How can an ecology of social networks, venture incubators, conferences, non-profit organizations, and government agencies work together to connect resources in order to accelerate ventures and sustainable initiatives? That is the question in front of the Colorado clean/green/sustainable/social next economy.
You can think of it as facilitation, you can think of it as enablement (with IT), or you can think of it as a chemical reaction that requires a catalyst and a container for the reaction to take place in.
Often we have the catalyst - market perception (reduce foriegn fuel dependence), rapid change in environment (financial meltdown); change the work mentality (millennium generation). But the container is the challenge, a place where facilitation can occur and activities can be coordinated.
One of the biggest problems, and greatest attributes, is free market competition. We end up with so many players doing similar things that the noise overrides the signal. It takes quite awhile for the noise to settle down, for the weaker players to fall by the wayside. Its up to each venture to narrow its focus and become more unique and better able to compliment peripheral capability.
We can go further faster by having a smaller breadth of reach, lock in the traction begun THEN expand across peripheral offerings to touch the next player in ecology. Container (means and rules), catalyst (market and money), and collaborative players (desire for common benefit rather than aggressive competition).
gNav tracks energy politics and socio economics from a citizen's perspective. Faux realities and evolutionary economics, it's time for our model to shift to again --Clean.Green.Sustainable.Social.
Apr 30, 2010
Apr 2, 2010
How to Turn Incubators into Venture Accelerators
..well that is the point yes? That an incubator is in the business of accelerating ventures to a cashflow positive state faster than they could get there on their own. Rather than trying to take apart what does not work herein, let's address what does work! We have several successes to model, a couple of which I'll reference, but do keep us honest by referencing others not covered, and present why they work so well.
Although incubators were all the rage in the late 90s and it seemed like all one had to do was provide office space and e-infrastructure! Well, those obviously weren't the only two ingredients in the recipe were they. You also needed pull, as in a funding market, and you needed push, as in advisory intellect. Incubators evolved into networks (virtually connected) rather than office space only (physically connected). But that allowed the pay to play model so one still got a lot of chafe in harvesting the grain, and without regular wins the angel money got locked up in indecision, generally. (Note that these also are not the sole winning and loosing ingredients but its important to get to the point). So if its not about pay to play -which in itself could be a good business advisory model- then it must be about quality ventures and quality advisory intellect.
An accelerating model that appears to be working very well we find in the software world -- y-combinator models such as TechStars. What works so well in this model? First and foremost is the promise of money along with a heavy dose of advisory intellect. If we take a look at what that does we'll immediately understand that the promise of money will draw many ventures... which allows picking the winners from a huge pool of ..ah .. loosers. (We should remember that not all ventures are winners, and that not all ideas will result in value, and therefore entrepreneurs would serve themselves and their friends and family the pain of pursuing a deadend. Fail fast is honorable in this game!) Also determine a near term liquidation model, not 100% liquidation but some way to refresh the pool of money for the next cohort. Second and also foremost is a high quality network of advisers and angels, with rolodexs filled with the market of target partners. Reach to intellectual and social capital is probably more critical than financial capital. Its arguable that one could derive a better business if they had the right advise rather than money alone. Yet the problem with advise is that the entrepreneur must utilize advise wisely, not attempt to execute every piece of advice that comes along... not easy. I propose that there are three other critical elements to successful accelerators - narrow focus; catalyst mechanism; and time dependency.
A narrow focus can be a host of different things -to solve a specific problem realm; to take advantage of an emerging market; or to serve a specific community. What a narrow focus does is the same for any organization - it requires that all involved are working in the same direction on the same time frame. That is the only way to fully understand a market place and its dynamics; it sets the playing field to know everyone involved (the players) and therefore what they are seeking to accomplish; and provides for cross-pollination on all the business elements. When you add a catalyzing mechanism into the mix we spawn the right conversations. A catalyzing mechanism is something that brings two communities together and generates forward momentum. Although there are several options, each being a fairly deep discussion, the simple one I like is a process with stage-gates. When 'gates' are predetermined and used as a carrot (and stick), then both entrepreneurial team and advisory team are aligned on goals, ideally one of those gates being funds or a serious funding consideration by the external angel network - focused, fast, evolution. And the final catalyst is time. Like the TechStars and UnReasonable model ventures are put through a camp. Not a camp with learning sessions but one where you either achieve and get the most out or you miss your chance to have attracted that network and money. Time focus is great because people are able to focus on interests for a few weeks or months, but that becomes a long dwindling tail over time because other life issues crop up and take over mind share.
