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June 30, 2014

Merlin at Training Camp

2014 Fellow Mike Patterson recounts his VFA experience, from his acceptance all the way to the 2nd day of Training Camp.  A great read and insight into the passion and drive of our Fellows  – you inspire us, Mike!  

You can read Mike’s original post on his blog The Merlin Venture.

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64 days ago, I accepted an offer from Venture for America (VFA), a fellowship program that trains recent grads to revitalize America through startups and entrepreneurship. I initially looked into VFA on a whim after a brief chat at Penn’s career fair and I’ll admit that, at first, the application was daunting. But the more I looked into it, the more I realized that this was what I wanted to do. Not only would it be a slightly smoother transition out of college, but I would gain a valuable network of friends, an incomparable training experience, and an amazing mentorship.

42 days ago, I graduated from the University of Pennsylvania (or as Kurt Vonnegut would say, I went through a puberty ceremony). Penn classes taught me a great deal but my friends, mentors, and teachers taught me a lot more. From my teachers, I learned persistence through strife and that I should never be afraid to ask for help. From my mentors, I learned that constraint breeds creativity and that 3 am chats don’t need sound. From my friends, I learned that love truly conquers all and that I have to believe the best in everyone.

34 days ago, I accepted an offer from ZeroFOX, one of VFA’s many startups. ZeroFOX is a social media security company in Baltimore, Maryland. While I had just finished a course on security and found it interesting, it was not something I wanted to do initially. For the last couple of years, I have always known that I need to go into educational technology and build something there. But while I was considering the offer and looking at edtech startups, I realized that edtech will be me for the rest of my life. And this, this is my opportunity do something that I will probably never do again. Not only that, but I saw this as a truly amazing opportunity to learn from a great CEO who has succeeded repeatedly and to stretch my coding prowess. So I took a leap of faith and signed on.

And 3 days ago, I arrived at Brown University in Providence, Rhode Island for VFA training camp. Days -2 and -1 (move-in days) consisted mainly of wandering around for food, meeting and helping fellows as they moved in, and mildly freaking out at this new adventure that I was about to embark on.

Day 0 was unbelievably only yesterday. We started our day at 10 am discussing what being a part of VFA really means and why we’re all here. We also went through a massive round of introductions with over 120 introductions (over 100 fellows and nearly 20 VFA team members). Quick break for lunch and group photo opp and then we hopped right back into our first challenge of camp. We were split into teams of five or six and tasked with building a Lego structure. The catch: one person briefly observed the structure, another had to build it based solely on the observer’s statements, another clarified and communicated from builder to observer, and the other two managed the rest of the team. Once this ridiculous but fun challenge ended, we were tasked with our second challenge: designing a team name and logo. After much pandering about, we finally settled on our name Hammerhead. During this time, we were also pulled aside for one on one goal setting. I set my goals to be that I wanted to learn more from the guest speakers and that I wanted to understand more about the business side of business. These goals then turned into actionable items in which I would work on marketing a product on days 6 through 10 of camp. Once we’d presented our teams, we were off to a delicious banquet, where I had the good fortune to sit with a VFA sponsor.

Day 1 started at the extremely bright and extremely early hour of 8 am this morning. We kicked off with a talk from the American Graphics Institute on User Experience and User Interface. One of the most valuable pieces of advice I took from that talk was that you should fiercely cut the unnecessary. Following that was a talk from The Flatiron School on working at a tech company. We broke for lunch and I was among those picked to have lunch with our two wonderful and gracious guest speakers. Our impeccable Indian food was covered by conversation ranging from the future of design to the functionality of the brain. After lunch came quick coding school on JavaScript and jQuery. Since these were topics I had covered previously, I took the opportunity to help my fellow Fellows. After the coding session was over, the VFA team presented us with the challenge to build a better VFA website. We were then introduced to the film crew that would be creating a documentary about VFA to help spread its message and mission. Dismissal sent us back to our dorms but we were by no means dismissed because we had to get started on our challenge due in only two days. Within a few short hours, we managed to come up with a great design, settle on who would work on what, and gather the necessary data for the project.

