The pandemic really showed both startups and individuals why having more than one stream of income is important. Industries that depended on 1 source of income, like travel and tourism, suffered greatly. For example, According to the study called 鈥淭he Diversification Dividend鈥 by Stryber, air traffic dropped by nearly 40%, causing numerous airline bankruptcies. Related sectors, like car rentals and hospitality, also faced severe difficulties.
On the other hand, companies with diversified revenue streams performed much better. Amazon, for instance, benefited from its different avenues, such as e-commerce, cloud services, and media. This diversification protected Amazon from the worst economic effects of the pandemic and allowed continued growth.
The point is, thinking outside the box, and doing a little more to ensure your startup鈥檚 security and sustainability, are important, so that you are able to easily pivot in times where the unexpected occurs.
听
What Did The Report Find?
听
The report found a few interesting things as key takeaways:
Higher Returns for Diversifiers: Companies that diversified their revenue streams between 2010 and 2019 achieved 16% higher annual total shareholder returns compared to those that did not.
Pandemic Performance: During the COVID-19 years, companies with diversified revenue streams outperformed non-diversifiers by 53% in annual total shareholder returns.
Core Business Focus: Companies that concentrated solely on their core business saw a decline in annual total shareholder returns by 6% during 2010-2019 and by 14% during 2020-2023.
听
What Are Experts Saying?
听
Previously, we asked experts their views on why diversification and diversity are so important in the context of startups. This report, as well as these insights, show exactly why:
听
Our Experts
听
- Jon Hunt, UKTIN Project Board Member, Executive Director of Research, Enterprise & Innovation, University of Bristol
- Alistair Moncrieff, Founder, Whisky Partners
- Ronni Zehavi, CEO and Co-Founder, HiBob
- Kevin Fitzgerald, Managing Director, Employment Hero UK
- Gordon Bateman, Founder, Investor Ladder and Climb24
- Hanno Cappon, Chief Technology Officer, H&H Group
- Jan Sedlacek, Co-founder and Managing Partner, Stryber
- Amy Tsang, Head of Europe, The Mills Fabrica
- Leo Labies, Founder and CEO, REGnosys
- Jay Shen, Founder and CEO, Transreport
听
Alistair Moncrieff, Founder, Whisky Partners
听
![]()
听
鈥淚nnovation and diverse ideas are the lifeblood of any successful startup and are crucial when it comes to attracting top talent and forward-thinking investors. Startups that embrace cutting-edge technology and fresh perspectives can gain significant competitive advantages.
鈥淓mbracing market adaptability and focusing on enhancing the customer experience are other key tenets for any good startup. Add in problem-solving skills and operational efficiency and you鈥檝e got a recipe for success.鈥
鈥淲e recognise the importance of such qualities and strive to integrate them into our business model to stay ahead in the competitive whisky investment market. By continually pushing the boundaries and welcoming diverse ideas 鈥 in our case, this includes embracing augmented reality (AR), blockchain technology, personalised recommendation engines, data analytics, and machine learning 鈥 we can better serve our clients and drive the industry forward.鈥
听
Jon Hunt, UKTIN Project Board Member, Executive Director of Research, Enterprise & Innovation, University of Bristol
听
![]()
听
鈥淪tart-ups are vital to any growing economy and need to be encouraged and nurtured. Over the past 25 years, small businesses have been responsible for 2 out of every 3 jobs created and are often a breeding ground for advanced innovation and growth.鈥
鈥淪tart-ups provide a much-needed support mechanism for larger businesses, and while consolidations and acquisitions by big tech are common, partnership models between small and large organisations can drive impressive results.鈥
鈥淚t鈥檚 crucial to nurture talent coming out of start-ups and small businesses, which is why initiatives such as the UKTIN small business support programme are vital for sustaining innovation in the UK.
鈥淯ltimately, established businesses need to cultivate innovation, and start-ups need the experience and diverse talent pools of bigger organisations. Through partnerships that foster collaboration; talent, experience, and research can all be shared to bring about greater collective benefit for organisations of all sizes.鈥
听
Ronni Zehavi, CEO and Co-Founder, HiBob
听
![]()
听
鈥淎s a serial entrepreneur myself, I鈥檝e experienced a lot of trial and error. Mistakes are inevitable, but it鈥檚 important to see them for what they are 鈥 invaluable learning experiences. I鈥檓 building my third company now, and still making (and learning from) mistakes.
鈥淔ostering innovation and diversity of thought are critical for the success of any business. Startups are fueled by creativity, unconventional thinking and the ability to approach challenges from different perspectives. Collaboration between people with different backgrounds, experiences and viewpoints often leads to forward-thinking and exciting ideas. That鈥檚 why diverse teams are a key ingredient for success.
鈥淲hen hiring it鈥檚 important to strive for diversity of thought and backgrounds. While you must watch out for red flags, self-awareness of your decision making is also important; avoid unconscious biases that could lead to building a team with similar perspectives and experiences. I purposefully surround myself with strong individuals who will challenge me, and who I can learn from.
