12 Clusters of Tech
Wales
3
Introduction
4
Regional
Summary
6
Established
Leaders
8
Scaleup
Stories
10
Ones to
Watch
12
Hotspot 1:
Cyber
14
Hotspot 2:
Data
16
Hostspot 3:
FinTech &
InsurTech
Contents
Introduction
This is the story of technology in the UK. Over 12 months, London Tech Week and UK
Tech Cluster Group will explore the unique ecosystems and tech trends in every region
of the UK. From space tech in the South West to cybersecurity in Northern Ireland,
12 Clusters of Tech charts the companies, sectors and case studies that make up the
entire UK tech landscape.
12 Clusters of Tech
September 2020 – August 2021
Brought to you by Sponsored by
12 Clusters of Tech Wales 12 Clusters of Tech Wales
2 3
Regional
Summary
The Welsh Tech and Digital
ecosystem is a thriving
and rapidly-expanding
sector. Wales’ start-ups and
scale-ups are adding to a
growing base of established
companies (SMEs to Primes),
Government data agencies
and Enterprise organisations.
This varied tech ecosystem is developing
a deep-level understanding, commercial
experience and scaling opportunities across
Tech and into Cyber, Data and FinTech.
The sector includes:
household names founded in Wales, such
as InsureTech’s Admiral, Go Compare and
Confused.com
technology centres for globally-recognised
brands like Aston Martin, Airbus, Thales, BT,
and Sony
a High Performance Computing (HPC) facility
with market leader Fujitsu
contract Semiconductor manufacturing at the
Newport Wafer Lab with world-leading tech
manufacturer IQE
The strength and opportunities in the tech
ecosystem in Wales, including the variety and
quality of start-ups that are emerging from
these green hills, is highly notable. Lab by
Transport for Wales has emerged out of a
desire to provide a growth platform to nurture
young companies in the transport sector and to
engage with new customers as they expand the
size and scope of their transport infrastructure.
The Startup Academy by Tramshed Tech
delivers a 12-week programme of networking,
instruction, coaching and support, culminating
in a demo-day and investor pitching session
to provide new companies with a structured
growth platform. The Alacrity Foundation
delivers a world-leading accelerator program
for graduates, providing practical business
training, software skills and mentoring to help
launch entrepreneurial businesses. In addition
to the academy and accelerator support, IoT
and Advanced Manufacturing start-ups are
well catered for at Barclays Eagle Labs. Highly
specific support for opto-electronic companies
in the Health and Aerospace sectors is provided
through the Glyndwr OpTIC Technology Centre
in St Asaph. The centre provides world-leading
product development and consulting facilities.
Lastly, the rapidly-expanding HealthTech &
MedTech sectors in Wales are led by a range
of innovative start-ups, scaling and fully-
established tech organisations like Concentric
and Creo Medical.
The tech sector in Wales is growing rapidly with
£100million of Venture Capital investments in
2019 and an estimated £8.5bn contribution
to the economy.The increasing expertise in
Industry 4.0 technologies is augmented by
innovative startups and a bedrock of more
established companies using technology to
provide a competitive advantage – providing a
resilient and attractive sector. Sector support
is underlined by the Welsh Government’s new
Digital Strategy for Wales, Seed and Early Stage
equity funding from the influential Development
Bank of Wales, the Angels Invest Wales network,
the Business Growth Fund (BGF). This is in
addition to regional funding available from
Cardiff Capital Region, Swansea City Deal,
the Mid Wales and North Wales Growth Deal,
which have already delivered approx. £800m of
funding into the sector.
Did you know?
THE TECH SECTOR
IN WALES EMPLOYS
UPWARDS OF
40,000
PEOPLE
(2019).
12 Clusters of Tech Wales 12 Clusters of Tech Wales
4 5
Admiral
IQE
Airbus Cyber Security
Wales has a long history of commerce, from the
former coalfields in the industrial heartland of South
Wales to the strategically important Port of Holyhead
in the North. Whilst agriculture and tourism continue
to dominate much of the landscape outside of
concentrated population areas, Wales’ cities are
increasingly becoming centres of service and digital
companies, with Cardiff currently the fastest-growing
city in the UK.
www.admiral.com
Location: Cardiff
Established: 1992
www.iqep.com
Location: Newport
Established: 1988
www.airbus-cyber-security.com
Location: Duffryn
Established: Circa 1990
Admiral is a multi award-winning FTSE 100 company, established in 1992 as a modest car insurer with just five
employees. Admiral has grown in size and scope from car insurance to now offer a variety of products including
travel, home and multicover insurance. Technology is at the heart of driving Admiral’s business forward. Admiral
has a large, established tech department and is a member of the #TechSheCan charter to inspire more women to
play an equal part in the tech landscape by removing barriers and providing an environment where female talent
can flourish.
