Phase One of the entrepreneurship project Scale Up Milwaukee is now underway. The multi-year project is a new initiative commissioned by American Express OPEN, a division of the company that focuses on entrepreneurs, and it has begun its efforts to create an โentrepreneurship ecosystemโ in Milwaukee.
The project is based on a model developed by Daniel Isenberg, founding executive director of the Babson Entrepreneurship Ecosystem Projects at Babson College in Wellesly, Mass., and author of the new book, โWorthless, Impossible and Stupid,โ published by Harvard Business Review Press. Both the book and the entrepreneurship project focus on โextraordinary value creation and capture.โ
โOne of the principles underlying Scale Up Milwaukee is to rebalance the emphasis of entrepreneurship so that itโs not just about startups, but itโs also about companies that exist, a certain small percentage of which have the potential or the desire to grow dramatically. We call these, โScale Ups,'โ Isenberg said. โThis is not about small business. This is about big businesses that happen to be small right now. This is about growth, not about size.โ
In addition to American Express OPEN, the Scale Up Milwaukee project has convened a number of partners in the public-private project, including the Wisconsin Economic Development Corp. (WEDC), the Wisconsin Housing and Economic Development Authority (WHEDA), the Milwaukee Economic Development Corp. (MEDC), Mayor Tom Barrettโs office, the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee (UWM), and the Greater Milwaukee Committee (GMC), which has played a large role as a convening force in the project.
What is unclear, however, is the amount of funding that will be put toward Scale Up Milwaukee. UWM Chancellor Mike Lovell told BizTimes that American Express is putting forth the โlionโs share of the costsโ when the project was initially unveiled in late March, but representatives from American Express OPEN declined to disclose any details of their funding for this project at this stage. Other partners on the project, including the GMC and Isenberg, declined to provide any detailed funding information.
The WEDC, however, will commit $50,000 to the project โas a co-investing partner,โ said Lee Swindall, WEDC vice president of business and industry development.
What is clear is the enthusiasm that American Express OPEN and the other convening partners have for this project in Milwaukee.
โWeโve put a lot of time and effort into this project because we really believe in it and Milwaukee has impressed us every step of the way,โ said Benjamin Stone, director of small business and startup development at American Express OPEN.
American Express OPEN compiled a report on the outlook of small business owners in Wisconsin, which showed that 87 percent of Wisconsin business owners plan to grow their businesses over the next six months, well above the national average of 74 percent.
โThat reflects the reality that Iโve seen on the gound: the palpable enthusiasmโฆto grow businesses,โ said Stone. โYou can just feel it.โ
โI think American Express is bringing a certain amount of legitimacy in terms of this being a pilot that can be replicated nationally,โ said Brian Schupper, director of policy at the GMC. โThatโs not to say that we donโt have large corporate partners in town that arenโt interested in similar activity, but I think itโs a strong statement about Milwaukee that theyโre gung-ho.โ
Enter the โScaleratorโ
One of the projectโs major efforts is whatโs being called the โScalerator,โ which will officially begin in mid-September. Roughly a dozen companies will be a part of the โScalerator,โ which will run for about two months.
โWeโll be inviting them to participate in a series of very intensive seminars with world class experts weโll bring in specifically for this purpose to get them laser-focused on growth and very specific things they can do to increase their sales tangibly in a very short run,โ said Isenberg. โWeโve learned from experience that this happens and it actually can be done.โ
An open application period will begin in a few weeks, and Isenberg and his team will determine the companies that will be selected for the program.
โWeโre going to be opening the application process to everybody. Weโll be selecting a very small number because first of all, itโs a pilot,โ he said. โSecond of all, itโs a myth that every business can grow and every startup can be successful. All the research shows that itโs a very small number, so weโre going to be selecting those that, first of all, have the ambition to grow, and secondly, have other characteristics that we think allows them to scale up.โ
Schupper said the goal of the โScaleratorโ will be to help already established companies that are already generating revenue and have a customer base realize their potential.
โThere will be four seminar sessions, probably each one a good day and a half, where Dan Isenberg is going to be in town, bringing in faculty that heโs worked with that are going to teach skills,โ said Schupper. โItโs not just a mini-Executive MBA, itโs much more than that. Itโs really diving deep, working with these folks, helping identify the stuff that maybe they donโt teach in business school, and helping overcome barriers, whether real or perceived.โ
The WEDC is also assisting in the development of a profiling application for identifying businesses for the โScalerator.โ
โWEDCโs long-term objective for the โScaleratorโ is to create an ongoing, integrated, multi-university entrepreneurial management acceleration pipeline for profiled businesses,โ said Swindall. He also said that the Scale Up Milwaukee project is being integrated in the state and the WEDCโs Transform Milwaukee efforts.
