Venture for America
Venture for America is a company.
Financial History
Leadership Team
Key people at Venture for America.
Venture for America is a company.
Key people at Venture for America.
Key people at Venture for America.
Venture for America (VFA) was a nonprofit organization and two-year fellowship program that trained recent college graduates to work at startups in emerging U.S. cities, aiming to create economic opportunity and jobs.[1][2][3] Its mission focused on mobilizing the next generation of entrepreneurs by providing hands-on startup experience, professional development, and networks to foster job growth in underserved areas, with commitments to diversity, equity, and inclusion.[1][2][4] VFA placed fellows in cities like Detroit, New Orleans, and Providence, partnering with over 500 companies; by its end, it had supported more than 1,500 alumni and fellows, 29% of whom started businesses raising over $750 million in capital.[1][2] Operations ceased in August 2024 due to financial struggles and layoffs.[1]
VFA was founded in 2011 by Andrew Yang, inspired by his own entrepreneurial experiences—including a failed startup at age 25 and later success as CEO of an acquired company—to address the gap in skills and opportunities for aspiring young entrepreneurs.[1][3] Yang launched the program to connect recent graduates with startups in low-cost cities needing talent, starting with placements in 2012 across Cincinnati, Detroit, Las Vegas, New Orleans, and Providence, scaling to 40 fellows.[1][3] Growth accelerated: by 2014, over 100 fellows in nine cities; by 2017, nearly 180 in 13 cities including Atlanta and Kansas City.[1] Yang stepped down as CEO in mid-2017, succeeded by Amy Nelson until 2021; a 2016 documentary *Generation Startup* highlighted its impact.[1]
VFA rode the post-2008 recession trend of revitalizing Rust Belt and secondary U.S. cities through entrepreneurship, countering talent concentration in coastal hubs like San Francisco by channeling young talent to places like Detroit and Pittsburgh.[1][3] Timing aligned with Obama-era initiatives—it was named a White House "Champion of Change" in 2011—amplifying startup ecosystems amid economic recovery needs.[3] Market forces like remote work's rise and demand for diverse talent favored its model, influencing the ecosystem by producing founders (29% rate) and leaders who raised substantial capital, while promoting inclusive growth in underrepresented regions.[1][2][5]
VFA's closure in August 2024 after layoffs underscores nonprofit vulnerabilities in funding-dependent entrepreneurship training amid economic shifts.[1] Its alumni network—1,500+ strong, with proven founders—positions it for informal evolution through ongoing connections, potentially inspiring similar programs in a post-remote-work era emphasizing regional hubs.[2] Trends like AI-driven job creation and urban revival could amplify its legacy, as ex-fellows continue shaping startups; watch for alumni-led ventures riding these waves to extend VFA's job-creation mission.[1][2] This echoes its founding vision: turning untapped talent into economic engines.[3]