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.
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I grew up in Indiana and attended undergrad at Indiana University.
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I move to Boulder in 2008 and still live there.
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My introduction to tech and startups came through my job at TechStars.
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From 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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We do email
We’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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SendGrid = 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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I co-founded a company called BoulderBeta dot CO.
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We 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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Brad 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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I co-organize Open Angel Forum in Boulder, helping entrepreneurs and angel investors find each other.
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Sometimes 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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Armed 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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I’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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Let’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?
21. COMMUNITY
Tuesday, May 21, 13
I’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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In 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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So why is this guy from Indiana...probably a Cardinals fan...
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Why 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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Each 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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Released into the wild, free to play with other passions and skills, they take flight and do amazing things.
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Sticking 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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The 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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We 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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By 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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Through 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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The 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.
35. 2
1
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I 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.
36. “If not us, who?
If not now, when?”
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Think about this.