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Menlo Innovations Shows A New Kind Of Michigan

Menlo Innovations

First Posted: 10/14/11 08:37 PM ET Updated: 12/14/11 05:12 AM ET

ANN ARBOR, Mich. -- When Rich Sheridan lost his job in the dot-com bubble about a decade ago and decided to start his own company, he had some trouble explaining the idea to his wife.

"I came home and told Carol I had lost my job and she went, 'So you're unemployed,'" he said. "And I said, 'No, I'm an entrepreneur now.'"

Even after weeks of working in his basement with friends on the business plan, when it came time to invest some $15,000 of the family's money in the nascent firm, Carol was confused.

"I was just thinking, what business?" she recalled, adding that she thought her husband and his friends had been applying for jobs together in the basement.

What they had been plotting instead was Menlo Innovations, a software-design outfit that now has 42 employees and that Sheridan and his partners expect will bring in about $5 million in revenue this year. And they weren't alone. While Michigan's economy is distressed overall, the emergence of countless small technology start-ups here in recent years gives some hope that there are better days ahead.

But even as a report issued this month showed that, for all the state's challenges, Michigan gained more tech jobs than any other state in 2010, there is still some lingering uncertainty about a brand of business that is much different from automobile manufacturing. Take Carol Sheridan's father, for one. He worked for Chrysler for 10 years and was later a tool and die maker for an auto parts manufacturer. When Rich Sheridan wanted to start Menlo, his father-in-law "looked at him funny," as James Goebel, another of the founders, remembered.

The state as a whole has had to wrap its mind around these new kinds of companies, which are among the fastest growing in Michigan. Even as GDP growth struggles here, the high concentrations of students and engineers have made it an attractive place to start new companies. Many of these have been founded by graduates of the University of Michigan, which recently announced that it would begin investing in companies that begin on its campus.

Still, Goebel said that Michigan investors in general are more risk-averse than venture capitalists in other states.

"People here only want to start the next HP or Apple," he said. "But you have to start 10,000 firms to end up with HP and Apple. It's a new idea here that you would start companies knowing so many would fail."

Menlo certainly hasn't failed, and nobody is looking at its founders with anything except admiration anymore. The company has been named a "Michigan Economic Bright Spot" and one of the fastest-growing private companies in America. Software they developed for a cytometer manufacturer helps count cells in fluid and has been one of the firm's biggest successes.

Now they're ready to branch out into even riskier territory. Nontraditional business arrangements, such as deferring design fees in exchange for an equity stake or royalties in the final product, have always been central to what Menlo does, and was central to getting the firm off its feet in its earliest days. Now the founders are considering making this kind of "leveraged play" almost their entire business.

"It's a completely new model," as Goebel put it, "and that's true for us and also for the state in general."

This post is part of Patch: The Road Trip. Read Arianna Huffington's introduction to the project, and be sure to follow Paul on Twitter and MapQuest.

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ANN ARBOR, Mich. -- When Rich Sheridan lost his job in the dot-com bubble about a decade ago and decided to start his own company, he had some trouble explaining the idea to his wife. "I came home ...
ANN ARBOR, Mich. -- When Rich Sheridan lost his job in the dot-com bubble about a decade ago and decided to start his own company, he had some trouble explaining the idea to his wife. "I came home ...
 
 
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03:40 PM on 10/15/2011
Ok, but great fluff piece, but I doubt Menlo is going to hire anyone losing their hourly jobs at the Ford factory, so what's the point?

Menlo may hire some folks who get laid off from EDS who were attached to a Ford or Delphi contract, but that's about it. And I doubt MI is going to become a high-tech hub, it's not exactly a boom market up there for folks right now.

