The Pathing Playbook

March 4, 2026 in Article

The Pathing Playbook

Detroit • Ann Arbor • Grand Rapids • Kalamazoo • Flint • Traverse City / Northern Michigan

This is a practical checklist for plugging into a new startup community in 30 days. It’s built for how ecosystems actually work: recurring rooms, organizer feeds, small-group trust, and give-first moves that earn you real introductions.

Print this, put it on your desk, and treat each quest like a mini-game. Each one has a clear finish line so you know when you’re done.

Quick Start (15 minutes)

[ ] Choose a primary city and a secondary city for the next 30 days.

[ ] Follow 5 organizers and 5 connectors. Turn on notifications for the organizers.

[ ] Put 3 events on your calendar for the next 14 days (at least 2 recurring).

Rule: show up before you optimize. Consistency beats intensity.

Path 1: Build Your Signal Stack (Social First)

Do:

[ ] Pick one primary city and one secondary city to track for the next 30 days.

[ ] Follow 5 organizers that consistently post events and turn on notifications.

[ ] Follow 5 connectors (founders, operators, investors) who regularly share local intel.

Done when:

[ ] You have 3 events on your calendar in the next 14 days (at least 2 recurring series).

[ ] You can name 5 organizers and 5 connectors from memory.

Pro move: Follow key organizers on Eventbrite, Luma and/or LinkedIn so new events hit your inbox before static calendars update.

Path 2: Follow the Connectors (Influencers = Intel Layer)

Do:

[ ] Create a private list called “Michigan Connectors” (LinkedIn list, X list, or Notes doc).

[ ] Engage publicly: leave 5 useful comments (share a resource, make an intro, or add context).

Done when:

[ ] You have a list of 15 people + 10 orgs you can reliably point others to.

[ ] You have made 2 warm introductions for other people.

Pro move: DM the easy question: “I’m new here. Who are two people I should meet – and which room is best to meet them in?”

Path 3: Choose a Home Base (One Room to Become a Regular)

Do:

[ ] Visit 3 hubs/coworking spaces in your city (tour, day pass, or event). Search for Innovation Hubs/Orgs in your vertical on michigan.pathing.co

[ ] Pick one as your default “drop-in” location for the next month.

Done when:

[ ] You have worked there twice, learned 2 staff names, and attended 1 recurring event there.

[ ] You can introduce two members to each other without thinking.

Pro move: Ask the community manager: “Which event has the highest intro density – where people actually meet each other?”

Path 4: Run the Small-Room Circuit (High Trust, Fast Access)

Do:

[ ] Attend 2 smaller recurring meetups where you can talk to most of the room.

[ ] Use a simple conversation loop: What are you building? What’s the constraint? Who are you trying to meet?

Done when:

[ ] You’ve exchanged contact info with 6 people and scheduled 2 follow-ups.

[ ] You’ve delivered 1 introduction within 48 hours.

Pro move: Small rooms are not “less important” – they are practice labs where you become familiar fast.

Path 5: Hit One Big-Tent Week (Cross-City Surface Area)

Do:

[ ] Choose one ecosystem “week” or major multi-day convening to attend this year.

[ ] Pick one identity track (e.g., mobility, health, community, climate) and stick to it.

Done when:

[ ] You attended 1 week event and left with 10 names + 3 meetings already scheduled.

[ ] You posted a short recap that highlights 3 people and 3 learnings.

Pro move: The goal is not more sessions; it’s more follow-ups.

Path 6: Make It a Streak (Consistency Beats Intensity)

Do:

[ ] Attend 1 event per week for 4 weeks (same series if possible).

[ ] Do follow-ups the next day: 2 messages, 1 intro, 1 ask.

Done when:

[ ] You have a 4-week streak and at least 8 follow-ups completed.

[ ] At least 1 person recognizes you and starts the conversation first.

Pro move: Don’t over-prepare. Attend once. Introduce yourself to 3 people. Repeat.

Path 7: Get a Backstage Pass (Volunteer Your Way In)

Do:

[ ] Volunteer for one event (check-in, speaker support, timekeeping, mic runner).

