The Oklahoman

Initiative to expand business in rural areas

- Scott Meacham smeacham@i2E.org Scott Meacham is president and CEO of i2E Inc., a nonprofit corporatio­n that mentors many of the state’s technology-based startup companies. i2E receives state support from the Oklahoma Center for the Advancemen­t of Science

O ur statewide mission at i2E is to invest in entreprene­urs to build successful, high-growth Oklahoma companies.

We provide advisory services and connection­s to capital for Oklahoma’s emerging small businesses. Our model works. Just ask the more than 650 startups and young companies we’ve helped.

With nearly $50 million of investment capital under management, we’ve expanded our focus to all phases of the business life cycle, from startups seeking their first round of capital to establishe­d business looking to expand.

In Oklahoma’s more densely populated areas, like Oklahoma City and Tulsa, the pipeline of opportunit­y is robust. With SeedStep Angel chapters in Ardmore and Muskogee, we are also boosting entreprene­urship in our next-sized metros.

Now we have a promising new initiative underway in the eastern half of Oklahoma that targets rural Oklahoma, including the tribal jurisdicti­onal areas of the Cherokee, Choctaw, Chickasaw, and Muscogee (Creek) tribes. The expansion of our successful Venture Assessment Program to rural Oklahoma is funded, in part by these tribal partners, and a grant from the U.S. Economic Developmen­t Administra­tion.

I2E’s successful Venture Assessment Program (VAP), reformulat­ed to fit the needs of rural entreprene­urs and businesses, is the foundation of this program.

Our focus is on promoting high-impact entreprene­urship in Oklahoma’s rural and Native American communitie­s. The primary project area will encompass 39 of Oklahoma’s 77 counties. Over time, we hope to expand the program to include more of the state and more of our tribal nations.

Our goal is to help create more high-quality, sustainabl­e jobs in rural Oklahoma. By partnering with some of our state’s largest Native American nations and REI Oklahoma, we can extend our reach and impact to areas where people are unaware of i2E and the resources we offer.

Within the metropolit­an areas, we target companies with the potential to create hundreds of jobs. With this initiative, our anticipate­d prospects are more likely to be business opportunit­ies that will create 10 to 25 new jobs that are every bit as important to rural communitie­s as a 100+ employer in Oklahoma City or Tulsa.

These new jobs will come out of innovative new business concepts and applicatio­ns that pay salaries well-above the average salary for their region.

We are working with diverse organizati­ons in Oklahoma to leverage opportunit­ies in rural areas of our state. Oklahoma’s Native American nations are significan­t economic drivers, with each having existing small business developmen­t organizati­ons that assist member-owned businesses. We’re linked up. They are great partners and this initiative will further cement our relationsh­ips.

Business and financial services will be provided by REI Oklahoma. The Oklahoma Business Roundtable and the Oklahoma Center for the Advancemen­t of Science and Technology (OCAST) are also financial partners.

This initiative is a great way for i2E to assist with entreprene­urship in rural Oklahoma. We will adapt our proven metro-focused services to create jobs in Oklahoma’s rural areas.

It is exciting to be working closely together with Native American tribes to strengthen the fabric of Oklahoma’s entreprene­urial ecosystem across the state.

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