Why Spanish tech is sizzling: ‘The mentality has completely shifted in the last six months’

Why Spanish tech is sizzling: ‘The mentality has completely shifted in the last six months’

2025-06-27Business
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纪飞
各位王康们,大家好!我是纪飞。
国荣
我是国荣!欢迎收听今天的Goose Pod。
纪飞
今天是6月27日星期五,晚上11点56分。我们今天将深入探讨一个热门话题:为什么西班牙科技产业正炙手可热,以及这背后“心态在过去六个月里彻底转变”的深层原因。准备好了吗?让我们开始吧!
国荣
纪飞,你有没有关注最近西班牙科技圈的动向?简直是热火朝天!根据Sifted的数据,今年第一季度,风险投资人向95家西班牙初创公司注入了超过10亿欧元,与去年同期相比增长了惊人的184%。这几乎是三倍的增长啊,纪飞!
纪飞
国荣,确实如此,数字非常亮眼。这不仅仅是资金量的增长,更在于交易的数量和规模都在迅速扩大。你提到的第一季度数据,清晰地表明了资本对西班牙科技市场的强烈信心。这背后,还有更多值得我们关注的现象,比如创始人心态的转变。
国荣
没错,我注意到Murphy AI的创始人Borja Solé Fauria说过,过去六个月里,大家的心态彻底变了,融资轮次更大、更快。他甚至说自己身边能感受到更多的抱负。这听起来,西班牙的创业者们都铆足了劲儿,要大干一场啊!
纪飞
这种“抱负”的增长,正是市场活跃度的重要体现。而且,西班牙在欧洲科技融资总额排名第四,交易数量与德国、法国不相上下,这本身就说明了其在全球科技版图中的地位正在迅速提升。这绝非偶然,国荣。
国荣
说到偶然,最近西班牙还有个大新闻,San Sebastián的Multiverse Computing公司,上周刚刚完成了2.15亿美元的B轮融资,这可是上周欧洲最大的融资案!他们致力于压缩大型语言模型,让它们运行成本更低、能效更高。这简直是西班牙科技界的一颗耀眼新星!
纪飞
Multiverse Computing的成功,无疑是西班牙科技实力提升的一个缩影。国荣,你觉得除了AI热潮,还有哪些因素促成了西班牙科技的这种“完美风暴”?毕竟,一个国家的科技崛起,往往是多方面因素共同作用的结果。
国荣
纪飞,我觉得这就像一场精心策划的交响乐,AI是主旋律,但政府的科技友好政策和“黑手党创始人”的崛起也是不可或缺的乐章!你听过“黑手党创始人”这个词吗?
纪飞
“黑手党创始人”?这个词很有趣,国荣,你能给我们解释一下吗?
国荣
哈哈,它可不是真指黑手党,而是指那些在西班牙大型科技公司,比如Glovo、Cabify、Job&Talent等,积累了丰富经验的创业者们。他们就像一个秘密组织,从大公司出来后,带着资源、经验和人脉,创办了第二波甚至第三波初创企业。这些经验丰富的“老炮儿”们,可比初出茅庐的新手靠谱多了,他们知道如何避坑,也知道如何快速成长。
纪飞
原来如此,这些“黑手党创始人”为西班牙的创业生态系统带来了宝贵的经验传承和行业洞察。这就像我们常说的“富二代”创业,但这里的“富”是经验和知识的财富。他们不再是白手起家,而是站在巨人的肩膀上。这也解释了为什么西班牙的初创文化能够迅速赶上。
国荣
对,Acurio Ventures的合伙人Kate Cornell就说,西班牙以前在创业文化方面相当落后,现在正在迎头赶上。她说,十年前起步的一些大公司,现在正在孵化出第二层级的初创企业,这吸引了更多来自国外的兴趣。这就像滚雪球一样,纪飞,越滚越大,越滚越快。
纪飞
这种内部的循环和外部的吸引力形成了良性互动。而政府层面的支持同样功不可没。西班牙政府推出了一系列科技友好政策,比如创业签证、数字游民计划,还有针对外国投资,特别是制药公司的慷慨税收减免,以及相对快速的新药审批流程。这些都为科技企业提供了沃土。
国荣
说到政府支持,我听说政府还有个叫SETT的“国家队”投资工具,去年启动时就有200亿欧元的初始资金,Multiverse Computing的融资就有SETT的参与,这简直是给西班牙科技企业打了一剂强心针啊!
纪飞
是的,SETT的设立是为了将这些关键技术留在西班牙,这被视为一项具有战略意义的长期投资。此外,国家银行Enisa也为初创公司提供贷款,而且条件非常优惠,不需要像普通银行那样提供抵押品。这些都降低了初创企业的融资门槛。
国荣
难怪大家都说西班牙的科技氛围越来越好了!我记得Shakers的联合创始人Nico de Luis还说过,现在西班牙的创业者一代非常强大,甚至五年前,如果你得了“创业病”,家人还会为你感到惋惜呢。现在,这种心态真的彻底变了!
纪飞
这种心态的转变,其实也体现在了估值上。Borja Solé Fauria提到,西班牙的种子前公司估值可能只有300万欧元,而在伦敦则可能达到1000万欧元,但现在这个差距正在缩小。这意味着西班牙的初创企业越来越被国际市场认可。