IQE is the leading global supplier of atomically
engineered wafers that are made into
advanced compound semiconductors. IQE-
manufactured wafers are used in almost every
mobile phone on the market and provide
unique capabilities for sensor technologies
such as 3D and Facial ID sensing.
Airbus is a global leader in aeronautics, space and related
services. In 2019, it generated revenues of €70 billion
and employed a global workforce of around 135,000,
with over 6,000 in Wales. In Broughton, north Wales,
Airbus manufactures wings for its commercial aircraft,
and in Newport, south Wales, Airbus specialises in secure
connectivity, cyber solutions and the security of critical
infrastructure in the UK, serving as a key partner in
government and NATO-led information infrastructure
programmes.
“Being based in Wales has played
a big part in Admiral’s success; the
quality and commitment of our
employees in Wales has played a huge part in
helping us grow from a start-up to the UK’s
leading car insurer in just over two decades.
David Stevens, Director, Admiral Group
As we go forward to higher
performance requirements with
5G, then the need for compound
semiconductors and IQE’s products will
increase. A lot of other connected devices –
including driverless vehicles with all their
sensor technologies, power management and
so on – will be dependent on them.
Because it’s a global business, we recruit in
Wales, across the UK and internationally.
We have strong links with Welsh
universities, and also with the likes of Bristol
and Manchester, as well as institutions
in Scotland. We’re working particularly
closely with Cardiff and Swansea: just
last year, Cardiff University launched two
Masters degrees specific to compound
semiconductors”
Chris Meadows, Corporate Systems Manager, IQE
Airbus is proud to be a Welsh
business. We are committed to
working in partnership with the
Welsh Government and Wales'
world-leading academic institutions on wing
technology and cyber security research,
investing in local people and maintaining
Wales' position as a major tech hub and an
economic success story."
Dr Kevin Jones, Chief Digital / Information Security Officer (CISO), Airbus
Established
Leaders
Did you know?
WALES'S CITIES
HOST OVER
3,600 TECH
BUSINESSES
Did you know?
ADMIRAL HAVE OVER 7,000
EMPLOYEES WORLDWIDE,
5,000 OF WHICH ARE
BASED IN SOUTH
WALES.
12 Clusters of Tech Wales 12 Clusters of Tech Wales
6 7
AMPLYFI
Delio
www.amplyfi.com
Location: Cardiff
Established: 2015
www.deliogroup.com
Location: Cardiff
Established: 2015
www.veeqo.com
Location: Swansea
Established: 2013
AMPLYFI’s Insights Automation
Platform powers decision making in
global organisations like BP, NatWest,
the US Air Force and Stanford
University. The platform uses data
science and machine learning to
extract value from the billions of
news articles, patents, papers and
documents that are available across
the internet, helping organisations
react faster to disruption and to
change with conviction.
Delio's configurable white-label technology, empowers
financial firms to connect their clients with private
market investments quickly, transparently and
compliantly. Through their digital tools, institutions
can originate, distribute, manage and report on
investment opportunities through one digital hub.
This makes their private markets proposition more
manageable and accessible to their wealthy clients
and investors. Delio has established an international
client base of more than 80 organisations, including
Barclays, ING and UBS. With over sixty employees,
Delio is now represented across the UK, Australia,
North America, the Middle East, Asia and Europe,
working with top-tier financial institutions, angel
networks and family offices. Delio has experienced
rapid growth in the last three years. Delio has tripled
their team since their first investment round in 2019,
opening offices in Dubai, Singapore, Switzerland and
New York .
"We know that digital
tools are only as
good as the way they
are applied to our customers.
That's why we take the time to
explore and understand the very
different needs of the financial
institutions we serve, creating
tailored solutions that solve their
specific challenges. Over the
last five years, the demand for
our technology has increased
significantly. Financial firms
know they need to digitise their
investment propositions and do
not always have the capacity or
resources to do so themselves.
Delio offers them the solutions
which they can tailor around their
operational processes and the
needs of their clients."
