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PostMar 15, 2017#526

Google Fiber Was Doomed From the Start
https://backchannel.com/google-fiber-wa ... .rhxzu4r91

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PostMar 17, 2017#527

Well this doesn't sound good:

Funding for local tech startups down 80%

http://www.bizjournals.com/stlouis/news ... wn-80.html

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PostMar 17, 2017#528

^ Agree, doesn't sound good but from a capital/market perspective I see it as a cycle where at least some of the existing start ups have to find a means or return on investment for the another round/uptick In funding. At some point funds are not unlimited for everyone who reaches out with hand promising the next big thing. Especially if your business model for all intents and purposes begins with gladly pay you tomorrow for two hamburgers today.

To me, what I think matters for St Louis area is continue to build the Institutional funded District's (financially and global networks) such as CORTEX and Plant Science while finding ways for the Nestlé's of the world to move IT operations to the area. In this case, I would say a bigger worry is possibly pull back by Feds in health across the board, whether it be Medicaid to NIH.

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PostMar 19, 2017#529

You do have this though. So maybe some money is just moving where they are investing.

St. Louis biotech startups increase funding 87 percent

http://www.bizjournals.com/stlouis/news ... ng-87.html

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PostMar 20, 2017#530

W.T.F.? so biotech isn't tech? these a-holes need to be more specific when they write sh*t like this.

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PostMar 20, 2017#531

Isn't this skewed because of the huge Answers financing?


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PostMay 27, 2017#532

14 High-Tech Cities You'll Want to Call Home from pcmag.com

http://www.pcmag.com/feature/323932/14- ... -call-home

St. Louis is # 10!!!
Last fall, FiveThirtyEight proclaimed St. Louis "the new startup frontier." Average tech salaries there in 2016 were $83,717, up 3.1 percent from 2015. According to FiveThirtyEight, Missouri aggressively courts entrepreneurs via organizations like the Missouri Technology Corporation and the Kauffman Foundation. Many start-ups there are healthcare related, and many are women-owned.

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PostMay 27, 2017#533

Pretty excited to have been at the T-REX event: Our City for the Building, Report to the Community.

The statistics are pretty strong for the first 5 years.

http://report.downtowntrex.org/

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PostJul 07, 2017#534

PD reporting the addition of tech jobs to Grand Center. Nice pickup from Chameleon

http://www.stltoday.com/business/local/ ... d6b48.html

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PostJul 22, 2017#535

Safe Trek, a St Louis startup, is running national advertisements. Very exciting.


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PostJul 26, 2017#536

Here's some fodder for the argument that STL tech scene is not all that its cracked up to be.compared to our peers...

St. Louis' tech workforce growing slower than other cities
https://www.bizjournals.com/stlouis/new ... other.html
Other cities that are frequently compared with St. Louis grew at a faster clip, too: Minneapolis (25.5 percent); Kansas City (39.1 percent); Columbus, Ohio (12.9 percent); Cincinnati (21 percent); Milwaukee (21.1 percent); and Nashville (43.5 percent).

In fact, of the 50 markets analyzed by the CBRE report, only two markets grew less than 10 percent — St. Louis and Washington, D.C. (9.6 percent).
However, as the article also notes its not all doom and gloom in other areas and this is a report for Top 50 U.S. and Canadian tech markets, so just to be included in this list at 35th is not exactly a bad thing.

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PostJul 26, 2017#537

STLrainbow wrote: Here's some fodder for the argument that STL tech scene is not all that its cracked up to be.compared to our peers...
That the article claims a near 50% jump it tech workers in San Fran over the same time period really makes me wonder about its methodology. The numbers out there were already so huge, how do they increase it by such a percentage. Maybe true but hard for me to believe.

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PostJul 26, 2017#538

STLEnginerd wrote:
Jul 26, 2017
STLrainbow wrote: Here's some fodder for the argument that STL tech scene is not all that its cracked up to be.compared to our peers...
That the article claims a near 50% jump it tech workers in San Fran over the same time period really makes me wonder about its methodology. The numbers out there were already so huge, how do they increase it by such a percentage. Maybe true but hard for me to believe.
Based on the housing situation that seems just be getting worse and worse out there I would say it's probably accurate.

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PostJul 27, 2017#539

Just observing that 50% of 100,000 is 50k while 50% of 1 million is 500k. The only thing that makes sense to me is if the study is for municipalities rather than for metros so San Fran's trends of tech workers living in San Fran proper and working in the valley is shown in the results of the study, or if Oakland and San Jose were taken as separate metros somehow.

Otherwise I don't see how you can increase tech worker population by 50 % in the Bay Area in 5 years. That would be incredible.

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PostJul 27, 2017#540

I think it's been discussed in this forum several times that St. Louis is seeing a biotech boom. That is where the explosive numbers are. Really look into these studies and their definitions of 'tech'. St. Louis is not seeing strong growth in IT services or things of the such. The boom STL has been seeing is in AgTech, BioTech and in MedTech. Our startup growth is often confused with 'tech'. The vast majority of St. Louis startups are media oriented or in non-tech fields. Yes, STL is seeing growth in technological fields, just not where some of these studies focus. Important to keep this in mind before our inferiority complex suffocates us all.

