Venture Capital in Detroit, Among Other Places (Video)
If you have a startup idea kicking around in your head, you don't necessarily need to head for California, New York or Massachusetts to find venture capital. In today's video, Timothy Lord visits a venture capital firm called Detroit Venture Partners. (Yes, it's in Detroit.) This not an intimidating company, even though it has some big bucks and big names (including Magic Johnson) behind it. But this doesn't mean you need to rush to Detroit to fund your million-dollar idea. There are lots of local venture capital companies in the U.S. -- and chances are, wherever you are, there's one near you that's panting to invest in your can't-miss business opportunity.
My experience is that a lot of supposed venture capital firms (particularly those that deal with economic development zones and distressed areas) are little more than scammers who live on government funding and/or ponzi-scheme style investments and use most of it to pay very high salaries to their staff. So if you're actually looking for venture capital be careful who you deal with. If their senior staff are all driving new Mercedes, while the portfolio of ventures they've funded is surprisingly slim, you might want to look elsewhere.
Not saying that is the case with the specific firm mentioned in this story. I'm just saying be careful who you deal with. The same also goes for non-profits, and anyone who wants to "pay cash for your inventions." There are plenty of reputable investors out there, but plenty of scammers too. And when you're desperate for funding for your big idea, it can be tempting to fall for the latter. Don't let your dream turn you into a mark.
SJW: Someone who has run out of real oppression, and has to fake it.
And so it is !! So it is !!
Why is that if I have pictures disabled, every annoying post from the Slashdot staff refuses to obey that? Do you guys hard code your own submissions to basically bypass all of the user selected preferences?
PS -- your layout has been horrible for months. The CSS overlaps itself, and doesn't work on smaller screens -- what morons are doing your web work these days?
In Detroit, you should be buying up all the empty lots and abandoned homes, tear down any structures, grease a few palms down at city hall to keep them off your back, and wait for global warming to make the area liveable. Then you sell high to all the people fleeing the flooding in New York and Los Angeles.
I looked at the list of current companies and checked the hiredmyway or whatever it is. It said there were 7 jobs available, listed one without any detail of responsibilities or pay. Then there was a prev-1-next thing at the bottom that doesn't work, so I can't go to the next listing. Remember, this is a company that's supposed to help people find jobs, but their own job postings don't work?
This is the 4th week in a row that some article is really an Ad in disguise. Augh.
Life takes interesting turns, but the most interest is when you're off the beaten path.
There's another advantage to setting up shop in Detroit these days: The city is much safer now that an angry Clint Eastwood is out there roaming its streets.
Jon Stewart interviewee Jonathan Macey (professor at Yale) said most people should avoid private equity. Good private equity firms require huge investments - more than he can can bring to the table...
As an aside, Mr. Romney is a bad joke of a candidate - he basically represents everything that the occupiers are protesting.
What the U.S. needs is a candidate who people who work for a living can rally around, and that people who steal for a living will fear. Most people would agree that Steve Jobs worked very hard for his billions, and that there are groups on Wall Street who ought to be prosecuted.
I like certain aspects of Ron Paul's candidacy, but I wonder if he can get a message together that could break through Wall Street's blockade.
Fortunately for us there is another candidate who could black-swan the election.
I have this idea for a great new company in detroit....
Most of the companies they're funding aren't in Detroit. And they mostly seem to be social media phone apps. No manufacturing, automotive, or heavy industrial startups.
(We need to get past "social media" and do something else.)
Cory Doctorow - Makers.... Somehow this article reminds me of the book...
how much they paid to get into the Top Stories?
( whom are too many to list here)
VULture capital !
Yours In Krasnoyarsk,
Kilgore Trout, C.T.O.
Social Media, Detroit's Rebirth?
Let's all totally commit to hoping hard enough to bring substance to one or both.
I mean, Detroit got one startup that was funded by venture capital and people think that it's so hot, that it's newsworthy
Plus, this particular startup has yet to prove it can succeed in the marketplace
One bird does not a flock made
Not until Detroit is swamped with a growing cluster of successful startups then maybe it'll become newsworthy
Muchas Gracias, Señor Edward Snowden !
One thing I want to know is there any decent Venture Captialists in Ontario Canada
Any good Venture Captialists in Ontario Canada
I wish there was good Venture capitalists in ontario Canada to start your own company