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2Mar/10N/A10

The State of New York Technology

Colleagues, I am very excited to report that the state of the NY early stage technology ecosystem is strong. Very strong!

In an analysis of every major component of the NY technology ecosystem, our industry scores nearly straight As; and, where we score below an "A," we have a clear path to improving and succeeding. Let's review:

Let say that in every major early stage technology ecosystem, one needs a healthy mixture of the following:

  • Supply of Great New Entrepreneurs
  • Foundation of great second and third generation entrepreneurs
  • Efficient capital markets
  • Access to large and diverse customer set
  • Unidirectional flow of Human Capital through local universities into the startup ecosystem
  • Bidirectional flow of Intellectual Capital between local universities and the startup ecosystem
  • A media industry interested in reporting on the innovations of the industry
  • Value-driven services infrastructure (lawyers, rent, etc)
  • High quality of life
  • Strong industry community infrastructure

In more detail, let's address and grade each of these issues:

Supply of Great New Entrepreneurs - A

One doesn't have to throw a stone very hard in NYC to hit an up and coming entrepreneur. This is a city full of ambitious risk-takers, most of them may not have what it takes to succeed, but many do and are laying the foundations of incredible careers. New Entrepreneurs in New York come from diverse backgrounds. Many have spent time working in one of NYC's Big Industries, which means they have exposure to business at a large-scale. However, they also tend to have strong connections to their local economies, making them aware of the "status on the ground," which is where many of their ideas for innovation come from.

Foundation of great second and third generation entrepreneurs - B+

For much of the last decade, this has been the biggest issue of some of the smartest observers in NY Tech. Every healthy ecosystem needs an old guard bringing up the new, and Boston and San Francisco have been great examples for why this is important (can you say "PayPal Mafia?").

But in New York the questions is, "As a New Entrepreneur, can I find a veteren to help show me the way?" I think we're on our way here. Certainly I've had that experience -- seeing that I've had the opportunity to co-found a company with serial entrepreneur Aaron Cohen, who's had multiple exits in the space. Elsewhere, media veterans like Strauss Zelnick have helped mentor first-time CEOs Sam Lessin and Ben Lerer. Now Ben and Sam have begun mentoring New Entrepreneurs like Andrew Kortina and Justin Shaffer. The waterfall of mentorship is at work here.

And the examples don't stop there. NY-centric mentors, all of whom have made themselves accessible to other entrepreneurs for guidance, capital, and/or management leadership, include: Steven Messer, John Maloney, Scott Heiferman, Andrew Raseij, Team Betaworks, Esther Dyson, David S. Rose, Jeff Stewart, Albert Wenger, Josh Kopelman, Dennis Crowley, Evan Korth, Howard Lindzon, Mike Lazerow, Darren Herman, David Kidder, Nancy Pedot, and on and on and on.

The point being, no matter what you're doing in this city, if you can't find an industry to get excited, you're not looking in the right places. While New York will be better off when the next generation of mentors come into the picture, things are quite healthy here and only getting better.

Efficient capital markets - A-

Let me echo something Charlie O'Donnell said the other day on his blog. If you can't get funded in New York City, your company shouldn't be funded.

Why is that okay for Charlie and me to say? For two reasons: 1) Because both of us had startups which were unable to raise VC money (while both had some level of friends and family/Angel money). We both know "it's okay" if you do a startup and fail. Us not getting money was as healthy for the ecosystem as Etsy or 10Gen getting money.

The second reason is that in 2010 global capital markets are very efficient. In New York there are dozens of investors -- VC to Angels to Friends-and-Family -- with direct experience in virtually every area of the industry. And where there's not clear point-of-contact (say, for semiconductors) are many more firms or people (from Chris Sacca to my friends at Flybridge) who operate in New York and bring that expertise into the ecosystem.

Wherever it comes from, dozens of millions of dollars get deployed at every level of the early-stage ecosystem in New York, and I have yet to hear of a deal -- including my own -- which deserved to get funded and didn't. Can you name one?

Access to large and diverse customer set - A+

Let me just name streets and neighborhoods, and you let me know if you have access to customers in New York City: Madison Avenue, Wall Street, Orchard Street, Chinatown, Upper West Side, Upper East Side, Williamsburg, Restaurant Row...

