Business
Why You Should Start a Company in Chicago…
Feb 21st

Go Chicago! Here’s an excerpt from a series fastcompany.com is running on entrepreneurial friendly cities across the country…
Chicago may lack the crackling energy of other startup hotspots like Seattle, Austin, Boston or Boulder, and its reputation for back-office, white-collar companies such as the former Andersen Consulting firm doesn’t help much. But Chicago is where many Internet mainstays were launched, from the jobs site CareerBuilder and travel service Orbitz to RSS technology innovators Feedburner (bought by Google in 2007) and the online audience measurement outfit comScore. One hot startup right now is the coupon site Groupon.
Health-care companies also have realized great potential in the area, led by Abbott Laboratories. And lest one forget, it was at nearby University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign where Marc Andreessen developed Mosaic, the Web browser that paved the way for the commercial Web. So there’s that.
These days Chicago’s startup culture is aimed at the steady and sure. As Matt McCall, a partner at New World Ventures and managing director at DFJ Portage, notes, Chicago is home to many of the largest companies in the country, including Accenture, Boeing, Integrys Energy, MillerCoors, McDonald’s, ACNielsen, Trans Union, and Fortune Brands. The list is long and comprehensive. For startups, it means a rich source of customers for products that fill a need or enhance their businesses.
McCall spoke with FastCompany.com about what makes Chicago’s startup scene so strong.
What makes Chicago a great place for startups?
Chicago has a mixture of a lot of very interesting things. I’ll start with the first, which is the customers are here. There are more Fortune 500s in this region than anywhere else in the U.S. And I’ve noticed this when I’m sitting in board meetings in San Francisco or New York or here. If you ever look at the sales pipeline, the Midwest is almost inevitably always the largest sales region because it’s a diverse economy and those companies tend to take care of their own here. So if you have a leading technology here, in almost every single situation, the top customers for those companies were all Midwest corporations. That’s the first thing I’d say.
The second is you’ve got more federal research dollars flowing into the universities here than any other region in the U.S. So if you just look at the federal funding–and this is just for Illinois, Michigan, Wisconsin, those three alone receive over $2 billion a year in U.S. federal funding. And it depends on the year, but they’re number three, four and five in the U.S. in research funding.
And the third is the connectivity, which is if you’ll look at a lot of successful companies in the valley, almost inevitably a huge percentage of them either went to school or grew up in the Midwest. And that’s ranging from [Oracle CEO] Larry Ellison growing up on the south side of Chicago to the YouTube guys.
So number four is you now have critical mass of what we call family trees where you’ve got entrepreneurs that are fourth generation entrepreneurs. They’re on their fourth business. As a result, they played at the big leagues. They’ve got a mafia of people that they can pull in to the companies. So when you go to recruit teams in certain spaces, you have the talent. Now, where are those spaces? I’ve always said we try to focus on areas where we are able to produce the number one or number two player in the U.S. or world out of our region and those areas would be interactive marketing, B2C, e-commerce, B2B, Internet enabled B2B, some enterprise software, medical devices and a host of other areas, everything from Archipelago to Think or Swim, OptionsXpress. You’ve got all kinds of talent, from writing the software platforms to actually creating exchanges.
TweetMicrosoft Outlook Gets LinkedIn Connector
Feb 18th

Recently Microsoft announced they are going to make Outlook Social Connectors for LinkedIn, Facebook, and Myspace.
The LinkedIn Outlook Social Connector is now available for download: www.LinkedIn.com/outlook
Coming soon will be Facebook and Myspace which at this time are not available.
TweetConfused About Google Voice?
Feb 18th
If you are like many, new products and features can be confusing. However, at the very same time it can improve your lifestyle immensely. Here are videos on the top 10 features Google Voice has to offer and also a brief introduction.
What Is Google Voice?
Google Voice Features:
Voicemail Transcription
One Number
Personalized Greetings
International Calling
SMS To Email
Share Voicemails
Block Callers
Screen Callers
Mobile App
Conference Calls
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Use Google Docs For Business or School
Jan 24th
If you haven’t started using Google Docs as a substitute to Word or Excel, or at the very least start using it at minimalist level you are living under a rock. We have been using it for the past year and the improvements that have been made during that time period have been incredible.
One of the best features is the online collaboration. You can upload or create a document and share it with an individual or a team. Same goes for being paired up with an individual for a school project or a group project. You can even have chat sessions within the document. You will be able see the other person updating the document right before you very eyes.
As an added effort to boost their document system Google has added some key features. These are the main ones:
- Upload any file
Over the next couple of weeks, we’re rolling out the ability to upload, store, and share any file in Google Docs. Your files will be stored in their original format and downloadable from anywhere. Uploading files to the cloud allows them to be safely stored and accessible at all times. - Shared folders
Now you can simultaneously share a group of docs with your friends, coworkers, or family, by sharing an entire folder with them. - Bulk upload
Upload multiple files quickly to your Docs list.
You can go to: What’s New in Google Docs to read the rest of the feature list.
I recommend Google Docs for any business or student. Or at least give it a try. It won’t cost you a cent.
TweetWarren Buffett’s 10 Rules for Getting Rich
Jan 4th
Reinvest your profits. “Even a small sum can turn into great wealth,” Schroeder writes, if you’re disciplined to not touch your profits. Let the power of compound interest work for you.
- Be willing to be different. Don’t follow the herd. Do what is best for you and your situation.
- Never suck your thumb. Ah, how I could learn from this one. Buffett makes decisions quickly based on the available information. I tend to sit and stew about things. Acting decisively can give you an advantage and prevent procrastination.
- Spell out the deal before you start. I stress this all the time: Don’t sign a contract unless you’ve read it (especially not a mortgage). Read the fine print. Understand the what you’re getting yourself into.
- Watch small expenses. While it’s true that the big things matter, the little things do too. Frugality is an important part of personal finance. But this principle also applies when investing, which is one reason I’m a fan of low-cost index funds.
- Limit what you borrow. “Living on credit cards and loans won’t make you rich,” writes Schroeder. Sure, leverage can get you into a home or a new car, but too much debt is one of the biggest drags on your financial well-being.
- Be persistent. If you know what you’re doing is important and right, stick to it. Doggedly pursue your goals. Learn to “fail forward”.
- Know when to quit. The other day, I wrote about the danger of the sunk-cost fallacy. Just because you’ve already paid $10 to see Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull, doesn’t mean you should sit through to the end. Be willing to cut your losses and walk away.
- Assess the risks. “Asking yourself ‘and then what?’ can help you see all of the possible consequences when you’re struggling to make a decision — and can guide you to the smartest choice.”
- Know what success really means. Success is different for each of us. Find what it is that brings meaning to your life, what makes each day important. Make this your focus. Buffett says: “When you get to my age, you’ll measure your success in life by how many of the people you want to have love you actually do love you. That’s the ultimate test of how you’ve lived your life.”
