5 Highlights of the Atlanta Technology Community

With the Atlanta TechCrunch meetup next week on July 9th at Sweetwater Brewery, it’s a good time to talk about five highlights of the Atlanta technology community. The technology community has improved tremendously over the 10 years that I’ve been here, with social media and general maturation being a big part of it.

With social media, especially Twitter, ideas spread faster and conversations are public. Several years ago the Atlanta technology community had more of an old boys network feel where it mattered who you knew and introductions were critical. Now, events like Startup Riot bring together hundreds of people on a regular basis and the hot startups are highlighted at the event as well as over Twitter, where the community participates.

Here are five highlights of the Atlanta technology community:

  • ATDC – the oldest and most prestigious publicly funded technology incubator that supports over 400 startups
  • Flashpoint – startup engineering accelerator sponsored by Georgia Tech that takes teams through a 90 day program
  • Atlanta Technology Angels – member-lead organization that is actively doing seed stage and early stage deals
  • Venture Atlanta / Startup Riot – Venture Atlanta is the largest annual venture conference in the Southeast and Startup Riot is the largest annual seed stage startup conference in the Southeast
  • Georgia Tech – the largest engineering school in the country, based on number of engineering graduates per year, and in the top five academically

As of July 4th, 2012, 778 people are signed up for the Atlanta TechCrunch meetup. Think about that for a second — there’s a good chance 1,000 people will sign up for a single tech startup event in Atlanta. Impressive! There are fewer than a dozen cities in the United States that would have that kind of volume for a tech startup event.

The Atlanta technology community has made amazing progress in the past 10 years, and still has a ways to go. Things like anchor billion dollar technology companies, more risk-loving seed stage capital, and many more success stories will help Atlanta get to the next level. Thankfully, a strong foundation is already in place and getting better every day.

What else? What are some other highlights of the Atlanta technology community?

Comments

3 responses to “5 Highlights of the Atlanta Technology Community”

  1. Mr.Jay Avatar
    Mr.Jay

    I find you are good at writing about start-ups. Follow your blog and here is ours http://xmscan.wordpress.com

  2. J Cornelius (@jc) Avatar

    Good post, David. But you’d be remiss to overlook the role local professional organizations and meetup groups have played in connecting and developing the community here. Some kudos should be given to them, too.

  3. Jon Birdsong (@JonnyBird) Avatar

    DC,

    All 5 of your highlights are significant contributors to the Atlanta technology community. However, an extremely important point many Atlantans miss is universities and publicly funded organizations cannot lead entrepreneurial and startup communities.

    Too many of us lean on Georgia Tech and the ATDC to lead our community and it’s not in the DNA of those organizations to cultivate and foster an entire community. They provide a fantastic structure but, we as a community, can’t expect leadership to come from such organizations.

    Your highlights are fantastic ingredients to a potential amazing startup community, but until entrepreneurs cultivate a community of “pay-it-forward” attitudes and orchestrate forums of idea exchange and collaboration, our community won’t fulfill it’s greatest potential. We need the cooks to take all the ingredients you outlined and build something people want to move and stay in Atlanta for.

    There are numerous ideas and take aways we’re learning in the TechStars program that I can’t wait to infuse in the Atlanta community.

    Atlanta still hasn’t been discovered on the national and global level of technology and startups. That’s about to change and it’s going to take the leadership of entrepreneurs, not any of the traditional organizations that have lead it up until now.

    – JB

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