![]() ![]() In exchange, they stage workshops or provide mentoring for local residents, creating a ripple effect.Īs of last year, the accelerator program had helped at least 4,000 entrepreneurs from 79 countries boost 1,400 fledgling businesses, according to Start-Up Chile’s website. Selected applicants from around the world get at least $10,000 in funding, a one-year work visa, office space, plus months of training, mentoring and networking with potential investors. In 2010, the Chilean government launched the so-called startup program for business startups to encourage entrepreneurs and define the country as a global hub of tech innovation. Lustig is a beneficiary of Start-Up Chile, an international model for public investment in entrepreneurship. Lustig and Valletta suggested Latin America also can export some valuable approaches to entrepreneurship. 17, 2017, during a four-country visit to Latin America. Vice President Mike Pence tours the Panama Canal on Aug. Pence, speaking at a business dinner in Santiago on Wednesday, said that U.S.-Latin America trade "totaled a stunning $1.6 trillion" last year and that the United States wants to see it increase: "We want to bring even more of our business culture of entrepreneurship and innovation across Latin America." "What we see on the ground is that they actually can." "Many Latin Americans limit themselves" because they lack confidence that they can compete in global markets, says the 31-year-old managing partner of Magma Partners, a wide-ranging seed-stage investment fund with offices in Los Angeles, California and Santiago, Chile. Nathan Lustig, an American entrepreneur, said he hopes Pence’s visit reinforces the benefits of trade and competition - for the entire hemisphere. "We’re doing our mini-version of trade, giving jobs on both sides," she joked. Valletta co-founded and runs CIEN+, a marketing and analytics firm based in New York and Medellin, Colombia. citizen, described Pence’s trip to her homeland, Argentina, Chile and Panama as "a good thing" that highlights bilateral trade. Liliana "Lili" Gil Valletta, a Colombia native and naturalized U.S. Vice President Mike Pence’s travels this week to Latin America, where he has promoted prosperity, security and democracy for the Americas. That’s what two transnational entrepreneurs hope will result from U.S. She is also a regular television commentator seen on Fox News Channel, Fox Business Network, and CNN en Español.More public backing for innovation, more idea exchanges to nurture global trade and more stability. Liliana "Lili" Gil Valletta is the co-founder and CEO of the cultural intelligence market research tech-firm CulturIntel and the cultural marketing agency CIEN+.Seen on Fox News Channel, Fox Business, among others (en).Chief Executive Officer of CulturIntel and CIEN+, independent television contributor for various networks like Fox News Channel (en).Independent Director ZUMIEZ, YMCA USA, Chairwoman FRIENDS of the American Latino Museum (en).Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University. ![]() Southwestern Adventist University, University of Colorado, and The John F.dbr:St._Jude_Children's_Research_Hospital.dbr:National_Association_of_Professional_Women.dbr:League_of_United_Latin_American_Citizens.dbr:Liliana_Gil_Valletta_PersonFunction_1.She is also a regular television commentator seen on Fox News Channel, Fox Business Network, and CNN en Español. ![]()
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