The legacy of Frohman’s commitment is still seen in the decisions of new multinational companies to set up critical operations in Israel. And some of these facilities, such as Google’s, were being built around the time of the 2006 Lebanon war.
The explanation for this concerns more than just engineering talent. It is also a matter of less tangible factors, such as
a drive to succeed that is both personal and national. Israelis have a term for this:
As Eitan Wertheimer told Warren Buffett at the start of the 2006 Lebanon war, “We’re going to determine which side has won this war by ramping up factory production to an all-time high, while the missiles are falling on us.”10 Israelis, by making their economy and their business reputation both a matter of national pride and a measure of national steadfastness, have created for foreign investors a confidence in Israel’s ability to honor, or even surpass, its commitments. Thanks to Dov Frohman, Eitan Wertheimer, and many others, the question of catastrophic risk, for investors and multinationals looking to do business in Israel, is virtually irrelevant.
CHAPTER 10
Yozma
The Match
—ORNA BERRY
ORNA BERRY’S SON, Amit, delivered what would be the $32 million message. Amit had retrieved the voice-mail message for his mom. A vice president from Siemens, the German telecommunications conglomerate, had called. Orna Berry, away on yet another trip abroad to pitch her start-up to bigger companies looking to buy, had missed the call. The message from Siemens marked the beginning of a process that culminated in the first acquisition of an Israeli start-up by a European company. The transaction was finalized in 1995.
Though today it’s a pretty commonplace event—Europeans have invested hundreds of millions of euros in Israeli companies—in 1995, for an Israeli start-up to be acquired by a European company was unheard-of. Orna Berry believes a new Israeli government program at the time, called Yozma, was what made it possible. She also believes that hundreds of other start-ups have had similar experiences because of the government’s initiative.
Berry is hailed as one of Israel’s leading business leaders.1 In 1997, she was named Israel’s chief scientist in the Ministry of Industry, Trade, and Labor—Israel’s innovation czar; in 2007, she became chair of the Israel Venture Association. She earned a PhD in computer science from the University of Southern California, worked for the technology consulting company Unisys in the United States, and then returned to Israel to work for IBM and, later, for Intel.
But in 1992, she was a first-time entrepreneur. She founded Ornet Data Communications with five colleagues from Fibronics, one of Israel’s early tech companies. Ornet Data developed software and equipment for local area networks (LANs), to double the speed of data transmission.
While most users were dialing into the World Wide Web through telephone lines, the Ethernet networking technology was growing as a way to connect LANs—groups of computers that were close together in homes and offices. LANs could move more information, faster, between computers in the network, but bandwidth was still quite limited. Ornet Data’s solution created a switch for these networked computers that, Berry estimated, multiplied the bandwidth fifty times.
Ornet Data had just a handful of employees in Karmiel, a city in northern Israel, and an office in Boston that Berry used when she came through town. In the early days of the company, she flew to the United States repeatedly to try to raise money, but she soon realized there was none available.
“There was no mechanism for early-stage high-risk funding in the absence of local venture capital,” she told us.2