Jeff Shulman, marketing professor at the University of Washington’s Foster School of Business, after recording the GeekWire Podcast in his office on the UW campus this week. (GeekWire Photo / Todd Bishop)

What’s at stake for Seattle in times of dramatic change?

University of Washington Foster School of Business marketing professor Jeff Shulman has spent years studying that question, as host of the Seattle Growth Podcast, director of the Product Management Center, and a civic voice on issues ranging from housing affordability to the campaign to bring back the Sonics.

On this episode of the GeekWire Podcast, Shulman joins us to talk about Seattle’s place in the global AI boom, why the city has struggled to produce superstar startups, what AI means for marketing and education, and how civic identity, tech, business, and sports have fueled the region in the past.

Shulman reflects on Seattle’s history of tech booms, noting that past eras led by Boeing, Microsoft, and Amazon created powerful local ecosystems and virtuous cycles that attracted talent and spurred innovation.

It happened most recently with the rise of the cloud, led by Amazon Web Services.

But the dynamic isn’t repeating itself in the current AI wave, with the industry’s center of gravity forming in the Bay Area instead. Two GeekWire stories this week underscored the problem: one highlighting Seattle’s absence from the top AI startup funding rounds, the other examining the regulatory hurdles preventing robotaxis in the region.

“We still have Amazon and Microsoft, but we have not become the Al capital of the world like we should have,” Shulman said. “We’re not seeing that virtuous cycle with Al yet, and it’s a missed opportunity.”

RELATED LINKS

Also check out the Seattle Growth Podcast and “On the Brink” documentary. 

Subscribe to GeekWire in Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you listen.

Edited by Curt Milton

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