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STRATEGY & BUSINESS PLAN
Executive Summary
x5 GVA
2,200 new jobs
x3 school leavers into digital employment
400 new jobs
e-Government as a platform for growth
10 VC-funded Jersey companies
10 new digital companies
Digital learning hub
Events
Tech talks
Outbound missions
Space Programme
100% high-speed wireless in schools
Jersey Digital Ideas Marketplace
Jersey Tech Growth Fund
PURPOSE
The purpose of Digital Jersey is to act as an accelerator for the digital economy and as an accelerator for a digitally enabled and connected society. The digital economy includes both the digital sector itself and the application of technology across all sectors.
DIGITALLY ENABLED
SOCIETY
DIGITAL JERSEY
AS AN ACCELERATOR
JERSEY S THE
DIGITAL DIGITAL SECTOR ECONOMY
OBJECTIVES
Digital Jersey has three primary objectives:
1 To support sustainable economic growth in Jersey s digital industry, as measured by sector
contribution to GVA, job creation and the number and health of digital businesses.
2 To enable a connected, digital society and enhanced quality of life in Jersey, as measured by an
increased provision of online services by government, changes in the IT education curriculum, improved skills and awareness in the general population, and the development of essential digital infrastructure.
3 To establish Jersey as an internationally well-regarded digital centre , as measured by ranking in
key indices, recognition in target media and online statistics, the results of industry surveys and sector-specific inward investment.
These objectives flow into the four priorities established by the States of Jersey s Economic Development Department (EDD) Enterprise Strategy:
1 Improving the productivity of business in Jersey and reducing dependence on inward migration. 2 Support for high-growth firms in high-value activity.
3 Attracting inward investment in high-value-added activities.
4 Ensuring that regulation does not impede business.
Digital Jersey s primary objectives translate into the following SMART targets:
By 2020, the digital economy will have grown by a factor of five from its 2013 level
By 2020, employment in the digital sector will be increased by 2,200 four times higher than its 2013 level of 560
By 2016, there will be 400 new jobs in the digital sector in the island
By 2018, there will be five times more Jersey students finding work in Jersey s digital sector than in 2013
Jersey will have a reputation as a preferred jurisdiction for investment target sectors, including e-health, e-government, data ownership and other strategic areas
By 2017, Jersey residents will use innovative services that will enhance their well-being, delivered over an e-government platform that gives equal access to all
Digital Jersey will establish an impact evaluation framework, along UK Treasury Green Book guidelines, in order to measure the impact resulting from the activities deployed to reach these targets, their outputs and outcomes.
DIGITAL JERSEY S STRUCTURE
Digital Jersey is comprised of:
A board, combining on- and off-island Non-Executive Directors, giving a strong base of knowledge and experience to facilitate sector growth and export business.
An executive who, with the guidance of the board, devises and executes activities intended to meet its primary and intermediate objectives.
Technical Action Groups, which engage with the communities who will experience growth and benefit from Jersey s evolution towards being a digital island . These communities include the private sector, the public sector, students, and residents. The TAGs are substantially responsible for developing and delivering work streams around: developing Jersey s competitive propositions, education & skills, business development, regulation & legislation and government & infrastructure.
BACKGROUND
Digital Jersey is an independent organisation, funded by the States of Jersey and responsible for promoting Jersey as a leading centre for digital excellence. Digital Jersey became operational in February 2013 with the appointment of Chief Executive Officer Ted Ridgway Watt.
Working alongside government and industry, Digital Jersey coordinates activities that improve the environment for digital business and individuals in Jersey; these activities include skills development, technical innovation, legislative and regulatory change, social connectivity and research & marketing.
Digital Jersey coordinates strategies and activities that enable:
Jersey to develop and attract digital businesses
The digital sector to create sustainable employment
Digital businesses to make substantial contributions to the island s economy and diversification strategy
A connected digital society
CHALLENGES
To succeed in this endeavour, Jersey faces serious challenges, including the island s late entry to a digital strategy, major competition from other jurisdictions and the significant incentives provided elsewhere, the lack of critical skills available in Jersey and long-term challenges in IT education, not least the lack of a university. Low levels of local innovation and a small, though excellent, IT sector focused on services rather than IP creation are also factors. Fewer than 600 people work in the independent IT sector, with the majority of these delivering services to the financial and public sectors. Furthermore, there is little track record for tech start-ups, diversification or collaboration. Finally, the high cost of data connectivity is perceived to be an obstacle to growth.
