Month: November 2010

State of Portland Tech and How you Can Make it (Even) Better

Portland has a pretty amazing tech scene, but it is often overlooked in favor or our big sisters to the north and south (Seattle and the SF Bay Area). Don’t worry, this isn’t another post about how Portland is the best city in which to base your start up. I don’t know if Portland is the best city to base your start-up in, or to move your company to, or to try and make a life in. Those decisions are highly dependent on a lot of factors that are personally unique.

What I do want to talk about is all that Portland tech does have going for it, what we’re lacking, and how we could do better. Portland tech folk do some pretty amazing things, but we could be doing even more.

What we do well

One thing Portland has going for it is a robust support structure for the software community in the form of a grassroots network of user groups and events. Our community-driven network provides mentoring, skill and job development, not to mention camaraderie. Dozens of technologies, languages and platforms are represented across several user groups that meet monthly. We also get a whole lot done. We put on events ranging from weekend unconferences like BarCamp, WhereCamp and CodeCamp to week-long professional conferences like Open Source Bridge. We launch and maintain projects like Calagator and CivicApps. We gather to work on projects together at regular, twice-weekly hackathons.

We’re an open source and open data hub. Oregon State’s Open Source Lab has a presence in Portland. Linus Torvalds, the creator of Linux lives in Portland, along with many, many other prominent open source contributors. Portland is home to projects such as Calagator, Open Conference Ware, AutomateIT, PDXAPI, Puppet and Concrete5. For several years the biggest conference about open source technology, OSCON, has been hosted by Portland. We’ve also hosted RubyConf and PyCon and will be hosting Grace Hopper Celebration of Women in Computing next year. Open Source philosophy is embraced deeply here, even in how we interact with our local government as evidenced by the CivicApps initiative.

We have a lot of software companies and they create significant economic impact. Notable software companies in the Portland metro area include: Jive Software, Webtrends, Survey Monkey, Tripwire, Inc., OpenSourcery, Sage Software, eRoi, AboutUs, Coaxis, Textronics, Oracle, Intel, Mentor Graphics, Google (via Instantiations), Microsoft, Galois. I could go on and on.

And, yes, I realize I’ve included companies that are not headquartered here in Oregon. I’ve done this intentionally because these companies still have a tremendous impact in terms of the folks they employ and the events in which they are involved.

In 2006, high tech employed 60 out of 1,000 Oregonians in the private sector and offered wages that were 101% higher compare to other private sector jobs. And 31% of these jobs are based in Portland. In 2005 software companies created $9.20 billion in economic impact across the state. These numbers are a few years old, but you get the idea: the software sector is a large slice of Oregon’s economic pie (source).

We have a rich start-up culture that includes: Puppet Labs, Urban Airship, ShopIgniter, Elemental Technologies, Second Porch, JanRain, Active Trak, Small Society and more. Portland start-ups have received roughly $130 million in Venture Capital in the last year (source). Additionally, we have support organizations for start-ups such as: Portland Ten, the Oregon Entrepreneur Network, the Oregon Technology and Business Center, and now the Portland Seed Fund.

What we need to do better

We need better public relations. We have a compelling story and we need to start telling it on a national level. Portland is a viable competitor on the national tech scene and people should know this.

One of the reasons to tell our story better and to more people is to attract business as well as engineering talent to Portland. We need to get folks who have experience creating successful exits for start-ups. We need folks that have experience nurturing small- and medium-size businesses. We also need more of the executive- and director-level expertise that companies need in order to grow. I have heard more than one start-up CEO lament about struggling to find qualified people locally and instead having to import it.

However, importing folks is not the only way to solve a talent shortage. We also need to grow executives and directors locally.

We can do this by better supporting the grassroots knowledge network that I mention above and by creating a way for individuals become experienced at running companies. The business incubators we have already are a good start, but we can do better.

How You can Help

Software Town Hall

Start by coming to the Software Town Hall discussion next Thursday, 11/18, 4:30pm at City Hall. You should RSVP here.

A bit of background on this event: Earlier this year, the Portland Development Commission identified four sectors for economic growth. Software was one of them. Over the last six months, the PDC has conducted three surveys, each building on the previous, in order to find out how the software sector could best be supported for economic growth. Three target areas were identified:

  • supporting Portland’s knowledge network
  • creating a business mentor network
  • fostering a financial network

“Conveners” have committed to shepherd each of these three targets:

  • PSU, via Warren Harrison, will take the lead on supporting Portland’s knowledge base.
  • The SAO, via Matt Nees, will take the lead on creating a business mentor-ship program.
  • The PDC, via Gerald Baugh, will take lead on the financial network.

Next week is the beginning of the conversation about how we grow and improve the three targets above. It’s your opportunity to weigh in with your issues, ideas and concerns, and to say how you will contribute.

