BBC #5: 8/28/12
August 31, 2012 1 Comment
Presentation and Presenter: Betamore, Mike Brenner
We invited Mike Brenner to be our first guest speaker at the BBC because of a recommendation from someone in the Baltimore community. He did not disappoint, as he explained many of his past experiences, ideas, and introduced his latest company “Betamore,” with lots of questions and answers along the way.
After graduating from George Washington, he launched a web design studio, Sunrise Design, with his Alma mater as one of his first clients. While running the studio, he also helped organize Beehive Baltimore, a community of other freelancers, designers, and entrepreneurs. He would later take some of his lessons learned from the Beehive to help launch Betamore. He launched his third major project, Startup Baltimore in 2010. The website served as an online publication that followed the Baltimore startup community. Earlier this year, the website was acquired by Technically Media and re-branded as Technically Baltimore, to compliment one of their other publications, Technically Philadelphia, which has a similar focus in Philly. Hearing about these experiences provided an engaging conversation for the BBC. Most of our regular members are in sales or engineering (with Chris Diller being the lone designer), so it was interesting to hear about the different communities and people around Baltimore.
We also discussed some ideas regarding “The Lean Startup,” by Eric Ries. Drew Vogt presented the startup loop at a past BBC meeting. Mike is a big proponent of the ideas discussed in the book, so it was exciting to hear positive feedback about some concepts we had previously discussed.
Lastly, we discussed Mike Brenner’s latest project, Betamore, a startup incubation center he is launching in Federal Hill this Fall with two other partners. These types of centers exist in major cities across the country, and the Betamore team is looking forward to helping other entrepreneurs achieve their goals while building a talent hub to hopefully keep many of these growing tech companies in Baltimore and attracting talent to move here.

Individuals in early stage companies can join Betamore (with different membership opportunities) to take advantage of shared work spaces, collaboration, and mentoring from the Betamore staff. They also hope to attract venture capitalists to join, so they have early access to some of the innovative ideas the city has to offer. A key differentiator with Betamore is the emphasis of ongoing education. They have a classroom set up in their facility, and plan to have members and experts in the community teach classes that are open to the general public. Interested in learning how to build an iphone app? Take the Betamore class on it. Want to learn more about website design? There is a Betamore class for it. Mike describes the community as “a gym membership for nerds,” and although construction has delayed its opening until October, they have a few dozen applicants ready to move in.
However, Betamore is hosting a launch event at the end of September called “Startup Weekend.” Individuals who sign up can literally toss around ideas, meet co-founders, build an initial product, and pitch it to mentors and investors all between a Friday afternoon and Sunday evening.
Members of the BBC thoroughly enjoyed the discussion and we are looking forward to keeping the meetings fresh by not only continuing our own presentations, but by hosting other guest speakers from the community.
Thanks for giving me the opportunity to talk about Betamore with you guys. I look forward to staying plugged into your events and hopefully finding some points of intersection between each of your ventures, the BBC, and Betamore.