Entrepreneurs building connected hardware

Entrepreneurs!  If’ you’re working on hardware, internet of things, and connected devices – you should be aware of a date that’s fast approaching.

October 11th is the last day to apply for the R/GA Accelerator, powered by Techstars.  The 3 month program is focused on connected devices and is based in NYC.  As is standard with all Techstars programs, you’ll have access to the leading mentors from NYC, Techstars, Makers, Marketers, major brands, any people who are experts in all things connected devices.  The 10 best companies will get:

  • Up to $120,000 in funding
  • Co-location space provided by R/GA in New York
  • Design and development support from experienced R/GA designers and developers who’ve built connected devices and services.
  • Mentor sessions with industry leaders, entrepreneurs, investors, and influencers
  • Access to prototyping equipment, including Makerbot printers
  • Invite-only launch presentation event in Austin, TX at SxSWi 2014
  • Demo Day presentation to angel investors, select R/GA clients, and media in New York

It’s perfect for teams still ideating, have a working prototype, or up to about $2M in revenue or funding.

Get all the details at http://www.RGAAccelerator.com.

OR just follow along on TW with @RGAaccelerator

Denver Startup Week and EFCO

efcologo

If you haven’t caught any of the events for Denver Startup Week this week, now’s the time to get involved.  Denver Startup Week is a celebration of all things entrepreneurial in Denver, and its in its last 2 days.

Tomorrow, I’m doing office hours as a contribution to EFCO, the Entrepreneurial Foundation of Colorado.  And while the hours are already booked, there are lots of great events today and tomorrow still.

Hope to see you there!

The Confidence Coefficient

I’ve had this theory running around in my head for a while now, and I’ve finally broken down and written a blog post about it.  It’s called the Confidence Coefficient and what that means for your startup, and anything else you feel like tackling in your life.

The notion is around how your confidence levels can impact your success.

Read about the Confidence Coefficient here – a guest post I recently did for UC Berkeley.

I’d love to know your thoughts and whether you agree or not.

App Developers Unite with the Application Developers Alliance

alliance_logo_colorApp developers – you’re large in numbers but small in representation.  That’s where the Application Developers Alliance comes in.  They help connect, educate, and share best practices for app developers.  They’re trying to be a unifying voice for the industry that has no clearly emerged leaders or representatives.  Given my experience working with entrepreneurs, many of whom focus on building apps, I’m pleased to tell you that I’ve joined their Board of Directors.  W00t!

If you’re an established company, consider joining and supporting this good cause.  If you’re an individual developer, membership is free.  Join us!

If you want to watch a video of me talking with the good folks over there about accelerators like TechStars – go here.

 

Joining the EFCO Board

efcologoI’ve had a long standing belief in doing at least 1 philanthropic thing a year, trying to give back a multiple of what I’ve been given, and supporting the community.

This year, I get to do that in spades.  I’m pleased to announce that I’ve been invited and have accepted a board role at the Entrepreneur’s Foundation of Colorado.

The premise behind EFCO is simple – donate 1% of your startup’s equity to EFCO.   If your company is ultimately successful, that 1% can go to support the charity of your choice.  It’s a great way to make a commitment of support to the very community in which you live and work.  There’s no cash component today – only if you’re successful tomorrow.  And it instills a culture of giving within your company.  The only way we’re going to make our communities better is by standing up and doing something about it, not by waiting for handouts or for things to improve.

If you have questions about EFCO or are interested in joining these awesome startups in contributing, reach out.  I’ll help you get set up.

Want to hire a CU student?

And another resource to help the startup community here in Boulder – if you’re interested in hiring students from CU – fill out this form.  It will get in front of students at CU who are looking to work for a startup.

Built by students, for students.  Great job to the CSUAC and AECU!

*********************************************

Dear Founders and Friends,

As students at CU Boulder, we have noticed that there are many startups that would love hire more interns and full time employees from the university, and lots of students would love to work at a startup. However, there seems to be a disconnect between the two.

We would like to fix this issue. We have created a simple form to get a better idea of the positions available for students at startups that we would greatly appreciate if you could fill out:

I’d like to hire some CU Students!

The data from this form will be used for two things:

1) To help start an online startup jobs and internships board for students that we are currently building. 


