TEDxDetroit

TEDxDetroit Ideas. Innovations. Inspiration. A gathering of creators, catalysts, entrepreneurs, artists, technologists, designers, scientists, thinkers and doers.

Road Trip! We're heading 30 miles up Woodward Ave for TedXpontiac  May 1st!The inaugural TEDx event in Pontiac is happen...
03/09/2026

Road Trip! We're heading 30 miles up Woodward Ave for TedXpontiac May 1st!

The inaugural TEDx event in Pontiac is happening this spring. Thinkers, builders, storytellers, and innovators who will take the stage to share ideas worth spreading and shape the future.

Meet the speakers and producers (and grab a ticket before they sell out) at TEDxPontiac.org

Big congrats to Kevandre Thompson and his team on bringing another TEDx event to the region.

If you believe in the power of ideas, community, and innovation, you need to be in the room. Seats are limited and this event will sell out.

Here's a soul warming story about 2011   speaker Veronika Scott and the amazing impact she's made in/for Detroit and bey...
11/30/2025

Here's a soul warming story about 2011 speaker Veronika Scott and the amazing impact she's made in/for Detroit and beyond! Congratulations on your hitting 100,000 units. Wow!!

When professor Stephen Schock challenged his College for Creative Studies design students to create something that filled a real need, Veronika Scott knew exactly what problem she wanted to solve. In Detroit, one of every 42 residents was homeless, and she saw them every day.
For five months, the twenty-one-year-old spent three evenings a week at a warming center, talking with people who had nowhere else to go. She watched them huddle in inadequate clothing against temperatures that plunged below freezing. She listened to their stories. She learned what they truly needed.
Her solution was elegant in its practicality: a coat that transformed into a sleeping bag at night, then converted into an over-the-shoulder bag during the day. Made from waterproof, windproof materials with storage built into the arm pockets, it was designed not just to keep people warm but to help them maintain dignity and independence.
The prototype was crude—it weighed twenty pounds and took eighty hours to make once she taught herself to sew. But Veronika refused to let her class project end with a grade. She understood what this coat could mean.
She kept refining the design, spending all her money on materials and improvements. She sought feedback from the people who would actually use it, making adjustments based on their real-world experience through a brutal Detroit winter. The coat began winning recognition, but Veronika knew something was still missing.
Then came the moment that changed everything.
A homeless woman approached her at the shelter, and instead of gratitude, her words carried anger and truth: "We don't need coats. We need jobs."
Those eight words hit Veronika like lightning. She'd been so focused on solving the immediate problem of warmth that she'd missed the deeper crisis. People didn't just need charity—they needed opportunity, income, purpose, and a pathway out of homelessness.
Veronika's motivation ran deeper than most people knew. She'd grown up with parents who struggled with addiction, constantly fighting to keep the family housed. Without help from other relatives, she would have faced the same struggles as the people she was trying to help. She understood firsthand what it meant to be judged for being poor, to face assumptions about what you were capable of achieving.
When she decided to turn her class project into a nonprofit organization in 2011, nearly everyone told her it would fail. But their reasons stunned her.
"They didn't say my product was bad," Veronika recalls. "They said these homeless women will never make more than a peanut butter and jelly sandwich—you cannot rely on them for anything."
She decided to prove them spectacularly wrong.
The Empowerment Plan launched with a revolutionary model. The organization would hire people from homeless shelters—predominantly women—to manufacture the coats. But it wouldn't just be about employment. Roughly sixty percent of their forty-hour work week would be dedicated to coat production. The remaining forty percent would focus on addressing whatever challenges each individual faced: obtaining a GED, driver's education, financial literacy, domestic violence support, or other services tailored to their specific needs.
The early days were challenging. Veronika had no business experience. She was working with people who'd been told their whole lives they weren't capable of reliable work. She was operating on donations and grants, including crucial support from Carhartt, which provided materials.
But something remarkable began to happen. The women she hired didn't just show up—they excelled. They took pride in creating something that would help others like themselves. They understood, better than anyone, what it felt like to sleep on cold streets, to be invisible to society. Every coat they sewed carried that understanding.
Within their first four to six weeks of employment, every worker moved into permanent housing for themselves and their families. After spending two years with The Empowerment Plan, learning new skills and building stability, they moved on to other jobs or even started their own companies. The results spoke louder than any critic ever could: one hundred percent of former employees maintained stable housing a year after leaving the organization.
"My team is badass," Veronika says with fierce pride. "They're very skilled, they're very driven and motivated, and they make a very good garment."
The coats themselves continued evolving. Early versions took five and a half hours to make. Through innovations suggested by the women on the factory floor, production time dropped to less than two hours per coat. The design improved, becoming lighter and more functional. Each coat cost one hundred fifty dollars to sponsor and was distributed free of charge through partnerships with outreach organizations nationwide.
As production ramped up, so did demand. The Empowerment Plan expanded from a converted closet to a space at Ponyride, a nonprofit that houses creative companies with social missions. Later, they moved to an even larger facility in Detroit's Milwaukee Junction neighborhood.
The coats began reaching people far beyond Detroit. Through partnerships and donations, they were distributed across all fifty states and twenty-two countries, going to disaster zones, refugee camps, and anywhere people faced extreme cold without shelter.
By 2024, the numbers told an extraordinary story. The organization had employed over one hundred people from homeless backgrounds, pulling more than two hundred families out of homelessness through employment. They had distributed ninety-five thousand coats to people in desperate need.
This winter, they will reach a milestone that seemed impossible when Veronika first sat in that college classroom: distributing their one hundred thousandth coat.
But even as they celebrate this achievement, the crisis deepens. In 2024, homelessness in America reached its highest level since data collection began, with 771,480 people experiencing homelessness on a single night—an eighteen percent increase from the previous year. Food prices and housing costs continue to climb. Nearly two thousand people currently wait on a list for coat sponsorships.
"It's been a really challenging year for our organization," observes Erika George, the chief development officer. "We've seen increased demand, and individuals we are hiring are coming in with way more barriers."
Yet The Empowerment Plan pushes forward, guided by Veronika's unwavering belief in local manufacturing and investing in people. Now recognized as one of the Chronicle of Philanthropy's "40 Under 40: Young Leaders Who Are Solving the Problems of Today," she continues challenging the notion that American manufacturing is outdated or that people experiencing homelessness can't be reliable employees.
"I think we're going to show a lot of people: you think it's outdated to do manufacturing in your neighborhood, but I think it's something that we have to do in the future," Veronika asserts. "Where it's sustainable, where you invest in people, where they're not interchangeable parts."
Every coat that leaves The Empowerment Plan factory carries multiple stories. It represents the woman who sewed it, rebuilding her life stitch by stitch. It will warm someone sleeping on cold concrete, offering not just physical protection but a reminder that someone cares. And it proves that a college student willing to listen—really listen—to the people she wanted to help could spark a movement that transforms lives on both sides of the sewing machine.
The ladies of The Empowerment Plan take joy in proving their doubters wrong every single day. They've shown that homelessness isn't a defining characteristic or a life sentence. They've demonstrated that given genuine opportunity, people can reclaim their independence and build futures they choose for themselves.
One coat at a time, one job at a time, one life at a time—they're stitching together proof that dignity, opportunity, and second chances can change everything.

