First of all you need to research why the ecosystem is not here.Now a small digression -. Germany - 2 startups at least six academic spin-offs two corporate spin-offs at least six where at least one of the founders is an active professor or university researcher. Austria - three startups all university spin-offs. Poland – startups at least six where at least one of the founders is an active professor or university researcher at least in eight one of the founders has a Ph.D. in some field of physics.
Slovakia – zero startups. The situation here is quite similar to the Czech Republic but at Indonesia WhatsApp Number Data least they have the Slovak National Center for Quantum Technologies there . So the direction of the university – startup or spin-off is absolutely key.So the primary question is what makes us so specific here that there are no quantum spin-offs and no "quantum experts" founding startups? And the second basic question is whether it is possible to somehow fix and change it somehow to support them.
When we have these answers we can talk about some kind of financial support directly to support the creation of spin-offs and startups certainly not for basic research at least not at this stage and position. It should be a competition where submitted proposals promise some softwarehardware prototype within say three to five years. And financial support should satisfy laboratory needs or perhaps access to quantum computers. This should probably be the biggest priority for directing financial support.