10 years later: Google Fiber boosted city’s ‘capacity for collaboration,’ former mayor says

October 14, 2022  |  Matthew Gwin

Sly James, former KCMO mayor, speaks alongside Aaron Deacon, KC Digital Drive, during an event celebrating KC Digital Drive's 10th anniversary

Instant success catalyzed by the arrival of high-speed internet 10 years ago uploaded more than hype for Kansas City, said Sly James, noting Google Fiber’s significant role in reshaping the community as a tech city to envy.

Opening unparalleled innovation and civic brand-building opportunities, Google’s selection of Kansas City, Kansas, and Kansas City, Missouri, as the first communities to receive its high-speed internet service in 2012 came at just the right time, said James, who served as KCMO mayor from 2011 to 2019.

“When all this was going on, we were coming out of the recession,” he said, referencing the Great Recession of 2008. “We were coming out of four years of absolutely nothing happening in the city. We were still in that attitude of comparing ourselves to other places. Why can’t we be like Minneapolis? Why can’t we be like St. Louis? Why can’t we be like anybody other than Kansas City?”

Kansas City, Kansas, was chosen to be the first Google Fiber community in March 2011 — from more than 1,100 U.S. cities that applied — and soon after Google chose to also include Kansas City, Missouri. The network became available to residents in September 2012.

James said he wasn’t sure whether Google Fiber lived up to the hype of that time — Google Fiber has been criticized by some for overpromising and underdelivering — but he argued those early expectations were now beside the point.

“I kind of liked the hype of saying something and doing something that would make us unique,” James added. “I don’t know whether living up to the hype is a big thing or not. I never looked at it like that. I looked at it as an opportunity for us to distinguish ourselves from other places doing other things, because I was all about wanting to make sure that we changed our attitude about who we were.”

Riddhiman Das, TripleBlind, speaks during a panel conversation marking the 10-year anniversary of KC Digital Drive

Opening access to a billion

James was joined in a panel discussion Wednesday evening by Riddhiman Das, co-founder and CEO of TripleBlind, a data encryption software company; and Rachel Merlo, head of government relations for Google Fiber. The former mayor co-founded Wickham James Strategic Solutions with Joni Wickham, his former chief of staff, after leaving City Hall.

The “Back to the Future” panel was moderated by Aaron Deacon, managing director of KC Digital Drive, who hosted and organized the “Forward to the Future” fundraiser.

KC Digital Drive was celebrating its own 10-year anniversary, as the organization was established by the governments of KCK and KCMO to address digital equity issues revealed when Google Fiber came to the area.

Das, a UMKC graduate and successful tech entrepreneur, noted how Kansas City companies, especially those in tech sectors, turned fiber access into capital.

“The hype also creates a lot of equity, and I think we rode that wave really well,” Das said. “I was just thinking as I was driving up here, that I can think of possibly a billion dollars of equity value that was generated as a direct consequence of hype. It brought attention to the region, and it brought attention in a way that showed that real things can happen here.”

Das shared a story about how in 2012, a Kansas City tech startup’s potential deal with a Bay Area venture capitalist fell through when the VC learned the company wasn’t located “within biking distance” of his firm’s San Francisco office.

“I think that is no longer true 10 years later,” Das said. “I think hype had a lot to do with it. It was a causational effect not a correlational effect, where it put Kansas City — and tech in Kansas City — on the map in a way that showed this place can be innovative … and those companies can go on to change the world.”

That shift in mindset led more tech workers to “give Kansas City a shot” rather than leave for traditional coastal tech hubs, Das said, calling Google Fiber a “catalyst” that “electrified that [KC tech] community.”

“As I look back at the long arc of the last 10 years, I would say [Google Fiber] was very, very transformational for tech in Kansas City,” he continued. “The number of exits that we’ve had, the number of patents and innovations that have come out of that ecosystem, the number of software products … I think that was catalyzed by Google Fiber. It was catalyzed by the sense of community.

Check out a brief photo gallery of event speakers, then keep reading.

‘Why can’t we be like Kansas City?’

This spirit of innovation and community collaboration extended into municipal endeavors, James said, including the airport expansion project — expected to culminate with the new single terminal’s opening in March 2023 — and the 2012 MLB All-Star Game, which many believe set the stage for the Royals’ World Series runs in 2014 and 2015.

Calling it “the best thing” that came out of Fiber implementation, James said Kansas City benefited from an increased “capacity for collaboration” that can be used to transform the city.

“It gave us the understanding that we really could achieve beyond where we thought we could, and that the only way that we could achieve that is by working together,” James said.

Seeing immediate success as the result of a collaborative approach had the power of uniting — and ultimately — transforming Kansas City’s future, the former mayor said.

“We were able to take that core, build it out, and keep adding layers to it,” James said. “We had instant success and positive reinforcement about what it meant for us as a city to unite behind an idea and push it forward. That is transformative, because that transformation applies to whatever we do.”

In contrast with a decade ago, Kansas City is now viewed enviously by other cities who hope to replicate the area’s growth, James said.

“Kansas City has done so many really unique things that our reputation outside of this area is greater than some of the people who live in this area think,” he said. “Everyone who’s a Kansas City resident or Kansas City-area resident should be exceptionally proud of the reputation that we have in this country and around the world.”

“Just as a point of pride, having other cities say, ‘Why can’t we be like Kansas City?’ I love that crap. I love that,” James added. “We were wanting to be like everybody else and then all of a sudden, people want to be like us — and they still do.”

startland-tip-jar

TIP JAR

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

2022 Startups to Watch

    stats here

    Related Posts on Startland News

    Niall goes ‘all in’ on new retail location, high-tech pen

    By Tommy Felts | March 3, 2016

    Well-known in Kansas City for gifting Royals manager Ned Yost a snazzy timepiece, Niall will soon be offering a host of new luxury products — including a high-tech pen — and a new store to feature them. Led by CEO Mike Wilson, Niall on Wednesday announced an expansion of its product line to include a…

    Cue the palpitations: Bobby’s taking a (free) coding class

    By Tommy Felts | March 1, 2016

    Only a few weeks in Kansas City, and LaunchCode is already making good on its promise to improve the area’s coding competency with a free, 16-week computer science course. And this mathematically-challenged, technically-inept journalist is going to do his best not to embarrass himself while attempting to learn the science of computing. Open to all…

    2016 Sprint Accelerator

    Sprint Accelerator firms hiring, offering meet-and-greet

    By Tommy Felts | March 1, 2016

    The new firms at the Techstars-led Sprint Accelerator program are already growing. While many are looking for interns, seven of the 10 mobile tech companies in the three-month accelerator are looking to hire staff. The companies, which entered the Kansas City-based accelerator on Feb. 22, each nabbed $120,000 in capital as part of the program,…

    autism behavioral therapy Pathfinder Health Services

    Behavioral health startup announces acquisition, name change

    By Tommy Felts | March 1, 2016

    Behavioral health tech firm ABPathfinder is blazing a new path thanks to a recent acquisition. In addition to a name change, the Overland Park-based firm announced Thursday that it purchased Phoenix-based Ensure Billing to beef up the company’s services. The new entity has rebranded to become Pathfinder Health Innovations. Acquiring an insurance billing company allows…