To reiterate - a venture accelerator needs the following elements:
-Chuck Ray-
Although incubators were all the rage in the late 90s and it seemed like all one had to do was provide office space and e-infrastructure! Well, those obviously weren't the only two ingredients in the recipe were they. You also needed pull, as in a funding market, and you needed push, as in advisory intellect. Incubators evolved into networks (virtually connected) rather than office space only (physically connected). But that allowed the pay to play model so one still got a lot of chafe in harvesting the grain, and without regular wins the angel money got locked up in indecision, generally. (Note that these also are not the sole winning and loosing ingredients but its important to get to the point). So if its not about pay to play -which in itself could be a good business advisory model- then it must be about quality ventures and quality advisory intellect.
An accelerating model that appears to be working very well we find in the software world -- y-combinator models such as TechStars. What works so well in this model? First and foremost is the promise of money along with a heavy dose of advisory intellect. If we take a look at what that does we'll immediately understand that the promise of money will draw many ventures... which allows picking the winners from a huge pool of ..ah .. loosers. (We should remember that not all ventures are winners, and that not all ideas will result in value, and therefore entrepreneurs would serve themselves and their friends and family the pain of pursuing a deadend. Fail fast is honorable in this game!) Also determine a near term liquidation model, not 100% liquidation but some way to refresh the pool of money for the next cohort. Second and also foremost is a high quality network of advisers and angels, with rolodexs filled with the market of target partners. Reach to intellectual and social capital is probably more critical than financial capital. Its arguable that one could derive a better business if they had the right advise rather than money alone. Yet the problem with advise is that the entrepreneur must utilize advise wisely, not attempt to execute every piece of advice that comes along... not easy. I propose that there are three other critical elements to successful accelerators - narrow focus; catalyst mechanism; and time dependency.
A narrow focus can be a host of different things -to solve a specific problem realm; to take advantage of an emerging market; or to serve a specific community. What a narrow focus does is the same for any organization - it requires that all involved are working in the same direction on the same time frame. That is the only way to fully understand a market place and its dynamics; it sets the playing field to know everyone involved (the players) and therefore what they are seeking to accomplish; and provides for cross-pollination on all the business elements. When you add a catalyzing mechanism into the mix we spawn the right conversations. A catalyzing mechanism is something that brings two communities together and generates forward momentum. Although there are several options, each being a fairly deep discussion, the simple one I like is a process with stage-gates. When 'gates' are predetermined and used as a carrot (and stick), then both entrepreneurial team and advisory team are aligned on goals, ideally one of those gates being funds or a serious funding consideration by the external angel network - focused, fast, evolution. And the final catalyst is time. Like the TechStars and UnReasonable model ventures are put through a camp. Not a camp with learning sessions but one where you either achieve and get the most out or you miss your chance to have attracted that network and money. Time focus is great because people are able to focus on interests for a few weeks or months, but that becomes a long dwindling tail over time because other life issues crop up and take over mind share.
To reiterate - a venture accelerator needs the following elements:
- use money to attract the highest quality ventures and teams - not all are quaity so make sure the ones you allow in can be successful; put a small amount up front, and a larger amount at the end;
- engage successful advisers with deep industry experience and rolodexs - not just one or two, but a whole peer group per target industry.
- maintain a narrow target industry focus - industry focus allows all the ventures and advisers to attack that target segment and know more than any other single group;
- use time to catalyze activity - with a time dependency such as summer camp or semester focus you can capture significant mind-share ... but that will only last for a while and they have to feel success in the graduation rate;
- implement a focusing mechanism such as a scorecard or stage-gate methodology - this will align entrepreneurs and advisers on exactly what they are seeking to achieve by when, and overcome debate or counter productive decision making.
-Chuck Ray-
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