I've found that one of the strengths and distinctions of New York City, from which we might all learn for our own local economy, is that it doesn’t have an ecosystem the way people say it at conferences, like it’s a single organism. A couple weeks ago, we explored here that New York is what I called in the prior piece "a rotating set of sector-specific machines that manufacture startups the way the Garment District used to manufacture clothing." That framing explains why NYC keeps producing venture-scale companies in specific categories (fintech, insurtech, regtech, adtech, martech, legal ops) even when the broader market mood swings between euphoria and hibernation.
Promised then was a deeper look at the startup ecosystem in New York so let's get into it. Before jumping in, if you appreciate this kind of analysis and work on your ecosystem, make sure you're connected with Founder Institute here, and reach out by subscribing to my Startup Economist research here.
This is a follow-up to that “Sector Machines” argument (read it first, here, if you haven’t). The punchline is simple: invention and innovation create the spark and draw attention; specialization multiplies attention by attracting the exact experience, networks, and buyers who turn a spark into a compounding flywheel. New York is not the best place in the world to invent in a vacuum; it is one of the best places in the world to commercialize under pressure: under population density, under institutional risk, under regulatory scrutiny, and under “show me the audit trail.”
We’re going to use the “10 Considerations of Startup Economic Development” to audit NYC, because if you’re going to talk about ecosystems we should be using some model for analysis.
New York’s culture was built for transaction, risk, and reinvention
New York’s startup advantage wasn’t born in coworking spaces. It came out of centuries of being a trust-and-logistics metropolis: shipping and insurance, finance and credit, media and advertising, real estate and law; industries where strangers transact at scale, where mistakes are expensive, and where the winners are the people who can reduce friction without increasing risk.
That’s why New York’s macroeconomic size is not just intriguing. NYCEDC describes the metro economy as about $2 trillion, roughly 9% of U.S. GDP. Big economies can absolutely produce bureaucracy; New York does that too, the difference is that New York’s bureaucracy sits adjacent to unusually dense clusters of buyers with budgets, compliance requirements, and internal ops teams. That adjacency is the soil where enterprise workflow startups grow. When your customer is a department, the product is never “an app.” The product is a measurable reduction in cycle time, leakage, or exposure.
New York also has a long cultural habit of pulling talent in, smashing backgrounds together, and then charging them rent until they do something useful. Immigration isn’t a vibe nor controversy; it’s an engine. This is a city where ambitious people arrive broke, then learn to talk their way into rooms they don’t deserve, until they do. It’s a training ground for sales, grit, marketing, and coalition-building, which is most of entrepreneurship once you stop romanticizing it.
New York’s inventions are largely “urban operating system” upgrades
The myth of innovation is the lone genius in a barn. Rather, that's not fair, that's a very accurate history of Silicon Valley. New York’s history is closer to: someone got tired of the world being inefficient and decided to fix the bottleneck that was blocking scale.
Start with vertical transportation. Elisha Otis publicly demonstrated the safety elevator concept in New York (the famous Crystal Palace demonstration "safe vertical space" believable), and that shift made skyscrapers commercially viable instead of just architectural bravado. You can’t have modern Manhattan (finance, law, media, dense headquarters) without monetizing height.
Then air conditioning: Willis Carrier’s “first modern” system traces directly to a Brooklyn printing problem (humidity wrecking print quality) so the invention wasn’t “comfort,” it was industrial reliability in a dense city. Carrier’s own materials still tie the origin to a Brooklyn printing plant and that humidity-control requirement. Solve a practical constraint, then scale the solution into infrastructure.
Then credit rails in, perhaps, the origin of FinTech. Diners Club’s story is literally a New York dinner problem: forgotten wallet embarrassment turned into generalized consumer charge-card infrastructure. “Trust at scale” is one of New York’s recurring inventions, and fintech is basically the modern continuation of that.
Then communications. Edwin Howard Armstrong’s work is deeply tied to Columbia and New York’s engineering culture; Columbia itself frames his contributions across regenerative circuits, superheterodyne, and FM. Again: dense cities demand systems that work reliably, loudly, and repeatably.
Notice the pattern: New York repeatedly produces inventions and companies that make dense economic life possible - transportation, climate control, credit, communications - and modern “New York categories” are software versions of the same thing: reduce friction, increase visibility, create auditability, and keep the machine running.