[ ] Ask the organizer who else is helping and introduce yourself to the team.

Done when:

[ ] You’ve done 1 volunteer shift and gained 5 new contacts.

[ ] You received at least 1 inbound message afterward (thank you, follow-up, intro).

Pro move: Choose roles that force interaction; avoid roles that keep you hidden.

Path 8: Pick Your Guild (Sector Room + Identity Room)

Do:

[ ] Join 1 sector room (mobility, health, SaaS, hardware, etc.) and attend twice.

[ ] Join 1 identity/community room (women in tech, Black tech, students, devs, operators) and attend twice.

Done when:

[ ] You can name the 3 most active organizers in each room.

[ ] You have 2 peers you can text for advice without it feeling weird.

Pro move: Ask every room: “Where do founders go when they’re stuck?”

Path 9: Pitch Once (Even If It’s Ugly)

Do:

[ ] Attend one pitch night and ask 1 thoughtful question, or pitch a problem you’re exploring.

[ ] Keep it simple: problem, who it hurts, what you tried, what you need.

Done when:

[ ] You’ve pitched once OR applied once OR participated once (question counts).

[ ] You leave with 3 pieces of actionable feedback.

Pro move: Pitching gets you mapped into everyone’s mental model. Winning is optional.

Path 10: Map the Money (But Don’t Start With Investors)

Do:

[ ] List 5 capital paths relevant to your stage (grants, angels, pre-seed, accelerators, revenue).

[ ] Take one real action: office hours, intro request, application, or deck review.

Done when:

[ ] You have 5 capital paths + 3 names per path.

[ ] You completed 1 action that moves you closer to capital.

Pro move: Ask: “What would have to be true for this to be fundable in the next 12-18 months?”

Path 11: Do One Pilot Move (Customers > Conversations)

Do:

[ ] Draft a one-page pilot concept (goal, timeline, success metrics).

[ ] Have 1 conversation with a potential pilot partner (customer, campus, manufacturer, city).

Done when:

[ ] You’ve shared the 1-pager with 2 people and received edits.

[ ] You’ve identified one path to a paid pilot or proof-of-value.

Pro move: Bring a 30/60/90-day plan. It turns “cool idea” into “real project someone can say yes to.”

Path 12: Tap Universities Without Becoming a Tourist

Do:

[ ] Attend 1 campus-adjacent event or demo day and meet 2 builders (students, researchers, alumni founders).

[ ] Ask what real-world problems capstone teams or labs want.

Done when:

[ ] You have 2 builder contacts and one follow-up meeting booked.

[ ] You identified 1 pathway to a pilot, capstone, or research collaboration.

Pro move: The best campus question: “What teams are looking for real problems right now and who decides?”

Path 13: Cross-City Loops (Michigan Is a Networked Ecosystem)

Do:

[ ] Attend one event outside your home city (Detroit, Ann Arbor, GR, Kalamazoo, Flint, Traverse City).

[ ] Create a three-person cross-city thread (text/WhatsApp/Signal) and share one opportunity per week.

Done when:

[ ] You made 2 cross-city introductions.

[ ] You have a “route” – a repeatable loop of rooms across cities.

Pro move: Pick a route you can repeat quarterly and anchor it to existing weeks (a2Tech360, Tech Week GR, Michigan Tech Week).

Path 14: Contribute to the Map (How Everyone Owns It)

Do:

[ ] Submit 5 updates (new event, corrected info, new connector, updated link, new resource).

[ ] Refer 2 people to Pathing who will actually use it.

Done when:

[ ] You’ve submitted 5 updates and 2 referrals.

[ ] You have a habit: “patch notes” once per month.

Pro move: Publish monthly patch notes: what changed, what’s new, what to watch and tag the people you mention.

30-Day Challenge Scoreboard

Hit 70 points to be “plugged in.” Hit 100 points to be a regular.

