Marin County is fertile ground for entrepreneurship. Good ideas abound, but it requires nurturing to take a concept and shape it into a successful business, especially for individuals just starting out. Thus, when VenturePad, an entrepreneurship center in San Rafael, opened in March 2017, one intent was to meet the physical needs of businesspeople by providing co-working and meeting spaces. Another equally important goal was to serve as an education resource and provide access to a set of advisors who could share their expertise with budding entrepreneurs and help new enterprises grow.
“The mission of the business is to support, promote and activate impact entrepreneurship in the North Bay,” says president and co-founder Chris Yalonis. Less than 18 months after he and vice president of marketing and co-founder Alejandro Moreno opened the doors, VenturePad is chalking up significant accomplishments.
Vision
The pair began developing the concept, but they also had another goal: creating a business with a high social impact and a low environmental impact. Moreno had earned a green masters in business administration from Dominican University of California, and Yalonis had studied sustainable management at Presidio Graduate School in San Francisco. “It transformed the way I looked at business,” says Yalonis. “Business has a social and environmental responsibility as well as opportunity,” he adds, explaining that a successful business benefits from having a triple bottom line: people, planet and profit. While he and Moreno wanted to put their entrepreneurial abilities to good use, sustainability was also a priority, as was giving back to the community, and those values were instrumental in defining their vision for VenturePad. The company is a Marin certified green business and a deep green MCE customer, which means 100 percent of its energy comes from renewable sources, and achieves a near zero waste stream each month. He observes that many of the businesses that came out of the Renaissance Center and Venture Greenhouse had positive social and environmental impacts. As an example, he mentions TrimTab Media of Sebastopol, a video agency that works with socially and environmentally responsible businesses and nonprofits. “We think VenturePad can bring values aligned with those companies,” he says. “It’s a constant balancing act around our careers. We want to give back and have fulfillment, but we want to make a living at it, too.”
As plans progressed, Yalonis and Moreno had to decide on a location and then search for an appropriate space. They eventually settled on downtown San Rafael, reasoning that businesses need to be close to amenities such as banks and restaurants. It took six months to find a building, however, because they encountered remote landlords who had little interest in the community or supporting the growth of local business, as well as asking for deposits that were unaffordable. Then, with the help of Newmark Cornish & Carey, they found a building on B Street belonging to Marin developers Jonathan Parker and Tom Monahan, who offered them a good deal so they could get started. According to Yalonis, it was essential to find a landlord who was interested in the community and would understand the potential, since VenturePad is self-funded.
Next, the building, which was once a bank, required a complete overhaul. “If you saw this place, it was a shell,” Yalonis says. Among the improvements, it needed walls, windows, new floors and lighting that would meet California’s Title 24 energy efficiency standards. They retained architect Simon Russell, who miraculously acquired the permits required in only three weeks in December 2016. On January 3, 2017, they were ready to go, with Loic Humbert as the general contractor. “He got this entire project done in two months,” says Yalonis. The result was a building with large expanses of glass to let in the natural light, LED lights, non-VOC paint, materials that are sustainably harvested and wooden tables built from sustainable products, such as bamboo or reclaimed wood. ”We wanted to model low-impact, low-carbon values,” says Yalonis. With construction completed, Venture Pad was ready to show off its new digs and had its official opening in partnership with the San Rafael Chamber of Commerce on March 9, 2017, with San Rafael Mayor Gary Phillips cutting the ribbon.
Connections
With the new center open for business, Yalonis and Moreno proceeded to the next step: building a community. A substantial number of people in Marin County work from home, but while the practice is a boon for those striving to achieve a balance between business and home life, for many, it can be distracting and isolating. Humans are social beings, and require interaction with other people. Socializing in a business setting allows meaningful connections and stimulates the creative discussions that help good ideas evolve into great ones. Yalonis and Moreno recognized that VenturePad could be a complement to home offices, with co-working spaces that would give employees a place to mingle with other like-minded individuals and meeting rooms that would provide a private and professional place to confer with clients and business associates. It would also allow a sense of community, which leads to greater productivity.
