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Blockchain Technology
Blockchain Gospel: Answering the question, what is blockchain tech?
Three Central Iowa entrepreneurs will explain what blockchain technology is and how it's applied to the real world with a subscription newsletter. Blockchain Gospel is a tech blog dedicated to blockchain technology and explaining it for the technical and nontechnical reader to understand. Blockchaingospel.com will publish five stories a week and utilize graphics and other techniques…
Middle Bit
Middle Bit: Plexpod acquires Think Big Coworking in Kansas City
Plexpod—a coworking company in Kansas City—acquired Think Big Coworking's 1712 Main Street location, adding 30,000 square feet of space to Plexpod's footprint in Kansas City, according to a story Thursday on StartlandNews.com.  The deal, which was not disclosed, will take effect Jan. 1. According to the story, Think Big Coworking will become Plexpod Crossroads, which will then…
Firefly Creek Ranch
Firefly Creek Ranch: Space for the arts in Northwest Iowa
Firefly Creek Ranch was created to be a place visitors can recharge their batteries. And after restoring an abandoned retirement community center and acquiring 31 acres of land, Brenda Rose may need a new battery. Rose is the founder and CEO Of Firefly Creek Ranch—a nonprofit organization in Northwest Iowa—that will use its land as a community…
Gravitate Valley Junction
Strategic planning: How to do it
Strategic planning for startup and small companies was the topic of a presentation during the lunch hour Tuesday at the Gravitate in Valley Junction. Joe Benesh—CEO of Des Moines-based The Ingenuity Company—presented on design thinking and creative destruction, two topics prominent in the business world today. The Ingenuity Company was formed to help companies through the…
EA Sports
Smith: A Premature Burial of Electronic Arts
As the late Catholic historian John Dalberg-Acton said, “Power corrupts, and absolute power corrupts absolutely.” Look no further than video game publisher Electronic Arts for a modern day example. The company (and others like it) have been under fire for their use of randomized loot boxes players pay real money for (i.e. gambling), and has now…
Technology Associationn of Iowa
TechBrew: Linc Kroeger on Pillar Technology, The Forge and video games
One Des Moines tech executive announced his love for video games Friday morning during the Technology Association of Iowa's monthly, "TechBrew AM." On the second Friday of each month, the Technology Association of Iowa hosts a networking event at West End Architectural Salvage in downtown Des Moines with a Q&A between a local tech executive and Brian Waller, President of the Technology Association of Iowa. Linc Kroeger—Vanguard of Future Ready Iowa…
TS Bank
TS Bank awards $27,000 to small businesses
T.S Bank held its third annual "REV" Pitch Competition Friday, Dec. 1 in Council Bluffs where five companies pitched their business plan to four judges. According to a news release Wednesday, Appsky Labs of Omaha was awarded $10,000. Des Moines-based Flyover Design Co. won $7,000 and Des Moines-based HomeDitty won $5,000. Fiiyo and Found Vintage—both of Omaha—were awarded…
Iowa Startup Accelerator
NewBoCo: Launch day for the Iowa Startup Accelerator is here
Launch Day for the Iowa Startup Accelerator is going to be a little different this year. Traditionally, Launch Day serves as the capstone or final event of the Iowa Startup Accelerator. But this year it will include a focus on Iowa's startup ecosystem. David Tominsky—Iowa Startup Accelerator Managing Director—said the focus will be on education, entrepreneurship and…
Joey Aguirre, Author at Clay & Milk | Page 11 of 27
A central Iowa ag-tech accelerator has secured more backers and finally has a name. The Greater Des Moines Partnership first announced the accelerator last year, naming four initial investors. On Monday, the Partnership said the program will be called the "Iowa AgriTech Accelerator" and named three new investors. The new investors include Grinnell Mutual, Kent Corp. and Sukup Manufacturing, all Iowa companies. They join investors Deere & Co., Peoples Co., Farmers Mutual Hail Insurance Co. and DuPont Pioneer. Each investor has agreed to put up $100,000 for the first year of the accelerator. Startups entering the program will receive $40,000 in seed funding in exchange for 6 percent equity. Tej Dhawan, an angel investor and local startup mentor, is serving as interim director until the AgriTech Accelerator names a permanent leader. Dhawan held a similar role with the GIA before Brian Hemesath was named as managing director. As interim director, Dhawan said his main job includes hiring the accelerator's executive director, establishing a business structure and initial recruiting for the first cohort. The accelerator will place few filters, such as location and product, on the applicant pool, Dhawan said. "When you’re seeking innovation, innovation can come from every corner of the world so why restrict ourselves," he said. One area the the AgriTech Accelerator won't recruit from is biotech. For its first cohort, the AgriTech Accelerator will work out of the GIA's space in Des Moines' East Village, Dhawan said. A future, permanent home is still to be decided. The accelerator's program will host startups from mid-July through mid-October, ending with an event connected to the annual World Food Prize. The GIA, which the AgriTech Accelerator is based on, also ends with presentations at an industry event. The accelerator has also started lining up a mentor pool. The Iowa Corn Growers Association, Iowa Soybean Association and the Iowa Pork Producers Association have agreed to provide mentors, as has Iowa State University. While the AgriTech Accelerator is loosely based off of the GIA, it will differ in its business structure, Dhawan said. The GIA runs through a for-profit model for both operations and its investment fund. The AgriTech Accelerator will have a nonprofit model for its operations and a for-profit setup for its fund. Dhawan said the nonprofit model is being used so the accelerator can better work with other nonprofit partners, such as trade associations. "These are all organizations that are nonprofits and can be amazing stakeholders without ever having to be investors in the accelerator," he said. "It becomes easier to work with trade associations in their nonprofit role when we are also a nonprofit." When it's up and running, the AgriTech Accelerator would be one of a handful of ag-focused startup development programs in Iowa. Others include the Ag Startup Engine out of Iowa State University and the Rural Ventures Alliance from Iowa MicroLoan. Matthew Patane is the managing editor and co-founder of Clay & Milk. Send him an email at mpatane@clayandmilk.com.
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