Week

Tasks

Points

Week 1 — Signals

Follow 10 orgs + 10 connectors; add 3 events to your calendar

20

Week 2 — Rooms

Attend 1 small-room event; do 1 cowork/community day; make 1 intro

25

Week 3 — Consistency

Repeat a recurring series; complete 6 follow-ups; volunteer once

25

Week 4 — Leverage

Attend 1 event outside your city; pitch/apply/ask a question; submit 5 map updates

30

Starter Follow List (People + Feeds)

Use this as a starting point. The real goal is to build your own list from the rooms you attend. This list trends towards high-signal founders and operators plus a few core feeds that consistently surface opportunities.

Statewide / Cross-City

• Ted Velie — Midwest House

• Ben Marchionna — MEDC ecosystem leadership

• Pete Martin — PitchMI / MSU Research Foundation

• MVCA — investor convening + events

• Monica Wheat — ecosystem architect + investor + founder support

• Michigan Growth Office — economic programs + entrepreneur support

• Alison Todak — VP, Entrepreneurship & Innovation, MEDC (statewide capital programs)

• Renaissance Venture Capital — UnDemo Day + venture network

• Michigan Founders Fund — founder-led statewide network + pre-accelerator

• Michigan Tech Week — statewide tech + startup convening

• Michigan Central / Newlab — tech/innovation Hub + innovation district

Michigan Economic Development Corporation (MEDC) – business support + services + access to capital



Detroit

• Mark de la Vergne — Michigan Central / innovation district

• Monica Wheat — ecosystem architect + investor + founder support

• Amanda Lewan — Bamboo (community + coworking in 5 locations)

• James Feagin — angel + venture community leadership

• Ned Staebler — TechTown Detroit

• Johnnie & Alexa Turnage — co-founders, Black Tech Saturdays

• Venture 313 — next stage entrepreneur support & acceleration

• Start Studio — early stage entrepreneur support & pre-accelerator

• Bamboo Detroit — Co-working and Ecosystem Support

• Detroit Startup Fund — non-dilutive grants for startup founders

• Black Tech Saturdays — inclusive tech + founder community

• Detroit Venture Partners — venture fund + founder support / innovation partners

• DEGC/Detroit Means Business — small business and startup support

• Rock Ventures — connected companies + founder support + innovation district

• Invest Detroit — venture fund + founder support + programs



Ann Arbor

• Paul Krutko — Ann Arbor SPARK

• Mike Flanagan — VP, Capital Programs, Ann Arbor SPARK

• A2 New Tech — founder pitches + feedback

• Michigan Founders Fund — Ann Arbor base

• Bamboo Ann Arbor — Co-working and Ecosystem Support

 
• Ann Arbor SPARK — events + bootcamps + capital programs

• A2Tech360 / Tech Trek — Ann Arbor SPARK annual event series

• University of Michigan Center for Entrepreneurship/Zell Lurie —Tech & Innovation Hub + Entrepreneurship Support



Grand Rapids

• Start Garden — pitch nights + venture studio + Entrepreneur Support

• 5X5 Night — recurring pitch event series

• Tech Week Grand Rapids — multi-day annual convening

• Bamboo Grand Rapids — events + coworking + Innovation Hub



Kalamazoo

• Carl Brown — Startup Zoo

• Southwest Michigan First — Catalyst Center programming

• Kalamazoo Forward — Entrepreneur Support

• Kalamazoo Forward Ventures — venture fund + pitch competition



Flint

• Brandee Cooke-Brown — 100K Ideas

• Ferris Wheel Flint — coworking + startup hub

• 100K Ideas — ideation, prototyping, and pitch programs

• Flint & Genessee Economic Alliance — events + resources



Traverse City / Northern Michigan

• Northern Michigan Startup Week

• 20Fathoms — events + coworking + incubator

• Northern Michigan Startup Week — multi-day annual startup convening

• Venture North — capital + business support

• Laura Galbraith — Venture North


Reference Links

Clickable sources for events, hubs, and connectors mentioned in this playbook.




Build the Path to Capital, Customers, and Champions.

Opportunity doesn’t scale on intention alone—it scales on clear pathways and coordinated execution. We design the infrastructure that helps ecosystems convert relationships into pilots, revenue, credibility, and capital readiness.

Venture Catalysts is a 501(c)(3) whose work sits at the intersection of people, place, and opportunity.

By browsing this website, you agree to our privacy policy.
I Agree