Is the Midwest the next Silicon Valley?

We’ve all heard the trope: Silicon Valley is the only place to be if you want to launch a tech startup — the only place where you can secure funding. Well, the Midwest has something to say about ...

We’ve all heard the trope: Silicon Valley is the only place to be if you want to launch a tech startup — the only place where you can secure funding.

Is the Midwest the next Silicon Valley?

Well, the Midwest has something to say about that.

There’s a huge tech boom underway in middle America…

So big, that some predict the region will have more startups than Silicon Valley within 5 years. And it’s fueled by high-profile venture capitalists leaving California for flatter pastures.

Back in 2013, Chris Olsen and Mark Kvamme, then both partners at Silicon Valley-based VC firm Sequoia Capital, decided to relocate to Columbus, Ohio and launch their own firm, Drive Capital.

The Ohio duo have raised $550m and invested in nearly 30 startups 

And they aren’t alone: once-sleepy cities across the Midwest are now dotted with “clusters” of startup incubators and accelerators, competing with SV firms like it ain’t no thang.

Comparatively, the big-time Silicon Valley VC firm Andreessen Horowitz sees about 4k pitches per year, and Drive Capital isn’t far behind at a solid 3.8k.

What’s driving the change?

For one, talent is cheaper in the Midwest. A top-notch engineer who would cost $200k+ in the Bay Area can be “had” for a mere $100k in Columbus, and there’s no shortage of skilled workers there.

But we’re also seeing a shift in tech investments toward non-tech sectors like agriculture and manufacturing — areas that Midwestern graduates are well-poised to disrupt.

Topics: Geography

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