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How innovative Stockholm is shaping the post-coronavirus world

When the world faces great challenges, innovative minds and entrepreneurial spirits often come up with the solutions. In 2020, the need for creative approaches to help us through the coronavirus pandemic could not be clearer.

How innovative Stockholm is shaping the post-coronavirus world
Photos: Anna Fredrixon of Kry and Donnie Lygonis of KTH

Companies founded in Stockholm, a global centre of innovation, are rising to the challenge of increased demand for digital services. Stockholm’s creative energy also continues to see the birth of new solutions-focused start-ups. 

The city actively fosters new innovations through the Stockholm Innovation Scholarship. The Local spoke with two people at the heart of innovation in the city about what’s happening now, what’s coming next – and why innovation is in Stockholm’s DNA.

Get it done at home – from healthcare to shopping

Our ability to do things remotely has been growing steadily for years. Then came the pandemic. Suddenly, doing as much as possible digitally became a necessity – or at least the obvious first choice – for vast numbers of us. This is true of work, shopping, and even seeing a doctor.

Find out how Stockholm provides support, consultation and opportunities to entrepreneurs

Stockholm-founded Kry is a digital health service provider offering help via their app, as well as at their growing chain of health centres, to ensure the right mix of physical and digital medical assistance. You can use the app to get the expert advice of a health professional from the safety of your own home.

Demand for the service has skyrocketed: it took four years for Kry to reach its first million calls from patients – but just one more year to reach two million. You can rapidly be connected for a primary care consultation for all manner of symptoms, with frequent topics including skin rashes, eye infections and anxiety.

“We’ve proven the need for digital healthcare to ensure patients can receive high quality consultations and treatment without having to physically visit a health centre,” says Anna Fredrixon, VP People at Kry. “Not all issues can be solved in a digital environment, so we make sure they’re triaged to the right level. Personally, I have three children and we’re using Kry to avoid going to a physical centre if it’s not necessary.”

The company operates in Sweden, Norway, and Germany, as well as in the UK and France under the name Livi. Recruiting more clinicians to keep up with demand has not been difficult, says Fredrixon. “People are really attracted by the idea of working for something with a purpose, that makes an impact on society,” she says. 

Kry is one of many major companies founded in Stockholm helping people to adjust to the realities of life today. Skype, co-founded by the Swede Niklas Zennström, has been connecting friends and colleagues online since 2003 and experienced a surge in demand as the pandemic spread.

If you’ve been doing more shopping online, you may be one of the 85 million consumers who use Klarna. The shopping app promises to make online payments simple, safe and smooth – a message that could have been created for 2020.

Take your innovation to the next level by applying for the Stockholm Innovation Scholarship

Photo:Ola Ericson/Stockholm Media Bank

A city of connections and solutions

Innovators never stand still. That’s why Stockholm constantly looks to the future. 

“Stockholmers are extremely connected and trend-aware,” says Donnie SC Lygonis, business development coach and innovation strategist at KTH Innovation. “The design, the fashion and the music here all play into the creative need to be on your toes all the time.” 

The City of Stockholm runs the Stockholm Innovation Scholarship to reward creative people with bright ideas – and help them develop their innovations further. If you’re an innovator you can enter across five categories, including ‘simplify everyday life’ and ‘social impact and sustainability’.The winners of each category get 100,000 Swedish kronor and further support to advance their project.

Lygonis says foreign students and researchers he works with are always impressed with how ingrained sustainability is in the Swedish way of thinking. But building a sustainable business also requires profitability, he cautions. “People forget that when they talk about social entrepreneurship,” he says.

A strong engineering tradition is another essential feature of Stockholm and Sweden. “A systematic approach to solving very big problems is part of the DNA strain of Swedish innovation,” Lygonis says, citing companies such as Ikea, Ericsson and Spotify.

Kry’s Fredrixon agrees that Stockholm is “a great climate to work in”. “We have an ecosystem of start-ups, support for scaling up, and angel investors looking for positive ideas,” she says. “We also have a high level of digital access and knowledge and Swedish people are early adopters who like to try new things.”

Inspiration and acceleration 

So, what’s the message for budding entrepreneurs considering making an entry? Lygonis says the best inspiration comes from “the world around you”.

“Today, that means all of them will have a more or less strong tie to the pandemic,” he says. “To address new problems on everything from transport to digital meetings to helping people into work. If social media made us more alone before, I think the pandemic has made us even more alone and we’ll see a lot of things coming up to address that.

“In Stockholm, we’ll always see quick, frugal responses to crisis. We’ve seen breweries producing disinfectants and we bought hand sanitizer that smells distinctively of gin – it’s very weird!”

Lygonis is chair of the judges for the Stockholm Acceleration Scholarship, which is open to finalists of the Innovation Scholarship during the past five years.

