Reflections & analysis about innovation, technology, startups, investing, healthcare, and more .... with a focus on Minnesota, Land of 10,000 Lakes. Blogging continuously since 2005.

Category: Minnesota (Page 2 of 6)

Will Another Minnesota Startup Ever Become a Fortune 500?

{NOTE: I originally wrote this article for a new publication called Starting Up North, which launched in early June 2019.]

Pretty much every Minnesota company on the Fortune 500 list began as a startup, as hard as that may be to imagine today. Sure, some were spinouts of large, established firms, such as Target, originally an internal startup at then Dayton-Hudson Corporation back in the 1960s.

Image by skeeze from Pixabay.

But think 3M in the early 1900s, rising from the obscurity of the Northern Minnesota mining industry, or Medtronic, which began as a repair shop in the 1950s in Earl Bakken’s garage in Northeast Minneapolis – both giants in their respective industries today. (Medtronic dropped off the list in recent years only because it’s now headquartered in Ireland.)

Obviously, the startup-to-Fortune 500 story can take decades to happen. And many, many American firms that reached this coveted designation have faded away over the years. But one wonders when another scrappy little Minnesota company might break out and hit the big time.

But should we even care? It’s just a list. Nonetheless, it’s fun to imagine… what startup out there could possibly be the next, however many years it might take?

What Even Qualifies a Company to Be On the Fortune 500 List?

Despite what it may seem, the Fortune 500 isn’t simply a list of the 500 largest firms of all types. Minnesota has at least one giant — Cargill, the largest privately-owned company in the U.S. – that’s never on the list. Surprisingly, there is no set amount of revenue that gets a company onto the list — though companies are ranked by revenue. (The threshold for making the list is different every year; for 2018, it was $5.4 billion in revenues – 6 percent more than 2017.) It’s a list of only American companies, meaning incorporated in and operating in the U.S. The companies can be public, private, or even cooperatives, but they must file financial statements with a government agency to qualify. (Cargill doesn’t, but we have other Minnesota companies that do and have made the list, even though they are not publicly traded: CHS and Securian. But, it should be noted, Securian dropped down on the list that just came out; it’s now #506.)

Profits aren’t part of the criteria. Crazily, you can lose money and make the list, even tons of it (looking at you, Tesla). Fortune magazine, which publishes the list annually, says its other criteria focus on a company’s long-term goals and adaptability. They rightfully point out that the road to the 500 will take a lot of years, and whatever your company is currently offering probably won’t get you there.

So, who might make it someday from Minnesota? What industry might they represent? First, let’s look at the industry sectors Minnesota Fortune 500s represent today:

• Healthcare/Medtech: 2
• Retail: 2
• Logistics/Transportation: 1
•¨Insurance: 1
• Food/Agriculture: 6
• Manufacturing 2
• Banking/Financial: 3
• Energy/Utilities: 1
• Water/Hygiene/Food Safety: 1

Notice not a single one is classified as “technology” in Wall Street terminology (meaning IT, software, computers, semiconductors), though the current Fortune 500 list has many such companies — by my quick count at least 18. Sure, looking at it another way, what company today would not be considered a technology company? It runs through everything. But the fact remains, Minnesota is not a technology company hotbed anymore. And that causes people to wonder how that happened, with our long history in the state as an information technology innovator. It’s been since the mid-1980s that a computer-related firm in Minnesota made the list. That would be Control Data (where I was a manager early in my career, in that company’s glory years). It broke itself up long ago, though its legacy remains strong. It spawned literally thousands of startups over its four decades of existence, scattered all over the country. At least three books have been written about Control Data and the era of tech dominance in our state.

Steve Grove, Minnesota’s new Commissioner of the Department of Employment and Economic Development (DEED), wrote about the state’s computer legacy in an excellent column in the StarTribune in January: Reboot required (or seeking a Minnesota Miracle 2.0).

Here’s the closing line: “With pride in our entrepreneurial roots and a bold vision for the future, Minnesota can become a nation-leading tech hub once again.”