ADVANTAGES
Jersey has a good proposition for broad inward investment projects, with quality of life, a light tax regime and robust legislation examples of attraction factors.
However, the island also has two good enablers for growth in a knowledge-driven economy: a bold plan for total connectivity and strong social capital; the latter a proven ingredient of success in sustainable centres of excellence and the hardest to create quickly.
SWOT
The characteristics of Digital Jersey are shown below as a SWOT analysis. Note that this applies to both the community of businesses, students & residents and to Digital Jersey Limited.
STRENGTHS WEAKNESSES
DJL is a well-conceived and Low numbers in digital sector supported project Small cohort in education
Strong early engagement with DJ Limited capacity for population and good access to government increase
High-calibre board Existing digital capability inward focus
Jersey strengths (tax, finances, Slow rate of change in States of Jersey skills, legislation and regulation, quality of life) Lack of appetite for diversification
Social capital Low entrepreneurial activity
Offshore reputation
Geographical location
OPPORTUNITIES THREATS
Gigabit project and walled garden Lack of engagement by industry test bed proposition Constraint on inward migration
Focused development of new Global competition in new markets sectors (data, e-health, social gaming, e-government) Other jurisdictions earlier positions
Competitive regulation and/or Data/IP legislation too slow legislation Data connectivity cost
University of Jersey
Well-integrated skills pipeline fit for Jersey s employment needs
Tech investment from Jersey
Potential to move quickly
CRITICAL DEPENDENCIES
Delivering Jersey s bold but achievable targets requires the following critical dependencies to be in place:
No barriers to inward migration of essential skills and talent. Development of on-island skills is a key priority but will take time to gain momentum. In the early years of the plan, these skills will need to be imported
An education programme that accelerates employment of students and re-skilling of employees towards the digital sector
The communications environment must be exceptional in terms of service reach, domestic and business capability and competitive data pricing
A compelling inward investment proposition for digital companies, financed by the States of Jersey
A funding regime that encourages investment in the digital sector
The effective development of an e-government platform that delivers improved services to citizens and facilitates the development of new services and business opportunities
Continued support by the States of Jersey for Digital Jersey Ltd
SKILLS, GROWTH AND FUNDING
As Jersey must engage in diversified business and new enterprise to grow, the sector needs new talent. To embark on new endeavour, Jersey has four sources of skills:
The independent developer community: numbering fewer than 50, these have a higher than average overseas business and generally have greater agility than companies
Students of ICT-related subjects: approximately 25 per annum come into employment or job seeking from Highlands College, whilst around 15 per annum return to Jersey within 10 years of graduating in the UK
Imported, licenced professionals: the fastest way to establish new competences in the island. This has been a consistent strategy across other jurisdictions intent on driving growth in a new sector
Diversification by existing businesses and re-skilling of workers for digital endeavour. In Jersey, many existing ICT businesses have focused on the domestic market with marginally differentiated products and have not demonstrated an appetite for diversification
To meet the employment demands implicit by the factor five economic growth target, we note that:
Early activity increase in the sector will come primarily from imported talent
Students effectively make continuing education choices at an early stage and so any strategy, policy or incentive applied now will still see a delay before significant changes can be effected amongst school leavers - although the Digital Learning Hub (DLH) could accelerate digital sector employment amongst those choosing not to go to university
Hence, in the initial stages of growth, the prime source will come from imported skills and the secondary source the migration of locally employed people to the digital sector, then school leavers and graduates. Enacting an achievable growth in these employment sources could give 2,200 new jobs by 2020.
DIGITAL EMPLOYMENT GROWTH & COMPOSITION FORECAST
700 600 500 400 300 200 100
0
2104 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020
LICENCES LOCAL STAFF UNIVERSITY STUDENTS STUDENTS FROM DLH
Looking at the composition of employment growth, we see the s-curve, below, reflecting a slow start in both new employment and graduating students. This represents the difficulty in migrating skills to new endeavour in the digital sector and of the early career choices made by students, many of whom who will have made decisions now that will affect their education choices in 2017.
