Monthly Archives May 2012

May 24, 2012 | Post by: kevin No Comments

“More Than an Incubator” – 1871 video story by First Business

Check out a great new story on 1871 by First Business posted on YouTube: http://youtu.be/AgMliaU1SHw

 



May 20, 2012 | Post by: kevin 1 Comments

British Prime Minister David Cameron Tours Chicago’s Digital Entrepreneur Hub “1871″ Prior To NATO Summit

UK leader meets with digital entrepreneurs, underscores role of start-ups in economic growth; invites Chicago delegation to UK’s Tech City

CHICAGO, May 20, 2012 /PRNewswire/ — Entrepreneurs at Chicago’s new hub for digital start-ups, 1871, got a surprise visit Sunday from British Prime Minister David Cameron prior to the start of the NATO Summit. The Prime Minister spoke with several entrepreneurs about their businesses and Chicago’s strong technology innovation sector, then toured the shared work space for digital start-ups that opened May 2 in the historic Merchandise Mart building.

Mr. Cameron had asked to visit 1871 (www.1871.com) as part of his ongoing mission to strengthen economic ties between the UK and the United States – especially in the technology sector, which he has described as having tremendous potential to fuel economic growth and job creation.

The 1871 entrepreneurs were only told the identity of their VIP guest moments before his arrival, for security purposes.

Upon his arrival, Mr. Cameron had a spirited conversation with three entrepreneurs, quizzing them about their businesses and the advantages of working in a tech “ecosystem” such as 1871:

  • Neal Sales-Griffin, founder of Code Academy, an immersive three-month training program housed in 1871 for people – often those who started in other careers — who want to become web developers, designers and entrepreneurs.
  • Louise Monger, a UK native who recently located in 1871 to start up the US version of an interactive silent auction fundraising company, FunRaising Events USA.
  • Erik Severinghaus, founder of SimpleRelevance, which improves digital marketing conversion by using data to segment customers and personalize their messaging.

In his exchange with Monger, Mr. Cameron offered his view that “there’s a great market” for her interactive fundraising service, and that the technology available to power her start-up is “fantastic.” Perhaps her greatest challenge, he quipped, is making sure the technology can be used by “an 80-year-old philanthropist.”

During his visit to 1871, the Prime Minister cited Tech City (www.techcityuk.com) in East London, an area with a network of start-ups and incubators alongside established technology companies such as Google and Cisco as well as university researchers and investors. He has said he intends for Tech City to become “one of the world’s great technology centers.”

The Prime Minister’s tour was led by Kevin Willer, president and CEO of the Chicagoland Entrepreneurial Center (CEC). The CEC, which manages 1871, is a not-for-profit organization dedicated to growing Chicago’s entrepreneurial community.

After talking with the digital entrepreneurs and touring their co-working space, Mr. Cameron also met privately with a handful of Chicago-area business leaders, including J.B. Pritzker, World Business Chicago Board member and one of the founders of 1871, to promote investment in the UK and invite them to visit Tech City.

In addition to providing co-working space and a sense of community, 1871 features educational programming, events and seminars to help foster the growth of digital startups in Chicago, which has seen an explosion of growth in the sector. The name “1871″ was inspired by the period of rapid innovation that followed immediately after The Great Chicago Fire in October of that year, when leading engineers, designers and builders came together to build a new city.

To view video of today’s visit to 1871 by Prime Minister David Cameron, please visit http://youtu.be/HPOE4arjf0s

To download photos, please visit http://bit.ly/1871Photos

 

 

SOURCE 1871

Source: PR Newswire (http://s.tt/1cnfH)



May 20, 2012 | Post by: kevin 5 Comments

British Prime Minister David Cameron Visits 1871

Today we hit a huge milestone in the early life of 1871 – we hosted a visit by a foreign head-of-government.  And it wasn’t just any head-of-government, this was the Prime Minister of the United Kingdom, David Cameron!

Prime Minister Cameron is in Chicago for the NATO Summit this weekend and his local British Consul General, Robert Chatterton Dickson, reached out to 1871 to see if he could visit some of Chicago’s startup companies.  He has been a huge supporter of digital startups in the UK – particularly around the eco-system being built in Tech City UK.

As the Prime Minsiter walked through 1871 he spoke with a number of startups along the way including Code Academy, FunRaising Events, SimpleRelevance, Toodalu, Cara Health, ProOnGo, Globus @ Computation Institute, CheekyChicago, and the CEC team!  He then hosted a roundtable discussion in the Excelerate space with the CEO’s of some of Chicago’s largest corporations: Allstate, Caterpillar, Walgreens, Groupon, Northern Trust, and Kraft. These CEO’s were also impressed with the 1871 community and toured the space afterwards.

