Posted Friday, January 18, 2008 by
Brennan Knotts
Check out this recent article in Indiana Business Magazine where Mark Hill discusses how investing in entrepreneurship is the best way to spur economic development. I've included the full article below.
COPYRIGHT 2007 Curtis Magazine Group, Inc.
EVERY EXPERIENCED investor knows the value of a balanced portfolio. "Safe" options like bonds and money market funds provide slow, steady returns. But it's the more aggressive investments that carry a higher risk, and also the greatest potential rewards.
The same principles apply to economic development. Larger, more mature companies can help anchor a regional economy, even account for a significant share of its jobs and tax base. But it's entrepreneurial success that's the real catalyst for dynamic growth.

Now more than ever, entrepreneurship is the critical ingredient for a diverse, thriving economy. Let's look at how entrepreneurial activity can drive Indiana towards our stated economic vision, defined by the Daniels administration in its "Accelerating Growth" strategic plan: Reversing our decades-long decline in per capita income to meet the national average by 2020.
Economists from the Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland studied the factors that contribute to rising wages in a recent report, "State Growth Empirics: The Long-Run Determinants of State Income Growth." Their conclusions confirm what most policymakers already realize: Human capital, measured primarily by percentage of college graduates in the workforce, and innovation, measured here by patents-per-capita, are the best predictors of income growth. Entrepreneurial companies contribute significantly to both.
First, human capital--entrepreneurial firms employ a greater percentage of scientists and engineers than the labor market as a whole. Exciting, plentiful careers with fast-growing companies also help attract and retain more college-educated workers. To quote a Small Business Administration research summary: "The most entrepreneurial regions possess the highest proportion of the population with a college degree ... the average for the most entrepreneurial regions is more than 42 percent higher than the average for the least entrepreneurial regions."
By their very nature, startups are major contributors of innovation. A churn of ideas allows new companies to grow, but also helps the better-established firms in a region succeed. According to the Council on Competitiveness ("Where America Stands: Entrepreneurship"), "Large firms often depend on small firms for new ideas and technologies ... Procter & Gamble now gets about 35 percent of its ideas from outside the company, and its goal is to reach 50 percent ... as the pace of innovation increases, tapping into the creativity of entrepreneurs is the only way to keep up."
With Indiana ranking among the bottom third of states in per capita income, educational attainment and patents-per-capita, it's clear that boosting our entrepreneurial ambitions should be an economic-development priority. The state is making some progress-from 2002 to 2006, TechPoint's Indiana Technology Index reports that Indiana experienced 50 percent growth in venture capital investment and more than a 200 percent increase in federal SBIR/STTR grants (two key sources of seed funding).
We're boasting more and more entrepreneurial success stories. Just in software technology, companies like Interactive Intelligence, Aprimo, Exact Target, Baker Hill and Pan Testing stand out.
We all know that entrepreneurship is important. But more and more evidence suggests that building an entrepreneurial economy should be the top priority. As "investors" in our state's economy, it's time to skew our portfolio towards entrepreneurial ventures, and make every effort to encourage these economic pioneers.
Mark Hill is managing partner of Collina Ventures LLC, a private investment company focusing on technology companies: Hill also serves on the board of directors for the Central Indiana Corporate Partnership.