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THE PROGRAMS: WHAT AND WHY?

The INTERalliance of Greater Cincinnati was formed in 2005 as a non-profit collaboration of Greater Cincinnati / Northern Kentucky regional businesses and educators. The collaborative effort was launched to create such a rich, stimulating technology environment here in the region that we give our local young IT talent a compelling reason to stay in southwest Ohio both for college and their careers. Since the first IT Careers Camp was piloted in 2006, we have been shattering students' biases and opening their eyes to the possibilities of IT-related careers with behind-the-scenes summer interventions and paid high school internships, individual high school chapters, career-spawning college co-ops and collaboration programs. All programs are geared toward solving two pervasive and debilitating problems that are haunting local businesses in virtually every sector:

1. Despite the fact that the Bureau of Labor Statistics continues to place 7 of the 10 top, fastest growing careers with the fastest salary growth in the high-tech and computer-technology sectors, US students are turning their heads. Our brightest young talent are increasingly not selecting technology careers, particularly information technology, nor the college and graduate school programs that prepare them for these fields. This has left the USA with a paltry ranking of 25th in the world when it comes to technology education, innovation, and a technology-savvy workforce.

2. Even though there are more Fortune 500 firms per capita in the Greater Cincinnati region than anywhere in the nation, the exodus of 19- to 30-year-olds continues to be worse in southwest Ohio than just about anywhere. We generally lose that critical workforce tier of bright, young professionals who contribute so vibrantly to the entrepreneurial advancement of any company. They are convinced that – compared to the other major urban centers around the country -- there is nothing for them here in the Greater Cincinnati / Northern Kentucky region... nothing, that is, until they turn 35, are ready to raise a family, and discover that $500,000 doesn't buy what it used to in Chicago, San Francisco, or D.C. But those young, upwardly-mobile career professionals who are at that point in their lives where they willingly devote endless hours to career advancement are, more times than not, gone from this region as soon as they graduate high school. We have clearly not done enough to engage them and create a compelling reason for them to stay, invest here, or come back to the region after graduate school. Generally speaking, we export our best-and-brightest to other regions.


 

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