Fighting the Silicon Valley monster and why startups leave the Midwest

February 18, 2016  |  Kat Hungerford

Regional Roundup

Here’s this week’s dish on the booming ed tech sector, how other communities can contend with Silicon Valley and the realities of startup relocation. Check out more in this series here.


Biz News: How the rest of America can compete with Silicon Valley

Silicon Valley is the “center of the new-business universe,” according to Dileep Rao, a professor of entrepreneurship at Florida International University. That statement is backed by some impressive figures:

  • 49 of the top 50 venture capitalists call Silicon Valley home.
  • The top 50 VCs earn about $0.66 of every $1.00 of IPO profits.
  • 20 percent of entrepreneurs with a billion-dollar or more net worth are headquartered in the Bay Area.

Startups not in Silicon Valley can look forward to a harder fight every step of the way. So, how do they win? By being better than anything coming out of the Bay Area. Startups not in the Golden State will win by having better ideas, better tech, better talent and better businesses.

9 out of 10 Silicon Valley startups accept VC cash. With 80 percent of billion-dollar startups still launching outside the bay area, it may come as a surprise that only one out of 10 of these entrepreneurs uses venture capital. They made it by building better businesses from the ground up.

Crain’s Cleveland Business — Sad truth: Leaving Ohio helped Phenom get into 500 Startups

One of the reasons Acre Designs won’t be coming back to Kansas City after Y Combinator is because they can no longer fight the local risk-averse investment climate. That problem is not unique to Kansas City.

Phenom, a tech startup that launched in Ohio, relocated to San Francisco to access Silicon Valley capital. The founders said raising capital was too difficult without developing face-to-face relationships.

For startups wanting to stay in Ohio, it isn’t all bad news. Similar to Kansas City, venture capital has been on the rise as local startups begin to mature out of the high-risk stage.

The New York Times: Education technology graduates from the classroom to the boardroom

These days, it’s rare to find a kid that isn’t plugged into social media, a smartphone, tablet, game consoles and TV. Kids are absorbing information completely differently than even 10 years ago. And schools are scrambling to catch up.

The industry for education tech is booming. There are nearly 4,000 apps for classroom management and other software services. Ed tech startups raised more $2.98 billion last year, up from $1.87 billion in 2014. For you math whizzes, that’s a 30 percent increase in one year.

For startups hoping to bite into the ed tech apple, they may want to focus on their business models. Schools have trouble quantifying a return on investment when kids won’t enter the workforce for another decade. And there’s the challenge of individually selling to the more than 13,500 districts.

startland-tip-jar

TIP JAR

Did you enjoy this post? Show your support by becoming a member or buying us a coffee.

Tagged ,
Featured Business
    Featured Founder

      2016 Startups to Watch

        stats here

        Related Posts on Startland News

        Reggie Gray, Black Privilege, KCSourceLink video

        WATCH: Faces of KC entrepreneurship find strength in numbers, community resources

        By Tommy Felts | April 5, 2019

        A new video from KCSourceLink highlights the faces of Kansas City entrepreneurship — featuring makers, innovators, tech founders and social entrepreneurs — and their connection to the resource network and ecosystem infrastructure in Kansas City. “It takes very special people to be able to put everything on the line,” says Reggie Gray, executive director of Black…

        We Create KC report: Half of top VC-backed companies tapped early-stage support

        By Tommy Felts | April 5, 2019

        In 2018, 50 percent of the top venture capital-funded companies in Kansas City got their start with early-stage investment programs that emerged after 2012, according to We Create KC 2019, KCSourceLink’s sixth annual state of entrepreneurship report. “That high percentage shows us how important these early-stage investment programs are to our entrepreneurs and our ecosystem,”…

        Jonathan Bender, Flatland, KCPT, photo courtesy of Brad Austin

        KCultivator Q&A: Jonathan Bender boils down his talents to curate KC food scene

        By Tommy Felts | April 5, 2019

        Editor’s note: KCultivators is a lighthearted profile series to highlight people who are meaningfully enriching Kansas City’s entrepreneurial ecosystem. The KCultivator Series is sponsored by Plexpod, a progressive coworking platform offering next generation workspace for entrepreneurs, startups, and growth-stage companies of all sizes. He’s mastered the art of pairing the perfect cookie with the crispest…

        Brendan Reilly, Dan Scott and Richard Neal, Lelex Prime

        Time to see green: 3 startups spring into Digital Sandbox KC proof-of-concept program

        By Tommy Felts | April 4, 2019

        The path from concept to commercialization has three reinvigorated travelers this spring, Jeff Shackelford said Thursday, announcing the latest early-stage entrepreneurs to join Digital Sandbox KC. The program’s newly joined startups include a tech-driven legal solution and two companies using artificial intelligence to innovate their industries, said Shackelford, executive director of Digital Sandbox KC. “As…