During those 32 days between accepting the Fox’s offer and arriving in Brown, my emotions ran the gamut on this entire VFA experience: doubts about myself, excitement for training camp, fear of competition, sadness at what I was leaving behind. You name it, I felt it. But now that I have arrived and training camp has begun, all those negative feelings are gone. I have never felt more passion or desire coursing through my veins than I do right now. I want to excel at this camp, not because I want some achievement tacked on my wall, but because I want to show everyone just how passionate I am about this. For the first time in my life, failure is not an option.

Posted in: Fellows
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June 24, 2014

Welcome to Training Camp: The Fellows have landed!

It’s here! We’ve finally landed at our home away from home – Brown University in Providence, RI! The Team and Fellows came by car, train, plane, and, even UHaul to spend the next five weeks at Training Camp. We can’t wait to give the Fellows the chance to explore everything the “Creative Capital” (and one of VFA’s original 5 cities!) has to offer.
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Day 1 was a whirlwind. After a welcome message from Andrew and the VFA Team, we revealed the Fellows’ teams and dove into our first challenge, where they had the chance to quickly get to know one another and work together during the “Smart People Should Build Things…with Legos” Challenge. How would you like to try copying a lego structure from memory?
From words of wisdom to pop culture references, here are a few of our favorite quotes:

“We don’t just want to exist in the world – we want to  improve it.”

“You will all become job fountains.”

And, of course, an X-men reference that only half of us understood.

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We topped off the day with our Welcome Dinner (and a projection of the World Cup, of course), where the Fellows, team, and some special visitors from one of our biggest supporters, UBS, came together to celebrate the kick-off of our third annual Training Camp. Portugal’s last-second goal against the United States only dampened the mood slightly– with over a hundred new faces from the Class of 2014, it was a great chance for some of the team and Fellows to get to know one another.
Over the next 5 weeks, our new Fellows will hear from expert trainers, work through team challenges, and develop the skills they need to hit the ground running in August at their companies. After five weeks of late nights, hard work, and fast friends, the Fellows will be in fighting shape to tackle any challenge startup life throws at them.
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We’ll be sharing weekly updates, posts from Fellows, and more, or you can check back anytime to see #VFABootcamp in real time!

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Posted in: News
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June 10, 2014

The Entrepreneurs Who Saved Seattle

Check out the post below, by Venture for America Founder & CEO Andrew Yang, originally published on FastCompany.com.


Today, Seattle is considered one of the most desirable places to live and work in the U.S. Amazon, Starbucks, Expedia, and other leading companies make their homes there.
But in 1979, Seattle was the last place you’d think to find a growth business. It had more in common with today’s Rust Belt than Silicon Valley–its economy centered on a declining manufacturing base and the lumber industry, both of which were shedding jobs. Starbucks was just a tiny local company with three stores serving standard-issue coffee. The Economist had labeled Seattle the “city of despair” and a billboard appeared saying “Will the last person leaving Seattle–turn off the lights.’
So what changed? Two Seattle natives decided to move their 13-employee company there in 1979 from Albuquerque. The two natives were Bill Gates and Paul Allen. And the company was Microsoft.
Is it possible to ascribe Seattle’s entire economic trajectory to just one company? Well, today over 40,000 people work at Microsoft in the region, and 28,000 of them are highly paid engineers. Approximately 4,000 businesses have been started by Microsoft alumni, many of which are in the region. Just one of these companies, RealNetworks, employs 1,500 people. Expedia, originally a Microsoft spinoff, employs another 14,000. The Gates Foundation itself has another several hundred employees. The economist Enrico Moretti* estimates that Microsoft’s growth has directly created 120,000 regional jobs for services workers with limited educations (cleaners, taxi drivers, carpenters, hairdressers, real estate agents, etc.) and another 80,000 jobs for workers with college degrees (teachers, nurses, doctors, architects).
The growth of Microsoft also influenced Jeff Bezos to locate Amazon there in 1994 when he was looking for a city with ample tech talent to build an e-commerce company. Today, about 17,000 of Amazon’s 51,000 employees live and work in the Seattle region. If Microsoft had not been there, Bezos could easily have migrated elsewhere. The day-to-day needs of these 17,000 Amazon employees have given rise to another 85,000 skilled and unskilled service jobs locally. That’s another 100,000 jobs.
It’s hard to imagine that two people transplanting their then-tiny firm to their hometown could change a city’s economic history for decades to come. Yet this phenomenon isn’t uncommon. You can see similar impacts with Dan Gilbert relocating Quicken Loans to downtown Detroit and Tony Hsieh moving Zappos to downtown Las Vegas–these effects are simply easier to see because these firms already have thousands of employees. In Microsoft’s case the company had yet to grow and mature.
It’s worth noting that Gates and Allen weren’t responding to any tax break or public entreaty. They were far too small to attract that sort of attention. Their decision wasn’t born of any particular policy. They just wanted to go home.
Microsoft is one of the great business success stories in American history, and 99.999% of companies are not going to have near the same impact. But it’s pretty amazing to see how an entire region’s economic course can be changed by a largely personal decision by a couple of young entrepreneurs. Imagine if Microsoft had stayed in Albuquerque? It turns out that Jeff Bezos is an Albuquerque native; he might have had a great excuse to return home 15 years later, and we all might think of Seattle today solely as the birthplace of grunge and flannel.
It’s also food for thought as to what will make a difference for today’s cities that are trying to rejuvenate themselves. It’s tempting to think big, but a dozen incredibly smart and talented people on top of a high-growth business can eventually make all the difference in the world.
Andrew Yang is the founder and CEO of Venture for America and the author of Smart People Should Build Things (HarperBusiness, an imprint of HarperCollins).

