Wisconsin's Startup Scene Is Stable But Slow
Although Wisconsin does well in startups remaining in business for a long time, why has it done poorly in business startup activity?
May 3, 2018
Criticism of Wisconsin’s startup activity by state Sen. Kathleen Vinehout, D-Alma, was verified by The Observatory, as the state has ranked last from 2015 through 2017 in the Kauffman Foundation’s annual report on state startup activity.
Gov. Scott Walker defended this on the Sunday talk show UpFront with Mike Gousha on WISN-TV in Milwaukee on November 12, 2017. Walker said Wisconsin has consistently ranked poorly in startup activity “long before” he took office and that the state is “fairly conservative” when it comes to venture capital and startups.
Walker told Wisconsin Public Radio that the state has ranked in the top 10 states for startups remaining in business after seven and 10 years.
“I’d rather have [the ranking] where we’re at. We’re in the top 10 when it comes to new businesses on their survival rate of seven and 10 years,” Walker said. “You can have all the startups in the world, but if they don’t last, that doesn’t get you any new jobs.”
Although Wisconsin does well in startups remaining in business for a long time, why has it done poorly in business startup activity?
Wendy Guillies, president and CEO of the Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation, said the story is not unique to Wisconsin. The overall trend in the United States for business startups is half of what it used to be in the 1980s.
“Despite this gloomy picture, there is reason to believe that we are about to enter a future with robust economic growth led by entrepreneurs,” wrote Guillies for the Ripon Society, a public policy organization aiming “to promote the ideas and principles that have made America great and contributed to the GOP’s success.”
Guillies cites five factors that would increase the chances for success in startups: adapt existing regulations to the new economy, reduce the cost of starting a business, increase the labor market supply by expanding immigration quotas and introducing startup visas, decrease incumbent bias to support entrepreneurial entry and competition, and more data and research on entrepreneurship.
There are many reasons why it is good to invest in a startup in the Midwest, according to Alec Slocum, co-founder and CEO of ABODO, a Madison-based apartment-hunting service. Slocum wrote in September 2016 about why he chose to keep his startup in the Midwest for VentureBeat. The lower initial costs for creating your business together with the affordable cost of living for employees are vital for any business, and the Midwest offers both.
In his piece for VentureBeat, Slocum praised the attitudes of Midwestern investors, whom he described as “all that niceness [which] typically hides a steely interior work-ethic, as well as a pragmatic approach to investment.”
In another VentureBeat column published in June 2017, Slocum wrote after the release of the Kauffman Foundation report about some of the issues and challenges ABODO experienced in Wisconsin. One of the big issues he notes is that investors in Wisconsin are “revenue-centric” and that can put a lot of stress on newer companies even before they have begun. He underlines that receiving funding here is harder than it is elsewhere.
Another is, “the hiring pool has fewer bigger fish.” By that he means that the small size of Madison and lack of history in startup activity makes it difficult to attract executives with experience working in rapidly growing companies.
Convincing experienced executives to come to Wisconsin is hampered also by the weather. The cold winters make “it hard to convince someone used to 70-degree January days” to move to the state, according to Slocum. Taken together with the political climate of an increasing partisan divide, it becomes difficult to attract top tech talent and investors to move to Wisconsin, as there are many alternatives to Silicon Valley across the country.
It’s not all bad in Wisconsin as Madison has flourishing tech scene. According to an August 2016 report from the Brookings Institute, Madison has the fifth highest growth rate in advanced industries output in the nation. Another report by TechNet and the Progressive Policy Institute, released in March 2017, ranked Madison in the top 25 of “next tech hubs.”
A 2018 Cyberstates report from CompTIA, the largest leading tech association in the United States, using a mix of public and private data, established that in 2017 there were 102,274 tech workers in Wisconsin compared with 100,025 in 2016 and 93,742 in 2015. The report estimated the rapidly growing tech sector accounts for 6.3 percent of the state’s economy.
Editor’s note: This report was originally published on April 17, 2018 by The Observatory, a publication of the University of Wisconsin-Madison School of Journalism and Mass Communication.
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