鈥淒iversity breeds innovation, so make room to hire people who offer alternative thoughts, viewpoints and skills. Proactively cultivating a diverse culture will breed the kind of innovative thinking that startups need to adapt swiftly and grow sustainably.鈥
听
More from Startups
- How Are Rising Employment Costs Creating A New Market For AI Startups?
- Top IoT Startups In Finland
- 10 Startups Crowdfunding w/c 01.06.2026
- Top Fashion Startups In Saudi Arabia
- What Happens When 100+ EU Founders Market An Entire Tech Ecosystem Like A Product?
- Founder Of The Week: Garrett Reynolds
- Top Blockchain Startups In Estonia
- Why Are Europe鈥檚 Smaller Cities Producing So Many Startups?
听
Kevin Fitzgerald, Managing Director, Employment Hero UK
听
![]()
听
鈥淓veryone talks about being innovative, but what does that actually mean? For me, innovation is the solution to a problem that hasn鈥檛 been discovered yet. Simply put, it鈥檚 solving a problem in a new way. Most people connect innovation with success, but not all innovations are successful 鈥 some are impactful, some are inconsequential. Either way, they can still be innovative.
鈥淚nnovation takes time, because you exhaust all prior 鈥榢nown鈥 options first. Most people think of 鈥榠nnovations鈥 as completely new services/products, but you can also take an innovative approach to something that already exists, for example Employment Hero鈥檚 vision to transform employment (HR, payroll, onboarding, recruitment) from analogue to digital, was unthought of when it was founded 10 years ago.
鈥淚nnovation and diversity of thought are crucial for business growth. It teaches you to celebrate failures (something you鈥檒l probably be well adept at as a founder) and, most importantly, it forces you to remain humble. This means being open to the ideas and contributions of your team and recognising that personal growth comes from learning and feedback. Humility fosters a culture of mutual respect, collaboration, and continuous learning. There鈥檚 no space for singular thinking in innovation.鈥
听
Gordon Bateman, Founder, Investor Ladder and Climb24
听
![]()
听
鈥淚nnovation isn鈥檛 just about creating the best solution or product. Start-ups also need to take an innovative approach to how they are operating and introduce diverse ways of working that will help to accelerate growth.
鈥淥ften, the simplest initiatives can yield the biggest returns and positively affect areas including staff retention, market share, and business valuation.
鈥淎 tech start-up for example, might find that offering flexible working or the ability to spend time volunteering is attractive for recruitment and helps them to secure the best technical team. By building the right team, they can hit their next product development milestone sooner, which also helps to fast-track conversations with investors.
鈥淭his could also include looking at opportunities to make meaningful connections. A founder at the beginning of their journey may decide to hot desk in three or four different co-working spaces, or attend events outside of their region, to help broaden their network, for example. Access to a more diverse pool of knowledge may result in growth being fast-tracked 鈥 whether that鈥檚 due to uncovering a new resource, or an opportune introduction to an investor.鈥
听
Hanno Cappon, Chief Technology Officer, H&H Group
听
![]()
听
鈥淒iversification and innovation need to be treated as a priority within all businesses. Having a strong foundation and a variety of talents, skills, tools and ideas backed by science-based evidence is invaluable when it comes to progressing commercial aims 鈥 whether that鈥檚 new product development, expanding into new countries, securing financial investment or diversifying your market offering 鈥 every business must innovate to stand out, boost the bottom line and remain competitive.
鈥淚t鈥檚 important that innovation and diversification is spearheaded by customer preferences and fuelled by extensive research and innovation programmes combined with external partnerships to drive cutting-edge solutions.
鈥淣ew product development and existing product innovation should be a core driver of realising a business鈥檚 vision. Products are the currency that you provide to your customers, and as a global organisation that prides itself on its leading products across adult, baby and pet nutrition & wellness, we are continuously developing science-based and innovative products that deliver their health benefits to more and more consumers every day.
鈥淚nnovation is what drives businesses forward, combined with efficiencies of sharing insights, technologies and innovative solutions across markets and product categories that allow for speed and scale. That鈥檚 why we find it crucial to create strategic innovation frameworks and concerted efforts across our R&D hubs and markets to provide consistent strategic guidance, facilitate sharing of opportunities and best practices and ensure agile execution.
鈥淓specially at H&H Group, where our focus on health and wellness directly impacts the lives of people and pets, it鈥檚 of utmost importance that we鈥檙e constantly investing in the continuous improvement of the nutritional quality and efficacy of our products. This is why in 2023, we increased our R&D expenditure by 30%, which we invested in building innovation springboards, external partnerships and digital technology to better serve the health and wellbeing needs of our consumers.鈥
Jan Sedlacek, Co-founder and Managing Partner, Stryber
听
![]()
听
鈥淲hen looking at strategies for success, at the early stage in the lifecycle of a startup, ensuring you are building a team with diverse backgrounds and thought processes will only add momentum, as diversity fosters creativity and innovation鈥 at least, so the chorus goes.
鈥淚 would argue, however, diversity should not be a startup鈥檚 sole focus. Though diversity has its merits, it鈥檚 not what makes a startup succeed beyond the very first fragile days. A startup needs to 鈥渄iversify around鈥 in their first months until they find a true problem worth solving and figure out a solution to that problem, aka: their product.
