portsEngine.com co-founder Justin Kaufenberg worked for several years before taking a salary at the Minneapolis company, a provider of data services to athletic clubs and leagues.
"At particularly dire times, we'd get a new credit card to pay wages to our first employees," he remembers.
Along the way, he learned about working with banks, finding angel investors and setting up legal infrastructure. Patience, he said, became a requirement.
In 2016, more than a dozen years after its start, NBC bought SportsEngine and Kaufenberg became a venture capitalist helping other companies get off the ground.
We asked him and some other founders of startup companies in the Twin Cities for practical ways to get a business started. Here's some of their advice:
Find mentors and tools
Whether you are trying to find mentors, build a website or learn about angel investing, the Internet is a place to start.
Startup veterans advise turning to LinkedIn and Twitter to find new connections in your industry. "A fairly simple Google search will help you find angel investors," Kaufenberg said.
Morning Consult co-founder Michael Ramlet turned to mentors from his undergraduate days at the Carlson School of Management at the University of Minnesota as he built what's now a global decision-intelligence company.