国荣
纪飞,虽然西班牙科技圈一片大好,但我心里还是有个小问号。这么多资金涌入,估值也水涨船高,这会不会有点虚高啊?就像Kate Cornell说的,她有点担心这种增长是否具有“粘性”,毕竟西班牙真正“走到最后”的公司数量还不多。
纪飞
国荣,你这个问题提得很好,这正是当前西班牙科技热潮中一个需要警惕的方面。Kate Cornell的担忧并非空穴来风,她甚至用“令人恐惧”来形容一些估值。这确实引出了一个核心问题:这种增长是真正的结构性转变,还是仅仅因为大量基金需要部署资金而造成的短期现象?
国荣
对啊,要是泡沫破了,那可就惨了。而且,我听说西班牙对富人的税收政策,可能不像对普通打工人那么友好。比如,如果你在其他国家有过高额退出,搬到西班牙可能还要交税,这会不会劝退一些高净值人士呢?
纪飞
你说得很对,国荣,税收问题确实是高净值人群考虑迁徙的重要因素。尽管西班牙有针对外籍员工的“贝克汉姆法案”等优惠政策,但对于那些在其他国家已经实现巨额财富退出的人来说,搬到西班牙可能会面临额外的税务负担。这也是为什么一些超级富豪选择将资金放在邻国安道尔或更远的瑞士。
国荣
哇,那这不就形成了一个矛盾吗?一方面想吸引投资,另一方面又让一些超级富豪望而却步。那对于本地的风险投资公司来说,外国资本的大举进入,会不会挤压他们的生存空间,让他们“丢掉”一些好项目呢?
纪飞
这确实是竞争加剧带来的挑战。Kibo Ventures的合伙人Jordi Vidal也承认,本地公司可能会因此失去一些交易。然而,他也指出,这个行业本身就是高度协作的。而Kate Cornell也表示,她很乐意看到外国基金的进入,因为这会促使本地基金“提高竞争力”。所以,虽然有竞争,但更可能是一种促进发展的良性竞争。
国荣
听你这么一说,好像也没那么悲观了。不过,我还是觉得,西班牙如果想真正成为全球科技强国,还需要更多的“榜样”公司。Rever的联合创始人Màrius Montmany就说,西班牙只有两三个榜样,而不是25个。这意味着,他们还需要更多能走向全球的本土巨头。
纪飞
是的,榜样的力量是无穷的。但我们也要看到,这种增长已经带来了实实在在的影响。首先,它极大地增强了西班牙创业者的信心和抱负,让他们敢于挑战更大的目标,敢于直接与全球顶级投资者对话,寻求更好的投资条款。
国荣
没错,以前可能只是想着被法德公司收购,现在是直接瞄准全球市场!这种心态的转变,我觉得是最大的影响。而且,外国投资者的涌入,也让西班牙的科技市场更加成熟和规范,纪飞,这就像一个新手村突然来了很多满级玩家,大家都被迫升级了。
纪飞
形象的比喻,国荣。除了心态,我们还看到新兴行业的崛起。Carlos Trenchs建议我们关注AI和生命科学,他认为这两个领域在西班牙可能会发生大事件。政府对制药公司的投资倾斜,也使得医疗科技可能成为西班牙科技界的新名片。
国荣
哦?那是不是意味着以后西班牙不仅有阳光沙滩,还有高科技医疗和AI机器人了?听起来就让人兴奋!而且,巴塞罗那超级计算中心今年预计将孵化出5家公司,这比以前一年只有一家,简直是井喷式增长啊!
纪飞
这表明科研机构的转化能力显著提升。同时,政府在改善员工股权期权方面的努力,也为吸引和留住顶尖人才提供了有利条件。总的来说,西班牙的科技生态系统正在变得更加完善和富有活力。吸引人才方面,除了“贝克汉姆法案”,西班牙的生活方式也很有吸引力。
国荣
说到生活方式,纪飞,我觉得西班牙有个特别吸引人的地方,就是它既有像硅谷那样“疯狂工作”的氛围,也有能让你慢下来享受生活的节奏。像美国企业家Ashley Duque Kienzle,她从纽约、旧金山、伦敦搬到巴塞罗那,就是喜欢这里的工作生活平衡。她可以早上和晚上都遛狗,不用那么赶。这简直是理想生活啊!
纪飞
没错,这种独特的魅力,让西班牙在吸引全球人才方面具有显著优势。展望未来,国荣,你认为西班牙科技发展的下一个亮点会在哪里?或者说,我们应该关注哪些趋势?
国荣
纪飞,我觉得AI和生命科学肯定是未来的重头戏,Carlos Trenchs都点名要我们重点关注了。而且,随着像Rever这样的公司积极寻求全球化发展,我相信我们会看到更多西班牙本土企业走向世界舞台,成为真正的全球巨头。
纪飞
是的,培育更多具有全球规模的本土企业,是西班牙科技生态系统成熟的关键。同时,政府的持续支持,尤其是在税收政策和人才引进方面的优化,将继续为科技产业提供强劲的推动力。我们也有理由期待,在未来几个月,会听到更多由Andreessen Horowitz和Bessemer等顶级风投领投的大额交易。
国荣
嗯,这听起来就很有盼头!而且,那些“黑手党创始人”们也会持续不断地带来新的创业项目和活力。西班牙的科技热潮,看来不是一阵风,而是要持续“高温”很长一段时间了。
纪飞
总的来说,西班牙科技的崛起,是多重因素叠加的 결과。从心态转变到政策支持,从本土孵化到国际合作,每一步都走得扎实而充满活力。虽然有挑战,但前景无疑是光明的。
国荣
纪飞总结得太到位了!今天的讨论真是让人受益匪浅。
纪飞
是的,希望我们的听众王康们也能从中获得一些启发。
国荣
那今天的Goose Pod就到这里了,感谢大家的收听,我们明天再见!

