The Starter League
The Starter League is a company.
Financial History
Leadership Team
Key people at The Starter League.
The Starter League is a company.
Key people at The Starter League.
Key people at The Starter League.
The Starter League was a Chicago-based coding bootcamp and software school that trained beginners in web development, design, and entrepreneurship from 2011 until its acquisition by Fullstack Academy in March 2016. It offered immersive, in-person programs like the 3-month Web Development course and the 9-month (later described as 27-week) Starter School, costing around $36,000, focusing on hands-on skills to build and ship real products.[1][2][3][6] The school empowered over 1,000 students, many from non-traditional backgrounds, to become developers, designers, product managers, or entrepreneurs, pioneering accessible tech education outside traditional college curricula.[1][2][3]
It served career changers and aspiring technologists, solving the problem of limited access to practical coding skills by emphasizing project-based learning, confidence-building, and real-world application over rote theory.[2][3]
Founded in 2011 by Chicago entrepreneurs Neal Sales-Griffin and Mike McGee, both from low-income backgrounds, The Starter League emerged as a response to the need for intensive, hands-on tech training.[1][4] The co-founders drew from their own experiences of being "pulled up" through support, aiming to make tech careers attainable for a broader population by focusing on coding for all skill levels rather than embedding it in lengthy college programs.[1]
Early traction came quickly; backed by Basecamp (the Ruby on Rails birthplace), it trained over 1,000 people by 2016, with alumni launching products, securing jobs, and building networks through demo days and guest sessions from figures like Obama for America tech leads and Chicago VCs.[2][3][6] A pivotal moment was its 2016 acquisition by New York-based Fullstack Academy, after which Sales-Griffin transitioned to lead nonprofit CodeNow, partnering with McGee to extend their mission to underserved youth.[1][6]
The Starter League rode the early 2010s coding bootcamp boom, a trend democratizing tech education amid talent shortages and the rise of startups needing quick-skilling developers outside elite CS programs.[1][6] Timing was ideal post-2008 recession, as remote-friendly web tech (Ruby on Rails via Basecamp backing) exploded, and Chicago's ecosystem sought local talent pipelines.[2][6]
Market forces like Y Combinator's nonprofit accelerator influence (contemporary to CodeNow) and demand for diverse hires favored its model, influencing the ecosystem by producing hundreds of job-ready pros and 150+ founders, while inspiring immersive programs globally.[1][2][3] Its acquisition by Fullstack amplified this, blending Chicago grit with NYC scale to shape affordable, outcome-focused training.
Post-2016 acquisition, The Starter League no longer operates independently—its programs ended, with founders pivoting to nonprofits like CodeNow for youth impact—but its DNA endures in modern bootcamps emphasizing projects over credentials.[1][3] Next could see alumni driving AI-era tools or edtech, shaped by trends like no-code/low-code and lifelong learning amid tech layoffs.
Its legacy as a pioneer humanizes tech entry, proving inclusive training sparks innovation; as Sales-Griffin noted, it unlocks curiosity in kids and adults alike, tying back to empowering beginners to solve real problems through technology.[1][2]