โWeโre not going to transform Milwaukee if we donโt create a system of serial entrepreneurship that creates vibrancy over time,โ Swindall said.
Also occurring in the first phase of Scale Up Milwaukee are four workshops and seminars. The first focuses on faculty case-writing aiming to change how business professors teach entrepreneurial activity, said Schupper. Another will focus on groups such as accountants, lawyers and other groups who provide non-financial resources for entrepreneurs. Another will focus on investments, and a fourth will focus on engaging with both traditional and non-traditional media. The first of these took place on July 15.
A major component of the activity in the first phase of Scale Up Milwaukee has been fact-finding and discussion. In addition to the core partners, these discussions have involved a variety of leaders in the Milwaukee area, including Milwaukee County Executive Chris Abele, Barrett, Tom Still of the Wisconsin Technology Council, Eve Hall of the African American Chamber of Commerce, Pat OโBrien of the Milwaukee Development Corporation, John Torinus of the Wisconsin Super Angel Fund, and several others.
โThe beginning of the phase is what weโd call a fact-finding mission,โ said Schupper. โThat was a lot of Dan leading some conversations, meeting with many, many stakeholdersโฆto kind of get a fresh look at where the challenges and opportunities are here.โ
Isenberg said that beginning in mid-April, there have been roundtable discussions, workshops, meetings and online Google Hangouts that have been part of the project.
โWe havenโt really done anything except for encourage dialogue,โ said Isenberg. โThe dialogue is important.โ
Schupper said all of the discussions and conversations address some of the challenges the city faces.
โTo me, the challenge is changing the perception, in terms of โcan-do.โ I think thereโs a lot of great activity here, but all too often, we hear the negative stories. I think part of what we need to do is change that perception so that people say, โI can do that here. I want to do that here, and I can do that here.โ And part of what we need to do is get those stories out, and I think thatโs a challenge,โ Schupper said. โOne of the challenges we have in Milwaukee is weโre too quick to look at the deficiencies.โ
Now, with the focus beginning to shift to the seminars, workshops and the โScalerator,โ the rubber is starting to meet the road.
โWeโre moving to the action phase right now,โ said Stone. The second phase of Scale Up will begin roughly at the beginning of 2014, he said.
โRight now, weโre formulating programs,โ said Isenberg. โThis is a process that takes anywhere from four to five years to really generate the tangible benefits that weโre talking about. What weโre doing in this, phase one, is a proof of concept to convince or to persuade ourselves and all the stakeholders that weโre on the right track.โ
โTremendous assetsโ
Through the early discussions and roundtables, Isenberg has learned several important things about Milwaukeeโs entrepreneurial landscape.
โThere are a tremendous number of assets in the environment,โ he said. โThere are success stories, there are entrepreneurs, there are corporations who can buy things, there are great educational institutions, and thereโs a very strong civic spirit thatโs reflected in a number of organizations, the Greater Milwaukee Committee being just one example. There are organizations to support entrepreneurship. There are a lot of pieces in place.
โAnother asset is a sense of frustration that it could be a lot more. I think thatโs an asset. If people were happy with the status quo, I would view that as not an asset. People are not happy with the status quo โ thatโs an asset. All the good things combined with the sense of frustration that it could be better, these are wonderful building blocks for growth.โ
The genesis for this project came soon after Lovell became chancellor at UWM, when he, school of Business Dean Timothy Smunt and Sheldon Lubar, founder and chairman of Lubar & Co., traveled to Babson College because of its reputation for entrepreneurial activity. There, they met with Isenberg and later, in spring, 2012, invited him to Milwaukee, where he spoke at the Greater Milwaukee Committee. Not long after, Isenberg was contacted by American Express OPEN about their new pilot program.
โPart of my job is just to be tapped into the conversation around entrepreneurship and I thought it was an opportunity to bring Isenbergโs work to the United States for the first time,โ said Stone.
It was at that time that Isenberg suggested Milwaukee as the pilot city, which soon became Scale Up Milwaukee.
โWe werenโt looking to do a project as much as the project found us,โ said Schupper. โI think (Isenberg) saw a community that was ripe for this kind of injection of activity. We have a lot of preexisting stakeholders, partners and institutions that can be leveraged and somewhat realigned to help foster the ecosystemโฆIt was a nice marriage waiting to happen.โ