It’s been almost four years since Detroit hit rock bottom, but you wouldn’t know that. The enthusiasm and passion in the air downtown is contagious, and the amount of cool new stuff in Detroit seems never ending.
There are hot pockets of activity in Detroit — downtown, Midtown, and Corktown. Traffic is increasing to the suburbs. The university triangle with the University of Michigan, Michigan State, and Wayne State University is booming with talented grads wanting to stay in Detroit.
Detroit’s newest Mayor Mike Duggan is off to a fantastic start. On a technical front, he just hired a new CIO to turn around the city’s antiquated technology systems.
The momentum is building every day.
And it’s time for an event to celebrate and strengthen the growing entrepreneurial community downtown. An event that can grow year-over-year in Detroit. An event led by entrepreneurs, a key anchor in building startup communities, as outlined by Brad Feld in his book, Startup Communities.
Bringing Techweek to Detroit
In 2013, I was exchanging emails with Dan Gilbert, founder and chairman of Quicken Loans, about having our own SXSW-like event in Detroit. At the end of the email chain, Dan quipped, “Make it happen, Ted.”
Yikes. I’m a venture guy. And a former developer. But event planner? Not in my DNA.
But, I’m on a mission to be one of the heroes that helped rebuild Detroit. “There must be a way, I’ll figure it out,” I thought to myself.
And serendipity has a way of speeding up that figuring-out process. The following week (in April), I was on a call with Techweek. They wanted me to attend the 2013 Chicago Techweek. They proceeded to say they were expanding in 2014 to New York and Miami. At the end of our conversation, I told them they needed to be in Detroit. After they stopped laughing, I said, “No really, you need to.”
After a few more calls, the Techweek crew visited Detroit. After an hour, they were sold. The energy downtown, the incredible office spaces, and density of startups on the Madison Block, they knew a Detroit Techweek could be huge.
And so, May 2014 was picked for Techweek Detroit.
Building Up the Startup Ecosystem
My vision for Detroit’s startup ecosystem includes many startup-oriented events, happening every month. Events that help further define Detroit’s presence as a fast-growing region for high tech startups.
I’d like to see, at least twice a year, a weeklong event that helps anchor the year and shine a bright spot on the Detroit startup ecosystem. An event or two that people from all over look forward to year after year. An event that can serve as an umbrella for other events happening the same week.
And what better brand than Techweek to become one of these events (the other could be North By Northeast, combining Detroit’s digital, music, entertainment, and event production talents). An experience that will have a lasting impact on Detroit, including:
- Changing the conversation about tech in Detroit. This will be the biggest impact. Celebrating technology as a whole, not as a specific industry. Uniting and expanding the conversation around entrepreneurship and startups. Working in a Silicon-Valley-esque manner, but tailored to the strengths of the region.
- Activating the metro Detroit tech community. Getting people in Detroit, Ann Arbor, Lansing, and beyond together. Encouraging networking and collaboration and helping to break down silos. Bringing disparate groups together that might not have worked together in the past.
- Growing alongside a fast changing Detroit. Techweek is not a fly-by-night operation. They are coming to Detroit and planning to stay. As the city grows and industries change, Techweek will grow and adapt. I expect we’re going to surpass 10,000 folks at Techweek 2016 and 20,000 by 2020. Yes, we’re thinking big (and starting small).
So grab your ticket here and I’ll see you in a few weeks. You might even catch me on stage talking about the entrepreneurial gold rush.
Detroit’s inaugural Techweek celebration will be held May 19-25 in downtown Detroit. Sign up here and be part of the largest tech conference for entrepreneurs in Detroit.