Seoul City recruits new resident companies for the second Seoul Fintech Lab… Strengthening support for fintech startups

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Seoul City will help lay the foundation for early-stage fintech companies by recruiting 8 new companies to settle in the Second Seoul Fintech Lab before May 29. Its goal is to provide office space and growth support programs during the startup phase when funding and manpower are limited, to increase the likelihood of companies establishing a foothold in the market.

According to Seoul City news on the 27th, the Second Seoul Fintech Lab is an incubator for early-stage fintech companies established in 2023. It covers an area of approximately 600 pyeong, with 32 company spaces, 16 member seats, shared conference rooms, training rooms, and rest areas. Fintech is an industry combining finance and information technology; due to rapid service development, network and investment matchmaking are especially important during the initial commercialization stage, making such support facilities crucial.

This recruitment is divided into two categories: companies occupying independent office spaces and member companies using non-designated seating workspaces. The incubator targets early-stage fintech companies established within three years, while member companies can be pre-startup entrepreneurs or fintech and blockchain companies established within seven years. Seoul City has decided to also select pre-startup entrepreneurs before officially launching their businesses starting this year, which can be seen as an expansion of support to the most vulnerable stages before and after registering a business license.

Support is not limited to providing space. Seoul City plans to offer customized guidance, capacity-building training, funding, and investment attraction programs for selected companies. In fact, the Second Seoul Fintech Lab has supported a total of 111 companies so far, achieving results such as 43 billion won in sales, 13.4 billion won in investment attraction, and creating 344 jobs. This indicates that public institutions have effectively reduced early-stage companies’ costs and facilitated their connection to private funding.

Recently, the fintech and blockchain industries are highly sensitive to changes in interest rates, investment psychology, and regulations. Therefore, establishing a survival foundation for early-stage startups is seen as a core competitiveness factor. This recruitment by Seoul City also has an industrial policy aspect, aiming to discover promising technological companies early and keep them in Seoul. This trend may further promote the expansion of public incubation spaces and strengthen investment matchmaking in the future.

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