startup
FastTrac TechVenture
Submitted by Joe Mullins on Tue, 03/18/2008 - 1:33pm.FastTrac® TechVenture™, a program of the Ewing Marion Kauffman
Mygistics AlwaysOn DEMO
Submitted by admin on Thu, 03/06/2008 - 1:55pm.Traffic monitoring and enhancement company that is looking to reduce congestion, traffic issues, and fuel waste, nation wide.
Kansas City Based
Fail Fast
Submitted by admin on Mon, 03/03/2008 - 11:07am.Posted From: Joylent Blog
One of the things we are most proud of at Joyent is our history of helping fledging start-ups bootstrap themselves into a successful business.
A critical component of this is giving you the flexibility to “fail fast”. This means you can try a business plan, see if it catches on, adjust and react to market changes, and most importantly, gain traction and revenues before you ever need to seek funding. With a deal like the free Joyent Facebook Accelerators, we take care of the hosting infrastructure, Facebook provides you with a distribution channel and all you need to bring is the code.
Fred Wilson over at Union Square Ventures has an interesting post entitled Why Early Stage enture Investments Fail which proves the value of this flexibility.
Fred puts it this way:
So it’s pretty clear to me that most venture backed investments don’t fail because the business plan was flawed. In my experience at least 2/3 of all business plans we back are flawed. Most venture backed investments fail because the venture capital is used to scale the business before the correct business plan is discovered. That scale/burn rate becomes the cancer that kills the business.
And to prove it, he gives some nice statistics on companies that he has funded. He compares the performance of companies that were nimble enough to transform their business (aka the ones that failed fast) with the businesses that stuck to one plan and did not or could not ever adjust.
The lessons for this are simple:
- Keep all your costs variable
- Get traction before raising capital.
Using cloud computing as part of your infrastructure is one way to accomplish both of these goals.
Additional reading about failing fast and failing often at Early Stage VC
Launch Programs
Submitted by admin on Mon, 02/18/2008 - 2:25pm.Seed funding has been challenging to track down, but maybe that's changing. Here's a list of programs designed not only to seed early growth, but provide expertise and inspiration to get you there.
The KTEC PIPELINE is an innovative new program, designed to identify talented and entrepreneurial Kansans, match them with best-in-class training, resources and mentors and encourage them to pursue a career as a technology entrepreneur in Kansas.
Kansas is the only state today that is systematically identifying their top technology talent and connecting them to become future leaders. The KTEC PIPELINE adds to KTEC's comprehensive technology program by ensuring the most important component to any successful economy - cadre of innovators that will lead the Kansas economy for generations to come
Deadline: Sept 10, 2008 Apply
Get up to $15,000 in seed funding for your new company, plus the chance to pitch to angel investors and venture capitalists at the end of the summer.
Only ten spots. TechStars takes only ten companies each summer. Last year more than 300 companies applied. Getting in is hard, and it means something special.
Seed funding. TechStars fills the startup funding gap by providing just enough capital to get your idea off the ground. Your new company receives up to $15,000 in seed funding.
Advice and Mentoring. TechStars fills the experience gap by bringing together the best and the brightest in one place and surrounding you with incredible proven mentors for the summer. With this much talent in one place you’ll get great advice on your product and strategy, thereby ensuring the best possible start for
your new business.
Connections. TechStars companies get immeasurable benefits that come from introductions and connections to potential partners and customers. At the end of the summer, each company also has the opportunity to pitch during an investor event that
we organize.
A great deal and a great co-founder.
In exchange for the TechStars summer program, seed funding, advice, mentorship, connections, and investor demo day, TechStars receives a 5% equity stake in your new company. TechStars receives “founders stock” which is just like yours. We want to be thought of as an experienced and well connected co-founder so we have the same risk and reward system that you do. Learn more.
Deadline: March 31, 2008 Apply here
LaunchBox Digital, an early stage investment firm located in Washington, D.C., is focused on helping entrepreneurs get through those challenging early days by bringing capital, advice, and practical guidance to help early stage businesses succeed. We offer:
- Funding and administrative support to enable founders to focus their energy on developing a great product;
- Mentoring and advice from seasoned technology veterans who have created significant stakeholder value; and
- Access to strategic partners, angels, VCs and the press to take your business to a whole new level
LaunchBox Digital is a place for cutting-edge ideas and cutting-edge talent. It's a way to maximize your chances of success. We've structured LaunchBox Digital so that we win only if you win.
Deadline: March 14, 2008 Apply
Y Combinator does seed funding for startups. Seed funding is the earliest stage of venture funding. It pays your expenses while you're getting started.
Some companies may need no more than seed funding. Others will go through several rounds. There is no right answer; how much funding you need depends on the kind of company you start.
At Y Combinator, our goal is to get you through the first phase. This usually means: get you to the point where you've built something impressive enough to raise money on a larger scale. Then we introduce you to later stage investors—and in some cases even acquirers.
Deadline: April 2, 2008 Apply
Are you a hacker who has thought about one day starting a startup? Have you already started it? Then you're invited to a free, one-day startup school this April 19 at Stanford
Deadline: March 23, 2008 Apply
UPDATE: Found a Few more.
