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Irish American Partnership

Software Pioneer John Cullinane on Creating Opportunity in Ireland

John Cullinane’s illustrious career in the software industry is known far beyond the Massachusetts technology sphere. Having graduated from Northeastern University, he went on to create the Cullinane Corporation, later Cullinet, which was among the first software companies to go public in 1977. When Cullinet was sold in 1989, its founder turned his attention to a new challenge: providing mentorship and support to emerging talent in Northern Ireland.

John Cullinane mentors young people in Belfast at a skills training class

A child of Irish immigrants and native Irish speakers, John’s mother Margaret arrived in the United States from Dunmore East in Waterford in 1929. Sixty years later, John was asked to mentor and support Irish technology entrepreneurs while promoting business ties and job creation between Northern Ireland and the U.S. “I come out of an entrepreneurial background and I’m used to creating jobs so when I first went to Belfast, I looked around and recognized that there is a very talented group of people in Northern Ireland. Belfast, the most powerful industrial city at one time, could compete with global capacity once again if they started investing in things like high tech.”

John helped attract much-needed U.S. investment through the creation of the Friends of Belfast to promote partnerships, strategic alliances, and entrepreneurship as the way forward for Northern Ireland. This outreach and networking helped secure jobs that would lead to prosperity and bolster peace in the region. “I did everything in my power to help create jobs in Northern Ireland to make it possible for people from both Protestant and Catholic traditions to become involved. And they did.”

Onwards and Upwards program participants
“My major focus in the last couple of years is Onwards and Upwards, which is a program created to help kids that have dropped out of the educational process in Northern Ireland.” In Belfast, where rates of generational unemployment remain high, the Onwards and Upwards program is designed to put young people on a track to secure a job by helping them earn recognized certification in coding and digital science, with training placements in technology sector companies. Personal mentoring expands their network and increases their self-esteem. Under the direction of program co-founder Dr. Frank Costello, the guided focus on the future can be life-changing. The aim is to enable these young people to a play a part in Belfast’s success in the modern global economy.

 

Onwards and Upwards program participants
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