Bledsoe, who gained national attention for creating a thriving Internet design company, could not fathom the youthโs positionโฆat first.
โThat was his dream,โ Bledsoe told Urban News Service in a rare extended interview. โ[But] knowing the [lack of] support he had and the community he [lived in], there was no one there to teach him beyond school. [It] was the community, the drug dealer. Thatโs where he saw success. He saw drug-dealing as the [reason] they have the cars they have, the money they have, the women they have.โ
In that moment, for Bledsoe, a larger vision came into focus. He had achieved astonishing success in building a website design business when he was just 14, inspiring business camps in St. Louis and Dallas for teenagers, and developing the Jaylen D. Bledsoe Global Group โ a company that specializes in brand expansion consulting for celebrities like Steve Harvey, business development, venture capital funding and direct marketing strategies, among other disciplines.
But the talk with the young man inspired him, he said, to prioritize the Young Entrepreneur University, a program for teenagers where he would โteach students who have not been heavily exposed to entrepreneurship the concepts and fundamentals of building a business, based on the idea of innovating for people.โ
Bledsoe has partnered with major companies, including K Swiss and AT&T, was featured on the Bishop T.D. Jakes Show and, through referrals, has a growing clientele of celebrities in need of brand development. This includes developing online strategies that expand companiesโ reach and product identification.
Thatโs heady stuff for anyone โ especially a teenager. But then, Bledsoe is hardly a typical 17-year-old.
It would be too simplistic to call him a millionaire boy-genius. Yes, four years ago, he became an Internet sensation when his IT company reportedly was worth $3.5 million.
And, yes, he scored 28 out of 36 on the ACT โฆ without even studying. But the true measure of this wunderkind is in his mission โ and it has nothing to do with taking over the world, but certainly is about changing the business world.
โItโs more like crafting young people in our society to be entrepreneurs,โ Bledsoe said. โEntrepreneurship is a hot topic right now for young college students trying to find their way, but thatโs the youngest age in which efforts extend to. If I can use my story to motivate, inspire and push a young person who may be lost in life, then thatโs my purpose.โ
โTo work for him now is pretty remarkable,โ said Wilmer Jackson-Spencer, Bledsoeโs business manager, who grew up in the same neighborhood. โHe has such a high aptitude. Heโs very clear in what he wants done and how he wants it done. He doesnโt watch football or play sports. Heโs all about the Jaylen Bledsoe Global Group. His focus and diligence force me to put that into my work โ and Iโm 37. Itโs amazing to have the kind of engagement he has.โ
Bledsoe is so fiercely private that he frowns on his family having access to the media. He says โfunโ is limited to an infrequent episode of video games or trips to the mall with a small group of like-minded friends.
Working is his โrush,โ he said, with his Young Entrepreneurs University among his top initiatives. Through a digital curriculum of online courses, he plans to make an โinternational program teaching youths (around the world) how to innovateโ in new businesses.
Bledsoe already employs 180 people across the nation. His company used its search engine optimization experience to help comedian and entertainment star Steve Harvey earn $8 million in presales of his book, Act Like A Lady, Think Like A Man, according to Jackson.
Remarkably, Bledsoe insists he is not driven by โchasing moneyโ or material possessions โ he drives a used Nissan Altima โ a mindset that he realizes makes him unlike the average teenager.
He shuns discussing the financial part of his life, believing that the focus on money subtracts from his work and gives the false impression that money rules his life.
โI look back at an interview I did at 14,โ Bledsoe said, โand that interview went viral (because of the headline โteenage millionaireโ). For me, the focus shouldnโt have been that.
โSuccess is not about the money youโve made or how much your company is worth. Success is the ability to impact lives (within) your purpose, doing something you love. For me itโs about distancing myself from the numbers โฆ Moneyโs not that solution.โ
Then what is, especially to a teenager? โSuccess is impacting and innovating and helping people in their lives,โ Bledsoe said. โWhether itโs through philanthropy efforts or through innovating a business idea for them โฆWe help companies and individuals understand and operate better with technology. Now weโre helping celebrities and major brands reorganize their brands and grow and inspire people.โ
Asked if he is surprised by his success, Bledsoe was typically beyond-his-years introspective. โIโm surprised,โ he said, โbut do I understand why? Yes. God has a divine purpose in life for me โฆ My principle is that we all get a dream. But the difference between the successful dreamers and not-successful dreamers is that the successful dreamers take Godโs dream and act on it.โ
Bledsoe said he is ready to take on college, but he has to endure his last year of high school first. He has been accepted at Stanford University and plans to study international business and psychology. Meanwhile, though, high school is not much of a challenge for Bledsoe, even while taking advanced courses.
โIf compared to average 17-year-olds in my community, my focus is different,โ he said. โFor them, it may be, โHow do I get my next paycheck or buy some jewelry?โ For me, itโs, โHow can I innovate for people? How can I build my brand so I can help people and save someoneโs life?โ
โI want to be the go-to guy for digital strategy and business development among celebrities and Fortune 500 companies.โ
โItโs a clichรฉ, but everyone agrees,โ said Jackson-Spencer. โJaylen hasnโt even scratched the surface. The best thing about that is that he will help people, especially young people, along the way.โ
Thanks to the Urban News Service for sharing this story with us.