## Comprehensive News Summary: Spanish Tech Scene Sizzling This summary provides a comprehensive overview of the recent surge in Spain's tech sector, highlighting significant investment growth, changing founder mentality, and the role of government support. --- ### News Metadata * **News Title:** Why Spanish tech is sizzling: ‘The mentality has completely shifted in the last six months’ * **Report Provider/Publisher:** Sifted * **Authors:** Éanna Kelly, Jonathan Sinclair, Hessa Alabbas * **Date/Time Period Covered:** Published 2025-06-20 11:07:35. The article covers investment data for Q1 2025 and Q2 2025 (with one week remaining in Q2). --- ### Key Findings and Conclusions The Spanish tech scene is experiencing an unprecedented boom, characterized by a significant increase in both the number and size of deals. This surge is attributed to a confluence of factors: the global AI gold rush, a notable shift in founder mentality towards greater ambition, increased interest and investment from foreign VCs, and supportive government initiatives. While the growth is exciting, some experts raise questions about the sustainability of current valuations. ### Key Statistics and Metrics * **Q1 2025 Investment:** Venture Capitalists (VCs) pumped **€1 billion** into **95 Spanish startups**. This marks a **184% increase** compared to the **€362 million** raised in the same period last year (Q1 2024), indicating a dramatic acceleration in funding, nearly tripling the investment year-over-year. * **Q2 2025 Investment (with one week remaining):** **€910 million** has been raised across **95 equity rounds**. This represents a **90% rise** on the amount raised in Q2 2024, demonstrating continued robust growth even before the quarter's full close, nearly doubling the investment. * **European Ranking:** Spain is currently **fourth** for overall tech funding in Europe this year, with a deal count "not far behind Germany and France," positioning it as a significant player in the European tech landscape, closing the gap on traditional tech hubs. * **Foreign Investment:** More than **half** of all fundraising deals in Spain last year had at least one foreign investor, underscoring the high international validation and appeal of the Spanish market. * **Notable Deals:** * **Multiverse Computing:** This AI company, based in San Sebastián, raised Europe's biggest round last week, a **$215 million Series B**. * **Shakers:** A site connecting companies with freelancers, bagged a **€14 million Series A** in May. * **Seqera:** Barcelona-based bioinformatics startup, secured a **$26 million Series B**, led by New York VC Addition. * **Factorial:** An HR software player, received a **$120 million ‘go-to-market’ investment** by General Catalyst. * **Valuation Gap:** The valuation for a pre-seed company in Spain might be **€3 million**, whereas in London it could be **€10 million**. However, the article notes that this gap is "starting to close," suggesting Spanish valuations are on an upward trend and becoming more competitive. * **Government Funding Vehicles:** * **SETT:** A new state vehicle deployed last year with an initial **€20 billion**, which was one of the backers in the Multiverse deal, highlighting significant state support. * **Hyperion:** A new **€150 million** defence-focused fund, launched by former politician Pablo Casado, signaling emerging sector interest. * **Barcelona Supercomputing Centre:** Expected to spin out **five companies** this year, a significant increase from its previous rate of "one company a year," indicating increased innovation output from research institutions. ### Significant Trends and Changes 1. **Booming Investment:** There's a dramatic increase in capital inflow and deal volume, with rounds becoming "bigger and faster," reflecting a more mature and competitive funding environment. 2. **Changing Founder Mentality:** A notable shift has occurred, moving from a perception of startups as an "illness" (as described by Nico de Luis) to a culture of ambition and confidence. Founders are now actively seeking out large global investors for better terms and higher valuations, with Borja Solé Fauria noting, "The mentality has completely changed, literally in the last six months: rounds are bigger and faster." 