Spotlight: Crystal Martin on What Entrepreneur Means to Her

Crystal is the St. Louis community engagement manager for LaunchCode. A Michigan native, coding captured her attention and kept herย in St. Louis.

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Photo courtesy of Megan Magray

How did you get involved in the startup community?

I didnโ€™t know what a startup tech scene even was when I was in college. I could hardly get my Dell desktop computer to turn on, let alone figure out how it works.

I got involved in the tech scene in a funny, weird way: I came here with Teach For America in 2010 and taught middle school math in South City for four years. During my last year of teaching, I realized I wanted to do something different.

I wanted to pair my creative, artistic side with my love for science, and I discovered that code was a way to do that. I didnโ€™t know exactly where to start, but Iโ€™d heard that Meetup.com had all kinds of groups.

So I searched โ€œcoding meetupsโ€ and found STLRuby. I signed up and showed up to their monthly meetup. I was the only woman and black person there, but the guys were super-welcoming.

After the meetup, Brad Urani (who just so happened to be a LaunchCode mentor at his company, Upside) told me I should talk to his friend Colleen [Liebig]. He said, โ€œSheโ€™s starting this girl-coder thing.โ€

Thatโ€™s when I first found out about CoderGirl. Through that program, I started learning to code through CS50. Once I learned about all the opportunities at LaunchCode, I thought, โ€œI want to give my time to this organization for freeโ€”how awesome would it be to work there!โ€

Whatโ€™s kept you in St. Louis?

Tech is whatโ€™s kept me in St. Louis. Not too long ago, one of my co-workers at LaunchCode told me that he was so blown away by the fact that I cited LaunchCode and CoderGirl as reasons why I stayed in St. Louis.

I was one foot out the door, and then I heard about these organizations and the opportunity they were giving to people, and I thought, โ€œI really want to see where this goes.โ€

What does being an โ€œentrepreneurโ€ mean to you?

For me, entrepreneur really translates to โ€œhustler.โ€ Itโ€™s the ability to make โ€œ$1 out of 15 centsโ€; something out of nothing.

There are so many people who are entrepreneurs and never get celebrated or acknowledged as such because theyโ€™re promoting parties in their community or doing hair in their basement salon (like I did all through high school and college).

What three qualities do you think an entrepreneur should have?

Empathy, integrity and tact.

What are you most passionate about?

I care about everybody getting an opportunity. We all come from different walks of life and circumstances, but everyone should at least get the chance to know whatโ€™s out thereโ€”what you can learn, explore or be. I care about people actualizing their dreams, whatever they might be.

What keeps you up at night?

All the things that I want to do and places I want to go. Iโ€™m a dreamer, and I spend a lot of time wishing I could have 1,000 lives at once.

I often feel like Iโ€™m not doing enough, so Iโ€™m up strategizing how I could maybe live 999 of those lives.

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