If Menlo had started as a result of THIS recession, instead of the last one, I could see the point of this story. Right now, this is almost like salt in the wound of what people are dealing with today, because I doubt there are any Menlo startups in Detroit these days.
03:14 PM on 10/15/2011
NIce piece of PR but really not sure what sets this company apart from a lot of other tech cos.
10:08 AM on 10/15/2011
If you wnat to learn about a true cooperative business model. Google the Mondragon Corporation, which is located in the Basque region, of Spain. That is truly a cooperative that works.
09:04 AM on 10/15/2011
While I applaud these gentlemen for their creativity and talents and their success; this line of business doesn't compare to the former manufacturing concerns that inhabited Michigan. Software design and sales doesn't create the quantity of jobs that manufacturing did. Unfortunately, the final death knell has sounded on our manufacturing greatness. The empty manufacturing facilities all over the state of Michigan, Ohio, Pennsylvania and New York bear stark witness to that. The former "Precision Valley" in New England as well. Our government allowed this to happen and these jobs can never be regained. Couple that with the apparent unwillingness of our young people to get the education and training they need to be productive members of our society and you see a pretty bleak pictures. The financial base will no longer exist to support the grandiose programs the government continues to birth. Best of luck to Michigan.
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Dr Scott
All I ask is that you make sense
09:52 AM on 10/15/2011
My sentiments exactly. I see so many young men and women in high school who are just not going to become software designers. We still need jobs that will allow these youngsters to become productive members of society who contribute their labor and taxes for a better future.
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thinkb4uleapII
My micro-bio is no longer empty.
11:50 AM on 10/15/2011
The success of any type of business has a "ripple-out" effect and indirectly supports or creates jobs outside the immediate scope of that business. For example, this software design company needs an ongoing source of equipment, supplies and services. Someone has to provide them -- which means ongoing or new employment for the supplier.
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clearasmud
De Tocqueville and Marx were both right
10:43 AM on 10/15/2011
The road to revitalization is made up of many small steps.
08:58 PM on 10/15/2011
Very profound grasshopper. However, in today's world, that road is strewn with government obstacles and lined with folks of various races with their hands out.
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07:33 AM on 10/15/2011
There is no union, how can libs support such a thing
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maddogjohnson
Removing conservatives one tumor at a time.
10:26 AM on 10/15/2011
Unions only need to be in place with republican companies that screw their workers.
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clearasmud
De Tocqueville and Marx were both right
10:46 AM on 10/15/2011
Who said that all Liberals would associate this with Unions? Oh, never mind... Fox. Fox loves to generalize and characterize things the way they want their viewers to see it. Unfortunately, they keep forgetting that Liberals cannot be generalized. We are much too independent to think ideologically like robots, the way Cons do.
This comment has been removed due to violations of our [Guidelines]
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DragonFly
There is no planet 'B'
07:18 AM on 10/15/2011
The only thing that seems novel about this company is that it actually hires and functions within the USA.
yeah-isaidit
Not On Facebook, Second Home: Public Library
07:09 AM on 10/15/2011
I hope they supply their potential investors with some kind of idea as to what the company actually does.
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belladio
Not in the mood to suffer fools
02:16 PM on 10/15/2011
Software design not sufficient for you?
03:53 AM on 10/15/2011
Good for those who started the business, but I still have no idea what it does or how it's model is different. Maybe someone needs to replace this reporter?
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dennis1943
whatever the voices in my head say.......
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clearasmud
De Tocqueville and Marx were both right
10:49 AM on 10/15/2011
Maybe you need to read to the end.
03:11 PM on 10/15/2011
Ummm yeah. I just read a paragraph of the article and then wandered off willy nilly to play in the yard. :/
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kostya
Ineluctable modality of the visual
03:14 AM on 10/15/2011
Huh? I work with several tech companies and see nothing suggesting a new model or even something like additive manufacturing that is not dependent on scale economies.
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Ryosuke91t
Now you know, and knowing is half the battle..
02:56 AM on 10/15/2011
what did they do differently?
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clearasmud
De Tocqueville and Marx were both right
10:50 AM on 10/15/2011
Reading comprehension is a good thing.
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Mark Redd
02:47 AM on 10/15/2011
What do they do? What a waste of a read.
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clearasmud
De Tocqueville and Marx were both right
10:51 AM on 10/15/2011
The article clearly explains that.
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KOisGod
To thine own self be true
02:32 AM on 10/15/2011
I'm sorry, what is their product again?
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briarus42
07:24 AM on 10/15/2011
butterfly farts and angel kisses apparently?
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clearasmud
De Tocqueville and Marx were both right
10:54 AM on 10/15/2011
Reading comprehension is a wonderful thing and needs to be practiced daily.
01:43 AM on 10/15/2011
Many of us left the former rust belt over the past 3 decades for in Silicon Valley. But we too have been laid off following acquisitions and in some cases lack of follow-on investment capital.

Finding ways to be capital efficient is a necessity. In the past we would use credit cards - but due to new bankruptcy rules I would not advise doing that!

We also see tremendous aversion to risk-taking by venture capitalists. Short-term thinking leads to numerous me-too investments in social networking and iphone apps. Sure, thetime to market is short, but the fundamental value is low. It's not like they're curing cancer, is it? Now there's a business in which I want to be involved!
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OldKatt
Yet, forever 21
01:04 AM on 10/15/2011
"....But even as a report issued this month showed that, for all the state's challenges, Michigan gained more tech jobs than any other state in 2010...."

That's when our Democratic governor, Jennifer Granholm, was still in office.
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LivingDebtFree
I bet you I can be less competitive than you.
10:48 AM on 10/15/2011
Yeah, I heard he was in the basement with them.
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clearasmud
De Tocqueville and Marx were both right
10:52 AM on 10/15/2011
I would love to see her in Washington. Awesome lady.
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sdavidweaver
11:53 PM on 10/14/2011
Would have been nice if the article explained what the company does...