For all the talk about its Big Industries, New York's economy is also a great example of diversity. Have a platform for restaurants? No better place but here. Something for tiny shops? New York is your place. Something for house keepers? Banks? Political campaigns? DIYers? Mega-fashion? Time-tracking? There's no better place than New York City to get access to these customers.

Unidirectional flow of Human Capital through local universities into the startup ecosystem - B

The dynamic between startups and universities can be broken down into two parts. The first is the mostly unidirectional flow of human capital into universities and out to the innovation industry.

In order for this to work out, our local universities have to recruit top talent on a global level. In the case of early stage technology, we need this to be a healthy mix of engineers/hackers and "business kids."

In New York, our universities are doing great jobs of recruiting, educating, and feeding (into the startup industry) folks on the business side of the equation. Little improvement is needed here.

However, on the engineering side of the equation recruiting top engineering students -- on a graduate and undergraduate level -- and then getting them excited about joining or starting startups has been tough. Right now, professors like Evan Korth (NYU) and Chris Wiggins (Columbia) are too few and far between, and their departments and schools pay too little attention to the great work they are doing.

At the same time, startups pay too little attention to their opportunity to foster relationships with students at early ages. While folks like Evan and Chris push students to intern with startups, startup too often think of internships of as too expensive to provide -- the short-term output doesn't outweigh the salary and training expenses, they think -- and so often shrug it off, or offer positions without pay.

On this matter, we all need to step up to the plate. Universities need to do a better job attracting startup-minded talent and a better job of steering students away from Wall Street (or even big, established tech companies) and point them in the direction of the startup community. Meanwhile, those in the startup community need to make investments in this talent. While we can't compete with alternatives, we can pay decent salaries and invest the time into mentoring students.

We can do a better job, and must.

The good news is stuff is happening here. The NY Tech Meetup is now attracting dozens of student hackers each month through our Student Group, and Chris Wiggins, with a group of dedicated community members, is independently spearheading an exciting new project around internships (which I won't unveil too much of). NY Tech Meetup is also about to focus a lot of of its resources in the area of internships and recruitment.

Bidirectional flow of Intellectual Capital between local universities and the startup ecosystem - C

The second pilar of the University/Startup relationship is the bidirectional flow of intellectual capital.

I've given New York a "C" grade in this area because there are far to few people and startups working in this space. However, its the area we can most improve upon.

To make this bidirectional flow of intellectual capital work, we need more entrepreneurs and investors going on tours of university labs, diving into the great research projects already going on here, and thinking about how to commercialize the technology. I've been to both NYU and Columbia multiple times in the last year, but feel like I haven't done enough by not seeing the labs at Pace, Stevens, Poly, and other institutions. On the flip side, more tech transfer offices need to be visible in the startup community. David Lerner, who run's Columbia's office, is on the Board of the NY Tech Meetup, and is one of the most accessible people in the city. We need more people like him -- but we also need to do a better job seeking his counterparts out and bringing them into the fold.

Meanwhile, researchers should  also be paying attention to what's going on in the "real world" more often. While I appreciate and respect the separation between capitalism and academics, the truth is a lot of research is influenced by government DARPA and IARPA grants already -- so why shouldn't private companies, namely startups, be a bigger influence too? Researchers need to get out of the labs and into Meetups and VC offices to hear about the problems confronting real startups today.

A media industry interested in reporting on the innovations of the industry - A

The media lives in New York City and is paying attention. Not much to say here, except that I know of two stories coming out of two of the biggest news outlets about the startup community. Of course we'd love more attention, as an industry, but also our startups need to do more to deserve it. If you're finding something to complain about here, now you're really stretching.

Value-driven services infrastructure (lawyers, rent, etc) - A-

If one more person cites "rent" as a reason it's tough to do startups in New York City, I'm going to personally kick them out of New York. It's one of the most absurd statements anyone ever makes. It is the go-to issue of the shrill and unimaginative. First of all, rent is a relative cost. You live and work here for all the benefits listed above. The premium on NYC rent is far less than the premium you gain for your business. I have never met a single company who has not made it here because they couldn't find insanely cheap office space. In fact, every startup I know of finds exactly what they need at a price they can afford.

