Submitted
Reimagining Pathways to Employment in the US Challenge

Future of Work Game

Team Leader
Julie Dunlap
Solution Overview
Solution Name:
Future of Work Game
One-line solution summary:
Integrating game-based career navigation and interoperable Learning Employment Records (LERs) for skills documentation and lifelong learning
Pitch your solution.

The current U.S. education employment ecosystem fails to equitably include and value the knowledge, skills and experiences of marginalized populations. Fathom's team is developing a culturally responsive, career navigation and work-based learning game to complement learners and workers at any stage in their career continuum. Learners are guided through blended offline and online challenges, while exploring diverse career pathways, developing transferable skills, earning badges and building out portfolios to showcase tangible artifacts of learning, skills and work experiences. This, in turn, creates personalized metrics around learning/work outcomes which, with the learners' permission, can be securely shared with their teachers, counselors and case managers. This connects critical data feedback loops and improves personalized service delivery. At scale, this solution has the potential to bridge gaps in the school to workforce pipeline, fostering more flexible, open learning and career service delivery for the expansion of more equitable, inclusive on-ramps to high-quality careers.  

Film your elevator pitch.
What specific problem are you solving?

By failing to equitably serve and include all learners and earners, the current education employment ecosystem in the United States reinforces, rather than intervenes upon, existing socioeconomic disparities. This is exacerbated by a massively disjointed ecosystem in which agencies are siloed and education and trainings are misaligned. Furthermore, the front-line providers who are perhaps in the greatest position to intervene, are overburdened and under-resourced in their ability to delivery high quality outcomes for all stakeholders. Low-income and marginalized populations bear the burden of these systems failures across their lifespans, encountering constant contradictions in their experiences and outcomes with those proclaimed in the promises of education and full-labor participation in the U.S. This manifests in the 5 million young adults who are out of work at any given time in America, carrying a lifetime risk of lower earnings and limited economic mobility; in the growing number of low-income working students who struggle to balance their immediate financial and long-term career needs; in the underemployed recent college graduates who are permanently detoured from attaining high-quality career opportunities; and in the 9.8 million post-traditional learners and 45 million working poor in the United States whose learning, skills and experiences are under-utilized and under-valued. 

What is your solution?

Fathom's team is developing an immersive work-based learning game incorporating interoperable learning records for learners, workers and career changers. By completing career readiness and navigation challenges aligned with open learning standards for skill competencies, learners are guided to build out their interoperable Learning Employment Records (LERs) stored on the blockchain while simultaneously being trained and empowered as self-sovereign agents of their own data. To better demonstrate learning and skill development, these records are linked to off-chain user-curated evidence of learning portfolios, showcasing tangible artifacts of learners’ competency and skill development across formal, informal and non-formal contexts. Furthermore, this innovation addresses data silos through an ecosystem-first approach which optimizes interoperable data sharing for front-line providers including educators, counselors, case managers, and trainers. Recognizing the critical importance of meaningful relationship and capacity-building for client success, this innovation streamlines the delivery of more personalized and integral client data to support front-line providers in better allocating their time and resources to the human-centered tasks they do best. At scale, this solution has the potential to bridge critical gaps in the school to workforce pipeline for marginalized learners and workers, fostering a culture of lifelong learning and pathways to socioeconomic mobility. 

Who does your solution serve, and in what ways will the solution impact their lives?

Our solution is designed with and for populations most underserved by existing education and workforce development systems. Specifically, groups include Black, brown and low-income youth ages 13-18 in need of early high quality work-based learning experiences; young adults 18-24 disconnected and in need of re-entry into the world of education and employment; low-income working college students and underemployed recent college graduates in need of more flexible and open learning modules to equitably access high-quality career pathways; and post-traditional learners in need of connecting their formal, non-formal and informal learning, skills and experiences toward their improved socioeconomic mobility. This solution is tailored to serve those groups of non-traditional lifelong learners with more flexible, equitable and culturally relevant solutions to personalized career development. 

