In its fifth and biggest year yet, Twin Cities Startup Week attracted one group like never before: the largest companies in town.
From the first Startup Week in 2014, Minnesota's big companies have sent their technologists, developers and engineers to attend the various technical panels and networking events put together by startup firms and related organizations, including Beta.MN and the U's Minnesota Cup. They also donated space and money to those efforts and, in turn, harvested ideas and occasionally talent.
But this past week, managers at firms like U.S. Bank, Securian Financial, Allina Health Systems and Best Buy played much bigger roles in Twin Cities Startup Week and three other innovation conferences that were cross-promoted and attended by thousands of people.
For instance, the chief executives of General Mills, Cargill and Ecolab headlined events at the Food Ag Ideas conference. Walmart and Mayo Clinic joined Medical Alley, the trade group of Minnesota medical device companies, in sponsoring the Manova health innovations conference. And nearly every major company turned up to present and recruit at the Blacks in Technology convention.
"Startups empower people to pursue their own ideas," Paige Benson, a recent University of Minnesota graduate, said after a Startup Week panel of executives from large and small firms. "It's encouraging to know that bigger companies are looking to the entrepreneurial scene to pursue more of those ideas."
For organizers, the rising participation of the region's most powerful businesses in Twin Cities Startup Week validates the work they have done organizing and promoting startup firms. More broadly, it reflects an evolution in the way big businesses approach technological challenges and opportunities.
For decades, executives at big firms believed they needed in-house systems along with ideas and tech people they controlled. But as the rise of internet and mobile gadgets created more opportunities to deliver their goods and services, these executives realized their tech teams couldn't do everything.
Tech executives at big firms locally also realized they were frequently reaching out to small firms in other parts of the country for help and needed to do more of that at home.