operate under such circumstances, leaving first responders and inspection teams without real-time situational awareness when it is needed most.

    The Empa spin-off FireDrone develops heat-resistant autonomous drones capable of withstanding temperatures of at least 200°C, delivering real-time hazard detection in environments where standard technologies fail. Using advanced thermal insulation and cooling systems, the drones enhance safety, reduce operational downtime, and improve decision-making in critical situations.

    FireDrone targets two main markets: high-temperature industrial inspections and public safety. Together, these areas represent an estimated market size of USD 12.1 billionUSD 6.45 billion in industrial inspection and USD 5.65 billion in firefighting. The company’s initial addressable market of about USD 1.0 billion includes industries such as cement, steel and aluminum, waste-to-energy, fertilizer, and glass production, as well as first responder operations where conventional drones cannot function due to heat and smoke. These sectors share core needs: minimizing downtime, ensuring worker safety, and meeting regulatory standards—challenges FireDrone’s technology addresses through real-time monitoring in extreme environments.

    The CHF 150,000 from Venture Kick will accelerate its go-to-market efforts by expanding the business development team, onboarding distribution and maintenance partners, advancing product certification, and converting pilot projects into pre-orders across its target industries.

    The founding team unites robotics, materials, and aeronautical knowledge, with Dr. Fabian Wiesemüller and David Häusermann bringing extensive research and field experience in drone design and autonomous systems, while their deep understanding of industrial safety positions the startup to deliver innovative solutions for operations in extreme heat.

    “Venture Kick has been fantastic for us,” highlights Co-Founder Fabian Wiesemüller. “It helped turn an ambitious idea into a venture, sharpened our business case with expert feedback, and opened doors to partners and investors. The program doesn’t just provide seed capital – it brings visibility, structure and momentum that fuel FireDrone’s ongoing growth.”


    FireDrone Co-Founders Dr. Fabian Wiesemüller and David Häusermann

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    RetinAI and the road to EssilorLuxottica: lessons from Co-Founder Carlos Ciller

    Mo. 03.11.2025, 11:00

    When RetinAI was founded in Bern, the goal was clear: use data and artificial intelligence to improve eye health. Today, Co-Founder Carlos Ciller sees the company taking its next step as it joins EssilorLuxottica, the global leader in vision care and eyewear, bringing RetinAI’s AI-powered solutions to a broader, international stage....Read more

    RetinAI develops software that analyzes large-scale retinal images and biomarker data to support the diagnosis and monitoring of conditions such as age-related macular degeneration, glaucoma, and diabetic retinopathy. Its AI platform, RetinAI Discovery, is both FDA-cleared and CE-marked, and is used to advance clinical research and patient care worldwide. Following the company's recent acquisition by EssilorLuxottica, we spoke with Co-Founder Carlos Ciller about RetinAI’s journey, the lessons learned along the way, and his advice for the next generation of entrepreneurs.

     
    "The Venture Leaders program
    brought us our first investment."

     

    RetinAI was recently acquired by EssilorLuxottica. Looking back, what were the most important factors that made this outcome possible?
    It’s hard to pinpoint a single set of decisions that defined our journey. For us, it was a framework built on team selection, focus, and execution. We chose to specialize deeply in ophthalmology because that was our background, moving quickly to form partnerships with established stakeholders—first in pharma, then in clinics—and consistently deliver the highest-quality work to our customers. On the team side, we were deliberate. Each early hire was critical, and we looked for people who could deliver, learn fast, and grow with us. We refused to be intimidated by regulatory frameworks, such as those in medical devices or AI, and instead aimed to maximize ROI for every innovation by collaborating with key players and forming win-win partnerships through our network. Above all, we treated every customer with genuine care. We wanted them to feel we had their back, no matter the circumstance. In the end, customers may forget the details, but they remember how you made them feel.

    That mindset earned us trust and recognition. Over time, our brand gained credibility with customers and peers alike. We were carving out our place in the market just as EssilorLuxottica entered the healthcare field, setting the stage for the next chapter of growth together. Chapter 1 is complete, and chapter 2 is just beginning.
     

    "The money from Venture Kick
    saved the company at the time."

