Company:Venture Café
Type | Nonprofit |
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Industry | Technology, Startups |
Founded | 2009 |
Founders | Tim Rowe, Carrie Stalder |
Headquarters | Boston, , U.S. |
Areas served | 11 cities |
Key people | Tim Rowe |
Products |
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Brands |
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Services | Shared workspaces and related services for entrepreneurs |
Venture Café is a nonprofit organization that hosts community events and programs that support early-stage entrepreneurs.[1]
As of May 2020, there are 11 independently managed Venture Cafés, located in Boston, St. Louis, Missouri; Miami; Winston-Salem, North Carolina; Providence, Rhode Island; Tokyo, Japan ; Rotterdam, The Netherlands; Warsaw, Poland ; Bilbao, Spain ; and Sydney, Australia .[2] As of 2019, there were plans to open Venture Cafés in some 40 more cities.[3]
The flagship event of Venture Café is the Thursday Gathering, a weekly meeting for new and experienced entrepreneurs to exchange ideas and support. The event usually includes several free educational sessions to teach entrepreneurs to how to start and run a business. Participants can also hold informal discussions of creative and speculative ideas and look for collaborators, co-founders, mentors, or investors.[4]
History
The Venture Café was conceived as a restaurant in the Cambridge Innovation Center in Boston, Massachusetts.[5] The idea failed to attract investment, so the founders changed it to a gathering space for the entrepreneurial community, based on the book Venture Café by Teresa Esser.[4] Venture Café Kendall launched in 2009.[citation needed]
In 2014, Venture Café expanded to the Cortex Innovation Community in St. Louis, Missouri, to bring together the emerging startup community.[6] The success of the St. Louis location prompted the launch of Venture Cafés in other cities and ultimately the creation of Venture Café Global Institute, a public benefit corporation based in St. Louis and Boston.[7]
In 2018, as part of St. Louis Cortex District's new 4220 Duncan building anchored by Microsoft, Venture Cafe launched Innovation Hall in St. Louis based upon Boston's District Hall.[8]
In 2018, St. Louis launched EdHub[9] to support and bring together innovators to increase youth access to education.[10] EdHub STL is inspired by the Forward Through Ferguson report, which calls for an innovation education hub to address the region's most entrenched educational issues.[11]
Venture Café Foundation in Boston runs the Roxbury Innovation Center.[9] Like EdHub, it brings together innovators in education including students, parents, administration, and teachers to help solve inequities in education and introduce youth to entrepreneurship and STEAM activities.[citation needed]
In September 2021, Venture Café St. Louis cancelled its events and made no public statements.[12]
On September 13, 2021, Venture Café St. Louis board chair Whitney Masching released a statement stating, "Seven years later, it is time to close this chapter. Effective immediately, the VCSTL programming you know is on pause — but this isn’t the end."[13]
See also
- Co-working
External links
- CIC Venture Café Global Institute - Official Website
- Venture Café Foundation Official Website
- Venture Café St. Louis Official Website
- Venture Café Sydney Official Website
- Venture Café Warsaw Official Website
- Venture Café The Success Story of a coworking space.
References
- ↑ "Innovation Studio | Roxbury, MA | Cause IQ". https://www.causeiq.com/organizations/venture-cafe-foundation,455191933/.
- ↑ "Global Network". https://venturecafeglobal.org/about-the-network/.
- ↑ "Our netowrk is growing". https://venturecafeglobal.org/about-the-network/187-2/.
- ↑ 4.0 4.1 "Venture Café’s mission is connecting innovators to make things happen.". Venture Cafe Official Website. 24 August 2018. http://venturecafeglobal.org/about/.
- ↑ Kirsner, Scott (21 June 2018). "How a failed restaurant became Cambridge’s hottest Thursday spot". Boston Globe. https://www.bostonglobe.com/business/2018/06/21/this-could-hottest-place-town-thursday-night-and-beer-free/so61lJpjP7HcZLXTCEGvcK/story.html.
- ↑ Bryant, Tim (Sep 29, 2014). "Cambridge Innovation Center opens at Cortex". St. Louis Post Dispatch. https://www.stltoday.com/business/columns/building-blocks/cambridge-innovation-center-opens-at-cortex/article_202c0df4-dbbb-567e-aec8-32ee0a9eff35.html.
- ↑ McGuigan, Christine (2 March 2018). "T-REX and Venture Cafe STL are changing St. Louis’ startup landscape". Silicon Prairie News. http://siliconprairienews.com/2018/03/t-rex-venture-cafe-changing-st-louis-startup-landscape/.
- ↑ Deem, Jason (10 May 2018). "Cortex Unveils New 4220 Duncan Building". NextSTL. https://nextstl.com/2018/05/cortex-unveils-new-4220-duncan-building/.
- ↑ 9.0 9.1 Kukuljan, Steph (11 April 2018). "'Innovation center,' restaurant to open at Cortex". St. Louis Business Journal. https://www.bizjournals.com/stlouis/news/2018/04/11/innovation-center-restaurant-to-open-at-cortex.html.
- ↑ "Venture Cafe St. Louis To Open Innovation Hall At Cortex". 12 April 2018. http://eqstl.com/venture-cafe-st-louis-open-innovation-hall-cortex/.
- ↑ "Create an Innovative Education Hub". Forward Through Ferguson. 24 August 2018. https://forwardthroughferguson.org/calls-to-action/innovative-education-hub/.
- ↑ Paul Riat (10 September 2021). "Venture Cafe St. Louis Goes Quiet". 4thest8. https://4thest8.com/vencafstl-quiet/.
- ↑ Paul Riat (13 September 2021). "UPDATE: VENCAFSTL BOARD RESPONDS; NEW SITE GOES UP (BUT NO CONTENT)". 4thest8. https://4thest8.com/venture-cafe-confirmation/.
Original source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Venture Café.
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