3. **Rise of "Mafia Founders":** Experienced entrepreneurs from successful Spanish companies like Glovo, Cabify, and Job&Talent are now launching second and third-generation startups, bringing valuable experience and fostering a more robust ecosystem. Carlos Trenchs states, "There are a lot more second and third time founders around: I’d say this is the main factor." 4. **Global AI Gold Rush:** The global focus on AI is a significant driver, with Spanish companies like Multiverse Computing making substantial contributions (e.g., LLM compression technology) and attracting major investment in the sector. 5. **Increased Foreign Investor Presence:** Major US and European VCs (e.g., Andreessen Horowitz, Bessemer, General Catalyst, SeedCamp, Partech, Addition) are increasingly active in Spain. This influx leads to more competition for local firms but also validates the market and pushes local VCs to "up their game," as noted by Jordi Vidal and Kate Cornell. 6. **Supportive Government Initiatives:** Pro-tech policies, including a startup visa, digital nomad program, generous tax breaks for foreign investment (particularly in pharma), and state-backed funding vehicles (SETT, Enisa), are actively contributing to the growth. 7. **Emerging Sectors:** Medtech/life sciences and AI are identified as high-growth areas to watch, with Trenchs advising, "Keep an eye on AI and life sciences, something big could happen here." The launch of the Hyperion defence fund also signals emerging interest in this sector. 8. **Evolving Work Culture:** While some young founders embrace a "work-crazy-hours mentality" (e.g., Solé Fauria and Montmany), Spain also offers a desirable work-life balance, attracting entrepreneurs seeking a slightly slower pace and better quality of life, as exemplified by US entrepreneur Ashley Duque Kienzle. ### Notable Risks or Concerns * **Sustainability of Growth:** Some investors, like Kate Cornell, question if the current growth is a genuine, sticky shift or merely a consequence of large funds needing to deploy capital. Concerns are raised over "terrifying" valuations, given the relatively few Spanish companies that have "gone the distance" (achieved significant exits or scale). * **Taxation for the Wealthy:** While tax breaks exist for workers (e.g., the "Beckham law"), wealthy individuals with exits in other countries may face taxation upon moving to Spain, leading some to keep their money in neighboring Andorra or Switzerland. * **Competition for Local VCs:** The influx of foreign VCs creates more competition for local firms, potentially leading them to "lose deals." However, local VCs generally view this as a positive, fostering collaboration and pushing them to improve. ### Important Recommendations/Outlook * **Focus on AI and Life Sciences:** Carlos Trenchs advises keeping a close eye on these sectors for significant developments and potential breakthroughs. * **Foster Global-Sized Companies:** Founders like Màrius Montmany of Rever emphasize the critical need for more Spanish-born companies to achieve global scale, beyond the current "two or three role models." * **Continued Government Support:** Ongoing efforts to improve tech share options and attract foreign talent are seen as crucial for sustaining the growth trajectory. --- ### Material Financial Data (Summarized) * **Q1 2025 Funding:** €1 billion (184% increase from €362 million in Q1 2024). * **Q2 2025 Funding (partial):** €910 million (90% increase from Q2 2024). * **Multiverse Computing Round:** $215 million Series B. * **Shakers Series A:** €14 million. * **Seqera Series B:** $26 million. * **Factorial Investment:** $120 million. * **SETT State Vehicle:** Initial €20 billion deployment. * **Hyperion Defence Fund:** €150 million. * **Pre-seed Valuation Gap:** Spain ~€3 million vs. London ~€10 million (this gap is narrowing). --- The article paints a vibrant picture of a Spanish tech ecosystem rapidly maturing and attracting significant global attention, driven by innovation, entrepreneurial spirit, and supportive policies, though with some underlying concerns about long-term sustainability.