     

    You received early backing from programs such as Venture Kick. How did this support help you establish the foundation for growth and long-term success?
    The money from Venture Kick saved the company at the time. In Switzerland, labels matter—a lot: academic labels, merit labels, grassroots labels, and the seal of approval you get from programs like Venture Kick and other initiatives organized by Venturelab. These were important milestones that helped us close our first pre-seed round. I’m grateful for that support, because without it, we wouldn’t have lived to see what the company became a few years later.



    You also joined the Venture Leaders programs in China and Life Sciences. In what ways did these experiences shape your fundraising strategy and international expansion?
    We were fortunate to be selected for both Venture Leaders Life Sciences in Boston in 2017 and Venture Leaders China the following year. The first trip—and, in fact, the preparation before leaving for Boston—led to our first investment. Had we not been selected for Venture Leaders in 2017, we wouldn’t have been in the spotlight at EPFL’s Startup Night that April/May, and our first angel investor might never have noticed us in the audience. From that perspective, it was incredibly important—and a reminder that you always need to show what you do, because you never know who is listening. 


    "We refused to be intimidated
    by regulatory frameworks."

     

    The trip to Boston opened our minds and exposed us to the realities of entrepreneurship in the US. We built a network of contacts there that continues to have important effects to this day. The trip to China was longer and gave us the chance to explore the Asian giant. It helped us understand that entering such a market would require muscle, significant capital, and dedication. The experience allowed us to reshape our business, reassess opportunities, and refine our focus. I really value these trips as opportunities for new entrepreneurs to grow by learning from peers and exploring the unknown. That mindset will, in turn, be essential for their companies’ success.


    Carlos Ciller at the Venture Leaders China kick-off in 2018

    What advice would you give to entrepreneurs aiming for a successful exit?
    Find the right co-founders and team members, and push yourself out of your comfort zone before you start. Test those relationships early—working together on small projects, if possible. My co-founders were essential to every success, including the exit. When challenges arose, we acted without hesitation or finger-pointing, focusing on thinking and taking action. Understand your situation, and make decisions as a team. Luck comes in waves, and when it appears, you have to be ready to seize it.

    One might think the beginning of an exit happens just months before the event, but in our case, the path started at least two years earlier. From day one, build relationships with industry players—you never know when their strategy or mission might align with your vision. Don’t wait until the end to build those bridges. Get to know the teams that could one day acquire your company, because few buyers acquire businesses they don’t already know.

    Finally, be ready for the possibility of failure. When you lower expectations and focus on conviction—pushing forward with minimal regrets—that’s when you find the clarity and resilience to take your company to new heights. For us, it wasn’t the exit itself, but preparing for the exciting next chapter in the story of Ikerian/RetinAI.


    RetinAI / Ikerian's Co-Founders: CEO Carlos Ciller, CSO Sandro De Zanet, and CTO Stefanos Apostolopoulos

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    USD 16 million for Mimic Robotics to bring physical AI to industry

    Mo. 03.11.2025, 08:30

    Swiss robotics startup Mimic has raised USD 16 million to deploy advanced physical AI for robots capable of performing complex, dexterous tasks across manufacturing and logistics. With this move, the Zurich-based company positions itself as a leading European player in the race toward general-purpose robotics....Read more

    Millions of intricate manual tasks on factory floors still rely on human skill, beyond the reach of traditional robots. Conventional automation handles repetitive motions but requires costly setup for new tasks, while humanoid robots have seen limited adoption due to high costs and safety concerns.

    The robotics startup Mimic, a Venture Kick winner and ranked among the Top100 Swiss Startups, addresses this gap by training AI models on real-world human demonstrations. Operators wear proprietary devices while performing tasks, capturing movement data without disrupting production. The AI enables Mimic’s humanoid hands to reproduce human techniques, react to object changes, and self-correct in human-centered environments.
     
    "Venture Kick was one of our first backers."

    The technology is already piloted with top manufacturers and logistics providers, responding to growing demand amid labor shortages and reshoring trends. Founded in 2024 as an ETH Zurich spin-off, Mimic has a 25-person team and has received support from Switzerland’s federal innovation agency and the AWS Generative AI Accelerator.

    The USD 16 million seed round, led by Elaia and backed by Speedinvest and others, brings total funding to over USD 20 million and will accelerate development of foundation AI models and humanoid robotic hands for real-world deployments.

