Oakland

California Sunday Magazine: “Those were our entrepreneurs we locked up.” Can Oakland, a new capital of legal weed, undo the injustices of the war on drugs?

BEN LARSON MET his co-founder Carter Laren in 2014 while they were both at Founder Institute, an entrepreneurship training program in Palo Alto that seeks to “globalize Silicon Valley.” Legalization caught both partners’ attention, but when they began their research, the companies they encountered were, Larson said, “far from the quality that you might see in the typical Silicon Valley pitch session.” They lacked professional polish and what he called an “understanding of what makes a viable business.” Gateway, the cannabis incubator the pair started in response, takes a 6 percent stake in early stage startups and, in exchange, gives them a months-long boot camp and a chance to pitch investors. Basing Gateway in Oakland was an easy call. “We see it as the capital of the cannabis industry,” Larson said.
Gateway received more than 100 applications for its first class, which began with seven companies this past spring. Gateway is housed in a bayside industrial building called Leviathan, whose façade evokes a ship and a sea monster in battle. Some of the walls are covered in copper-colored scales, like snakeskin.
When I visited in June, presentations to investors were still months away, but the founders were already honing their language and slide decks. Over a pizza lunch, they practiced their pitches for one another, a few guests, and a video camera. Laren paced the barren room like a stern grade school teacher, encouraging “candid, Simon Cowell–style feedback.”
Most of the Gateway companies had developed software aimed at professionalizing the outlaw industry. One startup, called Charge, wanted to simplify payment processing; since many banks won’t give cannabis companies accounts, they still often operate in cash. Another, Trellis, had developed compliance and inventory software for growers. Of the five founders who presented, two, Khari Stallworth and McKinley Owens, were blackroughly as many black entrepreneurs as I’d met in the previous year and a half covering cannabis from Denver.
Twenty-four-year-old Owens, dressed in a jean jacket, untucked shirt, and pointed leather boots, went first. He’s the CEO of Flora, a company he started with two friends from the University of Michigan. Flora plans to digitize and study the cannabis genetics data that underground growers have accumulated over the years. For now, growers use “20 years of intuition and maybe pen and paper if they’re super advanced,” Owens told the room. He quoted one grower: “‘If those notes got wet or caught fire, we’d be fucked.’”
Flora had attracted interest on Reddit, but like any tech startup, it faced thorny questions. One was how to convince growersa generally self-protective groupto share their data, especially with, as Owens put it, “carpetbagging hipsters.” 
When Stallworth’s turn came, he stood up and said, “My wife and I don’t know shit about cannabis. We know food.” He wore a sport coat over a Sriracha T-shirt, and a few days of stubble. After high school, Stallworth lived near Chicago with a roommate who was studying to be a chef. When they got high, they feasted on his roommate’s homework assignmentsfoie gras and crème brûléeinstead of chips and pizza.
Years later, after studying cooking and cinematography, he was living in Los Angeles working as a unit technician on Hollywood blockbusters when he met Sascha Simonsen, an expert baker from Denmark who catered movie shoots. On the set of Inception, Stallworth boasted, “Leonardo DiCaprio himself” requested her cookies. The pair married and now have two young children. 
The edibles market is crowded, but the couple thought they could differentiate themselves with treats that masked the plant’s unappealing taste. “We knew we were on the edge of a problem we could solve,” Stallworth said. Early this decade, their company, Buddha Bakes, placed products in 75 dispensaries and had more orders than they could fill. But as they started having kids, they became worried about the risk of criminal prosecution and eventually scaled down and then shuttered the business. After Gateway invited them to join its first class, however, they decided to try again. They moved to Oakland and renamed their company Kamala.
Unlike Gateway’s software companies, Kamala, if it stays in Oakland, will have to get licensed by the city. Over the summer, Stallworth told me, he got into a tense exchange with Council member Brooks at a mixer for those interested in equity licenses. When Stallworth said that entrepreneurs with criminal backgrounds would struggle to raise venture capital and that the city should figure out ways to support them, Brooks accused him of, as he recalls, “trying to cut people out.” (Brooks has no memory of this exchange.) “I definitely recognize the injustices,” Stallworth said. “I am a black man.” But as a new arrival, Oakland is telling him to take his business’s jobs and tax dollars elsewhere. The city should “put something together that just makes sense for a business owner,” he said.