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PostJul 27, 2017#541

Chalupas54 wrote:
Jul 27, 2017
I think it's been discussed in this forum several times that St. Louis is seeing a biotech boom. That is where the explosive numbers are. Really look into these studies and their definitions of 'tech'. St. Louis is not seeing strong growth in IT services or things of the such. The boom STL has been seeing is in AgTech, BioTech and in MedTech. Our startup growth is often confused with 'tech'. The vast majority of St. Louis startups are media oriented or in non-tech fields. Yes, STL is seeing growth in technological fields, just not where some of these studies focus. Important to keep this in mind before our inferiority complex suffocates us all.
Interesting. Correct me if I'm misunderstanding you here, but it seems you're saying a few things here:
  • St. Louis is not seeing much growth in IT despite initiatives like LaunchCode and T-Rex
  • The "tech" growth is in biotech and is not just growth but a "boom"
  • But the vast majority of startups are non-tech, media oriented.
The third point I maybe find most surprising. I take it you mean "media" in a traditional sense? i.e. the main means of mass communications: broadcasting, publishing and the interwebs?

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PostJul 27, 2017#542

San Luis Native wrote:
Chalupas54 wrote:
Jul 27, 2017
I think it's been discussed in this forum several times that St. Louis is seeing a biotech boom. That is where the explosive numbers are. Really look into these studies and their definitions of 'tech'. St. Louis is not seeing strong growth in IT services or things of the such. The boom STL has been seeing is in AgTech, BioTech and in MedTech. Our startup growth is often confused with 'tech'. The vast majority of St. Louis startups are media oriented or in non-tech fields. Yes, STL is seeing growth in technological fields, just not where some of these studies focus. Important to keep this in mind before our inferiority complex suffocates us all.
Interesting. Correct me if I'm misunderstanding you here, but it seems you're saying a few things here:
  • St. Louis is not seeing much growth in IT despite initiatives like LaunchCode and T-Rex
  • The "tech" growth is in biotech and is not just growth but a "boom"
  • But the vast majority of startups are non-tech, media oriented.
The third point I maybe find most surprising. I take it you mean "media" in a traditional sense? i.e. the main means of mass communications: broadcasting, publishing and the interwebs?
To address your first point, unfortunately the answer is yes. STL is not seeing significant growth in IT. This is proved by numerous studies, however it is starting to change thanks to those initiatives. Secondly, yes you can refer to it as a boom. Thirdly, vast majority is not the words I should have used. Some examples are OlioCity, SafeTrek, many others are app developments, which some may define as tech, but it's not the definition I use.


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PostSep 06, 2017#543


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PostSep 19, 2017#544

Pure rumor: heard through a tech recruiter today that Stifel's IT department is going through some "major reorganization".

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PostOct 13, 2017#545

From the biz journal:

Riverside Co., a private equity group out of Boston, has merged St. Louis-based Information Technologies Inc. with a similar software firm in Milwaukee, Competitive Edge, and has established the new company's headquarters in St. Louis.

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PostOct 13, 2017#546

Ebsy wrote:
Oct 13, 2017
From the biz journal:

Riverside Co., a private equity group out of Boston, has merged St. Louis-based Information Technologies Inc. with a similar software firm in Milwaukee, Competitive Edge, and has established the new company's headquarters in St. Louis.
HQ is in an office park in Olivette

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PostOct 13, 2017#547

moorlander wrote:
Oct 13, 2017
Ebsy wrote:
Oct 13, 2017
From the biz journal:

Riverside Co., a private equity group out of Boston, has merged St. Louis-based Information Technologies Inc. with a similar software firm in Milwaukee, Competitive Edge, and has established the new company's headquarters in St. Louis.
HQ is in an office park in Olivette
That's sweet!!! Olivette is primed to be the next major draw of international talent. And why not? With it's attractive urban design, industry leading businesses, superb walk score and well established night life scene.

Watch out San Francisco. There's a new kid in town. And that kid's name is Generic Olivette Office Park.

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PostOct 13, 2017#548

^ HA!

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PostOct 14, 2017#549

Reported on earlier but Nestle relocation of IT jobs to St. Louis from California as part of its NA HQ move to Northern Virginia noted in a nice PD write up that included some of the investment and expansion of R&D in St. Louis as of late. Not much on details though on how the relocation will play out and what space they will utilize. Link to earlier story noted 300 jobs by end of year. New article noted next year.

Will throw it out there for goat. Is this possibly the next big Cortex/Mid town announcement? Nestle IT as anchor tenant for the next CORTEX Wexford building (microsoft neighbor)/or CORTEX Koman or CORTEX East/Lawrence group? I would love to see Nestle commit its IT as anchor tenant for Cupples X to build on BPV II/downtown momentum as it would also be short walk down from the main Purina campus & future Chouteau Greenway

http://www.stltoday.com/business/local/ ... 952d2.html

Nestlé also is poised to increase its local workforce next year when it moves hundreds of IT jobs to St. Louis from California as part of Nestlé USA’s relocation of its headquarters from California to northern Virginia. The IT jobs are moving to St. Louis due to its central location and will provide IT support for multiple business units, including Purina.

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PostOct 15, 2017#550

As much i love the Cortex's momentum i would rather see those 300 nestle relocation jobs be Downtown. BPV preferably, if CupplesX were to ever resurface i think that be a great fit too.

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