Last week we partnered with Capital at Play for the final 1 Million Cups session before summer break, bringing together the Asheville Angels, the Asheville Investment Club and Carofin. As separate organizations, we’ve all been working toward a program like this. Instead of trying to throw three unique events around the same topic of investment, we collaborated to create one larger, more comprehensive, and much more impactful program that, like we say about our role in the ecosystem, “flies in formation.” 

This got me thinking about connectivity, one of the nine metrics we use to understand the health of a startup ecosystem. Connectivity is measured by the number of organizations, accelerators, incubators, coworking spaces, support programs, mentor groups, and events and examining how well those systems are horizontally integrated. 

Here’s why connectivity matters so much. Connectivity will tell us how fragmented or collaborative an ecosystem is. Being too fragmented can create an out-of-balance ecosystem with redundant resources, events, programs, you-name-it, for an entrepreneur to participate in. This fragmentation divides not only the entrepreneur’s time, but also the efficacy of any effort. Connectivity, as a metric, challenges us to decrease the number of events and programs offered and to increase their quality.

For a proof point, just look at an entrepreneur like Lee Lance, of Ecobot (this is a short version, we’ll do a full profile in an upcoming newsletter). Lee went from a Pitch Breakfast to Elevate to Hatch Demo Day to securing his Seed round from Cofounder’s Capital. Examine Lee’s journey – each step led to the next one. They didn’t conflict, they weren’t redundant, they complimented each other. A really mature ecosystem can take a founder through each of those steps meeting the needs of that founder where they are at the right time.

The ability for a founder to chart a course, mapping out their individual entrepreneurial journey, can be frictionless or full of obstacles. The degree of horizontal integration makes all the difference by eliminating redundancy, focusing our fire power, flying in formation all for the betterment of our ecosystem. Connectivity, as a metric, challenges us to decrease the number of events and programs offered and to increase their quality.

Last week I was invited to the ScaleUpWNC 8th cohort kick off  and 7th cohort recap, by Hatch AVL and Mountain Biz Works. Chris Buehler, Hatch Board Member, announced that the 7th cohort reported the highest levels of satisfaction ever for a ScaleUp cohort. Why? The participants cited the Hatch mentoring complimenting the Mountain Biz Works curriculum. The collaboration between two organizations made the best program since inception.

My challenge for all the entrepreneurial support organizations out there — work together. Don’t be fragmented. The more we do that, the better Asheville’s founders are. And that’s the only reason these organizations exist, to build better founders and startups.

So with that, I’ll leave you with an invitation: Asheville Entrepreneurship Week, September 2nd through 8th. 1 Million Cups will celebrate its 5th Anniversary and the Asheville Investment Club will host Big Scary Fish Tank. There will be an Intro to Startup Scene event (cohosted by my besties from Supportedly), a Pitch Party, and whatever else you got. Seriously, you want to get on board with Asheville Entrepreneurship Week? Drop us a note and we’ll find a way to work together. 

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