Ne-Yo wants to make Silicon Valley more diverse, one investment at a time
Dressed in a
Naruto t-shirt and a hat emblazoned with the phrase “lone wolf,” Ne-Yo slouches
over in a chair inside a Holberton School classroom. The Grammy-winning
recording artist is struggling to remember the name of “that actor,” the one
who’s had a successful career in both the entertainment industry and tech
investing.
“I learned
about all the things he was doing and I thought it was great for him,” Ne-Yo
told TechCrunch. “But I didn’t really know what my place in tech would be.”
It turns out
“that actor” is Ashton Kutcher, widely known in Hollywood and beyond for his
role in several blockbusters and the TV sitcom That ’70s Show, and respected in
Silicon Valley for his investments via Sound Ventures and A-Grade in Uber,
Airbnb, Spotify, Bird and several others.
Ne-Yo, for
his part, is known for a string of R&B hits including So Sick, One in a
Million and Because of You. His latest album, Good Man, came out in June.
Ne-Yo, like
Kutcher, is interested in pursuing a side gig in investing but he doesn’t want
to waste time chasing down the next big thing. His goal, he explained, is to
use his wealth to encourage people like him to view software engineering and
other technical careers as viable options.
“Little
black kids growing up don’t say things like ‘I want to be a coder when I grow
up,’ because it’s not real to them, they don’t see people that look like me
doing it,” Ne-Yo said. “But tech is changing the world, like literally by the
day, by the second, so I feel like it just makes the most sense to have it
accessible to everyone.”
Last year,
Ne-Yo finally made the leap into venture capital investing: his first deal, an
investment in Holberton School, a two-year coding academy founded by Julien
Barbier and Sylvain Kalache that trains full-stack engineers. The singer
returned to San Francisco earlier this month for the grand opening of
Holberton’s remodeled headquarters on Mission Street in the city’s SoMa
neighborhood.
Holberton, a
proposed alternative to a computer science degree, is free to students until
they graduate and land a job, at which point they are asked to pay 17 percent
of their salaries during their first three years in the workforce.
It has a
different teaching philosophy than your average coding academy or four-year
university. It relies on project-based and peer learning, i.e. students helping
and teaching each other; there are no formal teachers or lecturers. The concept
appears to be working. Holberton says their former students are now employed at
Apple, NASA, LinkedIn, Facebook, Dropbox and Tesla.
Ne-Yo
participated in Holberton’s $2.3 million round in February 2017 alongside Reach
Capital and Insight Venture Partners, as well as Trinity Ventures, the VC firm
that introduced Ne-Yo to the edtech startup. Holberton has since raised an
additional $8 million from existing and new investors like daphni, Omidyar
Network, Yahoo! co-founder Jerry Yang and Slideshare co-founder Jonathan
Boutelle.
Holberton
has used that capital to expand beyond the Bay Area. A school in New Haven,
Conn., where the company hopes to reach students who can’t afford to live in
tech’s hubs, is in development.
The
startup’s emphasis on diversity is what attracted Ne-Yo to the project and why
he signed on as a member of the board of trustees. More than half of
Holberton’s students are people of color and 35 percent are women. Since Ne-Yo
got involved, the number of African American applicants has doubled from
roughly 5 percent to 11.5 percent.
“I didn’t really know what my place in tech
would be.”
Before
Ne-Yo’s preliminary meetings with Holberton’s founders, he says he wasn’t aware
of the racial and gender diversity problem in tech.
“When it was
brought to my attention, I was like ‘ok, this is definitely a problem that
needs to be addressed,'” he said. “It makes no sense that this thing that
affects us all isn’t available to us all. If you don’t have the money or you
don’t have the schooling, it’s not available to you, however, it’s affecting
their lives the same way it’s affecting the rich guys’ lives.”
Holberton’s
founders joked with TechCrunch that Ne-Yo has actually been more supportive and
helpful in the last year than many of the venture capitalists who back
Holberton. He’s very “hands-on,” they said. Despite the fact that he’s
balancing a successful music career and doesn’t exactly have a lot of free
time, he’s made sure to attend events at Holberton, like the recent grand
opening, and will Skype with students occasionally.
“I wanted it to be grassroots and
authentic.”
Ne-Yo was
very careful to explain that he didn’t put money in Holberton for the good
optics.
“This isn’t
something I just wanted to put my name on,” he said. “I wanted to make sure
[the founders] knew this was something I was going to be serious about and not
just do the celebrity thing. I wanted it to be grassroots and authentic so we
dropped whatever we were doing and came down, met these guys, hung out with the
students and hung out at the school to see what it’s really about.”
What’s next
for Ne-Yo? A career in venture capital, perhaps? He’s definitely interested and
will be making more investments soon, but a full pivot into VC is unlikely.
At the end
of the day, Silicon Valley doesn’t need more people with fat wallets and a
hankering for the billionaire lifestyle. What it needs are people who have the
money and resources necessary to bolster the right businesses and who care enough
to prioritize diversity and inclusivity over yet another payday.
“Not to toot
the horn or brag, but I’m not missing any meals,” Ne-Yo said. “So, if I’m going
to do it, let it mean something.”
TechCrunh
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