Uncategorized

NoBadGift.com will keep Baltimore as its home even after SF accelerator [Q&A]

NoBadGift.com co-founder and self-proclaimed hustler McKeever Conwell heads to San Francisco in August to begin his 12-week tenure at the NewME Accelerator. Conwell and his two partners, Sam Henry and Michael Washington, have had a whirlwind last six months, as Technically Baltimore reported this morning. But will NoBadGift.com heading westward be a story of loss […]

NoBadGift.com co-founder and self-proclaimed hustler McKeever Conwell heads to San Francisco in August to begin his 12-week tenure at the NewME Accelerator. Conwell and his two partners, Sam Henry and Michael Washington, have had a whirlwind last six months, as Technically Baltimore reported this morning.
But will NoBadGift.com heading westward be a story of loss for Baltmore’s startup community?
Recently, Technically Baltimore sat down with Conwell to talk about what excites he and his co-founders about this new accelerator, popping up in TechCrunch and what’s keeping them tied to Charm City.

TB: So, NewME, out in Silicon Valley. Big deal, right?
MC: It means new opportunities, networking. We’re probably not going to do another accelerator after this [laughing]. It’s an opportunity to go out to California. And we were on TechCrunch—one thing to take off my bucket list.
TB: Are you guys anxious at all about having your name in Silicon Valley?
MC: We’ll be more open to the public eye. It’s also scary—companies there get great press, but their competitors are all ramping up [after reading about them].
TB: Is this just a temporary stay, so to speak? Does NoBadGift.com have any intention of leaving Baltimore?
MC: We have to be stationed in Baltimore—at least, our headquarters—for five years [as a condition of Accelerate Baltimore’s terms]. But I’m from Baltimore, I love Baltimore. I haven’t left yet.
TB: What makes Baltimore’s tech community unique? In Baltimore, it seems, people are able to make a big splash. Seems Silicon Valley isn’t quite like that.
MC: Baltimore’s tech community is a small and very tight-knit group. This community really helps each other. These people are accessible to me, and we all want to help Baltimore. You can be a rock star in the tech community and not get pummeled. I don’t know if I can do that in Silicon Valley. I don’t know if everyone wants to help in San Francisco.
TB: You had a six-figure job at age 22, making more money than, say, your friendly neighborhood technology journalist might make. Why leave that?
MC: If you’re a developer, you have the skill set to rule the world. A lot of schools sell you on getting a skill set and getting a job in an industry. No one ever gives [students] this [startup] mindset. What do you want out of life? Are you fulfilled, happy, enjoying it? The rewards from [running a startup] are so different. I can effect so much more change—effect real change, doing what I’m doing.

Companies: NewME Accelerator / NoBadGift.com

Before you go...

Please consider supporting Technical.ly to keep our independent journalism strong. Unlike most business-focused media outlets, we don’t have a paywall. Instead, we count on your personal and organizational support.

Our services Preferred partners The journalism fund
Engagement

Join our growing Slack community

Join 5,000 tech professionals and entrepreneurs in our community Slack today!

Trending

Why are there so few tech apprenticeships?

Baltimore's innovation scene proved its resilience in 2024

How a Hubble scientist draws on her elite athletic career to advance space exploration

Maryland governor appoints CIO to combat child poverty

Technically Media