This article is part two of a three-part series on Black Wall Street’s journey to South by Southwest. Read part one.

At 1:15 pm on March 13, 2016 something monumental happened in Austin, Texas. For the first time in the history of SXSW Interactive, a black-owned company, Opportunity HUB, had a presence on the SXSW trade show floor. As many of my readers already know, I ‘do it big’ in every situation. In that fashion, not only did we make history with Opportunity HUB’s presence on the SXSW floor as an official exhibitor, but this was the first year that a delegation of HBCUs represented at SXSW. 

 
To give a bit more context on how this happened we have to first shed light on Rodney Sampson. Rodney, chief of diversity and inclusion initiatives for Tech Square Labs, chairman of Opportunity Hub and an investor based in Atlanta, came up with the idea to splash the SXSW Interactive with more color this year. 
The SXSW effort was designed to support President Obama’s My Brother’s Keeper initiative, which launched in 2014 to address persistent opportunity gaps facing boys and young men of color and to ensure that all young people can reach their full potential. Note – the lyrics at the beginning of the post – “Its easy to reach a mil, all you need is a skill, then its grind time” ~ Nas. 
 
Through partnerships with MVMT50#ChooseATL HouseWeDC House, Black Wall StreetKingonomics, TechCrunch, Tech CocktailTech Square LabsAWDA and The Iron Yard, HBCU students and alumni representing Morehouse, Spelman, Howard, Johnson C. Smith, Huston-Tillotson and Hampton universities participated in the first ever HBCU@SXSW cohort. Throughout the weekend, students attended panels, workshops, the career fair, pitch competitions, hackathons and meetups, along with a panel discussion on the Interactive trade show floor. The general tone of the panel was all about exposing these students to tech-related careers and educational paths. 
 
As a panelist, I sat on stage watching the reactions of the HBCU students as we shared our stories and offered advice on navigating the tech space and becoming entrepreneurs. The reactions and intense interest from the students energized me to want to ‘do- more’. In that vein, I am putting out a charge to the three HBCUs that have assisted in my career matriculation—North Carolina A&T, North Carolina Central University and Hampton University. I pledge to work with each university to bring five students per school to SXSW Interactive in 2017. Let’s do this! Email—Talib@bwshomecoming.com.
Through the Atlanta TechHire Initiative, the Atlanta Workforce Development Agency, The Iron Yard and Tech Square Labs will train at least 100 individuals in 2016 and 400 by 2020 in software development and other high-growth IT occupations. 
 
I am excited to witness Atlanta leading the charge regarding TechHire, and excited about the possibilities for the other cities I spend significant time in—Durham, Greensboro, and Hampton. Let’s make history. 
 
My favorite quote is “Everything you see is just a thought manifested”. Let’s manifest!