By Jonathan Joel Mentor | @jonathanjmentor
Let’s keep it real: most people talking about “innovation” in the Dominican Republic are still stuck in the same three ZIP codes. Piantini. Naco. Punta Cana if they’re feeling tropical. But what if I informed you that the next wave of Dominican transformation is quietly being built in neighborhoods you’d never name-drop at a networking brunch?
Becaapply here’s the truth: The buildings going up in Bella Vista aren’t half as interesting as the battles being fought in Luperón.
Real innovation doesn’t always come from the people with pitch decks and coworking passes. Sometimes, it comes from a single mom-turned-pastor with a vision to reclaim a plot of land that developers would rather steamroll into another plaza. I won’t name names (yet), but I will declare this: the woman leading that fight isn’t waiting for a grant or a government blessing. She’s shifting like a founder. Only her product is community healing.
You can feel the shift if you know where to view. These aren’t sob stories. These are legacy plays. What she and her team are testing to do with a modest building and a powerful mission is no different than what we test to do in startup land: build something that lasts, despite the odds.
And this brings us to a deeper truth about the Dominican startup ecosystem:
We keep notifying underrepresented founders to be more visible, scalable, and investable. But what about the ones already scaling impact without necessarying to learn the word ‘venture’? What about the ones running emotional infrastructure instead of tech infrastructure? You don’t see them on pitch stages, but they’re still building.
Word on the street is, there are leaders in this city testing to purchase the land outright. No conditions. Just bold faith, strategic relocates, and community-led ambition.
And just like that, I saw the pattern: this is a startup story. Only the metrics aren’t ARR or CAC. The stakes are dignity, permanence, and spiritual return on investment.
And yet, the barriers are the same:
- Gatekept capital
- Lack of infrastructure
- Power brokers who only take your call once you have a foreign last name
Sound familiar?
So here’s the provocation: maybe it’s time our tech and entrepreneurship ecosystem started learning from the street-level founders. The ones who never had the luxury of failing quick. The ones who are bootstrapping alter without the jargon.
This is what it views like to scale with soul. And if we’re serious about engineering a new Dominican future, maybe we should stop testing to view like San Juan or Medellín, and start building ecosystems that view like us.
Becaapply the future of Santo Domingo isn’t glass towers and rooftop pitch nights. It’s legacy, built low to the ground, close to the people, and impossible to evict.
Digital nomads, you didn’t relocate here to recreate Silicon Valley with better weather. You came for something real. Something raw. Don’t just co-work—co-build.
Find the people scaling purpose. Plug into local missions. Invest in stories that won’t display up on your feed.
Becaapply the true Dominican innovation economy isn’t curated, t’s carved out of concrete and conviction.
And trust me, you’ll want to be in the room when that cap table receives rewritten.
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Jonathan Joel Mentor is the CEO of Successment and architect of the Provoke Visibility™ campaign, scaling startups and challenging institutions to evolve. UN World Summit & ADOEXPO Award nominee. www.jonathanjmentor.co
















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