The economy: huge, yes but more important, it’s buyer-dense and risk-priced
A $2T metro economy is impressive, but it doesn’t automatically manufacture startups, it manufactures meetings. New York’s difference is the composition of its demand: finance and insurance (risk pricing), media and advertising (attention markets), real estate (capital stacking), law and compliance (rules and enforcement). Those sectors create a permanent appetite for software that makes decisions explainable and operations measurable.
Government matters here, but not the way people play politics. Government doesn’t “create wealth,” it decides whether entrepreneurs can, and New York is a great case study in both directions (enabling and constraining). Policy’s core role is to defend rights and establish rules that allow markets to allocate capital toward value.
In New York, you can see the enabling side in intentional “applied sciences” and commercialization initiatives. Cornell Tech came out of the Bloomberg-era Applied Sciences push (Cornell and Technion won the bid to build a major applied-science campus on Roosevelt Island). That’s government behaving like a competent allocator of conditions: land, capital, convening power, and a mandate to build an institution that produces talent and commercialization pathways.
At the state level, START-UP NY is another example of government trying to pull levers around university adjacency, offering tax benefits for approved businesses located on or near participating campuses. Whether such programs are perfectly executed is a separate debate; the point is that New York (state and city) has repeatedly tried to connect academia, incentives, and economic outcomes, instead of just cutting ribbons for another “innovation center.”
NYCEDC’s more direct interventions are also instructive: LifeSci NYC is framed as a $1B initiative intended to grow life sciences R&D and jobs. That’s New York acknowledging a truth most cities avoid: you don’t get a category by wishing; you get a category by building the institutions, capital pathways, and real estate that make it feasible.
By the way, readers in policy, economic development, or in office, we're here to advise you on this. Connect with our work for governments here.
Why NYC is already a fintech and insurtech hub, and why legaltech is “up for grabs”
When you want proof that New York is structurally advantaged in fintech, start with the state’s own framing: Empire State Development explicitly positions New York as a fintech powerhouse and reports billions in VC activity and a large base of fintech startups. Appreciate if you're elsewhere, this framing is one of the most important things you must do to help your entrepreneurs - you're not a tech hub, you're not a startup hotspot, you are something specific that matters.
Then look at the infrastructure that exists when buyers are nearby. The FinTech Innovation Lab (run by Accenture and the Partnership Fund for New York City) is clear about the model: it pairs selected startups with senior-level executives at major financial institutions and VCs, and it publishes program outcomes like proofs of concept and capital raised. That’s customer development institutionalized; most ecosystems say they want “more pilots.” New York operationalizes pilots as a repeatable machine.
Insurtech is the same logic with some paranoia; insurance is finance’s more anxious sibling: underwriting, claims, fraud, catastrophe modeling, compliance (paperwork and probabilistic risk sitting on legacy systems). That’s the kind of environment where software and now AI thrive, and the Lab itself explicitly runs insurtech alongside fintech in New York. The key advantage isn’t “talent” in the abstract; it’s that you can hire people who’ve actually done the job inside carriers, brokers, MGAs, and compliance functions. Sector experience turns “we automate insurance” into “we cut FNOL triage time and leakage” - only one of those sentences gets procurement to move (take note founders).
Legaltech is where this gets fun, because it’s not “behind,” it’s cautious by design. The legaltech wave that matters now isn’t marketplaces or templates; it’s operational infrastructure for in-house teams and AI-native compliance workflows. That’s why Checkbox’s framing is so on: the company positions itself as an “AI Legal Front Door,” capturing requests where business users already work and converting messy intake into structured, measurable workflow. Legaltech is “up for grabs” because there still isn’t a universally adopted operating system for legal work. Finance has ERPs, CRMs, and well-worn implementation playbooks. Legal departments often have a Frankenstein stack: email, intake forms, CLM, e-billing, knowledge bases, outside counsel portals, and whatever got purchased after the last conference. The winners will be the platforms that turn legal work into auditable operations.
If you’re hunting for incubators and accelerators in New York, you quickly notice the same sector-machine reality: they’re clustered around buyer bases, universities, and industry-specific pathways.
NYU Tandon’s Future Labs are a great example because they’re explicit about being a public-private partnership focused on incubation and economic impact. That matters because it’s not just “space,” it’s a commercialization mechanism connected to the city’s priorities.