2) To build a contact list of companies for the Students2Startups fair early next year, which will be bigger and better than ever before!
Thank you so much for your help! Please let us know if you have any questions.

Sincerely,

CSUAC and AECU

 

Why women make for better bottom lines

I’ve been pulled into a lot of conversations recently around the fundability of women and getting more women involved in tech and entrepreneurship.  Its a topic that’s received a lot of media attention given Marissa’s appointment to Yahoo as CEO while she’s pregnant.  I keep getting asked these questions around “Do women make for good CEOs” and “Are women good investments” and “Can a woman really have a family and be an entrepreneur?”

I thought I’d spend a little brain cycles here talking about my thoughts on this.  My disclaimer is that I’m talking about gross generalizations based mostly on my empirical experience working with and investing in both men and women, and also pulling from my own experience as a female, with 2 small children (11 months and 2.5 years!).  There are exceptions to every generalization.

First of all, a great study called Women at the Wheel came out showing that having women in C level roles or on your Board of Directors make for more profitable companies and better returns for investors.  I love this study, because if anything is going to move the needle for women, it’s this.  Show the industry how ANYTHING positively impacts the bottom line, and needles will be moved.  The results of this study aren’t surprising to me.  There are many reasons I think women make great executives and entrepreneurs.  They include:

  • Women tent to be less risk tolerant than men.  They’ll hedge their bets, create Plans B and C, thus will generally be more prepared when things go wrong.  They’ll step cautiously before making a risky decision and weigh all the options, instead of just charging head-long into it.  So having a mix of men and women making decisions is a great idea – it allows for a more robust plan of attack.
  • As a Part B to “women are less risk tolerant” – that means they’re more conservative.  More conservative with their financial projections, more conservative with performance projections.  This leads to many more pleasant surprises when things are going well, and fewer disappointments when they aren’t.
  • Women tend to be less afraid to ask for help and openly discuss their limitations.  I love this approach because if things are going wrong, or you suck at something, and I don’t know about it, I can’t help you fix it.  Asking for help and being openly honest about your limitations means stronger companies.
  • Women tend to be monster executors and are often more capable of multi-tasking.  I think this is critical to a CEO skill set.  I’d argue that women who have kids are particularly well suited for this role.  If you have kids, you know how to keep multiple balls in the air simultaneously with a watchful eye on all of them, know how to get stuff done quickly and efficiently, and know how to put out fires and remain calm when the shit hits the fan.  As a mom, it happens daily, no – hourly.
  • Because they are generally less ego driven, they’re more about boosting the morale of their team and giving credit to them for things.  I hear “we” much more often than I hear “I”.  They tend to care deeply about their teams and work really hard to ensure their happiness.
  • Interestingly, they tend to undervalue their contributions and work.  This is good news/bad news.  Good news for the investor b/c they won’t have the same salary demands, won’t ask for as high of company valuations, and won’t negotiate as hard.  Investors can get more of the company for less money which means higher returns.  This is clearly bad though for the woman, a weakness we all have to work on.

Some of the negatives about women CEOs

  • Women have babies and are chemically/hormonally oriented around this.  My husband stays at home with our 2 kids.  And when our kids were born, my mom basically lived with us to help care for the infants while I worked.  I figured I wouldn’t ever worry about them because I pretty much had it as good as it gets.  But that wasn’t true.  Women are chemically tied to their children.  When they’re sick or sad, I’m STILL the first one to call the doctor and sit by their side and fret about medicines and dosage and temperatures and everything else.  My husband doesn’t worry about it – he says “yep, they’re sick!” While I’m going through every disease and symptom and possibility in my head and calling the doctor 15 times.  I’ll put everything, EVERYTHING on hold when my kids aren’t well, physically or emotionally.  But flexible workplaces with teams to compensate for family needs don’t just benefit women with kids, they benefit the men too and make for stronger families at home.  And the benefits of having a women CEO far outweigh this one challenge.  This is what it is.  Companies need to just embrace it.
  • Because women are generally more conservative, they tend to think smaller.  I know lots of men that dreamed of being a superhero and saving the world (or destroying it) when they were children.  Most girls don’t think that way.  But having an amazing Board of Directors in place can counteract this.
  • I think women have a harder time letting a bad apple in the company go.  They’ll work really hard to make things right for that person at the expense of the company.  Sometimes, you just need to fire the bad apple and move on.
  • I think generally women aren’t great negotiators.  We think that the world is a just and fair place, that we get what we deserve.  We won’t fight hard for salaries because we think we’re being paid what we deserve.  I heard a great analogy to this – that women are compensated for their performance and men are compensated for their potential.  If this is true, I don’t fault men for this – its women’s fault b/c we don’t fight for it.
  • We tend to be more apologetic, more self-conscious, and less risky than our male counterparts.

