Young people, startups fuel New Orleans’ recovery — will it be enough?

A decade after Hurricane Katrina decimated New Orleans, the city has unexpectedly emerged as one of the fastest growing hubs for entrepreneurship in the country. New businesses are launching at twice the rate they were before the storm. Between 2011 and 2013, the rate of new business growth was 64% higher than the national average. Venture capital funding, virtually nonexistent pre-Katrina, rose to $15.51 per capita by 2010 and has doubled since then, according to the Data Center, an independent research firm covering Southeast Louisiana.

A variety of factors have driven that growth, not the least of which has been an influx of young newcomers. In 2013, 7% of the population in New Orleans had moved there only in the past year, up from 3% in 2004. More than half came from outside Louisiana. Today, more than one in four New Orleans residents are between age the ages of 20 and 34, up from one in five in 2000. And the number of people living in single-person households rose from 27% to 32% over the same period. Groups that track small business growth in the city don't keep record of their owners' ages, but city leaders we spoke with agree young people are playing a vital role in the New Orleans’ entrepreneurial renaissance.

“We all realize we need to have a vibrant small business environment for all of New Orleans,” says Quentin Messer, president of New Orleans’ Business Alliance. “I think we should not pat ourselves on the back yet. But you now have people in the room engaged in solving this collaboratively in a way that hasn’t happened before.”

Entrepreneurs we interviewed say they are attracted to New Orleans both because of the city’s financial appeal — labor costs are low and housing, while getting pricier, is still cheap relative to cities like San Francisco and New York — and the opportunity to be part of one of what is arguably one of the most dramatic comeback stories in the country. From environmental concerns over the city's declining coastal wetlands to systemic poverty and educational inequality, there is no shortage of problems for scrappy startups to tackle.

Houston native Crystal McDonald, 33, studied economics and finance at Dillard University, a historically African-American school in New Orleans, before moving to Chicago to work as a banker and earn her MBA at the University of Chicago. Love brought her back to New Orleans in 2012 (she married her college sweetheart) and rich business opportunities have kept her there. McDonald and her husband launched a startup, GoToInterview, a virtual job interview service, in 2013 after they struggled to find reliable part-time workers for the fast-food franchise they ran together. In a city where the majority of jobs are in high turnover industries like restaurants and tourism, they saw a need for a simple way for employers to vet job applicants without having to sift through paper applications or wait for viable candidates to work through their doors. They quickly found support from the city’s burgeoning startup network.