Techstars NYC is one of the accelerator models plugged into the city’s category mix; Techstars is transparent about its standard accelerator structure and investment terms, and it continues to recruit cohorts that reflect NYC’s strengths (AI infrastructure, fintech, government tech, compliance, and more).
ERA (Entrepreneurs Roundtable Accelerator) is another anchor: an accelerator plus seed capital plus a network, and it publishes its own scale claims (hundreds of startups, billions raised).
Then you have “buyer-integrated” programs like the FinTech Innovation Lab, which is basically the opposite of demo day theater because it's structured access to senior decision-makers and proofs-of-concept pathways because the institutions themselves are involved.
Founder Institute's impact in New York, with Ken Parker, Lara Hejtmanek, and Reid Hamilton, is likely the best place for everyone to get involved if only because the mentor network in New York is immense. Programs are starting again soon so check it out as a founder, mentor, or potential partner.
On the funding side, New York has the full ladder, from angels to mega-funds. The most important point isn’t that there are many firms; it’s that New York’s investing base includes people who understand procurement cycles, regulation, and enterprise ops. Long ago as I moved to Texas, I gave a talk about how Silicon Valley investors seek scale, Texas' seek revenue analogous to putting a hole in the ground and drawing oil, and New York's are understandably drawn from their finance roots.
Angels: New York Angels is one of the most established organized groups; it frames itself as a long-running angel organization and points to early investments in notable companies.
Venture: the city has iconic firms and a deep bench across stages: Union Square Ventures, Insight Partners, Thrive Capital, Greycroft, FirstMark, Primary, Lerer Hippeau, IA Ventures, RRE, and more. Different lists exist and vary in quality, but even mainstream ecosystem roundups emphasize NYC’s density of VC shops.
And then there’s the “institutional adjacency” capital that makes New York different: corporate venture arms, private equity, hedge-fund talent migrating into venture, and sector specialists who treat regulated enterprise as a home turf rather than a scary place full of sales cycles.
This is also where the “Sector Machine” framing should shake economic developers awake: the most valuable capital isn’t money. It’s expert capital - operators, compliance leaders, risk managers, procurement veterans - because they are the ones who turn an innovation into something an institution can actually buy.
Ten considerations of startup economic development in New York, scored like an adult
Now let’s run the 10 Considerations and be honest about what New York does well and where it’s still stepping on rakes. This is work I do for cities throughout the world, here in a brief assessment, so if you're interested in exploring your own strengths and weaknesses, so you can address the gaps and reinforce the distinctions, let me know.
1) Overcoming silos through shared infrastructure and community. New York is simultaneously excellent and terrible here, which is very on-brand. Inside sectors, collaboration is natural because proximity to buyers and peers forces it: fintech people run into fintech people; legal ops people find each other because the city is dense and the career pathways overlap. Cross-sector, New York fractures into tribes. NYC’s advantage is that sector machines are strong enough that founders can still progress without a unified “community.” The improvement opportunity is citywide shared infrastructure: interoperable calendars, shared mentorship CRM, cross-sector founder services that don’t require joining the “right” clique. NYCEDC’s Venture Access NYC explicitly exists to build a more inclusive pipeline and address inequities; great signal, but the broader “shared rails” problem remains. Frankly, easily addressed, I'd put this infrastructure under the ecosystem and onboard entrepreneurs with assessments while connecting mentors throughout programs.
2) The missing middle. New York can start companies and it can scale companies, but it still has a widening gap between “seed-stage darlings” and “established institution.” Part of that is structural: enterprise sales cycles are naturally slow, and regulated verticals hinder premature scaling. The missing middle shows up when founders can raise a seed on narrative, then discover that procurement doesn’t care about narrative. New York’s fix is not more pitch events; it’s more structured commercialization pathways like the FinTech Innovation Lab model: proofs of concept, buyer access, and measurable outcomes. This might be one place in particular where startups should lean in more on public affairs and policy professionals so as to work the system.