Let’s Start With a Counterpoint

When seeking commentary for this article, I especially wanted to hear from Tom Kieffer, one of the most prolific and successful serial tech entrepreneurs in our state. He’s had four successful exits in his career in the IT sector, the latest being the sale of a majority interest in Virteva just this spring. (A company I had a role in helping him launch in 2005.)

“I think the question you raise with this article is the wrong one,” he said. “It’s an outdated measure of success. I think history will show the pursuit of Fortune 500-ness in this day and age is a fool’s errand.”

He went on: “The real question is, how well is Minnesota positioned to build the companies — and jobs, careers, communities, and clusters — of the future?”

That future, he said “lies somewhere between the gig economy and the GE-style conglomerates of the past — and it’s certainly closer to the small end of that spectrum. The world is getting smaller, and we’re not going back –- ask any millennial or Gen-Xer.”

Look at the history of the Fortune 500 phenomenon, Kieffer said. “A major benefit, and definition, of being one of these companies is access to ‘cheap’ public funding. But it’s really not that cheap anymore. There are many ways to access capital these days, from Kickstarter to private equity in addition to legacy VC. And there are plenty of exit paths for startups beyond selling to a public company.” (Exit alternatives he knows well.)

Many of the Fortune 500 companies created in the past 10 years are the so-called ‘unicorn’ style, he noted — such as Amazon, Facebook, and Uber. “However, I think the public financing approach is going out of fashion now, just as the current wave of unicorns goes public.”

So much for Fortune 500 (and IPO) adoration.

Running the Numbers

The quantity of Minnesota firms on the Fortune 500 list has remained relatively stable over several years. I can remember it being as high as 21 or 22, then it dropped to 17 in 2016. In 2018, it went up to 19. On the most recent list, just published in May 2019, we’re back down to 17 Minnesota companies. So we’re hanging in — somewhat.

Minnesota DEED says on its web site that our state ranks third in Fortune 500 companies per one million people. And, by number of firms on the list, our state ranks #10 in the U.S.  Yes, Minnesota represents well.

How many more Minnesota firms are on the second 500 of the Fortune list? Don’t get excited: only six more. So, a total of 23 Minnesota firms now on the Fortune 1000, as of their 2018 list (just published). What we’re asking in this article is, are there growing companies in our state that might be among the 2000 or 3000 largest right now – or maybe an upstart we’ve barely heard of yet – who could be capable of rising up over the years (decades?) to become dominant corporate leaders in Minnesota?

Ecosystems Matter

Does Minnesota have an ecosystem that can ensure we will continue to produce Fortune 500 companies?

“We do have some things in our favor related to eventually producing additional Fortune 500 companies — such as a patient workforce,” said Mac Lewis, who’s been CEO of a public company (Computer Network Technology, acquired by McData in 2005). He’s also a venture capitalist with Sherpa Partners, was CEO of Field Solutions (acquired by Field Nation), and currently serves as CEO of Phocus.io. In addition, he’s a longtime board member of the Minnesota High Tech Association. “Employees here tend to stick with a company.”

He notes that many Minnesota startup companies do have experienced leadership and a culture for producing value, with revenue-based business models – that is, “a real product or service, versus plans to capture eyeballs and then do advertising.”

Other benefits of our business community, according to Lewis are “a skilled workforce, experienced leaders and managers, high-caliber support in the legal, regulatory, and financial areas, and many mentors.”

Phil Soran has been a CEO and cofounder of two successful Minnesota tech firms, one being Compellent, which went public and was later acquired by Dell (in 2010) for close to $1 billion. (In essence, it almost became our own little unicorn.) “Minnesota does have attributes that could produce more Fortune 500 companies in the future,” he said — role-model companies with experienced management not being the least. “We tend to build on sustainable business models as opposed to hyped trends. That’s the foundation of a company that can be a future industry leader.”

How have things changed over the years in Minnesota? “It’s much more accepted now to be an entrepreneur — that was not the case previously,” Soran said. “This is very important. We now need more large successful startups to role model success in this new environment. I do see some current growing younger businesses in our state that could grow into Fortune 500 companies.” (No, I couldn’t get him to name them.)

