“When you think about other places and what they’re going to be like five years from now, it’s hard to think about anything that’s going to be [more] different than Detroit,” says DVP’s Stasik. “San Francisco is going to be San Francisco, except they’ll probably put lights on the Bay Bridge. New York is going to be amazing for all the reasons that it is, but it will still be New York. Chicago is going to be Chicago. But I think Detroit is one of the cities where I think the next five years are going to be transformational.”
And, at the end of the day, that’s the big selling point for entrepreneurs in this town. Sure, you can come to the city, find some funding, and get your own personal dreams and aspirations off the ground. There is a community and a support network in place to make that happen now. But startup life in and around Detroit is about more than just individual goals and individual aspirations. It’s about the fortunes of the city and the region, it’s about contributing to something bigger than yourself, and it’s about getting in on the ground floor of what, many hope, could be one of the largest civic recovery projects in US history.
For entrepreneurs, particularly in the tech space, it’s an intriguing opportunity, not only to contribute to this rebirth but also to carve out a new niche in the regional economy, with the backing and support of everyone from the state government on down.
Everyone there wants to see you succeed. Everyone there loves your ideas, simply because it’s something new and different, and many are prepared to put up cash to back your startup. The economy needs solutions, and tech startups are very much on the radar for the future of Detroit.
And the message to entrepreneurs is clear.
Come to Michigan, do interesting work that makes sense for your career, and enjoy the quality of life that comes with it. Weekends at the lake house (which you can afford, since the Michigan real estate market is in shambles), private school for the kids (which is pretty much required, given the state of public education in the city), and a beautiful house . . . in the suburbs. It used to be called the American dream and it’s still possible—at least for some people, in certain ways—in and around Detroit.
CHAPTER
3
“I believe that more and more Stanford graduates will find themselves moving to Silicon Alley, not only because we’re the hottest new tech scene in the country, but also because there’s more to do on a Friday night than go to the Pizza Hut in Sunnyvale.”
—Former New York City mayor Michael Bloomberg,Stanford University commencement, January 2013
MICROSOFT’S NEW YORK CITY office is in Midtown, not far from Radio City Music Hall and the NBC studios at Rockefeller Center. It’s a sleek, modern space on one of the building’s upper floors, highlighted by walls of windows, long straight hallways, and the well-known red-green-blue-yellow color scheme from Microsoft’s logo played out in everything from artwork motifs to carpeting. The lobby downstairs is marble—white walls, gray floor—with vertical lighting and soaring, twenty-foot ceilings.
And for the monthly meeting of Ultra Light Startups, one of the oldest startup-investor pitch meetups in the city, the office space is packed to the gills. There are probably 300-plus entrepreneurs, investors, and other technology pros in the Microsoft auditorium when I arrive, all there to hear from a handful of founders and VCs and to debate the latest-and-greatest in digital currency innovations. The night’s discussion is centered on bitcoin and the New York–area startups that are working to make sense of the fast-emerging digital currency.
“So here’s what we’re going to be seeing,” explains Graham Lawlor from the podium. Lawlor is the founder of Ultra Light Startups as well as BrightMap, a service that leverages technology to connect event MCs and potential sponsors. Prior to founding this series of startup pitch events, he spent a decade as an IT project manager in the financial services industry, including positions with UBS and Deutsche Bank. He continues, “You’ll hear pitches from nine startup companies, all of which are built with or for bitcoin in some way. Once we hear from them, we’ll hold the contest and give out prizes to the winners.”
Standard stuff. But the interesting thing about this particular event is that it’s bringing together several different parts of the New York City economy. There are tech enthusiasts and startup watchers here, to be sure, but there are also representatives from the financial services industry—attracted by the focus on a digital currency that at the time was poised to shake up the business of money management—media representatives, and a variety of non-tech investors. At first, that might seem pretty unique. But the ability to access multiple industries and bring them all together in one room is a hallmark of the New York business world, and is one oft-cited advantage that the city offers its startup founders. Since the region is home to so many different companies in so many different sectors—just about every firm of note has a New York–area office, even if their headquarters and primary businesses are far away from Manhattan—it’s not difficult to reach out across industries when looking for new clients or potential partners. Want to sell your product or service to the fashion industry? Great, everyone you need to talk to essentially works within in a few square miles of Midtown. Want to expand your financial technology business beyond the banks and mutual funds? No problem, there are dozens of other industries to reach out to in the city, all just a subway ride away. It’s that whole “crossroads of the world” effect in action, and it can make life a good bit easier for growing startups.
Afterward, Lawlor explains to me that the New York startup ecosystem has been on a strong growth trend since about 2008, as evidenced by the large crowd that came out for the Ultra Light Startups event on bitcoin. (And his events are not alone in this, by the way. The New York Tech Meetup is generally considered to be the largest meetup group in the world with some 33,000 members.)
“I would say there was something of a dead period for startups [in New York] probably about after the tech bubble burst from 2000 to 2001,” he says. “And back then, there really wasn’t a startup community at all. It was all very, very limited. You know, if you told people back then that you were involved in startups you’d get a lot of blank stares. The attitude was kind of, ‘wasn’t that over in 2000 when the bubble burst?’ ”
That’s all changed now, Lawlor says, with growth happening in both the number of overall startups in the city (counting all five boroughs) as well as the number of people founding companies and working for them:
Everything is growing. The number of investors, the number of angels, the numbers of VCs, the number of local VCs as well as the number of outside VCs that are opening offices in the city. There’s also more diversity in the set of startups and the projects that they’re working on and the sectors that they’re working in.
Not surprisingly, given these various trends, he is very optimistic about the city’s long-term prospects.
“I think it’s entirely possible that [New York City] could even overtake Silicon Valley at some point as a hub for startups,” he says, “just because the city is bigger and the economy is bigger. And if tech grows in parallel with the size of the economy, then it will be. I think a lot of it is driven by the size of the city itself and the size of the economy. Tech is a trend that’s just going to span everything. I think it’s kind of inevitable. Big cities are hubs of economic activity, so just by virtue of the fact that New York’s as big as it is, it’s almost inevitable [that entrepreneurs will play a major role in the city’s economic future]. Every big city is going to be this way.”
As far as technology is concerned, New York City is already in the big time.
In fact, the city ranks behind only the Bay Area itself and Boston-Cambridge in terms of metro areas by venture capital investment, according to the National Venture Capital Association, with more