    "Venture Kick was one of our first backers and really helped us make the shift from a highly technical deep-tech team to a more business-driven company," highlighted Mimic's Co-Founders. "The program moves fast, keeps you accountable, and the bootcamps and expert feedback were incredibly valuable in sharpening our pitch and preparing us for international investors."


    Mimic robotics team

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    Tethys Robotics advances subsea automation with EUR 3.5 million pre-seed round

    Do. 30.10.2025, 09:56

    Born from research at ETH Zurich, Tethys Robotics is modernizing underwater operations once reliant on human divers. The startup has raised EUR 3.5 million in pre-seed funding to accelerate its transition from pilot projects to commercial deployment across Europe....Read more

    When Tethys' co-founder Jonas Wüst first met rescue divers in Switzerland, what struck him wasn’t their courage but the persistent risks defining their work. “We realized how outdated it all was,” he recalls. “Divers were still sent into low-visibility waters to inspect wrecks, recover objects, or deal with unexploded ordnance. It was slow, risky, and often guesswork.”

    That realization became the foundation for Tethys Robotics, a Zurich-based spin-out from ETH Zurich focused on subsea automation. The startup develops autonomous robotic systems capable of performing complex underwater missions—tasks traditionally carried out by divers under dangerous and uncertain conditions.

    The Robotics company has secured EUR 3.5 million in pre-seed funding to expand its engineering and data teams, scale production, and move from pilot deployments to full commercial operations across Europe. Led by Redstone with participation from Euregio+, Alpine VC, Zürcher Kantonalbank, the ETH Foundation, Kickfund, and Venture Kick, the funding represents a step toward industrial adoption of autonomous underwater systems.

    Wüst and his co-founders began developing their first prototypes while studying and conducting research at ETH Zurich. The university’s ecosystem, known for nurturing robotics ventures, provided the technical and academic grounding that shaped Tethys Robotics’ early development.

    By combining robotics, data-driven autonomy, and maritime expertise, the startup, which was ranked among the Top100 Swiss Startups this year, aims to bring safety, precision, and scalability to underwater missions—redefining how subsea operations are conducted in fields from infrastructure inspection to environmental monitoring.


    Tethys Robotics Co-Founders: Pragash Sivananthaguru (CTO), Andrej Studer (mapping lead), Bastian Schildknecht (user software lead), Jonas Wüst (CEO), Johannes Lienhart (COO), and Florin Kümin (robotics software lead)

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    ONWARD Medical raises EUR 50.85 million to advance spinal cord injury therapies

    Di. 28.10.2025, 10:36

    ONWARD Medical, a neurotechnology company developing therapies to restore movement and function in people with spinal cord injuries, has raised EUR 50.85 million in gross proceeds through a private placement. The funding will strengthen the company’s financial position, support product development, and accelerate commercialization activities for its external neurostimulation device, the ARC-EX System....Read more

    The investment was raised via an accelerated bookbuild offering of 11.3 million new ordinary shares at EUR 4.50 per share, determined by ONWARD Medical’s pricing committee. The private placement attracted both existing and new institutional investors. Ottobock SE & Co. KGaA, a global leader in prosthetics, orthotics, and exoskeleton technology, participated as a cornerstone investor, joined by healthcare-focused investor Invus and the ASR Global Impact Equity Fund managed by a.s.r. Asset Management N.V., acting as anchor investors.

    The company intends to allocate the proceeds strategically across its operations. Around 40% will go toward development initiatives, including clinical studies and regulatory activities for the investigational ARC-IM System, which aims to address blood pressure instability in individuals with spinal cord injuries. Another 30% will fund the expansion of sales and operations to support the commercialization of the ARC-EX System in the United States, Europe, and select other regions. Quality, administrative, and operational scaling activities will receive 20% of the funds, while the remaining 10% will cover working capital, general corporate purposes, and financing costs, including existing debt obligations.


    ONWARD Co-Founders: Jocelyne Bloch, MD, Head of the Department of Functional Neurosurgery at the CHUV and Grégoire Courtine, Phd, Professor of neuroscience and neurotechnolgy at EPFL

    The funding is expected to extend ONWARD Medical’s cash runway through at least the end of 2026, assuming no use of its existing debt facility. Despite the strengthened balance sheet, the company’s stock price fell on Euronext Brussels following the announcement.