To date, we have worked with diverse groups of young adults ages 13-21 in Nashville, TN to provide in-person work-based learning experiences and internships. Through this work we have consistently engaged young adults in creating and improving transformative, culturally-relevant learning experiences. For the proposed solution, we are conducting a participatory user-design project to transform the existing game-based learning prototype to co-design the integration of blockchain technology and ecosystem processes for improved service delivery and case management. 

Which dimension of the Challenge does your solution most closely address?
  • Implement competency-based models for life-long learning and credentialing
Explain how the problem, your solution, and your solution’s target population relate to the Reimagining Pathways to Employment in the US Challenge and your selected dimension.

The proposed solution overlaps several challenge dimensions, with a primary focus on competency-based models for lifelong learning. Fathom is seeking more inclusive ways to value the skills, knowledge and experiences of historically excluded and underserved populations. Fathom's solution pairs innovative technologies for game-based learning, open skills documentation and interoperable learning employment records to train, equip and incentivize learners and workers at all stages to assess and document their own learning while owning and effectively leveraging these records toward personal career advancement. Through an ecosystem approach, this solution provides more open, learner-centered protocols for qualitatively documenting and verifying lifelong skills-in-action. 

In what city, town, or region is your solution team headquartered?
Nashville, TN, USA
If your solution is already being implemented in the US, in which US state(s) do you currently operate?
  • Alabama
  • Georgia
  • Tennessee
Are you planning to expand your solution to at least one US state? If so, please provide an overview of your expansion plans. What is the market opportunity for your business or product here?

We are working with workforce development boards in Tennessee, Georgia and Alabama with aims to pilot test the existing prototype via a participatory user-design study with diverse cohorts of young adults and case managers.  While we do eventually plan to nation-wide, we have a specific interest and opportunity in focusing on Southeastern states to address the major socioeconomic gaps for youth and adults in this region. In our customer discovery interviews we consistently learned of challenges in balancing the continuous cycles of brain drain as they simultaneously struggle to attract and retain high-skill local talent, employers and industry. This cycle directly stagnates local economic development across the region with large disparities for Black, brown and working-class youth and adults.

Workforce development spans sectors of education, human capital management, job training and counseling, among others with braided public and private funding across the ecosystem. We have specifically narrowed down to focus on federally funded workforce development agencies who serve underemployed and disconnected populations in these states. The market opportunity here is to use this tool to support streamlining and improving mandated service-delivery and case management follow-up and outcome reporting which was identified as major pain points for these customers. Starting with this particular customer and region, we can reach an estimated 2 million users (and even more due to current crises) and capture around $208M/year, with plenty of room to scale to other use cases, customers, industries and geographic regions. Scaling nationally extends this to 4 million clients and 400 M/year. 


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In which US state(s) will you be operating within the next year?
  • Alabama
  • Georgia
  • Tennessee
What is your solution’s stage of development?
  • Prototype: A venture or organization building and testing its product, service, or business model
Who is the team lead for your solution?
Joseph Adeola, Fathom founder and CEO
How many people work on your solution team?

3 full time staff

3 part-time staff

2 contractors


Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion: What is your approach to building a diverse, equitable, and inclusive organization?

Fathom's founding team is a testament to the possible innovation and impact when communities with shared adversities, diverse experiences and cultural backgrounds are given the opportunity to leverage their talents to solve the problems they are engulfed in. This formula inevitably exposes fault lines in the existing systems, reveals opportunities for transformative change and paves a path forward for innovative, equitable and sustainable organizations. From this understanding, Fathom as an organization has and always will intentionally recruit based on value alignment, closeness and commitment to the problem we are solving and the people we serve. This practice as policy ensures not only that we have a diverse, equitable and inclusive organization but also that we consistently co-develop and deliver products and services that are culturally relevant, community-owned, and meeting the needs and desires of our beneficiaries. 

More About Your Solution
About Your Team
Your Business Model & Funding
Partnership Opportunities
Solution Team:
Julie  Dunlap
Julie Dunlap
Co-Founder and Chief Impact Officer
Joseph Adeola
Joseph Adeola
CEO