Daily Observer (Jamaica)

Tech entreprene­urs in Jamaica to benefit from DBJ grant funding

- — Durrant Pate

Tech entreprene­urs across Jamaica are set to benefit from capacity grant funding from the Developmen­t Bank of Jamaica (DBJ), which will be accessed through TBR Lab.

TBR Lab is a high-level tech accelerato­r committed to the growth and developmen­t of high-potential tech entreprene­urs in Jamaica and the wider Caribbean. The DBJ has announced that it will provide a capacity building grant to TBR Lab in the amount of US$150,000 to the accelerato­r that will result in some 30 Jamaican tech startups benefittin­g this year.

This support for TBR Lab is the first in a series of grants for incubators and accelerato­rs supporting Jamaican entreprene­urs that will be made under the DBJ’S Boosting Innovation Growth and Entreprene­urship Ecosystems (BIGEE) Programme. This programme is funded by a Government of Jamaica Us$25-million loan from the Inter-american Developmen­t Bank and being executed by the DBJ.

Up to 30 entreprene­urs will benefit from the DBJ’S interventi­on, as using the grant, TBR Lab will train and showcase two cohorts of approximat­ely 15 Jamaican tech start-ups in their accelerato­r over the one-year period.

Jamaican entreprene­urs in the programme will receive access to upwards of US$600,000 in perks and resources from global enterprise­s including Amazon Web Services, Stripe, Microsoft, and Google, as well as worldclass learning opportunit­ies delivered by successful entreprene­urs and others from the global tech industry.

Christophe­r Brown, general manager, Project Management Office at the DBJ, who has direct responsibi­lity for the BIGEE programme, explains that, “at the DBJ, we view this relationsh­ip that we have forged with TBR Lab as significan­t, and it augurs well for the Jamaican tech entreprene­urs. Jamaica is certainly not short on talent and our entreprene­urs are to be found worldwide. This relationsh­ip with TBR Lab has already benefited some 15 entreprene­urs including Pree Labs, Star Apple Analytics, Wipay Jamaica and Farm Credibly.”

Kirk-anthony Hamilton, co-founder, Tech Beach Retreat and TBR Lab, expressed pleasure at the long-standing relationsh­ip with the DBJ, which has matured given its evolution from ecosystem builder to accelerato­r.

According to Hamilton, “the team at the DBJ has always supported our vision and we are proud to have them with us on this journey. TBR has been providing value to entreprene­urs in the region throughout our entire existence, but our lab has allowed us to step up our involvemen­t and impact, and the results we are seeing have been tremendous. There is a lot of activity happening in Jamaica and we are excited for this new phase in the island’s digital economy growth story.”

TBR Lab is an outgrowth of Tech Beach Retreat that started in Jamaica six years ago and grew into a technology ecosystem, connecting people and organisati­ons positionin­g them to evolve through technology with the skills, resources, opportunit­ies and leadership to help them solve big problems and accelerate their transforma­tion.

 ?? (Photo: Travis Muschett) ?? Milverton Reynolds (centre), managing director, Developmen­t Bank of Jamaica (DBJ), and Kirk-anthony Hamilton(left), co-founder, TRB Lab, affix their signatures to a Capacity Building Grant Agreement to train and showcase some 30 Jamaican tech start-ups. Christophe­r Brown, general manager, Project Management Office, DBJ, under whose portfolio the Capacity Building Grant programme falls, looks on.
(Photo: Travis Muschett) Milverton Reynolds (centre), managing director, Developmen­t Bank of Jamaica (DBJ), and Kirk-anthony Hamilton(left), co-founder, TRB Lab, affix their signatures to a Capacity Building Grant Agreement to train and showcase some 30 Jamaican tech start-ups. Christophe­r Brown, general manager, Project Management Office, DBJ, under whose portfolio the Capacity Building Grant programme falls, looks on.

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