Gareth Lewis, Chief Executive and Co-Founder, Delio
Scaleup
Stories
“Part of the reason AMPLYFI is
growing so fast is our location.
People join our team from all over
the globe to solve hard problems without
compromising on their quality of life.
AMPLYFI’s combination of ground-breaking
technology, culture and Welsh countryside
allows us to compete for the smartest people
with the biggest organisations in the world,
which in turn helps us build better solutions
for global decision makers.
Chris Ganje, CEO, Amplyfi
The Swansea-based technology firm, has developed
an all-in-one platform to help online retailers manage
inventory and ordering, and deliver the best customer
experience to customers everywhere. Veeqo was founded
by experienced ecommerce retailer Matt Warren to allow
their customers, small and large, to stay on top of being
fast-paced omnichannel retailers. The investment received
by Veeqo allowed them to add features and functionality
to their platform, hire teams in key areas and scale up their
growth strategy by utilising inbound marketing, outbound
sales and strategic channel partnerships .
"I wanted a new
challenge, and
there was this pull
back to Wales. It's great
to have the chance to get
into a company when it's
relatively small and young,
and help it to reach exciting
heights. And it says a lot
about where the company is
going when Matt Warren,
the founder and CEO, is
willing to put money into
HR this early on."
Cerys Davies, Head of HR, Veeqo
As the number of start-ups continues to grow
in Wales, a strong sector cohort is breaking
through and beginning their exponential
growth. Establishing this network of successful
entrepreneurs and sharing their knowledge
of markets and lessons-learned, to provide
mentorship to the next cohort, is a key focus for the
Welsh tech sector.
Scale-Up success stories in Wales have benefited
from: a strong Angel investor network; access to
world-class talent via our university and HE sector;
and a growing informed network of business
advisors and support services. This is underlined
by continued support from Welsh Government,
who consider the start-up and technology sectors
as strategically important as part of their inward-
investment and International Strategy.
Veeqo
12 Clusters of Tech Wales 12 Clusters of Tech Wales
8 9
RiverSimple Configur
Concentric
There has never been a better time for tech
and digital startups in Wales. There are a large
number of support mechanisms, funds and
expertise available for businesses in the area.
Startup friendly spaces are offering communities
of like minded people areas to collaborate and
innovate successfully. Many startups are coming
out of local spaces such as Tramshed Tech,
Barclays Eagle Labs, NatWest’s Entrepreneur
Accelerator and publicly funded hubs.
www.riversimple.com
Location: Llandrindod Wells
Established: 2005
www.configur.tech
Location: Cardiff
Established: 2019
www.concentric.health
Location: Cardiff
Established: 2019
Not many car designs set out to change
the world. From Powys to the planet,
Riversimple has spent 15 years developing
the technology and business strategies that
have led to its carbon-fibre Rasa vehicle.
Founder Hugo Spowers has a track record in
good-looking motors.
Configur is a data-driven software company,
empowering businesses and organisations by
simplifying their digital transformation journeys.
Configur Codex, their recently launched
groundbreaking data platform, makes it simple for
businesses and organisations to store, secure and
safely share data. Configur’s aim is to encourage
companies of all sizes to be confident interacting
with their data, unlocking new insights and savings
across the organisation.
Coming to Wales has been much better than we ever expected. We didn’t
realise just what advantages it would have. We get a lot of support from
the Welsh Automotive Forum. It’s fantastic for us, being able to leapfrog
and establish cross-sectoral collaborations. We’ve also got a fantastic
relationship with the Welsh Government and they really have been extremely
supportive. This is a much better environment than if wed stayed across the border;
for what we’re doing, it’s easier to do it here in Wales.
Hugo Spowers, Founder, Riversimple
Ones to
Watch
Concentric is a digital consent application which transforms
the paper process of giving consent for treatment. Based
in Wales and in use by clinicians internationally, Concentric
Health is transforming how we make decisions about our
health, supporting patients to engage with, understand and
own decisions about their care.
“Since launching
in early 2020, and
accelerated by the
need for remote care pathways
in response to COVID-19, we’ve
seen the transformational impact
of introducing Concentric at
world-leading centres such as
Imperial College Healthcare
NHS Trust and Chelsea and
Westminster Hospital NHS
Trust. Concentric supports
patients and clinicians with
trusted, personalised, accessible
information, supporting
informed, shared decisions, both
within the hospital walls and at
home.
