Geographic Diversification of Startup Funding Beyond Silicon Valley
Democratizing the Deal Flow: Capital Flows Beyond the Bay Area
The “Rise of the Rest” is a movement and investment thesis that describes the geographic diversification of venture capital and high-growth startup formation beyond the traditional hubs of Silicon Valley, New York City, and Boston. Coined and championed by investor Steve Case (AOL co-founder) through his Revolution funds and annual bus tours, the concept gained significant momentum in the 2010s and exploded in the 2020s. It is driven by the recognition that entrepreneurial talent and innovative ideas are evenly distributed across the United States and the world, but venture capital has been highly concentrated. The convergence of several trendsthe maturation of local entrepreneurial ecosystems, the success of breakout companies outside the Valley (like SpaceX in LA, Shopify in Ottawa, or Atlassian in Sydney), the pandemic-induced normalization of remote work, and the rise of distributed teamshas fueled this shift. “Rise of the Rest” funds and local seed-stage investors began actively capitalizing startups in cities like Miami, Atlanta, Austin, Denver, Chicago, and across the Midwest and Southeast, betting that lower costs of living, access to niche industry expertise (e.g., agtech in the Midwest, fintech in Atlanta), and growing local support networks could produce outsized returns. This trend represents a decentralization of innovation, challenging the long-held belief that startup success requires being in Silicon Valley.
The Drivers: Ecosystem Maturation and Remote Work
Several key drivers powered the Rise of the Rest. **Local Success Stories:** Breakout companies like Zoom (founded in San Jose but emblematic of remote work), Duolingo (Pittsburgh), and Epic Systems (Madison) proved it was possible to build a giant far from Sand Hill Road. These companies created wealth, experienced talent, and angel investors who recycled capital and knowledge locally. **Ecosystem Builders:** Organizations like Techstars and Y Combinator launched city-specific programs. Universities ramped up tech transfer and incubators. City and state governments offered incentives. **Remote Work Acceleration:** The pandemic proved that startups could be built with distributed teams from day one, freeing founders to live wherever they wanted and tap talent pools nationally. This made lower-cost, high-quality-of-life cities more attractive to both founders and employees. **Specialization:** Cities began developing specialized clusters based on local industry strengths: logistics in Chicago, healthcare in Nashville, aerospace in Seattle, crypto (briefly) in Miami.
The Investment Thesis and the Role of Seed Funds
The investment thesis for Rise of the Rest is multifold: **Lower Capital Intensity:** Startups outside major hubs often have lower burn rates due to cheaper office space and salaries, meaning they can achieve milestones with less dilution. **Less Competition for Deals:** With fewer investors locally chasing deals, VCs can get better terms and more hands-on access to founders. **Unique Insights:** Local investors may have deeper networks and understanding of region-specific problems and markets (e.g., insurtech in Hartford, agriculture in Iowa). **Untapped Talent Pools:** Access to graduates from strong regional universities and professionals from legacy industries looking for new challenges. Specialized seed funds, micro-VCs, and angel networks have been the backbone of this movement, providing the crucial first check that enables companies to start and prove their concepts before attracting larger, national VC firms for Series A and beyond.
Challenges and the Path to Scale
Despite the progress, significant challenges remain for startups in emerging ecosystems. **Access to Later-Stage Capital:** While seed funding has proliferated, securing large Series B and C rounds often still requires engaging with major firms in San Francisco or New York, which can be a hurdle. **Network Density:** The serendipitous collisions and deep bench of executive talent found in Silicon Valley are harder to replicate. **Mentorship Gap:** There are fewer seasoned, “been-there-done-that” startup operators and founders to advise new companies. Success often depends on “boomerang” talentpeople who left for the Valley and returnedor on founders deliberately building distributed networks. The ultimate test for the Rise of the Rest is whether these ecosystems can produce not just start-ups, but scale-ups that go public or have major acquisitions, creating the virtuous cycle of wealth and expertise that sustains a mature tech hub.
Legacy: A More Resilient and Inclusive Innovation Economy
The legacy of the Rise of the Rest movement is the creation of a more geographically diverse, resilient, and inclusive American innovation economy. It has begun to rectify a historic misallocation of capital, directing funding to founders and ideas that might have been overlooked because of their zip code. This decentralization mitigates systemic risk; an innovation economy concentrated in one region is vulnerable to earthquakes, housing crises, or policy changes. It also promotes broader economic development, spreading the job creation and wealth generation of the tech sector to more communities. While Silicon Valley will likely remain the dominant global hub, its share of venture activity is decreasing. The Rise of the Rest signifies that the monopoly of place in entrepreneurship is over. In the 21st century, a great company can start anywhere, as long as it has access to capital, talent, and customersand the movement is ensuring that capital, at least, is increasingly within reach.