On the issue of other services (namely lawyers), again, this is where people are totally wrong. First of all, if you can't afford NY lawyers hire elsewhere. For BricaBox, I was able to use a law firm in Cincinnati. They have Associates and Partners admitted in the NY State Bar too! But you also don't have to go outside New York. As Chris Dixon wrote, if someone tries to make you pay more than $10k for your first round, tell them you'll go elsewhere.

High quality of life - A+

Nothing to say here. The fact that you can live a life of luxury AND have a lower carbon footprint than anywhere else in the country speaks for itself.

Strong industry community infrastructure - A+

Lastly on my list is the community infrastructure. I may be biased, here, but remember I've still spent more time in this community without my leadership role at NY Tech Meetup than with it. So aside from having the largest monthly meeting of technologists in the world (yes, that's true), we also have amazing people leading amazing groups like, nextNY, Y+30, Entrepreneurs Roundtable, Founders Club, Feedback Forum, Ultra-light Startups, Girls in Tech, New Work City, Video 2.0, TechAviv, Fashion 2.0, Gaming 2.0, Semantic Web Meetup, IxDA, and so on.

Conclusion

I said it before and I'll say it again: The State of the NY technology industry is strong. Yes, there are major things we need to work on, but at least we have focus here: I believe we should be doing everything possible around the flow of human capital through universities into the startup ecosystem, and the flow of intellectual capital between universities and the startup ecosystem.

If we could just focus on this alone, we could create tremendous value here.

Meanwhile, it will continue to be wasted breath to gripe and moan about the capital market or costs of doing business here. Those complains are from the unimaginative and are simply not true.

So, let's celebrate our successes as a community and rally around what's next to come. There's a lot we can do if we focus our energies on the right things.

14Dec/09N/A2

What does NY technology look like in 2010?

2010 is right around the corner, leaving me wondering, "What will next year bring for NY's technology sector?"

No group of people is better equipped to answer this question than NY Tech Meetup members and members of the broader NY tech community, and so, as I blogged on the NYTM Blog, I've set up a place (with Magnify.net's help) for you to submit your predictions on video.

Head to this link and submit a 10 second video of your prognostications for 2010. Then, at the January NY Tech Meetup, I'll show your videos to the crowd, and after the event I'll post them back on the NY Tech Meetup blog for the World to see.

31Aug/09N/A4

Why Tomorrow Night’s NYTM is so Important

NY Tech Meetup
Image by @MSG via Flickr

Tomorrow night -- on Tuesday, September 1st -- the NY Tech Meetup will feature 4 presentations of technology and research which originated at New York and Columbia Universities' computer science departments.

It's about time the University and Commercial tech communities did something together. This is why you should RSVP for it now:

The "NY tech community" as most of our 10,000 members consider it, is largely comprised of people in the commercial world. We are entrepreneurs, investors, service providers, and technologist-employees in companies large and small.

For the most part, in the commercial world, we do an amazing job at solving tech's medium-sized and important problems. If you're lucky enough to work a small handful of our member startups and you work on something like Health Care, you're among the few working on a super-sized problem and massively important.

However, for the most of us in the private, commercial space, we're at our best when giving you the ability to find what bars your friends are in or edit images in browsers or even serve advertisements in effective manners.

Great stuff. Innovative stuff. But that's not always where revolutionary technology comes from.

Universities are hugely important pieces of a technology ecosystem because they often produce revolutionary technology (TCP/IP, Apache, Mosaic, Google), and thus should be cornerstones of our communities.

However, in New York City, we fail at integrating our University and Commercial technology communities.

Until now. Tomorrow night we're showing off 4 amazing demos from some innovative teams located at NYU and Columbia University. You'll learn about "Musically Intelligent Machines," "Teaching Robots to See" and much, much more.

So come out and celebrate this great research happening in our back-yard.

It's important.

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2Jun/09N/A2

NY Tech Meetup Showcase!

Interested in meeting entrepreneurs and learning about some of NYC's most exciting and innovative startups? Come to New York Tech Meetup's first ever Showcase, a free event being held today, June 2nd, 3:30 to 6:30. at FIT's Great Hall (West 28th St., btw 7th and 8th Avenues, south side of the street.)

NYTM's monthly meetup will take place immediately following the Showcase at 7:00 pm in FIT's Haft Auditorium.
Come tomorrow to meet founders and learn about the following companies:
9Feb/09N/A3

cafeBricolage Revisited

Yesterday marked the two year aniversary of my getting involved in the NY tech community. In fact, I believe February 8th, 2007, was the day I turned my love of community, technology, and innovation, into a career.