“It’s a hard task to accomplish,” Soran added, “but made easier as many Fortune 500s are being acquired, providing openings for new members.”

Soran said we’re very lucky to have so many “large, ethical companies in a variety of industries providing very good employment opportunities.” But he sees two issues: “I do not think our community and government appreciate their impact nearly enough.” Also, though he sees lots of “spinoffs” that alumni of these companies have started, “many of them are not as visible as their success might dictate.” Too shy? Too Minnesota-nice to brag?

What Are We Lacking?

So, all the positives aside, where does Minnesota fall short?

According to Lewis, “Relative to other parts of the country, Minnesota does not have the entrepreneurial personality to ‘swing for the fences’ — that is, leadership and vision for a company that can paint a big picture of its future, in which it can be the next ‘unicorn’ with a market value in the billions.”

But there’s a bigger problem, he said: “There’s less local venture leadership and other financing for companies that may need mid-to-high hundreds of millions of dollars of funding to support large, sustained investment in product and distribution – things that are critical to building such a ‘unicorn’.”

Soran sees an ongoing issue, a common refrain of local startup CEOs (and one he himself has experienced): “I still find it very hard for young local technology companies to win business at larger companies in town. There’s still a little bit of the notion that ‘it cannot be good if it’s not from the coasts’,” he said.

Listening, Fortune 500 execs?

Lewis said some large Minnesota companies do seem interested to work with local startups as initial local customers, “to help them establish their market,” he said. “I believe this has been an initiative of the Itasca Project and other business groups. However, I don’t think it’s been easy to implement, and, as a result, has had only a minor positive impact.”

What’s Better: Becoming a Fortune 500 or Having a Big Exit?

Some say we’re unlikely to produce as many Fortune 500s as in the past because too many fast-growing Minnesota firms opt to be acquired rather than go public.

“Early-stage companies get acquired for many good reasons,” said Lewis. “They get financing and much larger market exposure by becoming part of an established company,” he said. “Investors and leadership teams get a payout and liquidity.”

But he points to another benefit for the seller: “It can be less risky and less costly than staying independent. In the 1990s and earlier, smaller companies were able to tap public markets for funding and liquidity. Now there’s a higher bar to go public,” Lewis said, “including (the costs associated with) Sarbanes Oxley [a U.S. Federal Law] and desire or need of investment bankers for fees from larger and larger transactions.”

Soran said, “Going public is a challenging hurdle for young companies to clear — and there have not been many in Minnesota in the recent past.” (His Compellent was one of the last big, successful ones, certainly in the tech sector.) “There are lots of benefits for companies jumping this hurdle — in branding, sustainability, and credibility. Nationwide, the number of IPOs is way down, with other options like private equity providing liquidity, growth capital, and equity upside to entrepreneurs.”

Care to Pick a Winner?

What sector is likely to produce our state’s next Fortune 500?

“I’m not sure,” said Lewis. “I don’t see an easy path for any Minnesota company to become a future Fortune 500. But I’m an optimist — as an entrepreneurial personality — and believe there will be some. Considering industry segments, I’d probably prioritize the likelihood like this: healthcare services, medtech, agtech, software, or financial/insurance services.”

“Our economy is changing quickly,” said Soran. “Technologies such as data analytics, artificial intelligence, digital records, and information security will provide leadership opportunities for Minnesota startups.”

Does One XL Beat Five Mediums?

Is continuing to attract educated, highly paid workers to our state dependent on growing new Fortune 500 companies to our ranks? Or if we produce, say, 5-10 fast-growing startups, each achieving $50-100M in annual revenue, will that lead to the same result?

Lewis likes the former: “Having a local company grow to be a market leader would have larger impact on our local economy and job base – like Seattle with Microsoft and Amazon. Multiple smaller successes are good and will have positive impact, but not close to the impact of one or more big success stories. UnitedHealthcare is an example of such impact recently in our market.” (That company, which is Fortune #5, dwarfs the other 17 Minnesota firms on the list – and how many “spinoffs” of various types  has it produced already? I don’t know the exact number, but it’s many and growing!)

