As my Linkedin profile says, I'm an IT geek that likes to start things. I have had the opportunity to work with and lead successful companies during the startup, commercialization, and exit phase. I am co-founder of Startup NL Corp., a not-for-profit organization that delivers events and programs to entrepreneurs; helping them accelerate their ideas during the critical startup phase and I'm involved with other early stage technology startups.
Recently, Carol Moreira of
entrevestor.com contacted me and asked if I would be interested in an interview with entrevestor.com. They were starting to profile Community-Builders and had highlighted me as one of those people. Of course I agreed and the following is the article she published.
Community-Builder Jason Janes by Carol Moreira 
Itβs been two years since Jason Janes and Roger Power began
StartupNL as an opportunity for isolated entrepreneurs to network and gain mutual support. Meeting in borrowed boardrooms and local restaurants, those first get-togethers attracted around 40. Today, over 200 members meet to find mentors, space and funding. For Janes, who self-identifies as βa typical IT geek who likes to start things,β the success of StartupNL is a joy and a personal triumph. Having always been entrepreneurial himself, Janes, currently chief operating officer of tech venture, Geo-wise, knows the difficulties of the lifestyle. βStartup communities matter because all entrepreneurs experience similar problems, similar successes and similar isolation,β he said by phone from St. Johnβs. βThey need people who know what itβs like when thereβs no money left in your bank account. People who will say, βDonβt worry; Iβve been out of money 20 times.β It gets lonely, the navigation gets difficult, but people can help guide each other.β

Since the formation of StartupNL, the Rockβs scene has burgeoned. βYou see people getting together to form new businesses all the time as they realize they donβt have to have a killer idea, just an idea that can gain some traction.β Entrepreneurs across the province are benefiting from events like last Novemberβs Startup Weekend, which allowed innovators to gather to ramp up their ideas. Similarly, a new demo-focused event will be held during the upcoming NL Innovation Week, in partnership with Newfoundland and Labrador Association of Technology Industries. βOur goal for this year is to help facilitate in Newfoundlandβs third largest city, Corner Brook, where entrepreneurs are trying to get things started,β Janes said. Now 41, Janes has been entrepreneurial since a young age. At 17, he operated a strawberry farm where he increased production after asking nearby farmers for advice. βWhat I quickly found out is that if you ask for advice, people help you.β Growing up in a small town on the west coast of Newfoundland (Deer Lake) with not a lot to do, he learned to write code and earn an independent living at an early age. He has been building mobile apps with a focus on mobile enterprise solutions since the mid-1990s. βMobile applications with a geospatial twist are my passion. I donβt always get it right at first, but that doesnβt stop me improving. Iβve helped develop mobile solutions to business problems, such as field sales and service, route accounting, and direct store delivery.β A few years ago, he and Power teamed up with Dr. Jim Wyse to commercialize geospatial patents for optimizing and retrieving location-aware data. βOur patents improve the speeds by which locations are found. In our case, increased data doesnβt increase the length of the search.β The companyβs latest project is a mobile app that will allow users to quickly find the emergency response centres closest to them. Starting out, Janes studied business and computer studies at Newfoundlandβs College of the North Atlantic and later became chief technology officer at Moncton startup BelTek Systems Design. After BelTek was sold in 2008, he returned to St. Johnβs and worked as a project manager for various IT companies. Power says Janesβs community-building is appreciated by other entrepreneurs. βJason combines enthusiasm, love of technology and a solid sense of how to commercialize new ideas,β he said. Despite his successes, Janes thinks he could have accomplished more at an earlier age if heβd had a support network. βI had to go from thinking that having a job was what was important. If Iβd had a support organization like StartupNL when I was 20, I would have pursued my passions sooner.β