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Key people at Allied Talent.
Allied Talent was founded by Chris Yeh (Co-Founder and Partner).
Allied Talent is a management consulting and corporate training firm based in the San Francisco Bay Area that helps enterprise organizations implement modern employer-employee relationship frameworks. The boutique agency provides specialized corporate workshops, executive coaching, and strategic consulting services designed to improve talent retention and foster entrepreneurial thinking within corporate teams. The firm's core methodology is directly based on the organizational principles outlined in the bestselling business book The Alliance. Operating as a specialized business-to-business service provider, the firm targets human resources leaders and corporate executives seeking talent management strategies. A separate, unaffiliated entity operating as Allied Talent LLC, led by Jesse Wright, provides technical staffing and recruiting services for the automotive, aerospace, and defense sectors. The consulting firm Allied Talent was officially founded in 2014 by prominent Silicon Valley figures Reid Hoffman, Chris Yeh, and Ben Casnocha.
Key people at Allied Talent.
Allied Talent was founded by Chris Yeh (Co-Founder and Partner).
Allied Talent Partners (ATP) is a mission-driven, not-for-profit talent marketplace that connects vetted, experienced professionals to high-impact, fixed-term opportunities in energy access, climate action, and sustainable development, with an initial focus on Africa.[2][3][5] It addresses human capital bottlenecks in emerging economies by matching local, regional, and global talent to projects in sectors like clean energy, rooftop solar, e-mobility, and energy efficiency, serving clients including consulting firms, private corporations, utilities, NGOs, and donor agencies.[2][3][5] ATP provides full-service talent deployment—scoping, sourcing, vetting, matching, contracting, and payroll compliance—enabling organizations to turn stalled projects into engines of economic vitality while prioritizing African talent to build local capacity.[2][5]
Incubated by Three Cairns Group, ATP has matched over 200 projects with 9,000+ professionals across 80+ organizations, fostering inclusive growth and skill transfer in underserved markets.[2][5]
ATP emerged from the recognition of untapped human capital as a key bottleneck in emerging economies, particularly Africa, where talent gaps often result from inaccessibility rather than absence.[2][3] Inspired by the "on-demand talent" model successful in OECD markets, ATP was incubated and developed by Three Cairns Group to adapt this approach for climate-related projects in developing economies.[2][3] A September 2023 overview document outlined its concept as a marketplace linking high-quality local and global talent to climate initiatives, with ambitions to expand into training and capacity building.[3]
The platform officially launched on January 29, 2025, at the M300 Summit in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, hosted by the African Development Bank and World Bank, aligning with Mission 300's goal to electrify 300 million people in Sub-Saharan Africa by 2030.[5] Sarah McNeilly serves as Managing Director, emphasizing efficient talent mobilization for climate action.[5]
ATP rides the global trend of on-demand, independent talent marketplaces, adapting it to emerging markets where fragmented workforces hinder sustainable development.[2][3] Its timing aligns with accelerating climate action in Africa, fueled by initiatives like Mission 300 and donor-backed electrification, amid market forces like talent inaccessibility and stalled projects due to capacity gaps.[3][5] By channeling skilled independents to clean energy and climate efforts—such as rooftop solar and e-mobility—ATP strengthens local ecosystems, enables knowledge transfer, and supports inclusive growth in regions underserved by traditional staffing.[2][5] This positions it as a neutral enabler in the intersection of tech platforms, sustainability, and economic development, filling scale-level talent needs that incumbents overlook.[3]
ATP is poised to scale as a cornerstone for climate talent in Africa, expanding from marketplace matching to training, capacity building, and volunteerism programs.[2][3] Rising demand for flexible resourcing in energy access, driven by AfDB/World Bank initiatives and private sector net-zero goals, will shape its growth, potentially broadening to more emerging markets.[5] Its influence may evolve into a full talent development hub, amplifying local expertise and turning human capital bottlenecks into competitive advantages for sustainable projects—ultimately fueling the teams that electrify and green the continent.[2][3][5]