What Role Should Minnesota Fortune 500s Be Playing to Support the Growth of Startups in the State?

So what are some things — right or wrong — with the current situation?

“Engaging newer companies as vendors is the most important support that’s needed,” said Soran. “That’s where Fortune 500s can have an impact.”

Another way they can play: collaborating with and supporting incubators or accelerators in their respective markets. “The impact that Target, Cargill, and Ecolab are creating with their Techstars programs is palpable. Keep it going!” (And UnitedHealthcare also recently launched such a program. Gener8tor, too, is coming on strong with its accelerator programs in Minnesota and other states.)

What about the part local higher-ed institutions can play? “The universities I am involved with have a strong appetite for collaboration,” said Soran, “Much more so than in the past.”

Lewis echoed that actively engaging newer companies as vendors is at the top of his list. He also agrees with Soran about incubators and collaborating with our local universities.

So What’s the Verdict?

There’s no question our startups can learn much from their successful predecessors in the state. But it’s time they got more love and support from them, too. Minnesota’s strong entrepreneurship legacy can and will continue to roll on. Our startup community is hot! Even Fortune’s archrival, Forbes magazine, has told us that.

If you’re a Minnesotan (or even if you’re not), what’s your take? Are the best days ahead for our state when it comes to being a center for Fortune 500 companies?

 

Which Minnesota Accelerator Has Graduated 18 Healthcare Startups in the Last Year?

If you know how startup accelerator programs work, 18 is a seriously impressive number to achieve in 12 months. Having a program that can put that many startups, that quickly, through a rigorous process, enabling them to launch effectively out into the world, deserves some major praise. And I’m about to give it to them.

Hats off to gBETA MedTech! And especially to the program manager who runs it, Adam Choe. Adam is the man! If you’re not familiar with this program (a part of gener8tor Minnesota), it’s a free, seven-week accelerator that works with medical device, healthcare-gBETA MedTech logorelated software, biotech, and diagnostics startups. In 2018, it successfully ran three — count ’em, three! — cohorts of six startups each. So, yes, it prepared a total of 18 healthcare-related startups, from Minnesota and beyond, to go out and raise money, continue their product development, build out their teams, and start hitting their milestones. And it did all that very, very well.

I can say that because, as a gener8tor mentor since 2016, I was involved throughout. I have met and heard the pitches of every single one of those 18 startups — at least twice, actually. The highlight is always the final pitch of these startups at the demo night for each cohort, called “LiveBeta,” an event attended by at least a few hundred folks here in the Twin Cities (a large percentage of which are investors). That is where these founders shine! And you can really see the progress they’ve made during the seven-week program.

Scene at LiveBeta demo event on January 16, 2019

Hundreds gathered at the JJ Hill Center in St. Paul to hear the Fall 2018 gBeta MedTech class give their pitches.

I have never ceased to be impressed when I attend these demo nights that gener8tor and gBETA put on (and I’ve attended each and every one since gener8tor came to Minnesota in 2016). These founders get on stage and deliver amazing, very well prepared pitches that really focus great attention on the problem they’re solving and the attendant market opportunity. (And they each must have a total addressable market of hundreds of millions of dollars, or more, to participate in the program.)

Logos of the 18 gBETA MedTech startups in 2018

The 18 startups that completed the gBETA MedTech program in calendar year 2018.

You can bet you’ll be hearing more about many of these startups going forward. Remember these 18 names! You can click through and read more about them on gBETA MedTech’s site here.

And what’s more impressive than 18? Well, try 23. That’s actually the total number of startups that gener8tor graduated here in Minnesota during 2018 when you count the five that went through its main equity program during the summer.  (One of which is healthcare.) Congratulations to those startups as well: Cellular EMT, FaithBox, Onepanel, SpeechMed, and Virtue Analytics. I wrote about that cohort here.

