Memphian here. Bootstrapping (mostly) a startup here in town and working through the funding struggles. I think pg alluded to a lot of this in a recent post:<p>Here, if you're trying to start a company--and especially a tech company--the general feedback is the quintessentially southern "Oh, that's really nice. So are you going to put it on "Shark Tank" or something?" In other words, the support is minimal from everyday citizens. This is not a town filled with early adopters. There's very little chance of meeting another founder at the local coffee house.<p>I think Memphis is trying to change this, and they're doing a fine job, but these things take time. There's Emerge Memphis, which right now is just a building. But that building is our little coffee house in the valley. Every time I walk in, without fail, I have an engaging conversation with someone who's completely interested in what I'm doing. It's on a smaller scale, but it's there.<p>And I think the key is that the building, and its support organization Launch Memphis, are themselves run like a startup. They try something and if it doesn't work out they scrap it and try something else. Minimal bureaucracy, and minimal bs.<p>And for what it's worth, I don't completely agree that squelchers make that much of a difference. What's missing are champions, all the way up the chain. Champions at the grassroots supporting education and entrepreneurship, champions who commit to funding home grown companies, and champions who support those companies with guidance and advice. I'll take one of those folks for every 100 squelchers. Luckily, Memphis has a few. Not enough though. Not yet.