Technology

Momentum growing behind hatching a tech hub

 

South Florida’s start-up ecosystem is beginning to develop as an attractive location for tech entrepreneurs and programmers.

Keeping up with tech

While nearly every organization has websites, newsletters and Twitter handles and many community leaders have blogs, it can be overwhelming. Here are a few broad sources for staying up with what is going on.

•  Miamitechevents.com: When Brian Breslin started this listing in January 2010, there were just five tech events. Now there are typically 60-plus listed every month, thanks to the efforts of Breslin and Ed Toro. No excuse for nothing to do.

•  Miami StartupDigest: A newsletter arriving in your inbox every Monday morning, it lists events for the week and commentary on the previous week by Andrej Kostresevic. Sign up at startupdigest.com.

• Blogs: Started this spring, The Miami Herald’s Starting Gate offers news, views and tools for entrepreneurs. Find it at the bottom of MiamiHerald.com/business. A newer offering: Moises Szarf covers the scene with Startropica.com.


Americas Venture Capital Conference ( AVCC)

What: Third annual conference presented by Florida International University brings together entrepreneurs and investors from throughout the Americas.

When: Dec. 13-14

Where: JW Marriott Brickell

Theme: Data, Design & Dollars

One highlight: Up to 20 selected top start-up and later-stage high-growth companies will make presentations and compete for cash awards.

Changes this year: Two full days with agenda redesigned to include more short talks from entrepreneurs and investors from around the world, more Q&A time, more networking and “surprises.”

More info: avcc.fiu.edu


How AWESOME are we?

The entrepreneurial movement is fueling interest in groups like TEDX Miami and Ignite, which stage events for showcasing change-making ideas and projects. Now Miami also has its own chapter of the Awesome Foundation.

Every month, chapters of the Awesome Foundation around the world give $1,000 to a local project in a wide range of areas including technology, the arts, social entrepreneurship and beyond. The Miami chapter has just come together, with 12 local trustees, and it hopes to award its first grants early next year.

For more information, go to the Miami page on awesomefoundation.org


ndahlberg@miamiherald.com

The vision: Entrepreneurs find many places to meet and mingle, maybe run into an investor or two. Accelerators accept the best and the brightest start-ups, which in turn stay and grow their businesses in South Florida. Tech companies and serial entrepreneurs open their doors to mentor others. Robust university systems supply the talented technologists and entrepreneurs in the making. Healthy angel networks fund many early-stage companies.

That’s what a healthy ecosystem for start-ups is all about, and some leaders say the vision is within reach for South Florida. “It’s about growing great entrepreneurs. They need to have a community supporting them,” says Susan Amat, executive director of the University of Miami’s Launch Pad entrepreneurship center and one of the leading advocates of the entrepreneurial movement here.

Last week, Launch Pad announced it will open a community accelerator in January at the Terremark/NAP of the Americas building in downtown Miami. The companies selected for the Launch Pad Tech Accelerator will participate in a three-month program of intense mentoring designed to grow the businesses quickly, receive $25,000 grants, and get mentoring and office space for the year. The Miami Downtown Development Authority has committed $460,000 in funding over two years for operations. Miami-Dade County is kicking in $1 million over four years to fund the grants to entrepreneurs.

And that’s not all. Florida International University President Mark Rosenberg is hoping to include a required course on entrepreneurship for every undergraduate. New events, companies, nonprofit initiatives and funding groups have been springing up to support the entrepreneur. Consider:

• The Knight Foundation has announced a major new program to promote and fund entrepreneurship projects in South Florida. The nonprofit Enterprise Development Corporation, under new leadership, recently expanded its incubator in Boca Raton and is at work on an incubator at Broward College. The University of Miami Life Science & Technology Park is gaining traction as a community hub for tech and the sciences, with co-working space, shared lab space, new restaurants and frequent events, in addition to a growing number of technology tenants that call it home.

•  A wave of co-working spaces is expected to sweep in this fall. These include Pipeline Brickell opening in a couple of weeks, and a huge expansion of the recently opened LAB Miami in Wynwood set for early winter. Also scheduled to open in October: RightSpace2Meet’s co-working space at UM’s Life Science & Technology Park, and in Boca Raton, Caffeine Spaces. All plan to feature programs and services geared to the entrepreneur. (See related story here.)

• Tech calendars runneth over, with 60 to 70 events every month in South Florida. The weekend-long AT&T Mobile App Hackathon drew a record 200 people in August, and regular monthly meetups for Refresh Miami in August and September packed in 300 people. Silicon Valley’s Lean Startup Machine rolled into town and has vowed to lead quarterly workshops. Two weekends ago, hackers took over the Bass Museum to develop apps for the arts, and coming up Oct 12-14 Startup Weekends will be held at both UM’s Launch Pad/Terremark space and at the incubator in Boca Raton. In what could be a yearly tradition, Miami will host WebCongress, a huge Internet marketing conference formerly held in Spain. The Latin America-themed program will be Nov. 29 and 30.

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