Heartland tech weekly: What ‘the value of work’ means


Here’s this week’s newsletter: Fourth of July celebrations took place across America yesterday, our nation’s Independence being one of the few things that everyone can agree on. Perhaps another is the importance of work — but not just work. Rather, a good-paying job that, aside from providing a wage, also offers less tangible rewards like meaning, a sense of pride, even beauty.

In his landmark book Working, Studs Terkel captured the oral histories of ordinary people engaged in ordinary jobs from gravedigger to studio head, from police officer to piano tuner. Nearly 50 years after its publication, Terkel’s masterpiece can be seen as a protest against many of the same forces rocking today’s labor market. He wrote, “As the automated pace of our daily lives wipes out name and face — and in many instances, feeling — there is a sacrilegious question being asked these days.” The question, of course, was then, and remains today: What is the value of work?

It’s a question facing heartland cities as they seek to spur economic growth with tech jobs. Companies that offer fair salaries and opportunities for advancement, and that directly contribute to the commonweal or become part of a rising tide lifting all boats, will do the most to bridge the tech and economic divide between Silicon Valley and the rest of the country.

For in the end, the intangible benefits of job creation can be far-reaching and have lasting impact.

Eric Tobias, a partner at High Alpha, an Indianapolis-based venture studio, described the local effects of Salesforce buying ExactTarget this way: “That success made everyone’s ambition level rise 10X. Everybody saw that it wasn’t just something that happened on the coasts.”

Barb Ewing, CEO of the Youngstown Business Incubator, told me about the connection local entrepreneurs pursuing additive manufacturing rather than, say, B2B software feel to their city’s proud past. “It’s easier to see ourselves as makers. Maybe there’s a strong cultural aspect at work.”

Please send feedback, news tips, or story suggestions to me via email — and be sure to bookmark our Heartland Tech Channel.

Thanks for reading,

Blaise Zerega
Editor in Chief

P.S. Please enjoy this video from the Aspen Ideas Festival, “Manufacturing in America: The Millennial Way to Make Things.”

From the Heartland Tech channel

Why I outsourced to Michigan instead of India

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This photo shows VentureBeat's Blaise Zerega, Bombora's Rob Armstrong, Capstak's. Heather Goldman, EDAWN's Mike Kazmierski, and TrainerRoad's Nate Pearson onstage at the VentureBeat Heartland Tech and Blueprint kickoff event in San Francisco on June 14, 2017.

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A Rust Belt comeback requires job hubs

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Beyond VB links

Reno Is Starting to Look More Like Silicon Valley

“Are you with Tesla or Panasonic?” the waitress asks with a smile. It’s morning in Reno, and it’s natural to assume anyone eating breakfast among the rustic wood walls and Instagram-worthy succulents of the Whitney Peak Hotel would work at the mammoth Tesla Gigafactory, jointly run by the two tech companies. For transplants landing in Reno, the boutique hotel, formerly a casino, has become a common crash pad—albeit one wrapped by an outdoor rock-climbing wall. (via Bloomberg)

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After Trump: Techies ‘boomerang’ to Midwest to spread wealth

Shaken by the outcome of the presidential election, Brian McClendon left his job at Uber and returned to the Midwest after three decades in Silicon Valley. His mission: to bring Silicon Valley-style job creation to Kansas, a state technology investors have long flown over, not into. (via USA Today)

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How a 1950’s Egg Farm Hatched the Modern Startup Incubator

The story of the world’s first business incubator begins, more or less, with 80,000 square feet of surplus chickens. The early 1960s was a good time for poultry, and the Mount Hope Hatchery of Rochester, New York needed some buildings for overflow coops. They found them in Batavia, a small city about 35 miles west of Rochester, where a former hardware store manager named Joe Mancuso was leasing a variety of irregular spaces carved out of a vast, decommissioned harvester factory. (via Wired)

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Mark Pincus and Reid Hoffman are launching a new group to rethink the Democratic Party

Mark Pincus and Reid Hoffman want to hack the Democratic Party. Not literally. Not the likes of what befell the team behind Hillary Clinton’s 2016 campaign, resulting in scores of private emails being published online — and countless news stories that helped seal her defeat. No, Pincus, the co-founder of Zynga, and Hoffman, the brains behind LinkedIn, want to force Democrats to rewire their philosophical core, from their agenda to the way they choose candidates in elections — the stuff of politics, they said, that had been out of reach for most voters long before Donald Trump became president. (via Recode)

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Post Author: martin

Martin is an enthusiastic programmer, a webdeveloper and a young entrepreneur. He is intereted into computers for a long time. In the age of 10 he has programmed his first website and since then he has been working on web technologies until now. He is the Founder and Editor-in-Chief of BriefNews.eu and PCHealthBoost.info Online Magazines. His colleagues appreciate him as a passionate workhorse, a fan of new technologies, an eternal optimist and a dreamer, but especially the soul of the team for whom he can do anything in the world.

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