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P.S.  I should also mention here that the very first gBETA startup I mentored, which was part of the first class in Minnesota in late 2016, happened to be healthcare related — and it went on to be acquired just two short years later: CoreBiome. Congrats to them!

gener8tor Minnesota Names 2018 Cohort

In what may be the worst-kept secret of the year, gener8tor today formally announced the five startups it accepted into its 2018 Minnesota program. The 12-week summer program officially kicked off the week of June 25th, but they tell me it always takes a while for all the legal paperwork to be completed — thus the delay in an official announcement, even though many in the Twin Cities community already knew. Nonetheless — ta-dah! — here’s the 2018 class, selected from some 800 applications it received from throughout North America:

CellularEMT
Detroit, MI
Dwain Watkins, CEO

CellularEMT connects certified technicians who provide a variety of on-demand services (e.g., cell phone repair, technical support) to consumers. By tapping into the gig economy, CellularEMT offers a lower cost, higher quality service than traditional tech support (i.e., Geek Squad), while providing entrepreneurial contractors higher earning potential than traditional employment. CellularEMT piloted with smart device screen repair, and has grown monthly revenue from $10,000 to $37,000 from January to May 2018.

Faithbox
Omaha, NE
Jeff Smith, CEO

Faithbox provides monthly subscription boxes to the Christian market with proprietary devotionals, books, and products that benefit charitable projects (e.g., fund a school for disabled children in Kenya and health insurance for their mothers). Faithbox also partners with Christian musicians, authors, and organizations to offer custom co-branded subscription boxes to their audiences.

As the Christian brick-and-mortar retailer market shrinks (i.e., fewer books on the shelves at Walmart), Faithbox allows vendors to move the displaced inventory directly to consumers while buying that inventory at discount prices. In addition, Faithbox’s unique partnership with Christian artists and influencers (many of whom have millions of followers) leverages the partners’ brands to drive down acquisition costs and reach a larger audience. Faithbox is an Omaha-based Delaware C-Corp. It generates $180,000 MRR and is growing at 10%+ per month.

Virtue Analytics
Woodbury, MN
Vikas Mehrotra, CEO

Virtue Analytics (previously called Manboat) allows educational institutions to leverage the power of machine learning and predictive modeling to make better decisions across the admissions process. Customized to the institution’s environment, Virtue Analytics provides student-specific recommendations, related to admissions, financial aid & retention, enabling better outcomes for the student and delivering increased revenue to the institution.Virtue Analytics logo

Historically, admissions departments have relied on intuition, guesswork, and Excel spreadsheets to determine the amount of financial aid to offer in a manually intensive, sub-optimized manner. With Virtue Analytics, these decisions are optimized, automated using self-tuning algorithms that allocate available financial assistance by neither over funding (and wasting money) or under funding (and burdening a student with debt). Since going live in January 2018, it has secured contracts totaling $76K ARR with expectations to reach $240K ARR by December 2018.

Onepanel
San Francisco, CA
Donald Scott, COO

Onepanel allows companies, researchers, and students access to the same world-class machine learning and artificial intelligence tools that are used by Google and Facebook. Onepanel takes months and hundreds of thousands of dollars of investment in infrastructure and provides the same toolset as a platform, available at a click of a button. Onepanel’s suite of tools makes machine learning available for highly technical researchers and non-technical analysts alike, allowing them to collaborate and build on each other’s work.

SpeechMED
Miami, FL
Susan Perry, CEO

SpeechMED’s smart device application speaks medical information to patients in the language they understand. SpeechMED’s application removes obstacles to clear communication regardless of language preference, age, vision, and literacy level by playing the information out-loud in the patient’s native language and simplifying medical jargon into simple instructions. SpeechMED empowers patients and their caregivers to understand vital medical information resulting in improved health literacy, higher rates of medication adherence, reduced chance of medical mishap, and the resulting costs to payers. It is a Miami, Florida based Delaware C-Corp. and has a paid pilot at Baptist Health for $10,000.00 per month.

