Decoder: Incubator vs Accelerator



The terms startup accelerator and startup incubator might seem like they have the same meaning: to help your business grow. They are often interchangeably used, but both differ a lot from one another. While one helps established businesses grow quickly, the other helps flesh out the details in starting a new business.

What Is A Startup Incubator?

A startup incubator or business incubator is a collaborative program designed to help your very early-stage startup to develop until it is able to sustain itself in the market.

In simple terms – incubators incubate new ideas and help new entrepreneurs convert their ideas into a business model and eventually into a working business. Incubators usually don’t provide any funding to the startups.

It is also important to note that startup incubators are usually non-profit. This fits their line of work quite well and this means that they are usually run by academic or government institutions.

What Is A Startup Accelerator?

Startup accelerator or business accelerator is an organisation that helps your developing startup to grow by providing structured guidance, mentorship, access to investors and other support.

Accelerator helps young startups and businesses grow quickly during their starting stages by providing years’ worth of learning in short periods of time rather than letting them learn by scratch. They also often provide funding to the startups to kickstart their growth.

The nature of the functioning of accelerators means that it is usually run by established, successful companies and are usually for-profit.

This clearly sets both, incubators and accelerators, quite apart from one another. It helps if you look at how incubators and accelerators differ from one another in the various other aspects too.

Purpose

Incubation and acceleration aren’t the same. Incubators incubate very-early stage businesses by helping them convert their ideas into businesses. Accelerators, on the other hand, accelerate already running businesses that have some potential.

Incubator

Startup incubators help new entrepreneurs flesh out their business ideas by providing them with the following resources –

  • Infrastructure
  • Networking
  • Financial advisory/ Intellectual property teams/ Legal advisory
  • Contacts for potential investors
  • Manufacturing
  • Initial financial support
  • Training and guidance
  • Incubators help them convert their business idea into a successful business with a proper business model.

Accelerator

A startup accelerator or business accelerator help early-stage startups in becoming successful and accelerating their growth by providing them with structured guidance. This guidance is usually taken from the practices followed by other successful ventures and moulded to fit the current startup and help boost their growth and sales.

Apart from the structured guidance, accelerators also provide businesses and startups with –

  • Resources focused on achieving increased growth within a short span. This includes infrastructure, mentorship, seminar, and workshops
  • Funding in exchange for equity in the company
  • Legal guidance
  • Networking opportunity

Working Time-frame

Incubation period could be different for different businesses. Usually, startups work with incubators for a longer period compared to working with accelerators who have fixed time-frame cohorts.

Incubator

Due to the nature of incubators and businesses in general, joining and working with incubators usually means that both work together for longer periods. Incubators look to get a new business get started from scratch.

Incubators also tend to work on an open-ended basis – incubators tend to keep in touch with and provide help and resources even after the business has been established.

Accelerator

Accelerators are usually laser-focused on achieving growth numbers quickly. Hence they tend to take the best and optimum approach possible in the shortest time, leading to accelerators working with businesses and startups for much shorter periods of time compared to incubators.

It goes without mentioning that accelerators tend to work on a more close-ended basis – the businesses or startups are required to present their growth numbers at the end of the accelerator program. Once the specified growth target has been achieved, it tends to focus on the next business at hand and long term support varies according to the accelerator.

Joining

Joining an incubator is far easier than joining an accelerator. Accelerator provides a business with a lot of resources. Hence, it has a rigorous selection procedure as well.

Incubator

Joining a business incubator usually involves relocating to a shared coworking space that houses other yet-to-be-launched businesses. It is also easier to get into an incubator compared to an accelerator – all you need to have is a valid idea to get into one. The rest is provided by the incubator in making sure the finer details are all fleshed out to be made into a functioning business.


Accelerator

Joining a business accelerator usually doesn’t involve in the shifting of the business operation but requires the founders and employees to focus most of their time in executing the plans formulated by the accelerator after lengthy discussions and analysis.

But joining an accelerator program is stricter than joining an incubator – the startup or business must be up and running along with some initial traction on its part to be selected by an accelerator. Accelerators also tend to prefer startups and businesses that have already identified an MVP (Minimum Viable Product).

Raising Funds

A startup doesn’t require much funds at the time of validating an idea or converting it into a business. However, it may require additional funds to accelerate an already running business. Hence, accelerators focus more on helping startups raise funds.

Incubator

Startup incubators do not focus much on raising funds, especially during earlier stages of fleshing out the business idea. Though it acts as a platform for entrepreneurs and startups to network and also meet potential funding prospects, the act of raising funds is pushed to later stages.

Instead, incubators focus on making the idea into something that will attract investors to it and provide entrepreneurs with the necessary training and preparation to raise funds.

Accelerator

Accelerators, with their shorter time-frames, generally tend to focus on the act of raising funds quickly after laying out the necessary course of action for the startup or business.

Accelerators generally provide in-house funding and tend to have a larger network of investors, VCs and angel investors within their reach. This helps it quickly gain funding rather than waiting to get noticed by an investor.

Funded By

Incubators are often not-for-profit organisations while accelerators are for-profit organisations backed by big businesses.

Incubator

Most business incubators are not-for-profit organizations funded by government or academic institutions. This fits well with their nature of operation in the fact that it provides a nurturing environment for newer businesses to take off from their ideation stage.

Accelerator

A business accelerator or startup accelerator is generally run by other established companies and businesses – this helps them provide the necessary guidance and support from previous learning experience for faster and quicker growth. In these cases, accelerators are usually for-profit ventures.

Equity

Since accelerators offer more resources, they expect more equity compared to incubators.

Incubators

Since Incubators are not-for-profit organisations that usually doesn’t invest in your startups, they usually take very little or no equity.

Accelerators

Since accelerators also provide funding to the startups, they take some equity in it as well.

NB: Article first appeared on Feed Dough
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