Canada's fastest growing technology companies have established themselves at a rapid pace and are laying the groundwork for a successful future by significantly boosting their research and development spending in the last year.
They are capitalizing on niche segments in such emerging fields as digital media software, wireless communications and green technology. And they are enjoying the best environment for going public since before the great tech bust of 2001.
Younger companies still in startup mode, however, will be challenged to duplicate the successes of today's newest tech stars because of a dearth of venture capital funding available to them.
These are some of the observations made by the consultants behind Deloitte & Touche's 10th annual Technology Fast 50 ranking, where the average growth rate for a firm was 3,732 per cent over the past five years.
"The growth rate of these companies has been absolutely spectacular, even at a time when people consider the tech industry is slowing down," says John Ruffolo, leader of Deloitte's technology, media and telecommunications practice. "They are going into hyper-growth rate right out of the chute."
For example, Sandvine Corp., the network management operation that tops this year's rankings, was founded in 2001 and most recently posted quarterly sales of $20-million, up from $7.4-million in the year-earlier period.
The companies on the list, more than two-thirds of which are less than 10 years old, represent the start of the second generation of Canada's technology players and have benefited from both the boom of the late 1990s and the bust of 2001.
More than half the businesses in the list were born between 1997 and 2001, coinciding with the peak of venture capital financing in Canada, and 70 per cent of the companies received money from VCs, Mr. Ruffolo said.
After the market for technology crashed in 2001, many managers and engineers moved to start or join new businesses, providing today's success stories with seasoned talent, he said.
The fertile VC environment for tech has not been matched since the bust, however, with today's investors favouring other opportunities, such as hedge funds, and many venture capitalists still wary of repeating mistakes made during the boom.
"The amount of VC funding going to these companies is dropping like a stone, especially in Ontario," Mr. Ruffolo said. This is forcing young operations to rely on internal cash and slow their investments. He warns that the impact five years from now will be slower growth in the sector.
Nevertheless, there is one rapidly expanding segment within Canada's technology industry that is suddenly attracting hundreds of millions of dollars from both Bay Street and venture capitalists: green technology.
6N Silicon Inc., for example, raised $6-million in July in its first round of venture capital financing. The company, founded last year, makes specialized silicon for the solar power industry.
6N Silicon tops a new list that Deloitte has added to its annual survey of the industry, ranking 15 promising green-tech firms.
The rapid emergence and growth of green-tech companies is one of the biggest stories in the tech sector and has all the signs of a dot-com boom in the making, Mr. Ruffolo said.
Promising green-tech companies range from publicly traded Xantrex Technology Inc., which has been around since 1983 and makes equipment for converting alternative energy into electrical power, to four-year-old Sempa Power Systems Ltd., a privately held firm that sells hybrid heating systems to businesses.
Among the more traditional tech companies, the last year has proved extremely lucrative in the capital markets. Six firms in the Fast 50 have gone public in the past year, including Sandvine, RuggedCom Inc., Redline Communications, DragonWave Inc. and March Networks Corp. "It was a great year for exits," Mr. Ruffolo said, noting that at least another half-dozen companies have IPOs in the pipeline.
