Nashville Innovation Alliance partners with Amazon for AI, cloud job skills training

Amazon Web Services announced Wednesday an expansion of its Skills to Jobs Tech Alliance program, partnering with the Nashville Innovation Alliance in Tennessee to create more pathways to jobs in artificial intelligence and cloud computing in the state.
The announcement makes Tennessee the sixth state to join the AWS Skills to Jobs Tech Alliance, following Illinois, New York, Texas, Washington and West Virginia. The program expansion aims to address middle Tennessee’s growing tech talent demand with particular emphasis on AI and cloud computing skills. According to statistics shared by AWS, tech job postings have increased in the region by 35% between 2020 and 2023, and there are currently an estimated 8,000 open technology positions in the area.
The Nashville Innovation Alliance, which launched in June 2024 as a partnership between Vanderbilt University and the Nashville mayor’s office, now includes several other area higher education institutions like Nashville State Community College, Belmont University, Tennessee State University and Fisk University. AWS will work with these institutions and the Metropolitan Government of Nashville and Davidson County to modernize their programs of study to ensure they align with industry demand for AI and cloud skills.
Additionally, the AWS Skills to Jobs Tech Alliance will help participants connect with potential employers in the area and provide experiential learning opportunities that will allow them to test their AI and cloud skills outside of the classroom. By 2027, the program hopes to provide training to over 1,000 Tennesseans around the Nashville area, with expansion to other areas of the state planned for next year.
Nashville Mayor Freddie O’Connell said this work and AWS’s goals align with the state’s broader workforce development objectives and support Nashville’s growing reputation as a tech hub.
“By giving Nashvillians the skills and expertise needed to access leading tech jobs, we will better prepare our local workforce for the economy of tomorrow which will help spread economic prosperity throughout our city. And when we make announcements like this, we want Nashvillians to see themselves in the pathways to these opportunities,” O’Connell said in a news release.