Elevating Upstate New York through collective action.
Our mission is simple: educate, elevate, and invest in the people and places that make Buffalo home. From classrooms to city hall, from holiday toy drives to entrepreneur summits — we show up, we stay consistent, and we build for the long term.
In 2021, Quinton Smith had a vision — bring together a group of like-minded professionals who could pool their skills, their networks, and their drive to do something real for Buffalo. Nine people came together from across diverse backgrounds and industries, united by one belief: that their community deserved more.
Five years later, the Upstate Collective has hosted summits, run a youth literacy intensive, delivered holiday toy drives, built relationships with city leaders, and created spaces for Black professionals in Buffalo to connect, grow, and invest in their home. Every event, every workshop, every conversation is part of one long game: building a Buffalo that works for everyone.
Four pillars. One direction.
Education doesn't stop at graduation — and it shouldn't stop at any age. From Buffalo SpeedUp, our annual literacy program for kids, to financial literacy workshops and entrepreneurship events for adults, we invest in knowledge at every level. Because an informed community is an empowered community.
Thriving communities are built by people who own things — businesses, property, ideas. We want more people in Buffalo to have access to the tools, knowledge, and connections it takes to build something. Through our events and our network, we open doors that too often stay closed.
Showing up for our community isn't one thing — it's everything. It's sitting in classrooms, hosting events, teaching financial literacy, and making sure families have something to celebrate around the holidays. The work looks different every season, but the commitment never changes.
Real change in a community requires people who are willing to be in the room where decisions get made. We meet with city leaders, elected officials, and community stakeholders — not to represent ourselves, but to represent the people and neighborhoods that don't always have a voice at the table.