Back when I published "The cafeBricolage Manifesto," I knew practically no one in the New York technology industry, or even New York City for that matter. Sure, I had been piping up for a few months the nextNY list, and I had been to two or three events, but aside from that, I wasn't participating.

Boy, things have come a long way.

Reflecting on the cafeBricolage dream is not only a nostalgic exercise, but also a good marker for how far NY tech has come in two years. Back then, I wrote:

cafeBricolage would be the NYC incubator for start-ups, but it would be done in a way that NYC needs. Throw out your old concepts of an incubator, and think about this: a collective space, one part cafe and one part office, which could support up to a dozen small resident companies of various smallness, and work-space, geared toward the laptop carrying professional, embedded in a community cafe operated by the members themselves. Since we’re all tech people here, I say in in a way we can all understand: “It’s ‘co-working‘ meets ‘cooperative cafe‘ meets NYSIA meets ‘Digg’” (just kidding about the “Digg” part, it’s just something you have to say in a sentence like that).

While this dream never came to fruition, in the past two years many other dreams have.

New Work City, which grew out of cooperBricolage (which was, clearly, at least influenced by my cafeBricolage Manifesto) launched late last year, bringing a magnificent work and programming space to the New York tech and independent community.

Of course the Incubator at Rose Tech Ventures -- the space I currently manage -- has also launched in that time. In fact, I met David at the cooperBricolage launch party, where I overheard him talking about the early vision for our incubator. I offered to be the first tenant (as BricaBox back then) and soon thereafter my working relationship with David S. Rose and Rose Tech Ventures began. Now, we have a dozen startups under our roof, weekly programming, and dozens of community events throughout the year.

As these types of community energizing places have emerged, so have new community energizing times.

Last year we saw New York City's first Internet Week, putting our industry on the same level of other great New York industries. We also saw the Web 2.0 Expo come to New York, making it clear to the industry elsewhere that New York City is a leading place to innovate and develop new technology. And this week, Social Media Week has kicked off its inaugural event, bringing the City dozens of free, community-led events about the area where tech and media are converging: a phenomenon New York City experiences like nowhere else.

What's remarkable to me is that what's emerged in the last two years is far richer and sustainable than anything I called for then. While the dream of a one-stop still has its benefits, realistically the decentralized-yet-interconnected nature of today's New York tech industry sets the stage for futher and futher growth from places not yet imagined two years ago, like the newly-institutionalized NY Tech Meetup, its Community Committee, and the dozens of other new groups which have sprung up in such a short period of time, like Fashion 2.0, Ultralight Startups, and the Entrepreneurs Roundtable.

Looking back on these past two years invigorates me. On a purely personal level, they've been two years of tremendous growth. But on a community level, on the two-year anniversary of my involvement in this great thing we call "NY tech," they've been two years of tremendous progress of which I am blessed to have become involved.

Onward and upward, New York!

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30Dec/08N/A5

“Egoless Community Organizing”

In the past, I've spoken about "egoless community organizing" -- and nearly every time I do, people (even those I respect and listen to closely) scoff at the concept.

"It's naive," they say.

Not so.

The concept of "egoless community organizing" borrows from two proven -- and initially ridiculed -- principals from the Obama campaign:

The first, the idea of an egoless organization, is one actually rooted in valuing competence over politics. In TIME's Person of the Year interview with Barack Obama, the President-Elect talked about how he created his organization's effective and winning culture from the top down.

I don't think I've got some magic trick here. I think I've got a good nose for talent, so I hire really good people. And I've got a pretty healthy ego, so I'm not scared of hiring the smartest people, even when they're smarter than me. And I have a low tolerance of nonsense and turf battles and game-playing, and I send that message very clearly. And so over time, I think, people start trusting each other, and they stay focused on the mission, as opposed to personal ambition or grievance. If you've got really smart people who are all focused on the same mission, then usually you can get some things done. [emphasis mine]

I'll do what TIME's editors did and recommend that you read those last words again.

I've long believed that the Hope of Barack Obama is the hope of competence; and in those words, Obama unveils an invaluable key to producing Change:

Whether your organizing the New York tech industry, activists against Prop 8, a soccer team or employees in a startup, creating a culture where people "stay focused on the mission, as opposed to personal ambition" -- egoless, if I may -- is the secret.

