"It feels like it's in the new frontier of the entrepreneurial hot spots," says Chris Myers, co-founder of BodeTree, a venture-backed startup that provides financial analysis and reporting tools for small businesses. Myers had been living in Phoenix up until recently, when he relocated to join his business partner in Denver. The company's headquarters are located in downtown Denver in a building originally constructed in 1865.
Denver is home to the consumer product innovation company UrgentRx and health-care application iTriage. And according to a recent ranking by the Kauffman foundation, Denver has moved from the 9th most popular startup scene to the 4th from 1990 to 2010. Also, on Monday, the city's second annual Denver Startup Week kicks off.
Fewer distractions for talent.
For tech startups in Denver, the less concentrated startup density
tends to draw a more committed employee. "When you look at hiring talent
and bringing people on, especially for a tech startup, you know, the
story has always been, 'It has got to be the Bay, or it has got to be in
Flatiron [New York City],' or something like that. And there is great
talent there, no question about it. But it is just a different dynamic,"
says Myers. In The Valley and New York, "you have a lot of people
bouncing from one thing to the next to the next to the next."
"Been-there-done-that" sentiment. The
laid-back, outdoor oriented, environmentally-friendly culture of Denver
is extremely attractive to burned-out, overworked employees. "You get
the people who have 'been-there-and-done-that' in the Valley and New
York, and they are ready for just a change of pace," says Myers. "You
are still getting top notch talent, but you know, you move quickly in
those areas, and people want a different pace of life."
Developing entrepreneurship community.
"It is getting there," says Myers. And that it is not already there is
precisely one of the benefits to being part of it. In Palo Alto or
Mountain View, Calif., "there is an established community, which is good
and bad. Breaking into that community can be hard. It is like cliques
in high school. There is an unspoken set of rules of how to interact and
things. I think there are benefits with that, but a lot of times there
are drawbacks," says Myers.
Constantly working to position yourself
can be distracting. "You are not really focused on the business that you
are building, you are focused on how you fit into this ecosystem of
startups and VC's and who is cool and who is not and who is growing and
who is not," says Myers, who also in the same breath added that he was
not disavowing that there are benefits of a developed and sophisticated
entrepreneurship community.
Launching a startup in the bucolic greens of Denver does come with some handicaps, too. Here is a look at some of the negatives:
It can be harder to get money than if you were on a coast. BodeTree
closed a $1.4 million round of venture capital in April with a couple
of Denver-based VCs, but it's harder to prove your chops to venture
capitalists and investors in New York and San Francisco from the middle
of the country. "When you are talking to them and you are giving them
your pitch and you are telling them your story, invariably it always
comes up, 'Oh so you are not in The Valley? Oh, so we don't really
invest in businesses outside of The Valley,'" says Myers. "Now, a good
idea will always get funded. But you don't have that same face-to-face,
'Hey lets go grab drinks.'"
If your startup builds upon the infrastructure of a tech-giant, it could be hard to be in Denver. "If
you are a social app that ties into Facebook, you are going to want to
be by Facebook. If you are a real, youth-oriented type of solution, you
are going to want to be in those hotspots," says Myers. But if you're
startup like BodeTree that caters to a demographic not tied to companies
in the Valley or in New York, being in Denver may be a boon, because
you are embedded with your customers more directly.
The Denver airport is in the middle of nowhereseville. If you are inking deals on a regular basis, you spend a lot of time in
the air. The Denver airport is not conveniently located to the center of
town, says Myers. "It is about a million miles away from the downtown,"
says Myers. It's actually about 30 miles. But once you hit the exit for
the airport, you have to go another nine miles to get to the airport.
"I have no idea why they put it out there."
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