OneSpartanburg, Inc. on April 22 unveiled EDGE, a new formalized brand that pulls the chamber’s growing portfolio of internships, apprenticeships and student work-based learning programs under a single Spartanburg County umbrella. The announcement was made in front of private-sector and public employer partners who already feed students into OneSpartanburg’s summer pipeline.
The scale of what EDGE is branding is not theoretical. OneSpartanburg says employer commitments to summer placements grew from 203 in summer 2024 to 556 in summer 2025, and the organization expects the summer 2026 cohort to eclipse 600 placements across Spartanburg County employers. That trajectory is what the new brand is meant to lock in and market to both students and companies.
Dr. Ron Garner, OneSpartanburg’s Chief Talent Officer, framed EDGE as a consolidation rather than a new program, describing it as a way to pull every existing work-based learning initiative under a single easy-to-identify heading so students across Spartanburg can find their edge in the workforce in one place.
Taylor Dement, OneSpartanburg’s vice president of talent strategy, pointed to the data behind the branding decision, noting that internships consistently translate into higher starting salaries, more job offers, and better entry-level outcomes for students while giving employers a practical recruitment pipeline with longer retention — which is where the EDGE name comes from. The name itself is not an acronym; it references the leg-up students gain through early career experience and the talent pipeline edge employers gain by participating.
EDGE is tied into two broader Spartanburg County strategies that have been in motion for several years. The OneSpartanburg Vision Plan, the chamber’s countywide economic-development strategy, identifies talent pipeline as a core priority. Movement 2030, led by the Spartanburg Academic Movement, targets educational attainment and economic mobility gains across the county over the next several years. OneSpartanburg is positioning EDGE as the connective tissue that delivers on both.
The message to Spartanburg County employers — manufacturers along Highway 290 and the Tyger River industrial corridor, health systems in and around the city, and the growing cluster of professional services firms downtown — is that participating in the work-based learning program now has one recognizable brand, one set of standards, and one consolidated enrollment surface instead of the fragmented approach that existed before. For students and parents in Spartanburg District 6, District 7, Boiling Springs and surrounding school communities, EDGE is meant to be a single door into internships and apprenticeships that previously lived under a scatter of program names.
Sources: OneSpartanburg, Inc. official announcement and brand launch materials, April 22, 2026.
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If these internships are structured right, they can solve a real problem: entry-level talent that actually knows what a shop floor looks like. Curious how many placements are in manufacturing vs. office roles.
Work-based learning is one of those quiet inputs that shows up later in workforce stability. Employers looking to expand here will pay attention to whether EDGE makes it easier to recruit locally.
I love seeing students get a head start, especially if it keeps more young people in Spartanburg after graduation. Hope the county makes it easy for parents and students to find the opportunities.
Branding is nice, but the real test is whether students get paid placements and whether companies follow through. Would be great to see a public list of participating employers and how many slots they’re offering.
Anything that helps teens and young adults build workplace skills helps our local businesses too. If EDGE can connect students to part-time roles during the school year, that would be huge.
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