Feature image above: Fuel Accelerator conference (Photos provided by Startup Junkie)
In the heart of northwest Arkansas, a powerful economic development strategy has quietly been gaining national attention. It is not an incentive tax break or a flashy recruiting campaign. It is a homegrown, sector-specific accelerator that proves what is possible when startups, enterprise leaders, public partners and ecosystem builders align with purpose.
That strategy is Fuel Accelerator.
Fuel was launched in 2018 by Startup Junkie Foundation and RevUnit. Fuel was built not as a vanity project or an import from the coasts but as a deliberate economic tool to support the state’s evolving innovation economy. Since its inception, the program has grown into one of the region’s most consistent and influential vehicles for venture engagement, capital formation and high-value job creation.
How It Started: Strategy, Not Hype
The Startup Junkie Foundation, a nonprofit entrepreneurial support organization based in Fayetteville, laid the foundation for Fuel with the support of RevUnit, then a Bentonville-based, nationally recognized tech firm known for transforming enterprise operations. It was not about chasing trends or mimicking coastal incubators. The team instead looked inward, zeroed in on what made the northwest Arkansas business ecosystem unique and dreamt of what could be accomplished by a coalition of the willing. Then they got to work designing a program to connect early-stage, high-growth ventures to some of the key industrial strengths of Arkansas — supply chain and logistics — and the enterprise partners embedded there.
It was not a cakewalk. No public-facing success story is ever the overnight success that headlines often portray.
“It was really an endeavor pulling the first cohort together,” said Michael Iseman, a member of the Startup Junkie Foundation from 2015 to 2019 who served as the founding director of the Fuel Accelerator. “Working with the state for that first program to be approved, coordinating with volunteers, partners, funders, mentors and other entrepreneurial support groups in the region and then recruiting companies to a pilot program … took a lot of coordinated effort.”
That effort paid off. With critical early funding from the Arkansas Economic Development Commission via its business and technology accelerator grant program, Fuel launched its first program in 2019. That grant program, made possible by legislation passed in 2017, was structured to incentivize the development of high-skill, high-wage jobs through technology-based innovation.
The inaugural cohort focused on scalable supply chain technology. It was a natural fit for the region, home to corporate titans such as Walmart, Tyson Foods, J.B. Hunt and ArcBest. Early results were promising, founders citing direct access to decision-makers and clear pathways to enterprise pilots.
The Pivot to AI/ML: Early and Strategic
Following the success of its supply chain-focused pilot program, Fuel made a bold and forward-looking move. Ahead of a 2020 launch, it shifted its entire programming to focus on artificial intelligence and machine learning. This pivot was not so much reactive as it was predictive.
Even before AI captured global headlines, Fuel’s leadership saw that AI/ML would become foundational across nearly every industry. Partnering again with RevUnit to develop a refined curriculum and hands-on engagement model, the new direction positioned Arkansas as a regional leader in applied enterprise AI.
To help launch this second program, then-Gov. Asa Hutchinson joined Startup Junkie to publicly announce the shift at a press event in 2019.

Asa Hutchinson
“[The Fuel Accelerator] is exciting for the entire state of Arkansas because it illustrates that we are accomplishing a strategic plan, that we’re carrying out our desire to increase not only businesses that can excel in technology but also supply the existing industries here with the talent and technology that’s needed,” Hutchinson said.
He added, “The Fuel Accelerator has had success. The second cohort will be from across the country, top-level companies. We’re going to be able to land some great companies that will stay right here when they see what all Arkansas has to offer. These programs have resulted in Arkansas becoming a micro hub of technology and startup companies. We’re looked at, nationally, as a leader because of these accelerator programs.”
It was a vote of confidence — not just in Fuel, but in Arkansas’ potential to lead in innovation.
Leadership That Executes
What makes Fuel stand apart is not just its positioning. It is the team behind it. The Startup Junkie Foundation has served as the operating engine from day one. From recruiting founders across the globe to cultivating relationships with enterprise partners and industry mentors, managing government contracts, working with critical program partners to develop curriculum, and executing programming — Startup Junkie continues to carry the torch.
Over time, Fuel has earned the trust and backing of multiple partners. In addition to AEDC, the program has received federal funding from the U.S. Small Business Administration and impactful regional support from the Walton Family Foundation, but these investments did not seed the work — they followed results.