GVA x5
(pinned to
2013 values) Productivity increases of 20% in
the strategic propositions gives x4 employment for x5 GVA
EMPLOYMENT X4
Inward licences to locally qualified staff ratio, 2014 - 2020 1 to 1 - 1 to 4
2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020
MEASURE PROCESS AND ACTIVITY EMPLOYMENT
ECONOMIC VALUE ADDED
GROSS VALUE ADDED
The critical dependencies will determine how quickly employment and then economic returns will flow from activities and processes to stimulate growth.
Growth needs to be underpinned by a thriving investment market
The complementary resource required to drive the sector growth is funding. As a major player in financial services, Jersey should be ideally placed to position itself as a centre for tech funding.
Businesses require a complete pathway of funding and this need presents a specific opportunity for Jersey with its deep expertise in financial services.
Initial start-up funding should be complemented by assistance from the Economic Development Innovation Fund this mechanism has been in preparation for some time but must now be made available immediately.
FUNDING
Digital Jersey is grant-funded by the States of Jersey s Economic Development Department. The level of funding required to support the processes and programmes to meet its SMART objectives is £916K in 2014 and £1116K for 2015. It is intended that, in future, funding could be supplemented by membership fees.
KEY PROGRAMMES AND NEAR TERM DELIVERABLES
The primary objectives will be met against these challenging and prevailing conditions through programmes and projects that set out to build capacity and enhance capability, with Digital Jersey acting as an accelerator for the digital economy, Jersey s digital sector and our digitally enabled society. Outcomes will include:
A JERSEY TECH GROWTH FUND
providing small/mid-cap and up to growth equity investments from the island, managed by the private sector
AN EDUCATION PROGRAMME
that complements the schools and Highlands College s provision of services and includes a Digital Learning Hub, a five-year Space Programme and a 3D printing programme
THE DIGITAL LEARNING HUB
will help students, school leavers and others to acquire the skills and knowledge needed by Jersey s growing digital sector, directly contributing to the drive to reduce dependency on inward licences. Local businesses will need to support the hub with course material and mentors
COMPETITIVE PROPOSITIONS
that support Jersey s strengths in areas of high opportunity and provide a focus for investment, pre-competitive collaboration and training
TARGETING THE CREATIVE SECTOR
to create and deliver more digital content from the island, through seminars, training and outbound missions
Selected near-term activities and targets | To year-end 2014 | 2015 |
New employment in the digital sector | 65 | 115 |
New companies created in Jersey | 6 | 8 |
Inward investments new companies | 8 | 10 |
Outbound missions companies attending | 15 | 20 |
Growth incentive package | Agreed with EDD, active |
|
Digital Learning Hub | Operational, 40 students | 70 students |
Jersey Space Programme | Initiate programme | In curriculum |
Major tech conference hosted in Jersey |
| |
Co-working space for start-up companies | Co-located with DLH |
|
Formation of Jersey Tech Growth Fund | Fund formed | Fund operational |
Funding applications Innovation Fund and other | 8 | 12 |
Apple iTunes store in Jersey |
| |
Monthly tech seminars to extend the reach of the sector |
| |
3D printing programme in schools |
| |
Formation of Channel Islands Info Sec Forum |
| |
Jersey Digital Ideas Marketplace | 6 applications | 10 |
Cisco NVI hub in Jersey |
| Yes/pending |
Initiate target sector development | E-health, social gaming, e-money |
|
Establish baseline data for economic activity of the sector | Publish |
|
Create impact evaluation framework | Publish | Use |
CONCLUSION
The digital sector represents a clear and compelling opportunity for economic diversification for Jersey, offering the potential for high growth with relatively low capital expenditure.
Jersey is late to the gate and faces stiff competition from jurisdictions able to offer compelling incentives around taxation and resource mobility.
Digital Jersey has developed long-term objectives for a five-fold increase in economic activity by 2020, supported by a four-fold increase in employment and definable social benefits. These long-term objectives are founded on, and complemented by, detailed and cohesive programmes and near-term targets and attainments. Given that the critical dependencies will be in place, with the aligned support of all stakeholders, the digital sector can become a vital pillar of Jersey s economic and social strength.