Why Spanish tech is sizzling: ‘The mentality has completely shifted in the last six months’

Read original at Sifted

There’s no tech pain in Spain: both the number and size of deals have ballooned in 2025, with startups landing chunky offers from big name VCs and founders giddily trading gossip on (still unannounced) future rounds.VCs pumped just over €1bn into 95 Spanish startups in the first quarter, a 184% increase on the sum raised in the same period last year (€362m), according to Sifted data.

There have also been 95 equity rounds and €910m raised so far in Q2, a 90% rise on the amount raised in Q2 2024, with one week still to go in the quarter. The country is fourth for tech funding overall this year in Europe, with a deal count not far behind Germany and France. “The mentality has completely changed, literally in the last six months: rounds are bigger and faster,” says Borja Solé Fauria, founder of Barcelona-based Murphy AI, which uses AI to modernise debt collecting services.

“I’m seeing way more ambition around me.” “The market’s gotten hotter,” says Jordi Vidal, a partner at Barcelona-based VC firm Kibo Ventures. He pins this mainly on the global AI gold rush. Europe’s AI industry is centralised in France, the UK, Germany and Sweden but one big Spanish player of note is Multiverse Computing, which has developed technology to compress large-language models, with the hope of making them cheaper and more energy efficient to run.

The company, based in northern San Sebastián, a city not normally on VC radars, raised the biggest round in Europe last week, a $215m Series B. AI is just one part of the Spanish surge, however, with techies also keen to give plaudits to tech-friendly moves by the government and the emergence of so-called mafia founders, the ones with experience in big Spanish companies like Glovo, Cabify and Job&Talent.

“It’s the perfect storm for Spain,” says Kate Cornell, general partner at Acurio Ventures in Madrid. “We were quite behind in startup culture and now are catching up. We’ve got a few big companies that started a decade ago which are now offering that second layer of startups. This has fed into a bigger interest from abroad.

”More buzzy deals are promised, with info fizzing on founder WhatsApp groups about rounds yet to be made official. In the coming months, expect to hear about sizable deals led by VCs including Andreessen Horowitz and Bessemer, among others.Growing confidenceNico de Luis, cofounder of Shakers, a site where companies can find freelancers, bagged a €14m Series A in May.

“It’s a really strong generation of entrepreneurs we’ve got right now,” he says. He agrees there’s been a notable mindset shift. “Even five years ago, your family would feel sorry for you for having the startup illness. The goal would be for a French or German company to buy you.”Shakers’s round was led by Paris-headquartered Partech.

“If you get a term sheet from a global fund, suddenly you’ve created FOMO for the Spanish VCs.” De Luis shopped his company to 50 firms overall. “Two told us their LPs [limited partners] weren’t sure about investing in Spain. We can live with just a couple saying this.”Everyone’s excited to see the big firms circling.

Recent deals involving US names in Spain include Barcelona bioinformatics startup Seqera’s $26m Series B, led by New York VC Addition, and HR software player Factorial’s $120m ‘go-to-market’ investment by General Catalyst.“Spanish founders are reaching out to big investors — which is a sign of a growing confidence in itself — because they want better terms than Spanish VCs offer,” Solé Fauria explains.

“Here, the valuation for a pre-seed company might be €3m, whereas in London it could be €10m. That gap is starting to close.”More than half of all fundraising deals in Spain last year had at least one foreign investor, according to Carlos Trenchs, cofounder of Barcelona angel fund Masia Ventures. “General Catalyst, SeedCamp: it used to be just one deal a year for these types of funds, now you’re seeing multiple,” Trenchs says.

What does he think has changed? “There are a lot more second and third time founders around: I’d say this is the main factor.”More foreign VCs will mean extra competition for local firms — but that’s okay, says Vidal. “We will lose deals at some point but this is an industry that’s also very collaborative.

