Nashville Entrepreneur Center
Prepared for Dougal Ballantyne, Oracle · May 2026
A follow-up to our conversation

"What is Nashville's durable advantage?"

Healthcare gets decided here. We're making it where the next generation gets built.

Nashville already runs America's healthcare back office. The opportunity in front of us — and in front of Oracle — is to make this the city where global health innovators land, scale, and choose to stay. The EC has the curriculum, the relationships, and the operator network to do it. What's missing is the technical and capital infrastructure to match. That's where this conversation starts.

$256M
in cumulative alumni revenue
1,935
jobs created by EC founders
85%
of EC founders still in business at 5 years (vs. 50% industry standard)
$3.6M
raised by Project Healthcare cohort during the program
The thesis

Nashville's durable advantage is access. AI and health is what gets built on top of it.

Density and go-to-market are real. They're also not enough — every city in America claims a version of them. The advantage that compounds is access: the ability to put a founder in the room with the operators, regulators, capital, and clinical leaders who actually move healthcare in this country.

No one else can sell that access the way Nashville can. The EC has spent fifteen years assembling it.

What this city doesn't yet have is the layer above it: the technical and AI infrastructure that lets innovators — domestic and international — build at U.S. scale once they get here. A company serving six million people in Ireland needs a different architecture to serve sixty million in the United States.

That gap is the partnership opportunity.

Already in motion

Three programs you'd be plugging into, not funding from scratch.

Oracle isn't being asked to underwrite a concept. Each of these is operating, has produced outcomes, or has a launch date on the calendar.

Launching Sept 14, 2026

LIGHT

Nashville's market-entry program for international health companies.

A 12-month residency for proven international health SMEs entering the U.S. market. Founding partners: EC, Nashville Area Chamber of Commerce, Global Health Connector. Public launch May 12 at the ABHI conference. Ribbon cutting in September with companies in residence.

Delivered April 2026

Innovation Immersion

A productized ecosystem residency for visiting cohorts.

13 MIT Foundry Fellows, 3 days, built around MIT's five-stakeholder model. Delivered as a paid product going forward — universities, international delegations, and corporate innovation teams as buyers. Photos and testimonials in hand.

Operating since 2018

Project Healthcare

The flagship 12-week health accelerator.

Direct curriculum and mentor pipeline into Nashville's health operator network. Cohorts have raised $3.6M during the program alone. The infrastructure inside which an Oracle technical and AI mentor track would live.

"In order to recruit eight thousand five hundred jobs to Nashville, employees want to see they're moving to a city with a vibrant startup scene."

— from our second conversation

A proposal in two parts

Capital alone gets seen. Capital plus presence gets felt.

A multi-year financial commitment funds what we build. An operational role inside our programs is what makes Oracle visible — to founders, to media, to the engineers Oracle is recruiting to the East Bank. We see them as one proposal, not two.

Financial commitment

  • Multi-year, multi-million.Five-year horizon. The EC's working number is $1M annually — calibrated to underwrite the technical infrastructure and program capacity below, not as a sponsorship line.
  • Cloud and AI compute pool.A pre-allocated credit pool deployable across LIGHT residents, Project Healthcare cohorts, and the international companies whose technology has to scale from European populations to American ones.
  • The physical anchor.An Oracle-branded technical environment at the EC — the analog to the Oracle Red Bull simulator, built for founders rather than racing customers. Function and form, not a logo.
  • Program capacity expansion.LIGHT scales from 4–8 companies in year one to a sustained 15+ per year. The recurring revenue programs (Immersion, Project Healthcare, future cohorts) get the headroom to take on more without diluting quality.

Operational participation

  • The Executive Briefing Center on the itinerary.Every paid Innovation Immersion cohort makes the EBC a stop. Oracle is positioned alongside Vanderbilt, the Mayor's office, and the Healthcare Council in the city's stakeholder framework. Visiting business schools, international delegations, and corporate innovation teams meet Oracle by default.
  • Oracle Health speaker bureau.Six to ten cohort sessions a year — fireside chats, panels, technical deep-dives. The same Oracle Health leaders Dougal offered access to, slotted into programs that already have rooms full of qualified founders.
  • An Oracle mentor track inside Project Healthcare.Five to ten Oracle engineers committing two hours a month to founder office hours. Photo-rich, story-rich, recruiter-rich. The kind of activity that survives an internal review at Oracle because it shows up in faces, not footnotes.
  • Oracle inside our exported curriculum.The EC is licensing accelerator curriculum to universities (MTSU is the first conversation). A co-branded "AI for founders" module ships Oracle into every classroom that buys it.
  • A founding-sponsor naming role on LIGHT."LIGHT, powered by Oracle" or the equivalent. Public, durable, and defensible — and it's the cleanest answer to the Seattle-Amazon problem you raised.
Why this is defensible internally at Oracle

A community-investment platform you can point at, not a sponsorship line.

Recruiting

The startup ecosystem you said Oracle needs to attract eight thousand five hundred employees to the East Bank — Oracle is now visibly inside it. Engineers mentoring founders is the proof that exists in a way a sponsorship line never will.

Brand

Oracle shows up in cohort photography, testimonials, press, and the lived experience of every visiting delegation. It's the answer to "we don't want to be the next Amazon in Seattle."

Pipeline

Project Healthcare and LIGHT founders running on OCI is a pipeline of long-term Oracle Health customers who chose the platform because of how they came up.

Story

At the end of year one, this looks like: a number of founders mentored, a number of cohorts hosted, a number of international companies that landed in the United States on Oracle infrastructure. Every one of those is a Nashville story Oracle can tell.

What we'd like to do next

A working session in early June.

The goal is to move from a shared interest to a shared shape — what Oracle's role looks like, what gets named publicly when LIGHT launches, and what a five-year working agreement could look like.

First two weeks of June
Working session — EC, Oracle, Saurabh Mittal (EC Board Chair, joining via Zoom from overseas), Bobby Frist (EC Board, healthcare).
Sam, Rob, Dougal, +1
Mid-June
Draft scope of partnership shared with Oracle for internal review.
Sam → Dougal
Late summer
Pre-brief and embargoed look at LIGHT's September ribbon cutting; Oracle's role determined for public moment.
EC + Oracle
September 14, 2026
LIGHT ribbon cutting. Companies in residence. Public launch of the partnership in whatever shape we've built.
Both teams
Final thought

The unfair advantage gets built once. We'd like to build it with you.

There's a version of this conversation where Oracle becomes the company that helped Nashville become the city where global health gets built. Not a logo on a brochure. Not a quarterly check. The company whose engineers, infrastructure, and people are inside the work.

That's the partnership we're proposing. We'd like to keep going.

Sam Davidson Chief Executive Officer · Nashville Entrepreneur Center
Rob Williams Director of Marketing · Nashville Entrepreneur Center
41 Peabody Street, Nashville, TN 37210 ec.co