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About gener8tor

gener8tor is a nationally ranked accelerator that invests in high-growth startups. Three times a year, it invests $90K in each of five startups who receive a concierge experience during its 12-week accelerator program. (The program takes place in each of three cities: Madison, Milwaukee, and Minneapolis.) gener8tor supports the growth of these startups through its network of experienced mentors, technologists, corporate partners, angel investors, and venture capitalists. To date, 71 gener8tor alumni have cumulatively raised more than $150M in follow-on financing. Of these 71 alumni, 58% have raised more than $1M in follow-on financing or have been acquired. gener8tor invests in high-growth startups, including software, IT, web, SaaS, life science, medtech, e-commerce, and hardware. gener8tor is a proud member of the Global Accelerator Network (GAN) and is sponsored by American Family Insurance. It is a GOLD-tier accelerator in the U.S. as ranked by the Seed Accelerator Rankings Project.

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Disclosure: I’m a mentor for gener8tor Minnesota.

Minnesota-Raised Entrepreneur Jeremy Allaire Making Big Bet on Blockchain

(Note: as a followup to my post a while back, So What’s Happening in Bitcoin and Blockchain in Minnesota, I thought it would be interesting to tell you about another Minnesota connection of sorts in the blockchain/crypto world.)

Jeremy Allaire, CEO, Circle

Jeremy Allaire, CEO, Circle Internet Financial. (Photo credit: Getty Images.)

For a serial entrepreneur who got his start right out of college in his home state of Minnesota, Jeremy Allaire has had quite a ride. Soon after graduating from Macalester College in St. Paul, he and brother J.J. founded Allaire Corp, an Internet software tools company. After a couple of years in  Minnesota, the firm migrated to Cambridge MA to take a VC infusion. In 1999, it had a successful IPO and soon after was acquired by rival Macromedia for $360 million. Jeremy served as CTO of that firm for a few years, then in 2003 joined VC firm  General Catalyst Partners as an executive-in-residence.

In 2004, Jeremy founded Brightcove, an online video platform used by many top media and marketing organizations worldwide. There, he raised close to $100 million in four rounds and had a successful IPO in 2012. He still serves as Chairman of the Board of Brightcove.

In 2013, Jeremy announced the launch of Circle, an Internet-based consumer finance company that aims to bring the power and benefits of digital money, such as Bitcoin, to the mainstream. As CEO of Boston-based Circle, Jeremy has raised $135 million in four rounds of VC, including $50 million led by Goldman Sachs.

Fast forward to today, when CNBC ran a story  summarizing an on-air interview it did with Jeremy, wherein he stated, in essence, that all global currencies will become cryptocurrencies. (Emphasis mine.) You read that right! He said every currency in the world, as the article stated, “from the U.S. dollar to the Chinese yuan,” will have its own cryptocurrency version.

“Our view is that all fiat currency will be crypto,” he told CNBC in the interview on Monday, June 18. “It seems inevitable at this point.”

The article describes Circle thusly:

Allaire’s start-up offers a blockchain-powered app that lets people send money to each other for free.  Blockchain is the public ledger of activity that underpins cryptocurrencies like bitcoin.

Circle also has a product that lets users invest in cryptocurrencies like bitcoin and ethereum, and another that facilitates over-the-counter cryptocurrency trading for institutional investors.

Circle is now valued at $3 billion and is backed by U.S. investment bank Goldman Sachs and Chinese internet giant Baidu. The CNBC piece also noted that Circle recently said it wants to introduce a new cryptocurrency pegged to the U.S. dollar, called “USD Coin.”

The idea is to speed up transactions made with dollars by using blockchain technology — which maintains a continuously growing digital record of transactions — and reducing the volatility seen in most cryptocurrencies.

It’s not the first so-called “stablecoin” on the market — other cryptocurrencies backed by fiat have been introduced. The most notable stablecoin is tether, a controversial virtual currency which critics have claimed was used to prop up bitcoin prices last year.