Beyond the Numbers: Telling the Stories and Celebrating the Wins
The Fuel effect shows up in alumni stories across each cohort, including the first one, which included Charu Thomas and her company Ox.
Thomas, a Georgia Tech graduate with a background in industrial engineering, joined the inaugural Fuel program in 2019 with her startup, then called Oculogx. The venture was focused on applying augmented reality to improve warehouse order picking — an ideal fit for Arkansas’s logistics and retail sectors. Thomas was recruited to the program by Iseman despite not knowing anything about the region.
“I had never heard of Startup Junkie before or northwest Arkansas,” Thomas said at the time.
After completing the program, she did not return to Atlanta. She stayed, and her company grew. Ox now employs more than 70 people. The startup has raised more than $16 million in capital, including a $12.6 million Series A in 2023 — the largest enterprise software Series A in Arkansas history. Thomas was later named to Forbes’ “30 Under 30” list, and the company has been profiled by the Wall Street Journal, Business Insider, and even the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office.
Why Arkansas? A Founder’s Strategic Edge
For many startup founders, Arkansas is not the first place that comes to mind when plotting a growth strategy but that perception is changing — and fast.
Fuel’s second cohort also saw immediate impact from ventures at the intersection of AI/ML and supply chain innovation. Fr8Relay, then known as Truckish, joined the 2020 cohort and traveled in from Memphis. The company, founded by husband-and-wife team Aayush Thakur and Deme Yuan, uses AI-enhanced relay models to transform long-haul trucking by enabling drivers to exchange trailers at designated hubs. The model reduces empty miles, improves sustainability and allows drivers to return home daily, addressing key challenges in the freight industry.
“Fuel’s focus on AI/ML tech startups, combined with the program’s proximity to major supply chain players, was a major draw to our decision to join their 2020 cohort,” said Yuan. “As Fuel participants, we got a preview of the invaluable resources and opportunities the ecosystem could offer for high growth tech startups. It just made sense for us to move our headquarters to northwest Arkansas after the program, where for the last five years, Startup Junkie has continued to be a vital resource, providing mentorship, industry connections and supporting us in securing five SBIR grants.”
Since completing Fuel, Fr8Relay has secured more than $2 million in Small Business Innovation Research funding from the National Science Foundation, the U.S. Department of Agriculture and the Department of Energy. Fr8Relay’s grant work includes rural pilot projects, clean energy logistics and predictive scheduling innovations. The company also gives back to the local business community through support of organizations such as the Arkansas Association of Asian Businesses and by co-hosting events and pitch competitions that support minority entrepreneurs and promote diverse economic development.
Another standout story is that of Deeping Source, a privacy-focused AI video analytics company based in Seoul, South Korea. The company joined Fuel’s 2022 AI/ML program.
Hyun-Kyu “Logan” Lee, vice president of business development, flew from Seoul to Bentonville to represent the company during that program’s 12-week run.
“Deeping Source was deeply impressed by the tangible support provided through the Fuel program, which served as a catalyst for initiating collaboration with North America’s largest retailers,” Lee said. “In particular, the northwest Arkansas mentoring program offered by Fuel allowed us to engage directly with industry leaders, which greatly helped us validate the local market fit of our solution.”
“Thanks to the startup-friendly business environment in northwest Arkansas and the attentive support from the Startup Junkie team, we were able to directly experience the growth potential in the North American market,” Lee added.
Then there is the story of Smart Eye Technology. Founder and CEO Dexter Caffey came through the 2023 Fuel AI/ML cohort. His cybersecurity company specializes in continuous biometric authentication and secure document sharing.
Caffey was so impacted by the program that he chose to relocate his company and family from Atlanta to Bentonville.
“Fuel gave us direct access to enterprise partners we could actually build with, something rare in most accelerators,” Caffey said. “Startup Junkie made us feel like part of the community from day one, and moving to Arkansas felt less like a relocation and more like plugging into an ecosystem that genuinely wants startups to win.”
Healthy Expansion: Forward Thinking in Action
In late 2022, the Startup Junkie Foundation made another strategic move. With new resources made possible by congressional funding, the organization decided to scale Fuel again — this time into health care innovation.
In the spring of 2023, the first HealthTech cohort launched.