by Alex Halperin
Full Article: California Sunday Magazine

Business Insider: Marijuana startups could be decimated once legalization hits

Ben Larson left his job directing a startup accelerator in 2015 to launch Gateway, one of the first incubators for pot entrepreneurs. The program helps founders develop their business models, find mentors, and learn about raising capital. Since Gateway set up shop in Oakland, California, Larson has been flooded with “‘X’ of pot” pitches. But a catchy tagline isn’t enough. Let’s say you run a payment processor company for marijuana dispensaries. You nickname it the “Stripe of pot.” “You have got to be much, much more,” Larson says. “Because as soon as it becomes legal, after the stigma drops a little bit, what stops PayPal from coming in and kicking your arse?”

by Melia Robinson
Full Article: Business Insider

MARIJUANA BUSINESS DAILY: Marijuana Business Incubator Launches in Oakland

Gateway will provide companies with $30,000 in return for six% equity, with once percent going to the mentors responsible for coaching the incubator companies, as well as office space, according to Oakland North. The paper reported that another incubator, CanopyBoulder in Colorado, gives businesses $20,000 in exchange for 9.5% equity.

Full Article: Marijuana Business Daily

KCBS RADIO: Interview with Gateway Co-Founder, Ben Larson

Co-Founder, Ben Larson, says the idea is to provide workspace, management expertise, and access to tech entrepreneurs for those with the next greatest idea in the burgeoning cannabis industry.

by Mark Selig

 
 

Available on SoundCloud
 

OAKLAND NORTH: California’s first marijuana incubator launches, headquartered in Oakland

Gateway aims to create a group of legal, scalable and investable cannabis businesses in the Bay Area by providing seed investment and mentorship. The incubator plans to accept ancillary businesses where marijuana isn’t touched—like those that produce cannabis grow lightsbut also businesses that directly handle the plants, like dispensaries and ventures that develop extraction technologies.

by Nailah Morgan and Kyle Ludowitz
Full Article: Oakland North

WEEDCLUB: Chat with Ben and Carter of Gateway Incubator

Is the world ready for the biggest onslaught of cannabis innovation in history? 

Ben Larson and Carter Laren Founded Gateway Incubator in Oakland, California to help early stage cannabis companies hit the ground running.

I was stoked to sit down in the #weedclubigloo with Gateway to discuss the launch of their incubator- enjoy!

 
 

by Evan Horowitz
Full Post: WeedClub

EAST BAY EXPRESS: ‘US Capital of Cannabis Will Be Oakland,’ Says Incubator Founder

Two flavors of Bay Area life — cannabis and technology — will continue their fusion this winter with the launch of Gateway Incubator, LLC in Oakland's Jack London district. It will be California’s first cannabis company incubator. 

by David Downs

Full Article: East Bay Express

YAHOO! FINANCE: MJIC Inc. Launches Gateway to Success With First California Cannabis Business Incubator

Located near Oakland's Jack London Square in the unconventional Leviathan Building, Gateway's mission is to bring the expertise of Silicon Valley technology entrepreneurship to the burgeoning industry of legal cannabis companies.

"We chose Oakland because we believe that as legalization unfolds, this city will emerge as the capital of the cannabis industry in the United States," said co-founder Ben Larson.

Full Article: Yahoo! Finance
reposted by CBS8, MJINews, FOX Carolina and WDRB

DCN: The Gateway Incubator is California's First Cannabis Company Incubator

There are a tremendous number of experienced and insightful start-up founders and investors in and around Silicon Valley who are enthusiastic about helping cannabis companies succeed,”wrote co-founder Carter Laren, “and they are all anticipating imminent legalization.” Laren brings with him the experience of CEO of Creative Allies and co-founder of MOX. Laren has also worked with several other startups.

by BenBot
Full Article: Direct Cannabis Network

TECH CRUNCH: Marijuana Startup Incubator “Gateway” Fires Up

But even if you’re stoned, you should be able to see the opportunity here. Marijuana prohibition is coming to an end, and massive businesses will grow in its place. Gateway wants to seed them.

On the morning of our launch, Tech Crunch journalist, Josh Constine (@joshconstine) published the following article: Tech Crunch