“The Innovation Scholarship is designed to help you and find out if something works,” he says. “The Acceleration Scholarship says ‘good job, it worked. Here’s another push in the right direction’.” 

That push means a bigger cash prize – 250,000 kronor – and other help including a co-working space at United Spaces for six months. “I meet people with incredible ideas every day,” says Lygonis. “But innovation is also about doing – that’s usually the hard part.”

As many businesses and entrepreneurs are already proving, in Stockholm the hard part happens with impressive regularity.

If you’re interested in the Stockholm Innovation Scholarship, you have until October 12th to apply for what could be a life-changing prize – find out more here

For members

PROPERTY

Should you buy a home in Sweden this summer?

Considering the fickle trends in the Swedish housing market, prospective homebuyers might find themselves at a crossroads this summer.

Should you buy a home in Sweden this summer?

After a period of falling prices driven by increased interest rates, the Swedish housing market is seeing a rebound, particularly in the biggest cities.

However, it’s also taking longer to finalise home sales.

READ MORE:

Recent data from Swedish property listings site Hemnet indicates that while home sales – and housing prices – are on the rise, the time to complete transactions has notably increased.

For instance, the average sale time for an apartment in Sweden increased to 27 days in the first half of the year, up from 22 days during the same period last year. Similarly, houses now take an average of 31 days to sell, compared to 30 days previously.

The slowest market is in the Gävleborg region, where it takes an average of 44 days to sell a home. The fastest transactions occur in Stockholm, with apartments selling in just 16 days and detached homes in 23 days.

This variation in market activity across the country calls for a deeper look into where the best opportunities might lie for homebuyers this summer.

Renewed market confidence in Sweden’s biggest cities

The confidence in the Swedish property market is on its way up in Stockholm, Gothenburg, and Malmö, Erik Holmberg, a market analyst at Hemnet, told The Local.

“I would say that we have seen a weaker market in the last couple of years, almost everywhere in the country, since the Swedish central bank started to increase the interest policy rate, which affected the market a lot,” he said.

“But in the last half of the year or rather in the last year, the confidence has come back in bigger cities – in Stockholm, Gothenburg, Malmö… When we look at price developments last year, in three of Sweden’s biggest cities, we see prices increasing again.”

However, the analyst warned that the opposite is currently true in other areas of the country, which have seen a continued decrease in market activity and flatter developments in the same time interval.

A new trend emerging in Stockholm?

As Hemnet’s analyst explained, in Sweden, housing market trends usually start in Stockholm, when the market begins to change, causing a ripple effect.

“And that’s what we have seen. Now, market activity and prices are increasing again in the bigger cities. Usually, when the market changes, other areas in the country follow, and that could be the case now,” said Holmberg.

“When the rates and inflation situation become clearer, other parts of the country might follow the market in the big cities. Our main scenario is that we will see this spread,” he said, adding that prices in Stockholm have picked up quite fast in the last year but that the demand is still affected by the high interest rates.

“I wouldn’t be surprised if we saw swift price developments in some areas with the highest demand, such as city centres.”

The effect on the rental market

Another aspect to consider is the rental market, which could see significant changes in the short to mid-term.

Holmberg pointed out that properties which fail to sell might enter the rental market.

“What we’ve seen is that it’s harder to sell properties today, so, probably, more people who own homes and can’t sell them will put these unsold homes on the market for a while. This could affect the supply of apartments for rent and, in turn, prices,” the analyst said.

INTERVIEW:

What different types of homebuyers should know

For buyers, the current market presents a mixed bag.

“In Sweden, we often talk of having a seller’s or buyer’s market. Today, it’s good for buyers that they have a lot to choose from; there’s a record-high supply almost everywhere in the country. That means it’s easy to find something,” said Holmberg.

However, he also cautioned that the slow market makes agreeing on terms with sellers challenging, with sales times at record highs.

“Sales take some time in today’s market, and that’s important to understand for both sellers and buyers, especially for homeowners who are changing homes, meaning they’re both buying and selling something; it’s a tough market for them.

“Today, this group often chooses to sell their home before they buy something new. That makes up a big part of record high sales times; we have people waiting for the right bid before moving from the selling to the buying side…” Holmberg said, noting that the market is different compared to two to three years ago when it was “very hot”.

“So, remember that even if prices grow, it’s still a tough or slow market.”

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On the other hand, first-time buyers might find a silver lining in the form of lower prices compared to a couple of years ago, making it a potentially favourable time to enter the Swedish housing market.

“First-time buyers are in another situation, which may be better because the prices are lower than two years ago, of course, and if you’re just buying something, you don’t need to worry about the selling part,” Holmberg told The Local.

“That’s why this could be a good situation to enter the housing market this summer, but even so, despite supply being really high, it could still be tough because many sellers have put down a listed price but don’t necessarily plan to sell at this price.”

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