The Big Red Startup Machine

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hi! @timfalls Tuesday, May 21, 13 HI! I’m tim @timfalls on twitter Thanks for having me!

description

I gave this talk at an awesome little conference called QCMerge, in Cincinnati, OH, in May, 2013. My goal for the talk was to send the audience home with a tangible action item - something each individual could take away and DO. Assuming *some* portion of the crowd accepted my challenge, my hopes are that this talk will directly result in a better community for the Cincinnati area and its surrounding communities - i.e., more successful entrepreneurs and startups, leading to a stronger local/regional economy.

Transcript of The Big Red Startup Machine

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hi!

@timfalls

Tuesday, May 21, 13HI! I’m tim@timfalls on twitterThanks for having me!

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Tuesday, May 21, 13I grew up in Indiana and attended undergrad at Indiana University.

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Tuesday, May 21, 13I move to Boulder in 2008 and still live there.

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Tuesday, May 21, 13My introduction to tech and startups came through my job at TechStars.

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Tuesday, May 21, 13From there, I started working with SendGrid.I’m the community guy.I lead a global team of Developer Evangelists. We’re building community, through developer and startup outreach.

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Tuesday, May 21, 13We do emailWe’re transitioning from startup to grown up company.

Some stats on SendGrid: •100k+ customers•7B+ emails/month•130+ employees•Offices in Boulder, Denver, Anaheim, Providence RI, Romania, London.

Elmer will tell you more about the email side of things, tomorrow during his workshop.

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Tuesday, May 21, 13SendGrid = day, night, weekend job.

But i do some other things, too.

**Note: This is a black slide, to keep the audience’s attention on me, the speaker :)

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Tuesday, May 21, 13I co-founded a company called BoulderBeta dot CO.

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Tuesday, May 21, 13We produce a startup event called BoulderBeta, which showcases 10-ish companies to 400+ community members each event, several times per year. Founded in 2011.

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Tuesday, May 21, 13Brad Feld asked me to write subchapter in his book, Startup Communities, telling the story of BoulderBeta. I draw from this book in this talk.

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Tuesday, May 21, 13I co-organize Open Angel Forum in Boulder, helping entrepreneurs and angel investors find each other.

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Tuesday, May 21, 13Sometimes I’m a geek on a plane. Previously I’ve visited, LatAm, Middle East, and India. Next stop: Southeast Asia, in June 2013.

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helping community happen

Tuesday, May 21, 13Through all of this - my team and I help community happen all over the world.

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Tuesday, May 21, 13What does that mean? How does one “help make community happen”?

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Tuesday, May 21, 13I/we *go places*

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Tuesday, May 21, 13I/we *meet people*.

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Tuesday, May 21, 13I/we *build relationships*.

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Tuesday, May 21, 13Armed with all of that, I/we connect dots.

We understand and identify the connections that need to be made, and we make them.

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Tuesday, May 21, 13I’ve now painted picture: who I am and why I’m talking to you about startup communities.

Now, on to the important stuff!

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Tuesday, May 21, 13Let’s learn more about YOU!

Who writes code? Who doesn’t? Who is a startup founder or employee?Who is a student or works “on campus” ?Who works for a larger, established company?

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COMMUNITY

Tuesday, May 21, 13I’m here to talk to you about community. This word is rather generic and has many meanings to different people. It’s an expansive topic; for example, we’ve already heard on other speaker talk about community today.So, I want to expand upon Nate’s message (previous speaker) and push everyone toward an understanding and appreciation of the power of community at every level.

Generally, I want you to be able to apply the lessons learned during this talk directly to your specific personal situation. Specifically, I want you to walk away with tangible action items that you can enact and make a difference.

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Tuesday, May 21, 13In the 1970’s the Cincinnati Reds were a force to be reckoned with. A good skipper - Sparky Anderson - and future hall of fame players - Pete Rose, Johnny Bench, Joe Morgan.

5 Division titles, 4 League pennants, 2 World Series

But one year, 1971, they failed and had a losing record. Just like a startup failure, this is where you learn - in failure.

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Tuesday, May 21, 13So why is this guy from Indiana...probably a Cardinals fan...

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Tuesday, May 21, 13...the truth comes out!...

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Tuesday, May 21, 13Why is he telling us about our baseball history, and what does it have to do with anything?

There are important lessons to learn from Big Red Machine - especially from 1971. The Cincinnati startup community has momentum and an opportunity to officially position itself on the startup map.

*It’s important that each of you understands your place in the community and fashion your contribution effectively*

Apply the lessons from the Reds. Each community member can contribute to *a* community, and collectively build up *the* community.

Important note: community is a long-term thing - it requires a 20-year mindset.

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Tuesday, May 21, 13Each of you has something he/she is passionate about -- something that he/she is really good at.

In captivity, those things can go wasted.

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Tuesday, May 21, 13Released into the wild, free to play with other passions and skills, they take flight and do amazing things.

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Tuesday, May 21, 13Sticking with the baseball analogy, let’s see how each individual within a community fits into the team scenario.

9 players: common goal and varying strengths/weaknesses, skills/abilities, etc.

Everyone knows what he/she can and can’t do. Some are fast and can steal bases, others are power hitters that can drive in runs; there’s an ace starter, a closer, and a gold glove defender.

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Tuesday, May 21, 13The same applies to startup communities - there are meetup groups, educational organizations, investors, etc. Each member needs to know who’s who - relative skills, experience, interests, etc.

When you need something...anything...who do you turn to? Who can/will help?

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Entrepreneurs

GovernmentUniversitiesInvestorsMentors 

Service providersLarge co’s 

Feeders

Leaders

Tuesday, May 21, 13Brad Feld categorizes community members into two groups:Feeders and Leaders.

Where do you fall?

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Tuesday, May 21, 13We can drill down from that level: Are you...a builder? (if so, what languages/frameworks)a sales/marketing person? an idea person?a person with money? if so, VC or Angel?a little bit of everything (i.e., superhero)? ...or a chili expert?!

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Tuesday, May 21, 13By not only being *aware* of our individual strengths, weaknesses, interests, problems, and abilities to solve problems,*but also* our specific position within the community, we can effectively represent ourselves to our fellow community members.

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Tuesday, May 21, 13Through a network of transparency and communication, a collective awareness builds, and each player is well-known within the team, leveraged efficiently/effectively. This provides a faster path to solution, startup, success.

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Tuesday, May 21, 13The benefits of all this...Micro/immediate benefits include: collaborative, inclusive, vibrant, atmosphere; enthusiastic, excited, invigorated community.

...which lead to macro/long term benefits, like: successful startups, economic growth, attraction of talent, respect/recognition from peers, self pride, and opportunity.

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1

Tuesday, May 21, 13I want you to do *1* thing in the next *2* weeks...

Sit down with a friend, colleague, peer, or group, and structure a conversation in this way: download. discuss. decide. DO.

Download your self-evaluation. Discuss what you have to contribute to the community. Decide what your part will be. Do It.

Then, hold each other accountable.

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“If not us, who?

If not now, when?”

Tuesday, May 21, 13Think about this.

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Read Startup Communities

Tuesday, May 21, 13also...do this. *I promise, I get no royalties!

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Tuesday, May 21, 13If this happens, the “merge” of QC Merge will happen.

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Tuesday, May 21, 13HIgh-fives will ensue, and the Big Red Machine can make its return as the Big Red Startup Machine.

#longterm

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queries?

@[email protected]/tsfalls

Tuesday, May 21, 13