We always hoped that 1871 could be a showcase for Chicago’s great digital entrepreneurs to government leaders from around the world and we are so proud to have had such an influential world leader as the Prime Minister of the United Kingdom as our first head-of-state visitor.  We look forward to forging strong ties with our counterparts in the UK and building successful high-growth startups together.



May 11, 2012 | Post by: kevin 3 Comments

How cool was the ActionBooth at the 1871 Grand Opening Party?



May 09, 2012 | Post by: Steven Collens No Comments

A New Home for the Startup Community by David Jesse, Groupon

When I was looking to move back to the Midwest two years ago, it struck me that
the startup community in Chicago was small in ways both bad and good.

Despite a very respectable amount of new venture activity here, it’s not exactly
Silicon Valley. People at a Chicago cocktail party probably are not debating whether
Facebook overpaid for Instagram, and your neighbor probably doesn’t have two
failed businesses—worn as a badge of honor.

On the positive side, the sense of startup community here was—and is—really
strong. People willingly introduced me around, and strangers took meaningful time
to chat even if they didn’t have a role for me. What the Chicago startup scene lacked
in size, it made up for in spirit and collaboration.

To me, 1871 embodies this spirit. The new center is going to provide a home for
the Chicago startup community to bring it even closer together. It will connect new
founders with people who have been around the block a few times. The support I
experienced before moving here will be concentrated under one roof, which will
help new entrepreneurs increase their chance of success.

For me, getting involved as a mentor is an opportunity to participate in that spirit.
It’s going to be fun to be a small part of fostering this ecosystem. Hope to see you
there!



May 05, 2012 | Post by: una 1 Comments

Be a mentor @ 1871, by Steve Sanger, GrubHub

As a member of Chicago’s tech community, I am honored to be a mentor for the Chicagoland Entrepreneurial Center and to be a part of 1871. I had the opportunity to get a sneak peak of the new space in the Merchandise Mart a few weeks ago and was absolutely blown away by what I saw.

As someone who has been involved in the Chicago tech community for the last 10 + years, it’s great to see the renaissance that is occurring in the digital community. It is my personal belief that a strong startup community needs continual contributions by the entrepreneurial / tech community to ensure a lasting impact on our tech community. The success or failure of Chicago will be determined by the willingness of people to contribute their time and energy to the community. I encourage everyone to get involved in some way – whether that be by being a mentor, meeting with people seeking advice, attending events, etc. I think that members of the community will find that 1871 provides opportunities to get involved via their workshops, seminars and office hours, events, etc. This programming will provide tremendous value to startups.

One of the biggest impediments for a startup can be space available to foster ideas, etc. Not only is 1871 helping to solve this issue for Chicago startups, but also it gives startups an environment to share ideas with one another and to receive the necessary feedback from peers / mentors to help iterate on their concept.

1871 is off to a good start with all 100 reserved seats allocated to 35 startups and 35 additional startups signed up for the shared space. It will be exciting to see the new companies that benefit from 1871. I’m excited about the hundreds of new jobs that will be created as a result of 1871.

A successful startup community can’t be created overnight. It’s going to take a lot of effort from many people over a long period of time to solidify our city as a hub for technical innovation.  As a member of the tech community, I’m looking forward to the opening of 1871 and what it’ll mean to our city. Congrats to the CEC team on a wonderful start.



May 02, 2012 | Post by: kevin 12 Comments

Opening Day for 1871

About 1 year ago, a small group of folks from Chicago’s startup community started researching the possibility of an ambitious, dynamic, flexible, digital startup center.

Today, this vision is a reality.  Today, we officially launch 1871.

There have been so many folks involved with this effort – over 200 entrepreneurs plus a core team including Steve Collens, Matt Moog, Dan Lyne, Jack Keenan, Jim Plummer, Todd Heiser, Carlos Martinez, Ray Kennedy, Katy Ruscitti, Lina Chiu, Luke Galambos, the Jasculca Terman team, the Skender team, Suzanne and the ROI Ventures team, VSA Partners and JB Pritzker.  Special thanks to my CEC team – Una, Caity, Kim, Melissa, Heidi, Mike, and Chris – as well as our incredible CEC Board of Directors for their leadership. Thank you for all of your efforts in making this dream a reality.  We will make you proud.

To honor this day, I’d like to share 1871: By the Numbers

50,000 square feet of space

500-person capacity

65 companies already accepted

85 Code Academy students

10 Excelerate Labs companies

36 events and educational programs scheduled for the month of May

200 members of the digital community consulted on design

18+ miles of communications cabling

3,200+ linear feet of light fixtures

3,400 square feet of glass

143-foot-long glass whiteboard

5,000 carpet tiles

28 conference and phone rooms

63 lockers

1871—(1) catalyzing moment in Chicago history, when the most brilliant
engineers,
architects and inventors came together to build a new city; (2)
where Chicago’s brightest digital designers, engineers and entrepreneurs
are shaping new technologies, disrupting old business models
and
resetting the boundaries of what’s possible