Archive for the 'Texas Related' Category

Austin Entrepreneur Townhall

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The night started with some casual networking. Kevin Koym our conversational host for the night told everyone this was not a sit-down event. That we needed to get off our butt and stop talking to the people we came in with. We were all there to meet people. I thought it was a great thing to say - really set the mood. Kevin knows what he’s doing, he’s held these kind of townhalls all over the place (Chile, Mexico… Kevin, correct me?). We also watched a clip from A Beautiful Mind, this one where John Nash (Russell Crowe) declares The “best result comes from everyone in the group doing what’s best for himself. Incomplete. Incomplete. Because the best result will come when everyone in the group doing what’s best for himself and the group.”

After a quick intro to the agenda of the night’s events we broke into groups of 3. Each person answered 3 questions: Why did you come here? What challenges are you facing in your business? Who are you? In my group was Jon Lebkowsky (more on Jon in wikipedia) and a nice guy named David? who was not yet an entrepreneur, is working on finding his passion in life, and doesn’t let his kids on the internet.

Then the discussion started. We were in a half-circle auditorium, the one at IC2 if you are familiar. Kevin seeded the discussion. He wanted to know, what can we do together? Where can we take Austin?

The conversation for some reason stayed on social media for quite some time - we can we all use it to efficiently make more meaningful connections. There was a lot of talk regarding the Digital Convergence Initiative, who’s goal is “To create an economic super cluster through the growth of the Digital Convergence business and research base of the Central Texas corridor from Waco through Austin to San Antonio and the surrounding and included communities.”

To further develop Austin as a hub for innovation I posed a couple things: There must be free flow of information (who’s working on what, etc), we must eliminate good ol’ boy networks, and use the internet to do this efficiently. This is what DCI is doing for businesses and this is what our co-company, Conjunctured is working on for the individual entrepreneur.

Of course the comparison came up between our Silicon Hills and Silicon Valley. Jonathan McCoy, one of Austin’s youngest serial entrepreneurs was called out because he’s leaving for San Francisco soon. Granted he has a good reason - he’s working on semantic web applications and the only place in the world for that is a little district in The Valley some are calling Sema.

hmm… If we believe that innovation comes from collaboration and collaboration can only happen when people know what the other individuals/companies are up to - I think the bay area benefits from such an extensive blog network - thus resulting in everyone knowing everyone else’s business AND everyone benefiting for a peer review, scrutiny. We need to work on a way to facilitate communication in Austin - these townhalls are a great way to do that, same with Rise Austin.

There is so much to say on the conversations that were had, I’m going to cut this off know because I’m way over my 20min time limit. Pretty soon we’ll have a video of the night that I will post here. Until then, here is a purposefully lame video by Saatchi and Saatchi (thanks Dave for this).

Join the Entrepreneur Townhall Google Group if you’d like to attend the next one - sometime after south-by.

Austin. Go!

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Myself, Cesar and Dusty went to the first of six Townhall Meetings regarding the redesign of the City of Austin’s website. At one time our site was voted the one of the best in the nation, unfortunately it hasn’t changed since then.

Pete Collins, CIO, did most of the talking and was very receptive to the audience’s thoughts and opinions - and even gave out his personal email address and phone number. We talked with Matt Esquibel who’s heading up the project. He seemed to really know his stuff and was a designer in his past life so I’m looking forward to a beautiful exterior for the site. Something that was interesting to me, they’ve deiced to build the site in Plone . They are looking to hire asap - I believe they have three full time positions open.

I was telling Paul Hopingardner how I believe the city needs a private media network to talk about/publicize what the city is up to. I’m subscribed to all these blog from The Valley, but really what I want to read about is what’s happening here in Austin. …We’re having drinks on this topic soon, I’ll report back.

On another note, it was my first time inside our City Hall, it’s very sleek, but quirky at the same time - fits Austin.

What is Texas Ventures?

texas-ventures.jpgI’ve been doing a bit of networking lately, and so I have been working on my Texas Ventures pitch – or, at least trying to explain concisely what it is/does and why I care about it. Here’s what I got:

I’m a recent graduate. While I was at UT I co-founded (with Tom Serres & Brandon Chicotsky) a student group called Texas Ventures. It’s a group for student entrepreneurs to get together, learn, network, etc.

  • We keep a database of all student entrepreneurs on campus. Want-a-bes and real ones. The real ones are organized by industry, description of their business, level of their business, etc. and we provide a prospectus to the university and soon the city of Austin on the climate of entrepreneurship at the university. We will soon be allowing organization like Angel groups and VC’s we’ve partnered with to search this list. Using Angelsoft or an old fashion phone call, we’ll pass off or pitch the best ones to these groups. But only the best of the best, and only if they need it.
  • Of course, we have a speakers series and we try to go to lunch with a local entrepreneur every week – the last two people we spent time with were Gay Gaddis and Donald Zale.

Now that I’m graduating (and the others are too), we’re taking it to the next level and forming a nonprofit. Andrews-Kurth has taken us on pro bono and we’re working on our 501(c)3 status.

  • The nonprofit will provide small financing to student run businesses as well as grants (probably average of a few thousand/yr)
  • Through our advisor, John Sibley Butler, we are working with IC2 and the Herb Kelleher Center for Entrepreneurship to provide a physical location for these companies to work together in a co-working environment (perhaps similar to what some other Austinites are doing, with this atmosphere)
  • In that environment we’ll continue to bring in consultants/professors/etc to continually mentor these students

This is what I always wanted when I was a freshman/sophomore. And that’s what we have created.

Anything else I should include? Want to talk more about this - drop me a line: jmetcalf27 (at) gmail.com or 210.724.3619 - you can join the facebook group if you’re a UT student.

Couple call outs because I’ve been reading your blogs for a while and would like to get to know you guys: Texas Startup BlogAustin Startup.

Marketing to Millenials

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I saw this billboard today and it really rubbed me the wrong way - it’s ridiculous. Maybe I’m missing something, but seeing it made me think “people just don’t understand.”

While I’m not a fan of sagging pants, how does sagging hurt anyone? It seems like this group is trying to create a correlation between wearing your pants low and a lack of self respect? I don’t see it. To me, this is an older generation trying to force their views/believes on a younger generation they do not understand.

As a millennial, here’s my advise (this is also part of what I wrote to the people who paid for the billboard):

Demanding conformity will never work, telling people (especially youth) not to do something will never work. Empower us, lift us up by the things we are doing right. Romanticize a positive life and those who are leading one. Tell us stories about them - stories are how we relate, stories are our language, stories are how our friends talk. Tell us stories and tell us good stories that make us say “wow,” that make us feel impressed. Tell us lot of stories. We hear many each day from our friends and from music, you have to create the opportunity for us to hear the positive ones. Parents can tell these stories in person, if your not a parent or friend, then help make positive, empowing stories available to our us. Available for our awareness to pick up. Use your billboard, a story can be one sentence that I can relate to. Perhaps, “so-and-so donates X to charity.” Romanticize. Pull, not push. Just as long as that so-and-so is someone I already respect, you’ve done good. It’s about taking things I already understand or respect and telling me something positive with them. It’s like co-branding. It’s like relationship marketing. It’s a trust network. Try it.