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INTRODUCTION


The Information Technology (IT) Industry has a large influence on Missouri’s economy, with the service sector accounting for 9 out of 10 direct jobs with the remaining 10 percent of direct jobs in the manufacturing sector. Jobs and sales generated by the industry itself (direct effects) combined with the spin-offs (indirect effects) account for over $17 billion in Gross State Product. The IT Industry accounted for 91,139 direct jobs and 118,532 indirect jobs in 2006. This resulted in a total employment impact of 209,670 jobs.

Missouri is a leader in the “service sector industry,” making communications and electronic components function together as a system. Consequently, telecommunications, which remains at the forefront of the information age, is important to Missouri. This sub-sector of the IT Industry is primarily engaged in delivering voice, data, graphics, and video at ever increasing speeds and increasing the number of ways we communicate.

Wire-line telephone communication, once the primary service of the industry but still the largest sector of telecommunications, is witnessing the predominance of wireless communication services and cable and satellite program distribution. While voice used to be the main type of data transmitted over the wires and cables, wired telecommunications service now includes the transmission of graphic, video, and electronic data primarily over the Internet.

 

MAJOR COMPANIES


3M

AT&T

Boeing

Daugherty Systems

Emerson                   

Maritz

Mid-West Microsoft

Monsanto                             

Newberry Group                  

Jack Henry and Associates                                                

Xiolink                       

 

KEY FACILITIES


Missouri’s Innovation Centers

Information Technology entrepreneurs come primarily from employed professionals, in contrast to life science ventures coming from research-based institutions. These entrepreneurs form companies primarily around innovative application of information technology for existing and new business-models as opposed to intellectual property.

Missouri state-supported Innovation Centers include 10 centers across the state. Theses facilities provide a range of management and technical assistance during the early stages of development for new technology-based business ventures. Services include market research and strategies; technology assessment; business planning; financial packaging; research and development; business management; patent and licensing consulting; preliminary patent searches; and prototype development.

 

Missouri Research Parks

Center of Research, Technology, and Entrepreneurial Exchange (CORTEX)

St. Louis, MO

CORTEX, in mid-town St. Louis, will enable collaboration between all the area research institutions. CORTEX is intended to house companies graduating from the incubator and companies attracted to the region due to the proximity to the research institutions.

 

Missouri Research Park

Chesterfield, MO

The Missouri Research Park is owned and managed by the University of Missouri System, occupying 130 acres with high-tech and research facilities, housing 17 tenant companies, and employing more than 2,000 people.

 

University of Missouri Technology Park at Fort Leonard Wood

Fort Leonard Wood, MO

The Technology Park is located on an active Army post. The 62-acre park was developed by the University of Missouri and the Missouri Department of Economic Development (DED), with the backing of Fort Leonard Wood. The Tech Park collaborates with the University of Missouri on technology transfer and is focused on biochemical, homeland security and GIS projects.

 

Midwest Research Institute (MRI)

Kansas City, MO

MRI, headquartered in Kansas City, recently established a 160-acre research farm near Butler, Missouri. The new facility serves as an extension of MRI’s field station in Grandview, Missouri and supports the expansion in the research of new technologies in crops, farming practices, agriculture products and the growing interest in improved nutrition and natural products. MRI is a key partner in the development of the proposed incubator in Kansas City under Governor Blunt’s Lewis and Clark Discovery Initiative.

 

Discovery Ridge

Columbia, MO

Discovery Ridge is a new research park to be located at the University of Missouri (MU) College of Agriculture, Food and Natural Resource’s South farm. Discovery Ridge will focus on leveraging MU’s resources in life sciences, including the areas of agriculture, health, veterinary medicine, bioengineering, nutrition, biology and environmental services.

 

Missouri has more than a dozen incubator facilities located throughout the state. These facilities provide divided units of space on a leased basis for a limited time to typically small start-up businesses. The incubator provides business development and support services for use by the tenants that commonly include: clerical support, telephone answering service, necessary business machines, and networking opportunities.

 

RESEARCH – ADVANCING THE INDUSTRY


Missouri’s universities are working hard to expand and promote new technologies within the business environment: 

High Performance Computing Center

University of Missouri – St. Louis

This center, located at a St. Louis information technology incubator, is designed to enhance Missouri’s entrepreneurial environment and to serve as a catalyst for innovation and entrepreneurship in the area of information technology.

 

Institute for Entrepreneurship

University of Missouri - Kansas City

The University has shown increased support for entrepreneurship through the creation of the Institute for Entrepreneurship. The Institute’s vision is to be the world's leading research and education institute for entrepreneurship and innovation.

 

Missouri Innovation Center (MIC)

University of Missouri – Columbia

MIC focuses on entrepreneurial clients refining and preparing new technologies for market.