Press Release: 5/26/2026
Healey-Driscoll Administration Joins with IBM, Red Hat to Launch AI Accelerator During Boston Tech Week
Joint initiative by Massachusetts AI Hub, IBM and Red Hat formally kicks off application process for inaugural startup cohort
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:
5/26/2026
MEDIA CONTACT
Meggie Quackenbush, Director of Communications
Online
Email Meggie Quackenbush, Director of Communications at Margaret.M.Quackenbush@mass.gov
BOSTON — Today, the Healey-Driscoll Administration joined with IBM and Red Hat to announce the official opening of the application process for the inaugural startup cohort of The Open Accelerator, a strategic initiative designed in collaboration with the Massachusetts AI Hub. Unveiled at a kickoff event for the first-ever Boston Tech Week from a16z, The Open Accelerator delivers an immersive residency program for technical entrepreneurs to gain real-world market insights and enterprise-grade architectural guidance based on open-source standards.
“Massachusetts has always been at its best when we bring together leaders from across sectors to tackle big challenges and seize new opportunities. That’s exactly what this partnership with Red Hat and IBM is all about,” said Governor Maura Healey. “As we kick off Boston Tech Week, we’re so excited that the Open Accelerator will give entrepreneurs the support they need to grow their ideas into successful companies. Together, we’re building pathways for innovation and creating opportunities for startups in Massachusetts.”
Governor Healey first announced the partnership with IBM and Red Hat in May 2025.
“One of Massachusetts’ greatest strengths is the way our companies, universities, investors, and entrepreneurs work together,” said Economic Development Secretary Eric Paley. “That collaboration has helped make Massachusetts a global leader in AI and innovation. The Open Accelerator builds on that momentum by giving founders the expertise and support they need to grow and scale their companies here in Massachusetts.”
“The Commonwealth has long been at the forefront of technological innovation, driven by world-class universities, visionary founders, and a strong investment community that enables AI startups to thrive,” said Emily Fontaine, Global Head of Venture Capital, IBM. “IBM Ventures is deeply committed to continue fueling this ecosystem—providing essential strategic investment alongside access to the unparalleled global network of IBM. The Open Accelerator is a blueprint for how early-stage founders can partner with leaders to build enterprise-ready solutions, leveraging open source technology to align product development with practical market needs and empowering founders with the resources, expertise, and alliances they need to scale faster in this competitive environment.”
"The true promise of AI lies in its ability to radically compress the timeline from a brilliant idea to meaningful business impact,” said Stefanie Chiras, Ph.D., Senior Vice President, The Open Accelerator, Red Hat. “However, unlocking that speed requires an entirely new collaboration model between emerging founders, established enterprise technology leaders and public infrastructure. Without this intentional framework, great ideas accelerate quickly to a working prototype or technical instantiation, but stall out before reaching enterprise adoption. Through The Open Accelerator, we are providing the open source architectural guidance and community support needed to bridge that last mile, helping technical entrepreneurs turn raw processing speed into lasting enterprise value."
The initiative’s high-touch, application-based track, The Open Accelerator Residency, draws on collaborations with the venture capital community and nonprofit collaborators to support a curated cohort of five to ten early-stage startups focused on enterprise IT markets and regulated industries. Starting in September, accepted technical entrepreneurs are eligible to receive the opportunity for strategic investment from IBM Ventures, the corporate venture capital fund operated by IBM, paired with dedicated architectural guidance from Red Hat and IBM system architects.
Advisors will collaborate side-by-side with founders to provide technical guidance and go-to-market expertise to build and sell solutions that align with real-world enterprise procurement, governance, and AI compliance requirements. Simultaneously, the program’s broader Community Engagement track hosts a recurring hackathon series and forges deeper academic ties to help empower the entire Massachusetts innovation economy and propel the next generation of innovators.
“Modern enterprise technology depends on open standards, strong security, and systems that work well together,” said Technology Services and Security Secretary Jason Snyder. “The Open Accelerator reflects those values by helping startups build AI tools that are secure, transparent and easy to integrate, giving public and private sector organizations more confidence adopting new technology.”
As AI breakthroughs arrive at breakneck speed, early-stage founders face an uphill battle evolving raw prototypes into the secure, scalable, and compliant architectures that enterprises mandate for production deployment. This structural hurdle is where technical entrepreneurs frequently encounter technical debt. The Open Accelerator directly addresses this friction point by helping startups maximize deployment optionality using open source tools and platforms that can more easily scale with their business.
“The Open Accelerator is a space where AI founders can learn, grow and experiment with industry peers and leaders to help forge the future of AI,” said Sabrina Mansur, Director, Massachusetts AI Hub. “Providing mentorship opportunities, business tools and a collaborative environment, IBM, Red Hat and the MA AI Hub are setting up this first cohort of Open Accelerator participants for success in the Boston AI economy and beyond.”
The MA AI Hub is an initiative led by the Massachusetts Technology Collaborative. Since its creation in 2024, the MA AI Hub has partnered with Holyoke-based Massachusetts Green High Performance Computing Center (MGHPCC) to announce Cambridge Computer, in partnership with Dell Technologies, NVIDIA and VAST to create the Artificial Intelligence Compute Resources (AICR) environment at MGHPCC. Serving as the backbone of the MA AI Hub, AICR supports startups, businesses, researchers and educators with access to sustainable, high-performance compute resources required for AI innovation. The AI Hub also partnered with Google to provide free AI training to all Massachusetts residents, and the Healey-Driscoll administration launched an effort to become the first state in the nation to deploy ChatGPT to every state employee through a partnership with OpenAI.
Applications to join The Open Accelerator are now open.
About the Massachusetts AI Hub
The Massachusetts AI Hub is Massachusetts’ central nexus for AI innovation and governance across industry, academia and the private sector. The AI Hub, supported by the Massachusetts Technology Collaborative, harnesses state resources and the top-tier talent to drive transformative change in the sector. With a focus on responsible AI development at its core, the AI Hub is committed to supporting Massachusetts as a global leader in fostering a collaborative, inclusive and ethical AI ecosystem. For more information, visit https://masstech.org/aihub.