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How to find your ideal startup to innovate with corporate venturing

To innovate with startups, don’t improvise. Identify, select and evaluate your best choice with a structured scouting process.

Lab of technological innovation
May 7, 2026

When it comes to innovation, companies are overwhelmed by the speed of technological advancement. To stay ahead of competitors and continue growing, it is increasingly important to look beyond your own R&D department. A good way to do this is by collaborating with startups in an approach known as corporate venturing.

However, the search for startups must be strategic rather than opportunistic. In this context, scouting — the search for startups — can be treated as a structured system by which companies identify, select and evaluate potential collaborators aligned with their strategic challenges.

In “Corporate venturing: the startup scouting process,” M. Julia Prats, Josemaria Siota, Guillermo Yáñez and Beatriz Camacho (all from IESE Business School) propose a practical framework to apply this process rigorously and reduce the risk of failure.

In this article, we will consider:

  1. What is corporate venturing and how does it relate to startup scouting?
  2. Why does corporate venturing often fail?
  3. How can the startup scouting process be structured?
  4. What are the benefits of systematizing startup scouting?
  5. What are the phases of the scouting process?
  6. What does the identification phase involve?
  7. What does the selection phase involve?
  8. What does the evaluation phase involve?
  9. What lessons can executives apply?

1. What is corporate venturing and how does it relate to startup scouting?

2. Why does corporate venturing often fail?

3. How can the startup scouting process be structured?

4. What are the benefits of systematizing startup scouting?

5. What are the phases of the scouting process?

6. What does the identification phase involve?

7. What does the selection phase involve?

8. What does the evaluation phase involve?

9. What lessons can executives apply?