Here in the Greater Seattle region, we have unlocked innovations that are changing the world, and it’s high time we let the world know.
You may have heard that David Baker won the Nobel Prize for his groundbreaking research and commercialization at the University of Washington’s Institute for Protein Design.
It may have caught your attention that Greater Seattle has the highest concentration of fusion energy companies on the planet, or that we have the highest concentration of AI talent in North America. You may even have marveled at the region’s aerospace supply chain, the largest in the US.
Instead of just telling you about this incredible diversity of innovation, we’re delighted to show you. Greater Seattle Partners, with our partners at GeekWire, Microsoft, the Technology Alliance, and the Washington Technology Industry Association, invite you to explore this map of our innovation ecosystem. We believe the “secret sauce” behind our leading startups shouldn’t be such a well-kept secret.
Welcome to Innovate State, where ideas meet world-class talent, committed investors, and an entrepreneurial mindset that transforms industries. This map highlights the dynamic ecosystem behind the 528 fast-growing startups that have made the “GeekWire 200” list since 2015, showcasing the deep interconnections between founders, employers, universities, investors, and incubators that fuel their success.
SECRET SAUCE INGREDIENTS 1 AND 2: Founders are the beating heart of this startup ecosystem, and world-class anchor institutions attract and spin off talent and ideas and invest in and acquire startups.
Fun Facts:
- Over 1100 founders created these 528 companies, with 772 connections mapped between their educational and employment backgrounds, investors, and commercialization centers (the “planets” in this map).
- The top 5 “planets” are responsible for 54% of these connections:
- University of Washington (149)
- Microsoft (103)
- Madrona Venture Group (63)
- Amazon (53)
- Techstars (51)
- Shout-out to the top 10 “planets,” collectively responsible for 73% of the connections:
- Google (30), PSL Ventures (20), AI2 Incubator (18), Vulcan/Cercano (17)
- Three-way tie: Alliance of Angels, Ascend.VC, and Portland Seed Fund (14 connections each)
- 24% of the startups (127) have been acquired, and 94 of them have made acquisitions—fueling the flywheel of innovation.
The data revealed in Innovate State underscores the economic trends we love to track at Greater Seattle Partners:
- 291 University of Washington spinoffs
- $24.5B in venture capital invested in Seattle-area companies (2021-2024)
- Check out these infographics for the region’s leadership in all things AI, biotech, cleantech, and more (and still more on our resources page!).



INGREDIENTS 3 AND 4: Cross-sector convergence and collaboration. With Microsoft’s Azure and Amazon’s AWS, we have already earned the moniker “cloud capital” of the world and are well-known for driving enterprise software innovation and productivity. But what further distinguishes this region is our commitment to people and the planet, with life-saving research, AI and cleantech permeating every sector of innovation, and startups representing a mash-up of disciplines. Consider these examples:
- A-Alpha Bio: a collaboration between University of Washington’s Institute for Protein Design and Center for Synthetic Biology, this biotechnology company is revolutionizing the field of protein-protein interactions through machine learning and synthetic biology. Its platforms can enable researchers to discover new drugs more quickly and accurately, including for infectious diseases and conditions like cancer. Funders include two more significant planets on this map: Madrona Venture Group and the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation.
- Stoke Space is a stellar example of the region’s leadership in green aerospace; having most recently closed a $260M funding round, they’re developing 100% reusable rockets, aiming to make space travel more affordable and sustainable. Co-founders Andy Lapsa and Tom Feldman have deep aerospace expertise, including at GeekWire 200 list-er Blue Origin, and were honored as “Uncommon Thinkers” at Greater Seattle Partners’ annual awards event in partnership with GeekWire.

- One of three unicorns in the Techstars Seattle 2011 class, Fintech phenom Remitly enables immigrants to affordably send payments home. Before starting Remitly, Matt Oppenheimer worked at Barclays Bank, while co-founder Josh Hug was a former Microsoft engineer. Hug also co-founded Shelfari, a startup funded by the Alliance of Angels, which was in turn acquired by Amazon in 2008. Remitly climbed to #3 on the GeekWire200 list in 2020 and “graduated” from it in 2022 with their IPO.
These examples hint at the incredible convergence of technologies and collaboration across institutions that are hallmarks of the Greater Seattle innovation economy. Dive into the 528 companies on this map, the 37 “planets” in this ecosystem, and learn more about the Uncommon Thinkers and deeply connected community that power Innovate State!