Among VenturePad’s members is Mary Ann Maggiore, the head of LAUNCH, a nonprofit organization that works with Millennials to help guide them to find meaningful and lucrative employment. “I’m basically a solopreneur,” she says, but rather than working alone, she prefers to be part of a community. Membership at VenturePad provides the missing piece, and she’s at a desk or in a phone booth there almost every day. “The energy of working together is expansive and centers you. You do more, and you’re more focused. It increases productivity,” says Maggiore. She finds VenturePad beautiful and affordable at the same time, and her clients feel comfortable meeting her there. Plus, she enjoys the camaraderie with other members. “Once in a while we meet for a happy hour and talk about our work. We’re developing a supportive community,” she says.
For Menno Van Rossum, it’s about quality and lifestyle. He is U.S. managing director for NewCompliance, a company in the Netherlands that produces software solutions to increase hygiene and efficiency in hospitals. His company has an office in San Francisco, but he doesn’t have to be there every day, and VenturePad gives him the perfect place to work in Marin County, where he lives. He observes that it makes sense to stay closer to home sometimes so he can work more efficiently while still being in a professional environment, and VenturePad allows him to do that. “It’s the most pleasant and professional co-working space I’ve found,” he says. “The two founders organize everything really well. It’s a great atmosphere. It gives me the feeling I have colleagues and work in an office.”
Incubation
Building a support system for entrepreneurs and small businesses and providing training, advisory support and peer networking to support young companies, were essential components of the founders’ vision, and those services were an integral part of VenturePad’s model from the beginning.
“It’s important because it enables the support and activation of start-ups,” says Yalonis. Along the way, VenturePad has cultivated an incubation model, a collaborative learning environment that allows people inexperienced in many of the aspects of business to spend several months learning good practices and participating in opportunities for professional development with experts in fields such as marketing and finance. Yalonis describes it as a cohort form, with several people in a classroom with an instructor, who delivers content either face-to-face or online. Participants get to test ideas, business models and prototypes, and while some might evolve into a business, not all do.
“People get fired up about ideas, but they don’t necessarily make a business,” he points out. First in the process, members acquire the knowledge to make an informed decision, and some might decide that it’s not worth the time and investment to go any farther, while others might find a pivot that makes it worth pursuing. Should they decide to move forward, the next step is learning about distribution and marketing strategy, and developing the new service or product. A big milestone is the launch,” says Yalonis, and with it comes the need to learn about building awareness. In addition, a new business might require advertising and public relations or the ability to scale customer acquisition and distribution, training and professional services in those skills is available as well.
In addition, a team of 80 smart, experienced executives and investors give advice on strategic issues, such as revenue streams, key partners, essential resources, how to build a supply chain and customer acquisition. As VenturePad’s incubator evolves, advisors meet weekly with new entrepreneurs and help them build a small advisory board with sector and discipline experts. Yalonis gives the hypothetical example of a cool, new restaurant in San Rafael’s Canal neighborhood, with an owner who would get advice from advisors experienced in food branding, who perhaps would make suggestions on new ways to deliver food, too. VenturePad also has experts who offer pro bono or highly discounted services, such as graphic design, branding, copywriting and prototype building—many of which services startups need but can’t afford. “We do those kinds of referrals almost on a daily basis,” says Yalonis. A member entrepreneur might need to set up an accounting system, for instance, he says, and the VenturPad team already knows several bookkeepers. “They’re vetted; they’re proven,” he adds.
Funding is always an issue. “Every week, we have people coming here looking for investment money,” says Yalonis. Though VenturePad doesn’t provide funding per se, it offers suggestions and might recommend routes such as crowd funding, a microloan from Working Solutions or borrowing money from friends and family. In the latter case, they might find someone to prepare documents that will avoid problems and keep family members talking to each other. VenturePad will also introduce business owners to angel investors, if it’s appropriate.
