AOL founder Steve Case says innovators must become policy savvy
October 25, 2016 | Bobby Burch
Get familiar with public policy or your company will get left behind.
That was the forward-looking message that AOL founder Steve Case had for a group of about 200 investors and entrepreneurs at the 2016 Kauffman Fellows summit in Kansas City.
Now the CEO of Revolution, Case argued that investors, entrepreneurs and policymakers will have to forge better working relationships or risk losing out on the economic paradigm shift he’s dubbed “the third wave.”
“The only way that we’re going to get this right is if we have move constructive dialogue between the innovators and the policymakers,” Case said during a Tuesday visit to the Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation. “Right now they’re talking past each other.”
In his new book, Case defines the third wave as entrepreneurs’ ability to leverage the Internet to transform the largest sectors of our economy. That will not only prompt new technologies to connect with broader industrial systems but also entail more cooperative partnerships among businesses big and small.
Entrepreneurs will have to get more creative with their partnerships to achieve scale and differentiation in the market. Corporations also will need to embrace “self-disruption,” in which they are constantly re-inventing their businesses.
Innovation will be more difficult in the future, he said, which is why entrepreneurs must work closer with local, state and federal lawmakers to craft policies conducive to competition.
Case said that regulators must change their mentality moving forward.
“My general view is that regulators are focused on keeping bad things from happening and need to focus on enabling good things to happen,” Case said. “Regulations are there essentially to lock in the status quo in a way that protects incumbents. We need (regulations) to enable innovation and open up the door to disrupters. We need more of a bias to enable good things to happen .”
Case is no stranger to Kansas City. In 2014, he visited the City of Fountains during his nationwide “Rise of the Rest” tour, in which he hosted a $100,000 pitch competition and stopped at the Kansas City Startup Village.
Featured Business

2016 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
C2FO primes for global expansion with C-suite adds; new CFO joins from post-IPO SelectQuote
Editor’s note: C2FO is a financial partner of Startland News. Two new C-suite appointments to C2FO’s leadership team come as the Kansas City-based startup swells to record funding activity and projects new phases for its global expansion and growth. Ragui Selwanes, a veteran tech executive, joins C2FO as chief product and technology officer, a newly…
Black & Veatch investing $50K in CAPS network, hoping to unite corporate champions amid lagging labor market
One of the earliest supporters of the Center for the Advanced Professional Studies (CAPS) is stepping up again to set the tone for foundational corporate backing as the Johnson County-spun experiential learning effort scales across North America. CAPS announced Monday a $50,000 investment from Black & Veatch to further long-term employment solutions for the engineering…
‘Cyderes’ emerges from Fishtech, Herjavec merger; new cybersecurity powerhouse aims to reshape market
Editor’s note: Cyderes is a financial partner of Startland News, supporting Community Builders to Watch and Startland News Live. Security stakes are at an all-time high, said Robert Herjavec, star of ABC’s “Shark Tank” and CEO of the newly announced Cyderes — a rebranded cybersecurity leader with its sights set no lower than becoming the new…