If you are concerned about the future of software in Portland, you should be there and lend your voice to the discussion.

Join the Stumptown Syndicate

Reid, Audrey and I are starting a project that will help support Portland’s knowledge network: the Stumptown Syndicate.

Briefly, our mission is to support education and career development for technology professionals through fundraising, space and resource coordination, and other activities.

We have two immediate goals:

  1. to maintain and provide a central meeting and event space for individuals and groups.
  2. to provide financial support to such individuals and groups in the form of fiscal infrastructure and/or grants.

But first we need to incorporate as a non-profit and that’s where you come in. If you help with these start-up costs, let us know.

We’re still working on pushing content to our website, so if you have any questions about the Syndicate, want to know when we get up and running, or want to help in other ways, contact me (or Reid, or Audrey) directly.

Run for the Legion of Tech Board

Legion of Tech is the organization that brings you BarCamp, Ignite and other events. We’re the welcoming committee to Portland’s tech scene, and we’re recruiting board members. Read more about how to apply and then get your application in! (The deadline is coming up quick: 11/17).

Participate!

Go to a user group. Start a user group. Run an unconference. Write about your experiences with Portland tech. Seek out and welcome new members of the community. Got questions about how to do any of these things? Just ask! I’m happy to answer your questions and I know others leaders in the community are as well.

Enough about what I think, what do you think?

What can we do to make Portland’s tech scene strong? How can your business and/or career be supported better? Have I neglected to a person, company or project above? Let me know in the comments.

BarCamp, Home Insulating, and Rainbows

I keep thinking I should write here and then realized I don’t really have the energy to do so. The last month has been incredibly business, with lots of community activities, some pretty heavy deadlines at work and major home improvements.

Perhaps the most time consuming community activity was running BarCamp Portland 4, which took place at the end of October. Despite being exhausted, I had a really good time and the event went really well. I got to try out a few new facilitation techniques that I learned at the “Art of Presentations” class I took in early October at Portland Center Stage. Attendance wasn’t as great as at previous BarCamps, but I think most people had a good time. I only went to one session and it was one that I lead, a Q&A about Legion of Tech. The rest of the time I spent running around answering volunteer’s questions and just hanging out with good people.

Organizers at the end of the day
BarCamp Organizers at the end of the day (photo courtesy @akfarrell)

Planning for Open Source Bridge is now in full swing. I’m co-chairing this year, along with Reid Beels. I’m really excited about this year’s core team, which I think has a great combination of skills and is going to work really well together.

There’s another project Reid, Audrey and I are working on that isn’t quite ready for prime-time, but which I hope to announce soon (hopefully this week).

I’ve also been spending a fair bit of time on Legion of Tech business, including wrapping up some unresolved business from last year and managing board elections.

All this is going on while I’m working at a startup, which has been intense, but manageable. Oh, and I got a small raise in the form of coffee subsidy: we got a fantastic espresso maker for the office. Seriously, it’s fantastic. I wish I had a photo of it to include in this post.

On the home-front, things have been a bit chaotic as well. During the summer, we applied for EcoTrust’s Clean Energy Works program. Our house qualified and work began last week. We have a storage pod in our driveway, and our living/dining rooms as well as my office are nearly empty. The insulation team has been drilling giant holes in our walls and filling the space with cellulose insulation. Once they finish up, the plaster team will remove the old wallpaper and paint and then repair the holes. Sherri has been amazing through this process and has really been doing the most of the work coordinating with the contractors and doing the majority of the packing. That’s really nice for me since these things really stress me out. I did manage to pack most of the office, however, which you can see below.

Prep for Home Insulation
Prep for Home Insulation

November is VeganMoFo, the Vegan Month of Food. Sherri has been writing a vegan food blog for sometime now and we’d talked several times about moving it, along with her other blog, from blogger to a WordPress installation on my server. Vegan MoFo gave us the incentive to get it done for the start of November. We bought a copy of the Thesis WordPress theme framework and Sherri and I have been working together to skin the re-named food blog Vegan Nosh. I think it turned out really well. This weekend I updated my personal homepage from an outdated WordPress installation to a single, static page. Since I have no plans to start freelancing again any time soon, I took down the now defunct CK Web Development blog and put up a static page there directing people to my homepage.

Vegan Nosh
Vegan Nosh

Phew! I’m getting exhausted just talking about it all.

But, it hasn’t been all work. Sherri and I have managed to spend some quality downtime together amid the madness and enjoy the beautiful Autumn we’re having.

Crisp Autumn Morning
Crisp Autumn Morning

And we’ve even managed to catch a few rainbows.

Amazingly Bright Rainbow
Amazingly Bright Rainbow