Dr Dafydd Loughran, CEO and Co-Founder,
Concentric Health
We’re very lucky in Wales to have a welcoming tech community built
around hubs such as Tramshed Tech. Whilst the pandemic may have
reduced face-to-face meetings, the partnerships and contacts we’ve made
over the years have continued to be a big part of our success.
Josh Evans, Co-Founder, Configur
12 Clusters of Tech Wales 12 Clusters of Tech Wales
10 11
Wolfberry
Awen Collective
The International Strategy for Wales launched by Welsh
Government in early 2020 announced Cyber as one of the 3 key
target sectors for which Wales is recognised as a world leader.
The hotspot benefits from innovative support. The support
includes conferences like bSides Cymru which curate a roster of
international speakers, dedicated accelerators such as Alacrity,
who provide a funded 15-month accelerator programme and
specialist consultancies with global reach such as 13 Fields.
Wales is also home to an increasing community of remote-
working employees for globally recognised leaders such as
Sophos, ControlPlane and GitLab. The proximity to Cheltenham
and the NCSC and the associated cyber community allows
strong bonds to permeate the Welsh border, with new cross-
border tech organisations like TechSPARK Wales about to come
on stream to take advantage of the political impetus behind the
Western Gateway alliance.
www.wolfberrycs.com
Location: Cardiff and Dubai
Established: 2016
www.awencollective.com
Location: Caerphilly
Established: 2017
www.cardiff.ac.uk
Location: Cardiff
Established: 2017
Wolfberry is an award-winning and rapidly-expanding
Cyber Security consultancy, whose goal is to make cyber
security accessible, understandable and affordable for
any organisation. The specialist team at Wolfberry have
a vast knowledge of the latest trends, technologies, and
attack vectors. Wolfberry’s aim is to provide support to
organisations working across all sectors and protect
their processes and data from all types of cyber security
risks, both internal and external.
Awen Collective produces
cybersecurity products which help
to secure critical infrastructures
and manufacturers for a safer
society.
“It’s an exciting time to be working in this field in
Wales. We’re very lucky to have the Cyber Wales
cluster, a group of cyber security businesses that
supports both North and South Wales. Just six of us went
to their first meeting, but we now have over 1,800 member
businesses throughout the UK, and have been recognised
internationally as a cyber ecosystem by GlobalEPIC. It’s
expanding worldwide. We now have clusters in Dubai –
where Wolfberry also has an office – and Japan. We’re
looking at setting one up in Abu Dhabi.
Damon Rands, Founder & CEO, Wolfberry
We’ve grown rapidly since founding; working with large organisations such
as Raytheon, the UK’s water companies, and secured a large contract from
the UK Ministry of Defence. We have also been on the first cohort of several
initiatives, including CyberASAP, the IoT Accelerator Wales, Tech Nation Cyber and
the Google for Startups UK Immersion Programme. In Wales, we have access to top
quality talent straight out of the wonderful universities. We’ve found that Wales
is a great place to live and work. We attract great people to work with us; when we
solve cyber problems, we look both globally and locally, as our target market is here
in Wales too - Wales-based manufacturers and critical infrastructure organisations -
with whom we are gradually building up very good relations.
Daniel Lewis, CEO & Co-Founder, Awen Collective
Our work supports
the UK Government’s
Industrial Strategy,
which aims to put the UK at
the forefront of the Artificial
Intelligence and data revolution.
Our ambition to be a world
leader for innovation in AI for
cybersecurity also underpins
the Welsh Government’s
international strategy, which
has cybersecurity as a core pillar.
The centre is interdisciplinary by
design and is drawing together
expertise in cyber security from
across the whole University,
including computer science,
psychology and criminology.
Pete Burnap, Professor of Data Science &
Cybersecurity, Cardiff University, Airbus Centre of
Excellence in Cyber Security Analytics
The Airbus Centre of Excellence is a leading UK
academic research unit for cyber security analytics,
focused on the interpretation and effective
communication of applied data science and artificial
intelligence methods through interdisciplinary insights
into cyber risk, threat intelligence, attack detection and
situational awareness. Cardiff University is recognised
by NSCS as an Academic Centre of Excellence in Cyber
Security Research.