Yalonis and Moreno took the search for financing a step further in June 2018, when they offered new entrepreneurs a chance to explore issues related to acquiring working capital in depth. Finance Your Business Summit, an evening event at the San Rafael Community Center, included a panel of entrepreneurs, workshops that examined financing for businesses at various stages, networking and exhibitors. Among the speakers were Laurie O’Hara, director of business development and marketing for Working Solutions, and Marin County Supervisor Damon Connolly. Event partners included Marin Economic Forum, Marin’s Small Business Development Center and the City of San Rafael, among others.
“With our incubator and support services, we’re trying to create businesses here,” says Yalonis. “We’re going to help grow companies in the county so people can earn a living and keep jobs here and not have to commute.” It’s a lofty goal that comes with the substantial challenges the county is facing, but VenturePad is actively seeking ways to help solve some of Marin’s problems, and, says Yalonis, “VenturePad wants to work at this intersection of public-private collaboration.”
On a lesser scale, interaction with the community was one of VenturePad’s intents from the outset, and in addition to signature events that promote economic development and sustainability, it hosts smaller gatherings, such as San Rafael Chamber of Commerce’s mixers and meetings of Resilient Neighborhoods. In 2017, it also hosted #YesWeCode, a Dream Corps initiative that aims to teach technology skills to 100,000 young people from underserved communities to meet the increasing need for software developers. The class consisted of 30 mostly young people from low-income neighborhoods in Marin County, whom Yalonis describes as smart and driven and ready to put their blood, sweat and tears into learning valuable technical skills. The training included the web application tool, Ruby on Rails, and multiple languages, such as Java, Python and HTML. “Our job was to host them and provide resources,” says Yalonis, and one of the advantages for the students was the opportunity to attend VenturePad’s networking events, which included potential employers. “We did our best to connect them with people who were hiring,” he adds, reporting that one student got a job as an analyst at Marin Economic Forum as a result.
Community
Much of what VenturePad does is part of being an engaged member of the arts community and a good neighbor. It participated in Marin Open Studios for two weekends in May, making wall space available for the works of painter Jane Heaphy, and it regularly displays art from the artists at Art Works Downtown. It’s a mutually beneficial arrangement. “The artists get lots of eyeballs, and we get free, beautiful art,” Yalonis observes. VenturePad also participates in San Rafael’s Second Friday Art Walk, often with music from its house band, the Venture Jammers, which features Yalonis on drums and Moreno playing percussion. VenturePad even has a place for kids, making space available for the Game Academy, a program that meets three times a week for two-hour sessions and uses tabletop and live-action role-playing games to teach decision-making skills, collaboration, and lessons in core academic subjects to children ages 8 to 18.
It’s been a busy year-and-a-half, and VenturePad is thriving. It’s accomplished its primary goal—creating something inclusive and growth-oriented. “I feel blessed about many things,” says Yalonis. He reports that more than 260 members, including solopreneurs, startups, telecommuters and large and small businesses have taken advantage of VenturePad’s services, and larger, more visible companies are joining such as Pacific Sun and Genentec. Several new businesses have gotten off to a good start, connected with others and moved on because they needed more space. In addition, VenturePad is financially viable despite hefty rent for a startup. It has organized well-attended summits on financing, cleantech and sustainable enterprise, and in April, was named Green Business of the Year by the City and Chamber of San Rafael. “We were able to achieve positive cash flow within one year,” he says. He and Moreno find satisfaction in what they’ve been able to establish as entrepreneurs, and more is yet to come. By all accounts, VenturePad is a success story.
Features
VenturePad offers the following amenities to members who use its co-working space:
• 4 meeting rooms
• 3 private booths for phone calls or video chats
• Kitchen
• Ultra-fast Wi-Fi
• Quiet Zone
• Residents’ Desks
• Open green co-working space
• Convenient parking
Educational and networking opportunities include the following:
• Clean Tech Summit
• Entrepreneur Peer Advisory Groups
• Finance Your Business Summit
• Lunch & Learn guest talks
• Marin Sustainable Enterprise Conference
Services
VenturePad offers a wide range of support with the following services:
• Advisory support
• Classes
• Conferences
• Co-working spaces
• Finding Funding
• Incubator and accelerator
• Lunch & Learn
• Meeting spaces
• Peer networks
• Social events
• Training
• Workshops
• Youth programs