Alrighty then, now that I’ve convinced you to put more women in executive and board seats of your company, the key becomes HOW.

  1. First of all, support sport programs for young girls.  Did you know that 80% of all women CEOs in Fortune 500 companies were athletes?  I LOVE this statistic.  I don’t know if its because they have more confidence or are more competitive or are used to performance/working hard/kicking ass…  but who cares.  Let’s help create a pipeline of strong young girls who grow up to be capable, strong women.  Added bonus is that they’re probably less susceptible to violence at home, early pregnancies, and all the other things that can create a vicious cycle.
  2. Secondly, support STEM and specifically girls in STEM programs.  Along these lines – support NCWIT.  It’s a great national program based out of Boulder that works across the country to increase girls involvement in STEM type activities.
  3. Give a woman a chance, but be supportive of her there.  Hire her as CEO even if she doesn’t have CEO experience.  Put her on the Board even if she doesn’t have board experience.  Put resources around her to ensure her success.
  4. Give a ton of visibility to those women who are in the executive roles in your organization.  They make great role models for other women and will be a great example for other companies that don’t have a lot of women represented.  Highlight them in blog posts and newspaper/magazine articles and TV shows, invite them to be keynote speakers. Most women I know aren’t great self-promoters, so they won’t do this naturally on their own.
  5. Create a culture of flexibility in the workplace to ensure women that are also moms are comfortable taking executive rolls.  A woman shouldn’t have to decide between a title and her kids.
  6. Hire women that have been out of the workforce for a while b/c they’ve been raising kids.  Train them.  Put resources into them and support them.  It isn’t a negative that their last “job” was 10 years ago.  I’ve hired 4 women in my life that had been out of the workforce for between 5-10 years.  They were, hands down, some of the best hires I ever made.  They were monster executors, humble, eager to learn and prove themselves, amazing multi-taskers, could handle crisis with ease, didn’t have ego….  They were all rising stars.  And I’d be willing to bet that raising kids is much harder than whatever job you’re hiring them for.
  7. Be a mentor to an awesome woman.  Women need encouragement and support, from both men AND women.  So support  your local badass lady and help get her to the top.

Increasing the likelihood of profitability

 

 

 

 

 

 

Recent studies have shown that having more women in c-level or board positions makes for more profitable companies.  And since profitability is good for everyone,  I’m currently involved in the National Center for Women in Technology (NCWIT); they have a mission to increase gender diversity in the workplace.  They have some amazing tools to help your company attract and retain more females.

On Dec 5th from 12-1, NCWIT is hosting a lunch entitled Startups, Culture, and Why Diversity Matters.  If you’re interested in learning more about how to make your startup more amazing, please join us.

You can RSVP here.

 

Pitch your startup, live, and get some feedback

In collaboration with University of Colorado’s Silicon Flatiron’s program, I’m hosting a crash course on how to pitch your startup.

Here, you’ll learn, uh, how to pitch your startup!  🙂

We’ve a couple of open slots for brave souls who want to pitch live, in front of the audience, then get feedback from me and the group on how to improve your pitch.  If you’re interested, shoot me an email (nicole at techstars dot com).

 

 

Welcome to Boulder!

At TechStars, we’ve been getting a lot of meeting requests around “I’m new in town and am looking to get plugged into the startup community”.  In an effort to get you connected quickly and meet the most amount of people, a few of us have gotten together to host a “Welcome To Boulder” event.  It’s just a simple meet and greet with some of the area entrepreneurs who are well connected.

Feel free to join us for the next one!  Check out the invite.