Alas, here are some recap photographs that tell the story of how awesome TEDxDetroit 2025 was!!!Check out our 2025 Class...
11/17/2025

Alas, here are some recap photographs that tell the story of how awesome TEDxDetroit 2025 was!!!

Check out our 2025 Class Photos and the amazing people captured having a blast at TEDXDetroit this year! What an experience!

IF YOU WEREN'T THERE, YOU MISSED IT!

Missed TEDxDetroit? Ready to go deeper? The Relatability Wave brings together TEDx alumni and expert leaders for five po...
11/16/2025

Missed TEDxDetroit? Ready to go deeper? The Relatability Wave brings together TEDx alumni and expert leaders for five powerful TEDx-style talks designed to reduce burnout, sharpen your focus, and reignite your purpose. Expect real stories, practical tools, and zero sales pitches. Walk away equipped to fire up your team, reconnect with purpose, and lead with calm, clarity, and focus – insights you can put to work immediately.

Join us Tuesday in Rochester from 11am–2pm.
relatabilitywave.com/event

Today is a good day for a great day. Here's the schedule for TEDxDetroit 2025 at Durfee Innovation Society.Doors Open at...
11/12/2025

Today is a good day for a great day. Here's the schedule for TEDxDetroit 2025 at Durfee Innovation Society.

Doors Open at 12:30 for Tours

Session Starts at 2pm Featuring Talks & Performances By:
+ Vickie Gould
+ Armond Harris
+ Rasmus Bendvold
+ Stevie Soul Ansara
+ Lorrena Black
+ Alexandra Clark
+ Galaxy The Poet
+ Johnnie Turnage
+ Tam White
+ W.E. Da'Cruz
+ Ned Staebler
+ Reggie Williams

The event will wrap before 5pm.

Thanks again for being a part of TEDxDetroit 2025. It's going to be an inspiring day in Detroit. Looking forward to seeing you Wednesday afternoon.

