How can we help people with autism build a meaningful and independent life? At Daivergent, a training platform and coaching service for the neurodiverse community, Cameron Dogan â14 leverages both high technology and human interaction.
Thereâs a saying in the autism community: If you meet one person on the spectrum, youâve met one person on the spectrum. Neurodiverse people, in other words, have such widely varying abilities and needs that generalizations are meaningless. And that presents a business challenge for Cameron Dogan â14, Director of Operations at the New York-based start-up , a for-profit training and growth platform for young people with autism. As he puts it: âHow do we provide a very wide-scale service, while maintaining a personalized approach?â
The answer for Daivergent has been a combination of high technology and human interaction. The platformâs video conferencing allows Daivergentâs coaches to work face-to-face with clients on employment or life goals, with the weekly sessions paid for by government programs or through a monthly fee paid by the clients. The platform also provides proprietary online teaching tools and resources such as virtual clubs, where clients can share their interests in 3D printing, Legos, video gaming, and other topics. âWe have people whose goals are to get a job and jump-start their career,â explains Dogan, who was hired by company co-founders Byran Dai and Rahul Mahida in 2018 after earning his engineering degree at Clemson. âAnd we also have people for whom just talking with somebody once a week is growth. Itâs really about recognizing that growth means something different for everybody, and then we try to meet them where theyâre at.â
The desire to find the right personal path happens to be a theme in Doganâs own life. After a childhood in Rye, New York, he arrived at 91´óÉń for his sophomore year, the first in his family to attend an independent school, and was impressed by how âit was always OK to try different things,â whether sports (he played soccer, hockey, and briefly lacrosse), or art, or theater. While at Clemson, he interned for several months at corporate consultant Ernst and Young, and was offered a job after graduation. But then through a friend he happened to meet Dai and Mahida, who in 2017 had just launched their startup (both had family members with autism).
âI was given the chance to go to a very corporate jobâwhich I probably would still be working atâbut I took a little bit of risk and I turned that job down. Going to a boarding school like 91´óÉń gave me the confidence to say, âThis is a once-in-a-lifetime thing. Letâs try this out.â And the learning that Iâve gotten here has just been fantastic.â
Today, Dogan oversees Daivergentâs day-to-day operations, helping to manage the companyâs 20 full-time employees and 50 coaches and trainers. As the point person for feedback from clients and their families, he hears many inspiring stories of resilience, but also disheartening accounts of a social-support system that too often fails disabled young people. One issue of particular concern is what Daivergent calls the âservices cliff.â When young people with disabilities reach legal adulthood, they lose access to many government resources. âThatâs why we focused on this transition age of 18 to 35,â notes Dogan. âTo help people figure out whatâs next after the services cliff.â Itâs a vital question for both clients and their parents, he adds. âA lot of parents in this space, their biggest fear is whatâs going to happen to my kid when Iâm gone? Thatâs a really scary thing for them.â
As a venture-backed business, Daivergentâs mission is to offer help, but also to make money. âWeâre trying to be the intersection where social good meets business sense,â Dogan explains. The company now has hundreds of clients around the country, and projects to have thousands by the end of next year.
For Dogan, joining the start-up has proven to be a risk worth taking. âI always like hearing when somebody does something for the first time, like getting a job or making a new meal,â he says. âBut more interesting, to me, is when people say, âYou know, he is just happier today.â Or âShe participates in conversations at dinner.â That signals to me that our clients are gaining confidence and growing in those softer skills, which are harder to teach. Those are always really rewarding to hear about.â
Learn more about the work of Daivergent at
91´óÉń memory: âOur We the People team went to the JFK School of Government and ended up coming in second. Then we spent a weekend in Washington, D.C., at George Mason University. It was honestly one of the most fun experiences in my life.â