Mycroft CEO: Ditch Amazon bait for better investment — KC startups

October 16, 2017  |  Joshua Montgomery

Editor’s note: Kansas City-based Mycroft CEO Joshua Montgomery wrote this piece in response to the area effort to attract Amazon’s prospective HQ2. The opinions expressed in this commentary are the author’s alone. [divide]

My first face-to-face meeting with an Amazon employee took place on his day off.

He was at the Sprint Accelerator on the Missouri side of the Kansas-Missouri state line and — because Amazon didn’t want to pay sales tax in Missouri — he couldn’t come to the accelerator on Amazon’s time.

Amazon’s refusal to pay sales tax for more than a decade amounted to a huge government subsidy. Customers paid shipping fees rather than sales tax and it allowed Amazon to increase market share at the expense of local competitors. They only stopped this practice recently when the company got so big that the subsidy no longer mattered.

Now Kansas City, like dozens of other cities around the country, is competing in a race to the bottom. It is a race to bring Amazon’s new headquarters to town. Never mind that the company will require billions of dollars in taxpayer subsidies. Never mind that Amazon has shirked its duty to pay Missouri sales tax for more than a decade. Our community is willing to lay down at Amazon’s feet and beg them to open headquarters here.

We seem to forget that Seattle didn’t become a technology leader by paying Jeff Bezos and Bill Gates to select it for their corporate headquarters. Both of them chose to build their businesses there for other reasons. Bill grew up in Seattle and wanted to go home. Jeff wanted to be near Ingram Book Group’s warehouse and needed access to a pool of reasonably priced technology talent. Both went on to build unicorn companies that now dominate their respective markets.

Both went on to build unicorn companies that now dominate their respective markets.

If Kansas City wants to stand tall on the global stage, we need to work to build our own unicorns. That means supporting local entrepreneurs and providing them with a business climate in which they can succeed. Startups need experienced mentors, low-cost real estate, readily available talent, high-speed broadband and – importantly – early-stage capital.

Kansas City has four of these five characteristics, lacking only early-stage capital. So how do we add the final piece? Well, giving billions of dollars to Amazon probably isn’t the answer.

Instead, why don’t we make these same funds available to local startups? Buffalo, New York, offers startups $500,000 to move there. Seoul, South Korea, runs a program that funds startups willing to relocate. Why not create a similar fund in Kansas City?

Here is my challenge to you, Kansas City. Add language to the Amazon proposal that allocates 25 percent of the subsidies as cash incentives to local startups if (when) Amazon turns us down. Provide our entrepreneurs with capital, office space and training. Watch as your investment grows and transforms Kansas City from a place that recruits out of state businesses into a place like Seattle, Palo Alto, Mountain View or San Jose – places where growth is so rapid that they need to put on the brakes.

Joshua Montgomery is a co-founder at Mycroft, an open-source version of Amazon Echo. Connect with Joshua on Twitter at @oojoshua

Tagged , , ,
Featured Business
    Featured Founder
      [adinserter block="4"]

      2017 Startups to Watch

        stats here

        Related Posts on Startland News

        The WTF Series: Agile

        By Tommy Felts | October 13, 2015

        On a daily basis, Ben Kittrell translates the jargon-filled world of technology for clients of his tech consultancy. The Words that Frustrate (WTF) series aims to offer readers some clarity in an industry dominated by techies’ confusing argot. In the stone age of software development, there was one way to manage projects, and we called it “Waterfall.”…

        (S)heStarts: How demographics affect views of your pitch

        By Tommy Felts | September 29, 2015

        Welcome to our new series exploring news and views on men, women, start-ups and the entrepreneurial experience. In July of 2015, Startland News collaborated with WhiteSpace Consulting to conduct a whiteboard conversation with women entrepreneurs in the Kansas City region. Women entrepreneurs shared their perceptions about launching and leading companies, and identified topics for ongoing…

        Startup families: You’re not perfect

        By Tommy Felts | September 24, 2015

        I’m not perfect. At being a father or running a startup. I’m 33 with two kids ages 7 and 5. I remember when they were younger. I would work until 3 a.m. on something I thought was extremely valuable at the time. My daughter would wake me up at 7 a.m., tugging on the sheets, “Daddy,…

        The WTF Series: Big data

        By Tommy Felts | September 17, 2015

        On a daily basis, Ben Kittrell translates the jargon-filled world of technology for clients of his tech consultancy. The Words that Frustrate (WTF) series aims to offer readers some clarity in an industry dominated by techies’ confusing argot. I don’t remember if I had heard the term “Big Data” before 2012 but after attending South-by-Southwest that year…