Leeds Readies its Crystal Ball for Annual Economic Forecast

Entrepreneurship, technology and major headwinds all figure to play leading roles at the Business Economic Outlook Forum. ââ
Richard Wobbekind, foreground, of Leeds and Elizabeth Garner, state demographer, present the 2022 economic forecast at last year's forum. Last year's forecast focused on emerging from the pandemic; many of those themesâlike inflation and labor shortagesâreturn for an encore this year.ĚýBelow, Erick Mueller works with fledgling founders in a Rural Entrepreneurship Workshop event.ĚýĚýĚý Ěý
Entrepreneurs will face plenty of challenges going into 2023âbut for those seeking investors, the picture is perhaps not as dire as you might expect.Ěý
12:30 p.m.: Check in
1 p.m.: Welcomes, state of the CU system
1:15 p.m.: 2023 Colorado economic outlook
2:30 p.m.: Keynote panel on disruptive technologies
3:45 p.m.: Industry breakout sessions
4:45 p.m.: Networking reception
According to conventional wisdom, rising interest rates will limit investor appetite and resources, so theyâll be more selective about the businesses they support. But Erick Mueller, executive director of the Deming Center for Entrepreneurship at the Leeds School of Business, said thereâs a lag in institutional money that will help founders weather the storm.Ěý
âFrom the venture capital perspective, theyâve already raised their funds, so they still have money theyâre looking to invest,â Mueller said. âIt will make it harder for them to raise their next fund, but they still have money on the sidelines that theyâre ready to deploy.â
Thatâs a topic Mueller hopes to touch on in greater detail next month, when he leads a panel discussion on tech, trends and tales in entrepreneurship at the annual Business Economic Outlook Forum.Ěý
âThere are a lot of great ideas out there, but in a climate like ours, you need to be scrappier and more creative,â he said, sharing a story from his latest venture, Funovation, which specializes in developing fun attractions that can be deployed in virtually any space. The company launched just ahead of the subprime slide that triggered a recession.Ěý
âYou've got to be scrappierâ
âWe didnât have to be too creativeâuntil things dried up,â Mueller said. âThen, we had to lean on our vendors in different ways to stay afloat. Weâre not in what Iâd call a contraction right now, but youâve got to be scrappier.âĚý
The entrepreneurship panel is just one feature of the Business Economic Outlook Forum, which is headlined by a deep dive into the state and national economies. The presentationâheadlined by Richard Wobbekind, senior economist and faculty director of Leedsâ Business Research Division, and Elizabeth Garner, state demographerâprovides a forecast for each of Coloradoâs main industry categories while offering a macro view on larger trends.
The forum always draws a crowd, but should be especially popular this year in the face of serious headwindsâinflation, interest rates, supply chains, worker shortages and so on.Ěý
âWeâre helping connect the dots for business and government,â said Brian Lewandowski, BRDâs executive director, who said the forecast is compiled in partnership with more than 100 private and public leaders across Colorado. âWe look at these larger stories, like rising interest rates, and show all the places where we expect they will create impact throughout the economy.âĚý
In addition to the forecast, the event will feature a keynote panel on disruptive technologies and industry breakouts on real estate and finance and water, in addition to the entrepreneurship session, which also will have a tech flavor.
âOne of the threads weâll be looking at is technology in our livesâthe positives and the negatives, as well as the opportunities that maybe havenât been fully appreciated yet,â Mueller said. âItâs fun, looking in the crystal ball with a group of really smart people to predict whatâs next for robotics, quantum computing and nano.âĚý
Heâs got one prediction already: As they have in the past, entrepreneurs will continue to lead the way through this challenging economy.
âFounders are very well equipped for times of uncertainty, just in terms of tolerance for risk and ambiguity,â Mueller said. âThey see opportunities where other folks may only see the downside.â