3) Long-term funding and incentives for the ecosystem builders. New York is good at funding big initiatives (Cornell Tech; LifeSci NYC) because it can marshal public and philanthropic capital, but it also churns programs when political priorities change. The city’s strength is that major institutions are permanent, and they can underwrite long-term efforts. Cornell Tech’s origin story shows deliberate public-private planning, and LifeSci NYC shows scale. The improvement is consistency at the “middle” layer: sustained funding for the operators running programs that move founders from prototype to repeatable revenue. This is something EVERYWHERE needs to explore doing because it's the under-appreciated community builders doing the heavy lift of turning institutional startup programs into part of your culture.
4) Measuring outcomes, not activity; promoting success so progress is visible and repeatable. New York has pockets of strong measurement because regulated industries demand measurement. The gap is ecosystem reporting: too much is still framed as “jobs created” (good) and “events held” (noise) when it should also include more pilots executed, procurement cycles shortened, follow-on revenue, retention of scale-stage firms, and category leadership. NYCEDC’s economy reports are helpful at the macro level, but founders need micro-level signals.
5) Culture and behaviors that make collaboration natural, not forced. New York’s culture makes certain types of collaboration effortless: dealmaking, sales, partnerships, and talent poaching (yes, that’s collaboration in New York’s dialect, it's not a bad thing; it grows talent and transfers experience to where best allocated). The improvement seems to be making collaboration less dependent on social status and more dependent on shared outcomes: buyer-driven cohorts, operator-led working groups, and compliance playbook exchanges.
6) Including the full spectrum of talent. New York has enormous talent diversity; it also has some gatekeeping. Venture Access NYC exists precisely because inequities persist in who gets funded and who gets connected. The improvement moving forward from panels about diversity to building more on-ramps where under-networked founders can get buyer conversations, not just “mentorship.” The city can do this better than almost anywhere because the buyers are local.
7) Architecting environments that enable peak performance. New York’s environment is simultaneously a performance enhancer and a tax. The density creates serendipity and urgency; the cost and stress create burnout and short-term thinking. The best “peak performance” environments in NYC are not generic coworking spaces; they’re sector-specific hubs where founders can move fast because the right expertise is physically and socially nearby.
8) Aligning government, academia, and private sector around shared outcomes. New York has some of the strongest examples in the country and since I've covered this a bit already, let's just jump into being better: too many cities (including New York, sometimes) try to be “everything tech.” The winning approach is to pick a few compounding categories and align research, talent, procurement, and capital around them. New York City does this, as we've explored; double down.
9) Ecosystems accelerating innovation and reducing risk by unlocking local competitiveness. This is where New York is elite; the city’s startups tend to reduce risk and compress cycle time inside institutions, because the institutions are right there.
10) Global best practices adapted, not copied. New York’s best practice is not “be New York.” It’s: build sector machines by concentrating buyers, talent, regulation fluency, and capital into tight loops. That’s what other regions can adapt without pretending they’re Manhattan.
Where New York still needs to improve (yes, even New York)
New York’s biggest weakness is the same thing that makes it powerful: it’s so dense and so successful in certain categories that it can tolerate fragmentation and still win. That’s a dangerous complacency because it means too many founders fall through cracks that shouldn’t in a city with this much capital and expertise.
The second weakness is affordability and operational drag. When the cost of “existing while building” is extreme, founders bias toward faster narratives and earlier fundraising rather than slower, more durable customer development. That’s not a morality issue; it’s a survival response. Interestingly, it actually works both ways since more expensive cities tend to orient founders to the high bar of accomplishment, the need for resources, and the demands of focus on acquiring both. The fix isn’t rent control for startups, it's more buyer-integrated pilots, more sector accelerators with real procurement pathways, and more shared infrastructure that reduces the time wasted on networking games.
In both cases, expertise exists, so I'd advise getting in touch with Ken Parker, Lara Hejtmanek, and Reid Hamilton, or with government oriented startup development organizations such as what we're doing in Founder Institute.
Invention gets attention; specialization compounds it
New York’s story isn’t “a lot of startups.” It’s that the city repeatedly upgrades the operating system of dense economic life, and then it builds sector machines that turn those upgrades into companies. Appreciate in an assessment of your city, that Silicon Valley will always be the casino for technological upside; New York will always be the risk desk with an aggressive bonus structure. Neither replicable, nor should you be trying to copy either... In a world where AI is turning workflows into software faster than org charts can update, the cities that win won’t be the ones with the loudest brand, they’ll be the ones with the tightest loops between innovation, buyers, and specialization - figure that out.