If you can do that, the Community Organizing part -- the work in the field -- will come that much easier; because, as Barack Obama says in the understatement of the year, "then you can get some things done."

22Dec/08N/A0

The Next NYTM

It's been a little over a week since I became the Organizer-elect of the New York Tech Meetup; and since then, I've spent most of my time working with others to shape the next phase of the largest organization in NY technology.

While part of this has meant meeting up with the current stakeholders in the NYTM (Scott & Dawn), most of my work has been around three areas: Listening to the Community; Forming the NYTM Board; Planning my Community Committee; and, Planning January's Meetup.

Here's are the updates I can share in each of those areas and how you can get involved:

Listening to the Community

In the last week, I've received dozens of emails, engaged in many conversations on the NYTM listserv, and read several blog posts relating to the future of the NYTM and the NY tech community. I've also met face-to-face with several folks, including my friend Sanford (who posted this after the election) to recap all of the ideas shared.

Of the many things I've heard, I think Sanford's actions of openning some of his schedule -- as a comunity resource -- is a large part of what's needed from the community at large. I'm glad he and I see eye-to-eye on this stuff. It's not a coincidence we were #1 & #2 in that election and both instituted "office hours" in the same week.

So, one way you can be involved in changing the NY tech community is by openning yourself up to the larger NYTM community and also doing some version of office hours. Get people in your door and meet folks you wouldn't ordinarily meet. Go visit people you'd like to learn more about. We could have a culture of connectedness here -- and that wouldn't be a bad place to start.

Forming the NYTM Board

As Scott mentioned back in November, the new NYTM will have a board to guide and preserve the future of the New York Tech Meetup, as well as serve the broader NY tech community. Forming the first board is almost complete and is being handled mostly by Dawn and Scott. For the sake of transparency, you should know that I lobbied to make this Board full of our tech community's greatest luminaries and that they represent a diverse constituency. I felt that the board needed folks who had been around the longest and had the most information and resources to share. I'm excited to see how my input on the matter ends up shaping the next Board. Regardless of its composition, I'm sure it will make our community stronger in the longest run.

Planning the Community Committee

"Community Committee," "Organizer Committee," "Organizer Board": this is the group I've spoken most about, am most excited about and have had the hardest trouble naming (partially because the name means the least while the work will be the most important).

At the next Meetup, I'll unveil the final plan, but already I've shared a lot about how I see this committee working out:

The Community Committee will the the source of coordination and communication throughout the ecosystem. It will be a 10 - 15 member committee comprised of community organizers and connectors: folks who have deep and broad knowledge about the NY tech community and have displayed a tendency to disseminate that information among the ecosystem's many communities.

The purpose of the committee is to provide coordination among those organizers, rather than forcing coordination upon the organizations themselves. It's about system optimization, not re-engineering or replacing.

So, using lightweight tools, the Community Committee will task itself with making sure critical information and networks traverse the ecosystem and that community stakeholders are strengthened by the rest of the Community Committee and their networks.

Besides the requirement to be deeply involved and connected in the broader community, being a part of this committee will also require specialized knowledge of specific sectors of the community. We need your expertise! As with the Board, I believe linking diverse groups together is mission critical for our community. And lastly, the biggest requirement is being bought into the idea that the most important work in this community will go unrecognized. I've always found that community organizers who want to be front and center get the least done. Everyone involved in this, including me, will have to be comfortable enjoying seeing the fruits of their labor in the success of others. Self-promoters need not apply.

PS: Info on how to apply will come at the next Meetup, or just drop me a note any time.

Planning January's Meetup

There's still a lot I have to learn from Scott and Dawn about running the Meetup, but before the New Year look for information in your inbox on how to apply to present at the next Meetup. The Meetup will still be at IAC for the next few months so it will still only fit 400 people. As for selecting the presentations for the next Meetup, be aware that I'm going to try a combination of curation from yours truly (as it has been in the past) as well as community voting.

Stay tuned.

Who is Nate?

You've found Nate Westheimer's blog. Nate wears many hats. He's the EVP Product & Technology and Co-founder of AnyClip, the Organizer of the NY Tech Meetup, and Advisor to Flybridge Capital Partners. More about Nate can be read on his Bio page and you can follow his thoughts on Twitter

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