Along with fellow cyber specialists from the Cyber
Academy at the University of South Wales, they are also
lead partners in a consortium bid to establish a new
Cyber Innovation Hub for Wales in central Cardiff, with
industry partners like Airbus, Thales, Tramshed Tech
and the Alacrity Foundation:
Hotspot 1
Cyber
Cardiff University, Airbus
Centre of Excellence in Cyber
Security Analytics
Did you know?
THE WELSH
CYBER HOTSPOT
COMPRISES
OVER 400 SME’S,
9 PRIMES, 7
ACADEMIC
RESEARCH
CENTRES AND
A PLETHORA
OF DEFENCE
ORGANISATIONS
AND
GOVERNMENT
AGENCIES.
12 Clusters of Tech Wales 12 Clusters of Tech Wales
12 13
Office of National Statistics (ONS)
Data Innovation / Data Nation Accelerator (DNA)
Next Generation Data - Newport
The UK Government's commitment to open
data continues to benefit the Tech ecosystem
with development of skills, provision of data
and bedrock employers. Wales is home to
government agencies such as the Office for
National Statistics (ONS), Companies House,
the Intellectual Property Office (IPO) and the
Driver and Vehicle Licensing Agency, leading
the way in developing best practices to curate,
deliver and publish open data.
A new generation of startups and scale-
ups are building their businesses atop this
bedrock, supported by knowledge-sharing
partnerships, meet-ups and pan-Wales
initiatives such as the Data Nation Accelerator.
www.ons.gov.uk
Location: Newport
Established: 1996
www.cardiff.ac.uk/data-innovation-accelerator
Location: Cardiff
Established: 2020
www.vantage-dc-cardiff.co.uk
Location: Newport
Established: 2010
The UK's largest independent producer of official statistics and
the recognised national statistical institute of the UK. The ONS
are responsible for the collection, collation and publication of
statistics related to the economy, population and society. ONS
are responsible for planning and carrying out the census for
England and Wales and have been a key support platform for
health data provision during the Covid pandemic.
The Data Nation Accelerator (DNA)
is a new pan-Wales initiative that
is being developed to accelerate
insight, foresight and intelligence
from diverse data assets for societal,
health and economic impact, building
upon the work of the Data Innovation
Accelerator, established in 2018.
Through co-creation across business
and other parties, the Wales Data
Nation Accelerator seeks to fuel
innovation in data and AI for new
solutions, products and applications
in key industrial clusters and public
services, while also enriching the
talent pool of skills in Wales for data
science and AI.
NGD opened its flagship 750,000 sq ft
data centre in Newport in early 2010.
One of the largest data centres in
Europe, the site has its own private
connection to the National SuperGrid,
with up to 180 megawatts of power
(sufficient to power a city the size of
Bristol) generated from 100% renewable
sources.
Located near the Welsh capital Cardiff
NDG hosts BT, IBM, WiPro and Microsoft
Azure in its facility, as well as being a
market leader in High-Performance
Computing Solutions.
As the needs of our hyperscale,
cloud and large enterprise customers
continue to grow, Wales represents
a highly attractive U.K. market, offering both
lower cost and greater scalability versus London.
Sureel Choksi, President and CEO, Vantage Data Centers
“Building on the recommendations of the
recent Brown review of Digital Skills and
the Future of Work in Wales, the Wales
Data Nation Accelerator (WDNA) is developing a
comprehensive strategy to support the economic
transformation for Wales through data science and
AI. Consistent with the emerging UK Data Strategy,
the WDNA is pursuing an agenda for partnership
and co-creation aligned to unlocking Welsh data,
enabling Welsh sustainability (spanning from health
to energy and transport), empowering citizens and
fuelling product and service innovation. This agenda
focuses on Wales’ vibrant SME community through
to corporate partners, government and the NHS.
Professor Roger Whitaker, Director, DNA
“The last year has demonstrated just how
important the robust data, statistics and analysis
produced by the ONS are in informing so many
key decisions in the UK. As part of the ONS’s
investment in data and digital capability, our Data Science
Campus is strengthening data science capability across
the UK public sector to ensure that we can take advantage
of the tools, methods and practices of the digital age. This
is driving new understanding and informing decisions
affecting everyone, from how governments spend
taxpayers’ money to the services we receive.
