An interesting take on jobs and entrepreneurship.  Very compatible with a 
Social Entrepreneur Antiparty platform....


http://gettingsmart.com/blog/2012/07/we-need-more-launching-pad-politics/

We Need More Launching Pad Politics

July 26, 2012 - by Tom Vander Ark


This country is stuck in disingenuous debate fueled by superpac superficiality. 
Thoughtful commentators agree (as noted in June) that the innovation economy 
requires two things:

Growth oriented policies – low tax rates, transparent and efficient government 
– and
An opportunity platform that includes effective education and health services 
and efficient energy and transportation infrastructure.
You could probably add culture of confidence to round out the innovation 
formula: opportunity, incentive, and culture. It’s certainly not a simple 
question of more or less government – that’s what the campaign seems to 
suggest. The challenge is to create high functioning public services that 
create opportunity and fuel growth. When combining attractive conditions and 
equitable opportunity you get what Tom Friedman called the launching pad:

Obama should aspire to make America the launching pad where everyone, 
everywhere should want to come to launch their own moon shot, their own 
startup, their own social movement. We can’t stimulate or tax cut our way to 
growth. We have to invent our way there.The majority of new jobs every year are 
created by start-ups. The days when Ford or G.E. came to town with 10,000 jobs 
are over. Their factories are much more automated today, and their products are 
made in global supply chains. Instead, we need 2,000 people in every town each 
starting something that employs five people.

Friedman suggests the launching pad requires public leadership and investment:

We need everyone starting something! Therefore, we should aspire to be the 
world’s best launching pad because our workforce is so productive; our markets 
the freest and most trusted; our infrastructure and Internet bandwidth the most 
advanced; our openness to foreign talent second to none; our funding for basic 
research the most generous; our rule of law, patent protection and 
investment-friendly tax code the envy of the world; our education system 
unrivaled; our currency and interest rates the most stable; our environment the 
most pristine; our health care system the most efficient; and our energy 
supplies the most secure, clean, and cost-effective.

Monday, I visited a brownstone in Washington D.C. that is an edupreneur 
launchpad. Sponsored byNew Schools Venture Fund and the city, the incubator 
includes professional development company LearnZillion, a Common Core State 
Standards content provider; Charter Board Partners, which helps new schools 
find great board members; blended learning platform EdElements; and The New 
Teacher Project (TNTP), a nonprofit focused around ending educational 
inequalities. This little D.C. hotbed is an example of what Deborah Quazzo and 
Michael Moe called the “Near spontaneous explosion of entrepreneurial activity 
in education.” It’s the confluence of forward-leaning city leadership, venture 
capital, philanthropy, and a maturing charter school sector.

Friedman’s suggestion that we need 2,000 startups like these four in every city 
would take a series of public private partnerships focus on impact as well as 
return. These partnerships would get a boost from a big venture investment 
perhaps through the Small Business Administration. More incubators would also 
help. It’s good to see colleges create their own launch pads. “New data from 
the National Business Incubation Association show that about one-third of the 
1,250 business incubators in the United States are at universities, up from 
one-fifth in 2006,” noted Laura Pappano in The New York Times. 

In addition to funding and talent development, federal and national groups can 
help create the infrastructure for innovation. The Common Core is a platform 
for innovation, a new opportunity to share content and services across much 
larger populations. Data standards – the plumbing for the new digital learning 
system – will also become a platform for innovation. The Department of of 
Education is promoting MyData, encouragement for schools and vendors to allow 
parents and students to download useful data into a learner profile. 

The Department also developed Learning Registry, an way to share information 
about content. The Gates Foundation and Dell Foundation also have significant 
data initiatives. The combination is likely to create a launching pad for 
edupreneurs.

Launching pads take a mixture of incentives, support, and culture. They usually 
result from public private partnerships – including dedicated folks thinking 
about mundane stuff like talent pipelines and like data standards.

The Bay Area, New York, D.C., and Boston are all becoming pretty good examples 
of edtech launching pads. Mind Trust has singlehandedly made Indianapolis the 
most improved edurepreneurial city. Matt Chandler at 4.0 Schools in New Orleans 
is doing great work incubating edupreneurs in NOLA. Any city with an R1 
university, a venture fund, a foundation, and some vision has the potential to 
be an edtech hotspot serving a global learning market. There are great examples 
of launching pads around the country. It would be great if, rather than 
mudslinging, we saw more launch pad politics.

For more see:

LearnZillion, One of the Scrappy Startups Making D.C. a Hotspot
Common Core Launches Avalanche of Innovation

-- 
Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
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