Allaire said that Circle’s U.S. dollar-backed crypto would benefit from coming under stricter regulations. The token is being built within an open-source platform called CENTRE, which Circle hopes will be joined by financial institutions and other firms.

Allaire said that the aim of the USD Coin was to bring mainstream financial processes into the world of cryptocurrencies and blockchain technology.

“Our focus with fiat stablecoins is we really think of it as a core building block for a crypto-native global digital economy,” the article quoted Allaire as saying.

“Our interest is in how do we take all of the tasks involved in the financial industry and move those onto a crypto-native infrastructure.”

The CNBC article also added that Circle is looking to add crypto tokens for the Euro and the British Pound.

Wow, what a story! A long way from his start here in the Twin Cities, but this Minnesota-born entrepreneur isn’t just out to change the world of banking — he’s out to change the very nature of money itself.

Go, Jeremy!

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P.S.  As long as we’re taking a bit of a walk back in history, I’ll link to three other posts I wrote about Jeremy on this blog some years ago, including one lengthy piece entitled “Minnesota Boy Makes Good (Very Good)” — based on an interview of Jeremy at the very seminal PC Forum in 2006. It was the last of an amazing run of those conferences, one that stands out in my mind as the best, most star-studded Internet conference I ever attended. And I attended and reported on plenty!

 

 

 

So, What’s Happening in Bitcoin and Blockchain in Minnesota?

Bitcoin Minnesota graphicHave you been wondering what might be going on in our state in the burgeoning area of bitcoin, cryptocurrencies, and blockchain? Well, I have, too! Luckily I met a guy recently who filled me in — bigtime. He reached out to me on LinkedIn, and I was glad he did. His name is Stephen Gornick and, just a couple of months ago, he relocated back here to his home state from California. He’s an accomplished techie, and he’s been involved in this space for several years. I’m pretty sure I haven’t met anyone with more knowledge about this field than Stephen. So, I was delighted to learn more from him about all the startups, projects, meetups, and more already happening, right here in our state. The amount of activity shocked me! It’s a list he compiled from research he did upon returning here, as a way to get connected back into our tech community.  Stephen also has set up a Twitter account called @MinnFinTech — so, follow him there! He was nice enough to allow me to republish his great list here:

A List of Bitcoin and Blockchain-Related Organizations and Projects in Minnesota

by Stephen Gornick (LinkedIn)
  • Silicon Prairie Online/SPPX — a MNvest equity and debt-based crowdfunding portal
  • BanQu — Economic identities for the unbanked (ICO forthcoming)
  • Vault Logic — Digital Currency Payment Kiosk Network & ATMs (Coming Fall 2017)
  • Scryp — Currency of cooperation (Coming soon)
  • CBT Success — Pay For Success (aka Social Impact Bond), on the blockchain (Coming soon)
  • Nomics —Yahoo Finance for Crypto (Coming soon)
  • SSAYE (ICO forthcoming)
  • ParaShoot — Video platform (ICO forthcoming)
  • Bitkota, LLC — Lawyer on all things crypto (exchanges, ICOs, & more)
  • Sawtooth Lake Core —A Hyperledger blockchain project that makes use of a trusted execution environment
  • CTI Consulting — Buy and Sell Bitcoin locally with cash
  • CoCreateX — Built a Blockchain-based Thank You app and community
  • Watch My Bit — Video platform, though currently in hibernation
  • Strength In Numbers Foundation’s 2Give Coin — Social tipping platform

Events / Meetups / Groups / Meeting Spaces

Organizations or projects not based in Minnesota but have a presence here

List composed/curated by Stephen Gornick.

Stephen adds: “This is certainly a work-in-progress. Any additions, corrections, clarifications, or any other submissions are welcome. Please submit to me via  e-mail or via mention to @MinnFinTech on Twitter.”

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As Stephen updates me with any further information, I will add it to this blog post. Meantime, if you’re interested in the topic, I’d encourage you to attend any of the meetups listed above. Maybe you’ll even meet Stephen!

Let me know in the comments what you might know about any of the resources on the list, or what you think of the list overall. Thanks!

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