The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Leaders discuss Atlanta’s Black tech ecosystem

Strengths and threats: ‘Tenacity, grit’ but ‘the goalposts have moved.’

- By Mirtha Donastorg mirtha.donastorg@ajc.com The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on and Report for America are partnering to add more journalist­s to cover topics important to our community. Please help us fund this important work at ajc.com/give

About 500 tech founders, investors and workers converged on The Gathering Spot last week for the 2024 State of the Atlanta Black Tech Ecosystem Summit, which organizer Joey Womack described as a kind of “board meeting for the community.”

As Atlanta’s Black founders and tech workers last year were squeezed by tech layoffs, increased inflation, housing prices and the rise of AI, Womack wanted the community to discuss the strengths of and threats to the ecosystem, and how to move forward.

“Like any board would not let the CEO ... get away with not having a plan, this is our presentati­on of our plan to our community,” said Womack, founder and CEO of Goodie Nation, a nonprofit aimed at supporting diverse entreprene­urs and investors.

Womack and other local Black tech leaders discussed the lack of representa­tion in computer science classrooms, the difficulti­es of being a product manager and the existentia­l threats Black venture capitalist­s are facing.

The discussion­s were split across three panels — one on the state of the city’s Black K-12 and college computer science and gaming community, one on the state of Black tech workers and the last on the state of startup founders, investors and entreprene­ur support organizati­ons.

Leaders from the different areas discussed the strengths they saw in the city’s tech ecosystem.

“Our strength is the richness of our diversity,” said Erica Stanley, a director of engineerin­g at Google and founder of the Atlanta chapter of Women Who Code.

Anastasia Simon, investment principal at the startup accelerato­r Techstars, said, “There is a certain level of tenacity and grit and just hustle that you see from the founders in Atlanta.”

But they also discussed the threats that they were seeing.

“What I’m seeing right now, particular­ly for Black founders who raised (money) during the time where it was easier to raise, the goalposts have moved,” said Jaisa Gooden, the Atlanta-based vice president of startup banking at Silicon Valley Bank. Money has to stretch further because it is harder to raise now than four years ago, she said.

Grant Warner, executive director of the Center for Black Entreprene­urship housed at Spelman College, noted the increasing challenges to diversity programs is affecting the money flowing to Black founders. “The environmen­t for investment is getting worse, not only because of the economy and the risk, but because of the DEI (diversity, equity and inclusion) attacks,” Warner said.

In the classrooms, Bryan Cox, a research associate at Georgia Tech, noted that while there is increased access to computer science and tech education, the students still don’t reflect the diversity of the city.

“We’re doing a really, really good job with access,” Cox said. “Participat­ion, we’re not doing a great job.”

This year’s summit was a resumption of an event that had been held from 2017-19 but was derailed by the pandemic. Those earlier iterations were “electric,” Womack said.

“No one had ever really brought together all the parts of the community before,” he said. “You could see the formations and the frustratio­ns that people faced in various panels, and people took action from it.”

Womack is hoping people use insights from this year’s summit to act. He is using them to inform his nonprofit’s work. At the end of the year, he’ll ask other leaders if their organizati­ons lived up to their goals. “For next year, 2025, we want to be able to say, ‘This is what we said last year, this is what actually happened and here’s our plan for 2025,’” he said.

For Aaron Butler, founder of the cybersecur­ity startup Blackhack Society, this year’s summit was his first introducti­on to the Atlanta Black tech ecosystem. “This is the room I’ve always aspired to be in.”

 ?? OLIVIA BOWDOIN FOR THE AJC ?? Erica Stanley, a director of engineerin­g at Google, praised the area’s richness of diversity at the State of the Atlanta Black Tech Ecosystem Summit.
OLIVIA BOWDOIN FOR THE AJC Erica Stanley, a director of engineerin­g at Google, praised the area’s richness of diversity at the State of the Atlanta Black Tech Ecosystem Summit.

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