Organization:Venture for America
Contents
Overview
Venture for America was founded in 2011 by Andrew Yang to train and place talented college graduates at start-up companies located in struggling cities. Modeled after Teach for America, Venture for America seeks to revitalize America through entrepreneurship, while enabling opportunity and restoring an American culture of achievement.
Since its inception, the organization has trained almost 100 fellows (today applications exceed availability), given fellows access to upwards of $100k in yearly seed funding and facilitated their placement in cities including Detroit, Cincinatti and New Orleans.
Purpose
Graduating from Columbia Law School, Andrew Yang was conflicted with what to do for his career. As with many other young professionals, Yang knew the options outside of working on Wall Street were slim and likely career-diverting. After working with, and starting several companies (rising to the rank of CEO in Manhattan GMAT), Yang founded Venture for America, to increase the accessibility to the start-up process for college graduates.
The problem today is that qualified college graduates crave hands-on business experience to learn how to start a business. Meanwhile, start-up companies struggle to hire due to lack of resources since they have yet to establish their brand. Venture for America bridges this gap; the organization gives companies access to high quality, motivated young workers.
Overall, the goal is to funnel top young people into American startups, socialize them and provide future structures and role models for others. Venture fo America wishes to rebrand entrepreneurship as the most prestigious professional aspiration, as evident in one of their mottos: "Smart people should build things."
Distinct Differences From Other Offerings
Venture for America Fellowship
After acceptance into the program, fellows commit to training and a two year commitment of work.
At training, fellows are given the skills to hit the ground running. Training sessions include lectures, visits from investors, website design challenges, and practice with business creation. By the end of training, fellows are well versed in finance modeling, sales, public relations, branding, marketing and basic business/office etiquette [1].
Fellows are matched with the company of best fit to them through an intense matchmaking process including preferences and phone/in person interviews. Companies must be show high growth potential (energy, biotech, health, information, technology, consumer markets) and are required to commit to $32-38k in salary (plus benefits), pay $2,500 to fund the fellow's training, and agree to actively growing the candidate (e.g. Monthly sit-downs with the CEO).
Fun Fact: Venture for America will still try and connect applicants with potential startups if they are not accepted into the fellowship.
Appeal
Venture for America appeals to young professionals in a few ways:
- Prestige: looks good on a resume and has the reputation of attracting ivy league talent
- Progress: brings young professionals to the next level in their careers
- Opportunity: keeps doors open
- Money: workers are compensated for their work
- Skills: fellows gain skills and training for anything and everything they will face
- Community: fellows build a sense of community with other inspired individuals
- Public Service: Fellows are doing a public good, both for local communities and America
Impact Achieved For Students and Campus
- Bottom line: "Venture for America" is a strong training program for graduating students who want to get into business creation but also help revitalize our economy. Today's VFA partnerships are over 50% non-technical, so nobody is limited from applying (in some ways, the fellowship seeks to open doors particularly for these students). Therefore, Venture for America's resources would be best used on a campus looking to a) Give benevolent entrepreneurial students a new outlet for post-graduation plans, b) Create a role-model/success story, c) Build support for this lifestyle as a career path.
- By advertising Venture for America as a prestigious scholarship/fellowship, a campus ambassador could build a long-term vision in students from varying degree paths and eventually place high achieving students in the program.
(Include images, where possible, and campuses involved)
Steps Required To Bring Resource to Campus
Options for getting Venture for America involved on campus:
- Schedule an event. Venture for America is currently touring the country and visiting top schools and looking to expand. If your school is not scheduled for a visit (see calendar: http://ventureforamerica.org/events/), contact events@ventureforamerica.org for more information (VFA attracts a lot of attention at career fairs).
- Become a VFA campus ambassador. Send resume and cover letter to jobs@ventureforamerica.org, titled "Application for Campus Ambassador - [your name]." For more information see: http://ventureforamerica.org/jobs/
Contact Information
Office: 40 West 29th St., Suite 301, New York, NY 10001
Mailing Address:
Venture for America
c/o Eileen Lee
40 West 29th St., Suite 301
New York, NY 10001
info@ventureforamerica.org | (646) 736-6460
Sources:
[1] http://ventureforamerica.org
Also see:
https://twitter.com/venture4america
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=t383l_7-o4o&feature=youtu.be (Andrew Yang @ Georgetown TEDx)
