Reboot U revives tech talent for KC startup

June 23, 2015  |  Startland News Staff

Phil USE (1 of 1)

A growing event photography company in Kansas City is looking to the past to find the tech talent it needs to build its future.

Phil USE (1 of 1)

Phil Huffman

SportsPhotos.com founder Brandon Schatz is a small-business participant in the Full Employment Council’s “Reboot U” program, which provides technology training for the chronically unemployed. Schatz’s company manages photos for sporting events, requiring it to manage terabytes of information from customers and freelance photographers.

Schatz said he looked to the Reboot U program as an opportunity to tap experienced technologists that could help his company grow.

“There are people in an older age range who have an aptitude for tech but who haven’t been exposed to modern languages and skills,” Schatz said. “My feeling is that there are all kinds of tech needs throughout the city, and we are going to need as many kinds of people as possible to meet those needs.”

Schatz interviewed a number of “Reboot U” participants before extending internship offers to two candidates at the FEC’s 2014 recruiting event. Candidates who accept offers from participating companies embark on eight- to 12-week paid internships, spending two days a week in classes developed by the University of Central Missouri and Metropolitan Community College.

One of Schatz’s interns, Phil Huffman, said he was relieved to be returning to what he does best.

“I am first and foremost a software developer,” Huffman said. “I heard about Reboot U through the Full Employment Council, and the timing was perfect.”

The candidates spend the rest of their week at the company where they are placed. For Schatz, this means immersing them in additional learning rather than working on a specific project.

Huffman would spend two days a week in class, and the remainder immersing himself in SportPhotos’ technology. That new work required additional instruction, apart from specific projects, Schatz said.

“I had them learn other things besides their course work,” Schatz said of his interns. “I put them on a learning path that was really specific to what we do. We were throwing all kinds of stuff at them at once.”

At the end of the internship, Schatz offered Huffman a full-time position. Huffman now helps Schatz with SportsPhotos.com and his other company, Great Web Development.

“I consider myself to be extremely fortunate,” Huffman said of landing his new gig. “It was clear that (Schatz) was a fine technician with a lot of drive. That’s what won me over.”

Schatz’s newest employee symbolizes the fruition of work he invested more than two years ago. Schatz and other professionals in the Kansas City startup community collaborated with the Full Employment Council to outline skills that are in high demand in the area. The group also identified the curriculum that would help retrain people in various computer languages and skills.

Eventually — on March 9 — Kansas City joined 20 other cities nationwide as a participant in TechHire, which is President Obama’s initiative to train and place people into technology jobs. Now a handful of local companies provide job-specific training and employment opportunities, including Think Big Partners, Children’s Mercy Hospitals and Clinics, University of Kansas Medical Center and Wireco World Group.

“We all need to work together to meet the tech needs that we all have,” Schatz said. “The city has done a great job of streamlining the process to help companies get access to these grants, but it is important to go into it with the mindset that the point is to train people. It takes a lot of work to get candidates to where they need to be to be productive for you and your company.”

This article was written by freelance reporter Toby Truog. A community builder and seeker of entrepreneurial stories, Toby works as a marketing and business development professional. Follow him at @ttruog, or visit him while he serves as a community organizer for 1 Million Cups.

startland-tip-jar

TIP JAR

Did you enjoy this post? Show your support by becoming a member or buying us a coffee.

Tagged , , ,
Featured Business
    Featured Founder

      2015 Startups to Watch

        stats here

        Related Posts on Startland News

        Katy Ibsen, founder, Sweet Jane

        Lawrence-based Sweet Jane magazine offers safe space for women to get candid about cannabis

        By Tommy Felts | October 29, 2019

        Satisfying her own curiosity, Katy Ibsen penned an article on cannabis opportunities for publishers.  “There were niche magazines being published, there were B2B magazines being published, there was ‘High Times’ and ‘Dope,’” Ibsen, now founder, editor and publisher of Sweet Jane magazine, said of her research for the piece.  A 10-year publishing vet with a…

        Michael Wilson, United American Hemp

        Cannabis founder’s advice: Weed out the bad seeds; run green startups like real businesses

        By Tommy Felts | October 29, 2019

        Cannabis might seem like it presents a Wild West frontier for entrepreneurs looking to strike green, said Michael Wilson, but would-be founders must cultivate a plan grounded in common sense — and the law. “In the industrial hemp or marijuana space, if you want to build a successful business, run it like a real damn…

        Hyperloop One

        Show Me Hyperloop: Missouri panel confident it can win route with $300M+ test track

        By Tommy Felts | October 28, 2019

        If Missouri wants to win the race for a Virgin Hyperloop One route connecting Kansas City and St. Louis, the Show Me State must foot the bill for a 12- to 15-mile test track that could cost taxpayers, the state and private partners more than $300 million, according to a new report.  “This initial segment…

        Kansas City Public Schools High School Girls Cybersecurity and Technology Summit, Fishtech Group

        Cyber threats and opportunities: Why did 50+ KC schoolgirls get a peek at Fishtech’s high-security campus?

        By Tommy Felts | October 26, 2019

        You never know when an opportunity will find you, Alex Vendetti told a group of Kansas City high school girls touring the Fishtech Group cybersecurity campus.  “I was a hairstylist before this,” Vendetti, a project manager at Fishtech, told groups of students making their ways through the cybersecurity startup’s sprawling Martin City facilities Friday. The…