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Innovation and Entrepreneurship

Three food tech start-ups, no stopping for Carolina alumna

Since graduating from UNC-Chapel Hill in 2008, Riana Lynn has founded three startups and managed high-profile projects at the White House.

Riana Lynn speaks.
Food tech entrepreneur Riana Lynn focuses on creating impact, transforming the nation’s food system and changing the face of the nation’s tech community.

Food tech entrepreneur Riana Lynn has chalked up more high-powered experiences at age 30 than most people accumulate in a lifetime.

Since graduating from UNC-Chapel Hill in 2008, she has founded three startups, managed high-profile projects at the White House and secured a coveted spot as a Google-Code2040 entrepreneur-in-residence.

Lynn is now negotiating the sale of her third food-related venture — FoodTrace, a software platform and suite of services for food suppliers — and planning the launch of a fourth.

The net result of her breathless past decade? A laser focus on what she cares about most deeply — creating impact, transforming the nation’s food system and changing the face of the nation’s tech community.

“I really just want to continue to build, to try to impact my community and get more minority entrepreneurs doing well,” she said.

Lynn grew up in Evanston, Ill., but North Carolina schools were always on her radar, due in large measure to Michael Jordan and college sports.

“I was just a nerdy little girl who loved basketball and science,” she said.

Carolina’s track coaches recruited her to Chapel Hill, where she excelled in discus, javelin and shot put, ranking at that time among the top 10 female discus throwers in university history.

Lynn initially jumped on the pre-med track, pursuing a biology major and chemistry minor. But she took an elective class on the Harlem Renaissance taught by professor Kenneth Janken that proved so transformative she added African, African American and diaspora studies as a second major.

“I learned that tons of entrepreneurs were bred out of the Harlem Renaissance,” Lynn recalled. “I was fascinated by that. I was really interested in figuring out how to bridge my passions with my beliefs.”

Lynn attended graduate school at Northwestern University, where she earned a master’s degree in public policy and administration. While there, she co-founded a food company, built outreach websites on minority-targeted health and human services programs, and conducted research on nutrigenomics — the study of how people respond to nutrients based on their genetic makeup. She also spent five months as a White House intern, supporting initiatives for women, girls, jobs and small business.

To keep reading, see: http://magazine.college.unc.edu/2016/03/lynn