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Spelman graduate leads accelerator program for HBCU founders at Nex Cubed investment firm


Jade Lockard
Jade Lockard, program manager of the HBCU Founder's Program at Nex Cubed.
Nex Cubed

Former Spelman College student Jade Lockard is leading an effort to support startup founders at Historically Black Colleges and Universities across the nation.  

Lockard, a 2020 graduate, is the program manager of the HBCU Founder’s Program at Nex Cubed, which is a San-Franscico-based accelerator and early-stage investment firm.  

The HBCU Founder’s Program aims to provide resources, mentorship and funding to HBCU students and recent alumni. Nex Cubed launched the program over the summer and is focused on companies in the digital health, financial technology, education technology and property technology industries.  

“Being a startup founder, I really became aware of the discrepancies between the predominately white colleges and institutions and HBCUs in terms of startup resources,” said Lockard, who founded InHous, a fintech startup accepted into Georgia Tech’s CREATE-X incubator. 

The acceptance into CREATE-X highlighted the lack of resources of entrepreneurs at her own school, which is why Lockard feels so passionately about Nex Cubed’s program.  

Throughout the fall, the HBCU Founder’s Program has hosted webinar panels about different industries. Lockard said the program has about 300 students with 60 HBCUs represented, including Spelman, Morehouse College and Clark Atlanta University.  

In January and February, the program will hold a virtual pitch competition and invite founders to its inaugural summer accelerator.  

The accelerator will be two months and end in a pitch to a panel of investors. Founders will receive $10,000 to participate, according to the Nex Cubed website.   

Nex Cubed, which is in its third year, has a portfolio of 75 companies, with half being owned by people of color or women, Lockard said. 

“The HBCU Founder's Program is a way to really start working with collegiate students and help bridge the gaps in the disparities there,” Lockard said. “There’s a lot of innovation coming from HBCUs.” 


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