Obama encourages international entrepreneurs to think US


President Barack Obama is encouraging aspiring entrepreneurs from more than 140 countries to connect their ideas with U.S. businesses. The Global Entrepreneurship Summit has become an annual event that tries to link entrepreneurs with investors from across the world.

Officials said the more the U.S. can help emerging economies, the more they become markets for American-made goods. The conference offers seminars on such topics as finding the capital needed to get businesses up and running. Participants also will make connections with each other that will pay off down the road, said deputy national security adviser Ben Rhodes.

"Often entrepreneurs from emerging economies don't have the same type of exposure to their peers as you have in the United States," Rhodes said. The White House is particularly trying to encourage women and minorities to become entrepreneurs. Just 3 percent of venture capital-backed startups are led by women, and only around 1 percent are led by African-Americans. Leading up to the conference, the White House announced a list of 30 tech companies that pledged to increase the diversity of their workforces, among them Airbnb, Intel and SAP.

Obama made a detour to San Francisco prior to the conference, dining Thursday night at the restaurant Twenty Five Lusk with guests who had a role shaping the conference, including Google CEO Sundar Pichai and venture capitalists John Doerr, Reid Hoffman and Chamath Palihapitiya, as well as other business leaders.