Kekona Evans wasn't about to let any chances slip by him when he spent a week in Silicon Valley as part of a nonprofit tech development camp.
The 14-year-old, who already started his own T-shirt company, approached each guest speaker after the event and gave them his best elevator pitch for his clothing and fashion business.
"No matter how young you are, you can turn a good idea into something big," Evans said.
Evans and 15 other soon-to-be high school freshmen from the Twin Cities were part of a program run by Silicon North Stars, a nonprofit organization formed by Steve and Mary Grove in 2014 to introduce high school students from underserved communities to the possibilities of technology careers.
"There will be 100,000 available tech jobs in Minnesota in the next 10 years," Grove said. Exposing them to the possibilities is the first step.
The Groves founded the nonprofit in California but recently moved to Minnesota.
Steve Grove is head of Google News Lab, which helps drive innovation in the news industry. Mary Grove is a former Google employee and now a partner in the Revolution's Rise of the Rest Seed Fund, a venture by entrepreneur and investor Steve Case, the former AOL chief executive, that invests in promising seed-stage companies.
Camp in California
The bulk of the Silicon North Stars program is a one-week camp each year in California, where the 16 students meet leaders of top technology companies, startups and venture capital funds.