”Cornell says she’s also happy for foreign funds to “make her up her game”. But she has a deeper question about the Spanish surge: “Is something truly shifting? Or are we seeing the consequence of huge funds needing to deploy their money?“I just wonder if this growth is sticky, because some of the valuations I find quite terrifying.

There are not that many companies, after all, that’ve gone the distance in Spain.”‘Happy to be the next big thing’Barcelona-based Rever, which came second in a recent Sifted ranking of the fastest-growing southern European companies, wants to be the next big Spanish export. The company aims to make the handling of returns smoother for e-commerce sites.

“I previously worked at Glovo and I saw that all parts of e-commerce were working well except one: returns,” says 25 year old cofounder Màrius Montmany. “They’re slow, they’re messy, they can take up to three weeks to process.”Rever promises to prevent some returns before they happen. “We gather valuable data for companies; for example, we could tell a clothing company that one t-shirt is being returned a lot in Germany and that they should proactively order different sizes,” Montmany says.

The company works with 500 merchants and transacts returns globally. Montmany and cofounder Oriol Hernandez i Fajula started the company in 2022 after a stint at the Y Combinator accelerator. “Entering YC changes how you’re perceived: You go from being a Spanish company to being a YC company,” Montmany says.

He wants to see more Spanish-born, global-sized companies. “We have two or three role models in Spain, we don’t have 25.” Glovo founder Oscar Pierre is someone he admires (he’s also a Rever investor). “We all need to be motivated by success stories and I'm happy to be the next one,” Montmany says.Government steps upThe government, despite currently battling corruption scandals that may force an early election, is receiving some credit for helping to stir the tech scene.

Investors say it has courted foreign investment, particularly pharma companies, with some of Europe’s most generous tax breaks and a relatively speedy regulatory process for new drugs. Other tech-friendly efforts in recent times include a startup visa and digital nomad programme. The influx of pharma companies means that medtech may increasingly define Spain’s tech scene, says Trenchs.

“Keep an eye on AI and life sciences, something big could happen here,” he says, noting the progress of Seqera. Spain doesn’t have many startups that fit into Europe’s other high growth category, defence, but there’s a new €150m defence-focused fund, Hyperion, launched by former politician Pablo Casado.

Some investors also speak about the importance of new state vehicle SETT, deployed last year with an initial €20bn, which was one of the backers in the Multiverse deal. “Keeping this tech in Spain was seen as strategically vital and something that will pay off in the future,” says Vidal. De Luis also points to the influence of the state bank Enisa, which offers loans to startups.

“They’re not asking for collateral like a normal bank would and you can get pretty good terms,” he says. Other institutions are stepping up. The Barcelona Supercomputing Centre is expected to spin out five companies this year, says Trenchs. “Previously it was one company a year from these guys.”Vidal rates other startup efforts like tweaks to tech share options.

“This used to be a nightmare, it has improved a bit,” he says. There are good tax breaks for employees moving to Spain, he says, including the so-called Beckham law, named after ex-England captain David Beckham, that allows foreigners to pay a lower income tax rate for a fixed period.“For workers, Spain’s fantastic.

But for wealthy people, maybe not so much,” says Trenchs. “If you had a nice exit in another country, you may be taxed for it when you move here.” The super wealthy keep a lot of their money in neighbouring Andorra or further afield in Switzerland, Vidal notes. Home to non-hustlers, tooSpeak to young Spanish founders and one thing quickly stands out: they have the work-crazy-hours mentality that’s seen a resurgence in tech circles this year.

It was after 7pm when Sifted chatted to Solé Fauria, while the chat with Montmany took place at 6pm on a Friday. Both founders headed back to their desks after the meetings ended. But Spain is also for those who want to slow down a bit. US entrepreneur Ashley Duque Kienzle worked at a string of tech companies in New York, San Francisco and London before settling in Barcelona.

Overall, she loves her new work-life balance, even if the after-work calendar is a lot less full than it was previously. “I would have two events a night to choose between in London. But that’s fine, I don’t want to go to as many things these days anyway. I don’t want to be 20 and hustling. People choose to live here because it has a slightly slower pace.

I want to walk my dogs in the mornings and evenings: I don’t want all the rush.”Kienzle reels off a list of familiar attributes. In her experience, “Spanish people are very well rounded; I love the friendliness of my neighbours. My parents live here now, too, three floors above me. How Spanish is that?

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