Kela Ivonye鈥檚 story is all about connections 鈥 finding them, building them and nurturing them.

As an international student from Nigeria, the connections he found with UofL faculty, staff and fellow students led him down a path of entrepreneurship and activism. His drive to build connections in the business world resulted in the creation of multiple successful startups.

Now, Ivonye 鈥12, 鈥15 is using his skills and success to nurture others. His latest venture is Prot茅g茅, a nonprofit to support Black entrepreneurs. The 20-week learning experience matches founders with mentors called super founders and asks those super founders to contribute at least $20,000 to their mentees鈥 ideas.

鈥淚 knew that in venture capital, Black founders get like 2% or 4% of ventures, and that鈥檚 just ridiculous. It鈥檚 so tiny,鈥 he said. 鈥淪o I thought, 鈥榳ait, why don鈥檛 we have a mentorship program where we鈥檙e getting these founders and connecting them with other founders who have done this before 鈥 who can really give back to help these new founders build wealth? As we build wealth we can solve some of this problem.鈥

Ivonye鈥檚 first foray into entrepreneurship began with holiday gifts of gaming consoles when he was growing up in Nigeria.

鈥淢y uncles bought me Game Boys the same Christmas, and so I ended up with three Game Boys,鈥 he said. 鈥淚 was 12, so I took them to boarding school and I rented them out.鈥

He saw an opportunity and he took it 鈥 and that attitude has repeated throughout his entire career. While earning his master鈥檚 degree in urban planning, Ivonye worked at a local restaurant and told his manager that adding delivery would increase the customer base. From that idea grew his first successful startup, Arrow Food Couriers.

Almuna Kela Ivonye, Entrepreneur In Residence, Amplify Louisville. Bachelor of Science, Applied Geography, GIS. Master’s Urban Planning

Ivonye used his undergraduate background in geographic information system (GIS) software and a connection with a UofL law student to help him map out super-localized food delivery and create a viable business plan. They also recruited eight Speed School of Engineering students to create an app for a capstone project.

Eventually, Tapingo purchased the contracts Arrow Food Couriers established with multiple local businesses. Ivonye鈥檚 next big idea was Mailhaven, a smart-mailbox company that tracked and secured packages for customers. Mailhaven was acquired by technology company Luxer One in 2019.

Through his efforts, Ivonye continued to grow his network, although it was a struggle at times.

鈥淓ven at my second company, even though I had an acquisition, it was still hard raising money,鈥 he said. 鈥淢e being a Black guy, my network was not as big. I had to fight to get my network.鈥

Building that network gave him the experience he needed to help support others. Through Prot茅g茅, his connections have become the connections of other Black founders.

Ivonye鈥檚 drive to better the Black community also grew through connections he found at UofL. While he thinks the university has room to improve when it comes to diversity matters, he said UofL provided a safe space for him and others to protest after the death of Trayvon Martin. At one of those protests, he met Mordean Taylor-Archer, the former vice provost for diversity and international affairs, with whom he shared his story and goals. Taylor-Archer offered him a diversity scholarship 鈥 partially funded from her own pocket 鈥 that allowed him to continue his education. Ivonye was also inspired by a former College of Arts and Sciences dean, the late Blaine Hudson.

鈥淯ofL created an atmosphere where it allowed you to try,鈥 he said.

Taylor-Archer was not the only one to see a spark in Ivonye.

鈥淗e鈥檚 one of the most tenacious humans I鈥檝e ever met,鈥 said Natalia Bishop, UofL鈥檚 director of innovation and entrepreneurship. 鈥淗is mentality is always 鈥榟ow am I paving the way鈥 and that鈥檚 not super common sometimes.鈥

Bishop and Ivonye are both entrepreneurs in residence with Amplify Louisville, a state-funded organization that supports startups. With similar backgrounds 鈥 both are immigrants; Bishop is from Colombia 鈥 they found themselves with parallel goals to increase entrepreneurship opportunities in their adopted home of Louisville. While Ivonye centers on Black entrepreneurs and Bishop focuses on Latinx and female entrepreneurs, they provide their mentorship and expertise to anyone with an idea who needs help to get it off the ground.

鈥淚t鈥檚 great work that is driving real change, and the change that is happening is quantifiable,鈥 Bishop said. 鈥淥ne of the things that is most difficult is how you leverage your personal resources for others and how you pull others up.鈥

That鈥檚 an area in which Ivonye excels, Bishop said.

鈥淜ela brings value to all his relationships,鈥 she said. 鈥淗e鈥檚 not afraid to make that introduction for you, to make sure you鈥檙e putting yourself out there. He will make sure you鈥檙e in a position to execute what it is that you say you鈥檙e going to execute.鈥

Ivonye鈥檚 introductions through Prot茅g茅 have been directly responsible for matching seven founders with their super founder mentors, resulting in over $1 million in direct investments so far. Additionally, those founders have used what their mentors taught them to go out and raise an additional $38.5 million in seed funding.

He has also been working his own business relationships to provide Prot茅g茅 with funding to pass that support along to the entrepreneurs.

鈥淲e鈥檙e pairing these people up with good mentors, I鈥檓 meeting with them, we鈥檙e helping them out there and we鈥檙e seeing success,鈥 he said. 鈥淢y own mentor decided to anchor a $1 million fund for me so when we accept you into the program and a mentor invests, Prot茅g茅 can also invest.鈥

Investing and connecting both lead to doing, Ivonye believes, and that鈥檚 how he plans to boost his community, city and beyond.

鈥淚’m fortunate that I鈥檝e had people tell me 鈥榊ou have to do something about it,鈥欌 he said. 鈥淪o that鈥檚 what I say: You cannot speak about it. You have to do something about it.鈥

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Erica Walsh
Erica Walsh is the marketing director for the Office of Communications and Marketing. Her job lets her share UofL鈥檚 good news in all avenues of communications including UofL Magazine, advertising, content marketing and branding. Walsh joined UofL in 2014 after previously serving as the public relations specialist at Indiana University Southeast. Prior to her career in higher education communications she was an award-winning newspaper reporter. Red is one of her favorite colors and it鈥檚 a good thing, too, because she earned her bachelor鈥檚 degree in journalism from Western Kentucky University and her master鈥檚 in communication from UofL.