    Headquartered in the Netherlands, with a Science and Engineering Center in Switzerland and an office in Boston, Massachusetts, ONWARD Medical, repeatedly ranked among the Top100 Swiss Startups, winner of Venture Kick, and participant in Venture Leaders Technology, is developing technologies that stimulate the spinal cord to restore movement and other functions in people with paralysis. Its ARC Therapy platform is based on years of research conducted at leading neuroscience and rehabilitation institutions. ONWARD has received ten Breakthrough Device designations from the US FDA and continues to develop its implantable system, ARC-IM, designed to pair with a brain-computer interface for thought-driven movement restoration.

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    MoleSense receives CHF 150,000 from Venture Kick to develop the first molecular wearable for maternity care

    Di. 28.10.2025, 08:30

    EPFL spin-off MoleSense has received CHF 150,000 from Venture Kick to bring molecular wearables to maternity care. These devices will continuously and non-invasively monitor key biochemical markers in high-risk pregnancies, enabling doctors to make data-driven decisions and mothers to receive proactive care....Read more

    Preterm birth and pregnancy complications remain among the most pressing challenges in maternal health. When a mother’s water breaks too early, doctors face a difficult dilemma: delay delivery and risk infection or induce birth and risk lifelong complications for the baby. With no reliable way to quantify these risks, mothers often undergo invasive tests while clinicians must make life-or-death decisions with limited data.

    The EPFL spin-off MoleSense is redefining women’s healthcare with a new class of wearables that track inflammatory proteins and steroid hormones in real time through non-invasive sweat monitoring using a “wear & forget” device. By combining personalized molecular data with biology-aware machine intelligence, the technology provides real-time, actionable insights for early diagnosis and targeted interventions.

    Founded and led by Gian Luca Barbruni and Ata Golparvar, both PhD graduates from EPFL, MoleSense brings together deep expertise in micro- and nano-engineering and wearable technologies. The team is initially focusing on pregnancy management, aiming to impact more than eight million pregnancies annually across Switzerland, Europe, and the United States. Their approach sets a new standard for proactive, personalized maternity care and targets the USD 110 billion women’s healthcare device market, beginning its rollout with high-risk pregnancy centers such as CHUV.

    The CHF 150,000 from Venture Kick will help the Medtech startup complete validation and move forward along the regulatory pathway toward early market entry.

    “Venture Kick challenged us to think bigger, move faster, and sharpen our vision,” commented CEO Gian Luca Barbruni.

    Gian Luca Barbruni CEO MoleSense

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TOP 100 Startups

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60 venture kickers made it to the TOP 100 startups

Each year, startup.ch launches the TOP 100 STARTUP AWARD in cooperation with the Handelszeitung. From over 100,000 young companies, the 100 most innovative and promising Swiss startups are picked by top startup experts.

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venture leaders program – ten intense days in USA or China

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Kick your startup idea to success with venture kick

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More than 50.000 startups were accompanied by the IFJ. A little more then 25 years ago, we have made it our mission to guide these entrepreneurs on their way to successful businesses. So they can develop their role as a part of the Swiss economy.

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  • 66 Venture Kickers made it to the TOP 100 Swiss Startups 2024

    Each year, startup.ch launches the TOP 100 SWISS STARTUP AWARD. From over 100,000 young companies, the 100 most innovative and promising Swiss startups are picked by top startup experts.

    Check out the TOP 100
  • Kick your startup idea to success with venture kick

    Venture Kick is a philanthropic three-stage funding model supporting Swiss startups with up to CHF 150,000. Winning startups can secure additional CHF 850,000 in equity funding from Kickfund plus an InnoBooster grant of CHF 150,000.

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  • Swiss startups ready to take over the World.

    The venture leaders have a clear-cut goal. They envision themselves as global players and want to take the first step to their global expansion. The ten-day business development program is specifically structured to help them achieve this goal.

    More
  • The first address for Startups in Switzerland

    More than 50.000 startups were accompanied by the IFJ. A little more then 25 years ago, we have made it our mission to guide these entrepreneurs on their way to successful businesses. So they can develop their role as a part of the Swiss economy.

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