Denver Startup Scene Highlighted as Leeap Project Hits 10 Cities in 20 Days

by
February 11, 2013

[video:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kv_dIfcxcSI]

Ten cities in twenty days. This was Australian entrepreneur Simon Walker’s plan of attack to understand U.S. startup hubs, a mission he has named Leeap Project.

And with Walker’s wish to visit the top 10 cities full of budding entrepreneurs, of course he didn’t miss Denver and Boulder. The video from his trip was published this week on Leeap Project’s YouTube channel.

The video features a few of Denver’s key players: Card Gnome’s Joel Wishkovsky, Galvanize’s Tony Mugavero, Silver Chalice’s Bill Cullen and The Unreasonable Institute’s Romain Vakilitabar.

Although Walker did not get to spend a full two days in the Denver/Boulder area because of a transportation mishap, he said he thought Denver and Boulder had thriving, healthy startup scenes.

“From the discussions that I did have, Boulder is absolutely packed and it does seem that people are moving from Boulder to Denver,” Walker said. “There is a great work-life balance there and that was really jelled into me. Everyone there is very active: on the weekends you go out skiing and then you’re back in the office on Monday.”

Galvanize was a particularly stand-out part of Denver, Walker wrote in his blog; the gym, café and mentorship opportunities make it “unquestionably one of the best co-working spaces” he had seen.

In Denver and in every city he visited, Walker stayed with local entrepreneurs using Startup Stay, a couchsurfing platform for entrepreneurs. Stumbling across Startup Stay’s site in late September was actually the impetus for Leeap in the first place, Walker said, and planning his stays through the site allowed him to gather truthful representations of each city from actual entrepreneurs involved in the scene.

Leeap was aimed at Australians wanting to know about startup life in America because many have a skewed view, Walker said, and think that “Silicon Valley is the whole of America with billionaires working in dorm rooms everywhere.”

“As a businessperson, you are seriously wanting to cut the bullshit and have information that is relevant and is actually going to help entrepreneurs,” Walker said.

As he traveled, Walker said he quickly realized that Leeap would serve to educate not only Australian innovators, but also American entrepreneurs working in different cities because “a lot of people within America didn’t know what was going on next door.”

Despite the fragmentation of the national startup community, there was high local activity; Walker said he received dozens of emails each day of his trip informing him of different events in different cities.

“There was only so much I could achieve in every city and I really wanted to get many perspectives to hear about the realities of what’s going on,” Walker said. “I was speaking with entrepreneurs, accelerators, co-working spaces, investors to create a relatively holistic, educated opinion. It was great to see that there was so much support locally for the project.”

Locations
Colorado, USA
geo locations data
a:1:{i:0;a:12:{s:13:"addressNumber";N;s:4:"city";N;s:7:"country";s:3:"USA";s:5:"label";s:13:"Colorado, USA";s:8:"latitude";d:38.998550562;s:9:"longitude";d:-105.547816373;s:12:"municipality";N;s:10:"postalCode";N;s:6:"region";s:8:"Colorado";s:5:"state";s:8:"Colorado";s:6:"street";N;s:9:"subRegion";N;}}
Blog Migrated
Yes