Durfee Innovation Society (DIS)
2470 Collingwood St,
Detroit, MI 48206

TEDxDetroit Executive Producer Terry Bean and Life Remodeled CEO Diallo Smith sit down with Robin Murdoch Fox 2 to talk ...
11/09/2025

TEDxDetroit Executive Producer Terry Bean and Life Remodeled CEO Diallo Smith sit down with Robin Murdoch Fox 2 to talk about Wednesday's big event! Shout outs to Wendy Ekua Da'Cruz, Ned Staebler, and Armond Harris.

Watch the interview on the FOX 2 Detroit website: https://www.fox2detroit.com/video/1737685

Ideas. Innovation. Inspiration. It's all happening THIS WEDNESDAY as TEDx returns to Detroit for TEDxDetroit 2025. Join ...
11/08/2025

Ideas. Innovation. Inspiration. It's all happening THIS WEDNESDAY as TEDx returns to Detroit for TEDxDetroit 2025. Join us for a special afternoon event that spark fresh thinking for your business creativity, and life.

TEDxDetroit 2025
Wednesday, November 12
Durfee Innovation Society
1pm-5pm

Reserve your seat at

TEDx Returns to Detroit Wednesday, November 12, 2025 Be part of the most exciting and inspiring Detroit event this year. TEDxDetroit features the best and brightest minds sharing their passion, insights, and ideas worth spreading. Join us as we stretch the boundaries of possibility and inspire actio...

If you missed the last episode of Opportunity Detroit on WJR Radio, it's now available on all your favorite podcast apps...
11/07/2025

If you missed the last episode of Opportunity Detroit on WJR Radio, it's now available on all your favorite podcast apps.

Links: https://lnkd.in/gB82bFD8

TEDxDetroit curator Charlie Wollborg joined host and producer Ann Thomas along with The Mushroom Angel Company CEO Wendy Ekua Da'Cruz, wheel.me US Managing Director Rasmus Noraas Bendvold, and Life Remodeled CEO Diallo Smith.

It was a fun and fascinating conversation covering everything from AI Robots and Mushrooms and Economic Development and Creativity and Community Restoration and the history of TEDx and plenty of love for Detroit.

TEDxDetroit 2025 is going to be a remarkable day in Detroit. We hope you'll join us Wednesday, November 12 from 1pm-5pm at the Durfee Innovation Society Opportunity Hub in Detroit. Don't miss out!

Tickets are on sale at TEDxDetroit.com

Meet the speakers: Alexandra Clark, Founder Bon Bon BonBorn into a chocolate loving family, it was no surprise when, at ...
11/07/2025

Meet the speakers: Alexandra Clark, Founder Bon Bon Bon

Born into a chocolate loving family, it was no surprise when, at nineteen, Alex announced she would open a chocolate shop. After traveling the world studying her craft as a food scientist, economist, confectioner, and retailer, she started Bon Bon Bon, as an experiment. It worked.

Today, "The Babes Babes Babes" (as they're called in Detroit) hand-make and hand-pipe millions of "Bons" in micro batches of colorful, delicious and truly good chocolates for the good people of Detroit and the world round!

Recognized as some of the best and most creative chocolate in the world by the likes of Forbes, Martha Stewart, Bon Appetit, Elle France and The James Beard Awards, Bon Bon Bon maintains an almost obsessive focus on quality.

Meanwhile, Alex remains a highly focused, creative and enthusiastic entrepreneur who is fascinated by people, obsessed with agri-food inefficiencies and believes deeply in the power of good data and great design.

One week until showtime! Don't miss out! Grab your tickets at TEDxDetroit.com
11/05/2025

One week until showtime! Don't miss out! Grab your tickets at TEDxDetroit.com

Meet the speakers: Johnnie Turnage, Co-Founder and Community Builder of Black Tech SaturdaysJohnnie Turnage is a visiona...
11/04/2025

Meet the speakers: Johnnie Turnage, Co-Founder and Community Builder of Black Tech Saturdays

Johnnie Turnage is a visionary leader, innovator, and co-founder of Black Tech Saturdays, a national movement reshaping how communities engage with technology, entrepreneurship, and innovation.

Under his leadership, Black Tech Saturdays has grown from a small Detroit meetup into a national model for inclusive innovation, engaging over 25,000 attendees, generating $40M+ in economic impact, and creating hundreds of jobs through partnerships.

Through Black Tech Saturdays, Johnnie has built an ecosystem where founders, creatives, and investors collide —empowering underrepresented voices and bridging gaps across industries, generations, and geographies. His work has been celebrated for its ability to turn tech spaces into community spaces, driving collaboration, career opportunities, and economic mobility.

Johnnie continues to inspire the next generation of innovators through his commitment to access, belonging, and purpose-driven innovation, making him one of the leading architects of Detroit’s and the nation’s growing tech renaissance.

Address

200 Walker Street
Detroit, MI
48207

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