I’m not a predictor so you won’t find me participating in the “best/worst of 2016” and “predictions for 2017” lists. But there is a trend that feels inevitable to me: “ everywhere.” Startups While Agent Smith was wrong, I don’t think I am. When the phrase “Startup Communities” started to become mainstream around 2012, I made the strong assertion that you could create a startup in any city with at least 100,000 people. I used Boulder as a canonical example of it in my book and have been beating the drum about startups everywhere ever since. community Startup Communities: Building an Entrepreneurial Ecosystem in Your City While the meme that the only place to build a company is in Silicon Valley has softened, there’s still a strong belief that the best place to be if you are a first time entrepreneur is Silicon Valley. My argument is, and has never been, against Silicon Valley, but rather for the rest of the planet. I saw three articles yesterday that reinforced the inevitability of startups everywhere. Millennial Innovators Are About to Leave Big Cities Here’s how small-town America is primed to beat Silicon Valley in innovation The Bright, Sustainable Future of Chicago’s Technology Ecosystem When I reflect on where some of our investments are, they are in cities like Portland, Seattle, Los Angeles, Santa Barbara, Minneapolis, Boulder, Denver, Charlotte, Lexington, New York, and Boston. And then there’s which is now . Techstars all over the world Sure — we have plenty of investments in Silicon Valley, or whatever you want to call it. I’ve asserted for a long time that Silicon Valley is a collection of startup communities, which includes San Francisco, Marin (the first board I was on — in 1994 — was for a company in San Rafael), Oakland, Redwood *, Palo Alto, Mountain View, Menlo Park, and Sunnyvale. Or you can just call it San Francisco, Oakland, and the Peninsula. Or maybe toss SOMA in. Or, well, does it really matter? As a bonus, I’ve been hearing Amazon referred to regularly by mainstream media (and some people in the tech world) as a Silicon Valley company. Having invested in and spent a lot of time in Seattle over the last 30 years, I smirk whenever I hear this. I love seeing articles like which should prompt entrepreneurs to Think Different (sorry, I couldn’t help myself). How Amazon innovates in ways that Google and Apple can’t As a bonus, I leave you with . Amazon’s patent for a flying warehouse While Silicon Valley is an amazing thing, if you are in the rest of the world, you are in a special and interesting place. Don’t lose sight of that. Originally published at Feld Thoughts .
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