TechSquare Labs, a technology innovation hub for startups and corporations, has merged withOpportunity Hub, a diverse and inclusive entrepreneurship center and multicampus co-working space. The two Atlanta-based startup hubs have come together for the purpose of increasing diversity in the technology sector.

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Opportunity Hub’s Founder and CEO Rodney Sampson, together with TechSquare Labs co-founder and angel investor Paul Judge, will focus on creating curriculum, products and solutions to increase diversity and inclusion in tech; build a platform to start, accelerate, incubate and fund diverse co-founding teams; help corporations meet their own internal strategies, goals, and initiatives in this area; and bridge the divide between corporate innovation and supplier diversity.

Opportunity Hub produces more than 300 educational events and classes per year, has pre-accelerated 25 startups, and awarded more than $60,000 in code school scholarships. The startups in the Opportunity Hub ecosystem have raised over $5,000,000 in pre-seed and seed capital. TechSquare Labs offers 25,000-square-feet of work space, including an incubator, venture fund, and corporate innovation programming in Technology Square, an Opportunity Zone and ground zero for innovation in the Southeast. The team uses their prime location and business experience to leverage connections between corporations, technical co-founders, and educational institutions accelerating startups and fostering innovation within large enterprises.

“Over the last three years, Opportunity Hub has led the nation in launching diverse and inclusive startup and technology ecosystems garnering greater access to vetted mentorship and early stage capital for minorities and women,” notes Sampson who joins the TechSquare Labs team as the chief of diversity and inclusion initiatives. “TechSquare Lab’s Co-founders Paul Judge and Allen Nance have a proven track record of starting and investing in scalable companies that create jobs and increase shareholder value. Their willingness to invest in the building of a diverse and inclusive end-to-end technology ecosystem demonstrates their commitment to developing Atlanta’s economy and our city’s attractiveness to the global markets.”

Atlanta is home to some of the largest coding schools in the Southeast, a quarter million higher education students, and two of the top five historically black colleges and universities. This talent pool, combined with the burgeoning startup scene and concentration of large corporations, creates an unparalleled opportunity to Build Something from Nothing at TechSquare Labs. TechSquare Labs’ first diversity initiative includes the launch of a pilot code school and co-founder’s college in collaboration with Atlanta’s Workforce Development Agency. Led by Michael Sterling, the Atlanta Workforce Development Agency has committed up to $200,000 toward the training of new software engineers (coders) from underserved and underrepresented communities in the City of Atlanta.

The code school and co-founder’s college will be led by Sampson, who has a long track record of creating inclusive platforms and advocating for minorities and women in the technology market. He was awarded the Commerce Department’s Minority Business Development Agency 2015 Access To Capital Award.

“Rodney is an innovator, pioneer and respected authority in the inclusive innovation space,” says Judge. “He is the perfect person to lead our diversity initiatives to not only build companies, but also opportunities for everyone in our community and beyond.”

No stranger to Black Enterprise’s TechConneXt Summit and Entrepreneurs Summit audiences, Sampson also is known for creating the diversity and inclusion initiatives for Mark Burnett Productions (One Three Media), the Executive Producers of Shark Tank, A.D., Son of God, and The Voice. In this role, he trained and advised Mark Burnett and the company’s key executives on diversifying and creating a more inclusive culture, which resulted in the hiring of more minorities, an increased focus on outreach to minority entrepreneurial organizations and communities, and an increase of the number of minorities and women that pitch each season on the show. Sampson also negotiated for Lady Gaga’s former manager turned venture capitalist, Troy Carter, to appear on Shark Tank as a Guest Shark.

Read more at: http://www.blackenterprise.com/

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CEO AfrikaTech

Comme beaucoup de personnes j’ai connu l’Afrique à travers des stéréotypes : l’Afrique est pauvre, il y a la guerre, famine… Je suis devenu entrepreneur pour briser ces clichés et participer à la construction du continent. J’ai lancé plusieurs entreprises dont Kareea (Formation et développement web), Tutorys (Plate-forme de e-learning), AfrikanFunding (Plate-forme de crowdfunding). Après un échec sur ma startup Tutorys, à cause d’une mauvaise exécution Business, un manque de réseau, pas de mentor, je suis parti 6 mois en immersion dans l’écosystème Tech au Sénégal. J’ai rencontré de nombreux entrepreneurs passionnés, talentueux et déterminés. A mon retour sur Paris je décide de raconter leur histoire en créant le média AfrikaTech. L'objectif est de soutenir les entrepreneurs qui se battent quotidiennement en Afrique en leur offrant la visibilité, les connaissances, le réseautage et les capitaux nécessaires pour réussir. L'Afrique de demain se construit aujourd'hui ensemble. Rejoignez-nous ! LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/boubacardiallo

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