鈥淏ut then, it鈥檚 really crucial to lay strong foundations to what exactly their offering to prospective customers is and reinforce it. It鈥檚 pretty simple: If they don鈥檛 get to that point, a startup is dead. In moving from the 鈥榩roblem-solution-fit鈥 towards 鈥榩roduct-market-fit鈥, startups need to foster uniformity, not diversity.
鈥淒iversity is very close to diversification, because in the early stage, every idea sounds like a great idea worth exploring. But diversification in the early days is actually something else entirely: it鈥檚 distraction.
鈥淎lthough a diversification of revenue streams has a proven benefit for large businesses 鈥 with our recent Diversification Dividend study showing that diversifying companies deliver 53% higher annual shareholder returns than non-diversifying companies 鈥 for startups it鈥檚 an entirely different story. From research we conducted in-house, from a cohort of start-ups launched since 2013, there was a success rate of only 11%.
鈥淭he remaining 89% failing aren鈥檛 doing so because of a lack of diversity; they simply fail because their products never find a market. To achieve that, startups need precision focus on building their offering, and avoid getting caught up in trying to bolster their diversity credentials.
鈥淎s a startup, you have bigger problems (first and foremost, your customer鈥檚 problems) to worry about. Once the foundations are laid in this respect, startups should absolutely focus on building a diverse team 鈥 in all aspects.鈥
听
Amy Tsang, Head of Europe, The Mills Fabrica
听
![]()
听
鈥淪tartups need to be innovative, adaptable and flexible. Having a diverse workforce with different skills and points of view can help start-ups achieve success. In order to disrupt the
market and successfully innovate within your industry, start-ups must ensure they are taking in multiple perspectives into consideration, and encouraging diverse ideas is a necessity to achieve this.
鈥淎t The Mills Fabrica we help start-ups to discover new innovations through our shared spaces, one of which is our membership-led co-working space that is dedicated to sustainable innovators.
This space is ideal for facilitating diverse and collaborative thinking, and its exclusivity to innovators in the sustainability space helps ensure it hosts like-minded innovators who have similar goals.
鈥淲e also have our experiential retail and innovation exhibition destination, Fabrica X. Here we display a curated selection of techstyle products and innovations, showcasing the latest groundbreaking
innovations of the future, each heralding biodiverse material use, minimal waste, and ethical production.
鈥淪hared spaces such as these are an effective way to encourage diverse thinking and learn from other start-ups in the innovation space.鈥
听
Leo Labies, Founder and CEO, REGnosys
听
![]()
听
鈥淢ost founders would argue that in the early stages of a start-up attracting the best talent quickly is all that matters. It would be great if it鈥檚 diverse, but it isn鈥檛 the priority. I was guilty of
this thinking too.
鈥淗owever, if you wait until your company is at 20 people plus to pay attention, then candidates from diverse backgrounds will look at your company and see a narrow pool. They simply won鈥檛 want to join you.
鈥淏y making a conscious effort to improve diversity and partner with organisations such as WISE and NextTechGirls, we were able to deliver on our pledge to boost women鈥檚 representation within the firm. This is now at 38%.鈥疊y doing so, we have noticed a real positive difference in our team workings, performance and growth.鈥
Jay Shen, Founder and CEO, Transreport
听
![]()
听
鈥淓ntrepreneurs have the opportunity to really make a difference with their idea and vision. An innovative idea has the potential to make a huge difference to people鈥檚 lives. If you combine this with genuine passion and societal demand, there is scope for wide-reaching social impact. Be bold, be innovative and take a chance.
鈥淪uccessful businesses set out to solve real problems. Purpose-driven organisations prioritise people鈥檚 genuine needs and when you focus on hiring authentic passion within a team, you unlock the potential for meaningful change.
鈥淒iversification within a team is crucial to enable a constant flow of new ideas and perspectives. At Transreport, social impact is the number one measurement for our success. Our Passenger Assistance technology is about connection at its core, leveraging innovation to shape more inclusive travel experiences for disabled and older people.
鈥淪tartups and scaleups have a unique advantage when it comes to creating social change because we are able to move very quickly. We can react to what the data, the industry, and end-users are telling us and action feedback at scale.
鈥淭o do this, you need people who are capable and dedicated, and who come from a wide range of backgrounds and experiences. As a CEO and Founder, you have an obligation to make sure your team is diverse and that your work culture is consistently inclusive. It also makes business sense because your role is so multifaceted that you need to delegate, and you need to have absolute trust in your team.
鈥淭his means hiring fast and hiring well. The most important piece of advice I could give is to hire people with lived experience of disability and chronic illness. This is essential for diversity and inclusion within an organisation 鈥 it鈥檚 not enough in 2024 to just have lived experience in the room. People with lived experience expertise need to be involved in all key-decision making processes across the business.
鈥淒iversity and creativity go hand in hand. Fostering an inclusive work culture reduces stigma and stagnation and increases innovation. It鈥檚 important that businesses recognise accessibility isn鈥檛 a 鈥渘ice to have鈥, it鈥檚 a must-have.鈥