Startup Weekend is a intense 54 hour event bringing together brilliant tech minds (developers, designers, marketers, ect.) together to create a company from concept to launch! You can read more about what the event is here.
Next Events;
More of a competition, but notable! $50K in cash and $50K in Amazon Web Services, a potential investment offer from Amazon and participating VC's.
KTEC
Submitted by admin on Sun, 02/17/2008 - 6:17pm.The
Kansas Technology Enterprise Corporation (KTEC) is a private/public
partnership established by the state of Kansas to promote technology
based economic development. Through support of strategic research and
development at our Centers of Excellence, through intense hands-on
business assistance at our incubators and through our direct equityi
investments in early-stage companies, KTEC serves as an invaluable
partner to companies that bring economic growth to Kansas.
startFEST event
Submitted by admin on Wed, 02/13/2008 - 8:17am.
startFEST+DEMO
startFEST+DEMO is
a social gathering with the aim to create relationships among
growth-oriented entrepreneurs, innovative companies, and members from
the investment community. This first event will introduce the Kansas
City business community tostartPATH, a
virtual incubator and social network helping entrepreneurs transform
concepts into successful companies. In addition, 10 companies will be
demonstrating their technology during this event. Fine beers from
Boulevard will be provided, encouraging lively social interaction among
attendees.
March 6, 2007 (6-9pm)
Boulevard Brewing Company
2501 Southwest Boulevard
Kansas City, MO 64108
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Failure Friendly
Submitted by admin on Wed, 02/06/2008 - 12:57pm.Silicon Valley is undoubtedly the center of the startup world. The numbers can be staggering, with 75% of VCi returns coming from a 10 mile radius around Stanford. A good portion of the remaining VC returns come from the area around MIT. The rest of the country trails far far behind.
Stanford and MIT are certainly a large factor in this success, but it isn't the whole story.
Success From Failure
Counter intuitive as it may seem, acceptance of failure seems to be one of the larger contributors to this success. Most startups fail, 60-90% depending on who you ask, and this applies even in Silicon Vally. The community in Silicon Valley not only accepts this, they embrace it. Failing shows that you tried, as long as you worked hard, were quick on your feet, and honest, you could try again, possibly working with the same investors.
Examples in Failure
Failures can be small incremental concept and business plani failures, or they can be catastrophic crashes with investors, founders, and employees being pounded.
Concept Failure: Confinity was initially started to transfer money from Palm Pilot to Palm Pilot to pay for meals! What a ridiculous idea, it only worked on Palm Pilots it was solving a problem that no one really had. They got $3 Million in VC funds to exploit this market. Not much exists from the original idea, which focused around encryption on mobile devices, but they realized their mistake and reshaped into a industry killer.
Result: PayPal!
Total Failure: GovWorks.com WAS an attempt to make transactions with local government (tickets, drivers licenses, property tax)easy. Great idea, but the team had problems, the technology didn't work, and competitors moved faster. They failed completely and a
movie, Startup.com, details their fateful journey.
Y Combinator
Submitted by Andrew B. Dickson on Tue, 01/22/2008 - 4:13pm.Y Combinator does seed funding for startups. Seed funding is the earliest stage of venture funding. It pays your expenses while you're getting started.
Some companies may need no more than seed funding. Others will go through several rounds. There is no right answer; how much funding you need depends on the kind of company you start.
At Y Combinator, our goal is to get you through the first phase. This usually means: get you to the point where you've built something impressive enough to raise money on a larger scale.
Then we introduce you to later stage investors—and in some cases even acquirers.
Coffee Shop Incubator
Submitted by Andrew B. Dickson on Sat, 01/19/2008 - 8:49am.Entrepreneurs often don't have the ideal office sitution, so you will often find them wherever wifi and beverages can be had.
Here's the top in KC. The Roasterie is the best IMHO, and is where you will find StartPathers. The Roasterie is owned by Danny and Carla O'Neil, hotshots of the coffee world and fellow entrepreneurs.
The Roasterie The is the default location, best seating, great coffee, and it is owned by a fellow entrepreneurs, Carla and Danny O'Neil 6223 Brookside Blvd Kansas City, MO 64113
Filling Station 2980 McGee Trafficway Kansas City, MO 64108
J P Wine and Coffee Bar 1526 Walnut St Coffee Girls 310 Southwest Blvd, Kansas City, MO 64108
Da Bronx Better than a coffee shop, great subs and pizza teamed with wifi makes for great working conditions, Bring headphones, its a bit rowdy. 3904 Bell St Kansas City, MO 64111
What's Your Fuel
Submitted by Andrew B. Dickson on Mon, 01/07/2008 - 12:58am.Coming from design school, I am intimately familiar with late nights and long hours. Not being a coffee drinker, I resorted to diet coke and cold air. However, I did discover that caffine only powers you for an hour or so. Caffine also aggrivates ADD, making that hour less than effective.
My new weapon of choice.
Three of these a day, and you'll manage a decent days work. I am currently under the inffluence and have hammered out a weeks worth of back emails, some blogging, a bit of Bplanning, prep for the week, laundry, bills, and have a couple hours left.
What's your Fuel?
















