SixThirty Launches SixThirty CYBER, St. Louis’ Latest Accelerator
St. Louis just got another accelerator.
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SixThirty, the St. Louis-based global financial technology (FinTech) venture fund and accelerator, just announced the launch of SixThirty CYBER, a cybersecurity-focused fund and accelerator that plans to invest $10 million into cybersecurity startups over the next five years.
SixThirty CYBER is based on the same successful principles as the SixThirty FinTech Accelerator, launched in 2013 by the St. Louis Regional Chamber and Cultivation Capital. SixThirty CYBER will accept five startups in each of two classes per year from hundreds of global applications, beginning in the fall of 2016.
The accelerator will invest up to $100,000 in each company in its cohorts. The first class will begin in September, 2016, and will be housed in T-REX, the technology incubator in Downtown St. Louis.
Each of the startups selected to participate in the program will receive an investment up to
$200,000 and will take part in a fourteen-week accelerator program that will offer hands-on training, mentoring and business development support.
Building on St. Louis’ Strengths–Again
“The conditions in St. Louis that made our FinTech business development accelerator so successful are the same ones that will lead to the success of the CYBER program,” said Brian Mathews, Managing Partner of Cultivation Capital, a founding partner of SixThirty CYBER.
SixThirty Managing Partner Atul Kamra noted, “Investing in B2B FinTech startups and teams has taught us that three factors drive their growth and acceleration: access to decision-makers, a dogged focus on customer revenue, and mentors with operating experience.”
The community-based approach, providing startups access to Edwards Jones, MasterCard, RGA, Scottrade, UMB and Wells Fargo Advisors, among others, has proven to be a great fit for the St. Louis region’s corporate assets and culture.
A Natural Expansion
A growing number of SixThirty’s hundreds of applicants each year are focused on cybersecurity solutions, making it an ideal organization to help foster innovation.
“We have a proven model and experience in operating accelerators and a natural flow of cybersecurity startups,” added Kamra. “We decided to invite partners that are experts in the space to leverage our deal flow and launch a dedicated cybersecurity fund.”
“St. Louis employers across all of our targeted growth industries–logistics, health, biosciences, and financial services–have shown themselves to be open to working with innovative new companies,” said Joe Reagan, President & CEO of the St. Louis Regional Chamber.
“With SixThirty Cyber, we are leveraging that great cooperation by connecting cybersecurity startups with potential customers, just as we have been doing with financial service startups.” The Regional Chamber was the first investor to commit to the new accelerator from its Spirit of St. Louis Ventures fund, and is making a three-year equity investment to the program.
Breaking Into New Markets
SixThirty co-founding General Partner Jay DeLong was tapped to manage the new CYBER fund. He emphasizes that, in addition to the corporate sector, SixThirty CYBER will provide access to federal sector customers as well.
“While the financial services corporate sector continues as an obvious market for many cyber startups, healthcare, IT, manufacturing, defense and federal agencies also face regular risk of a cyber attack. For SixThirty, that’s what makes the Collingwood (Washington D.C.-based Collingwood LLC) partnership so critical. They represent an incredibly important bridge to the federal market.”
The bi-state St. Louis region is home to two cyber commands at Scott Air Force Base, the western campus of the National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency (NGA), and the newly formed Midwest Cyber Center of Excellence, all of which present strong business opportunities for the startups selected to participate in the accelerator.
SixThirty CYBER also sees the potential for strong collaboration with strategic partner Security Advisor Alliance, which represents a sounding board and potential customer base of CISOs from some of the largest US companies.