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‘Black in America’: Wayne Sutton, One Year Later

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Wayne Sutton, a co-founder of the NewMe Accelerator, is now founder of PitchTo.co

 

Last November, CNN’s Soledad O’Brien explored Silicon Valley through the eyes of eight African-American entrepreneurs. All participants of the inaugural NewMe Accelerator class, the Black in America: The New Promised Land — Silicon Valley cast invited viewers into their journey as startup founders competing in an industry comprised of less than 1% of entrepreneurs that look like them. BlackEnterprise.com caught up with the tech innovators to see what they’ve been up to one year later.

There would not be a NewMe Accelerator without Wayne Sutton. When Angela Benton of BlackWeb2.0 contacted him in 2011 for advice about launching a mobile app and how they were apart of the 1% of  African Americans startup founders, together the team came up with the idea for a three-month accelerator. Since way before the age of Twitter, Sutton, who also blogs as and goes by the moniker SocialWayne, has been at the forefront of social media, blogging about all things tech related. Now, Sutton has many more notches on his belt and technophiles of all races turn to him for his expertise on any number of topics including location-based digital services, startup and pitch strategy, User Interface/User Interaction (UI/UX), mobile interface design, business development, and content strategy. Read ahead to learn more about why Sutton joined forces with Benton, whether the accelerator was a success in his eyes, and what’s next on his to-do list.

As co-founder of the NewMe Accelerator my vision was to…

Launch a successful program to work with the brightest minds in Silicon Valley. To help first-time and experienced minority entrepreneurs learn what it takes to build a technology startup.

I’ve learned a lot since launching and leaving NewME such as…

The importance of having great mentors and advisers, along with making sure every founder of the team understands their role before moving forward with the company. Overall, the experience of launching an accelerator in Silicon Valley was priceless.

I moved to San Francisco from North Carolina in February to keep the vision of the NewME Accelerator going. I worked with another class of founders from February to May of 2012, to help develop their product, connect with mentors and prepare them to pitch their products to VC firms and press.

What many people don’t know by just watching the CNN Black In America 4 documentary is…

That I was the co-founder of a mobile location-based startup in North Carolina that was founded in 2009. That’s the startup I was working on before my former NewME partner, Angela Ben

ton, called me asking
for advice about launching a startup. After NewME started, I decided to put our NC-based startup on hold, which allowed me to focus on maintaining the accelerator. Due to the CNN cameras, I still had to pitch at the end of the program so I came up with two app ideas from July to August one being Vouch and pitched it on demo day.

If I had to do it all over again…

I wouldn’t have pitched at all. I decided not to launch Vouch. Although I liked the idea, I wasn’t passionate about it. So decided to not move forward on the idea and focus on launching the NewME Community across the country and getting ready for the 2012 class.

In May, I decided to leave NewME to launch a new company call PitchTo.co. PitchTo is a mobile development lab which builds tools for investors to make smarter decisions and help entrepreneurs deliver exceptional pitches. The vision behind PitchTo came after seeing a disconnect between founders and investors around the pitch and feedback loop.

Working with the founders in the first and second class of NewME, I’ve heard tons of…

Advice from CEOs, engineers, developers, product managers, and marketers. One statement that has stuck with me came from the Tagged founders Greg Tseng and Johann Schleier-Smith who have know each other since middle school and launched Tagged in 2005. I asked Greg and Johann when they come to a disagreement about Tagged how do they come to a decision. Their advice was to put any personal differences aside and do what’s best for the company to keep moving the company forward.

I would say the environment in Silicon Valley has changed for the…

Better but not due to any overwhelming effort of those in Silicon Valley. But due to me moving to the Bay area [my perspective has changed]. I understand more about the community and how Silicon Valley operates. The Silicon Valley and Bay community is about being a doer and launching products, testing, failing and starting over again no matter your race or gender. It is not an equal meritocracy, but neither are things in America so let’s not point fingers at Silicon Valley but ask yourself what you can do to be successful.

The bigger question to ask…

Has the environment changed for blacks outside of Silicon Valley? Are blacks learning the right technical skills to launch a startup? Are they going to college, or using online learning platforms to better themselves, or being innovative in our rural communities?

Let’s not focus on…

Increasing the number of blacks in Silicon Valley. That was never a goal of mine. I don’t see people saying ‘How can we increase the number of whites in Atlanta or New York?’ Let’s talk about increasing the number of skilled technical black founders in America. It’s not just about Silicon Valley, but the world.

There needs to be more blacks with technical skills who can…

Code. In most

cases it will take a great hacker, developer to build a product to solve a problem that disrupts a market. In that market, there are various types of races and genders. Therefore we need a diverse group of people with technical skills to look at problems around them and think how they can use technology to find the solution.

The Black In America 4 documentary was very successful at…

Shedding light on the problem. One of the reasons why we created NewME was to be examples for others. The documentary gave us a platform to do so.

I felt  CNN could have…

Shown more footage of how the founders worked during the program on their product. For example, the founders had weekly product feedback sessions, where they tested code and gave feedback on the usability of their apps. They met with more than 20 different mentors and speakers. Unfortunately, the documentary focused on a narrative from one or two mentors. One segment that I thought would have been great was if the documentary would have shown the midway checkpoint at Blue Run Ventures with Jay Jamison.

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