Dr Louisa Nolan, Chief Data Scientist, ONS
Hotspot 2
Data
12 Clusters of Tech Wales 12 Clusters of Tech Wales
14 15
FinTech Wales
Wales has long hosted a bustling insurance sector, with the bulk of the
UK’s price comparison sites being based here. Wales’s expertise began
with the Export Credit Guarantee Department, grew with 90’s success
stories such as Admiral, NCM and LexisNexis, then through internet
pioneers like Confused.com and the Source, to latest InsurTech startups.
These companies form part of a wider FinTech sector alongside busy
startups like Sonnovate, who are reimagining contractor finance, BipSync
who streamline research management, Delio’s investment platform,
Wealthify’s robo-investing and Chetwood, a Wrexham based Challenger
Bank delivering innovative products for customer segments that it
considers to be underserved by the market.
Sectorial support is equally strong with higher education institutions
providing dedicated resources, such as the Trading Room learning
resource at the Centre for Financial and Professional Services at University
of South Wales. The Cardiff University Data Science Accelerator project-
based approach engages learners, industry and membership associations
such as FinTech Wales, coordinating resources.
fintechwales.org
Location: Cardiff
Established: 2019
FinTech Wales provides an independent voice
for the FinTech industry, both within Wales and
beyond, to help champion and maximise the
potential for all businesses in the sector. As well
as nurturing and supporting those businesses
already in Wales, FinTech Wales aims to develop an
ecosystem that will help new FinTech companies
start-up or scale-up. Ultimately, the goal is to
make Wales a leading pillar in the global FinTech
community. FinTech Wales and FinTech Scotland
have recently released a report (January 2021)
proposing increased Research and Innovation
(R&I) to drive acceleration in FinTech development
across the UK, nationally and regionally, to
support growth and new jobs. The report, entitled
“Research and Innovation for UK FinTech” sets
out a number of key actions to build longer-term
Research & Innovation across the UK.
“The FinTech sector in Wales is thriving, at FinTech Wales we aim
to raise awareness of the great firms that are already here as well as
developing the community and ecosystem to support new and exciting
startups. We work closely with the academic sector to ensure the skills and
talent required to build FinTech businesses in Wales are readily available. It’s
invigorating to talk to our members who are developing and providing world
leading FinTech businesses which stand strong on the UK and global stage.
Sarah Williams-Gardener, CEO, FinTech Wales
Confused.com
Veygo
www.confused.com
Location: Cardiff
Established: 2002
www.veygo.com
Location: Cardiff
Established: 2021
Confused.com is the first and longest-
running UK comparison site, formed
in 2002. Confused.com started with
just eight people in a room in Cardiff. It
revolutionised the way we all compare
and buy insurance – now, 88% of UK
motorists use comparison sites at least
once a year. Confused.com is now focused
on disrupting the price comparison
industry for a second and possibly a third
time over the next five years.
Veygo is the first start-up within Welsh FTSE100 insurer
Admiral's Pioneer business unit, which will be looking
to launch several new business over the next few years.
Veygo’s aim is to replace barriers with possibilities, currently
through temporary car insurance (including learner driver
insurance) helping customers get from A to B without
needing to own a car. Future plans involve exploring other
mobility solutions for customers.
“I think fundamentally to ensure
success it is about the people and
the talent that you have in your
organisation... People ask me how many
people work at Confused and I say 210. They
then asked me how many of those are in
tech? I say all of them because we are a tech
business. What we find - and I talk to the
likes of FinTech entrepreneur Richard Theo
and the guys at tech co-working location
Tramshed Tech - is there is a real hub building
in Cardiff and South Wales around AI, data
and automation. The skills that everyone is
crying out for are technology, digital, data-
based, as well as data scientists.
Louise O’Shea, Chief Executive, Confused.com
Hotspot 3
FinTech & InsurTech
We’re in the phase of
growing from start-up
to scale-up; and as fully-
digital operation, South Wales
is the perfect place to be. We’ve
hired some great talent locally who
together with the existing team will
get us to the next level, we have
really ambitious targets and plans,
and we want to be at the cutting-
edge of technology and the products
and experience we give to our
customers.
Gunnar Peters, CEO, Veygo
12 Clusters of Tech Wales 12 Clusters of Tech Wales
16 17
September
North East
December
Yorkshire & the Humber
May
East of England
June
London
July
South East
August
South West
February
Wales
November
Northern Ireland
March
West Midlands
January
North West
April
East Midlands
October
Scotland
2020 – 2021
12 months.
12 Clusters.
The whole of UK tech.
12 Clusters of Tech Wales
18
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