Posted in: Inside VFA
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June 4, 2014

See you tomorrow at the #VFAparty!

The VFA Summer Celebration is tomorrow! There is still time to purchase your tickets!
We look forward to seeing you tomorrow at the Third Annual Summer Celebration. Arrive early to meet VFA Fellows and Event Luminaries, including Dan Gilbert, Chairman & Founder of Quicken Loans & Rock Ventures, in conversation with David Brooks, Author & Op-Ed Columnist at the New York Times, as well as remarks from former Mayor Michael Bloomberg.
Thursday, June 5, 2014
7:00-11:00pm
IAC: 555 West 18th Street
For more information, please contact: events@ventureforamerica.org.
Event Luminaries:
Charles Best
Founder of DonorsChoose.org
Vinit Bharara
Co-Founder of Quidsi
David Brooks 
Author and Columnist, New York Times
Margo Cohen 
President of Glycadia Pharmaceuticals
Jennifer Fleiss
Co-Founder of Rent the Runway
Avi Flombaum
Dean of Flatiron School
Bill Ford 
CEO of General Atlantic
Dave Gilboa
Co-Founder & Co-CEO of Warby Parker
Jason Hogg
Founder of Revolution Money
Bob Jeffrey
Chairman & CEO of JWT Worldwide
Jeremy Johnson
Co-Founder of 2U
Dhani Jones
New York Giants & Fox Sports 1
Dina Kaplan
Co-Founder of Blip
Donald Katz
Founder & CEO of Audible
John Katzman
Founder of 2U & Princeton Review
Robert LoCascio
CEO & Founder of LivePerson
Cyrus Massoumi
CEO & Founder of ZocDoc
Alexis Maybank
Co-Founder & Strategic Advisor of Gilt
Jon Oringer
CEO of Shutterstock
Dan Porter
Head of Digital, William Morris Endeavor
Jeff Raider
Co-Founder of Harry’s
David Rose
Founder & CEO of Gust
Barry Rosenstein
Founder of Jana Partners
Bob Safian
Editor-in-Chief of Fast Company
Alisa Volkman
Co-Founder of Babble Media
Dan Yang
EVP of Viacom Entertainment Group
Lauren Zalaznick
Former EVP of NBC Universal
Jeffrey Zurofsky
Partner & CEO of ‘witchcraft
Event Sponsors:
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Posted in: News

VFA Has Ceased Operations


Since its first cohort in 2012, Venture For America (VFA) has championed entrepreneurship, innovation, and economic growth across the nation. As of August 6, 2024, VFA has ceased its operations. While this marks the end of an era, it also provides an opportunity to reflect on the extraordinary accomplishments and lasting impact that we have achieved together.

Please click here to read the full update.

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