“As the Fuel Accelerator continues to grow in both impact and scope, we see the opportunity to better serve our region by adding a focus on health-related innovations and technologies,” Caleb Talley, executive director at Startup Junkie Foundation, said at the time. “Before long, people will think about northwest Arkansas as a health care hub just as they currently do with retail or supply chain.”
That prediction is already proving true. In the two years since that first HealthTech program launched, the region has experienced an unprecedented health care infrastructure surge:
• Arkansas Children’s unveiled a $318 million campus expansion.
• Highlands Oncology acquired land for a massive 150,000-square-foot facility.
• The University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences broke ground on a 185,000-square-foot orthopedic and sports medicine center.
• Mercy Hospital and the Alice L. Walton Foundation, in partnership with the Cleveland Clinic, announced a $700 million health care investment.
This spring, Fuel’s third HealthTech cohort will host its Demo Day at the newly opened Heartland Whole Health Institute. Later this summer, the Alice L. Walton School of Medicine is expected to open its doors.
Fuel is not simply leaning into that heat and energy of the regional health momentum; it is helping to provide the spark. Its 10th cohort is more than a milestone. It is a marker of momentum.
With AI/ML and HealthTech firmly established as core pillars, Fuel is positioned to explore additional verticals, keeping an eye on sectors that align with regional priorities and emerging global needs.
As Startup Junkie and its partners look to the future, the focus remains steady: identify areas of strategic strength, build connective infrastructure, and attract founders who want to scale.
A Blueprint for What is Possible
The Fuel Accelerator proves that Arkansas does not have to chase someone else’s version of innovation. It can define its own.
By bridging world-class enterprise partners with emerging ventures and then giving those ventures the tools to compete on a global stage, Fuel has shown that startup acceleration can be more than pitch nights and platitudes. It can be a tool of strategy, resilience and long-term economic growth.
Fuel does not just make email introductions or help startups raise capital. It is changing the narrative.
That story is still being written.
In particular, northwest Arkansas is quietly emerging as one of the country’s most tactical locations for innovation-driven companies ready to scale. For those willing to look beyond the traditional coastal hubs, the region offers something rare: direct access, meaningful opportunity and the chance to grow alongside some of the world’s largest enterprises — without the barriers of larger, saturated markets.
At the heart of that advantage is proximity. Northwest Arkansas is not just home to Fortune 500 brands; it is home to their leadership, their innovation teams and their strategic partners. In a region where corporate campuses, startup hubs and research centers are separated by minutes — not hours — the collision potential between innovators and decision-makers is immediate and organic. Opportunities to launch pilot programs, forge partnerships and tap into enterprise-level contracts are not theoretical. They are daily realities.
That access is paired with an operational advantage that cannot be ignored. Founders relocating from high-cost urban centers quickly realize that every dollar stretches further there. Talent is plentiful, overhead is lower, and growth capital buys more — more time, more talent, more traction. In a landscape where extending runway often means the difference between scaling or shuttering, northwest Arkansas offers a powerful financial edge.
Yet it is not just the business fundamentals that set the region apart. Increasingly, quality of life has become a competitive edge for recruitment and retention. In northwest Arkansas, founders and their teams can build world-class companies without sacrificing access to world-class culture, education, recreation or health care. It is a place where mountain biking trails are minutes from downtown, where fine art and live music thrive, and where ambitious ideas do not require abandoning balance.
Fuel Accelerator alumni — many of whom have stayed to build and scale their companies here — consistently point to the region’s unique ecosystem: collaborative, supportive and deeply invested in seeing innovation succeed. Here, startups are not treated as expendable — they are treated as essential. They are not one small fish in an ocean of noise; they are partners in a regional strategy to grow, diversify and future-proof the economy.
None of that is by accident. The rise of northwest Arkansas as a magnet for startups is the result of intentional investment from state leaders, economic development organizations, private foundations and corporate innovators alike. Programs like Fuel Accelerator were launched not just to attract startups but to integrate them into the DNA of the region’s future.
Today, that future looks brighter than ever.
For founders willing to think differently about where they build, Arkansas is not just an option — it is a strategic advantage.
Fuel by the Numbers
• 10 cohorts completed
• 84 companies accelerated
• 11 countries represented
• 20-plus U.S. states represented
• $250 million-plus in capital raised by alumni
• $97.5 million raised by companies operating in Arkansas
• 10 companies relocated HQs to Arkansas
• 31 Arkansas-based offices opened
• 180-plus Arkansas jobs created
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